geonuc wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:geonuc wrote:Sure seems like the anti-gun movement is gaining steam. Along with Dick's Sporting Good not selling assault rifles, high capacity magazines and to those under 21, several large companies such as Delta have eliminated NRA perks, Chubb insurance will no longer offer NRA members 'murder insurance', and WalMart (which had already stopped selling assault rifles) now won't sell toys that look like assault rifles and they too have imposed a 21 year old age requirement for firearms and ammunition.
So, to what do we attribute this turn in national attitude? Keep in mind that in 2012, a gunman killed a couple dozen elementary school children and teachers and that had little effect.
Maybe I should have comprehended your post in addition to reading it.
I think what happens is that eventually the water builds up enough behind the dam to start overflowing the dam. Then the spillways get opened up and the next thing you know it is a flood. People will perceive that these kids in Parkland caused the change. And they deserve a huge amount of credit. All of the events leading up to those kids helped raise the water level (trying to stick to the same analogy). If they had to start with the water at the base of the dam they may not have been perceived to have had much of an effect. In 2012 the water wasn't quite high enough.
That seems to be the case in a very general sense, but I'm still very surprised. I mean, the Sandy Hook shooting was pretty horrific and the chief legacy from that seems to be a strengthening of the 'crisis actors' stupidity. Although, I think Walmart might have stopped selling assault rifles as a result of Sandy Hook.
I think, as SciFiFisher said, it is a little the water-building-up-behind the dam. And not just Sandy Hook, and this shooting, but Las Vegas, and the various church shootings, and on, and on....
But I think the students are a lot more than riding this wave over the top of the dam (being at the right place in history at the right time). Obviously, the grade school children from Sandy Hook weren't going to decide on their own to march on Washington. And though their parents tried, maybe it was a little too much like other adults from other shootings (though they certainly changed the laws in Connecticut).
These students are almost the perfect age for activism. They are adult enough to understand the system, the problems, and to be independent enough for action. But they are still not old cynical codgers like us, and think they can change the world. And one or several of them had the brilliant idea to turn their pain and sorrow into anger, and direct it in the right direction. And Columbine was 19 years ago... things like social media have changed how society reacts to things and how quickly things can change.
Of course, six months from now, after the next big shooting, we may all be saying "hey, whatever happened with....". Maybe at least they have destroyed the old "this is not the time to talk about this, out of respect for the survivors". These survivors are saying "NO, this is exactly the time to talk about this".
We will see.