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  • Writer's pictureKatoya R Palmer

911! We Must Act Quickly to Save Our Beloved Community Gun Violence Is an Infectious Disease

Updated: Mar 30, 2022

by Lynniah Grayson


I once heard someone say, “It won’t be long until Black men in America are extinct.” That statement shook me to my core and new thoughts flooded my mind around the notion that it might become true.


Could it be that mass incarceration and gun violence made them believe this?


The nation’s leading cause of death for Black men 44 and younger is homicide — not heart disease, but homicide. Think about that. The King County prosecuting attorney’s office 2021 Shots Fired report provides us with annual gun violence data that shows a terrifying increase year over year, with the demographics — Black people accounting for 50% of shooting victims — remaining the same. It’s important to note that 85% of these shooting victims are males. The data does not show what percentage of these males were fathers, husbands, and providers.


As a community leader, and one who has been impacted by gun violence since adolescence, with the most recent loss in the form of a family member, I have become an advocate for mothers who have experienced such tragedy and children who now must live with enormous adversity for the rest of what we hope to be a long healthy life. I do this work via Resilient in Sustaining Empowerment (R.I.S.E), where we focus on restoring families experiencing the impacts of gun violence through a holistic approach that intersects with public health.


If we are going to look at solutions, we must first identify the root cause of the problem. Gun violence is an issue that has impacted generations of families for decades. Where I am from, it is not unusual for a family to include third and fourth generation survivors, victims, or even perpetrators of gun violence.


The federal government has acknowledged that gun violence is a public health crisis. Many counties and states have declared gun violence a public health crisis and have sprung into addressing this health risk like how they responded to COVID-19. And gun violence is an infectious disease. It is a complicated situation affecting humans in one or more geographic areas. Health crises generally significantly impact community health, loss of life, and the economy. We are all impacted by gun violence — directly and indirectly.


In terms of impact, I must take a moment to draw your attention to our children and the consequences of exposure to violence on child brain development. Children and youth exposed to chronic trauma can experience inhibited brain development. If unaddressed, typically due to lack of resources, childhood mental health problems will likely continue to grow, and this will show up in all areas of children’s lives.


My commitment to this work stems from being severely impacted for the last 16 years of my life. Gun violence has cut my high school class down to half! Gun violence has harmed my household on so many levels. We lost a family member recently in the form of my Daughter’s father to gun violence; I went into preterm labor at five months due to gun violence’s mental health impacts on my body. Our community has seen tragedy after tragedy at a rapid speed, with evidence of enormous increase and lacking any signs of a sustainable decrease and without adequate support and sound investment. I want people to know that our community has unaddressed generational and historical trauma on top of trauma inflicted by social conditions, ACEs (adverse childhood experiences), and so much more. Add the direct impact of gun violence, and it all becomes a recipe for disease, disability, homelessness, social problems, health risk, and disrupted neurodevelopment that ultimately results in early death. Children are dying, and mothers are suffering; Black men are vanishing. There is an intense and urgent need to save our beloved community. We must act quickly.


With Love,

Lynniah Grayson Founder and Executive Director of Resilient In Sustaining Empowerment




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