You may have noticed that many folks are wearing orange shirts today. Or perhaps a friend changed their avatar to orange. That's because today is National Gun Violence Awareness Day. In his press briefing this morning, current Presidential Press Secretary Sean Spicer gave a shout out to National Donut Day, but not National Gun Violence Awareness Day. In a complete contrast Senator Kamala Harris expressed on twitter that ->
Women are 16x more likely to be killed with guns in the U.S than in other developed countries. What will it take for us to act? #WearOrange
There's a lot of misinformation going around about gun violence.— The Root (@TheRoot) June 2, 2017
Here are the facts. #WearOrange pic.twitter.com/S7HxElYacn
The Root created a powerful video (shown above) that clears up some of the misconceptions surrounding gun violence. AJ+ shows the human costs of gun violence in the video below:
Many will #WearOrange today on National Gun Violence Awareness Day.— AJ+ (@ajplus) June 2, 2017
This Chicago mother has pleaded for reform: pic.twitter.com/3ySLXBob5S
According to @CDCgov, more than 90 Americans are killed every day with guns. The United States has the highest gun ownership rate in the world and the highest per capita rate of firearm-related murders of all developed countries.
Link here: http://every.tw/2smaZY5
And importantly UC Davis Health has created a Violence Prevention Research Program:
"In the American Journal of Epidemiology, Dr. Magdalena Cerdá comments on the state-of-the-art evidence on gun violence organized around (1) the link between access to firearms and violence; (2) firearm violence related to substance abuse and affiliation with deviant social networks; and (3) approaches to violence prevention that span individual level interventions in the healthcare or home settings to state or national level interventions. This volume summarizes the epidemiology of firearms violence and highlights important gaps and priorities for future research on the risks, consequences, and prevention of gun violence.
Read more: Gun violence: Risk, Consequences, and Prevention (PDF)"
Read more: Gun violence: Risk, Consequences, and Prevention (PDF)"
Gregg Chadwick The Future Is Woke 40"x30" oil on linen 2017 |
I am from Austria, one of the countries you used as an example for low gun-crime.
ReplyDeleteGuns are free to own here from age 18 (for break-action shotguns and bolt/break-action rifles) or available from age 21 (for semi-auto shotguns, semi-auto rifles and handguns) with a shall-issue gun license.
For the guns in the former category, which is category "C" in our gun-law, you only have to wait 3 days from purchase to being handed the gun (unless you have a hunting license) and not have an active "weapons-ban" on yourself (generally handed out for certain violent felonies and felonies involving weapons)
For the guns in the latter category, which is category "B" in our gun-law, you need a license. To get that license, you will need to pass a medical/psychological exam (unless you have a hunting license), take a course on safe handling at a gun-dealer and have a "reason" for owning these guns. The following things are good reasons: "self defence in ones home", "hunting wild-boar", "sport", and "collection".
What is heavily regulated in our country though, is to carry a gun in public. Except for hunters, the military, security personel (both private and police) and "specially endangered people" (for instance jewelers and money couriers), getting a license for that is rather difficult.