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The price we pay for freedom. To own guns.

The price we pay for freedom. To own guns. 

by digby

Remember this from a few days ago?

Weirdly, I haven’t heard anyone suggest that the family of the man who shot up a movie theatre last night should be deported. Or punished in any way.

It appears that he was a man with serious mental problems.  So was the Chattanooga shooter as it turns out. They don’t know what specifically motivated this 58 year old man to take up arms last night and killing people. The same with the Chattanooga shooter.  Either way, innocent people are equally dead.

But the reactions to this fellow in Louisiana seems to be calm acceptance that in a society awash in guns this is just something that’s bound to happen and there’s nothing we can do about it. The Chattanooga shooting brought out a flood of toxic xenophobia and calls for the government to throw away the constitution to “protect” us from future crimes like that.

The only real difference between the two crimes is the race and religion of the perpetrators. But the danger to the public is exactly the same:  a person gets a gun and shoots innocent people and (usually) goes out in a blaze of glory.

FBI chief James Comey is completely freaked out by “troubled souls” who are perpetrating these killings — but only the Muslim ones. All the other ones are just a sad price we pay for our freedom. To have lots and lots of guns.

Update: Dave Weigel has an interesting piece on the Lafayette shooter:

John Russell Houser, the man police say opened fire inside a Lafayette, La., movie theater on Thursday night, had boasted in an online profile that he made dozens of appearances on television talk shows.

The hosts of those shows said Friday that Houser over-stated his role, but they do remember him as an argument-starting guest who was angry about high taxes and the growing power of women.

“I had him on strictly because he was entertaining,” said Calvin Floyd, the former host of the talk show “Rise and Shine” on WLTZ NBC 38 in Columbus, Ga. “He was radical, and when you’re looking for a person on a live show, taking calls, that’s what you want.”

On a LinkedIn profile, Houser claimed to have “guest hosted” the show at least “60 times.” According to Floyd, who has since retired from the station, Houser’s role was limited to call-ins and occasional debates on “15 or 20 episodes,” starting with a call about a fight he was having with the city’s water department. Sometimes, Houser – “pretty much a radical Republican,” in Floyd’s view – would be pitted against a local Democrat to tear into the issues of the day.

“Whatever he wanted to talk about, it would generate calls,” said Floyd. “He was anti-abortion. The best I can recall, Rusty had an issue with feminine rights. He was opposed to women having a say in anything. You could talk with him a few minutes, and you would know he had a high IQ but there was a lot missing with him.”

Houser allegedly killed two people and wounded nine others who were watching the new comedy “Trainwreck,” a film written by and starring the feminist comedian Amy Schumer. But the calls and television appearances in Columbus started and ended more than a decade ago.

“He was sort of a gadfly type, a frequent caller to the show,” recalled Doug Kellet, the host from 1991 to 2001 of the Columbus, Ga., series TalkLine. “I don’t remember him as a guest as anything but a candidate for city council. He had lot of anti-tax issues, and apart from that campaign, he was one of the guys who’d show up to city meetings to complain. There were a lot of people going to city council to do that back then. And we had the show where you could really hammer local politicians.”

Well he wasn’t a Muslim. So there’s that.

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