U.S. congressman posts family Christmas picture with guns, days after
school shooting
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[December 06, 2021]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - (Note language in penultimate
paragraph)
A U.S. congressman on Saturday posted a
Christmas picture of himself and what appeared to be his family, smiling
and posing with an assortment of guns, just days after four teenagers
were killed in a shooting at a Michigan high school.
"Merry Christmas! ps. Santa, please bring ammo," U.S. Representative
Thomas Massie of Kentucky wrote on Twitter.
Ethan Crumbley, 15, on Tuesday carried out the deadliest U.S. school
shooting this year, the latest in a decades-long series of mass
shootings at U.S. schools. His parents were arrested on Saturday in
connection with the slayings.
Massie, who represents a solidly Republican district, posted the picture
of himself and six others holding firearms resembling an M60 machine
gun, AR-15 semi-automatic rifle and a Thompson submachine gun.
Some semi-automatic weapons are made to look nearly identical to fully
automatic weapons like machine guns. Under U.S. law, weapons like
machine guns are restricted to the military, law enforcement and
civilians who have obtained special licenses for weapons made before May
1986.
Jonathan van Norman, a campaign manager for Massie, did not immediately
reply to a request for comment via Twitter.
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U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) in a Christmas photo of his family
holding guns, in this image obtained from Twitter, posted on
December 4, 2021. Courtesy of Twitter @REPTHOMASMASSIE / Social
Media via REUTERS
Democratic U.S. Representative John Yarmuth, who
chairs the U.S. House of Representatives Budget Committee, condemned
his fellow Kentuckian's post.
"I’m old enough to remember Republicans screaming that it was
insensitive to try to protect people from gun violence after a
tragedy," Yarmuth wrote on Twitter, apparently referring to calls
for gun control laws.
"I promise not everyone in Kentucky is an insensitive asshole," he
added.
The shooting in Oxford, Michigan - in which four teenagers were
killed and a teacher and six other students were wounded - was the
latest in a string of sometimes-deadlier incidents that have
prompted fierce debates over school safety, gun control and gun
rights.
(Reporting by Idrees Ali; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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