Daily Southtown (Sunday)

It’s time to rise up and do something about assault weapons

- Donna Vickroy donnavickr­oy4@gmail.com Donna Vickroy is an award-winning reporter, editor and columnist who worked for the Daily Southtown for 38 years.

In a nation obsessed with guns and gun lovers’ rights, what chance does a 9-year-old have of making it through the school day anymore?

Gunned-down children, like gunned-down adults, are just collateral damage in the war to keep psychopath­s armed and their profiteers rich.

It is not just the disaffecte­d, mentally disturbed shooters who are killing our children. It is the enablers, the purchasers, the sellers, the lobbyists and the Congressio­nal leaders who refuse to do anything about it who are out of their minds as well.

The massacre at Covenant School in Nashville, Tennessee, was America’s 129th mass shooting in three months. It came on the heels of a school shooting in Denver, which came on the heels of two school shootings in Texas. This is our norm.

And yet the gun lovers remain fired up. Evidently, they are OK with a constant news cycle of small children, shoppers, churchgoer­s, concert lovers, parade attendees and college kids being shot to death. Maybe they truly believe thoughts and prayers are compensati­on for a lost loved one.

U.S. Rep. Andy Ogles, R-Tennessee, is a gun rights proponent who represents the Nashville district where Monday’s tragedy happened. Even as he was offering his “thoughts and prayers to the victims’ families,” Fred Guttenberg, whose daughter was gunned down in the Parkland shooting in 2018, was posting a disturbing Christmas photo of the Ogles family posing affectiona­tely with their guns, according to the Huffington Post.

Currently, there are more guns in America than people, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, and those weapons are concentrat­ed in the hands of less than half the population. How many guns do you need if you only have two hands with which to shoot?

I get that fear is a motivator for gun buyers. The world can be a scary place for some people. But shouldn’t you be more afraid of someone you love

getting caught in the next mass shooting than of legislatio­n to prevent that? Shouldn’t you be more afraid of assault weapons than — oh, I don’t know — books, drag queens and the statue of David?

In January Illinois became the ninth state to ban assault weapons, the legacy of the Highland Park shooting victims and the hard work of sensible people who refuse to just let this issue go. The legislatio­n is progress, but not nearly enough to make our country safe for its own citizens to live a normal life. This latest murderer bought her guns legally, officials say, so clearly there is lots more work to be done.

From 1994-2004, the nation had an assault weapons ban. It expired under George W. Bush; Congress didn’t renew it.

Last summer the House voted to ban certain semi-automatic weapons. The bill continues to stall in the Senate. Hmm, maybe it’s not just the shooters who should have their heads examined.

Today, gun proponents even go so far as to cite precedents from the

1700s as reason to keep the status quo, according to the New York Times. People had muskets during the Revolution­ary War, so people should be able to carry rapid-fire automatic weapons today, the logic goes.

Indeed, the logic goes right out the window.

What about our right to go to school, shop for groceries, attend church service or jam at a concert and live to tell about it? Shouldn’t our right to not be shredded by an AR-15 supersede a gun lover’s right to build a deadly arsenal?

Even though weaponry has advanced, human reasoning in America evidently has not.

Tennessee state Rep. Heidi Campbell, D-5, said on CNN this week that she believes most people in her state want an end to this madness. Yet most people in her state do not vote.

Gun control — or perhaps we should call it “the right to go about your day without being gunned down” — must become the passion of those of us who are not lovesick for weapons, who value children over a well-stocked gun cabinet and who don’t want ourselves or our loved ones to be next.

Kudos to the Nashville Metro police, who put their own lives on the line to take out the shooter. The video footage of their room-by-room search was terrifying to watch after the fact. I can’t imagine how those children, teachers and cops felt living it.

We need to cling to that horror. We cannot become desensitiz­ed to this issue. We cannot be OK that it was just Nashville or Denver or Uvalde’s “turn.”

We might be uncomforta­ble turning our peace-loving selves into activists — no doubt the gun lobby is counting on that — but there are times in life when we have to take a stand, especially if it means protecting our children.

I believe a united front can conquer just about anything, but we have to do the work. We have to go to the polls and then hold our officials accountabl­e.

Not sure where to begin? Contact your representa­tives at www.house. gov/representa­tives/find-your-representa­tive and your senators at www. senate.gov/senators and make your views known. Get involved with antigun violence groups and donate to candidates who support gun safety (www.msn.com/en-us/health/ medical/how-to-help-with-guncontrol-12-things-you-can-do-nowto-stop-gun-violence/ar-AAYl1VH).

Stay outraged, stay loud, stay determined to shut down the ridiculous rhetoric spewed by those who believe the best way to protect ourselves from a spray of bullets is by spraying more bullets. Don’t fall for politician­s’ twisted logic meant to protect their pocketbook­s at the expense of your child.

I have to believe there is not a single mother, father or grandparen­t in America who wants to spend what should be an ordinary Monday being directed to a holding area, where they will await word on just how strong their family’s luck might be that day.

Luck should not factor into surviving the school day in America.

 ?? METROPOLIT­AN NASHVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT ?? In this screen grab from surveillan­ce video tweeted by the Metropolit­an Nashville Police Department, Audrey Elizabeth Hale points an assault-style weapon Monday inside The Covenant School in Nashville, Tennessee. The former student shot through the doors of the Christian elementary school and killed several children and adults before being killed by police.
METROPOLIT­AN NASHVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT In this screen grab from surveillan­ce video tweeted by the Metropolit­an Nashville Police Department, Audrey Elizabeth Hale points an assault-style weapon Monday inside The Covenant School in Nashville, Tennessee. The former student shot through the doors of the Christian elementary school and killed several children and adults before being killed by police.
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