One of the few positive trends amid this pandemic year was a marked decrease in mass shootings, which had become an all-too-common occurrence in the U.S. in recent years. But as the pandemic fog lifts, mass shootings have resumed, with two major killings in the last week in Atlanta, Georgia, and Boulder, Colorado—a grim reminder that gun violence too plagues America. And, despite gun safety measures that enjoy bipartisan agreement, gun violence has not been meaningfully addressed. Bipartisan House legislation intended to reduce gun violence through enhanced background checks is a good start. If Republicans in the Senate would only approach gun violence prevention with the same vigor as they've championed "voter fraud" prevention, they might actually save some lives. —Mindy Finn
 
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Is it finally Infrastructure Week?

Perhaps soon. President Biden, fresh off the passage of the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill, has turned his sights toward other national priorities, with the intention of fulfilling a campaign promise to "build back better." While the American Rescue Plan tackled the most immediate crises—a pandemic still spreading and an economy still in crisis—the next proposal addresses the nation's faltering infrastructure. White House aides are compiling a $3 trillion plan that also would include tax changes and funding for a wide range of social programs.

MORE: U.S. and allies announce sanctions against Chinese officials for 'serious human rights abuses' against Uyghurs—CNN

'This is a tragedy and a nightmare for Boulder County'

A shooting at a Boulder, Col., supermarket killed 10 people yesterday, including a police officer who was the first to respond to the scene. Police have arrested and charged 21-year-old Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, who former classmates recall as "violent, short-tempered, and paranoid." The attack was the seventh mass killing this year in the U.S., following the March 16 shooting that left eight people dead in Atlanta, Ga. It follows a lull in mass killings during the pandemic in 2020, which had the smallest number of such attacks in more than a decade. —Associated Press

MORE: Biden pushes House-passed gun reforms in the wake of Colorado mass shooting —CNN

Gans: SCOTUS must uphold the 4th Amendment

"The Founding generation considered the home to be a 'place of perfect security.' The question now is whether the Supreme Court will respect the text and history of the Fourth Amendment, or invent a new exception that would open the floodgates to police entry of the home. The justices should make clear that police need a warrant and probable cause of criminal wrongdoing or emergency circumstances before they enter a person's home." —David Gans in USA Today

David Gans is the civil rights director at the Constitutional Accountability Center.


MORE: Caniglia v. Strom: There's no place like home? —SCOTUSblog

Facebook's role in the insurrection

A new report released today accuses social media giant Facebook of "creating the conditions that swept America down the dark path from election to insurrection." Online advocacy group Avaaz found that if Facebook had not waited until October to tweak its algorithms to stem false content related to the 2020 U.S. election, the company could have prevented an estimated 10.1 billion views on the 100 most prominent pages that repeatedly shared misinformation ahead of the election. "The scary thing is that this is just for the top 100 pages—this is not the whole universe of misinformation," says Fadi Quran, a campaign director at Avaaz. —TIME

MORE: Big Tech showdown looms as Biden taps top critics Lina Khan, Tim Wu —NPR

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Campbell: RCV, corruption-fighter

"[Ranked-choice voting] reduces opportunities for corruption by making the election process more transparent, and reduces the means by which corruption occurs by leveling the playing field among a broader and more diverse slate of candidates. It changes the game by which officials are re-elected and leads to better behavior after the election." —Bill Campbell on IVN Network

Bill Campbell, a U.S. Marine veteran, represents the San Diego, Ca., chapter of RepresentUs, a national organization fighting corruption in government.


MORE: La Crosse Tribune Ed. Board: 'Final Five voting' merits support in Wisconsin —La Crosse Tribune

Focus on voting

The kraken is dead. Pro-Trump attorney Sidney Powell has asked a federal court to dismiss a $1.3 billion defamation suit filed against her by Dominion Voting Systems, arguing that her claims of rigged voting machines merely represented her "opinion." Powell's legal team argues that "reasonable people would not accept such statements as fact but view them only as claims that await testing by the courts through the adversary process." Lovely. Meanwhile, state legislatures across the country are advancing measures to restrict voting, based at least in part on the "opinions" of Powell and others. —The Wall Street Journal

MORE: Millions of Americans don't believe Biden was elected fairly. Here's how that's affecting voting laws —Deseret News

Vindman & Kasparov: Navalny isn't perfect, but that's not the point

"[Russian opposition leader Alexei] Navalny has received the lion's share of media attention, but his corrupt trial and imprisonment are among thousands currently taking place... If we in the circle of democratic nations fail, [Russian President Vladimir] Putin, his oligarchs, his enablers, and the mafia-state structure built around them will know that they can snuff out the stirrings of democracy with beatings, arrests, and murders—and we will be complicit. The moment demands action, not debate." —Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman & Garry Kasparov in The Washington Post

Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman (Ret.) served on the National Security Council as the director for Eastern European, Caucasus, and Russian affairs and is a Pritzker Military Fellow at the Lawfare Institute. Garry Kasparov is chair of the Human Rights Foundation and the Renew Democracy Initiative.


MORE: China, Russia officials meet in show of unity against EU, U.S. —Associated Press

How to respond to people who justify their opposition to mask-wearing by saying:

"But Rand Paul must know what he's talking about...after all, he is a doctor!"

"Yes, but so was Josef Mengele." —Jim V., New York

If we need a liberal party, how about a conservative party to deal with the far-right fringes? —John C., Florida

TELL US WHAT YOU THINK ABOUT TODAY'S STORIES

The views expressed in "What's Your Take?" are submitted by readers and do not necessarily reflect the views of the editorial staff or the Stand Up Republic Foundation.


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