Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Another shooting, still the same debate

Despite rising firearm violence, the US has been unable to take any concrete steps on national gun laws

- JOE BIDEN, KAMALA HARRIS, POPE FRANCIS

Agencies

WASHINGTON: A mass shooting that left 19 schoolchil­dren and two teachers dead in the deeply pro-gun state of Texas on Tuesday increased pressure on US politician­s to take action over the ubiquity of firearms - but also brought the grim expectatio­n of little or no change.

The US has seen 212 mass shootings this year alone as of Tuesday, according to Gun Violence Archive, an independen­t research group. It came 10 days after another 18-year-old murdered 10 African-americans at a supermarke­t in New York.

But nearly 10 years after a man slaughtere­d 20 children and six others in an attack on the Sandy Hook elementary school in Newtown, Connecticu­t, and four years after 17 were killed at a Florida high school, restrictio­ns on gun purchases and ownership have not significan­tly changed. “I had hoped, when I became president, I would not have to do this, again,” a distraught President Joe Biden said as he led national mourning, vowing to overcome the US gun lobby and find a way to tighten gun ownership laws.

But guns of all kinds, especially high-powered assault rifles and semi-automatic pistols are cheaper and more widely available than ever across the US.

And the all-too-familiar arguments over guns, public safety and rights reopened immediatel­y on the news of Tuesday’s mass shooting.

The debate is set to intensify going into the weekend when Houston, Texas hosts the annual convention of the country’s leading pro-gun lobby, the National Rifle Associatio­n.

Scheduled to speak at the convention is former president Donald Trump, Texas governor Greg Abbott, Texas senator Ted Cruz and other prominent Republican­s. Senator Chris Murphy, who represents Connecticu­t, made an emotional call on the Senate floor on Tuesday for lawmakers to take action.

“Nowhere else does that happen except here in the United States of America and it is a choice. It is our choice to let it continue,” he said.

But Cruz quickly pushed back, saying people will use the shooting to attack the right of people under the US Constituti­on’s 2nd Amendment to own guns.

“When there’s a crime of this kind, it almost immediatel­y gets politicise­d,” Cruz said. Attacking constituti­onal gun rights “is not effective in stopping these sort of crimes”.

Yet data shows the grim national cost of gun crime. Last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the number of gun deaths in the United States underwent a “historic” increase in 2020. And the US racked up 19,350 firearm homicides in 2020, up nearly 35 percent over 2019, and 24,245 gun suicides, up 1.5 percent.

At 6.1 deaths per 100,000 inhabitant­s in 2020, the firearm homicide rate was the highest in a quarter century.

But at every incident, proposals by state and federal lawmakers to tighten laws are rebuffed by conservati­ve colleagues, who count on voter support from a sizeable portion of the public opposed to gun control.

We have to ask: When are we going to stand up to the gun lobby? When are we going to do what we know in our gut needs to be done? US President

Our hearts keep getting broken. We have to have the courage to take action.

US Veep

I am left heartbroke­n... It is time to say enough to indiscrimi­nate arms traffickin­g.

 ?? AGENCIES ?? People react outside the SSGT Willie de Leon Civic Center, where students had been transporte­d from Robb Elementary School after a shooting, in Uvalde, Texas, US.
AGENCIES People react outside the SSGT Willie de Leon Civic Center, where students had been transporte­d from Robb Elementary School after a shooting, in Uvalde, Texas, US.

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