Current:Home > ScamsAfter another mass shooting, a bewildered and emotional NBA coach spoke for the country -LegacyBuild Academy
After another mass shooting, a bewildered and emotional NBA coach spoke for the country
View
Date:2025-04-18 13:25:40
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! (9)
Related
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- After 2022 mistreatment, former Alabama RB Kerry Goode won't return to Neyland Stadium
- Don't call Lions' Jared Goff a game manager. Call him one of NFL's best QBs.
- Rite Aid plans to close 154 stores after bankruptcy filing. See if your store is one of them
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- 3 are indicted on fraud-related charges in a Medicaid billing probe in Arizona
- Will Smith joins Jada Pinkett Smith at book talk, calls their relationship brutal and beautiful
- NFL Week 7 picks: Will Dolphins or Eagles triumph in prime-time battle of contenders?
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Toy Hall of Fame: The 'forgotten five' classic toys up for induction and how fans can vote
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Marine killed in Camp Lejeune barracks and fellow Marine held as suspect, the base says
- ‘Drop in the ocean': UN-backed aid could soon enter Gaza from Egypt, but only at a trickle for now
- FBI: Thousands of remote IT workers sent wages to North Korea to help fund weapons program
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Most in the US see Mexico as a partner despite border problems, an AP-NORC/Pearson poll shows
- Toy Hall of Fame: The 'forgotten five' classic toys up for induction and how fans can vote
- More than 300 arrested in US House protest calling for Israel-Hamas ceasefire
Recommendation
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
Trial begins for parents accused of starving Washington teen to death
300-year-old painting stolen by an American soldier during World War II returned to German museum
Israel-Hamas war fuels anger and protests across the Middle East amid fears of a wider conflict
Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
Sterigenics will pay $35 million to settle Georgia lawsuits, company announces
In 'Dicks: The Musical' 'SNL' star Bowen Yang embraces a 'petty, messy' God
Jordan will continue to bleed votes with every ballot, says Rep. Ken Buck — The Takeout