When reports came in that a lone gunman had opened fire on a community college in southwest Oregon Thursday — killing nine and injuring nine before being shot dead by officers — an all too familiar wave of sadness and frustration swept the country.
“Why real gun control won’t happen in America,” read one headline on The Huffington Post. “Why does nothing get done about gun control?” asked another article in The Independent. And then, there was a chilling Daily News cover declaring “nothing’s changed.”
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It’s easy to be pessimistic. Mass shootings this year in South Carolina, Tennessee, and Louisiana, as well as earlier massacres in Virginia, Colorado, and Connecticut have left the distinct impression that the rampage Thursday at Umpqua Community College is simply the new normal. “Somehow this has become routine,” said a visibly angry President Obama Thursday, hours after the Oregon shooting. “The reporting is routine. My response here, at this podium, ends up being routine. We’ve become numb to this.”
But even though the political calculus in Washington has yet to shift in favor of gun control, and the National Rifle Association remains as powerful as ever, activists pushing for stronger gun regulations believe the winds are changing. With growing grassroots support, financial resources, and visibility that comes with each and every shooting tragedy, gun control advocates are optimistic they’ll soon follow in the footsteps of other successful social movements.
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“We’re seeing a lot of encouraging signs, a swell of people getting involved,” said Ladd Everitt, communications director of the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence. “As with the recent debate about the Confederate Flag or gay marriage, I think a reckoning is coming to this country on guns and gun culture.”
Everitt is not alone in drawing a connection to the marriage equality movement. In fact, out of four gun control advocates interviewed for this article, three brought up same-sex nuptials without being prompted in any way.
“We’re taking a page out of the marriage equality playbook,” said Shannon Watts, founder of the group, Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America. In the case of marriage equality, she explained, “there were activists working on the ground for years before Congress and the Supreme Court realized that this was the way the nation was moving.”
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It’s an interesting connection to make, not just because of the similarities in grassroots support. As many marriage equality leaders will tell you, their victories in courts of law were attributed to a state-by-state approach of toppling same-sex marriage bans. Their success in the court of public opinion, meanwhile, came from decades of calls to come out of the closet.
On the state level, Watts said, the gun control movement is seeing tremendous progress. In the past two years, six states have closed loopholes that allowed for gun purchases without background checks — bringing to 18 the total number of states that now require background checks for some or all private firearm sales. Two more states, Nevada and Maine, look poised to follow.
“We’re close to a tipping point where half the states in the country have closed the background check loophole,” Watts said. “There’s a significant amount of momentum to show Congress that this is what Americans want.”








