After Arizona, Now What?

If you know what this is and where it is located, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest. / Daniel Terdiman/CNET
Harry Fuller spent decades in TV news in the San Francisco Bay Area, including stints as General Manager of KPIX-TV (CBS) and News Direcor at TechTV when it was founded in 1998. In 2001 he become Executive Producer for CNBC Europe. He later was the Executive Editor for CNET News.com.
The Arizona massacre reverberates across America's political landscape. There'll be discourse on our public discourse. The rhetoric about the vituperation in America's political rhetoric, the presence of war and violence images--that will go on and on. There's a verbal war about warlike verbiage. It sadly eclipses other crucial issues.
Beyond the real human concern for the real humans directly affected by the massacre and wounded, I can only hope three long-standing American problems, made manifest by the Tucson gunman, will not be ignored.
Mental Health Mess
How many mass killings, with legal weapons wielded by troubled young men do we need before we understand? We need preventive mental health measures. It might be worth a little effort and expense in our violence-prone public culture. What value do we place on innocent lives lost in preventable massacres?
The Jonesboro, Arkansas, massacre in 1998 was not enough.
Columbine High in 1999 was not enough.
Red Lake, Minnesota, was not enough.
Virginia Tech was not enough.
All these and the many more mass shootings in America's recent years share two things: guns and troubled, young shooters. The horrific Tucson massacre was not surprising nor even unforeseeable. It was horrible but seemingly inevitable. This ugly part of American history seems surely to be repeated.
We have almost no mental health system. The Virginia Tech killings are a case study of our entire society ignoring preventable disaster. We build towns on the beach in hurricane country. We treat mental illness like a rare, unpredictable disease. Hurricanes and psychotic behavior are both inevitable. When will we ever learn?
Tucson threatens to be similar to Virginia Tech. In either case were the parents or others close to the gunman able to get preventive treatment? Clear signals of coming violence must be taken seriously. Arizona has over 6.5 million residents. Statistics indicate there are tens of thousands of schizophrenic folks in Arizona.
Some portion of those are potentially violent. Arizona has just one public, modest-sized mental hospital.
If nothing changes in how we deal with mental illness, we just await the next mass shooting.
Guns
As the pro-gun lobby loves to tell us, guns don't kill people. True. People with guns kill people. And the bigger the gun, the more bullets the gunman can fire, the more people will be killed or wounded. Couldn't be clearer.
There's no effective way in the U.S. today to keep people who may be deranged from obtaining one of the more than 250-million legal guns here. It should be noted that we Americans own more guns per capita than any other nation on earth.
Does that make you feel safer?
Campaign Money
This lack of effective mental health intervention fits with readily available guns for anybody with some money and a desire to shoot. Neither problem will be dealt with as long as big money is gathered for political campaigns. The folks who nudge or push elected officials to ignore or deal with issues have a great deal of money. No moneyed interest sees much profit in dealing with mental illness issues. Thus our mentally ill will continue to populate our streets and allies, or troubled families. We all know there's a well-funded set of lobbyists to any local, state or federal government intervention in Americans owning guns.
There's profit in selling guns and ammunition. Some of money is used for constant lobbying. As long as hundreds of millions of dollars are spent in campaigns in America, guns will be easy to get and mental illness will be a non-issue. Their toxic mix will continue to have a horrific effect on our public welfare. Tucson will not be our last American mass shooting unless there is serious effort on both mental illness and easy gun access.
The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.
By Harry Fuller:
Special to CBSNews.com
Copyright 2011 CBS. All rights reserved. The Arizona massacre reverberates across America's political landscape. There'll be discourse on our public discourse. The rhetoric about the vituperation in America's political rhetoric, the presence of war and violence images--that will go on and on. There's a verbal war about warlike verbiage. It sadly eclipses other crucial issues.
Beyond the real human concern for the real humans directly affected by the massacre and wounded, I can only hope three long-standing American problems, made manifest by the Tucson gunman, will not be ignored.
Mental Health Mess
How many mass killings, with legal weapons wielded by troubled young men do we need before we understand? We need preventive mental health measures. It might be worth a little effort and expense in our violence-prone public culture. What value do we place on innocent lives lost in preventable massacres?
The Jonesboro, Arkansas, massacre in 1998 was not enough.
