Although gun violence is sadly common in the United States, a killing on a date as symbolic as the 4th of July will mark the spirits, say experts.
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“The only thing that can shock Americans with gun issues is when shootings happen in schools or in an event like this,” says Jason Opal, a history professor at the McGill University.
This time, the killer targeted the iconic Independence Day parade, which featured high school students and local bands.
“We have someone looking for notoriety who took advantage of a national event to shoot into a crowd. It’s completely thought out and it’s a growing phenomenon,” emphasizes Francis Langlois, member of the Observatory on the United States of the Raoul-Dandurand Chair.
The tragedy is all the more brutal since the 4th of July is historically a day when Americans put aside their deep differences to celebrate “by pretending to be always united”, underlines Mr. Opal.
No one is immune
Several residents of Highland Park, near Chicago, also expressed their disbelief on Monday at the shooting that left six people dead during the celebrations.
“Horrible to say, but these people are used to being safe from violence from the United States. They live in a fairly prosperous suburb of Chicago,” notes Opal.
A minority
Francis Langlois nevertheless recalls that mass killings – in this Chicago suburb as everywhere in the United States – cause a minority of victims of gun violence.
“Most of the violence is the disadvantaged and ethnic communities that suffer it [à cause de la criminalité]. And that, we talk very little about it, ”says the specialist in the matter.