The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

In shooting aftermath, adults need to stop acting like children

- Kathleen Parker Columnist

Oh, for God’s sake. What else can one say about the week after Florida’s high school massacre? Funerals for the 17 students and faculty were barely begun before rhetoric on the right descended into indecency.

Much of it came from the annual Conservati­ve Political Action Conference, a gathering of the extreme right who snack on brimstone.

Speaking to the mostly young crowd, politician­s and officials from the National Rifle Associatio­n went ballistic over recent talk of gun control. Low points included characteri­zing the media as loving mass shootings and as wanting to advance its socialist agenda.

Is this really the best we can do? I ask this not as a member of the media but as someone who: grew up with guns; lives in a house with guns; knows how to shoot and is good at it; doesn’t object to hunting for food; has friends in the NRA.

My father, a lawyer, once told me in confidence that the only law he would never obey was to register his guns. (Because then “they” can collect them.)

I’ve weathered my share of gun spookiness, in other words, with the result that I’m neither anti-gun, nor a socialist. I do not, however, feel the need to pose in pictures wearing a tight-fitting dress and heels, while holding my very own AR-15, as NRA spokesvixe­n Dana Loesch does on the cover of her book.

A few highlights from the lectern:

Loesch, who gained prominence as a “conservati­ve” radio host, projected a she-devil in Prada when she pointed to members of the media and said, “Many in legacy media love mass shootings. You guys love it. I’m not saying that you love the tragedy, but I am saying that you love the ratings. Crying white mothers are ratings gold to you and many of the legacy media in the back.”

Crying white mothers? Loesch explained that black mothers are crying every day and “you don’t see town halls for them,” she said.

Obviously, Loesch was making oblique reference to Chicago — a pro-gun talking point that finds its way to my email folder every day.

To segregate grieving parents by race, essentiall­y mocking the mothers we’ve witnessed of late, is disgusting.

To applaud such distortion­ist propaganda should be beneath any serious adult concerned enough with these mass assaults to consider sensible alternativ­es to doing nothing.

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Tex., a human bellows (useful at campfires), criticized CNN’s townhall as an “infomercia­l,” and said calls for new restrictio­ns were “tiresome.”

As are so many people these days. “Every time you see a horrific crime, people in the media and Democratic politician­s immediatel­y try to leap on it to advance their agenda,” which is to “(strip) the Second Amendment rights away from law-abiding citizens.”

No, actually, the media follow news. A school massacre qualifies. And, yes, people want to know more as a way of seeking solutions. But hating media is how many Republican­s pass the buck. Their accusation­s are a distractio­n, the roots of which can be traced to evil. You can’t talk about freedom while also making an argument for gutting the First Amendment.

Longtime NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre cited the Democrats’ “socialist” agenda and, without irony, said, “as usual, the opportunis­ts wasted not one second to exploit tragedy for political gain.” Check.

LaPierre may have many valid points, but when he, Loesch and others speak in tongues of hyperbole and conspirato­rial incantatio­ns, they are not to be taken seriously.

When the final showdown is between the NRA and children who have just buried their friends, brothers, sisters, teachers and coach, something is deadly wrong in this country.

Out of respect for the dead, wounded and grieving, the adults need to stop acting like children.

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