Jon Voight attributed the mass shootings, just like the one at a Uvalde, Texas, elementary college that killed 19 college students and two lecturers on Tuesday, to abuse and psychological well-being points.

In two and a half minute video posted to his social media, the actor mentioned there “should be proper qualifications for gun ownership” whereas additionally stating that the nation “must not allow mental illness to take away our right to bear arms.”

Voight started his message, titled “My Soul Cries for All Lost,” by saying, “We must do something about these horrors that are taken out on innocent beings, humans who each have lives and years of life that they’re supposed to live.” He went on to say that “they’ve been taken down by insanity.”

He continued, “These beings had been bullied, and they take out their disturbances, their grief, their horror on innocent souls. It’s not about left, right. Guns, no guns. This is about brains that are dysfunctioning. This is mental.”

On Friday, the identical day Voight posted his message, Rep. Joaquin Castro tweeted that the FBI, which has opened an investigation into numerous features of the mass taking pictures, “does not believe the shooter was motivated by a particular ideology.”

Authorities have mentioned the 18-year-old gunman legally purchased the AR-15 kind firearm, generally known as a DDM4 Rifle, and a second one prefers its final week, simply after his birthday. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott mentioned he had no identified legal or psychological well-being historical past, in accordance to the Associated Press.

Later within the message, Voight defends gun rights, saying that what occurred was “not about healthy human beings serving the country with arms to bear or even the right of this Constitution for bearing arms. It is a right to use arms with a proper purpose to defend one’s safety. We must not allow mental illness to take away our right to bear arms.”

The actor added that Americans are residing “in a world that has no remorse for wrongdoings because we’re being led by the worst in office,” although he didn’t specify which lawmakers he was referring to. Voight then recommended that “there should be proper qualifications for gun ownership and proper testing.”

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“One should only own a gun if they’re qualified and schooled,” he continued.

He ended his message with “May God watch over all and bring comfort for this loss which may never heal, for each child was so precious a gift.”

Voight is one amongst several Hollywood figures within the final week who’ve spoken out in regards to the mass taking pictures at Robb Elementary. On Thursday, Jamie Foxx had harsh phrases for lawmakers and “so-called Christians” who’ve failed to make adjustments to legal guidelines stopping mass taking pictures on occasions like Tuesdays.

“Little angels my heart goes out to our families,” Foxx, who grew up in Texas, wrote in an Instagram post. “Never thought I would live in A society a ‘Christian Society’ where they would let little children die over and over again and still not change any laws.”

In his statement posted to Instagram, Uvalde native Matthew McConaughey described America’s mass taking pictures epidemic as “an epidemic we can control, and whichever side of the aisle we may stand on, we all know we can do better.”