A few days after 12 people were killed in a movie theater in Colorado, 14 people were killed near a small town in Texas:

At least 14 people died after a Ford pickup truck crammed with nearly two dozen people ran off a highway in southeastern Texas, officials said Monday.

Nine people were injured in the Sunday evening crash, officials said.
At least six of the victims were airlifted to hospitals in San Antonio and Corpus Christi, said Trooper Gerald Bryant of the Texas Highway Patrol. All of their conditions were not immediately available, but three later died of injuries suffered in the accident.

At least two of the dead are children, troopers told CNN affiliate KTRK in Houston.

"There were multiple occupants in the front of the cab portion and multiple occupants in the bed of the pickup truck," Lt. Glen Garrett of the state Department of Public Safety told CNN affiliate KIII-TV.

Border Patrol and Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were called to the scene. The victims were from Guatemala, Honduras and Mexico, according to ICE. "Based on the mode of travel, the way that the people were in the vehicle, it's a high probability there were illegal immigrants traveling northbound on 59," Garrett said.

One has to see the deaths in Colorado and these deaths in Texas as not unrelated. They are not isolated events but are in a continuum of logically ordered degrees of violence. Violence is not limited to direct murder or harm by hands, knives, or guns; it's also the social production of conditions that are dangerous or harmful to individuals.