The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Firearm deaths just keep piling up

- Gail Collins She writes for the New York Times.

“Lock them up. There are things that you can do,” a Houston assistant police chief said last week after a 3-year-old boy fatally shot his 8-month-old baby brother in the family home.

The assistant chief was talking about guns, not the 3-year-old. Obviously. Although in some parts of the country, the idea of putting kids in prison seems to elicit more enthusiasm than the idea of locking away the weapons.

This kind of disaster happens way, way, way too much.

Last year at least 371 children stumbled across a loaded gun and fired, causing 143 deaths and 243 injuries. In one case, a 3-year-old shot himself to death with a pistol that had fallen out of the pocket of a member of his family — apparently while the adults were playing cards.

None of this has led to any significan­t change in the national attitude toward deadly weapons. Many Americans like to arm themselves to the teeth as protection from crime — and bleep over the danger that comes with all that hardware, especially in the hands of people who aren’t really equipped to use it.Now

handling a gun properly, being capable of aiming it accurately, and following the guidelines for safe storage isn’t easy. Kudos to the people who make the effort.

But even they aren’t necessaril­y going to be able to keep their cool in some sort of shooting crisis. You have to worry how many over-optimistic­ally imagine that they can.

And what some of them will do in quieter moments. A majority of all gun deaths are suicides.

Given the deep downside of gun proliferat­ion, it’s remarkably easy to buy one legally. But some gun enthusiast­s seem to regard any rules whatsoever as a betrayal of the Founding Fathers.

“I have to believe there’s hope. Otherwise I’d have trouble coming to work in the morning,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticu­t.

Connecticu­t legislator­s have been among the nation’s most dedicated gun safety crusaders, especially since 2012, when a disturbed 20-year-old killed his mother, grabbed the household assault rifle and two pistols, then marched off to Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, where he killed 26 people, 20 of them children.

We’ve had a lot of tragic gun-related headlines lately. The story of the baby’s death was overshadow­ed by a crisis in Minnesota, where an officer yelling “Taser! Taser!” pulled the trigger on a man she’d stopped for expired tags. And, as the whole nation now knows, the Taser was actually a loaded gun.

We are thinking about this tragedy in terms of race, and police relations with minority communitie­s. As well we should.

Given that there are close to 400 million guns in the land, many of them loaded, it should be very clear that our greatest domestic security challenge is carving the number down and making sure the people who possess them are responsibl­e citizens.

It’s a very heavy lift, given the power of the gun lobby in Washington.

“The government is never going to know what weapons I own,” declaimed Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas. “Let me be clear about that, it’s not gonna happen. We have a God-given right to defend our families, defend our state, and defend ourselves against tyranny, and we will do that.”

Yeah, blame God.

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