The Algonquin Lesson: Why We Keep Failing at Reducing Gun Violence
The myth of the quick fix is killing us more than the guns themselves.
The Algonquin Lesson: Why We Keep Failing at Reducing Gun Violence
The myth of the quick fix is killing us more than the guns themselves.
The Jack Hopkins Now Newsletter #539: Friday, September 12th, 2025.
Ancient Wisdom vs. Our Modern Madness
The Algonquins understood something America has forgotten.
They understood that every decision carried weight not just for today… not just for this season… but for generations down the line.
Think about that.
When they cleared land…when they rationed food…when they planned raids or made peace…they did so with a question in their minds: “How will this affect the children of the children of the children who come after me?”
Now look at us. Look at Washington. Look at the screaming matches on cable news… the political theater…the endless social media firestorms.
We’re not thinking about the seventh generation. Hell…we’re not even thinking seven days ahead.
We live in a system that prizes the instant. Instant outrage. Instant legislation. Instant gratification.
And nowhere is this sickness more obvious than in the debate about guns.
The Trap of “Do Something Now”
You’ve felt it. I’ve felt it. The gut punch of another headline. Another school. Another child. Another funeral.
The pressure mounts. People cry out: “Do something now! End this madness!”
But here’s the trap: the louder we scream for an instant solution, the less likely we are to get any solution at all.
Call for a total ban? The other side digs in.
Call for arming everyone? The opposition explodes.
Result? Stalemate. Polarization. Paralysis.
And while we scream at each other…the blood keeps flowing.
That’s not leadership. That’s not strategy. That’s panic dressed up as policy.
The Algonquin Contrast
The Algonquins didn’t think that way.
They weren’t perfect…no people are…but they carried a worldview that put survival ahead of ego. They understood the land…the seasons…the fragile balance of life.
They understood that rash decisions today could mean starvation or extinction tomorrow.
That’s the mindset we’ve lost.
We look at gun violence and demand instant perfection. But instant perfection is impossible. So we get nothing.
The Algonquins would look at this and shake their heads. They’d tell us: “Stop screaming for the impossible tomorrow. Start planting seeds today that will bear fruit decades from now.”
Why We’re Stuck: The Political Short-Term Disease
Let’s talk about why nothing changes.
The ugly truth is this: politicians don’t care about solutions that take decades. They care about solutions that take election cycles.
If it doesn’t deliver headlines in 24 hours…it’s ignored.
If it doesn’t show results in 2 years…it’s abandoned.
If it doesn’t build a “legacy,” it’s never pursued.
That’s why politicians leap to extreme proposals. A gun ban. A sweeping crackdown. A flashy…impossible fix.
It makes for a good press conference. It rallies donors. It cements talking points.
But it does nothing for the mother who just buried her child.
The Myth of the Instant Fix
Here’s what no one wants to say out loud:
There will never be an instant fix.
Not a ban.
Not a magical law.
Not a silver bullet.
And the longer we chase the fantasy of the instant…the more we delay the reality of the long-term.
We’ve been conned into believing that if a problem isn’t solved today…it’s not worth solving.
That’s the great lie.
That’s the rot in the system. That’s the reason we’ve been spinning our wheels for decades while the body count climbs.
The Hidden Truth: Small Seeds…Huge Harvests
Let me show you the hidden truth nobody wants to talk about.
The biggest payoffs often come from the smallest…least glamorous changes.
Safe storage laws.
How many kids shoot themselves or their friends because guns are lying around? Lockboxes and incentives could save thousands of lives over a decade.
Smart gun technology.
Imagine firearms that only discharge with biometric approval. Expensive now? Sure. But in 20 years? Ubiquitous…and life-saving.
Community intervention.
Violence interrupters in high-risk neighborhoods have already shown huge reductions in shootings. Scale it nationally…and you could save tens of thousands of lives.
Mental health pipelines.
Not a press-conference grabber…but building infrastructure for prevention is the kind of long-term investment that changes history.
These aren’t sexy. They don’t deliver overnight miracles. But stacked…compounded… and pursued relentlessly? They bend the curve.
What the Algonquins Teach Us About Policy
The Algonquins survived because they played the long game.
They rotated hunting grounds.
They practiced controlled burns.
They passed down oral traditions so the next generation wouldn’t repeat the last one’s mistakes.
Every decision was about stewardship…not glory.
