US accepts grim reality of school shooting in every 60 hours 

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FLORIDA: The deadly gun rampage at a Florida high school on Wednesday took to 18 the number of school shootings across the United States so far this year – an average of one school shooting every 60 hours, reported by The Telegraph.

The former New York Police Chief Bill Bratton said the statistic was “astonishing”, but admitted that it was “the new normal”.

“The reality is, this is something that will just continue to occur,” he told MSNBC.

The stunning number underscored how commonplace gun violence has become in America, with students in primary and high schools regularly performing drills on how to react in an “active shooter” situation.

According to the independent Everytown for Gun Safety group, eight of the 18 school shooting incidents so far this year, which cover primary schools to universities, involved guns being discharged with no one injured.

Two were suicide attempts, and the rest attacks on others.

The attack on Wednesday at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida – about 50 miles north of Miami – appeared to be the worst so far in 2018, with at least 17 confirmed dead.

It also ranked as the third deadliest mass shooting at a school in modern history, after the Virginia Tech and Sandy Hook massacres.

Donald Trump offered his “prayers and condolences to the families of the victims” in the latest tragedy.

Democratic Congressman Ted Deutch of Florida thanked colleagues for reaching out to him, calling it both “heartwarming and obscene.”

The congressman said he uses the word “obscene” because school shootings had become so commonplace that lawmakers were offering him guidance on what to expect in coming days as constituents grapple with the tragedy.

Deutch was among a number of politicians who urged the president “do something” about gun violence.

Former Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, the Arizona Democrat who survived being shot in the head in 2011, said the latest atrocity should “strike fear into all Americans”.

Saying it was the latest attack in an epidemic of gun violence that continues “days after deadly day”, Giffords said the tragedy should stir fresh resolve in Congress to “find the courage to pass the laws we need to protect our children”.

A number of celebrities also called for action on gun control, with actress Bette Midler calling members of Congress “spineless cowards”.

However, Republican Florida Senator Marco Rubio responded to calls for greater gun control by saying a law might not have prevented the shooting.

He said “people still don’t know how” the shooting occurred, or how the suspect Nikolas Cruz obtained the weapon.

“I think it’s important to know all of that before you jump to conclusions that there was some law that we could have passed that would have prevented it,” Rubio said on Fox News.

He also said it was too early for his Senate colleagues to call for new laws.

“I think you can always have that debate,” Rubio said. “But if you’re gonna have that debate about this particular incident you should know the facts of that incident before you run out and prescribe some law that you claim could have prevented it.”

Florida Governor Rick Scott – who described the massacre as “just pure evil” – declined to make a statement on gun control in the aftermath of the shooting.

“There’s a time to continue to have these conversations about how through law enforcement, how through mental illness funding that we make sure people is safe, and we’ll continue to do that,” said Scott, a Republican.

Each incident like the one in Parkland brings calls for more strict laws on gun sales and ownership, but gun rights campaigners regularly succeed in stifling those calls.

Indeed, laws on carrying guns in public have been made less strict in many areas.

“This is US,” the New York Daily News declared on Thursday’s front page, highlighting the fact there have been 300 such incidents in schools since the Sandy Hook tragedy in 2012.

In those six years, there have been 1,607 mass shootings, with at least 1,846 people killed, according to the Gun Violence Archive.

When it comes to major mass shootings (where more than four people are killed), there have been an average of just 72 days between events during the period of 2010 to 2017 .

This is a far more frequent rate when compared to the average gap of 162 days from 2000 to 2010, according to data compiled by Mother Jones.

Florida in particular has been the setting of several particularly deadly shootings in recent years.

The worst remains and attack on an Orlando gay nightclub on June 12, 2016, which saw a heavily armed man – who pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group – kill 49 people.

Six months later, a man opened fire at Fort Lauderdale International Airport, killing five people on January 6, 2017.

The state, home to 21 million people, has handed out more gun permits than any other state – around 1.9 million as of January, according to official statistics.

But this only makes up part of the total number of firearms, an unknown figure that cannot be estimated.