Monday, December 15, 2025

Something to Know - 16 December

I do not believe that a subject has been written more about than this one.   You would think that as much attention that has been devoted, that it would have had some positive result; but no, it has deteriorated even more.    Shootings - mass shootings in particular, and in public places where everyday people gather in going about their own business.   The horrors of shootings of students - innocent people in the process of education in being knowledgeable and productive citizens - snuffed out by a piece of metal traveling at high speed and striking them dead from the pull of a trigger by a sick person with a misanthropic agenda.   What follows is the predictable hum of sorrow, offers of thoughts and prayers; the same reaction as the previous mass shooting.  Cries for gun reform in many forms are rolled out, just as before, and this scenario plays out over and over and over again.   It's not difficult to understand why this keeps happening, and why things don't get better.    It's easy to figure out.  We are a good society with problems - and we know what the problems are.   1.  We have an amendment to our Constitution that follows the declaration of  being based on peace and happiness and domestic tranquility to be subverted with horrific results.   2.  We have too many guns.   3.  We have drifted into accepting that it is a Constitutional right to have a gun; anyone who wants one can get one; it's easier to get a gun than it is to get a driver's license.   We have a form of government that is totally run by the L.I.C (Lobbyist Industrial Complex).   The industries that make guns, sell guns, make and sell bullets are the main culprits of the LIC.   Then you have the ancillary industries that make money off of people getting shot (not to be identified here).   4. And finally you have the legislators in all our forms of government who thrive on financial support from the LIC who drown out or kick cans down the road preventing good legislation from occurring.   So, we know what the problem is.   Nothing is going to happen until we have a Constitutional do-over, and/or get our legislators to develop the spines necessary to combat the LIC.

Hey, Republicans - Quit the warfare and Keep the Healthcare

America Is Failing Its Children

Yesterday's attack at Brown University is just the latest example.

A photo showing police tape on the ground
Taylor Coester / Reuters
December 14, 2025, 12:07 PM ET

Updated at 1:20 p.m. ET on December 14, 2025

Nothing encapsulates the failures of our society more than what just happened to Mia Tretta. When she was 15, she was shot in the stomach by a classmate at her high school in California. Yesterday, she survived the second school shooting of her short life: A person opened fire at Brown University, where Tretta is a junior.

Students were studying for finals when a shooter walked into an economics classroom and started firing, killing two students, injuring nine, and inflicting terror on not just a campus but an entire city. No suspect has been named yet, but authorities have detained a "person of interest."xI left Brooklyn to attend Brown in 1995, when New York City had yet to shake its rough-and-tumble reputation. Of all the amenities that the Ivy League campus provided—bountiful libraries, a full-service gym—the most luxurious to me was a sense of safety. I'd walk around campus at all hours of the night; just the other day, my freshman roommate and I reminisced about keeping our dorm room unlocked so our friends could come and go. Despite how much has changed in the decades since I was there, it was that sense of security that had, after what she'd endured in high school, appealed to Tretta.

I'm a trustee at Brown now. Many of my friends have children there, and I know and care for countless staff members and administrators. When yet another tragedy like this takes place in America, everyone grieves. But it feels different when it happens so close to home. When you hear that your friend's daughter is hiding in a bathroom in the Sciences Library, you can picture the tiny floor tiles she's staring at. You can conjure the smell of the heat in the dorm where a student you recently had coffee with is sheltering in place. And you're able to picture the streets where the shooter is rumored to have been running at large.


I was a senior at Brown, sitting in a coffee shop a stone's throw from where yesterday's attack occurred, when I read about two boys in Colorado who'd donned black trench coats, walked into their high school, and opened fire with pump-action shotguns. At the time, it was a shocking story. It inspired a documentary, a film, and songs. If each school shooting that's happened since had inspired such creative output, we could populate an entire streaming service.

Every mass shooting in America fills me with sorrow, but this particular incident has been coupled with a dose of nihilism. Across the nation this week, students will be opening emails announcing their early-decision college acceptances. For many of America's children, it's the culmination of the zero-sum game of elite college admissions. They have been trained from their earliest years to pass exams and write essays so that they may one day be lucky enough to study for their finals in an Ivy League classroom where, randomly, at any moment, a shooter might open fire.

Over the past day, I've found myself ruminating on Thomas Hobbes's Leviathan. In Hobbes's estimation, the natural state of things was chaos: competition, violence, greed, war, self-interest, and economic insecurity. Government was the only solution to provide order and create a functioning society. Even tyranny, according to Hobbes, was better than all of that. Today, we seem to have saddled ourselves with tyranny while being mired in more chaos than ever.

No matter how great our collective amnesia, these mass shootings add up. Tretta is not even the only student at Brown who had already been involved in one. Zoe Weissmann, now 20, was only 12 when gunshots were fired at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, in Parkland, Florida. She was in a classroom in the middle school across campus. Yesterday she told The New York Times, "What I've been feeling most is just, like, how dare this country allow this to happen to someone like me twice?"


This article originally misstated the number of shooters involved in the Columbine massacre.

About the Author

Xochitl Gonzalez is a staff writer at The Atlantic. She is the author of the novels Anita de Monte Laughs Last and Olga Dies Dreaming, and was a finalist for the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for Commentary.

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Juan Matute
CCRC


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