As pandemic ebbs, an old fear is new again: mass shootings

Charles Blain, a new gun owner, poses with his holstered 9mm Glock 43 handgun, Monday, May 3, 2021, on the parking garage of his apartment complex in Houston. Blain also owns a shotgun and is currently completing his concealed carry license requirements to carry the handgun. Blain, who describes himself as a conservative, says “pandemic-related unemployment crime” and repeated calls over the past year to release hundreds of jail inmates because of soaring COVID-19 infections pushed him to buy. (AP Photo/Michael Wyke)

FILE - In this Friday, March 20, 2020, file photo, a customer looks through a rifle scope as Bob’s Little Sport Shop bustles with customers, in Glassboro, N.J. Gun retailers in New Jersey can remain open as essential businesses during the coronavirus outbreak. After a year of pandemic lockdowns, mass shootings are back, but the guns never went away. As the U.S. inches toward a post-pandemic future, guns are arguably more present in the American psyche and more deeply embedded in American discourse than ever before. The past year’s anxiety and loss fueled a rise in gun ownership across political and socio-economic lines. (Joe Lamberti/Camden Courier-Post via AP, File)

PORTLAND, Ore. — Brianne Smith was overjoyed to get an email telling her to schedule a second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. Hours later, her relief was replaced by dread: a phone alert — another mass public shooting.