Saturday, September 21, 2024
HomeOpinionShootings in Denver, Kansas City and the sorrow of not feeling safe...

Shootings in Denver, Kansas City and the sorrow of not feeling safe anywhere – The Denver Post

Published on

spot_img



Once again, violence mars celebration

Re: “One dead and 22 wounded by gunfire at Chiefs parade,” Feb. 15 news story

The mass shooting in Kansas City is as American as apple pie. A city celebrates, and school is canceled in order to celebrate a win. Instead, we have a shooting with kids caught in gunfire even though there is a police presence.

When Denver celebrated the Denver Nuggets winning the NBA championship, of course, there had to be a shooting. Are we safe anywhere? Not at a parade, sporting event, movie theater, church, synagogue, or grocery store?

Maybe we should cancel the events that make us feel good. You never know when anyone is standing by to disrupt and kill our celebrations.

Kal Zeppelin, Broomfield

A story about a mass shooting in a major American City is relegated to The Denver Post sports section. This speaks volumes. On the other hand, who reads real news anyway when there’s so much more important info every day in the sports section?

Rich Moore, Denver 

Guns and domestic violence: Why Latinx/Latinos should care

On Saturday we attended the Chicano Humanities and Arts Council (CHAC) Valentine fundraiser. The light, celebratory tone immediately changed when we remembered the loss of Lucille Ruibal Rivera, mother, daughter, godmother, health care leader, activist, Chicana artist, and CHAC Board member. Sadly, she became another domestic violence statistic as the victim in a murder-suicide at the hands of her boyfriend in Northglenn on Nov. 18, 2023.

Domestic violence and gun violence are deeply interconnected, impacting millions of women, families, and communities across the United States. Two-thirds of women killed by an intimate partner are killed with a gun, according to Everytown for Gun Safety.

See also  Stop Russia’s Ukraine kidnappings, GOP’s impeachment goof and other commentary

There is hope. House Bill 1122, Protection Orders for Victims of Crimes is being considered in the state House. This is a complicated bill largely dealing with court procedures for temporary protection orders in cases involving domestic violence.

Colorado Ceasefire and other gun violence prevention organizations strongly support a provision that requires a respondent to refrain from possessing or purchasing a firearm for the duration of the protection order and also relinquish all such items in their possession or control.

Lucille’s passing reminds us that as a Latino community, we must join with gun-violence prevention organizations that are on the front lines. Do we need to be reminded that gun violence is an issue for us? Lucille was a mother, activist and fighter for our community. Let us not let her down.

Pauline Nuñez, Lakewood

Olivia Garcia, Arvada



Source link

Latest articles

Enormous Navy fuel ship launched in San Diego at time of growing global tensions – San Diego Union-Tribune

A gray behemoth capable of fueling three warships at once slid into San...

Gov. Newsom signs law to protect children from social media addiction

California will make it illegal for social media platforms to knowingly provide addictive...

How your favourite Colin from Accounts stars Harriet Dyer and Patrick Brammall really live as photos of their stunning $2.6million Los Angeles pad emerge

While their Colin From Accounts characters lead decidedly average lives, the reality is...

This 2-Burner Portable Grill Is Ready for Game Day – and It’s 50% Off

As football fans, we’ve got enough to worry about on game day....

More like this

Enormous Navy fuel ship launched in San Diego at time of growing global tensions – San Diego Union-Tribune

A gray behemoth capable of fueling three warships at once slid into San...

Gov. Newsom signs law to protect children from social media addiction

California will make it illegal for social media platforms to knowingly provide addictive...

How your favourite Colin from Accounts stars Harriet Dyer and Patrick Brammall really live as photos of their stunning $2.6million Los Angeles pad emerge

While their Colin From Accounts characters lead decidedly average lives, the reality is...