Columbine High in 1999 was not enough.
Red Lake, Minnesota, was not enough.
Virginia Tech was not enough.
All these and the many more mass shootings in America's recent years share two things: guns and troubled, young shooters. The horrific Tucson massacre was not surprising nor even unforeseeable. It was horrible but seemingly inevitable. This ugly part of American history seems surely to be repeated.
We have almost no mental health system. The Virginia Tech killings are a case study of our entire society ignoring preventable disaster. We build towns on the beach in hurricane country. We treat mental illness like a rare, unpredictable disease. Hurricanes and psychotic behavior are both inevitable. When will we ever learn?
Tucson threatens to be similar to Virginia Tech. In either case were the parents or others close to the gunman able to get preventive treatment? Clear signals of coming violence must be taken seriously. Arizona has over 6.5 million residents. Statistics indicate there are tens of thousands of schizophrenic folks in Arizona.
Some portion of those are potentially violent. Arizona has just one public, modest-sized mental hospital.
If nothing changes in how we deal with mental illness, we just await the next mass shooting.
Guns
As the pro-gun lobby loves to tell us, guns don't kill people. True. People with guns kill people. And the bigger the gun, the more bullets the gunman can fire, the more people will be killed or wounded. Couldn't be clearer.
There's no effective way in the U.S. today to keep people who may be deranged from obtaining one of the more than 250-million legal guns here. It should be noted that we Americans own more guns per capita than any other nation on earth.
Does that make you feel safer?
Campaign Money
This lack of effective mental health intervention fits with readily available guns for anybody with some money and a desire to shoot. Neither problem will be dealt with as long as big money is gathered for political campaigns. The folks who nudge or push elected officials to ignore or deal with issues have a great deal of money. No moneyed interest sees much profit in dealing with mental illness issues. Thus our mentally ill will continue to populate our streets and allies, or troubled families. We all know there's a well-funded set of lobbyists to any local, state or federal government intervention in Americans owning guns.
There's profit in selling guns and ammunition. Some of money is used for constant lobbying. As long as hundreds of millions of dollars are spent in campaigns in America, guns will be easy to get and mental illness will be a non-issue. Their toxic mix will continue to have a horrific effect on our public welfare. Tucson will not be our last American mass shooting unless there is serious effort on both mental illness and easy gun access.
The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.
By Harry Fuller:
Special to CBSNews.com














If we don't change the behavior of humans, nothing else will work.
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Well, the repubs have the definitive action required - more guns!
As for the money angle you will find that it is the pharmaceutical industry where the big money goes. They lobby to push pills at everyone for any conceivable reason. This becomes very important when you realize it is the person taking the drugs who is more likely to kill indiscriminately. Fore example,what you might think is a stop smoking aid is actually a powerful stimulus for murder. No one points that out, do they?
CBS has recently been twisting the facts in several story apparently just to create animosity and flame the fury of the uninformed. Double check the various opinions and the facts they portray and you will find they are extremely twisted.
By what authority are anti abortionists operating?
I have not heard of any election in which the unborn delegated that power to anyone.
As far as I can see, the far right just usurped that power.
They want guns because they want to usurp other powers.
President Lincoln insisted upon the principle of ballots instead of bullets.
He would never have approved of this!
Clifford Spencer
Of course Jared Loughner is a lone nut.
Lee Harvey Oswald was another lone nut.
All of the shots, that killed President John Kennedy, were fired from the Texas school book depository.
Sirhan Sirhan was another lone nut.
It was only a mere coincidence that he is a Moslem Palestinian.
John Wilkes Booth was another lone nut.
Thomas Herold was just in the wrong place when he was inside the barn that Booth was shot!
Lewis Payne just happened to attack Secretary of State William Seward the same night that Lincoln was shot!
They all just happened to stay at the boarding house of Mary Surratt!
Somehow, the military tribunal did not accept that theory.
They hanged conspirators!
Clifford Spencer
The VA Tech shooter knew as soon as those doors were locked behind him, he was safe because nobody was going to shoot back.
The proper response is to nervously laugh and dismiss the possibility.
Payment for your services leads to ownership of property. That is the documentation that you are not a slave. Ownership of a corporation is included in that arrangement. Buy stock and go to a shareholder meeting.