Same.
And here's the thing. Anyone with a working brain knows that the problem isn't guns.
When I was a kiddo, gun ownership was even higher than it is today. If you took a visit to my high school, essentially every student's pickup truck in the parking lot would have a gun in it, usually on the back on a gun rack. My wife's high school (mine was too poor and rural so we just went to the local abandoned quarry) had a shooting range right next to the gym, and a shooting club. You could easily expect to see kids on the bus (those without their own car) carrying their rifles on days the shooting club met.
I bought and owned my first gun at age 10 (bought with money I earned from helping out neighbors). I fired my first rifle at age 7 (my dad's rifle).
I could order a rifle or shotgun from the Montgomery Ward catalog. When my dad was a tiny kiddo, you could order a Colt Machine Gun from the SEARS Roebuck catalog.
The problem isn't guns, or gun ownership. The problem is.... what has changed? What is different? I suspect a lot of it has to do with the emptying of psych wards in the 60s and 70s, and subsequent reproduction. I suspect another big player is the rise of 24/7 media focusing on and giving a platform for shooters who want to do something that gets them remembered and plastered over the news. And sadly, I suspect the single parenthood increase has played a role as well.