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Awash in Guns
by Sarah Brady
About
twenty years have passed since John Hinckley Jr. fired the shots that severely
wounded my husband, Jim, and drastically changed our family's life forever.
Unfortunately, our experience is far from unique. Since that time, the same
tragedy has struck hundreds of thousands of American families.
Consider this: In just one year guns are used to kill more than thirty
thousand Americans, and thousands more are injured. The fear of gun violence
alone affects the quality of life of every American, even those who have never
experienced it firsthand. What we forget is that living in fear does not have to
be an inevitable part of life in America.
But it wasn't Jim's near-fatal shooting that moved me to get involved on the
issue of gun violence. It was my role as a mother that spurred me into action.
In 1985, my son Scott, then five years old, picked up a loaded pistol left in a
family friend's car and, thinking it was a toy, pointed it at me. The gun was a
.22, the same kind of gun John Hinckley used to shoot Jim. Fortunately, this
time, no one was hurt. But I thought to myself, what kind of world do we live in
where five-year-olds and mentally unstable people can easily get their hands on
guns?
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I became determined to do whatever I could to prevent other families from
experiencing the same tragedy we had. So I picked up the phone and called
Handgun Control. And I've been at it ever since. The good news is that we have
already begun to reverse the tide of gun violence sweeping across the country.
Tough gun control laws, like the Brady Law, named for my husband, and the
federal assault weapons ban have proven to be successful at keeping the wrong
guns out of the wrong people's hands and have helped save lives. But more still
needs to be done.
We are a nation awash with guns. It is estimated that there are more than 200
million guns in America. That's almost one gun for every man, woman, and child.
The widespread availability of guns, especially handguns and assault weapons, to
criminals and children in this country spurs lethal violence on a frighteningly
regular basis. Today in America, more than eleven children are killed by guns
every day. Altogether, we lose close to 100 people to gun violence daily. Guns
are still the second leading cause of injury-related death in the United States,
after motor vehicle-related incidents.
If guns made us safer, as the powerful gun lobby likes to argue, then we'd
already be the safest country in the world. But sadly, America is the most
violent industrialized country on earth. Consider: In 1996, handguns murdered
213 people in Germany, 106 in Canada, 30 in Great Britain -- and 9,390 in the
United States. In a nation that rightfully calls itself the last remaining
superpower, this is a travesty of our strength and our ideals. And, a nation
that glorifies guns should not be surprised when children act out their darkest
fantasies with those same weapons, as happened in all-American towns like
Jonesboro, Arkansas; Paducah, Kentucky; Springfield, Oregon; and Littleton,
Colorado.
I am optimistic that we can change -- that there will be a time in Jim's and
my lifetime when we will no longer be afraid of guns invading our schools,
workplaces, places of worship, parks, shopping malls, and homes. Our fight is
not over.
Getting involved in the gun control movement did not feel like a choice. I
felt that my personal experience compelled me to do so. The honor of working for
a cause in which Jim and I truly believe has been a reward in itself.
This
article is excerpted from Architects of Peace, ©2000, by Michael Callopy.
Reprinted with permission of the publisher, New World Library. www.newworldlibrary.com
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About the Author
Sarah
Brady is chair of Handgun Control, Inc., the nation's largest citizens' gun
control lobbying organization. In 1993, President Clinton signed the "Brady
Bill" into law (named after her husband), which requires a five-day wait
and background check on all handgun purchases through licensed dealers. The law
has prevented hundreds of thousands of previously convicted felons and mentally
ill people from purchasing guns. For information, visit www.handguncontrol.org
or call 202-898-0792.
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