Tucson Shootings -- January 15
Washington Post: "Doctors at Tucson's University Medical Center said [Gabrielle] Giffords (D-Ariz.) remained in critical condition.... A ... tracheotomy was performed Saturday morning, they said. The 'tracheotomy tube was placed in her windpipe, protecting her airway and freeing her from the ventilator....' Surgeons also inserted a feeding tube to provide nutritional support. Doctors said these procedures are common among brain-injured patients."
New York Times: "A victim of the [Tucson] shooting ... was taken into custody on Saturday after the police and witnesses said the man spoke threateningly at a televised forum intended to help this stricken city heal. Eric Fuller, 63, a military veteran who was passionate about liberal causes and who had supported Ms. Giffords, was 'involuntarily committed for mental health evaluation.' ... Mr. Fuller, who was shot in the left knee and the back on Jan. 8, was among several victims, medical personnel and others who attended a special forum televised by ABC and hosted by Christiane Amanpour."
"Fanning the Flames." Peter Kramer, a Brown U. psychiatrist who specializes in treating paranoia -- a/k/a "delusional disorder" -- reflects on the factors that may have influenced Jared Loughner:
The public embrace of implausible beliefs creates a context of credulity.... Journalists and politicians who countenance conspiracy theories ... are enablers. They stand as exemplars of a mode of being that scorns doubt, celebrates grievances, and reframes ordinary disagreements as indicators of sinister intent. In the context of demonization and demagoguery, this embrace of paranoia helps to compose a politics of constant rage. It is convenient and convincing to say that no particular public figure is directly implicated in Loughner's actions. But I wonder whether finally the imputation of some responsibility is so easy to shed. -- Dr. Peter Kramer
... Read the whole article. Kramer's rebuke of Speaker John Boehner, et al., is telling. Thanks to a friend, who is a mental health professional, for pointing me to Kramer's article.
Melissa McEwan in AlterNet: "The shooting in Tucson was not an anomaly. It was an inevitability, and as long as we play this foolish game of 'both sides are just as bad,' it will be inevitable again." McEwan cites example after example of violent imagery spewed by leading right-wingers, then concludes,
This culture, this habit, of eliminationist rhetoric is not happening in a vacuum. It's happening in a culture of widely-available guns (thanks to conservative policies), of underfunded and unavailable medical care, especially mental health care (thanks to conservative policies), of a widespread belief that government is the enemy of the people (thanks to conservative rhetoric), and of millions of increasingly desperate people (thanks to an economy totally fucked by conservative governance).
** Denise Grady & Jennifer Medina of the New York Times recount the early efforts to save the victims of the Tucson shootings.
CW: Yesterday I linked to this story by Marc Lacey and other New York Times reporters, but it's been substantially altered to describe Jared Loughner's movements prior to the shooting. AND here's a pdf of the timeline, constructed by police, tracing Loughner's activities in the hours before he shot 20 people. The Washington Post translates the police timeline into a graphic, below. Also, see other helpful WashPo graphics here.
... Here's the Washington Post account by David Nakamura & others of Jared Loughner's movements before the shootings.
Amy Gardner of the Washington Post: "... one public figure has been uncharacteristically silent about one of the worst episodes of violence ever to befall his home state. Sen. John McCain (R) was on a congressional trip to Latin America at the time of the shooting and did not return to Arizona until Wednesday. He has granted no interviews and has not spoken about what happened in Tucson." CW: while I tend to agree with McCain's aide who justifies McCain's continuing his South American schedule, I saw several photos taken at different times during the Tucson memorial service in which McCain appeared to be glaring at President Obama. Here's one:
... In a Washington Post op-ed, Sen. McCain commends President Obama for his "comforting, inspiring & encouraging" speech at the Tucson memorial. He also excuses, without naming her, Sarah Palin's "blood libel" video. The overall tone of the piece is positive:
I disagree with many of the president's policies, but I believe he is a patriot sincerely intent on using his time in office to advance our country's cause. I reject accusations that his policies and beliefs make him unworthy to lead America or opposed to its founding ideals.
-- John McCain
Kirk Johnson & Charlie Savage of the New York Times: "As the prosecution phase nears and both federal and state courts pursue the case [against Jared Loughren], complications will inevitably appear — ... magnified by the sometimes sharply different requirements of the two court systems. The complications extend to the rules of evidence. Arizona state and federal rules differ significantly on what defense attorneys are entitled to hear before trial, and the federal and state teams could also head toward very different outcomes as well.... Arizona, unlike federal law, does not allow a finding of not guilty by reason of insanity. A defendant can only be found guilty, not guilty or guilty but insane."
Andrew Martin of the New York Times: "In the 25 years or so since the Glock company, based in Austria, began aggressively marketing firearms in this country, Glocks have become one of the best-selling pistols in America.... The guns are popular with law enforcement, consumers and, apparently, some young men intent on massacre. , who killed 32 at University in 2007, and Steven Kazmierczak, who killed five at in 2008, were armed with Glocks.... Glock has also benefited from changes in the American gun market. As the number of hunters has declined, so have sales of guns traditionally used for hunting. Sales of military-style rifles have increased and so have sales of handguns, in part, some gun experts say, because more states have passed concealed-weapons laws. The Glock 33, for instance, is a subcompact pistol marketed as a 'pocket rocket.'”