How Gun Violence Changed My Father, Ronald
Reagan, and Our Family
July 5,
2022
By Patti
Davis
Ms. Davis
is an author and the daughter of President Ronald Reagan.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/05/opinion/guns-highland-park-ronald-reagan.html
Forty-one
years ago, on a cold, drizzly day in Washington, four people were shot by a
young man who had concealed a gun in his jacket. This was long before mass
shootings became a frequent reality of our lives. It was long before
semiautomatic weapons became commonplace. There were many “good people with
guns” there that day. It made no difference. Four men were shot in a matter of
seconds. I am the daughter of one of those men, Ronald Reagan, who came
incredibly close to losing his life because the bullets John Hinckley loaded
into his gun were devastator bullets, meant to fragment. Meant to kill more
efficiently. One of those bullets blew apart James Brady’s head; he was never
the same.
The gun
used was a Röhm RG-14 revolver. It fit neatly into a jacket pocket. In the
decades since that day, I have lived with a fear of guns, especially concealed
guns. Now that fear has expanded to assassins in tactical gear with AR-15-style
rifles storming grocery stores, schools, churches, theaters — anyplace, really
— and mowing down scores of people in minutes. It is no comfort that my fear is
shared by so many Americans. In fact, that adds another dimension. We are,
increasingly, a country gripped by fear: It weakens us, gnaws at our
confidence, makes us more vulnerable than resolute.
When the
Supreme Court ruled recently that Americans have a right to carry a concealed
handgun in public, something froze in me. It won’t just be the sketchy-looking
guy with a backpack who sets off alarm bells, or the person wearing a big
jacket on a blazing hot day. It might also be the nondescript person who barely
gets noticed, who suddenly reaches into his pocket for a gun. Someone like John
Hinckley, who blended in until he didn’t.
Years ago,
someone quoted to me a statement they attributed — probably apocryphally — to
the Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu. The quote was, “You can do whatever
you want if you keep the people frightened enough.” There are people in America
who know this and are counting on it. And to have a country in which everyone
is scared of who might be legally carrying a gun as they walk through their
daily lives means we have a weakened country in which anything is possible.
Fear is a breeding ground for autocracy, and history shows us that every
democracy that has crumbled did so in an atmosphere of fear.
But fear is
not one-dimensional. There is a healthy version in which we learn caution; we
learn what to stay away from.
It was my
father who taught me to have a healthy fear of guns. I grew up in the 1950s,
when television staples were Westerns like “Gunsmoke” and “The Life and Legend
of Wyatt Earp.” The men had guns, someone was always getting shot, and they
would clutch their wounds and keep on fighting. My father was determined to
educate me about certain realities compared with what we were watching. Every
time, he would say things like: If that man were really shot in the shoulder at
that range, half his arm would be blown off. Or: He was just shot in the thigh.
He would not be limping along. He’d be bleeding out. I learned about the
femoral artery at a ridiculously young age.
Before I
was born, my father obtained a permit to carry a concealed gun. It was 1947; he
was the head of the Screen Actors Guild and it was a time of anti-Communist
fervor and intense labor disputes. He had gotten threats that acid would be
thrown in his face. His tires were slashed on one occasion. He said he wore the
gun in a shoulder holster and it was a horrible time in his life. It was
necessary, he said, but it didn’t really make him feel safer. It was a constant
reminder of how life can take a frightening turn, and he didn’t like living in
fear. He knew how corrosive it is.
On the day
my father was released from the hospital after John Hinckley nearly killed him,
my mother and I escorted him out. The world saw him confident, unafraid. What
you didn’t see was the Secret Service putting a bulletproof vest on him in the
hospital room, carefully strapping it over the long incision on his chest. That
evening at dinner I asked him if he would now endorse stricter gun control
legislation. My father had a stubborn streak, and he answered no, that stricter
laws wouldn’t have prevented what happened. By 1991 he had changed his mind,
supporting the Brady Bill and writing an Opinion essay for The New York Times
saying, “This level of violence must be stopped.”
Despite
bravely staring down his fear, my father did make some concessions to it. He
rarely attended church services. He said he was afraid he would be putting
other people in danger. I thought about that decades later, in 2017, when,
after receiving death threats following the publication of several of my
journalistic pieces, I decided to stop running my support group, Beyond
Alzheimer’s. I’d run it twice a week for six years, the schedule was public,
anyone could walk in, and I was increasingly haunted by the possibility that I
could be putting others at risk. One of the threats against me was credible
enough that I contacted the F.B.I. I remember after the Pulse nightclub
shooting, sitting in the support group with my stomach in knots, unable to
shake how vulnerable I thought we all were.
You are
never the same after gun violence has touched your life. From the deepest
wounds of those who have lost children, loved ones, friends — most recently in
Uvalde and Buffalo — to the survivors, like the kids from Parkland whose lives
have been changed forever, lives are never the same. You wonder when it will
happen again; there is a part of you that’s always watchful, always suspicious
of strangers. You get jumpy when someone reaches into a backpack. Increasingly,
because shootings have become so common in America, almost all people carry
around that fear, even if their own life hasn’t (yet) been touched by gun
violence.
Democracy
thrives when citizens feel emboldened by their country, when they feel
confident in their freedoms and in a government that exists to make their lives
safer, not more at risk. Democracy dies in the dark waters of fear, and that’s
where we are — swimming for our lives, wondering why a strident minority wants
us to drown.
Patti
Davis, daughter of President Ronald Reagan, is the author, most recently, of
“Floating in the Deep End.”


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário