President Obama unveiled proposals today aimed at curbing gun violence:
President Obama unveiled proposals today aimed at curbing gun violence, including background checks for every gun buyer in America, a ban on assault weapons and ammunition clips that hold more than 10 bullets and a federal firearm trafficking law.
Invoking the painful memory of the schoolchildren killed in Newtown, Conn., a month ago, President Barack Obama on Wednesday announced the most ambitious gun-control drive in generations. Proposals include universal background checks as well as bans on assault weapons and ammunition clips that hold more than 10 bullets. Some of his proposals are sure to run headlong into fierce opposition from Republicans and some Democrats in Congress, as well as the powerful National Rifle Association lobby.
"I will put everything I’ve got
into this,” Obama, standing alongside Vice President Joe Biden, promised
an audience that included relatives of the first-graders slaughtered at
Sandy Hook Elementary School, survivors of other mass shootings and
elected officials.
"While there is no law, or set of
laws, that can prevent every senseless act of violence completely, no
piece of legislation that will prevent every tragedy, every act of evil,
if there’s even one thing we can do to reduce this violence, if there’s
even one life that can be saved, then we’ve got an obligation to try,"
Obama said in his speech. "And I’m going to do my part."
The president declared himself a
firm believer in the Second Amendment and denounced those who will cast
his "common-sense" approach as "a tyrannical, all-out assault on
liberty." He also warned those inclined to support his strategy that
passage "will be difficult."
“This will not happen unless the
American people demand it. If parents and teachers, police officers and
pastors, if hunters and sportsmen, if responsible gun owners, if
Americans of every background stand up and say, ‘Enough, we’ve suffered
too much pain and care too much about our children to allow this to
continue,' then change will come," he said. "That’s what it’s going to
take."
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