Washington, Dec 30: Any chance for national unity on U.S. gun violence appeared to wane
a week after the Connecticut school massacre, as the powerful NRA gun rights
lobby called for armed guards in every school and gun-control advocates
vehemently rejected the proposal.
The solution offered by the National
Rifle Association defied a push by President Barack Obama for new gun laws, such
as bans on high-capacity magazines and certain semiautomatic rifles.
At a
hotel near the White House, NRA Chief Executive Wayne LaPierre said a debate
among lawmakers would be long and ineffective, and that school children were
better served by immediate action to send officers with firearms into
schools.
LaPierre delivered an impassioned defense of the firearms that
millions of Americans own, in a rare NRA news briefing after the Newtown,
Connecticut, shooting in which a gunman killed his mother, and then 20 children
and six adults at an elementary school.
"Why is the idea of a gun good
when it's used to protect our president or our country or our police, but bad
when it's used to protect our children in their schools?" LaPierre asked in
comments twice interrupted by anti-NRA protesters whom guards forced from the
room.
Speaking to about 200 reporters and editors but taking no
questions, LaPierre dared politicians to oppose armed guards.
"Is the
press and political class here in Washington so consumed by fear and hatred of
the NRA and America's gun owners," he asked, "that you're willing to accept a
world where real resistance to evil monsters is a lone, unarmed school
principal?"
Proponents of gun control immediately rejected the idea,
hardening battle lines in a social debate that divides Americans as much as
abortion or same-sex marriage.
A brief NRA statement three days earlier
in which the group said it wanted to contribute meaningfully to ways to prevent
school massacres led to speculation that compromise might be possible, or that
the NRA was too weak to defeat new legislation.
"The NRA's leadership had
an opportunity to help unite the nation behind efforts to reduce gun violence
and avert massacres like the one at Sandy Hook Elementary School," said
Democratic Representative Carolyn McCarthy of New York. She supports new limits
on ammunition and firearms, and universal background checks for gun
buyers.
Adam Winkler, author of "Gunfight," a history of U.S. gun rights,
said he expected the NRA might yield on background checks. About 40 percent of
gun purchasers are not checked, according to some estimates.
"The NRA
missed a huge opportunity to move in the direction of compromise. Instead of
offering a major contribution to the gun debate, which is what they promised, we
got the same old tired clichés," said Winkler, a law professor at the University
of California at Los Angeles.
A poll showed the percentage of Americans
favoring tough gun regulations rising 8 points after the Newtown shooting, to 50
percent.
Inside the NRA, though, attitudes might not change
much.
"The anti-gun forces which are motivated by hysteria and a refusal
to deal with the facts are going to be facing a counter-attack here that is
going to be very, very effective," said Robert Brown, an NRA board member and
the publisher of Soldier of Fortune, a military-focused magazine.
During
the news conference, LaPierre laid out a plan for a "National School Shield" and
said former U.S. congressman Asa Hutchinson from Arkansas would head up the
NRA's effort to develop a model security program for schools.
The NRA is
far and away America's most powerful gun organization and dwarves other groups
with its lobbying efforts. In 2011, it spent $3.1 million lobbying lawmakers and
federal agencies, while all gun-control groups combined spent $280,000,
according to records the groups filed with Congress.
Ken Blackwell,
another NRA board member, said NRA leaders were discussing how to react to the
Newtown shooting on the day it happened, helping LaPierre formulate a
position.
"He and the team of lawyers around him are very bright and they
understand the Constitution," said Blackwell, a Republican former state official
in Ohio.
The Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution as interpreted by
the Supreme Court in 2008 guarantees an individual right to own firearms, though
it allows for some limits.
While LaPierre's proposal to arm schools came
as a surprise to those who hoped for compromise, it is not new.
Former
NRA president, the late actor Charlton Heston, made a similar proposal after the
1999 Columbine High School massacre near Denver that killed 12 students and one
teacher.
"If there had been even one armed guard in the school, he could
have saved a lot of lives and perhaps ended the whole thing instantly," Heston
said in April 1999, according to The New York Times.
Columbine had an
armed sheriff's deputy who exchanged gunfire outside the school with one of the
two teenage killers, according to a Jefferson County, Colorado, sheriff's office
report. The deputy was unable to hit or stop the student, who was armed with a
semiautomatic rifle, from entering the school, and the deputy stayed in a
parking lot with police, the report said.
Protesters at the news briefing
accused the NRA of being complicit in gun deaths.
"If teachers can stand
up to gunmen, Congress can stand up to the NRA," said Medea Benjamin,
co-director of the peace group Code Pink, who was escorted from the news
conference.
Ends
SA/EN
Home »
» NRA offensive exposes deep U.S. divisions on guns
NRA offensive exposes deep U.S. divisions on guns
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment