Breaking the gun violence cycle
Timothy Dykes | Unsplash

Breaking the gun violence cycle

Zachary KarabellZachary Karabell

Zachary Karabell

The Edgy Optimist

Published May 26, 2022

Welcome to What Could Go Right?, where we want you to know that taking some time to mourn after the shooting in Texas is natural and OK. 

This edition also has a new section, The Department of Ideas. Let us know if you dig it. 

What Could Go Right? is a free weekly newsletter from The Progress Network written by our executive director, Emma Varvaloucas. In addition to this newsletter, which collects substantive progress news from around the world, The Progress Network publishes an anti-apocalypse conversational podcast also called What Could Go Right?.

Breaking the gun violence cycle

Facing the news about the elementary school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, and on the heels of the Laguna Woods and Buffalo shootings, is crushing, particularly so because this news has become so status quo in the United States. As The Progress Network (TPN) Member James Fallows wrote on Tuesday, we’re in a gun shootings cycle where the same features occur again and again and again and again. The rinse and repeat is exhausting. Over time, it drains our energy to respond, until one day we wake up to find that our belief that a response is even possible has been stolen in the night.

So before we can respond, first we must honor the emotional piece of this. The loss of young, innocent kids just hits differently—it's incredibly damaging to our psyches, individually and collectively. Give yourself time to acknowledge this and to mourn, if you need. 

Here at TPN, we’re choosing to mourn alongside the words from one among us who has suffered the worst from gun violence, those of Nelba Márquez-Greene, whose 6-year-old daughter, Ana Grace, was killed at the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.

“Days like today amplify an already heightened sense of lack of safety, hope, and love,” she wrote on Twitter yesterday. “The grief is overwhelming. Every feeling we are having is right and worthy. There is no judgment from me. This message is for the ones close to deciding there is no worthiness in the fight to stay."

She added, “I want to encourage you to stay. Not because I can promise you better . . . but because not having you here would make it worse.”

No alt text provided for this image

Although the store has made some effort to curtail gun sales, the point remains.

Indeed, as this interesting meditation on crisis mindsets posits, “there is no such thing as being individually good or bad in a crisis. Humans either deal with crises in effective groups, or not at all.” It’s painfully obvious that we’re falling on the “not at all” side of things when it comes to the American gun violence crisis. Dealing with it requires a group. It requires us, as Márquez-Greene put it, to stay—and to stay with those with whom we don't see eye-to-eye.

The most basic component of staying is simply giving our attention. As Márquez-Greenetold NPR in 2020, “Some of these legislators out there, they're banking on you to stop putting pressure on." 

Don’t. Keep giving the gift of your attention, and all of your choices on how to respond will flow from there.

And what choices, you ask, do we have at our disposal? Last week we mentioned the reframing of guns as a public safety matter, so we can deal with firearm fatalities like motor vehicle fatalities, a nonpoliticized issue that we have successfully mitigated. The New York Times is recirculating their circa-2017 take on that, by Nicholas Kristof, with several practical suggestions on how to reduce firearm fatalities without falling into the trap of talking about “gun control,” which “scares off gun owners and leads to more gun sales.” Yesterday Kristof came out with a new version that emphasizes upping the legal age for purchasing a gun.

We also found the thoughts of Isaac Saul, who runs the independent newsletter Tangle, helpful, especially because Saul himself is a gun hobbyist. (Scroll down to the "What should we do?" section.) He suggests a licensing and permit system á la—you guessed it—driving a car.

No alt text provided for this image

We’re making a little progress on a couple of suggestions from these lists, including developing smart guns and a bipartisan effort around revamped mental health legislation.

And Illinois just became the first Midwest state to pass a ban on ghost guns, which is a term for guns assembled at home from unserialized, and thus untraceable, gun parts bought online. Eleven other states and DC already have laws in place around ghost guns. 

One of TPN's slogans is "progress is still possible." Even in this tragic mess, we believe that. To stop believing is to give up.

Before we go

Is monkeypox the next Covid-19? Very likely not. For starters, it’s not as transmissible as Covid and doesn’t commonly kill people. Vox with the full explainer here.

Australians turned out to vote with climate change top of mind, leading to a parliamentary “supermajority” that is hungry for climate action. Australians have also voted in their most diverse parliament yet.

One thing we have been struck by since starting this newsletter is learning that when humans put energy into conservation efforts, they are astoundingly successful. Hannah Ritchie from Our World in Data has a great new roundup on Europe’s wild mammals, which are now flourishing after being driven to near-extinction. The Eurasian beaver, for instance, has seen a 14,000 percent population increase since 1960. The grey wolf? A “mere” 300 percent increase.

Our friends at the newsletter Today Do This have an array of suggestions for those looking to take action on anything from supporting Afghan women to protesting greenwashing. On the flip side of things, sometimes the best course of action is to take a break. Here are some good tips for taking one from the Internet.

And, we wish this response to the question of “how do we live alongside extremists?” from TPN Member Eboo Patel would go viral. 

Below in the links section, portable solar microgrids are helping save lives in Ukraine, Dads are getting longer parental leave in Morocco, and more.

Emma Varvaloucas

New from The Progress Network

We have the first fully complete human genome. So what?

