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S.E. Cupp: Gun massacres and the collapse of American values | TribLIVE.com
S.E. Cupp, Columnist

S.E. Cupp: Gun massacres and the collapse of American values

S.E. Cupp
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Tabitha Hawk/ZUMA Press Wire
Motorcycle police control the entrance to Nashville Covenant School March 27 after a shooting that left three 9-year-old children and three staff members dead.

My phone buzzed with a news alert, which happens numerous times throughout the day.

This one, at 1:45 p.m. on Monday, was yet another mass shooting. My stomach turned queasy anticipating the details. I knew they would be horrifying — they always are. But I feared the worst … and, as I read on, learning of the unthinkable deaths of three 9-year-old children at a Nashville elementary school, I was sickened, and right.

As parents, it’s also our job to protect our kids. And the mom in me is frustrated, saddened and terrified as that job becomes harder and harder in the face of so much violence — and complacency.

The data is conclusive: Mass shootings have surged over the past decade, up from 273 in 2014 to a nauseating 690 in 2021. This year, just a quarter of the way through, we are already at 131. This is appalling.

Gun-related deaths by suicide are up. Gun-related deaths by homicide are up. Last year, firearms replaced car accidents as the leading cause of death for children. How are we so willing to accept this menace to society?

Who could be optimistic that lawmakers will make any significant changes to our gun laws, even changes a majority of Americans want? Things like universal background checks, raising the age minimum to buy an assault weapon, high-­capacity magazine bans and stronger red flag laws have been a bridge too far.

While President Biden is renewing calls for an assault weapon ban, that prospect is pure fantasy. Very few, if any, Republicans will cross the NRA or their voters to support it. And even many Democrats are afraid to go that far, still haunted by the memory of 1994, when the GOP picked up eight Senate seats and 54 House seats in the midterms, just two months after Democrats passed an assault weapon ban.

Then you have the phony cartoon conservatives on the far right, who will giddily and gleefully exploit this tragedy to push more of their bigoted culture-­wars crap.

“How much hormones like testosterone and medication for mental illness was the transgender Nashville school shooter taking?” tweeted Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene. “Everyone can stop blaming guns now.”

This embarrassing display of mouth-breathing ignorance aside, the right’s fetishization of black guns over the past decade has turned assault weapons into political dog whistles and sacred cows, brandished proudly and, often, incongruously, as proof of their MAGA bona fides.

Then, there’s the creep of complacency, which, counterintuitively, seems to grow with every mass shooting, not recede.

Take Tennessee Rep. Tim Burchett, who told cameras on Monday that “We’re not gonna fix it.”

“My daddy fought in the Second World War, fought in the Pacific, fought the Japanese. And he told me, he said, ‘Buddy, if somebody wants to take you out and doesn’t mind losing their life, there’s not a whole heck of a lot you can do about it.’ ”

The idea that we just have to live with this is stomach-churning.

It’s also a deeply sad commentary on the collapse of American values. We can no longer solve problems? We’ll surrender to the terrorism of mass shooters? We’ll sacrifice our children on the altar of assault weapons?

There’s no life, liberty or the pursuit of happiness for the families of the Nashville shooting, nor the families of tens of thousands of victims of gun violence every year. And the rest of us just have to wait, knowing there will be another … and hope it’s not in our backyard.

S.E. Cupp is the host of "S.E. Cupp Unfiltered" on CNN.

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Categories: Opinion | S.E. Cupp Columns
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