The first truth to understand about Saturday’s March for Our Lives is that students really do fear for their lives. Their parents are fearful as well. Let’s not insult them by claiming that these gatherings all across the country were much ado about nothing. They’re not. Children and teachers are being shot to death in schools.
In the First Amendment to the Constitution, the framers added protections for free speech, peaceable assemblies and the right to petition the government. That’s what happened: From our largest cities to Cortez and Durango, people assembled, talked about a serious problem and asked their government to address it.
At best, legislation has nibbled around the edges of the problem. The Colorado Senate recently killed a proposed ban on bump stocks, the rapid-fire device used by the Las Vegas shooter, although President Donald Trump has ordered the Justice Department to draw up such a ban. After a visit from NRA representatives, the president backed away from early support for strengthening background checks and raising the age for buying weapons popularly known as assault rifles. Now, he supports arming teachers, an idea that, in the best possible light, contains significant costs and serious risks. As well, teachers take up their profession to nurture, and can’t be expected to suddenly and successfully try to harm or kill.
According to The Salt Lake Tribune (March 21), the omnibus spending bill includes a provision to bolster reporting to a national criminal record database to better flag convicted criminals in background checks and a rider by Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch to boost detection and reporting of potential school shooters and training for law enforcement, teachers and students on how to handle violent attacks.
All that fails to address the central issue. Students want more than active-shooter training: They want effective gun laws. That’s not too much to ask, and it’s not impossible to achieve without infringing on Second Amendment rights.
Most Americans agree. A recent Politico/Morning Consult poll found 88 percent of Americans now support universal background checks, 81 percent support a minimum purchase age of 21, 70 percent support a ban on high-capacity magazines and 68 percent support a ban on assault-style weapons. Waiting periods and bump-stock bans are widely supported.
One reason such measures have not been instituted is that the pro-gun lobby has successfully argued that there’s little data to suggest they might help.
Since 1996, the Dickey Amendment has deterred the Centers for Disease Control from using federal money to research gun violence in any way that might suggest a public-safety benefit to restrictions on gun ownership or access. It’s time to repeal the “advocacy” restriction and provide adequate funding for comprehensive data collection and rigorous analysis. Independent research is a scientific first step toward creating well-targeted solutions to the current problem of gun violence in schools.
The Parkland High School students are right: Our national paralysis around gun safety has to end. We need honest discussion and a commitment to solutions. Let’s back away from the extremist ideas that all guns and all gun owners are equally dangerous or that there’s any move toward disarming every gun owner, and start calmly discussing common-sense proposals that included changes in gun laws.
Our young people are asking for specific, concrete steps. Let’s honor their fears, their goals and their commitment by listening to what they have to say and working toward improved safety for everyone.
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