Another chapter of guns in America: Another useless death
Many Japanese dream of studying in America. Yoshihiro Hattori's dream turned into a nightmare. Hattori just came to America to study English. On October 17, 1992, he and his homestay brother thought they were going to a Halloween party. They drove to the wrong home, that of Rodney and Bonnie Peairs. Rodney Peairs, armed with a .44 magnum revolver with a laser sight, stepped outside. Peairs, a supermarket butcher, obviously felt threatened by this slight Japanese high school student in a tuxedo. Peairs said, "Freeze." Hattori, not understanding what to do, walked toward Peairs. Peairs shot his gun just like Dirty Harry. Hattori, a Japanese exchange student studying in gun country, who had only wanted to see America and learn English, was dead.
Newspapers and talk shows in Japan and America repeated again and again that Hattori would have been alive if he had understood the word "freeze," but the problem was not linguistics. Hattori did not understand that you should stop when you see someone with a gun. Do not walk toward them. Language is not relevant. This, however, was certainly no excuse for Peairs, a supermarket butcher, to kill a high school student who had come to America to study English. We certainly cannot hold Hattori responsible for his death, even though he made a fatal mistake. It is not reasonable to expect him to think that ringing the wrong doorbell will lead to a butcher shooting him with a .44 magnum.
Peairs's .44 magnum revolver was the gun popularized by Dirty Harry, who described the gun as "the most powerful handgun in the world". Dirty Harry was holding this instrument of death when he said, "Make my day." A butcher working in a supermarket has little need for such a gun. Few Americans need such a gun, but they are easily available in America. If they were not, Hattori might still be alive today. Peairs had probably seen Dirty Harry in action. Perhaps he fantasized about helping to rid America of crime. Hattori paid the price.
Japan is not 100% free of guns, but it is very close. Some hunters have guns and some of the yakuza, who are Japanese gangsters, have guns, but the average citizen in Japan is highly unlikely to see a gun or be injured by one. Japanese live in much greater danger of choking to death on some rice product, not exactly a death that strikes fear into the Japanese heart. Japanese often imagine that all Americans have guns. While this is obviously false, enough of the wrong people have guns.
The NRA says that when guns are outlawed, only outlaws will have guns. While Americans are divided on this statement, Japanese are not. Japan is not problem-free, but guns are not a problem worth mentioning. The Japanese populace appears perfectly happy with an almost gun free society. Still, many Japanese are in love with America and the freedom and individuality America represents to them. Some of them travel to America and find death instead of freedom. Hattori was neither the first nor the last Japanese to die a violent death in America.
Hollywood movies are very popular in Japan, including Clint Eastwood movies. A generation of Japanese and Americans watched Dirty Harry movies with fascination and applause, entertained by Clint Eastwood as Dirty Harry. Dirty Harry may not have played by the rules, but he never shot the wrong man. Peairs, a butcher in more ways than one, did.
Japan was outraged and couldn't understand. Many Americans were outraged again over a needless gun death as they had been before and would be again. Still, gun deaths continue in America as guns are easy for anyone to buy legally or illegally. The question is how much carnage is necessary for the United States to have the desire and the will to stop these gun deaths.
About the Author
Aaron Language Services (http://www.aaronlanguage.com ) provides translation, editing, and more for a primarily Japanese client base. If you are an experienced editor, specializing in medicine or the hard sciences, we are always looking for experienced editors. Click on the menu at our top page where it says personnel, in English, for more information about the work and how to contact us.
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