It only compounded the horror that the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history called forth talking points that had been composed long before 49 innocents were murdered early Sunday.
The immediate reactions on social media to the killings at Pulse Orlando, a popular gay dance club, etched a portrait of our national divisions, our mutual mistrust and our inclination to know what we think even when we lack all the facts.
Even before President Obama spoke Sunday afternoon, there were declarations of great certainty that he would attribute the massacre to guns and not "Islamism" — and would therefore feed support for Donald Trump.
Trump did not disappoint. At 12:43 p.m., he turned to his communications medium of choice and tweeted: "Appreciate the congrats for being right on radical Islamic terrorism, I don't want congrats, I want toughness & vigilance. We must be smart!"
It is no day for partisanship, but how could Trump even think of using a moment of national trauma and mourning as an occasion to tout his own genius — or to reach sweeping conclusions on the fly?
But it's entirely true that those of us who have long believed that our scandalously lax national gun laws make sickening slaughters inevitable had predictable reactions of our own.
I freely admit that I identified entirely with Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., when he declared: "This phenomenon of near constant mass shootings happens only in America — nowhere else. Congress has become complicit in these murders by its total, unconscionable deafening silence."
Note that phrase "near constant." We are far from alone in the world in confronting terrorism. What is different about our nation — enragingly, dispiritingly, depressingly different — is that from Virginia Tech to Sandy Hook to Orlando, attacks of this sort happen here again and again and again.