It evoked the massacre at Pulse, an Orlando LGBTQ club where, in 2016, 49 people were gunned down by a self-radicalized jihadist.
It took place at a drag show the day before Transgender Day of Remembrance, which honors those murdered in acts of transphobia, in a year marked by disgusting political attacks against transgender people by the likes of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.
It might be the product of ingrained self-loathing. According to their defense attorneys, the alleged shooter, 22-year-old Anderson Lee Aldrich, identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns. Their father, MMA coach Aaron Brink, told a CBS affiliate in San Diego that his first thought after hearing from his childโs public defender was to ask why his kid was in a gay bar.
โAnd then I go on to find out itโs a gay bar. I said, โGod, is he gay?โ I got scared, โShit, is he gay?โ And heโs not gay, so I said, โPhew.โ Iโm a Mormon. Iโm a conservative Republican. We donโt do gay.โ
Another disturbing detail: Aldrichโs arrest a year ago for threatening their mother with a homemade bomb should have triggered Coloradoโs red flag law, enabling authorities to seize their guns. But El Paso County declared itself a โSecond Amendment sanctuary,โ and police there havenโt seemed concerned about enforcing the law.
โMost gun carriers say they need protection from other people. But the evidence for defensive gun use is sketchy.โ
A veteran of Afghanistan and Iraq who was twice awarded the Bronze Star, Richard Fierro responded by instinct. When the shooting started, Fierroโwho was there with his wife, daughter, and her boyfriendโpulled the shooter to the floor from behind, dislodging their rifle, grabbed their pistol from their hand, then beat the shit out of them.
Fierroโs wife and daughter survived with only minor injuries. His daughterโs boyfriend didnโt make it.
โI donโt know how I got the weapon away from that guy, no idea,โ he told The New York Times. โIโm just a dude, Iโm a fat old vet, but I knew I had to do something.โ
Like many vets, Richard Fierro had trouble leaving the war behind. He came home in 2013 on edge. He saw a shrink and started taking meds. He also got rid of his guns. Put a pin in that.
Club Q was followed just three days later by a mass shooting in a Chesapeake, Virginia, Walmart that claimed six victims, all store employees. Chesapeake was the 607th mass shooting of 2022, according to the Gun Violence Archive, which defines mass shootings as incidents in which four or more people are shot.
As I write this on the morning of Nov. 28, 10 more incidents have been added to the list.
Using a narrower definitionโactive-shooter incidents in populated areas that produced three or more fatalitiesโChesapeake marked the yearโs 12th mass shooting, tying 2018 for a record that dates back at least 40 years, with a month yet to go. Seventy-four people have died in these incidents this year.
For comparison, from 1994-2004โthe 10 years in which we had a federal assault weapons banโ17 mass shootings killed 106 people. Itโs almost like we were on to something.
But despite the proposalโs popularity and Democratic control of Washington, Congress hasnโt restored the assault weapons ban. Nor did Democrats ban high-capacity magazines or subject private sales to background checks, both of which have majority support. Instead, after Uvalde, Congress cobbled together a bipartisan nothing-burger.
Chesapeake wasnโt perpetuated with an assault rifle, however. The killer used a handgunโas did killers in 155 of the 268 mass-fatality active-shooter incidents since 1982.
Handguns are used in about 80% of murders in the U.S.; in 2020, more than 19,000 people were shot to death. A new report found that the number of Americans carrying a loaded handgun every day doubled to 6 million between 2015-2019. Not surprisingly, most were white, male, and lived in states with less restrictive gun laws.
Most gun carriers say they need protection from other people. But the evidence for defensive gun use is sketchy; the best data indicates that guns are seven times more likely to be used in a crime than to defend a victim and only 1-2% of crime victims use a gun defensively.
โWhat we do know for sure,โ David Hemenway, โโdirector of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, told The Trace, โis that having a gun in your house increases suicides, it increases gun accidents, and it increases homicides, at least of women in the house.โ
Guns are, in fact, used in most suicides, and are more common in suicides than murders. Most firearm suicides involved handguns that are stored unlocked and loaded so owners can have quick access protection. But we know that implementing even small barriers can cause people to rethink their suicidal impulses; not having guns anywhere near them is an even better deterrent.
We also know that states with the loosest gun laws (e.g., Mississippi, Louisiana, Wyoming) had the highest rates of gun deaths in 2020, and states with the most restrictive laws (e.g., Hawaii, Massachusetts, New Jersey) had the lowest.
And we know that while nearly 80% of homicides in the United Statesโwhich has more than twice as many guns per capita as Yemen, the worldโs second-most gun-friendly countryโare carried out with firearms, compared with only 4% of homicides in the U.K., which also has less than one-fourth of Americaโs homicide rate.
Maybe miss me with the โguns donโt kill peopleโ thing.
This article appears in Nov 24-30, 2022.

