The Republican refusal to blame guns for mass shootings gets a new angle
for
On March 27, a 28-year-old armed with two assault rifles and a handgun broke into a Nashville school and murdered three 9-year-old children and three adults, just the latest deadly school shooting in the United States of America.
Republicans
are offering a different response than their usual, because of one fact: The
shooter is reportedly transgender.
The U.S. has school shooting after school shooting, and Republicans respond with thoughts and prayers and obstruction of meaningful gun laws. But let one shooter be trans, and it’s time for action—action against trans people.
Donald Trump, Jr. weighed in. So did Sen. J.D. Vance, writing, “We're still learning about the horrific shooting in Nashville. But if early reports are accurate that a trans shooter targeted a Christian school, there needs to be a lot of soul searching on the extreme left. Giving in to these ideas isn't compassion, it's dangerous.”
Here’s the thing. We don’t know much about the shooter. What we do know is that the shooter’s name was Audrey Hale, and he went by he/him pronouns.
We know he was
a former student of the private Christian school he attacked, and
that access to guns undeniably enabled him to do it.
Most mass shooters, at schools and in other locations, are cisgender males. In fact, at least 95% of mass shootings are perpetrated by cisgender men, according to analysis by Mother Jones magazine dating back to 1982, and a Violence Project analysis dating back to 1966.
That a mass shooter is a
cisgender man is basically taken for granted at this point. But what they all
have in common is the guns they use to murder with.
That’s not going
to stop the Republican hate campaign, an effort to distract from the guns and
point a finger instead at the shooter’s gender identity.
News of a “manifesto” is big among Republicans, even though we have no reliable public reporting on what that manifesto might have said, and despite the fact that Republicans have repeatedly dismissed shooters’ manifestos when they reveal far-right influences.
It is by now an article of faith on the right that this was a hate crime against Christians (again, remember that the shooter attended the Covenant School) by a trans person.
Citing a right-wing tweet
about a supposed “Trans Day of Vengeance,” Sen. Josh
Hawley tweeted, “This kind of
hateful rhetoric - ‘genocide’ and ‘day of vengeance’ - must be
condemned. The hate crime massacre in Nashville exposes where rhetoric like
this can lead.”
The original tweet
has since been taken down, but Hawley’s baseless observations remain. Hawley,
by the way, was the lone Senate vote against a hate crimes bill.
But now he’s all concerned about hate crimes.
“Transgender
people are actually those among us who are more likely to be the target of
violent hate crimes across the country every day—because of this very kind of
demonization—and the actions of GOP politicians and MAGA commentators will only
further embolden the hate that leads to violence,” Michelangelo Signorile wrote.
There’s so much we
don't know, but Republicans are rushing to take one little sliver of the
available information and construct a whole new branch of their ongoing
campaign against trans people while conducting their well-practiced rejection
of the thing we do know every single time we watch the aftermath of a mass
shooting—that it happened because of virtually unfettered access to guns in
this country.
Six innocent
people are dead, three of them children. And it was not the shooter’s gender
identity that sent bullets speeding into their bodies.