Elliot
Rodger’s story is not one of an untreated, mentally ill, white mass-killer who
illegally acquired fully-automatic “assault weapons.” This mixed white and Asian
22-year-old bought his firearms legally, and did not use a long-arm or
“high-capacity” weapon, and had been in therapy since the age of eight. Half
his murder victims were killed by knife. Several of the injured were run over by
Rodger’s car.
None of the mental
health professionals apparently felt that Rodger was a danger to himself or
others. The police had recently conducted a welfare check on him at the request
of his family. Rodger persuaded the police that he was fine.
In the media
coverage of the Isla Vista, California, murdering rampage, one angle seems
conspicuously absent. Few in the media describe the killings as a "hate
crime." Determining what is and is not a crime motivated by
"hate" has always seemed bizarre, particularly given how the term
seems selectively applied. Hispanics, for example, could, until recently, be a
“hate crime” victim -- but not a perp. Government hate crime stats counted
Hispanic perps -- but not victims -- as “white,” thus inflating the number of
hate crimes committed by “whites.”
The Isla
Vista murderer has a white father and Chinese mother. In his 140-page
“manifesto” Rodger spells out exactly whom he hates: “Fully
white” people: “I realized, with some horror, that I wasn’t ‘cool’ at all.
I had a dorky hairstyle, I wore plain and uncool clothing, and I was shy and
unpopular. On top of this was the feeling that I was different because I am of
mixed race. I am half white, half Asian, and this made me different from the
normal fully-white kids that I was trying to fit in with.”
At the age of 8,
he talked his parents into letting him dye his hair blonde. The hairdresser, however,
said he was too young, and would only bleach the top. Two years later, Rodger
tried again: “I was eager to re-bleach my hair to a fully blonde color, after
the disastrous failure of my previous attempt. This time, [my stepmother] took
me to the right salon, and they gave me a short haircut and bleached all of my
hair blonde. When I looked at myself in the mirrior [sic], I felt an intense
level of satisfaction.”
What’s more
disturbing -- that a child, at age 8, wants to die his hair to be a different
race or that his parents let him do it?
Rodger also wrote
racist postings on PuaHate, a misogynist hate site for men who dislike “pick-up
artists” and consider them manipulative hucksters who score attractive women
over more deserving people like Rodger. Last January, he posted this:
“Today I drove
through the area near my college and saw some things that were extremely
rage-inducing.
“I passed by this
restaurant and I saw this black guy chilling with 4 hot white girls. He didn’t
even look good.
“Then later on in
the day I was shopping at Trader Joe’s and saw an Indian guy with 2 above
average White Girls!!!
“What
rage-inducing sights did you guys see today? Don’t you just hate seeing these
things when you go out? It just makes you want to quit life.”
A murder victim’s
anguished father blamed “craven, irresponsible politicians and the NRA.” This father,
of course, is in deep pain. The desire to blame something or someone is
understandable. And, yes, mental health-care experts should advise us on warning
signs and encourage us to be proactive in urging those who need help to it.
But while they the
experts play Sigmund Freud, may we protect ourselves, even the odds a little in
favor of the good guys? This spree last 10 minutes, and police count nearly a
dozen crime scenes.
Nearly 40 states
allow people -- on a “shall issue” basis -- to carry a concealed weapon,
something that might have minimized the Isla Vista carnage. But California is
not a “shall issue” state.
California has
some of the most stringent “gun control” laws in the country, including the elimination
of the so-called “gun-show loophole” and limiting handgun purchases to one per
month. All transactions require a background check -- even a private sale
between two police officers. A new law requires “traceable micro-stamping” for
all new semi-automatic handguns.
Still the NRA gets
blamed -- not the gun-free zones, not the inability of citizens to protect
themselves, and certainly not the shooter. Blaming the NRA or “craven
politicians” won’t stop bad guys -- in this case one filled with racial hatred --
from doing bad things. The old line still rings true: The best and most sure
way to stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.
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