No alt text provided for this image

With genome sequencing becoming more accessible, more rare disease patients can get an accurate diagnosis of their conditions. | Read more 

Recommended by LinkedIn

Race in America, 2 Years After George Floyd | S2 Ep. 9

No alt text provided for this image

How do we grapple with the most challenging issues surrounding race, political division, equality, and more? Theodore R. Johnson, author, senior fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law, and retired commander in the US Navy, joins us to make a compelling case for a national solidarity necessary to mitigate racism and fulfill the American Promise. | Listen to the episode

Theodore R. Johnson:"I firmly believe the old maxim in public policy that you are hard on institutions and soft on people. If we are to have a democracy of 330 million people from different customs and cultures, different races and ethnicities, religions, languages, regions, et cetera, then we can't look at half the country as being anti-American, undemocratic, unworthy of the experiment. We have to look at them as our partners in this thing, or else democracy doesn't work at all, for any of us. And so I spend a lot of my time making the case to people that folks wouldn't suspect someone like me would talk to. But I want to talk with the Right about racial inequality and structural racism. I want to talk to the Left about forbearance and incrementalism. Because I think this is the way societies work, that you have to find some kind of middle ground—principled middle ground, but some kind of middle ground—to move forward. And I think you do that by putting flesh and bone on ideas instead of just relying on frameworks and theories alone."

Listen to the full episode here. Read the full transcript here.

Other good stuff in the news

Found good news we should hear about? Drop a link in the comments!

Environment:

Science & Tech:

Politics & Policy:

Covid & Public Health:

Economy:

Society & Culture:

Rights & Justice:

TPN Member originals:  

Department of Ideas 

A staff recommendation guaranteed to give your brain some food for thought.

The Certainty Trap: The solution to our broken political conversation won’t be found in censoring "misinformation" but in recognizing the profound limits of our own beliefs. |Tablet

Why we picked it: It encourages us to embrace openness, curiosity, uncertainty, and charitable interpretation as paths to—among other things—putting out the dumpster fires of our political and cultural discourse. —Brian Leli

New Member Alert

No alt text provided for this image

Ché Bolden is the President and CEO of The Charles F. Bolden Group, an executive leadership firm established for the global advancement of science and security. The Bolden Group transforms and cultivates leadership across the four focus areas of National Security; Space and Aerospace Exploration; Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math plus the Arts and Design (STEM+AD) education, and Health Initiatives.

A 26-year Marine Corps veteran, Ché has extensive expertise in aerospace, political-military and international affairs, critical infrastructure, and HUMAN+machine collaboration. Over the course of his military career, he traveled the globe to ensure peace.

Listen to Ché discuss leadership through generations.

Upcoming Events

What Could Go Right?What Could Go Right?

What Could Go Right?

50,639 followers

+ Subscribe
MARIA NIKAC, graphic
MARIA NIKAC

assistant at vv design works

3y

Have to catch and prosecute criminals and there would be less violence

To view or add a comment,sign in

More articles by Zachary Karabell

  • Miracle Drug
    Oct 30, 2025

    Miracle Drug

    Welcome to What Could Go Right?, where we are busy preparing our ghost turnips for Halloween. What Could Go Right? is a…

  • No Kings Breaks New Ground
    Oct 23, 2025

    No Kings Breaks New Ground

    Welcome to What Could Go Right?, where we're waiting patiently for the Hollywood remake. What Could Go Right? is a free…

  • Celebrating Five Years of Progress
    Oct 16, 2025

    Celebrating Five Years of Progress

    Welcome to What Could Go Right?, where we're publishing a special edition this week in honor of our fifth birthday…

    2 Comments
  • Is the Rise in Early-Onset Cancer Real?
    Oct 9, 2025

    Is the Rise in Early-Onset Cancer Real?

    Welcome to What Could Go Right?, where we are congratulating Chunk, a 1,200-pound bear with a broken jaw, on his first…

  • AI Triples Stroke Recovery Rates
    Oct 2, 2025

    AI Triples Stroke Recovery Rates

    Welcome to What Could Go Right?, where we’re looking forward to the day we can charge our EV at a lamppost. What Could…

  • 3 Transformative Trends You Won’t See in the News
    Sep 25, 2025

    3 Transformative Trends You Won’t See in the News

    Welcome to What Could Go Right?, where we are filling out our bracket for Fat Bear Week. What Could Go Right? is a free…

  • The Best of Us
    Sep 18, 2025

    The Best of Us

    Welcome to What Could Go Right?, where the bumpy snailfish would like us to know that not all deep sea creatures are…

    3 Comments
  • AI Cannot Replace Humans
    Sep 4, 2025

    AI Cannot Replace Humans

    Welcome to What Could Go Right?, where apparently The Rock was cooking . .

  • We Haven't Given Up on Gen Z
    Aug 28, 2025

    We Haven't Given Up on Gen Z

    Welcome to What Could Go Right?, where the jokes are writing themselves. What Could Go Right? is a free weekly…

  • We're Divorcing Like It's 1959
    Aug 21, 2025

    We're Divorcing Like It's 1959

    Welcome to What Could Go Right?, where we now know the answer to the question “How do you scare wolves away from…

    2 Comments

Others also viewed

Explore content categories