In a Thursday night address in which he said “Enough!” almost a dozen times, President Joe Biden ticked off a list of particularly deadly mass shootings, starting with Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado, and including Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut; Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina; Pulse Nightclub in Orlando, Florida; last week’s slaughter at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, and, even more recently, the Wednesday night murderous attack inside the Natalie Medical Building in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
If you rank the deadliest U.S. mass shootings with Columbine as your starting point, Columbine is far down the list.
The irony of Biden starting with a crime from nearly a quarter century ago to make the point that America has seen enough is that America claimed it had seen enough way back then, too.
“Every time one of these things happens,” a reporter said to then-President Bill Clinton in 1999, “we go through this chorus of hand-wringing and say we’ve got to stop it from happening again.” Yet another reporter told Clinton that “there seems to be an epidemic of these kinds of incidents now.” Clinton declined to call the problem an “epidemic” but did say that Columbine’s death toll made it stand out.
But if you rank the deadliest U.S. mass shootings with that massacre as your starting point, Columbine is far down the list. There have been nine shootings with more murder victims and two others with as many. Six of those shootings have been deadlier than the one in Uvalde. The massacre at Sandy Hook was not only deadlier than the one at Robb Elementary, but also its victims were younger. What reason, then, is there to believe that we’ll look back at Uvalde as a tipping point?
That’s not meant as a criticism of Biden’s speech. He dutifully appealed to Americans’ sense of decency and our claim that the deaths of little children hit us the hardest. Speaking during a week that began with Memorial Day, the president made a direct link between U.S. service members “who paid the ultimate price on battlefields around the world” and those students in Uvalde, “innocent victims, murdered in a classroom that had been turned into a killing field.”
He added that “there are too many other schools, too many other everyday places that have become killing fields, battlefields here in America.” The war analogy is apt because the people we’re currently mourning — grocery shoppers in Buffalo, third- and fourth-graders in Uvalde, hospital personnel in Tulsa — were killed with a weapon befitting a combat zone.
Unfortunately, the analogy is also apt because it’s impossible to grieve every casualty or even every mass-casualty event during a war. We’re at the point in this uniquely American war where there have to be really old victims, really young victims, victims in a house of worship, really old or really young victims in a house of worship or a really high number of victims for us to register a strong emotional response.
What Biden proposed in Thursday night’s address — banning the sale of AR-15-style weapons to those younger than 21, penalties and liability for those who don’t properly secure their weapons, expanded background checks and elimination of the law shielding gun manufacturers from lawsuits — likely strike most Americans as reasonable. But as MSNBC columnist Dean Obeidallah pointed out in a recent column, the conservative Supreme Court isn’t likely to look kindly upon a law that restricts the sale of AR-15-style weapons. More significantly, there’s no chance of there even being such a law so long as certain senators consider protecting the filibuster more important than protecting the lives of children.
Biden found it necessary to say Thursday that nothing he proposes is “about taking away anyone’s guns. It’s not about vilifying gun owners.” He even said he respects the “culture,” whatever that means, of “lawful gun owners.” The president’s statement that he’s not proposing anything extreme is true, but that’s also the problem. If America doesn’t do something extreme, what hope is there?
“According to new data just released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,” Biden said, “guns are the No. 1 killer of children in the United States of America. The No. 1 killer. More than car accidents. More than cancer.
“Over the last two decades, more school-aged children have died from guns than on-duty police officers and active-duty military combined.”








