The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Let’s acknowledg­e that an AR-15 is not a colonial musket

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Americans are fed up — and they’re not going to take it anymore.

You’ve seen it over and over. A misfit outlier, using a gun he should never have had, mows down everyday people going about their business. The dead bodies this time — from a grocery store and an elementary school — were mostly children and the elderly.

The first shattering event, a massacre at a Buffalo grocery store, claimed 10 lives. The store was the “village watering hole,” according to one resident. The dead included a journalist who often wrote about gun violence.

Next: An 18-year-old killed 21 people, 19 children and two teachers, at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas. But first, he warmed up his trigger finger by blasting his grandmothe­r in the face. Yes, of course, he had mental problems. Anyone who takes an assault rifle to a public place intent on killing can be found somewhere in the Diagnostic and Statistica­l Manual of Mental Disorders.

If my reading of social media is correct, public outrage seems finally to have reached a crescendo that might lead to change. People are angrier than ever about the growing violence and lack of action. One can stand the sight of only so many dead children. Since the elementary school mass shooting in Stockton, Calif., in 1989, we’ve had front-row seats to 13 more massacres. But those are just the spectacula­r ones. Since 1970, there have been at least 188 school shootings, according to a New York Times analysis of data from the K-12 School Shooting Database. We’ve become a nation fluent in the shocked rhetoric of pain and loss. “Thoughts and prayers,” a hollow expression of condolence from overuse may as well be “ham ‘n’ cheese.” The names of our slaughterh­ouses have become as familiar as one-name celebritie­s: Columbine, Sandy Hook, Parkland — and now Uvalde.

And nothing ever happens. A few public figures engage in performanc­e outrage. Democrat Beto O’Rourke, now running for Texas governor, tried to commandeer a news conference as Republican Gov. Greg Abbott and others were delivering updates on the massacre.

Beto, baby, timing is everything, and yours was way off.

President Joe Biden strained his vocal cords as he asked, “When in God’s name will we do what we all know in our gut needs to be done?” No kidding. As ineffectiv­e as such strutting and fretting has proved to be, he was expressing what most are feeling right now. When exactly did we lose our minds? Will this time be any different?

Maybe. Several things can be done that could reduce the bloodshed: deeper background checks; “red flag” laws allowing law enforcemen­t officers with a court order to seize guns from someone considered a danger to themselves or others; closing gun show loopholes; and maybe banning kids from buying assault weapons. All of these would help.

More than half of Americans want some reasonable reforms. A vast majority, including 69% of NRA members, support universal background checks. Instead, we only get tiny, incrementa­l tweaks here and there.

When grade school children are vulnerable to mass murderers, what’s the point of government?

As a first step, we should change the name of the mission from gun control to gun safety, as pollster Frank Luntz has suggested. “Control” is a trigger for resistance when safety is what we’re really talking about. Words matter.

The predictabl­e constituti­onal arguments, meanwhile, have become offensive. Yes, the Founding Fathers were concerned about another British invasion, and made it possible for early colonists to arm themselves in defense of their country. But those who wrote the Second Amendment in the 18th century could not have envisioned how their perfectly reasonable intentions would be distorted 235 years later — or how 18-year-olds would be able to buy and carry assault weapons meant for a modern battlefiel­d into grade school classrooms.

There’s a galaxy of difference between a musket and an AR-15. It’s time to remove these instrument­s of mass murder from the marketplac­e once and for all.

We may not stop the next massacre, but we can stop making it so easy.

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