New gun tragedy in the US: Three dead by fire in a church parking lot

The list of victims of gun attacks continues to grow USA. A man has shot and killed two women in a church parking lot in Iowa before turning his shotgun on himself, police said.

The incident in Iowa was announced shortly after President Joe Biden’s sermon on the issue of weapons after the mass shootings in Buffalo (New York), Ovalde (Texas) and Tulsa (Oklahoma).

Moreover two people – five, according to media – were seriously injured, one by bullets during a funeral in the city of Racine (Wisconsin) yesterday at noon (local time). No arrests were reported.

In Iowa, according to Nicholas Lenny, a Story County police officer, the killing took place outside Cornerstone Church, east of Ames. It is a church of fundamentalist Christians. Mr Lenny spoke of an “isolated incident”, declining to reveal the relationship between the perpetrator and the victims, according to Reuters and the Athens News Agency.

Biden: Enough is enough!

A few minutes earlier, President Biden was shouting “Enough is enough!” during a sermon which called on Congress to ban the sale of assault rifles and large-caliber cartridges and to promote stricter checks on the criminal record and psychiatric history of would-be firearms buyers.

It has been almost ten days since 19 children and two teachers were slaughtered inside a Texas school.

“How many more massacres are we willing to accept?” thundered the head of state, reiterating in his seventeen-minute sermon from the White House that the “repeat” attacks with the use of firearms, which immerse the United States in mourning, are “enough”.

Behind the podium were 56 candles, representing the victims of the massacres in all US states and regions.

After the most recent, in the primary school of Uvalde, in a supermarket in Buffalo, in a hospital in Tulsa, he stressed that “too many” locations in the country have been “turned into places of killing, of battlefields”.

THE Mr. Biden called for a nationwide ban on the sale of semi-automatic assault rifles, as had been the case from 1994 to 2004. that the minimum that can and should be done is to increase the age limit for the purchase of such weapons, which is now 18 years old, to 21.

He also demanded that large-capacity magazines be banned, that controls on the criminal record and psychological history of would-be arms buyers be tightened, and that individuals be required to keep their weapons locked in their homes.

“For twenty years now, more students have been killed by gunfire than police and soldiers on duty together. Think about it”threw away.

“The ‘second amendment’ to the US Constitution, which guarantees the right to bear arms, is not ‘absolute,'” he said.

After Sandy Hook

“I support the (‘s) efforts of a small group of Republicans and Democratic senators seeking to find a way, but, oh my God, the fact that a majority of Republican senators do not want any of these proposals to be debated, let alone put to a vote. “I find this unacceptable,” he said.

“We can not betray the American people again,” he said. “It’s time for the Senate to do something.”

“Thank you, Mr. President,” Senator Chris Murphy tweeted after the address.

“We should do something. “And we can,” continued the Connecticut candidate, who, forever marked by the Sandy Hook massacre (26 dead, including 20 children in 2012), has taken on the role of pilot in the Republican-Senate debate.

The challenge for this group is to find measures that could be adopted by ten Republicans – to secure the strengthened majority needed.

Nevertheless In a country where more than 30% of adults own at least one firearm, conservatives strongly oppose any measure against the rights of “law-abiding citizens”.

The debate in the Senate revolves around limited proposals, such as the control of the criminal record and the history of would-be arms buyers, something that civil society organizations have been calling for for years.

It remains to be seen whether the negotiations in Congress will bear fruit or whether the current initiative will have the fate of the previous ones, like the one in the days of Barack Obama after the Sandy Hook massacre.

Mr Murphy assured that there was “an increasingly strong momentum” to “get something done”. Republican Sen. Pat Tummy has expressed “optimism” about this.

At the same time, a draft law was discussed in the House of Representatives yesterday, which provides for a ban on the sale of assault rifles to individuals under the age of 21, as well as a complete ban on the sale of large-capacity magazines. The text, which will be put to a vote in the House next week, has already been described as “ineffective”, “irrational”, “anti-American” by a group of Republicans. Even if it passes the House, it is not considered that there is a chance for it to be voted in the Senate.

Source: News Beast

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