Rabbi Sol Solomon’s Rabbinical Reflection #106 (9/7/14) – UZI DOES IT

airs Sept. 6, 2014 on Dave’s Gone By.  Youtube clip:  http://youtu.be/XM9w34BrJf8

Shalom Dammit!  This is Rabbi Sol Solomon with a Rabbinical Reflection for the week of September 7, 2014.

 Chuck D once rapped, “My Uzi weighs a ton.”  If only Uzi submachine guns did weigh a ton, then children couldn’t pick them up and fire them.  But, of course, submachine guns are made purposely to be lightweight and portable yet still cause massive damage in a brief amount of time.  Like eating sugar-free Gummi Bears.

 Last week near Las Vegas, a nine-year-old girl was practicing on a gun range.  As Lewis Black would say, I shall repeat that.  There’s an Arizona firing range, about an hour from Sin City, where tourists can go practice their marksmanship under instructional supervision.  Among those tourists last week: a nine-year-old child.  (Not that there are any nine-year-old grownups – unless you count kids with the aging disease that makes them look like Mr. Magoo.)  This little girl was doing so well with regular weapons, that her instructor, Charles Vacca – the late Charles Vacca – said, “Oh, what the hell.  Let’s give her a repeating assault weapon, and see how she does.” 

 She did not do well.  I think most parents will tell you that a nine-year-old girl can barely control her bladder, let alone a semi-automatic machine gun.  Charles Vacca instructed the little tyke to pull the trigger and fire off one round at the target.  Which she did.  But you know, bullets are like potato chips; you fire one, before you know it, you’ve emptied the whole bag.  The difference between a snack food and an Israeli-made weapon of mass destruction is that a can of Pringles doesn’t have a kickback.  Well, unless they’re made with Olestra.  A machine gun, however, in the hands of someone who weighs fifty pounds, is gonna squeeze off fifty rounds.  One of those bullets managed to find its way to the middle of Charles Vacca’s forehead, which is why he had to cancel the rest of his classes through next Thursday.  His return after that depends on whether Moshiach comes on Friday and revives him.

 Otherwise, you’ve got a dead guy, a child who has to go through life knowing she killed him, and a gun industry saying, “Hey, freak accident.  We don’t need minimum age requirements, just height and weight suggestions.”  Morons.

 But there is some good that can come out of this tragic incident.  When this moppet murderess grows up and goes to college, she is the last chick any frat boy is gonna date rape.  (“Steer clear, bro.  Remember what she did to the last guy who grabbed her arm?”)  Also, in the big book of karma, you gotta figure this is payback for every deer that was ever minding its own business, frolicking in the woods and suddenly, BAM!, she’s on the hood of a four-by-four.  For once, Bambi’s mother gets to snicker and go, “How’s it feel, asshole?” 

 Lastly and bestly, this episode does serve to showcase the glorious superiority of Israeli technology.  Arabs can fire a thousand rockets out of Gaza, with two or three – almost by accident – hitting targets and causing damage.  But the Uzi submachine gun?  You pick that up and point, and you’re looking at a Jonestown massacre in seven seconds.  That’s craftsmanship!

 Anyhoo, the Arizona Last Stop shooting range where all this went down, is still open, still packed with customers, still promoting, quote, “a Desert Storm” atmosphere with a base age requirement of eight.  I shall repeat that: eight.  Folks, I have an eight-year-old kid, and I won’t even let her use a cheese grater.  Yes, I have to tolerate chunky wedges of parmesan on my linguini, but she keeps her fingers, and I keep my sanity.  Well, such as it is.

 This has been a Rabbinical Reflection from Rabbi Sol Solomon, Temple Sons of Bitches in Great Neck, New York.

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