Thirteen years ago today: Sandy Hook

12 thoughts on “Thirteen years ago today: Sandy Hook”

  1. I don’t seen gun control happening in my lifetime, even though polls have shown that most Americans support some kind of gun control. And just this week another mass shooting at Brown University. That this is a preventable tragedy makes it only worse.

    1. The Brown shooting got my attention immediately. One of my granddaughter’s best friends goes there.

      I can’t even imagine going to school these days thinking you could be shot or killed on any given day, and having regular active shooter drills. The worst I ever saw were fire drills and tornado drills (which paid off when my high school’s auditorium burned). The only guns I ever saw were my dad’s shotgun, the .22 I got for my twelfth birthday (it was my dad’s when he was a kid), and the rifles we used for riflery class at CU.

      That most Americans favor some kind of gun control and yet don’t get it because of NRA influence in Congress is depressing.

      1. John has a point about the laws. I recently gave one of sons a pistol that had belonged to my father. He delayed taking it because of legal restrictions on shipping. Finally took it home this year by buying a TSA-approved carrying case to pack with luggage on the flight. The thing had to have two small padlocks on it, designed to be openable by TSA. I thought it was a good example of an unduly-restrictive law. The tiny cables could easily be cut, so why two? And, why wouldn’t simple declaration that it was in the luggage be enough? That said, the line should be drawn at assault-style guns. They are as much a weapon of war as a rocket-launcher RPG.

        1. I agree assault-style weapons should be forbidden to the public. Period. We used to have such a ban but despite public support, it was allowed to sunset. Shame on Congress for letting it go.

          I don’t know anything about laws re shipping guns. Somehow my dad’s .22 rifle got from Oklahoma City to Boulder. Either it was shipped or somebody in the family just transported it by car. But that was several decades ago. The laws were likely changed. Still, it should have been a simple matter to either ship your dad’s pistol or put it in checked luggage in the plane’s cargo hold.

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