Fiji Sun

‘Don’t be numb to this’: Battling despair over gun deaths

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Buffalo, New York: Increasing­ly it feels like America is at war with itself.

In New Orleans, just days into the new year, a 14-year-old girl was shot to death, along with her father and uncle. A few days after, in a Virginia classroom, a 6-yearold boy pulled out a gun and shot his first-grade teacher. That news was eclipsed by a mass shooting at a California dance studio last weekend that left 11 people dead. A day later and a few hundred miles away, a farmworker opened fire in a beachside town, killing seven coworkers. Three more were killed and four wounded in a shooting at a short-term rental home in an an upscale Los Angeles neighborho­od early Saturday.

Just keeping track of all the shootings has become overwhelmi­ng, with the locations, circumstan­ces and the names of the victims running together into a seemingly endless trail of bloodshed and grief. And many Americans are deeply pessimisti­c that anything will soon change. When President Joe Biden signed a bill last year to fight gun violence — the first such measure to pass Congress in a generation — a substantia­l majority supported it. But 78% said they believed it would do little or nothing at all, a survey by the Pew Research Center found.

The sheer number of killings and the glacial pace of the political response “breeds a sense of powerlessn­ess and despair,” said Pedro Noguera, the dean of the school of education at the University of Southern California and a sociologis­t who has studied gun violence for more than two decades.

 ?? Photo: AP ?? From left, Zeneta Everhart, whose son Zaire Goodman, 20, was shot in the neck during the Buffalo Tops supermarke­t mass shooting and survived, Roy Guerrero, a pediatrici­an from Uvalde, Texas, MiguelCerr­illo, father of Miah Cerrillo fourth grade student at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, and Lucretia Hughes, of DC Project, Women for Gun Rights, are sworn in to testify during a House Committee on Oversight and Reform hearing on gun violence on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, June 8, 2022. The month after the supermarke­t shooting, she and other victims’ relatives testified before a House committee about the need for gun safety legislatio­n. Two weeks later, Biden signed the gun violence bill.
Photo: AP From left, Zeneta Everhart, whose son Zaire Goodman, 20, was shot in the neck during the Buffalo Tops supermarke­t mass shooting and survived, Roy Guerrero, a pediatrici­an from Uvalde, Texas, MiguelCerr­illo, father of Miah Cerrillo fourth grade student at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, and Lucretia Hughes, of DC Project, Women for Gun Rights, are sworn in to testify during a House Committee on Oversight and Reform hearing on gun violence on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, June 8, 2022. The month after the supermarke­t shooting, she and other victims’ relatives testified before a House committee about the need for gun safety legislatio­n. Two weeks later, Biden signed the gun violence bill.
 ?? Photo: AP ?? Women pause at a memorial at a vigil honoring the victims of a shooting at the Star Ballroom Dance Studio on January 23, 2023, in Monterey Park, Californin­a.
Photo: AP Women pause at a memorial at a vigil honoring the victims of a shooting at the Star Ballroom Dance Studio on January 23, 2023, in Monterey Park, Californin­a.

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