ニューヨーク・タイムズさんのインスタグラム写真 - (ニューヨーク・タイムズInstagram)「Nearly a year has passed since a gunman breached Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, and killed 19 children and two teachers. The community is still waiting for officials to fully disclose how it happened.  “Almost a year now, and honestly nothing has changed,” Jesse Rizo, the uncle of one of the massacre victims, told the school board at a meeting this month. “These people are pretty much begging you guys to answer questions. You came here and you pretty much oppress people. They ask you questions, you don’t have answers.”  Despite the passage of time, there is still strong disagreement over who should be fired for the slow police response to the Uvalde massacre, one of the worst school shootings in American history, and what position the town should take on the repeated calls from families of the victims to restrict guns. Neighbors who have known one another for years now find themselves unable to agree and more distant than ever before.  United in grief in the weeks after the shooting, which ignited a national firestorm over how the police respond to mass shootings, Uvalde has since drifted apart, dividing along fault lines that barely existed a year ago. The fissures run deep and remain raw: between the victims’ relatives lobbying for stricter gun laws, and neighbors who have long been avid hunters and gun owners and bristle at any new restrictions; between supporters of the police, who are the subject of a district attorney’s investigation for their delay in taking down the gunman, and residents who now distrust law enforcement; between those still in mourning and those who would like to move on.  Read more about the tensions in Uvalde at the link in our bio. Photos by @tamirhasacellphone」5月23日 6時24分 - nytimes

ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 5月23日 06時24分


Nearly a year has passed since a gunman breached Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, and killed 19 children and two teachers. The community is still waiting for officials to fully disclose how it happened.

“Almost a year now, and honestly nothing has changed,” Jesse Rizo, the uncle of one of the massacre victims, told the school board at a meeting this month. “These people are pretty much begging you guys to answer questions. You came here and you pretty much oppress people. They ask you questions, you don’t have answers.”

Despite the passage of time, there is still strong disagreement over who should be fired for the slow police response to the Uvalde massacre, one of the worst school shootings in American history, and what position the town should take on the repeated calls from families of the victims to restrict guns. Neighbors who have known one another for years now find themselves unable to agree and more distant than ever before.

United in grief in the weeks after the shooting, which ignited a national firestorm over how the police respond to mass shootings, Uvalde has since drifted apart, dividing along fault lines that barely existed a year ago. The fissures run deep and remain raw: between the victims’ relatives lobbying for stricter gun laws, and neighbors who have long been avid hunters and gun owners and bristle at any new restrictions; between supporters of the police, who are the subject of a district attorney’s investigation for their delay in taking down the gunman, and residents who now distrust law enforcement; between those still in mourning and those who would like to move on.

Read more about the tensions in Uvalde at the link in our bio. Photos by @tamirhasacellphone


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