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I can’t even put into words how sick this latest tragedy made me feel. When I saw the headline about the mass shooting at Willie’s Bar in South Carolina, my stomach turned. Four people dead—just like that—because somebody couldn’t control their emotions, their anger, or their weapon. This is not “freedom.” This is chaos disguised as liberty, and it’s tearing our communities apart.

Every time we see a story like this, we say, “Thoughts and prayers.” But let’s be real—it’s not enough anymore. I don’t care what side of the political fence you’re on. When people are being murdered in bars, churches, grocery stores, schools, and even at home, we have a national sickness. And it’s called gun obsession.

I’ve been saying for years that allowing guns to be this easily available to the public would eventually destroy us from within. People are not emotionally equipped to handle that kind of power. We’re living in a time where road rage can turn into a shootout, bar arguments become mass murders, and innocent people who just wanted a night out never make it home. It’s insanity.

Now, I keep hearing about open carry being pushed in Florida, and I can’t help but shake my head. If South Carolina’s tragedy isn’t enough proof that people can’t handle this responsibility, I don’t know what is. The idea that anyone can just walk around with a gun strapped to their side like it’s an accessory is terrifying. You think that makes you safer? No—it just means you’re more likely to end up in the middle of a deadly situation.

This is not about “taking away rights.” It’s about protecting lives. Somewhere along the line, people started confusing the Second Amendment with the right to terrorize. When the founding fathers wrote those words, they weren’t talking about drunk guys in bars waving pistols or people blasting away at grocery store shoppers. They were talking about a militia—a structured defense in a time when there was no formal army. We have police, military, and advanced technology now. Why are we still acting like it’s the 1700s?

What’s even worse is how numb people are becoming. We scroll past the headlines like it’s just another Tuesday. Four dead here, ten dead there—it’s like background noise now. But behind those numbers are real lives. Someone lost a parent, a child, a friend, a partner. The pain doesn’t go away after the cameras leave. The families of those victims will never be the same again.

And while lawmakers argue about their precious gun rights, they’re forgetting about human rights—the right to live, to be safe, to go out and enjoy yourself without fearing for your life. When does that become the priority again? When does protecting people matter more than protecting a political talking point?

I can already hear people saying, “Guns don’t kill people, people kill people.” Yeah, but people with guns kill a lot more people, a lot faster. If that shooter in South Carolina hadn’t had a weapon in his hand, those four people might still be alive. Guns amplify human rage into tragedy. That’s the part nobody wants to admit.

I’m not anti-gun in the sense that I don’t understand their place in history or defense. But I am against how casually people treat them today—like toys, like symbols of power, like extensions of their ego. Until we deal with the mental health crisis, the anger epidemic, and the lack of accountability in this country, we have no business making it easier for anyone to carry a gun.

The shooting at Willie’s Bar should be a wake-up call for America. But I fear it won’t be. We’ll talk about it for a few days, then move on until the next one happens. And it will happen again, because we refuse to admit that the system is broken.

This isn’t just a South Carolina problem—it’s an American one. And until we face that truth, we’ll keep watching the same story play out, one tragedy at a time.

Adam


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