CONTACT US   SUBSCRIBE   PREMIUM   ADVERTISING

75F Hi 78F
Lo 68F

Recent Blog Posts

A Glimpse of Evil

Editorial of The New York Sun | April 17, 2007

A glimpse of evil as ghastly as Americans got in Virginia yesterday tends to cast a pall over the nation. President Bush spoke for millions when he said, "We hold the victims in our hearts. We lift them up in our prayers and we ask a loving God to comfort those who are suffering today." Millions got up as they ordinarily do yesterday and expected to spend a normal day, only to find themselves glued to the television sets as the grim story unfolded. Parents thought about their children. Children thought about their friends. From all walks of life people tried to comprehend the kind of monster that stalked the Virginia Tech campus.

Soon the talk will turn to the policy implications, as our Bradley Hope reports on page one this morning, particularly because it occurs at the start of a presidential campaign in which Mayor Bloomberg is seeking to make guns a national issue. The shooting erupted as a little noticed legal war was gathering between Virginia and New York over our city's legal maneuvering to stem the sale of what Mayor Bloomberg calls illegal guns. The smell of cordite hadn't cleared from the Virginia Tech campus when the declared candidates for president began addressing the shooting, ending, as Mr. Hope put it, "what had been seen as an unwillingness to fully address gun issues so far in the campaign."

Only weeks before the shooting, Virginia's legislature "shot down," according to a January 31 report on the Web site of the Roanoke Times, a bill that, as the paper put it, "would have given college students and employees the right to carry handguns on campus." The story reported that a spokesman for Virginia Tech, Larry Hincker, was happy to hear the bill was defeated. "I'm sure," the paper quoted Mr. Hincker as saying, "the university community is appreciative of the General Assembly's actions because this will help parents, students, faculty and visitors feel safe on our campus."

Today, however, the question hanging over this tragedy is whether the legislature acted wisely or whether, in fact, the campus would have been safer had the students and others been permitted to keep and bear arms in the dorms and on the greenswards. It's not a theoretical question. In 2002, according to a report on CNSNews.com, a disgruntled student at the Appalachian Law School, Peter Odighizuwa, allegedly shot and killed the school's dean, a professor, and a student on campus. He was subdued, CNSNews.comreported, only when two students reportedly ran to their cars to fetch their own guns and returned to confront the killer, who surrendered.

This led the president of the Second Amendment group at another school, George Mason University, to start looking into reforming bans on weapons on campus. That issue, already alive on campuses across the country, will grow only larger in the wake of the tragedy at Virginia Tech. It will be an important debate. We don't believe any public policy will be able to expunge from society the kind of insanity or evil that leads to the kinds of acts witnessed yesterday. But we do believe that Americans have the capacity to reason out their own choices about how to defend themselves. And to reach out in their thoughts and prayers to the families who lost loved ones on the campus of Virginia Tech.


Reader comments on this article

Comment By Date

Naturally, what we--the country with the most guns,the most murders by guns, the most weapons manufacturers and weapon sellers in... [MORE]

Don Satterlee 

Apr 17, 2007 11:25

Allow me to correct Don Saterlee. Virginia Tech type incidents do not occur daily in Iraq. What does occur... [MORE]

David Eisenberg 

Apr 18, 2007 12:09

>>The Second Amendment was never intended to arm violently disposed people with modern mass killing machines.

Well, that is correct. The... [MORE]

Dave Blackmon 

Apr 20, 2007 15:13

If it had been a tornado in VA, they would have found a way to warn the students.

It had been... [MORE]

Jay Larson 

Apr 17, 2007 11:59

The constitution allows everyone the authority to own a weapon. When it was written its constructors had no way of... [MORE]

dan mckeown 

Apr 30, 2007 05:30

Nearly twenty years ago a woman friend of mine, staunchly anti-gun, was sitting in her boyfriend's convertible waiting for him... [MORE]

A.L. 

Apr 17, 2007 13:50

As a pediatric physician, I can tell you universal allowance of handgun possession is not the answer to the escalating... [MORE]

Doreen Ciancaglini 

Apr 17, 2007 14:13

I find the editorial's labeling of the culprit as "evil" rather unhelpful. Certainly his acts could be labelled as evil.... [MORE]

Guy B. Jones 

Apr 17, 2007 14:20

Hey, 9-11 was the biggest mass slaughter in our history...No guns were involved. [MORE]

Edmond J. Gruenenfelder 

Apr 19, 2007 12:26

Although it is nearly universally accepted that there are individuals who are mentally burdened, the murdered remain murdered, and the... [MORE]

George Rivera 

Apr 23, 2007 20:18

Some of what I am reading about Cho today suggest he was crazy not evil. There is a difference. Unfortunately, from... [MORE]

obera 

Apr 17, 2007 14:49

There is no sanity in the 'Insanity of Gun Obsession' response. The point this person misses, and most people who... [MORE]

CR Mountjoy 

Apr 17, 2007 17:46

We will never get rid of guns in this country. And I say that being an anti-gun person. I have... [MORE]

Garrett 

Apr 18, 2007 13:51

To Ciancaglini,Garrett,Saterlee. You are living in a dream world if you thing any kind of a law would have stopped... [MORE]

Rogers Marshall 

Apr 18, 2007 18:23

Every time an atrocity of this nature occurs, somehow we as a nation seem to forget the loss of X... [MORE]

A Troubled American 

Apr 18, 2007 18:07

The Virginia Tech shootings provoke cries for draconian gun control laws enlisting wisdom from bureaucrats and politicians comparable to those... [MORE]

Nolan Nelson 

Apr 21, 2007 21:22

You all are missing the point here. This is what happens when you try to limit who can own a... [MORE]

Jack Modena 

Apr 29, 2007 18:01

Comment on this article

    Before submitting your comment, please provide a valid email address to complete the verification process.

    Fall Education
    A New York Sun Advertorial Section

    NEW YORK ›

    A Surge of Support for the Sun Voiced by Leaders in the City

    19 Columbia Freshmen Jump to the Ivy League From the Armed Forces

    2 Arrested for Running Prostitution Ring

    Community Organizers 'Appalled' by Their Portrayal

    City Teacher Charged With Section 8 Fraud

    More School Construction Is Urged for Manhattan

    NATIONAL ›

    Detroit Mayor To Step Down: 'I Lied Under Oath'

    Tropical Storm Hanna Set To Soak East Coast

    Palin Speech Draws More Than 40 Million Viewers

    Abortion Rights Group Sees 'Discrepancy' in Palin Stance

    Bush To Announce Troop Levels in Iraq Next Week

    Abramoff Sentenced to Four Years in Corruption Scandal

    ARTS+ ›

    This Old House: Godfrey Cheshire's Family History

    Alan Ball Is Looking for Trouble

    Latinbeart 2008: The Heart of Latin America Is Strong

    'Mister Foe': The Boy Who Cried Mother

    'Everybody Wants To Be Italian': Love Is Never Saying ... Anything

    'August Evening': A Repressed Family in the Land of the Free