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With her husband looking on, an Ohio woman takes aim at the National Rifle Association annual convention in Milwaukee on May 19, 2006. - With her husband looking on, an Ohio woman takes aim at the National Rifle Association annual convention in Milwaukee on May 19, 2006. | AFP/Getty Images

With her husband looking on, an Ohio woman takes aim at the National Rifle Association annual convention in Milwaukee on May 19, 2006.

With her husband looking on, an Ohio woman takes aim at the National Rifle Association annual convention in Milwaukee on May 19, 2006. - With her husband looking on, an Ohio woman takes aim at the National Rifle Association annual convention in Milwaukee on May 19, 2006. | AFP/Getty Images
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U.S. gun lobbies: the inmates who run the asylum

Globe and Mail Update

Why is the United States so much more violent than Canada? Canadians receive, even welcome, violence-based American mass culture pumped out 24/7 by the mammoth entertainment industry. Yet our society remains dramatically less violent than theirs. Take guns.

The United States has by far the highest gun homicide rate in the industrialized world. In a study of 23 of these nations, the American rate was nearly 20 times higher than the others. Some 100,000 shootings take place in the U.S. every year, 30,000 of them fatal. In Canada, with about one-tenth the U.S. population, 190 people were killed by guns in 2006. More than a million Americans have died from gun violence, whether by murders, suicides or accidents, since Martin Luther King was gunned down in 1968.

In 2010, there were at least 15 shootings at American schools from elementary to college level. Such incidents rarely make much news any longer unless the death and injury toll is huge, as at Columbine and Virginia Tech.

Violence by right-wing groups against alleged liberals is also more common than generally known. Since 2008, the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence has documented more than two dozen killings by, or arrests of, right-wing extremists who intended to do serious political violence to their political enemies. Before Jared Loughner tried to murder her, Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords had been threatened after voting for Barack Obama’s health-care reform bill (as had other Democrats), shots had been fired through her office window and police had removed a protester at one of her meetings when his pistol fell from its holster.

What lessons have our neighbours to the south learned from this horror show? For many, it’s a waste of time to ask the question. The answer is obvious: Many more Americans need to be armed, the sooner the better.

Enter the formidable gun lobby, led by the National Rifle Association, with its four-million-or-so members and $307-million annual budget. (The Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, the largest American umbrella group of organizations dedicated to gun control has about 25,000 members.) Here’s the paradox you need to grasp about the NRA: Its ferocious opposition to any form of gun control is motivated precisely by the American orgy of gun violence. Because of this violence, it will maintain its relentless pressure for government to eliminate (except for children) literally every possible constraint on owning and carrying guns – and the deadlier the gun, better.

What the NRA wants, the NRA usually gets

Now here’s what every American politician knows in her gut: You cross the NRA at your peril. It is among the two or three most powerful, ruthless and single-minded lobby groups in the United States. It instills fear, cowardice and capitulation in politicians and law-makers at every level.

The NRA’s great weapon is its sophisticated political machine, like a SWAT team ready to be mobilized against an enemy at a moment’s notice. But it has more going for it than this. It has as well two critical philosophical advantages. One is well-known. It’s the Second Amendment to the American Constitution, a part of the U.S. Bill of Rights: “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed.”

In most of the normal world, that statement is interpreted to mean that the government, representing the people, is entitled to establish an armed force. But for many Americans, led by the NRA, it means something far more. It means that every individual has the right to be personally armed. This issue has bitterly divided Americans for two centuries, but the life-and-death conflict is finally over, with the NRA emerging as the unequivocal winner. Twice in the past two years the U.S. Supreme Court, now as politicized and brazenly partisan as any time in its often shameful history, has ruled that the Second Amendment does indeed guarantee any individual the right to have a gun. And most politicians, either from conviction (all Republicans) or fear (many Democrats) legislate accordingly.