I spent most of Tuesday avoiding having to write this article. Anything I could do to keep myself from writing about a mass shooting at Michigan State University, my alma mater, I did. But time marches on and my delay did nothing to change the fact that three students are dead and several more injured on a campus that I visited for the first time in nearly a decade last August.
It’s hard to emphasize the level of disrespect it would be for lawmakers not to act.
It feels worse that there’s still no known motive for the shooter deciding to be at the school’s East Lansing campus on Monday night, no reason for him to open fire on his victims, nothing linking them before he took their lives. Its absence only highlights the common denominator in what Gov. Gretchen Whitmer called a “uniquely American problem” at a news conference Tuesday.
“We’re all too broken by an all-too familiar feeling, a place that’s supposed to be about community and togetherness shattered by bullets and bloodshed,” Whitmer declared. She had delivered a similar statement less than two years ago after a student killed four of his classmates at Oxford High School in the exurbs of Detroit. Some of the students who lived through that trauma are now students in East Lansing. “We just went through this 14 months ago,” Emma Riddle, a Michigan State freshman who graduated from Oxford High, told The New York Times. “What is happening?”
This cycle continues to play out across the country, as the compromise gun legislation Congress passed last year did not treat the cause of this cultural sickness: the widespread availability of guns in America. Instead, it remains up to the states to determine how much death one person should be able to dole out and how quickly, and even those state-level restrictions are being winnowed away under the conservative Supreme Court.
Michigan has some of the laxest gun policies in the country, according to researchers at the Rand Corp. “Despite pleas from Oxford families, these issues never even got a hearing in the legislature,” Whitmer said in her State of the State address last month, calling on lawmakers to pass a series of proposed reforms. “This year, let’s change that and work together to stop the violence and save lives.”








