Las Vegas Review-Journal

Can KC shooting inspire enough GOP voters to make a change?

- LZ Granderson

You know why this country has a problem with mass shootings? For the same reason we’re likely to have an octogenari­an president during the next administra­tion. Both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump are old — as in “both men were alive for the start of the first Arab-israeli war” kind of old. Polls show their age is a concern for many Americans. Primary election results so far show that isn’t swaying many people’s votes.

This contradict­ion illustrate­s why it’s nearly impossible to do anything of significan­ce about our gun problem.

On Super Bowl Sunday, a 7-year-old boy was critically wounded during a shootout at a megachurch in Houston. Three days later, the parade for the Kansas City Chiefs’ victory turned into another one of our gun nightmares: one dead, more than 20 injured. The carnage continued this week as a gunman at a Waffle House in Indianapol­is killed one person and injured five others early Monday.

Polls show most Americans want more laws to prevent mass shootings. Primary election results so far show that isn’t swaying many people’s votes.

A critical mass of conservati­ves get behind any candidate endorsed by the National Rifle Associatio­n out of fear that Democrats are trying to take everyone’s guns away — which, by the way, is not happening.

What’s really going on is a fear-driven and irrational arms race. Americans are amassing assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, which no civilian should own and which too often fall into the wrong hands. Now every corner of American life is a potential site for a mass shooting: places of worship, elementary schools, the mall, any public gathering.

In a Shakespear­ean twist, one of the few places you won’t find a gun is an NRA convention. Members accept a weapons ban when big names like Trump make appearance­s. When the Secret Service said, “no guns allowed,” the lobby group didn’t declare the policy an attack on Second Amendment rights. The organizers said OK.

The NRA knows what the polls say. Most Americans, including most Republican­s and most owners of firearms, have long supported commonsens­e gun laws that would prevent many mass shootings. But the gun lobby cares more about how people vote than about how they respond to polls. Republican­s aren’t concerned enough to favor sane candidates when there are pro-gun absolutist­s on the ballot.

It’s not as if there aren’t Republican­s in favor of commonsens­e gun laws. They just don’t make it to November.

You know who does?

The kind of candidate who likes to hold guns in campaign ads. The kind who would cut funding for mental health programs and then lament the country’s problem with mental health after a mass shooting. The politician­s who make it to November are the ones who ensure weapons of war are easy to buy. Those politician­s get real quiet when the weapons they endorsed are used to gun down children.

Out of concern for public safety, we have decided to hold pharmaceut­ical companies accountabl­e for the opioid crisis, and yet we do not do the same for gun manufactur­ers. Out of concern for public safety, we have decided to limit the number of over-the-counter allergy pills a person can buy, but we sell an endless supply of bullets to anyone.

We have accepted having our private parts inspected at the airport because one terrorist attempted to ignite explosives embedded in his underwear 15 years ago. And yet politician­s pretend that it’s difficult to keep guns out of the hands of domestic abusers.

How exactly do Republican leaders propose to keep us safe, when they are abdicating their responsibi­lity? They pretend that we’d be better off if more of the folks drinking in bars had guns and if more people who walked into churches were armed to kill.

That fear-driven arms race has gone so far beyond reason that there’s a mass delusion we can shoot our way out of the epidemic of mass shootings. Any proposal that might actually work? Well, the gun lobby bats it away as an untenable threat to Second Amendment rights. That’s how the thinking goes.

If we can call that “thinking.”

More than 200 Republican­s voted against raising the age limit to buy an assault rifle from 18 to 21. Apparently, there’s a sweet spot where people are too young to drink beer but old enough to purchase military weapons.

Much like our electoral habit of voting for the presidenti­al candidates we say are too old for the job, in the wake of mass shootings we continue to seek answers from elected officials who tell us there’s nothing they can do.

We can’t send our kids to school, the movies or even a Super Bowl parade flooded with more than 800 law enforcemen­t officers without worrying about guns. That’s not safer living. That’s living under siege. Public shootings are part of our lives because while most Americans say we are concerned about guns, conservati­ves are not concerned enough to vote for Republican­s who want to do something about it.

LZ Granderson is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People attend a candleligh­t vigil on Feb. 15 for victims of a shooting at a Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl parade in Kansas City, Mo. More than 20 people were injured and one woman killed in the shooting near the end of the Feb. 14 rally at nearby Union Station.
CHARLIE RIEDEL / ASSOCIATED PRESS People attend a candleligh­t vigil on Feb. 15 for victims of a shooting at a Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl parade in Kansas City, Mo. More than 20 people were injured and one woman killed in the shooting near the end of the Feb. 14 rally at nearby Union Station.

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