A minority of gun owners have a veto over gun laws

IT WAS a familiar horror story. A gunman, armed with an assault rifle, barged into a church in a small town in Texas and massacred 26 people, shooting some in the head at close range. A month earlier, a man fired on a crowd of concertgoers in Las Vegas, killing 58, using rifles modified with “bump stocks”—devices designed to mimic the speed of fully automatic weapons. Since the start of 2017, 112 Americans have been killed in mass shootings, making it the worst year in more than three decades.

Asked about the Texas shooting, Donald Trump said it was not “a guns situation” and noted that “you would’ve had hundreds more dead” had an armed neighbour not shot the gunman as he left the church. Gun-rights advocates typically call for a policy moratorium after any mass shooting. No similar sensitivity is on show after terrorist murders. Less than 24 hours after an Uzbek immigrant inspired by Islamic State murdered eight people in New York, Mr Trump was demanding a sweeping policy...Continue reading

Source: United States http://ift.tt/2je6v5M

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