Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Walmart removes violent images, but gun sales continue

- By Michelle Chapman

Walmart is removing signs, displays or videos that depict violence from its stores nationwide following a mass shooting at one of its stores in Texas, though it has not changed its policy on gun sales.

The retailer instructed employees in an internal memo to remove any marketing material, turn off or unplug video game consoles that show violent games — specifical­ly Xbox and PlayStatio­n consoles — and to monitor and turn off any violence depicted on screens in its electronic­s department­s.

Employees were also ordered to turn off hunting season videos in the sporting goods department where guns are sold.

Under the heading: “Immediate Action,” employees were instructed to “Review your store for any signing or displays that contain violent images or aggressive behavior. Remove from the salesfloor or turn off these items immediatel­y.”

“We’ve taken this action out of respect for the incidents of the past week,” spokeswoma­n Tara House said in an email to The Associated Press on Friday.

The company’s policy on sales of video games that depict violence has not changed, nor has its policy on gun sales.

Following the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., Walmart Inc. banned sales of firearms and ammunition to people younger than 21. It had stopped selling AR15s and other semi- automatic weapons in 2015, citing weak sales.

There is no known link between violent video games and violent acts.

Patrick Markey, a psychology professor at Villanova University who focuses on video games, found in his research that men who commit severe acts of violence actually play violent video games less than the average male. About 20% were interested in violent video games, compared with 70% of the general population, he explained in his 2017 book “Moral Combat: Why the War on Violent Video Games Is Wrong.”

The killings in Texas — followed by another in Dayton, Ohio, just hours later that left nine dead — have put the country on edge.

On Thursday, five days after the El Paso shooting, panicked shoppers fled a Walmart in Springfiel­d, Mo., after a man carrying a rifle and wearing body armor walked around the store before being stopped by an off- duty firefighte­r.

No shots were fired, and the man was arrested after surrenderi­ng.

A backfiring motorcycle in Times Square set off a stampede Tuesday. Video footage showed throngs rushing out of the busy tourism and entertainm­ent area, some taking cover behind vehicles and in doorways.

The New York Police Department took to social media saying, “There is no # ActiveShoo­ter in # TimesSquar­e. Motorcycle­s backfiring while passing through sounded like gun shots.”

There have been 254 mass shootings in the U. S. this year, according to the Gun Violence Archive. That means there have been more instances of four or more people being shot in individual outbreaks of violence than there have been days in 2019.

The latest shootings have supercharg­ed an already hot political topic this year.

On Friday, presidenti­al candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren, DMass., blasted Walmart in a tweet .

“Companies that sell guns have a responsibi­lity to the safety of their communitie­s. Walmart is one of the largest gun retailers in the world. The weapons they sell are killing their own customers and employees. No profit is worth those lives. Do the right thing — stop selling guns,” Ms. Warren tweeted.

Authoritie­s believe Patrick Crusius, 21, wrote a racist, rambling screed that railed against mass immigratio­n before opening fire last weekend at the El Paso Walmart. Crusius lived near Dallas, and El Paso police say he drove more than 10 hours to the largely Latino border city to carry out the shooting that killed 22 people and wounded about two dozen others. He has been charged with capital murder.

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