The Commercial Appeal

Waffle House hero a role model for lawmakers

- David Waters USA TODAY NETWORK – TENN.

James Shaw Jr., the Waffle House hero, did what NRA-controlled members of Congress and the Tennessee state legislatur­e have been unwilling to do.

He acted courageous­ly to take a deeply disturbed young man’s weapon of war away from him.

He didn’t check to see if the young man had a valid gun permit, or whether the AR-15 military-style assault rifle he was reloading was legally purchased or obtained.

He didn’t wait to find out if the young man had cleared background checks for previous arrests or had a history of mental illness. He didn’t ask the NRA’s permission. He took a weapon of war away from a civilian who was firing at other civilians in a Waffle House outside Nashville early Sunday morning.

“I kind of made up my mind, because there was no way to lock that door, that if it was going to come down to it, he was going to have to work to kill me,” said Shaw, an AT&T employee who has a 4year-old daughter.

Shaw’s heroic act no doubt prevented more carnage. The gunman already had killed two people outside the Waffle House and two more inside.

Shaw didn’t hide behind a flag or the Second Amendment. He acted. When will our lawmakers act to protect us from disturbed young men bearing AR-15s and other weapons of war?

After 20 children and six adults in Newtown, Conn., were gunned down in 2012 by a man with a legally obtained AR-15, Congress and the legislatur­e failed to act.

After 49 people were gunned down at an Orlando night club in 2016 by a young man with a legally purchased AR-15, Congress and the legislatur­e failed to act.

After 58 concertgoe­rs were gunned down in Las Vegas last year by a man bearing legally purchased AR-15 assault rifles converted to automatic weapons with legally purchased bump stocks, Congress and the legislatur­e failed to act.

After 26 churchgoer­s were gunned down in Texas last year by a young man with a legally purchased AR-15, Congress and the legislatur­e failed to act.

After 17 students and adults were gunned down at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., on Valentine’s Day by a young man with a legally obtained AR-15, Congress and the legislatur­e failed to act.

Sunday, four people were gunned down at a Waffle House near Nashville by a young man with a legally obtained AR-15.

Current laws allowed the suspect, 29-year-old Travis Reinking, who was arrested Monday, to have an AR-15, despite clear indication­s he had been experienci­ng delusions since 2014.

Current laws allowed his father to take possession of the AR-15, and “gift” it back, even after young Reinking threatened someone with it last June, and was arrested outside the White House for breaching a barrier last July.

Current laws allow just about any deeply disturbed young man to obtain an AR-15 or similar military-style assault rifle.

James Shaw Jr. risked his life to take Reinking’s war weapon away from him before he could kill anyone else.

When will members of Congress and the Tennessee state legislatur­e have the courage to act to take them away?

David Waters is the opinion and engagement editor of the Commercial Appeal in Memphis, a publicatio­n of the USA TODAY NETWORK Tennessee. Email him at David.Waters@commercial­appeal.com.

 ??  ?? James Shaw Jr. gets a hug from Waffle House CEO Walt Ehmer on Sunday during a press conference on the Waffle House shooting in Nashville. WADE PAYNE / THE TENNESSEAN VIA USA TODAY NETWORK
James Shaw Jr. gets a hug from Waffle House CEO Walt Ehmer on Sunday during a press conference on the Waffle House shooting in Nashville. WADE PAYNE / THE TENNESSEAN VIA USA TODAY NETWORK
 ?? Columnist Memphis Commercial Appeal ??
Columnist Memphis Commercial Appeal

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