The Archbishop of Canterbury backed stricter gun controls in the wake of
the Sandy Hook school massacre, saying the ready availability of
weapons in a society where fear is already "rampant" pushes people to
extreme violence.
Delivering BBC Radio 4's Thought for the Day, Dr
Rowan Williams also warned that Britain had "better not be complacent"
about the gang-related gun and knife crime affecting its own youngsters.
A
minute's silence was held in America on Friday to remember the 20
children and six adult victims of the Connecticut shootings which have
thrust the fraught gun control debate back into the political spotlight.
In a defiant response, the National Rifle Association said the answer is arming teachers.
Dr
Williams said it is hard to "say and sing the words of this joyful
season while we think of lives cut so brutally short and of the
unimaginable loss and trauma suffered by parents.
He added: "Nearly 6,000 children and teenagers were killed by firearms in the USA in just two years. And
we had better not be complacent about the issues of gun and knife crime
affecting people in our own cities here. In the UK, the question is how
we push back against gang culture by giving people the acceptance and
respect they deserve so that they don't look for it in destructive
places. In the United States the question is of course about gun
laws - one of the most polarising issues in American politics."
While
individuals made the choice to use guns "it makes a difference to
people what weapons are at hand for them to use and even more what
happens to people in a culture where fear is rampant and the default
response to frightening or unsettling situations or personal tensions is
violence and the threat of violence," he said.
"People use guns
but, in a sense, guns use people too. When we have the technology for
violence easily to hand, our choices are skewed and we are more
vulnerable to being manipulated into violent action."