Nearly 200 times in 2021 alone, elected officials and their staffers have had to draft remarks memorializing the loss of some 15,000 lives to gun violence.
The people who must come up with these words are running out of things to say.
Former President @BarackObama wasn't afraid to deploy the expression. "I'm sure I wrote it several times for him in his first term," said Cody Keenan, Obama’s speechwriter.
Keenan thinks “thoughts and prayers” became cliché after 2013, when the Obama administration attempted to push background checks for gun owners through the Senate.
Obama's own 2015 remarks, after an Oregon shooting, put the phrase closer to its demise.
In the Trump era, “thoughts and prayers” remained standard fare for Republicans. Trump did his own variation in February 2018 after a 19-year-old gunman killed 17 people and injured 17 more at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.
Among the masses, the phrase had lost any trace of comfort it once had. After Parkland, it wasn't uncommon to see protesters hoist signs that condemned “thoughts and prayers."
Thomas Cook, the former chief deputy mayor to Indianapolis' mayor, said the frequency with which staffers and mayors are responding to shootings has made the process clinical in a way he didn't like.
Democrats who are interested in pushing for expanded background checks and other federal policies that could stop the violence have officially co-opted the phrase "thoughts and prayers" to use it on their terms.
At the federal level, few have dealt with the issue more than Connecticut’s Sen. @ChrisMurphyCT, who still speaks to the families of the 2012 Newtown shooting victims.
He’s working to expand background checks with his Background Check Expansion Act.
Monfared was an Arab-Iranian from Ahvaz, the capital of Iran's Khuzestan province. His family was wealthy, and his Instagram page shows a love of designer fashion.
He also enjoyed experimenting with makeup but felt unable to do so in public.
Jerusalem's Al-Aqsa Mosque Compound, known to the Jewish people as Temple Mount, is at the heart of escalating violence between Israelis and Palestinians.
This is why one of the world’s holiest religious sites is the most contentious place in Jerusalem.
Al-Aqsa Compound is in Jerusalem's Old City. Israel considers the entire city as its capital.
Palestinians consider East Jerusalem as the future capital of the independent state that they seek. The site is the third holiest place of worship for Muslims.
It is believed the Prophet Muhammad ascended into heaven from the site. But access is especially hard for the 3 million Palestinians who live in the occupied West Bank.
Effective through May 31, any Maine resident who gets vaccinated is eligible for "Your Shot to Get Outdoors," which allows residents to choose between a free fishing license, a free hunting license, and more.
Pre-pandemic, South Asians often relied on huge support systems of family and friends to look after each other. And in times of grief, they would open their homes to mourn together through customs and prayer.
For Saurav Dutt, to have the honor of Hindu death rituals taken away by the pandemic felt like he was "cheating the person who has passed away of the ritual that they deserved."
Snapchat has become an on-demand delivery app for teens to score illegal drugs. Some kids are dying after taking one pill. 👇 businessinsider.com/snapchat-insta…
Devin Norring, a 19-year-old from Minnesota, died last year after taking a pill filled with fentanyl — a highly addictive opioid — that he arranged to buy via Snapchat.
Devin's mom, Bridgette Norring, believes there are "thousands of families like ours."