Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Mr. Will Smith Death: Can losing him transform the debate on the culture of guns in the USA?


On Saturday night of April 9, 2016 in NEW ORLEANS, a former Saints defensive end and member of the Super bowl winning team, Mr. Will Smith lost his life from yet another senseless and irrational use of gun by one Mr. Cardell Hayes after a traffic altercation.

 

The fatal shooting of the New Orleans football star have resurrected the conversation on the use of gun and also the culture of how we can interact with one another in a modern and humane fashion.

 

While the family, friends and fans mourn the lost of this illustrious son, the question about the use of gun cannot be overemphasized.

It is therefore very critical that all stakeholders and the citizenry come together and help transform the culture of gun and its associated violence in the country.

We cannot afford to continue to waste precious lives due to reckless endangerment and unnecessary fatalities as a result of the use of gun.

 

The society, which depends primarily on gun and other weaponry as the primary source of security for lives and properties, is to a greater extent uncivilized.

Additionally when the value of life is not any differently more important and sacred from the right to possession of gun and the profiteering network that enhances, indoctrinates and cajole citizenry to continue to perpetuate this detrimental culture, then we are really in deep troubled waters in the United States of America in particular and the world at large.

 

While I have not qualm with the right to bear arms, nor the use of arms as a means of defending loved ones and self from “predators” in context of a life and death situation, my conscience as a Christian does not support the idea that my life ultimate protections and security must be enshrined in the power of “gun” or arms as that primary source of defense.

 

In light of the above and without reservation, and as a Christian, I am urging humanity to turn to God and allow love to guide our actions and even inactions too.

I would rather pick up the Bible, concede and be humiliated than to lose my life due to arrogance, pride and or get somebody killed simply because I feel the possession of guns makes me “superior” to the other guy.

 

If we cannot disagree without being disagreeable, argue without recourse to arms conflict and above all learn to value the sacredness of lives, as a gift from God to be cherished by all, then ours is a generation that is sincerely on a path to self-destruction and a gloomy eschatology.

PODEH/2016

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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