A recent opinion piece by Andrew Pollack, whose daughter was a victim of the Parkland shooting, critiques a University of Colorado study claiming that 1 in 15 U.S. adults have witnessed a mass shooting. Pollack argues that the study’s vague definition of “mass shooting” inflates numbers, potentially categorizing anyone who has heard gunfire as a survivor, thus undermining the gravity of actual victims’ experiences.
The article emphasizes the importance of accurate data in discussing gun violence, noting that mass shootings, while tragic, are statistically rare events. Pollack contends that dangerous individuals, rather than gun ownership itself, should be the focus of solutions aimed at prevention. His insights call for a shift in the national conversation around gun violence that honors the victims authentically and addresses the real issues behind these tragedies.
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