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		Gun control rhetoric heats up after Highland Park mass shooting
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		 [July 07, 2022]  
		By Greg Bishop | The Center Square 
		(The Center Square) – Illinois Gov. J.B. 
		Pritzker’s rhetoric around the issue of gun violence is heating up and 
		some say it’s “disgusting.”
 Before Monday’s mass shooting in a Chicago suburb at an Independence Day 
		parade, Pritzker spoke to a group of New Hampshire Democrats saying the 
		Republican game plan heading into November is to focus on cultural 
		issues instead of on gun control.
 
 “And if we can’t call bull[expletive] on that, well then Democrats, we 
		don’t deserve to win elections,” Pritzker told the crowd last month.
 
 Monday, after the Highland Park shooter killed seven and wounded dozens, 
		Pritzker said there’s no better time to talk about gun control and 
		criticized the Second Amendment right to bear arms as antiquated.
 
		
		 
		“If you’re angry today, I’m here to tell you ‘be angry,’” Pritzker told 
		reporters in Highland Park. “I’m furious. I’m furious that yet more 
		innocent lives were taken by gun violence.”
 State Sen. Neil Anderson, R-Andalusia, said everyone needs to come 
		together to focus on solutions, including recognizing mental health 
		issues. He said Pritzker’s emotional rhetoric isn’t helpful.
 
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		“The governor is using a tragedy to try and gin people up and it’s 
		disgusting,” Anderson told The Center Square. 
		Authorities revealed Tuesday that police encounted the alleged shooter 
		twice in 2019, once when he threatened to commit suicide and a second 
		time when family members reported he threatened to kill them.
 Pritzker issued a disaster proclamation for Lake County Tuesday because 
		of the Highland Park shooting. The proclamation expedites the use of 
		state resources, personnel or equipment to help affected communities 
		recover, the governor’s office said.
 
 The governor declaring Highland Park a disaster while overlooking the 
		daily shooting victims in Chicago speaks volumes, Anderson said.
 
 “Another example of the hypocrisy of the governor saying ‘this is so 
		bad, this is so bad,’ but he never talks about what happens on a regular 
		basis in Chicago is bad,” Anderson said.
 
 Over the Independence Day holiday weekend in Chicago, scores of people 
		were shot and at least nine were killed, a weekly trend in the Windy 
		City.
 
 Wednesday, Pritzker took to Twitter in an exchange with the National 
		Rifle Association and told them to “leave us the hell alone.”
 
		
		Greg Bishop reports on Illinois government and other 
		issues for The Center Square. Bishop has years of award-winning 
		broadcast experience and hosts the WMAY Morning Newsfeed out of 
		Springfield. |