A 46-year-old man walked into the Tree of Life Congregation Synagogue in Pittsburgh’s Squirrel Hill neighborhood Saturday morning and slaughtered 11 people. We are beginning to learn their stories. Read even the snippets — where they lived, what they did, who they loved and who loved them — and then try to imagine those final, horrifying moments.

According to early reports, the killer used an assault rifle and three handguns. While the country grapples with renewed anti-Semitism, it is also — as it does again and again — arguing over gun control.

On that topic Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr has been one of the most outspoken — and fervent — figure in the sports world. He delivered again on Sunday.

Steve Kerr: “It’s easy to feel how broken we are as a country right now.” pic.twitter.com/guIHBKaafs — Connor Letourneau (@Con_Chron) October 28, 2018

Kerr, whose father was murdered with a gun, has spoken out on this issue time after time after time after time. He’s numb to it now, per the San Francisco Chronicle:

“It was just devastating,” Kerr said when asked how he is processing the news that an anti-Semite carried out the deadliest attack on Jews in U.S. history, killing 11 people inside a Pittsburgh synagogue Saturday. “I just expect it now, and that’s the sad thing. “I remember an interview with a student after the Santa Fe (High School) shooting in Texas. It was a 14-year-old girl, and she was asked, ‘Did this shock you?’ And she said, ‘No, I kind of expected that this would happen to us at our school at some point.’ That’s where we’ve gotten as a country. We’re broken right now. So, nothing surprises us anymore. Nothing surprises me anymore.”

Here are the rest his remarks from today.