Tag Archives: Virginia Beach massacre

What about ‘gun-free zones’?

We have entered a zone that requires a good bit of rational thought and a decided absence of hysteria.

A gunman opened fire Friday in a municipal building in Virginia Beach, Va., killing 12 people and injuring five or six others. He was killed in a fire fight with police.

I don’t know this yet to be fact, but I am going to presume the government building and its surroundings are deemed to be “gun-free zones.” That means you must be unarmed if you are to enter the building. You can’t be packing heat under your jacket, or in an ankle holster.

Now, here’s the question: Do we take down gun-free zones to enable heat-packing bystanders to open fire when someone starts blasting away in the manner that occurred in Virginia Beach?

For that matter, what about in church sanctuaries or in any number of schools that have been the scenes of despicable gun violence?

Dear reader, we have a serious conundrum on our hands — and in our hearts and heads — as we reignite the debate over how to deal with senseless gun violence.

I understand why governments impose gun-free zones. They want there to be an absence of dangerous weapons in what could be called “soft target” areas. You know, places such as public government buildings, or schools, houses of worship.

The debate that no doubt will ensue in the wake of the Virginia Beach massacre is clearly headed toward some further discussion of the value of gun-free zones and whether they make those zones less safe from madmen like the one who opened fire in Virginia Beach.

My first instinct is to say that gun-free zones should remain. We shouldn’t expose children, or worshipers, or government employees to more firearms in the workplace, in our church sanctuaries or in our classrooms.

I am going to implore us all to wage this debate with seriousness and caution.

So help me, this is the kind of issue that gives me serious heartburn.

Chief is spot on in his refusal to ID the killer

Virginia Beach, Va., Police Chief James Cervera and I are on virtually the same page in one respect relating to the tragedy that erupted Friday in his city.

The chief will refuse to refer to a lunatic killer by name. Yes, he has vowed to do so only one time. After that initial identification, Chief Cervera said he will refer to the individual as “the suspect,” who is responsible for the deaths of 12 innocent victims and the injuring of six others.

I have followed that doctrine for some time on this blog. I refuse to identify the individuals who commit these acts of insanity against human beings. Hell, I have difficulty writing the words “fellow human beings,” because that suggests the killers have a semblance of humanity. They do not.

Yes, this blog has identified some of history’s most notorious killers by name; individuals such as Lee Harvey Oswald, Sirhan Sirhan and James Earl Ray come to mind. Their victims were public figures known around the world.

As for other mass murderers, such as the guy who blew up the Murrah Building in Oklahoma City in April 1995, he joined the ranks of infamous monsters long before I started writing this blog. So, yes, I have ID’d that individual as well over the years.

The monsters who do things such as open fire on municipal employees at a government complex in a coastal Virginia city, though, are simply seeking their 15 seconds of fame. I won’t contribute to that demented desire here.

With that, I want to salute the Virginia Beach chief of police for relegating the gun-toting moron to the world of anonymity.

As the chief said, the focus now should be on honoring the victims, helping the wounded among them heal and lend love and comfort to the loved ones of those who were lost.

Another mass shooting; more inaction awaits

Let’s add Virginia Beach, Va., to the list of American communities torn asunder by the madness associated with gun violence and the multiple casualties that result from it.

Eleven people were gunned down today at a municipal building; the gunman engaged in a fire fight with police, who then shot him to death.

He reportedly was a municipal employee. The motive for killing his colleagues has yet to be determined. His name hasn’t been released by the authorities; I won’t identify this lunatic on this blog when his name becomes known.

What in the world do we do?

That is the question of the day. It’s always the question when these tragedies unfold.

I am sickened to be core at the senselessness of it all.

The deaths of those individuals is enough to break one’s heart. The inaction that likely will come from Congress — let alone from the White House — only will pulverize my heart’s broken pieces.

Meanwhile, the list of communities where citizens will shed tears in the wake of future tragedies, I am quite certain, only will grow.