Full disclosure: Am autistic dude, care quite a bit about this issue.
One thing I've been seeing a lot lately, is how with all the shootings, both sides of the debate have clamored about mental health reform as very much the default assumption with the "fix". The left says: We'll reform the way mental health is treated in this country and then add more gun control. The right says: We'll reform the way mental health is treated in this country and then improve security and enforcement. I feel like I'm about to make it a bit more complicated for some of ya'll.
In general, I think mental health reform is a great idea, as I feel it's not addressed well enough in the country as it stands. That hasn't changed due to this. But seeing it develop as a response to how certain individuals are harming society feels like a bad source for this to happen, and somewhat reminiscent of the start of the drug war. I am very concerned that Congress will pass some "compromise" that generalizes mental illness and restricts our rights and ability to succeed in society to alleviate the public's worry on this issue, beyond the reasonable.
There's a few reasons I feel this could happen:
1. As it stands, Congress looks worse and worse by the day by doing nothing much at all about the shootings. They could really do for passing anything, even just a mental health bill, to improve their reputations for the election. They don't have any direct voting backlash for harming the rights of particularly uncommon mental illnesses, as they aren't a deciding factor in the vote. The backlash on such a law relies entirely on people speaking for us, and that's not a good enough guarantee for me. It's the only really bipartisan thing I've seen about this debate, and in this age the more independents you get to vote for your party the better, so there is some good incentive.
2. Let's be real here, it's much easier than almost any other minority group to dehumanize people with mental illnesses, we can often behave in ways that seem unnatural to mentally well folk, and with more severe illnesses it can feel almost uncanny valley to them. It's human nature, but it poses a risk here. With us being associated to these horrible people, it feels like our reputation declines with the public every day, though I do admit the association isn't unjustified.
3. The fact that this is brought up now, with the goal in question being "stop shootings" and not "improve people's lives when dealing with mental health" leaves me very worried. I'm not saying it's completely unreasonable to block people with certain mental illnesses from having weaponry, but I can see this whole topic extending into a general bill, and with the basis not being our own interests I have doubts it will care for our lives as much as a reform should.
4. I debate the idea that a bunch of politicians could really grasp the issues we go through. Humans in general struggle enough understanding each other in normal circumstances, I don't know if I can expect people with their own lives to deal with to understand folks who have brains and thought processes very different from the norm. And not just one form of deviance from the norm, quite a list of them.
If a mental health advocacy group gained steam with a bill proposal I could trust them to get it right. They have experts and people who've experienced mental illness on their teams a lot of the time. But if the main support comes from the folks advocating about firearms i'm not sure they'll hit the mark much at all.
Overall, I just don't think a time period where we have America recovering from tragedies and looking for something to blame or an immediate fix, is a good time to work on legislation to improve the lives of those accused of being the cause. Too much potential for vindictive or not well-thought out laws without advocates for the actual issue being the primary source and movement behind it.