Some weapons are too dangerous for civilian use.
Centerfold from the NRA magazine |
Dozens of Americans
will be murdered, hundreds of others will be shot, and nearly 1,000 will be robbed or assaulted with a gun — today.
The United States has
some of the weakest gun laws in the world. To make us, our families, and our
communities safer, we need to beef up a few of those laws — now.
As President Barack
Obama has urged, Congress should vote soon on common-sense gun laws that will
keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people. Sensible steps include
requiring a criminal background check for every gun sale, making gun
trafficking a federal crime, and banning the military-style assault weapon that
killed so many people in Newtown on December 14.
But millions of guns are sold by unlicensed sellers at gun shows and through websites with no background checks. We need to strengthen current law to cover all gun sales. The few minutes it takes to complete a computerized check would save lives.
The federal background
check law has blocked more than 1.5
million illegal gun sales over the past 14 years. It works. The problem is that the
law doesn’t apply to private sales, so the bad guys (and gals) can avoid a
background check and get any kind of gun, no questions asked.
Both the International
Association of Chiefs of Police and the national Fraternal Order of Police have endorsed mandatory, universal background
checks because they know they will save lives. It’s time to close the gun show
loophole.
I support the Second
Amendment. Even gun
owners overwhelmingly favor requiring a criminal background check of anyone purchasing a
gun. It will lead to fewer firearm deaths.
Some weapons are too
dangerous for civilian use. That’s why the federal government imposed
taxes and strict regulations on the manufacturing and distribution of sawed-off
shotguns, silencers, very high-caliber firearms, grenades, and bombs nearly 80
years ago. Military-style assault weapons — like the one used to murder
defenseless children and educators in Newtown — are versions of military
weapons that are designed for rapid fire. They’re weapons of war, and like
machine guns, extremely dangerous. We’d be safer without them.
And hunters and
sportspeople don’t use these weapons to kill game. Rapid fire is contrary to
the whole point of the sport. In the decade that the federal ban on assault
weapons was in effect, the
percentage of assault weapons traced to crime fell by 66 percent. The ban worked.
Some gun accessories
should be outlawed. High-capacity ammunition magazines are designed to shoot a
lot of people, quickly. There is no hunting or sporting purpose for these
magazines — and that was a major reason for the ban on them between 1994 and
2004. Just like silencers, high-capacity magazines are simply too dangerous for
sale to civilians.
The Tucson massacre is
a good example. Rep. Gabby Giffords’ shooter had an ammunition magazine with 31
bullets. He was tackled after he shot out his clip and was trying to
reload. If the magazine had only 10 rounds, a lot of lives could have been
saved.
Let’s work together.
Let’s ask our leaders to prevent the next mentally ill person from going to a
gun show and buying an automatic weapon with a huge magazine without getting a
background check. The police chiefs are asking for this.
What is Washington
waiting for?
Elizabeth Rose is the
communications director for the Campaign for America's Future, an organization that promotes progressive
policies. Distributed via OtherWords. OtherWords.org