Maine鈥檚 mass shooting should change America鈥檚 gun culture

ANOTHER mass shooting. Another group of innocents slaughtered. Another public gathering place terrorized. Another community devastated. And another occasion for the gun lobby to say: Oh, well, move along, nothing to see here.
Not this time. We can鈥檛 let it happen again. We can鈥檛 let the gun lobby get away with it. Not when your community 鈥 your bowling alley, your bar, your house of worship, your movie theater, your supermarket, your shopping mall, your workplace and, yes, your child鈥檚 school 鈥 could be next. Unless we take action to adopt smart and common-sense gun laws, the question isn鈥檛 whether another massacre will occur 鈥 only how soon. And sadly, we know the answer: very soon.
In 2023 alone, there have been more than 565 incidents in which someone shot four or more people 鈥 that鈥檚 almost two mass shootings a day. The US is the only country in the world where this happens. We are not the only country with mentally ill people, of course, just the only country that makes it easy for nearly anyone, no matter how dangerous, to buy guns, including guns that were designed to be used by soldiers.
There is no reason any civilian needs to carry a military-grade rifle. It鈥檚 not a hunting weapon. It鈥檚 a weapon designed to kill as many people as quickly as possible. The same is true for high-capacity magazines. If someone needs a high-capacity magazine to shoot a deer or a bird, they must be the world鈥檚 worst shot. They need an instructor, not a semiautomatic rifle.
The continued sale of these weapons and magazines not only places all Americans at risk, but it also endangers our police officers, including those who must track down and apprehend people who have shown no compunction about killing as many people as possible.
The definition of insanity, it鈥檚 often said, is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result. That鈥檚 what the gun lobby wants us to keep doing 鈥 offering 鈥渢houghts and prayers鈥 but doing nothing. But there are some encouraging signs that more people are refusing to go along.
Faced with the enormity of the catastrophe, Jared Golden, the Democratic congressman who represents most of rural Maine, has reversed his opposition to a ban on assault weapons. In announcing his change of heart, Golden 鈥 a Marine Corps veteran who knows the deadly capacity of these weapons firsthand 鈥 used words the public rarely hears from elected officials: 鈥淭he time has now come for me to take responsibility for this failure,鈥 he said to his great credit, asking Maine鈥檚 residents 鈥渇or forgiveness and support.鈥
Senator Susan Collins, too, has begun to reevaluate her positions. Collins was among the Republicans who helped kill an assault-weapons ban in 2013, after the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut. She now says that she supports a ban on high-capacity magazines, as does Senator Angus King. Golden should work to persuade both to join him in reviving an assault weapons ban.
Golden can also help bring along Maine鈥檚 state lawmakers and Democratic governor, Janet Mills. Mills has previously failed to lend her support to red-flag laws that are designed to prevent the kind of tragedy the state has just suffered: stopping a person with a history of mental illness from being able to buy and possess guns. She has also opposed stronger background checks and limits on magazines. Her support now is crucial to reviving and passing such laws.
It鈥檚 not just in Maine where the politics of gun safety are changing. Last year, after nearly three decades of inaction, 15 Republican senators joined Democrats to pass the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act following mass shootings in Buffalo and Uvalde. And this year, Vermont, which like Maine has a strong tradition of gun ownership, adopted new gun-safety policies under a Republican governor.
In the days and weeks ahead, it鈥檚 crucial for all of us to make our voices heard and demand that elected officials who have opposed sensible gun regulations follow Representative Golden in reversing course. The gun lobby wants the massacre in Maine to pass from the news quickly. We can鈥檛 let them win 鈥 not when so many innocent people are dying, so many families are grieving, and so many Americans are facing danger in their own communities.
The moment is now. Speak out. Get involved. And when politicians offer only thoughts and prayers, counter with deeds and votes. It鈥檚 the only way out of this insanity.
BLOOMBERG OPINION


