Orlando shooting exposes so many of America’s faultlines 
The array of initial reactions illustrates just how confused the  political response might become. Whatever else this is, it’s not about  immigration. Omar Mateen, the suspected killer, was born in America.  Whatever compelled him to commit such a terrible act cannot be laid at  the border of a foreign nation. His hatred was home-grown.
 Some will say it is about Islam. Mateen was Muslim. But mass  shootings are not unique to Islam or alien to America. There were 330  last year alone.
 Some will say it is about security. Mateen claimed allegiance to  Islamic State. At the time of writing the Isis-affiliated news agency,  Amaq, has claimed responsibility for the attack, although an official  claim from Isis has been disputed. But he appears to have had no  previous convictions. He may have been inspired by Isis’s brutality, but  you can’t arrest people for what’s in their heads. 
Some will say it is about religious integration. Interviews with his  father and former wife suggest he was deeply homophobic and violent. The  target of a gay club was clearly not an accident.
 His father told NBC he once become enraged by two men kissing in  public. His ex-wife told the Washington Post he was abusive and  unstable. “He beat me,” she said. “He would just come home and start  beating me up because the laundry wasn’t finished.” All this could  prompt a liberal broadside against both Islam and the perils of  multiculturalism.
 But Muslims did not invent domestic violence or homophobia. And the  determination with which some on the right have fought same-sex marriage  indicates tolerance and acceptance have struggled to find a home in  significant sections of Christian America. Indeed, just hours after the  attack Texas’s lieutenant governor, Dan Patrick, seemed to suggest that  the victims were responsible for their own deaths: “Do not be deceived,”  he tweeted, citing Galatians chapter 6, verse 7. “God cannot be mocked.  A man reaps what he sows.”