The N.R. A. and gun rights advocates are quick to use the Constitution to defend unfettered access to even the most lethal firearms. But before the Constitution there was the Declaration of Independence, which asserts that we are endowed with certain unalienable rights, including those of “Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” It continues, “That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted…”
It is time now for government to protect our right to life from the threat of gun violence. It is time for politicians to put this right on the same pedestal they afford the right to bear arms. It is time for them to heed Supreme Court Justice Scalia who said that “like most rights, the right secured by the Second Amendment is not unlimited.” The Court was clear about the need for gun regulation: “nothing in our opinion should be taken to cast doubt on…laws imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of arms.” It even goes so far as to recognize the right of government to prohibit “the carrying of ‘dangerous and unusual weapons’.”
Some are defending the status
quo by claiming that
common sense gun regulations won't protect us from all incidents of gun
violence. President Obama in the State of the Union address said what is
obvious to most folks: "Our actions will not prevent every senseless
act of violence in this country. In fact, no laws, no initiatives, no
administrative acts will perfectly solve all the challenges...But we were never
sent here to be perfect. We were sent here to make what difference we can..."
Common sense regulation is
urgently needed to protect the lives of Americans in their places of work,
houses of worship, shopping centers, movie theaters, parks and schools. Among these are universal background checks
for gun and ammunition purchases, stricter bans on military-style assault
weapons, bans on high-capacity gun magazines, and registration of
firearms. None of these restrict the
ability of law-abiding citizens to own guns, any more so than vehicle
registration makes it impossible to own a car or TSA security checks make it
impossible to board a plane.
But little is going to change
unless concerned citizens speak out and demand action from politicians. Greenwich has very effective advocates in
Washington—Senators Blumenthal and Murphy, and Representative Himes—who are
publicly and vocally pushing for more effective gun regulation. But they need our support in the face of a gun
lobby that not only opposes any restriction on gun ownership, but recommends a
rush to arms as the solution to gun violence that kills 30,000 Americans every
year. In the words of N.R.A.
executive vice president Wayne LaPierre, “The enemies of the Second Amendment
will be met with unprecedented defiance, commitment and determination. We will
Stand And Fight.”
The Greenwich delegation to the
Connecticut State Assembly—Senator Frantz and Representatives Floren, Camillo
and Walko—appear to support more effective gun regulation, but they need our
encouragement. We need them to do more
than cast their votes when the time comes.
We need them to join other Connecticut legislators who are showing
leadership by publicly and forcefully making the case for tighter gun laws. In
the aftermath of the Newtown tragedy, Connecticut has a unique opportunity and
the moral authority to convince law-abiding Americans and their political
representatives that sensible limitations on gun ownership are vital to public
safety.
At the March for Change rally in
Hartford, one legislator noted he is being overwhelmed with email from those
opposed to gun regulation. Yet polls show
that a majority of Americans, including gun owners and N.R.A. members, favor
tighter gun laws. But many politicians
are hesitant to speak out and vote in favor of sensible gun regulation without
hearing from this silent majority. The
time to act is now (contact information for elected officials representing
Greenwich can be found at the website of the League of Women Voters of
Greenwich, www.lwvg.org).
According to Slate,
at least 1,850 Americans have been killed by guns just since the Newtown
massacre. We can’t afford to wait.
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