HOW TO THINK ABOUT IT
Here we go again. The mass shooting routine has become sadly familiar. Outrage and calls for gun control on the left, pleas for deliberation and caution on the right. The New York Daily News took umbrage, retweeting politicians offering “thoughts and prayers” along with the amount each had received in campaign donations from the NRA.
It’s the quiet ones. Cruz had been expelled from Marjory Stoneman Douglas for disciplinary reasons, posted violent imagery on social media and bragged about killing animals. The FBI also had reason to suspect Cruz: A YouTube user named Nikolas Cruz posted “I’m going to be a professional school shooter” in a comment in September, but the information never made it to local law enforcement.
Where’s POTUS? In a televised address nearly a full day after the shooting, Donald Trump said he will soon pay a visit to Parkland, which is about 40 miles from his Mar-a-Lago club. He didn’t mention guns Thursday morning, focusing instead on the need to offer more support to mentally troubled youth: “Answer hate with love. Answer cruelty with kindness.”
Hero on the scene. Assistant football coach and security guard Aaron Feis, according to witnesses, draped himself over students to protect them from the shooter — and died in Wednesday’s massacre. Feis, a beloved figure who played football at Marjory Stoneman Douglas and coached there for a decade, was described by the head football coach as a “big ol’ teddy bear.”
By the numbers. The gun control advocacy group Everytown for Gun Safety released a stunning statistic: Wednesday was the 18th school shooting so far this year, a number cited prominently in media coverage of the massacre. But Everytown has a broad definition for “school shooting,” including incidents where firearms were discharged and no one was injured, or when there was a suicide. Based on reports compiled by Everytown, there were three gun murders on school property this year before Parkland.