Each slaughter of innocents seems to get more appalling. A
high school. A college campus. A movie theater. People meeting their
congresswoman. A shopping mall in Oregon, just this Tuesday. On Friday,
an elementary school classroom.
People will want to know about the killer in Newtown,
Conn. His background and his supposed motives. Did he show signs of
violence? But what actually matters are the children. What are their
names? What did they dream of becoming? Did they enjoy finger painting?
Or tee ball?
All that is now torn away. There is no crime greater than
violence against children, no sorrow greater than that of a parent who
has lost a child, especially in this horrible way. Our hearts are broken
for those parents who found out their children — little more than
babies, really — were wounded or killed, and for those who agonized for
hours before taking their traumatized children home.
President Obama said he had talked to Gov. Dannel P.
Malloy of Connecticut and promised him the full resources of the federal
government to investigate the killer and give succor to his victims. We
have no doubt Mr. Obama will help in any way he can, for now, but what
about addressing the problem of guns gone completely out of control, a
problem that comes up each time a shooter opens fire on a roomful of
people but then disappears again?
The assault weapons ban enacted under President Clinton
was deficient and has expired. Mr. Obama talked about the need for
“common sense” gun control after the movie theater slaughter in Aurora,
Colo., and he hinted during the campaign that he might support a new
assault weapons ban, presumably if someone else introduced it.
Republicans will never do that, because they are mired in
an ideology that opposes any gun control. After each tragedy, including
this one, some people litter the Internet with grotesque suggestions
that it would be better if everyone (kindergarten teachers?) were armed.
Far too many Democrats also live in fear of the gun lobby and will not
support an assault weapons ban, or a ban on high-capacity bullet clips,
or any one of a half-dozen other sensible ideas.
Mr. Obama said Friday that “we have been through this too
many times” and that “we’re going to have to come together and take
meaningful action to prevent more tragedies like this, regardless of the
politics.”
When will that day come? It did not come after the 1999
Columbine shooting, or the 2007 Virginia Tech shooting, or the murders
in Aurora last summer.
The more that we hear about gun control and nothing
happens, the less we can believe it will ever come. Certainly, it will
not unless Mr. Obama and Congressional leaders show the courage to make
it happen.
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