The British newspaper Financial Times, in its editorial entitled “Dealing with guns as fate and the fate that kills America’s children,” stressed that “the most horrific aspects of the horrific mass shootings in the United States of America today are” the morbid fatalism that follows this. as the Republicans offer their useless thoughts and prayers as they head to the upcoming NRA convention.

“Democrats say nothing can be done unless conservatives abandon their immediate opposition to any semblance of gun law reform,” she said, emphasizing that “with each new massacre, this feeling of powerlessness is taking root deeper, and the reputation that once sank America it was well deserved as a place that solves more problems.”

The newspaper stated: “Like bad weather or car accidents, school massacres have become part of everyday life. Such fatalism should be the curse of every American.” And she believed that “a lot can be done in this regard. For starters, U.S. President Joe Biden should insist that Congress vote directly on laws that reasonably control gun ownership and force his obstructionists to register their names on the record.”

Topping the list should be a ban on the sale of army weapons, which are used in most shootings in schools and other public places, as well as in last week’s school massacre, as well as in the shooting of ten Africans. “Americans in the supermarket for up to three weeks.”

She also stated that “it’s no coincidence that mass shootings have skyrocketed since 2004, when the 10-year ban on semi-automatic weapons ended,” noting that “Biden knows this better than anyone because he was involved in the development of the 1994 bill “. draft law that introduced the ban.