Current:Home > ContactAfter another mass shooting, a bewildered and emotional NBA coach spoke for the country -Insightful Finance Hub
After another mass shooting, a bewildered and emotional NBA coach spoke for the country
View
Date:2025-04-16 05:36:14
The new horrors are the old horrors.
Mike Brown, coach of the Sacramento Kings, knew this instinctively as he took a seat in his postgame press conference on Wednesday night, a short time after yet another American mass shooting, and following his team’s season-opening win over the Utah Jazz. He sat, looked anguished, and began talking, understanding that the new horrors are the old horrors.
It was a basketball presser but it quickly evolved into a therapy session. Brown looked shaken and anyone who heard the news of over a dozen people being murdered by a shooter in Lewiston, Maine, and others injured, had to feel the same.
Brown was relaying the truth that we all know. This is our nation’s unique nightmare, a bloody and tragic AR-15-inspired Groundhog Day. A school. An arena. A mall. A grocery store. This time it was Maine but it could be any state, anywhere, at any time. America recycles its gun violence the way we do our plastics.
Another mass shooting, another preventable moment, and another instance where the clock simultaneously stops and continues to tick. It stops because we pause as a nation, for a moment, to take in the latest carnage and move our flags yet again to half staff while overflowing with grief. The clock keeps ticking because we know it’s only a matter of time before the next mass shooting occurs. Tick, tock, gunshot. Tick, tock, gunshot.
Brown’s words were instructional and powerful and a reminder of the dangers of acclimating to all of this senseless violence. Maybe it’s too late for that but Brown issued a dire warning that was as important and elegant as the words of any politician who has spoken about what happened in Maine.
This is partly what Brown said: "I don’t even want to talk about basketball. We played a game, it was fun. Obviously, we won but if we can’t do anything to fix this, it’s over. It’s over for our country for this to happen time after time."
"If that doesn’t touch anybody," he said, speaking of the shootings, "then I don’t know. I don’t even know what to say."
"It’s a sad day. It’s a sad day for our country. It’s a sad day in this world," Brown said. "And, until we decide to do something about it, the powers that be, this is going to keep happening. And our kids are not going to be able to enjoy what our kids are about because we don’t know how to fix a problem that’s right in front of us."
Read moreWho is Robert Card? Man wanted for questioning in Maine mass shooting
He described the shootings as "absolutely disgusting" and urged lawmakers to take steps to prevent future tragedies like this one.
"We, as a country, have to do something," Brown said. "That is absolutely disgusting. And it’s sad. And it’s sad that we sit here and watch this happen time after time after time after time and no one does anything about it. It’s sad. I feel for the families. I don’t know what else to say."
In many ways, Brown was acting as a spokesperson for the nation.
Stars in the NBA have used their power to try and effect change before. After a mass shooting at an elementary school in Texas last year LeBron James posted, in part, on social media: "Like when is enough enough man!!! These are kids and we keep putting them in harm's way at school. Like seriously ‘AT SCHOOL’ where it’s suppose to be the safest. There simply has to be change! HAS TO BE!! Praying to the heavens above to all with kids these days in schools."
Gregg Popovich, who has spoken repeatedly about the need for more gun control, said in April: "… They’re going to cloak all this stuff (in) the myth of the Second Amendment, the freedom. You know, it's just a myth. It’s a joke. It’s just a game they play. I mean, that's freedom. Is it freedom for kids to go to school and try to socialize and try to learn and be scared to death that they might die that day?"
Now, it's Mike Brown's turn to say what needed to be said. Because here we are again. The new horrors are the old horrors.
veryGood! (5852)
Related
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- 'Are We Dating the Same Guy?' What to know about controversial Facebook groups at center of lawsuit
- She lost 100-pounds but gained it back. The grief surprised her. Now, like others, she's sharing her story.
- Judge dismisses juror who compared Connecticut missing mom case to the ‘Gone Girl’ plot
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- The March for Life rallies against abortion with an eye toward the November elections
- Subway adds 3 new foot-long items to its menu. Hint: None of them are sandwiches
- Tekashi 6ix9ine arrested in Dominican Republic on charges of domestic violence
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Trump urges Supreme Court to reject efforts to keep him off ballot, warning of chaos in new filing
Ranking
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Russian prosecutors seek lengthy prison terms for suspects in cases linked to the war in Ukraine
- Sami rights activists in Norway charged over protests against wind farm affecting reindeer herding
- Apple offers rivals access to tap-and-go payment tech to resolve EU antitrust case
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- House committee seeks answers from Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on hospitalization
- Japan hopes to join an elite club by landing on the moon: A closer look
- A Chinese and a Taiwanese comedian walk into a bar ...
Recommendation
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
At Davos, leaders talked big on rebuilding trust. Can the World Economic Forum make a difference?
Japan’s imperial family hosts a poetry reading with a focus on peace to welcome the new year
Why Kim Kardashian Is Defending Her Use of Tanning Beds
Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
AP Week in Pictures: Asia
'Hairbrained': Nebraska woman converts dining room into stable for horses during cold wave
No Labels files DOJ complaint about groups boycotting its 2024 presidential ballot access effort