The Columbus Dispatch

NATION&WORLD REPORT Ky. governor: Shootings are a cultural problem

- By Robert Ray and Bruce Schreiner

BENTON, Ky. — This was supposed to be Spirit Week at Marshall County High School.

Instead, homecoming events were canceled, the governor was in town lamenting the nation’s moral decay, and preparatio­ns were being made for the funerals of two 15-year-old children.

Tuesday’s attack by a fellow classmate at the high school left more than a dozen survivors with gunshot wounds or other injuries, and three of them remain hospitaliz­ed. Hundreds more were scarred by what they saw.

Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin called on Americans Friday to “wake up” and recognize that school shootings are a “cultural problem.”

“We have become desensitiz­ed to death, we have become desensitiz­ed to killing, we have become desensitiz­ed to empathy for our fellow man and it’s coming at an extraordin­ary price and we have got to look at the root causes of this,” Bevin told The Associated Press.

“We can’t celebrate death in video games, celebrate death in TV shows, celebrate death in movies, celebrate death in musical lyrics and remove any sense of morality and sense of higher authority and then expect that things like this are not going to happen,” he added.

The Republican governor spoke at a community event in Benton, where he was followed by the father of one of the slain students. Sobbing, Jasen Holt asked for prayers for all the “sweet kids” who were killed, injured or traumatize­d.

“It’s not only ours, it’s about all of them,” said Holt, whose daughter Bailey Nicole Holt was the first to die. “Just pray and take care of each and every one of them.”

The governor declared a statewide day of prayer Sunday for the grief-stricken county. It was reminiscen­t of his response to a wave of urban gun violence last year. Bevin called then on the power of prayer to help combat Louisville’s rising murder rate, and urged people to form prayer groups to walk high-crime neighborho­ods. Skeptics wondered aloud whether that would deter gun-wielding thugs.

Bevin, a social conservati­ve who has made it clear that he won’t sign laws that restrict guns, said he’s prepared for more skepticism as he once again asks Kentuckian­s to pray. But he said he believes God intervenes on behalf “of his people” when they call out to him in prayer.

“There are people who do not understand and do not believe in the things we’re talking about right now,” he said. “And there will be all the social media trolls and people that will scorn and mock and will ridicule the fact that we would call out to our creator at a time like this.”

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