Historian Joel Spring of Queens College and the City University of New York shared this important story, in the wake of the horrific massacre in Orlando:

Port Arthur Massacre: The Shooting Spree That Changed Australia’s Gun Laws

BY MATTHEW GRIMSON

In 1996, Martin Bryant entered a café at the site of a historic penal colony at Port Arthur, Tasmania.

The 28-year-old ate lunch before pulling a semi-automatic rifle from his bag and embarking on a killing spree. By the time he was apprehended the next morning, 35 people were dead and 23 had been wounded. Bryant had become the worst mass-murderer in Australia’s history.

The Australian government subsequently introduced the National Firearms Agreement — legislation that outlawed automatic and semi-automatic rifles, as well as pump-action shotguns. A nationwide gun buyback scheme also saw more than 640,000 weapons turned in to authorities.

http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/port-arthur-massacre-shooting-spree-changed-australia-gun-laws-n396476

If we really cared about human life, no civilian would ever own an assault rifle like the Bushmaster; Internet sales of these deadly weapons would be banned. Gun manufacturers would not be allowed to sell their guns to anyone but government agencies. Only single-shot hunting rifles would be available, and then only to buyers who passed a background check. Even with all these restrictions, the mass murderer in Orlando would still have had access to the weapons he used, because he was trained for security work. But Adam Lanza, the Newtown shooter, would not have had a weapon; nor would most of the other mass murderers. The one thing we can’t afford to do is nothing at all. The next massacre might be in your city, your town, your village, your pizza parlor, your grocery store, your school, your train station, your airport. So long as unstable and hateful people can kill at will, the rest of us do not have a guarantee of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”