Blaming everything but guns
THE BIG STORY Trump blamed this weekend's white supremacist terror attack and mass shooting on everything but guns
The president's first substantial remarks since the attacks over the weekend cited mental health issues, video games, and the internet for the massacres. His speech was an example of how he conditions people with a relentless barrage of tweets, rallies, and official statements that stoke racial division and fear of immigrants — then adopts the language of outrage in the wake of disasters to make it appear as though he is above the very fray he helped create.
What we saw Monday was what Trump derides as a "teleprompter deal," a planned speech he says people find boring. The real Trump is not a voice of reconciliation, of unity, of love. It's one of a relentless us vs. them mentality.
In an apparent swipe at Trump's division, former president Barack Obama spoke out about the shootings and called on Americans to reject political leaders who spew racist, hateful, and dehumanizing rhetoric.
Meanwhile, people continue to die from the attacks — the death toll from the El Paso shooting rose by two to 22 yesterday. Here's what we know about the victims of that shooting, and what we know about those who died in Dayton.
👉 The Dayton shooter was the lead singer of a "pornogrind" metal band 👉Pressure is on Congress to address gun violence, but if recent history is any guide, it will not. 👉Of the many Democrats running for president, only one has won tougher gun laws in the aftermath of a mass shooting in his state: John Hickenlooper. 👉Online trolls went back to their standard playbook to spread false information during the El Paso terror attack and Dayton mass shooting. 👉Mexico has declared the El Paso mass shooting an act of "terrorism against Mexicans" and has vowed to take legal action. 👉So many people were shot in Chicago this weekend, a hospital had to briefly stop taking patients. Mark Ralston / AFP / Getty Images SNAPSHOTS
Protests in Hong Kong turned chaotic as police fired tear gas and a car rammed protesters' barricade. Storefronts were shuttered across the city as residents took off from work in opposition to a controversial bill proposed by the government that would permit extraditions to China, which has been suspended but not withdrawn.
STANDING STRONG
Here's how people are coming together after the mass shootings Mourners gather at the scene of the shooting in Dayton. John Minchillo / AP
A couple wearing a Mexican flag and the US flag take part in a rally against hate in El Paso. Jose Luis Gonzalez / Reuters
A man takes part in a rally against hate in El Paso. Jose Luis Gonzalez / Reuters
A mourner holds a candle during a vigil in Dayton. Bryan Woolston / Reuters
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