Los Angeles Times

Why so many mass shootings?

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Re “U.S. is mass-shooting capital of world — by far,” Aug. 26

While I applaud your coverage of University of Alabama criminolog­ist Adam Lankford’s research on mass shootings, scrutiny of such events risks overshadow­ing larger societal problems. Mass shootings pale in comparison with ordinary homicides.

More than 10,000 Americans die violently each

year, but only a small fraction of these horrible crimes are mass shootings. Among industrial­ized societies, ours is remarkably violent. While gun ownership does affect the frequency of mass shootings, it has little impact on the much more important problem of overall homicide rates.

What, then, makes our society so violent? Research indicates that a principal driver is income inequality. In addition to being among the most violent of industrial­ized nations, ours is among the most unequal, with wealth being concentrat­ed in the hands of a few.

Despite widespread recognitio­n that income inequality has grown dramatical­ly worse in recent years, many voters consistent­ly fail to support policies that would alleviate it. In opposing the redistribu­tion of wealth, voters not only undermine their own financial interests, they also undermine the peaceful existence that should characteri­ze an advanced democratic society such as our own.

Though less visceral than the horror of mass shootings, income inequality, no less tragic, is a far bigger problem in the long run.

Daniel M.T. Fessler

Los Angeles The writer, a professor of anthropolo­gy, is director of the UCLA Center for Behavior, Evolution and Culture.

The United States leads all countries in mass murder not because we have more angry, delusional, psychotic or depressed people but because some of these people have access to guns — often many guns.

Profiles of many of these killers often show a very angry person with a desire for revenge (on people at large rather than specific victims).

It is obvious that the volume of guns is not going to be curbed in the next few decades, so we need to focus on identifyin­g and helping those in need of treatment before they explode into violence.

Sol Taylor

Studio City

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