Now imagine if we treated gun violence the same way: not as a stage for politicians to strut on…but as a generational mission.
Imagine if we said: “By the time today’s children are grandparents, America will have half the gun deaths it does now.”
Not an overnight miracle. But a generational goal. A slow…steady…relentless march.
That’s the Algonquin way.
The Aha! Moments
Here’s where I want you to feel the fire in your gut…those “Ahhhh!” moments where the hidden angles snap into place.
Aha #1:
We already run our finances this way. You don’t demand instant retirement. You invest a little at a time…knowing decades of compounding will pay off big. Why not apply the same logic to lives saved?
Aha #2:
We already run medicine this way. No one screams for cancer to be cured in a year. We fund research…trials…prevention…knowing breakthroughs take decades. Why not treat violence like a disease?
Aha #3:
We already run infrastructure this way. Highways…bridges…grids…built and maintained over generations. Nobody expects an instant road to appear overnight. Why not see gun safety the same way?
You see it now…don’t you?
The insanity isn’t that gun violence exists.
The insanity is that we keep demanding miracle cures instead of doing the slow…steady work every other sector of life demands.
The Psychology of “All or Nothing”
Let me lay bare the psychology at work.
When a tragedy strikes…people default to all or nothing. Ban it all. Or do nothing.
Why? Because all-or-nothing feels emotionally satisfying. It feels big. It feels like action.
But it’s a trap.
A psychological con job. Because while people fight over extremes…the middle ground…the actual ground where lives could be saved…lies abandoned.
The Algonquins didn’t play that game. They knew survival wasn’t about all or nothing. It was about small steps…repeated endlessly…until survival was secured.
What Politicians Don’t Want You to Know
Here’s the dirty secret: politicians don’t actually want long-term solutions.
Why? Because long-term solutions mean someone else gets the credit.
If you pass a law that saves 50,000 lives over 50 years…guess what? You’re dead and gone before the final numbers are in. No legacy. No statue. No book deal.
That’s why Washington avoids the slow grind. It doesn’t feed the ego.
But that’s exactly why we the people must demand it.
Stop Falling for the Con
This is where I grab you by the shirt collar.
Stop falling for the con.
Stop letting politicians feed you the drug of instant fixes. Stop swallowing the lie that anything less than perfection tomorrow is worthless.
That mindset is killing people. Literally.
The Algonquins knew better. They knew you plant trees not for yourself…but for those who come after.
If we don’t reclaim that wisdom…we’ll keep bleeding while politicians keep posing.
The Practical Blueprint: Generational Change in Action
Let me hand you a practical blueprint…the seeds we can plant today that will yield massive dividends over generations:
Safe Storage Incentives.
Tax breaks…insurance discounts…cultural campaigns that normalize locking guns away. Could cut child gun deaths in half within a generation.
Smart Tech Investment.
Fund innovation in biometric firearms. Mandate them in phases…the way seatbelts and airbags became standard. Decades from now…they’ll be the norm.
Violence Interrupters.
Expand programs in urban neighborhoods proven to reduce shootings by 30–60%. Scale that nationally. Long-term payoff: massive.
Mental Health Infrastructure.
Not just crisis hotlines…but integrated community systems that catch problems before they erupt. Expensive…yes. Worth it…absolutely.
Generational Goals.
Publicly commit to reducing gun deaths by X% over 20, 40, 60 years. Track it relentlessly. Measure progress across administrations.
That’s not fantasy. That’s stewardship. That’s how you actually save lives.
The Fire We Pass On
The Algonquins knew every decision was a ripple that reached beyond their own lives.
We’ve forgotten that. We’ve traded generational stewardship for instant gratification… and we’re drowning in the blood of that mistake.
Gun violence won’t be solved tomorrow. But it can be solved across generations.
If we plant the seeds now…if we refuse to let politicians con us with instant fixes…our children’s children’s children…could live in a safer America.
That’s the Algonquin lesson.
That’s the only way forward.
The question is simple:
Will we have the courage to think like them? Or will we keep screaming for miracles while the funerals keep piling up?
I’m glad you’re here. I’ll be back…soon.
Warmly,
-Jack
I would add to your suggestions:
1. Red flag laws. Keep guns out of the hands of abusers. Less women die.
2. Bump stock laws. No extended magazines.
3. Stretch goal of not allowing military-grade weapons in civilian life.
You have perfectly described the system thinking Archetype “Shifting the Burden” thank you for your wisdom