微速讯:Nothing has changed a year after Uvalde
Families participate in a candlelight vigil dedicated to the 19 children and two adults murderedon May 24, 2022during the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School on May 25, 2023 in Uvalde, Texas. [Photo/VCG]
The shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, U.S.A., happened about a year ago. It encapsulates so much of what is wrong with American politics and society.
There exists a pervasive culture of violence, a lack of regulation that allows criminals and mentally ill people to own guns, a lack of treatment for individuals suffering from psychopathy and schizophrenia, cowardly police officers, and corrupt politicians who refuse to take the initiative or listen to the people.
【资料图】
It is a year later, and yet politicians in the U.S. and Texas have done nothing to ease the suffering of the victims or decrease the likelihood of another attack like this happening again. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said he would oppose any so-called gun control bill, not even a very minor one that would increase the purchase age for assault rifles from 18 to 21.
It was one of many bills a coalition of parents who lost children, children who survived, and other concerned citizens have advocated for to make people safer. The Texas state assembly will not even vote on the bills. They won"t even debate them. A few lonely representatives have heard them and introduced bills based on their concerns. But of the 22 gun safety bills introduced, only one has even been put on the committee floor.
After waiting 14 hours at the Capitol, Brett Cross, the father of one of those slain, was finally allowed to testify. He said, "Your "thoughts and prayers" haven"t done anything in the 329 days since Uziyah was shot through his stomach and spine."
Pro-gun Republican committee members sat at their high desks with disinterested looks on their faces. They treat the protesters and witnesses testifying in favor of gun safety, who make up a large constituency of the population, even in a state as conservative as Texas, as the enemy. The bill was eventually approved by the committee and sent to the full legislature, but Republican leadership in the legislature refused to schedule a pass-or-fail vote.
Mass shootings still abound. Just one week after Uvalde, a shooter attacked doctors and patients at a hospital in neighboring Tulsa, Oklahoma. This May, there have been at least two other major mass shootings in Texas, including a neo-Nazi who killed nine people outside of Austin and a man who killed five of his neighbors outside of Houston.
People who are violently mentally ill still do not get treatment and usually are able to buy guns. Mental health treatment in America is as obscenely expensive, as is treatment for physical ailments, even making it a burden for those who recognize they have a problem and seeks help.
But many people who are the most seriously in need of treatment or institutionalization are unaware or unwilling to seek treatment. They remain in society, in some cases posing a threat to themselves and others.
Even those whose mental illness might result in an increased proclivity towards violence are still allowed to purchase guns and carry them anywhere. Only 19 states have any kind of "red flag" law that allows for the firearms purchases of people ruled mentally ill by a court to be reviewed. Even in those states, the laws are rarely enforced.
What can be done? Will anything ever change?
The prospects are dim. Look at how dysfunctional the United States Congress is. The Republicans who control the House of Representatives just wasted months threatening to hold the economy hostage and only passed a bill to raise the debt ceiling at the last minute. However, their bill only included minor spending cuts, so they did it all for nothing.
If Congress can barely get a debt ceiling bill passed, they certainly can"t get a gun safety bill passed. So what should we do?
Washington Post columnist Brian Broome wrote that "with all the mass shootings," he is staying inside. It"s as if the pandemic never ended or the virus particles floating through the air just changed to bullets. That is surely an overreaction. One meaningless death is one too many, and there are thousands too many in the U.S. every year. No one thinks it"s going to happen to them, and in most cases, it won"t, but Brett Cross didn"t think it would happen to his son, either.
Mitchell Blatt is a columnist with China.org.cn. For more information please visit:
http://www.china.org.cn/opinion/MitchellBlatt.htm
Opinion articles reflect the views of their authors, not necessarily those of China.org.cn.
标签:
- 1 不退不换?概不负责?拿什么回击霸王条款
- 2 马桶堵得死死的怎么办(马桶堵死了可以用皮掳子来处理吗)
- 3 发现戒的癌症幸存者的心血管风险比继续吸的人低 36%|今日报
- 4 浙江瑞安2023年有序用电和电力需求响应工作方案印发!_热推荐
- 5 天天实时:青平:警惕商家借“升学”煽动教育焦虑
- 6 e-mail邮箱是qq邮箱吗_mail qq co
- 7 【世界聚看点】桂东电力: 公司油品业务占总体营收比重较大,净利润受成品油市场价格波动影响
- 8 呼吸困难胸闷是什么病吃什么药_呼吸困难胸闷是什么病
- 9 世界短讯!尤文财政赤字将超2.4亿 超越国米意甲纪录前景几何
- 10 茅台冰淇淋一年卖出千万杯:年赚上亿
- 环球今热点:公安部:对欺诈发行证券犯罪毫不姑息一查到底
- 世界新资讯:中泰证券:6月A股整体或仍以调整为主,强调防御优先
- 【全球播资讯】金塔县:再问苍穹踏星海 “航天故乡”勇担当
- 2023第十八届斯迈夫国际体育产业展览会将于六月在京举办_热议
- 河南财政金融学院招生简章 河南财政金融学院排名-每日观点
- 环球观天下!一季度我国新设外商投资企业超九成在服务业
- 在我们等待总决赛的同时报名参加今年夏天即将到来的Embark的ARCRaiders内测
- 你为什么越忙越穷?
- 公共财政收入低于50亿元的区县一律不能新增公司债?假的|今日要闻
- 在岸人民币兑美元跌破7.10 为2022年11月30日以来首次 世界快播
- 王桐萍看病怎么样_王桐晶简历
- 快看:室外ONU配线箱(关于室外ONU配线箱介绍)
- 全球快资讯丨航天宏图(688066)盘中异动 股价振幅达7.04% 跌6.99% 报56.7元(05-31)
- 港股内房股盘初全线下挫 龙湖集团跌4.6%|每日热议
- 蒙自县气象台发布干旱橙色预警信号【Ⅱ级/严重】【2023-05-31】
- 今日关注:8项议案7项被否,家纺巨头“内斗”恶化!昔日盟友反目成仇,去年巨亏4亿
- 肾炎饮食吃什么好呢(肾炎饮食吃什么好) 每日短讯
- 一深万难!我国首口万米科学探索井开钻 挺进地下一万米
- 焦点快报!迈尔斯:勇士如此幸运能够拥有库里作为领袖 库里就像是礼物
- 揭西8基地上榜粤港澳大湾区"菜篮子"生产基地认定名单

书画传家!杨燕来、杨雪来、杨福音艺术展
水银温度计原理(水银温度计的工作原理是热胀冷缩) 世界热推荐
三星Galaxy Fold可折叠智能手机可能很快会重新推出|全球热讯
膜厚测量仪中标结果公告 热闻
燕京八绝联手三孔文化,把非遗穿戴上身|天天信息
咽鼓管吹张正确做法_咽鼓管吹张怎么回事 全球短讯