Two people are dead after a reported shooting at a SW Portland strip mall approximately five minutes from my house.
I've been to this strip mall. I've eaten at the cafe where the bodies were reportedly found. The UPS store across the street is where we go when we need to send a package. This part of Portland is in my normal orbit.
Contrary to what you've heard, Portland is actually a relatively safe city. Our crime rates are remarkably unremarkable -- a recent survey ranked us 21st out of 40 major cities when it came to violent crime. And my neighborhood is almost certainly safe than the city as a whole. This shooting is not, I think, reflective of any trends. If anything, it is in defiance of a national downward trend in violent crime.
Nonetheless, it's sickening that this is even a tertiary part of my -- or anyone else's -- life. And it's infuriating that the Supreme Court has essentially decided that people like me must, as a matter of inviolable constitutional law, live under the scourge of infinitely proliferating guns forever. It's terrible to know that if my elected representatives ever tried to do anything substantial to stem the tide of gun proliferation, the Supreme Court would be on the case to wag a finger and say no.
By the same token, the Republican Party's response to gun violence is, of course, to promote more guns (and to teach eight-year olds battlefield trauma techniques). "The only way to stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun". When you strip away all the window dressing, what this boils down to is saying the solution is getting into a shootout. But I don't want to get into a shootout! I don't want to shoot anyone, and I should be able to get a cheese omelet at a local diner without committing to reliving the OK Corral. That's not a solution, that's a capitulation -- gun violence accepted as a forever-scourge, and you're either dishing it out or you're the victim.
It doesn't have to be that way. In most developed countries, it isn't that way. That it is that way here is not an inevitability. It is a policy choice, imposed by a radical judiciary whose contempt for the people it rules is becoming increasingly more brazen.
2 comments:
Are the figures in this article accurate? Or is it a misinterpretation of the data?
https://www.oregonlive.com/crime/2023/01/portlands-101-homicides-in-2022-set-new-record-at-some-point-we-have-to-be-tired-of-burying-our-children.html
Unclear. Looks like the murder rate might have gone up in the past two years, but maybe now is starting to slightly dip again?
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