2017
October
03
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 03, 2017
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The Las Vegas shooting reopens a lamentably familiar debate over gun violence in the United States.

At issue is a sense of security. The left, seeking personal safety, wants to limit gun ownership. The right, seeking personal safety (and having little faith in government) sees gun control as eroding the Second Amendment of the US Constitution.

Since the 2012 Newtown, Conn., shooting, liberals have felt a deep sense of despair over the political impasse, notes one Monitor editor.

But perhaps we need to look more closely at the nature of the problem. Gun violence in America isn’t primarily a mass shooting problem. Almost two-thirds of the 33,000 annual gun deaths in the US are suicides. Or to put it another way, the same number of Americans fatally shoot themselves each day as died in Las Vegas on Sunday.

If the goal is really to reduce gun deaths, we’d focus on preventing suicides and gang violence. Those are two different problems with different solutions. The steps that would prevent mostly older white men from killing themselves aren’t likely to be the same steps that would prevent mostly young minority men from shooting each other. And there are firearms dealers working on stopping suicide by gun, as we’ve reported.

Yes, Las Vegas is another tragic example of America’s mass shooting problem. But the nation has a much bigger gun-death problem that may actually be more solvable.

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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/AP
Shirley Connuck, right, of Falls Church, Va., holds up a sign representing a district in Texas, as the Supreme Court hears a case on possible partisan gerrymandering by state legislatures on October 3.
SOURCE:

US Census, PennLive, Michigan Radio

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Ahmer Khan
Rohingya refugees line up for food aid at a distribution point for food at the Balukhali refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh.
Courtesy of C. Henze/NASA Ames Research Center
A simulation shows the gravitational waves emitted by the merger of two black holes. The colored contours around each black hole represent the gravitational amplitude, the blue lines represent the orbits of the black holes, and the green arrows represent their spins.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
Actor and former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger speaks outside the Supreme Court Oct. 3 after oral arguments in the Gill v. Whitford case and to call for an end to partisan gerrymandering in electoral districts.

A Christian Science Perspective

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A message of love

Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP
The US Capitol dome serves as a backdrop for flags flying at half-staff in honor of those killed in the Las Vegas shooting as the sun rises Oct. 3 at the foot of the Washington Monument on the National Mall.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’re talking to Nevada gun owners and dealers about the national conversation that needs to happen to help prevent mass shootings.

More issues

2017
October
03
Tuesday
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