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Don’t tell me it’s too soon to talk guns

Nashville school shooting just adds to US carnage

- Rex Huppke Follow USA TODAY columnist Rex Huppke on Twitter @ RexHuppke and Facebook facebook. com/ RexIsAJerk

Three children and three adults are dead, gunned down in a Christian elementary school in Nashville, Tenn., by a human being who had no business possessing an AR- style rifle, an AR- style pistol and another handgun.

“But, but, but … the Second Amendment,” some will scream, like a myopic, zombified Greek chorus.

Hang your Second Amendment. It was a Monday in America when there was yet another school shooting. Children are dead.

The students who weren’t shot are forever changed by the trauma, and plenty more people across the country will be killed by gunfire in the days to come because, as I wrote a few words earlier, it was a Monday in America, and the week’s not over yet.

“Thoughts and prayers! Don’t politicize this!” the people will crow.

Nuts to that. The thoughts- and- prayers, it’s- too- soon- to- talk- about- it ship sailed several hundred mass shootings ago. I’m mad now.

What are we protecting?

And I’m not waiting for permission to tweet or write or holler about how reckless, how ridiculous, how bloody twisted it is that we inhabit a country where people treat the tool used to murder other people in schools, in churches, in malls, at concerts, in movie theaters, on street corners and in their homes as a sacred possession that must not be regulated – that should be protected as an icon of America, like a bald eagle that spits lead.

Now the chorus is really riled: “You can’t blame the guns!”

Oh yes I can.

This latest alleged school shooter is a 28- year- old from Nashville – who police say had the AR- style rifle, an AR- style pistol and another handgun – entered The Covenant School and, in short order, shot and killed three kids and three adults before being shot to death by the officers. Do I blame the shooter? Of course I do.

But if there’s one thing I’ve noticed about shootings in America, one unmistakab­le through line, it’s the presence of one or more guns. Absent the guns that so many states have made easy- as- pie to get, these shootings would be distinctly different, in that they wouldn’t be shootings.

“Oh, if it wasn’t a gun the killer would just use a knife or something else,” the chorus moans.

FINE! I’m happy to take that chance. A knife isn’t going to do near the same damage as a pair of AR- 15- style weapons in the hands of a violent person.

And also: What kind of dumb argument is that? That’s like saying, “Well, I’m not going to baby- proof these electrical outlets because my toddler could just as easily get electrocut­ed by walking outside and holding a metal pole in a lightning storm.”

Maybe – just maybe – it’s time to admit the reason this common carnage is happening in our schools and in virtually every imaginable space in America is because we treat guns with more reverence than we treat our fellow humans’ right to keep living.

Republican lawmakers continue to fight with gusto to eliminate every reasonable restrictio­n on buying and carrying firearms, including in Tennessee where this most recent mass shooting happened. Republican­s in the state have proposed expanding the concealed carry law to allow rifles rather than just handguns.

Meanwhile, they’re working hard to restrict things they say are harmful to children, like drag shows. Earlier this month, Tennessee became the first state to restrict public drag shows.

How will Washington respond?

U. S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s response to the Nashville school shooting? She tweeted: “How many more children have to murdered before Democrats will agree to protect children at schools the same way good guys with guns protect the President and others?”

Yes. Battle- ready teachers are for sure the answer.

Republican Sen. Rick Scott tweeted: “We need to consider an automatic death penalty for school shooters. Life in prison is not enough for the deranged monsters who go into our schools to kill innocent kids & educators.”

The Nashville shooter was shot and killed by police, Senator Einstein. What are you going to do, kill the killer twice?

If the Republican Party addressed gun violence with a third the energy it puts into battling “wokeness,” we might be able to make progress. But Republican­s won’t and we won’t, at least not until people start caring enough about avoidable tragedies like the Covenant School shooting to vote for people who will end this madness.

We’ll learn more in the days to come about why a person decided to open fire in an elementary school in Nashville. But we already know enough, from this horrific scene and all those that came before it, to place the blame.

“Don’t you jump to conclusion­s!,” the chorus wails. Nah. It’s not even a jump.

It’s the guns. It has always been the guns. And until we treat them like the deadly tools we know they are, it will always be the guns.

 ?? USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Students from the Covenant School meet their parents at a nearby church Monday in Nashville, Tenn.
USA TODAY NETWORK Students from the Covenant School meet their parents at a nearby church Monday in Nashville, Tenn.
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