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Gun concerns evoking sound and fury, but will anything change?

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — America has been here time and time again.

After Columbine. After Virginia Tech. After Tucson.

In the last three decades, the nation has grieved over more than 60 mass shootings.

But something changed after the massacre last month at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. The thought of 20 once-smiling 6- and 7-year-olds suddenly riddled with nine, 10, even 11 bullets permeated the national psyche.

This week, President Barack Obama proposed the nation’s most aggressive gun control plan in generations. Governors have unveiled their own plans for restrictions. Groups who have been toiling for years on the vexing issue of gun violence suddenly have influence in a newly invigorated grass-roots movement.

Poll after poll finds more Americans agree that their elected officials need to do something, anything, to prevent more children from dying in a nation with more firearms than any other in the world.

“I … have never seen the nation’s conscience so shaken by what happened at Sandy Hook,” Vice President Joe Biden said this week. “The world has changed.”

But in Washington — where cooperation in a divided Congress is tenuous at best — it still may not be enough.

Some Democrats who have long supported gun rights have called for changes. But others on Capitol Hill, including most Republicans, remain opposed to restrictions on guns, worried that the government is chipping away at the freedoms this nation was founded on.

“While we mourn with those who have lost loved ones, in no way should the actions of those few who act illegally impact the constitutional rights of the many,” said Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla.

The right to keep and bear arms has divided American society for decades. There are no signs it will stop now.

Rep. Richard Hudson, R-N.C., said, “Not a day passes that I don’t think about the Newtown community,” but he remains opposed to changing gun laws. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. called the shooting “heartbreaking and beyond words,” but he, too, is opposed.

“The only place where this is a heated partisan debate is in the halls of Congress,” said Dan Gross, the president of the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence. “It’s not among the American people.”

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