There are so many potential risks
that first responders in general and police officers in particular face each
and every day they are on the job. Officer Collier undoubtedly had a lot more
experience with things like drunk and disorderly and students hacking into
buildings than he did with bomb makers and automatic weapons. His young life
and his short career were unfairly ended this past week. As we will undoubtedly
be reminded by a 24/7 media what the terrorists look like, what their names
are, where they are from, and what they did and did not like and do, I plead
the case of the heroes, the people who take on the role of protecting us, and
ask that if only for a moment that we make the same effort to remember them.
Officer
Collier was gunned down. Gun violence is a major American problem. Terrorism by
foreign nationals is a miniscule problem compared to the legacy of gun
violence--today, this week, this year, this decade, this half century. No
matter the time frame, gun violence wins. By a landslide. It is desperately sad and
ultimately humiliating that our elected officials are beholden to the arms industry rather than to us.
The most elementary of laws to begin a path towards sparing people's lives was
defeated in the Senate last week. Money talks, and we lose. Officer Collier
loses too. So let's go back to majority rules--both in the Senate and in the
nation. We can be so much better than this.
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