Stop me if you’ve heard this one before


I know you’ve heard this one way too many times before, but this time, God tells a story.

Once there was a nation suffering the plague of gun violence. “Help us,” the nation prayed, “save us from the violence.” And God said, “You shall be provided with the legislative tools to ban assault weapons, high-capacity magazines, and other wartime instruments of death.” And lo, the nation said, “I’d rather not.” And so nothing came to pass.

“Help us,” the nation prayed a year or so later, “save us from the violence.” And God said, “You shall be provided with the best universities and research institutions in the world, so that you may study the topic of gun violence and arrive at solutions to this public health crisis yourselves.” And lo, the nation said, “Let’s make funding studies of gun violence illegal.” And so nothing came to pass.

“Help us,” the nation prayed a few months later, “save us from the violence.” And God said, “You shall be provided with the best mental health resources in the world, and you shall be provided with wealth beyond compare so that all who are struggling with homicidal or suicidal thoughts will have access to care.” And lo, the nation said, “Sounds socialist to me. Let’s make Medicaid harder to access, not easier. And, oh yeah, our leaders are going to spread hate and xenophobia to give people a reason to commit acts of violence.” And so nothing came to pass.

“Help us,” the nation prayed a few weeks later, “save us from the violence.” And God said, “If you are scared that the Supreme Court will overturn sensible gun laws, if you are scared of the lobbying power of the NRA, then you shall be provided with a way to create Constitutional Amendments overturning the Second Amendment and making it harder for lobbying groups to influence elections.” And lo, the nation said, “A Constitutional Amendment? Sounds kinda complicated. It can’t be done except for all those times it’s been done. Nope.” And so nothing came to pass.

“Help us,” the nation prayed a few days later, “save us from the violence.” And God said, “It seems like many of these shooters are white men. I think you should raise boys differently and look closely at what whiteness does to someone’s psychology.” And lo, the nation said, “How dare you even say that.”

And so God — that’s me — I’m sitting up here going, What the hell is wrong with you? I have given you people a raft. I have given you people a boat. I have given you a helicopter on top of a fucking cruise ship. And still you are drowning???

That’s so familiar. I told my own version of that very same parable in The Happy Atheist, only from the perspective of a nonbeliever. It came out a little differently.

Once upon a time, there was an atheist who was trapped in her house by a flood. As the waters rose higher and higher, she had to climb up on the roof, where she hoped for rescue.

A little later, her neighbors paddled by in a canoe, and offered to take her to high ground.

She got in the canoe.

See? That’s the difference between a godly person and an atheist. Our stories are shorter and
don’t assume the protagonist is an idiot.

I’m pleased to see that God is coming around to my perspective.

Comments

  1. militantagnostic says

    The one thing the Dayton shooting clearly indicates is that banning semi-automatics is a no-brainer. The police were already there when it started and opened fire as soon as the street was clear, but the shooter was able to kill 9 people and wound a bunch more in that short period of time.

  2. says

    This weekend, I read Sudden Sea: The Great Hurricane of 1938 and Isaac’s Storm: A Man, a Time, and the Deadliest Hurricane in History, and we’re in the middle of hurricane season.

    This post is raising my anxiety level.

  3. ardipithecus says

    I grew up on a farm and I always wondered why so many farmers were religious. The easiest things in the world to distinguish are the farms cared for by farmers and those cared for only by god.

  4. nomdeplume says

    Here is the introduction to a story on the BBC today:
    “Should US police be able to seize guns?
    President Donald Trump wants the power to take firearms from people who “pose a grave risk to public safety”.
    Seventeen US states have some kind of so-called red flags laws – now the president wants to expand their use, although it’s unclear how. In Colorado, one of these US sheriffs campaigned for this law – the other refuses to enforce it.”

    Seriously, America “Should US police be able to seize guns?” That this can even be a question suggests that your society has gone insane. The fact that a sheriff would refuse to confiscate a gun confirms it.