Another school shooting, and Congress will remain impotent to do anything

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Estimated time to read:

3–4 minutes

Well, one more school shoot­ing!  Did any­one real­ly expect that there would not be anoth­er one?  And the shoot­ers are get­ting younger, gain­ing access to the weapons kept in their house­holds.  It seemed inevitable that the par­ent of the lat­est shoot­er would also be arrest­ed and charged since par­ents are, more and more, being sub­ject­ed to the con­se­quences of allow­ing their chil­dren access to weapons.

The lat­est shoot­er at Apalachee school in Georgia was only 14 years old.  And even though he only killed four and injured nine oth­ers, the occur­rence of these shoot­ings says some­thing real­ly hor­rif­ic about American soci­ety, a soci­ety in which there are more guns than people.

Though school shoot­ings total in the scores, even over fair­ly recent years, the worst of these still remain in the minds of many of us.

At Virginia Tech on April 16, 2007 a col­lege stu­dent killed 32 stu­dents and faculty.

Perhaps the most hor­ren­dous of all the school shoot­ings was Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut on December 14, 2012.  Imagine.  Just eleven days before the holi­est day of Christianity, twen­ty kids aged six and sev­en and six adults, were slaugh­tered by a 20-year-old wield­ing an assault rifle.

February 14, 2018 was the day that 17 stu­dents and teach­ers were killed and anoth­er 17 wound­ed at Parkland High School in Florida.

And on May 24, 2022, 19 stu­dents between the ages of nine and 11 and two teach­ers were sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly killed at an Uvalde, Texas school while local law enforce­ment failed to inter­vene expeditiously.

So, when these school shoot­ings occur so peri­od­i­cal­ly, there is no rea­son for any­one to expect that they will cease, and cer­tain­ly not so when the avail­abil­i­ty of weapons is so prevalent.

If the deaths of twen­ty and nine­teen chil­dren can do noth­ing to spur law­mak­ers, it is com­plete­ly unlike­ly that the deaths of two stu­dents in the lat­est assault will do so either.

For me the basic ques­tion is this: How much NRA mon­ey does it take to buy the life of a sin­gle child?

Our Congress is impo­tent when it comes to real­is­ti­cal­ly address­ing the prob­lem of gun vio­lence because the flow of funds into the cof­fers of Congress from the likes of the NRA is blind­ing our leg­is­la­tors to even try­ing to find some rea­son­able solu­tion to the problem.

It’s not a mat­ter of con­fis­cat­ing guns.  But it may require that the man­u­fac­ture of cer­tain types of guns be cur­tailed and that the flow of unreg­is­tered and ille­gal guns be stopped, and back­ground checks be strength­ened and more rig­or­ous­ly enforced.

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Too many law­mak­ers con­tin­u­al­ly try to sug­gest that the prob­lem isn’t the guns but one of men­tal health.  Poppycock!  If some­one with men­tal health prob­lems only had access to a base­ball bat, that per­son would be far less like­ly to com­mit the huge num­bers of casu­al­ties that occur when an AR-15 or oth­er assault rifle or even a simi-auto­mat­ic pis­tol is involved.

Lawmakers and judges who claim to be “orig­i­nal­ists,” seek­ing to apply the arti­cles of the Constitution as they “believe” the framers intend­ed, are the very same indi­vid­u­als who con­sis­tent­ly refuse to rec­og­nize that very vex­ing clause in the Second Amendment, “A well reg­u­lat­ed militia….”

And can those orig­i­nal­ists tru­ly believe that the framers ever con­sid­ered the tech­nol­o­gy that has pro­vid­ed the weapons of today that make mass killing so easy?

This should not be a Democrat vs. Republican issue.  Undoubtedly, the chil­dren who have died in these inci­dents were the off­spring of par­ents of both polit­i­cal parties.

In the final analy­sis, the croc­o­dile-tears and “prayers and thoughts” will do noth­ing to stop the deaths of the chil­dren of this coun­try.  And every par­ent will sleep a bit more uneasi­ly ques­tion­ing if these episodes will be vis­it­ed on their own chil­dren, regard­less of how small the com­mu­ni­ty in which they live.

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