America's Controversial Second Amendment
Losing the vote on gun control in the Senate last week was a huge political blow to President Obama. While 90% support the Second Amendment and only 49% of the population support tougher gun laws, the president pushed through with his proposals regardless.
Blaming the NRA did not help his cause as polls showed that the Manchin-Toomey bill was voted down because it would have had no impact on gun crime or future mass-shootings. It only made more legal gun sales subject to federal databases, but did nothing about illegal gun sales or mental health or any of the issues actually related to gun crime and mass shooting.
Obama's defeat was equally a defeat for the pro-Obama media, who unashamedly does his bidding. Instead of educating the public about the complexity of the debate and the history of gun ownership, the mainstream media was more intent on placating the president than educating the public. So, with the large-scale media support, why did the president lose the Senate vote?
He lost a golden opportunity to bring rational debate to a country where gun ownership is a constitutional right. Had he convened a cross-sectional group of advisors to investigate whether gun controls are properly applied, the outcome would have been less divisive. Keen to win, he railroaded this bill through Congress with tactics that boomeranged in his face rather embarrassingly.
The Sandy Hook massacre propelled Obama into action in a way that his hometown, Chicago, with its excessive gun killings, failed to do. Why? Gun killings in Chicago is mostly black on black violence whereas Sandy Hook was about a young white man who killed a number of white teachers and children in a gruesome attack.