Gun violence in America has always been a great concern to communities, families and law enforcement officials. But in recent years gun violence has received a great deal more publicity and public concern because of the mass shootings -- particularly in schools -- that the media focuses on in great detail. In other words, a law-abiding family living in a quiet small town in Vermont is impacted emotionally when a gunman enters a school in California or Connecticut and murders innocent children. This paper identifies recent trends in mass shootings, potential laws that would attempt to keep guns out of the hands of mentally disturbed and violent individuals, and how the National Rifle Association (NRA) uses unethical tactics to promote its paranoid obsession that government is out to take guns away from law-abiding gun owners.
Recent Mass Shootings
Of the many gruesome mass killings that have been reported on television screens and in newspapers across the country over the recent past is the bloody slaughter at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. This heinous crime stands out as the most egregiously inhumane among all the mass killings recorded in the past twenty years or so. A twenty-year-old individual, clearly deranged and lacking in human feelings, entered Sandy Hook on Friday, December 14 in 2012 and "…executed 20 young children and six teachers and administrators" (Thompson, 2014). There were reports that some of the children were shot in the forehead multiple times. The killer, Adam Lanza, turned a gun on himself and took his own life, but the damage he did could never be undone and the parents of the twenty kindergartens and first grade children have to live with this tragedy the rest of their lives.
Thompson, writing in the peer-reviewed journal Society, mentions that between 1997 and 2012, "…ten boys have killed 73 students, parents, and teachers, and wounded 99 more," in the nine school shooting incidents that have received the most attention (Thompson, 2010). Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris, who attended Columbine High School in Colorado, are among the most highly publicized of young killers. The pair killed 12 students and a teacher before killing themselves, but they had much bigger plans than just killing fellow classmates.
Thompson explains that they had planned (for over a year prior to the attack in 1999) to "…bomb and level the entire school in a series of massive explosions and then shoot everyone left alive" (there were 2,000 students and 150 teachers and staff at Columbine High School) (2010).
FBI Confirms Sharp Rise in Mass Shootings
For people who pay close attention to the news -- even grim, violent news -- have seen what seems like an increase in mass shootings over the past fifteen years or so. What seems like an increase in mass shootings is in fact just that -- a dramatic increase. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) reported in September, 2014, that there have been, on average, 16.4 mass shootings each year between 2007 and 2013 (Schmidt, 2014). In the years 2000 to 2006, there were an average of 6.4 mass shootings reported, so the increase since 2007 (Schmidt, p. 1).
Four hundred eighty six people have died in mass shootings over the past 13 years, and 366 of those were killed over the past seven years, Schmidt explains. The FBI report did not take into consideration shootings based on gang violence or domestic disputes, and it found that in 44 of the 64 cases the gunfire lasted "less than five minutes" (Schmidt, p. 1). In 23 of the 64 cases the gunman finished his evil deed in less than two minutes, so the data shows that perpetrators go into situations with multiple weapons loaded, intending to shoot quickly before they could be stopped, killing as many people as possible.
The FBI report also noted that in 21 of 45 mass shootings in which officers confronted the gunmen, "…nine officers were killed and 28 were wounded," which led to the suggestion that "…local officers need to be better trained and equipped to stop gunmen intent on slaughter" (Schmidt, p. 2).
Harvard Research -- Mass Shootings have Tripled Since 2011
Data compiled by Harvard University researchers and published by Mother Jones magazine show that a mass shooting has occurred "…on average every 172 days since 1982" (Cohen, et al., 2014). The data gathered for this research deliberately left out killings in private homes, where domestic troubles contribute to violence against family and friends. Instead the data gathered involved public shootings "…in...
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