butters
High on a Hill
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2009
- Posts
- 85,801
“There were six bodies that were immediately assessed to be dead. Those bodies were literally blown up by these bullets.” (Authorities confirmed Monday afternoon that at least six people had been killed; the gunman remained at large.)
Other victims were hit in the arms or legs, Baum said. “I saw horrific, devastating injuries, the kind that you normally see in a war.”
https://www.yahoo.com/news/doctor-rushed-aid-victims-moments-200659432.htmlAs emergency responders tended to victims, Baum said he pitched in with other healthcare professionals, including a nurse, a nurse practitioner, an emergency room doctor, and a plastic surgeon.
“I don't think I need to describe the horrific nature of what the bullets did to those bodies, but it was horrific,” said Baum of Monday’s attack. “As a physician for 33 years, blood doesn't bother me. But seeing people's heads blown up, and bodies eviscerated, would be disturbing to anyone who was there besides maybe a physician.”
i was watching stuff unfold on abc... they had some guy (some 'expert) very keen to intercede in the narrative of the moment with how "impossible" it is to stop these kinds of shootings, given the numbers of guns out there, yada yada yada, and how focusing on mental health is the only way forward.
of course mental health's important; people have been lobbying for YEARS for improved mental health care. But it's not true to say these kinds of attacks are impossible to stop; it might not stop every single one, but the one step that could be taken to prevent so many, and the kinds of casualties the doctor above and those speaking after Ulvade, is one most republicans will refuse to go near: BAN civilian ownership of any of these AR/AK/whatever boutique name they're being sold under 'assault-style rifles. Declare them illegal to own, illegal to have inside your home, illegal to be sold to the general public.
without that step, this will continue to happen in shops and places of business, church, parks, concerts, movie houses, parades... every day life. Until enough people are personally impacted that they feel they can't ignore it and stand up for the removal of these weapons. There're none so convinced of the need to make these guns illegal as those who're living with the consequences of experiencing an attack.