Senate inaction on guns was inexcusable in the wake of the
Boston Marathon bombing.
By Marc Morial
Acts of terror like
the ones committed at the Boston Marathon are reprehensible and lack moral or
logical explanation. They rock us to our core.
They also unite us in
common purpose. Victims and their families seem to become our own loved ones.
We want to ease their pain. We want to do something to ensure that this doesn’t
happen again. Our togetherness as a nation is often most evident when something
happens that’s meant to break us.
Nearly 12 years after the 9/11 attacks, terrorism in our homeland still seems a nearly impossible reality — one that none of us want to accept. Still, communities across America are terrorized each day. But rarely do these victims and their families receive national media attention, or better yet, our collective attention.
Every year, 100,000
people are shot or killed with a gun in America. Every day, these acts of
terror are carried out in homes, on playgrounds, schoolyards, neighborhood
streets, even in houses of worship — turning spaces that should represent peace
and sanctuary into places that elicit danger and fear.
Just two days after
the Boston Marathon bombing, the Senate had an opportunity to curb another kind
of terror facing our nation by taking modest steps toward keeping guns out of
the wrong hands. Yet, it voted down a sensible gun background check bill.
Never
mind that 90 percent of Americans and 74 percent of National Rifle Association
members support universal background checks. It didn’t even matter that a
majority of senators (54-46) actually voted in favor of the bill. Because of
the Senate’s 60-vote majority rule, along with the distortions and political
threats from NRA leaders, the bill went down in defeat.
President Barack Obama
called it “a shameful day in Washington.” Former lawmaker and gun violence
survivor, Gabrielle Giffords, added, “I will not rest until we have righted the
wrong these senators have done, and until we have changed our laws so we can
look parents in the face and say: We are trying to keep our children safe.”
We share her
determination. Whether in Newtown or scores of other communities across the
nation, one point is clear: Guns in the wrong hands can be weapons of mass
destruction as deadly as a terrorist’s bomb.
Where, we wonder, is
the unified purpose in Congress to work toward firearm safety to address the reign
of gun-related terror devastating so many of our neighborhoods?
Let’s be clear: This
issue is not about gun confiscation, nor is it an attack on anyone’s rights. We
know that this step is not a cure-all for the plague of gun violence in
America. But, it is at least a first step towards doing all we can to ensure
the safety of our citizens.
The city of Boston and
its people deserve all the support and attention they have received in the wake
of this horrific tragedy. I just hope that we can elevate our sense of unity,
urgency and purpose to do what is right for the countless of Americans whose
lives have been ended or forever changed by gun violence.
Let’s not forget, in addition to killing
with homemade bombs, the Boston terrorists also used guns in killing MIT police
officer Sean Collier and seriously wounding Massachusetts Bay transit officer
Richard H. Donohue.
As we pray for the
dead, the wounded survivors, and their loved ones, we urge the nation to unite
against terror — including gun violence — everywhere. We must all heed the
words of eight-year-old Martin Richard, the boy who perished in the Boston Marathon
bombing: “No more hurting people. Peace.”
Marc Morial is the president and CEO of the National Urban
League and the former mayor of New Orleans. www.nul.org
Distributed via OtherWords (OtherWords.org)
Distributed via OtherWords (OtherWords.org)