Visiting Las Vegas Still Causes Culture Shock, But Now, a Lot of it is About Guns
http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/shooting-it-all-las-vegas
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None of which is to say we didnt have a good time, although in some ways it was more a replica of enjoyment, like the fake Eiffel Tower, Statue of Liberty, Venetian canals and other reproductions that dot the Vegas landscape. This is America through the distorting, funhouse looking glass, whether its the 32-ounce, frozen cocktails in adult sippy cups or (Im not making this up) the Kardashian Khaos boutique in the Mirage Hotel.
And guns. True, we didnt spot anyone overtly packing heat, except for the occasional law enforcement officer, but the culture certainly was magnified all around us, from the stores with stacks of American Gun, the bestseller by Chris Kyle, the ex-Navy SEAL who was shot to death in Texas four months ago, to the multiple billboards advertising machine gun firing ranges and the jeeps in camouflage paint that prowl the boulevards promoting commando-style training in the desert.
The citys homicide rate for the first quarter of this year is up fifty percent from the same period in 2012. In February, for example, a fatal shooting on the Strip only a couple of blocks from our hotel led to a car crash that also killed a cab driver and his passenger, for a total of three deaths, and just two weeks before we arrived, two died and two were injured in a gun-related, double murder-attempted suicide.
The Vegas police department has above average success arresting the perpetrators75% against the national rate of 65%but oddly, as columnist J. Patrick Coolican of the Las Vegas Sun reports, In nonlethal shootings, when the victim survives, the criminal is more than 90 percent likely to get away with the crime
In 2012, for instance, there were 313 nonlethal assaults with firearms. Just 20 of the cases led to an arrest.