Actor and comedian Jay Mohr waded into the gun debate on Twitter after Monday's deadly terrorist attacks at the Boston Marathon.
"What  bothers me most about today is that we're getting used 2 it. ENOUGH.  2nd amendment must go. Violence has 2 stop. Culture MUST change," the  Jerry Maguire actor tweeted Monday night.     What bothers me most about  today is that we're getting used 2 it. ENOUGH. 2nd amendment must go.  Violence has 2 stop. Culture MUST change.     — Jay Mohr (@jaymohr37)  April 15, 2013
Mohr, who hosts a podcast and Jay Mohr Sports on  Fox Sports Radio, followed it up with another tweet connecting the  Second Amendment to a "culture of violence."
Following push back  on Twitter, Mohr elaborated on his contention further, explaining that  he finds it sad that gun massacres are becoming increasingly common.
"Newtown  tragedy was gun violence. Where are u maniacs coming from. I'm just  stating that its so sad we're getting used to watching it on tv," he  tweeted.
He further stressed that his aim was not to politicize  the event, but instead to point out what he described as a cultural  numbness to violence.
"No politics here at all," he tweeted.  "Just sick of watching bloodshed on tv. It's become reality tv and we're  becoming numb. Amazed at pro gun responses"
Officials  investigating the Boston Marathon attack say early evidence suggests the  culprit is likely to be a homegrown "domestic extremist," leaving the  path clear for the Obama administration's political adversaries to be  demonized as extremists.
Richard  DesLauriers, the special agent in charge of the Boston FBI office,  asserted, "The person who did this was someone's friend, neighbor or  coworker," ruling out the possibility that the attack was carried out by  foreigners who entered the United States.
Georgia Senator Saxby  Chambliss, the top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee, went  further, telling reporters, "There are a lot of things that are  surrounding this that would give an indication it may have been a  domestic terrorist."
Dutch Ruppersberger of Maryland, the top  Democrat on the House intelligence, said the investigation was leaning  towards the likelihood that the bombings were the work of a "lone wolf"  extremist.
If the bomber turns out to be a stereotypical  "right-wing extremist," President Obama will likely follow the advice of  a number of Democratic strategists who have openly invited acts of  violence that Obama can exploit to push his big government agenda.
Despite  zero tangible evidence so far indicating that the attack was carried  out by an anti-tax protester or a "right-winger," numerous personalities  on the left have made the connection anyway.
- Just hours after  the bombing, Michael Moore blamed the Tea Party for the tragedy,  tweeting "2+2 =" followed by "Tax Day. Patriots Day."
- A  Salon.com opinion piece published last night entitled, "Let's hope the  Boston Marathon bomber is a white American," expressed the desire that  the "bomber ends up being a white anti-government extremist."
-  Former Bill Clinton advisor David Axelrod also hinted yesterday on MSNBC  that the attack could have been a form of tax protest.
- A US  Forest Service PR rep also took to Twitter to blame the bombing on the  Tea Party, writing, "I fear nutty logic goes like this ... Patriots Day.  April 15. Tax Day. Bad government. Boston. Tea Party. Let's show 'em.
- Actor and comedian Jay Mohr blamed the  bombings on the Second Amendment, tweeting, "What bothers me most about  today is that we're getting used 2 it. ENOUGH. 2nd amendment must go.  Violence has 2 stop. Culture MUST change."
This kind of rhetoric  led statewide organizer for the Massachusetts Tea Party Carlos Hernandez  to express his anger at opportunists milking the tragedy for political  points scoring. Hernandez lost his 8-year-old nephew Martin Richard, who  was the youngest victim of the bombing.
"I just hope the  politicians don't try to show up at the funeral," said Hernandez. "If  these guys try to use it as political crap, I might get arrested."