On Wednesday evening, a rifle-toting gunman murdered 18 people and wounded at least 13 more in Lewiston, Maine, when he opened fire at two separate locationsāa bowling alley, followed by a bar. A manhunt is still underway for 40-year-old suspect Robert Card, a trained firearms instructor with the U.S. Army Reserve who, just this summer, spent two weeks in a mental hospital after reporting that he was hearing voices and threatening to shoot up a military base.
While the other late-night talk show hosts stuck to poking fun at new Speaker of the House Mike Johnson on Thursday night, Stephen Colbert took his rebuke of the Louisiana congressman to a whole other level.
āNow, we know the arguments,ā Colbert said of the do-nothing response politicians generally have to tragedies such as this. āSome people are going to say this is a mental health issue. Others are going to say itās a gun issue. But thereās no reason it canāt be both.ā
That was exactly my point, thanks.
Banning things doesnāt make them magically go away.
What is your point, exactly? Because maybe thereās a misunderstanding here, because you seemed to make a pro-gun argument by forgetting that murder is, famously, a crime.
If thatās the case, it would raise the question: do you think we should regulate gun ownership to lower the rate of gun violence, the same way that the penalties for murder are meant to lower the rate of homicide? Or do you think we shouldnāt criminalize homicide, the same way people donāt want to regulate gun ownership, because if it isnāt 100% effective then itās not worth doing?
I wasnāt making an argument, I was making a joke. I was imagining a fictional character believing that illegal things magically canāt happen, and murder does happen so it must be legal, so the obvious solution would be to make it illegal so it would stop happening.
Ah, okay.
I was inclined to think you were serious because, believe it or not, itās an argument Iāve heard before. Apart from random people trying to futz through an argument, Ben Shapiro complained that Democrats, when asked what theyād ban, didnāt say ācrime.ā
I should add in seriousness, I do think itās important to recognize that laws donāt magically make things go away. Sometimes things are very hard to eliminate, and sometimes prohibition of something actually makes it worse like with the Drug War. But like you said about murder, we donāt say, āmurder bans didnāt actually eliminate murder, therefore we might as well get rid of them.ā