The tragic Tuscon shooting has provoked a lot of political commentary about the role of partisan speech as a provocative element in the events. Although the statements by many (usually Tea Party representatives) seem to suggest that polemic and inflammatory speech has occurred "on both sides" of the political spectrum, it seems clear to me that all statements are not created equal and that the reactionary wing of the Republican party has made statements that seem to endorse violence against the "overreaching" Federal government by whatever means necessary. This sort of approach has been almost the exclusive territory of the far right which seems to view guns as an effective mechanism for political change. This is not a new approach by the Right and is just another extension of the armed resistance philosophy which was expressed by some Republican politicians who implied support for the attack on an IRS office some months ago when an individual flew a plane into a building. http://thinkprogress.org/2010/02/18/scott-brown-terrorism-yawn/
Interestingly, there are beginning to be discussions and suggestions on how politicians can protect themselves from violent attacks and certainly these will include increased restrictions on access to politicians, further restrictions of weapons on federal property or in the proximity of elected officials, metal detectors, and armed guards. It is time we stemmed the flood of handguns and assault weapons into our society. Surely this attack is further evidence that there are too many guns in the wrong hands.
When will we get serious about guns and approach the easy availability of handguns in a country that is awash in firearms? Certainly there will be comments that the assault occurred because there were too few guns and that this society needs more weapons to prevent this sort of attack. This inverted logic would argue for the elimination of child safety caps on drugs (fewer poisoning will occur if there are more toxic drugs available to teach children not to take medications), argue for the storage of gasoline in glass containers (people will handle gasoline more carefully if it is in fragile containers), and we should all carry our own container of acid to protect against crazed individuals who might throw acid.
The cure for a fallacious argument is a better argument, not the suppression of ideas.
-- Carl Sagan