The problem with any discussion about guns and gun violence and gun control in this country is that logic typically gets drowned by a cacophony of ideological rhetoric on both sides of the issue. All too often, the din hampers society’s ability to have a rational discussion — to separate the stock from the barrel, as it were.
So allow us to focus for a moment on a proposal pushed by state Rep. Lynda Wilson, R-Vancouver, and supported by all Republican lawmakers from Clark County and many from elsewhere in the state. Wilson is urging Gov. Jay Inslee to allow members of the Washington National Guard to carry firearms at military facilities, giving them “the right to protect themselves from peril.”
This appears to be perfectly reasonable, a logical course of action after a gunman killed four U.S. Marines and a Navy sailor at a military recruiting station in Tennessee. Military personnel face a heightened risk of being targeted by terrorists, and they are trained in the use of firearms. While it should be noted that a representative from the Washington National Guard said the move is not necessary, that does not mitigate the fact that if anybody should be allowed to carry weapons in the workplace, it would be military personnel.
Yet this middle ground also highlights the absurdity of our inability to have a discussion about guns in this nation. The need for such a discussion should be obvious, as The Washington Post reports that the United States has not gone more than eight days this year without a mass shooting. That is an eye-opening statistic that should be unacceptable in a civilized society, and yet the cacophony typically overwhelms the reason that is required to address the issue.