By Solape Solarin
“Too much of everything has its shortcomings.” Bet the US, the flag-bearer and custodian of liberalism should know this in the wake of the latest gun violence that tragically ended the lives of 59 and wounded 520 people in Las Vegas  last week.
As usual, the country is in a ‘shock state’, trying to grapple with the latest horror that has made headlines not only within her borders but outside. It is an uncomfortable scenario that has once again thrown into the spotlight the country’s gun culture-one that has continued to generate controversies over the years.
The complications and dangers of the ‘rights and access to bear arms’ in the US has never been hidden; they are dangerous signs and signals that had always been there. From Columbine high-school shootings to Southern Carolina and Nevada to mention a few, these tragic events all bore the complacency or succinctly put, the failure of Washington to confront her ‘worst nightmare’.
The ‘Second amendment’, the controversial bill that allowed Americans the right to bear arms is and had always been at the crux of this national matter. Since the time of Obama, the ‘second amendment’ stood tall like a fortress as the former President tried to seek changes to the bill in the congress after the ‘Columbine carnage’. It was a move that fell flat.
And now, in the wake of the Las Vegas shootings, the bill has once again come up on the menu. While one should applaud the ‘sensible’ decision of the Trump’s administration to, for now halt the proposed bill on gun modifications, however, taking drastic moves; urgent ones aimed at addressing the proliferation of weapons and easy access to them should be his utmost priority.
 It is wrong to brand the Last Vegas shooting as the ‘most tragic in modern day America’. It is ignoble and annoying. For every gun violence that leads to death irrespective of the numbers and casualties they are all ‘tragic in modern day America’. Because: most of these deaths are quite avoidable if the government had tightened the screw.
For those against changing the gun laws and restricting ownership, it is awkward to defend the indefensible on the basis of freedom. Every citizen deserves to exercise his/her freedom no doubt, but in countless situations that we have witnessed  prior to the ‘Paddock rage’, it is right to also argue that everybody deserves the ‘right to live’-That ‘right to live’ should not be decided by a trigger-happy fella or mentally unstable citizen out there.
The mauling down of 59 and wounding of 520 people by Paddock-who investigations proved that he passed all tests before being granted the license to buy arms- clearly validates this point. And it is high-time Washington confronted her gun laws once and for all.
The stats are horrific, pathetic and gruesome. According to reports, many Americans have been killed in internal gun violence than her soldiers in wars outside her shores.
 In the year 2014, thousands of Americans were killed by guns in America. There were a total of 8,124 gun homicides. In 2015, there were 372 mass shootings and 33,636 deaths due to firearms in the U.S, while guns were used to kill about 50 people in the U.K.
Every day, 93 people die from gun violence: 32 are murdered, 58 die from suicide,1 killed unintentionally,1 killed by legal intervention,1 died but  intent unknown according to Brady campaign organization a movement aimed at cutting down gun deaths in the US by half in 2025.
So, America can’t afford to lay back and watch her promising youths, fathers, mothers, uncles, aunties continue to live in perpetual fear of gun-induced deaths.
The onus lies on Trump and the Congress to take a holistic and not a veneer approach on the issue. Halting gun modifications is just a practical step. The government should move beyond that and address the cultural affinity with guns by her citizens. It is a deep-rooted problem that has become a lifestyle. An American sees a gun as a household furniture or item.
Well, many would argue that it is a lifestyle that Americans didn’t just embrace; it has been planted since 1791; the days of the musket when it was America’s most dangerous firearm then. But, this is not 1791, this is 2017.
Times have change; things have evolved thanks to technology. There are more dangerous firearms and various modifications out there hence, the United States can’t continue to tread with no self-restraint.
Unlimited access to firearms is like handing a ten year old a ‘grenade’- Just like we found out in Paddock’s-the gruesome killer of the Las Vegas shooting’s-case.
The discovery of 19 firearms with ammo at his Mandalay-the hotel where he committed his atrocities-suite and another 24 in his home-all licensed- clearly shows the US is losing the battle.    
There are many paddocks out there who passed their integrity tests, other requirements before being permitted to get guns but, along the way fell victim to inexplicable situations that turned them into national villians.
Hence, the more reason Washington needs to step up.
Tightening the noose on guns shouldn’t be a national catastrophy as is being painted. Other developed countries have been down that lane but, the only difference was that they didn’t hover over it for so long like the US.
Australia is a great example. After the infamous shooting by a lone gunman at a former prison colony, Prince Arthur in Tasmania in 1996 that killed 35 people, the government tightened its gun laws while at the same time put an amnesty in place to allow those with illegal firearms to surrender them to the state.
It was a decision that achieved results: 51,000 illegal firearms were surrendered.
Therefore, the US can take a cue from Malcolm Turnbull. Putting a leash on its gun laws couldn’t have been more timely and urgent. Trump owes Americans a duty to ensure their safety. The Las Vegas shooting can’t be more alarming.
As John Lewis, US house democrat puts it: We must use our common sense, we must act now! Today not tomorrow.