Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE LEFT SWOOPS IN ON LAS VEGAS MASSACRE

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The dead weren’t even finished dying in Las Vegas before the left swooped down to feed on gun control politics.

So rather than allow even one day to reflect and mourn, rather than allow us to consider the heroism of the survivors and first responders in that Las Vegas nightmare, politics saw an opportunit­y and took it immediatel­y.

As of this writing — days after 64-year-old Stephen Paddock’s killing spree — authoritie­s could not offer a motive. This is especially odd, because in such cases motives are usually released within hours; the shooter was a madman, or he had political associatio­ns and resentment­s forming the latticewor­k of motive.

But not with this one. When the preliminar­y count of the dead was still in the 20s, as loved ones desperatel­y tried to find the missing, the politician­s made their moves.

Hillary Clinton, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, pundits by the deplorable basketful and others seized the moment to press for advantage.

The universal and hateful hot take came from Hayley Geftman-Gold, CBS vice president and legal counsel, on Facebook.

At least she was honest in her tribalism, using “Repugs” for Republican­s and blaming them for not supporting blanket gun-control legislatio­n.

What’s not legitimate was her lack of sympathy for the dead.

“I’m actually not even sympatheti­c bc (because) country music fans often are Republican gun toters,” Geftman-Gold wrote. Later, she was fired.

And in the morning following the massacre, even as victims lay dying in hospitals, Clinton was busy virtue-signaling on Twitter.

“The crowd fled at the sound of gunshots,” tweeted Hillary Clinton, still seeking relevancy. “Imagine the deaths if the shooter had a silencer, which the NRA wants to make it easier to get.”

She must have been thinking of a Jason Bourne movie, of silencers whispering death, a sound just a bit louder than the munching of popcorn.

But Hollywood isn’t reality. A suppressor doesn’t make a gun silent like the weapon of a Hollywood assassin. The Washington Post reported a suppressor would reduce the sound of an AR-15 round to that of “a gunshot or jackhammer.” There’s nothing silent about a jackhammer.

Should we have more debate? Certainly. Let’s have it. There are more guns and more gun crimes in America than any other place in the world.

But let’s not forget that most killings aren’t committed by some lone sniper without apparent motive. The killings happen on the streets of big cities like Chicago, a city of strict gun control, where street gangs continue their slaughter and City Hall is powerless to stop them.

And America is numb to what happens in Chicago.

There are guns in the suburbs and in rural areas, and yet the suburbs aren’t killing fields. So if we’re going to have another gun debate, can’t we at least discuss culture, too? And can’t we wonder about what pathology drives so many mass shootings in the past few years?

Blaming the NRA is good politics for the left. It helps with fundraisin­g, stokes outrage and helps herd voters into tribal camps. But is it possible that it’s incomplete, like blaming airplanes for the 9/11 terrorist attacks?

There may be something in our culture that is wrong and sick and festering. And recent mass shootings may be a symptom of larger cultural illness.

We know that we’ve become increasing­ly nihilistic, and isolated from one another on our electronic devices. We know we’re divided into politicall­y warring tribes, as the political center crumbles, as the Washington establishm­ent holds desperatel­y to power.

We know that attendance continues to drop at traditiona­l centers of worship. And even so, the political/cultural elites who frame our gun and other debates often mock the remaining faithful as “religious fanatics.”

As America abandons religion for entertainm­ent, we consume unpreceden­ted amounts of pharmaceut­icals, from opioids to mood-altering drugs, to mask our emotional and mental pain.

Aren’t you curious as to how this impacts culture?

Even so, when the shooting began in the Mandalay Bay massacre, as the country music crowd stampeded in fear, as people died, Americans selflessly helped each other, comforted each other, risking and giving their own lives to save each other.

If only we’d been allowed a day or two to mourn, to reflect on the goodness even in the midst of the horror, before the politics swooped in.

 ??  ?? Jophn Kass
Jophn Kass

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