fbpx

The ‘sick overdose’ of guns in this country

Robert Fehring, Creep of the Week

These are dark times. 

The Supreme Court is going to either overturn or completely gut Roe v Wade, making abortion illegal, or at least impossible to get, in states across the country. We’re still in a pandemic that has killed well over 807,000 people in the United States alone and yet Republicans are still all, “Vaccines are a Biden plot to make you magnetic and/or put a tiny robot in your blood to track you” all while calling themselves the Pro-life party. Then there’s the Republican plot to do away with democracy in favor of some kind of white supremacist dictatorship.

And then there are the guns. In the U.S., we have more guns than we have people. Which means that some people (a lot of people, actually) have NO guns, while some people (too many people, actually) have A LOT of guns.

I hate guns. 

I hate how they’re so widely and easily available. I hate how they are designed to kill people. I hate how gun culture is fetishized in this country. I hate that legislators think it’s cool to send out a Christmas card of themselves surrounded by their family where everyone, including the kids, are holding weapons designed to kill. I hate how we are the only country on earth where school shootings occur regularly. 

On Tuesday, Nov. 30, it happened again. This time at Oxford High School. A 15-year-old child killed four other children. I went to high school with the mother of the shooter. Same graduating class. I didn’t know her very well. I don’t remember that much about her. To be fair, she probably doesn’t remember much about me, either.



Thankfully, this has given Michigan Republicans the chance to do what they have planned to do all along: nothing. Or, worse than nothing. They want guns to be even easier to get and carry. They’re talking, again, about arming teachers. With them, “more guns” is always the answer. 

I was just reading about Robert Fehring, a 74-year-old New York man who was arrested for “mailing dozens of letters threatening to assault, shoot and bomb LGBTQ-affiliated individuals, organizations and businesses, including New York City’s annual Pride festival,” according to NBC News. When police searched his house, they found two loaded guns and hundreds of rounds of ammunition.

His letters are vile and hateful. Something that would make Fred Phelps and his Westboro ilk proud. I won’t quote them here. But I will say he wanted to make the 2015 Pulse Nightclub shooting look like “a cakewalk.”

Have you ever done a cakewalk? I know now that a “cakewalk” actually has a complicated history that is tied to slavery, which basically sums up American history. But the only cakewalk I  ever participated in involved walking around a room with numbers on the floor. There was music that stopped, like musical chairs. If you were on the number they called you won a cake.

One thing I know with certainty is that a cakewalk definitely does not include the murder of 49 people. It does not include guns. It does not include an attack on LGBTQ+ spaces. And anyone who thinks the shooting of over 100 people is a “cakewalk” definitely shouldn’t have guns. 

According to NBC News, Ferling said that there is “a sick overdose of that stuff being shoved down everybody’s face on the paper, on the TV and all over the place, and I’m not a fan of any of the homosexuality, homosexual thing.”

And so his response is to threaten death and violence and prepare to enact it. 

There are a lot of things I am not a fan of. There are certainly things that you, reader, are not a fan of. But it’s a symptom of our toxic-masculinity obsessed culture that the way to approach things you don’t like is with a gun. 

It’s almost like there’s a sick overdose of that stuff. And it’s killing us.

Personalized options are changing HIV prevention. People can choose between daily pills or injections for PrEP that fit their lifestyle, and there are even more options are on the horizon. Full article link in bio. @alliespgh ...

26 0

Pulling the balls at OUTrageous Bingo with Rick Allison. Rick has been calling the monthly OUTrageous Bingo for 27 years, which raises money for the Shepherd Wellness Community and the Pittsburgh Equality Center. Rick takes us through the origins of this LGBTQ Pittsburgh institution beginning on December 6, 1997, the opening bingo pledge, the unique games played, and the guest bingo callers throughout the years. Listen at the link in bio or wherever you get your podcasts. ...

6 0
D'Anne Witkowski is a poet, writer and comedian living life with her wife and son. She has been writing about LGBT politics for over a decade. Follow her on Twitter.