Three
years ago on October 1, 2017 Wikipedia reminds us:
Stephen Paddock,
a 64-year-old man from Mesquite, Nevada, opened fire upon the crowd attending
the Route 91 Harvest music festival on the Las Vegas Strip in Nevada. Between
10:05 and 10:15 p.m. PDT, he fired more than 1,000 rounds of ammunition from
his 32nd floor suites in the Mandalay Bay Hotel, killing 60 people[a] and
wounding 411, with the ensuing panic bringing the injury total to 867. About an
hour later, Paddock was found dead in his room from a self-inflicted gunshot
wound. His motive remains officially undetermined.
The incident is
the deadliest mass shooting committed by an individual in modern United States
history. It focused attention on firearms laws in the U.S., particularly with
regard to bump stocks, which Paddock used to fire shots in rapid succession, at
a rate of fire similar to automatic weapons.[3] As a result, bump stocks were
banned by the U.S. Justice Department in December 2018, with the regulation in
effect as of March 2019.
Within
a couple of days the identities of
the victims became, one by one, known.
They were a cross section of Americans
out to have a good time in the city
that brags about keeping secrets, maybe Whiter than some concert throngs. On October
3rd I took notice of them.
Oh,
and in case you were wondering,
other than that blip reform on bump stocks, no other action was taken
to confront rampant gun violence. In fact the massacre caused a rush
to stock up on more, and more deadly
firearms, ammo, and those soon to be banned bump stocks. The NRA
fundraised over the hysterical
threat of gun grabbers. And for most of us, numbed by way too many shootings, the event has faded into the recesses of our memories.
What Doesn’t
Stay In Vegas
October 3, 2017
What happens in
Vegas doesn’t stay there.
It oozes under
the front door
of that little
house in Tennessee
leaving a nasty
stain in the carpet
that will last
generations.
It drips from
the empty desk
in the high school office
where the phone rings unattended
next to a famed family photo
and a jar of M & Ms.
It is tangled in
the nets
of that Alaska trawler
spilling on the deck
and splattering those rubber boots.
It has to be
wiped from the table
of that Disneyland café
by some other harried waitress
before it spoils some child’s
special day
or gets on Snow White’s costume.
It pools by the
council’s table
in a San Diego courtroom
the empty chair
unable to represent
the mother of three.
It cannot be
washed from
the filthy hands
of every politico
who took gun pushers’ cash
and kissed the ass of every
fetishist wanking himself off
to violence porn and hero fantasies.
—Patrick
Murfin
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