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In Short

We Can’t Keep Living, and Dying, By the Gun

We Can't Keep Living, and Dying, By the Gun_image.jpeg

With , there are almost as many guns in this country as there are Americans. And despite the carnage and chaos they routinely cause鈥 in the form of mass shootings, urban gun violence, domestic violence and suicides鈥 we have yet to witness the political will or courage to do anything to stanch the bleeding.

In 2013 alone there were more than and committed with guns. Those are just the dead. people were injured by gunfire, many of them left with catastrophic and debilitating injuries.

The vast costs of gun violence can be tallied in more than just physical injury and death, casting a long shadow of emotional and psychological trauma experienced by those repeatedly exposed to it鈥 whether they are physical victims or not. There are also great financial costs, both direct and indirect dollar amounts that figure to the tune of upward of $200 billion a year, according to both the University of Chicago Crime Lab and the Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation.

Yet, even as the blood and bullets continue to flow through our streets, Congress (and many state legislatures) has failed to pass a single piece of legislation for robust gun-control. Not for bolstered background checks for gun sales, despite that shows a wide majority of Americans, including gun owners, support. Nor for stricter state-level reforms that have led to major drops in gun-violence in states that have adopted such measures. This, despite the reality that the data is striking on that point. States of gun death rates. Period.

Congress has the Center for Disease Control from engaging in the kind of research into gun violence that we offer into other major killers of Americans like car accidents and all manner of cancer, by starving it of funding dedicated to studying it.

It鈥檚 as if we鈥檙e living in a sort of Twilight Zone of political theater that has made keeping a check on America鈥檚 lust for guns, and the violence they bear, virtually impossible.

But perhaps, in the first few days of 2016, we exited stage left.

This week, the Obama administration overcame political daggers and posturing to present a that some in the anti-gun violence community say are the more than two decades ago.

President Obama announced a series of executive actions that the White House has billed as the president鈥檚 best efforts in the face of an unmovable Congress.

The president鈥檚 executive actions, which differ from executive orders which become law upon signing, include a 10-point plan aimed at keeping guns from people who shouldn鈥檛 have them. includes hiring 230 new FBI examiners to process background checks, making the national background check system a 24-hour, 7-day-a-week operation. There鈥檚 also a request for $500 million in congressional funding for mental health care, and new direction for federal agencies to expand their research into smart gun technology.

But the heart of the new guidelines is a clarification as to who is 鈥渆ngaged in the business鈥 of selling guns and thus, who is required to get a federal license and conduct a background check for all gun sales. That effort is aimed at the so-called 鈥済un show loophole,鈥 which allows people who sell from their 鈥減rivate collections鈥 to sell guns without a license or a background check. That loophole has allowed gun traffickers and people supplying guns for all types of nefarious purposes unfettered distribution, all out of the purview of federal authorities.

The new guidelines, then, offer new scrutiny over those who sell a volume of weapons but don鈥檛 operate out of a brick and mortar store鈥攖hat is, over people who sell their 鈥減rivate collections鈥 at gun shows and internet gun sellers. In by the anti-gun violence group Everytown for Gun Safety, just a handful of unlicensed high-volume gun sellers on the largest online market for unlicensed gun sales, Armslist.com, posted more than 30,000 gun ads 鈥 all without the requirement of a background check or other safeguards required by licensed dealers.

While the administration allows that the new guidance does not directly upend the universe of gun violence, these are steps in the right direction.

With tears rolling down his cheek, President Obama, in his announcement, made an emotional plea to the nation to stand up against the all-powerful gun lobby and the politicians situated in their deep pockets.

鈥淭he gun lobby may be holding Congress hostage right now but they can鈥檛 hold America hostage. We do not have to accept that carnage is the price of freedom,鈥 Obama said from the East Room of the White House on Tuesday. 鈥淐ongress still needs to act. The folks in this room will not rest until Congress does.

鈥淭he reason Congress blocks laws is because they want to win elections,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f you make it hard for them to win an election if they block those laws, they鈥檒l change course, I promise.鈥

Flanked by victims of gun violence and the families of loved ones who鈥檝e been taken by guns and bullets, Obama was visibly shaken. He referenced the 20 young children slaughtered at Sandy Hook Elementary. And with his voice at times halting with emotion, he recalled the heroic recent death of a Tennessee teen who took a bullet to the head after leaping between a hail of bullets and three young female friends.

Obama talked about the 30,000 or so lives typically lost each year to guns, noting those killed each day on the streets of his hometown of Chicago.

鈥淓very time I think about those kids it gets me mad,鈥 he said of the children of Sandy Hook Elementary. 鈥淎nd by the way, it happens on the streets of Chicago every day.鈥

The rare show of emotion by the president may have moved some hearts already wrenching under the weight of the unending drumbeat of gun violence in our country. Yet, the response from Obama鈥檚 detractors was expectedly vitriolic.

Republican presidential candidates laid into Obama. Gov. Chris Christie called Obama a 鈥減etulant child.鈥

Jeb Bush said he will 鈥渇ight as hard as I can against any effort by this president, or by any liberal that wants to take away people鈥檚 rights that are embedded in the Bill of Rights, embedded in our Constitution. Sen. Ted Cruz saying if he becomes president he鈥檇 wipe out the plan, said, 鈥淚f you live by the pen you die by the pen, and my pen has got an eraser.鈥

And the National Rifle Association, in a bit of snark, jabbed at the proposal in an interview with the New York Times.

鈥淭his is it, really?鈥 Jennifer Baker, the NRA鈥檚 director of public affairs, told The New York Times. 鈥淭his is what they鈥檝e been hyping for how long now? This is the proposal they鈥檝e spent seven years putting together? They鈥檙e not really doing anything.鈥

In a perverted kind of way, the NRA spokeswoman is right. Unfortunately, without the support of Congress and strong action by it, these measures will not have a tremendous impact on gun violence or access to guns by violent people. But the hoping, hand-wringing and talk go far beyond the presidency of Barack Obama. It鈥檚 a bi-partisan burden that has left America holding the bag鈥 the body bag.

Each day in America, about by the gun. They鈥檙e dying in church houses and schoolhouses, street corners and the movie theaters. We are living, and they are dying, by the gun. Unlike Cruz鈥檚 pen, it does not have an eraser. And we should all be mad that there is not more being done to stop the bleeding.

And then we should do more than be mad. We should do something about it.

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We Can’t Keep Living, and Dying, By the Gun