"The Second Amendment, as applied in the last 30 years or so, has become
so perverted, twisted and misused that you have to see it now as the
second original sin in the founding of this country, after slavery."
—Timothy Egan
Trillions of galaxies each contain billions of stars. A unified field of gravitational waves, black holes, and dark matter ties the vast enterprise together. Out of this furnace of process churning through billions of years of evolutionary time our earth emerged, then biological life, then self-conscious human life. This universe we inhabit is shot through with utter mystery.
—Timothy Egan
Trillions of galaxies each contain billions of stars. A unified field of gravitational waves, black holes, and dark matter ties the vast enterprise together. Out of this furnace of process churning through billions of years of evolutionary time our earth emerged, then biological life, then self-conscious human life. This universe we inhabit is shot through with utter mystery.
We are also mysteries to each other. For the moment at
least, the motivation of Stephen Paddock’s massacre in Las Vegas is as
mysterious as the workings of a black hole. So mysteriously meaningless is the
slaughter that we have no recourse but to find a crutch of ersatz
meaningfulness in the many acts of selfless heroism among the victims and first
responders, as we reel helplessly toward the next incident of mass murder that
inevitably lies ahead.
The motivation of Wayne LaPierre, the president of the
National Rifle Association, is almost as mysterious as Stephen Paddock’s. Is it money? He is paid very well
indeed. Is it willingness to shamelessly serve the interests of the companies
that manufacture guns and ammunition?
To demonstrate the sacred-cowness of LaPierre’s vaunted
Second Amendment, one need only point out that out of 200 countries on earth,
only 3 (the U.S., along with Mexico and Guatemala) constitutionally enshrine the
right to bear arms. The idea of the deterrence of tyranny by constitutionally
protected caches of privately stored weapons distracts from what truly
inoculates against the bacillus of tyranny: not weaponry but more active civic participation,
in the context of all we share beyond our illusory differences.
The motivations of our political leaders are also shrouded
in mystery, from our narcissistic president on down to Mitch McConnell and
friends, proud of the enormous political power they wield, and yet placidly
content to remain the weak and willing pawns of Mr. LaPierre.
In fact I find the nation of which I am a citizen to be more
than a little mysterious. Who are
we? We often mouth platitudes about the exceptional breadth of our freedom and
prosperity, where in reality our exceptionalism seems to cluster around our unique
level of bellicosity, our absurd tolerance for mass violence both domestic and
international, and our willingness to countenance spending trillions for newer and
better nuclear weapons when the far greater threat is human-caused climate change.
We have recently been presented with an elaborate 18 hour
retrospective of the Vietnam War, outlining the historical ignorance,
corruption and treachery of our leaders, the lies that resulted in years of
unnecessary death on all sides, while we seem to have learned nothing from this
historical experience that might apply to our present endless and futile wars.
There is a further mystery that provides one possible
antidote to the mystery of all that our country refuses to admit about itself—
the redemptive mystery of black spirituality. Whole peoples were forcibly brought
across from Africa in chains to our young nation, which then built upon their
backs our prosperous economy, a history which truncated the possibilities of
African American citizens at every turn right to the present day. The mystery
of the indiscriminate use of weaponry that is endemic to our culture is an all
too terrible part of their story, too.
By all precedent blacks in America should have long since
risen up in a paroxysm of destructive rage equal to Mr. Paddock’s, and of
course at acute moments some have.
But, in a mystery complementary to the mystery of violence, this
tyrannized people as a whole have not
taken refuge in nonsense like the sacredness of an amendment written long ago
by people who could not imagine our nation awash in automatic weapons, but instead
in healthier particulars of our constitution that enshrined black rights to
full inclusivity and to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
Of course for whites Martin Luther King Jr. is the most
renown representative of this black non-violent spirituality, but there are
ranks upon ranks of others, dead and alive, whose spiritual depths, born of
undeserved suffering(including the actual worst mass murders in
American history), we Americans can draw upon as we gradually shape ourselves into
a less violent culture.
The late Vincent Harding comes to mind, a gentle, loving
giant who helped administer the freedom schools that initiated voter
registration campaigns in the South. Harding also helped write Martin Luther
King’s great 1967 speech at Riverside Church taking on our country for its intertwined
addictions to racism, militarism and materialism.
Or the very much alive social activist Ruby Sales, whose
vision of American life acknowledges race but reaches beyond it to a healing
vision that includes all in our country who are hurting, the unemployed coal
miner in West Virginia as well as the education-deprived black child living in a
high-risk precinct of Baltimore. Perhaps her instinctive inclusivity comes from
the fact that a white seminarian died
blocking a bullet meant for her.
Or the eloquent polemicist Ta Nehisi-Coates, heir to James
Baldwin, whose challenging essays and books demand that whites look in the
mirror to find the ultimate source of deeply-set structural
violence and prejudice in our country.
These leaders and teachers point us in a direction in which
we really do have the potential to become an exceptional nation, less fearful,
therefore less armed to the teeth at home and abroad, less bellicose, therefore
more willing to choose diplomacy and humanitarian initiatives over war, more
understanding of the “other,” and therefore more willing to reach out and see
even our worst enemies as having a humanity equal to our own.
In spite of all that science allows us to understand, we
live, move and have our being in a context of mystery, and it isn’t going away
any time soon. We can approach it in isolated fear, or in collegial wonder,
gratitude, and humility—humility in the spirit of Job the prophet of old, to
whose undeserved pain a mysterious God replied “Where were you when I laid the
foundations of the earth?”
Thanks, Winslow - thought provoking (!), wide-ranging and deeply felt.
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