Enough!: Solving America's Gun Violence Crisis
By Thomas Gabor
()
About this ebook
Life in America feels more dangerous today.
There are 40,000 gun-related deaths each year and nearly one mass shooting every day in the United States. Despite the annual death toll and sobering statistics, how can we turn fear into action? How can survivors fight back? When is enough finally enough?
There's evidence that change is coming.
International gun policy consultant Thomas Gabor offers a roadmap of bold solutions that tackle every side of gun violence.
You'll learn:
- Why we need to create a gun licensing system, ban military-style weapons and enact stricter gun carrying regulations.
- Ways to improve oversight of the gun industry and hold them accountable.
- Why it's critical to repeal laws like Stand Your Ground that enable lethal force.
- About a grassroots bill of rights for people who reject a society awash in guns.
ENOUGH! is the most up-to-date guide for any change agent, activist, or concerned citizen who seeks a safer world.
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Enough! - Thomas Gabor
Enough!
Solving America’s Gun Violence Crisis
Thomas Gabor
Consultant And Expert Witness
Professor of Criminology
(Retired, University of Ottawa)
Copyright © 2019 by Thomas Gabor
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, contact the author at the following email address: [email protected]
Center for the Study of Gun Violence
Lake Worth, Florida 33467
http://thomasgaborbooks.com
ISBN (print): 978-1-7336908-0-5
ISBN (eBook): 978-1-7336908-1-2
Ordering Information:
Special discounts are available on quantity purchases by corporations, associations, and others. For details, contact the author at [email protected].
To the victims of gun violence and their families,
as well as the activists, researchers, and healers
working to alleviate the suffering from this scourge.
Preface
There are nearly 40,000 gun-related deaths each year in the United States. Every 18 months, the number of Americans who die from gunshot wounds equals the number who perished throughout the entire Vietnam War! Yet, rather than holding the massive protests seen against that war, the country as a whole has been far more restrained in its reaction to gun violence. Despite the annual death toll and almost daily mass shootings, many Americans feel helpless and unable to take action. We also are condemned by human rights groups, such as Amnesty International, which accuse the US of committing human rights violations by failing to protect its own citizens from gun violence.
In America, the right to live free from violence, discrimination and fear has been superseded by a sense of entitlement to own a practically unlimited array of deadly weapons, without sufficient regulations on their acquisition, possession and use,
¹ the organization concluded in a September 2018 report.
Despite such condemnations, the seemingly endless carnage and a litany of bad news, I’m hopeful that significant change will occur in the next 10 years. Here’s why:
Gun ownership in the US has been declining since the 1970s. The University of Chicago’s National Opinion Research Center has shown that in 2010 and 2014 about 32 percent of adults lived in households with firearms. In 1976 to 1982, 51 percent of adults lived in households with one or more guns.²
Public opinion has been shifting in the last few years in favor of stricter gun laws. About nine in 10 Americans favor expanding background checks to all firearm sales.
A large grassroots movement to counter the gun lobby and effect major change has been growing since the 2012 mass shooting of children at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown (Connecticut). After another mass casualty shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland (Florida) six years later, the growth of the gun violence prevention movement has accelerated with numerous marches, more lobbying, and a much larger number of volunteers nationally.
The National Rifle Association’s economic strength and political influence are in decline. The gun industry is experiencing a drop in sales and facing opposition from groups on the upswing, such as Everytown for Gun Safety and former Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords’ organization. The NRA also is facing damage to its image due to serious allegations that it colluded with Russia to help Donald Trump, an NRA-friendly candidate, win the presidency in 2016.
In the 2018 midterm elections, anti-gun violence groups outspent the NRA, and many candidates calling for stricter gun regulations prevailed. Candidates are no longer so afraid of the NRA’s influence that they refuse to discuss gun violence and prioritize gun policy.
The voters of the future are youth, and they tend to support more restrictive gun laws because they feel threatened by gun violence.
One significant challenge has little to do with public opinion, grassroots mobilization, or the state of the gun business. The challenge is that of an electoral system that gives rural voters a disproportionate voice over city dwellers, allows voter suppression aimed at minority groups that are more supportive of gun regulations, and that enables special interests to shape election outcomes. These issues need to be addressed if the voice of the majority on guns is to be heard.
I owe a great debt to so many people and groups with whom I have exchanged views or who have inspired me over the last few years. Experts, such as David Hemenway of Harvard University, Jamie Fox of Northeastern University, and Stephen Teret, Professor Emeritus of Johns Hopkins University provided valuable feedback and encouragement related to my previous book, Confronting Gun Violence in America. The late Maurice Murad, an award-winning producer at 60 Minutes, believed that my book made an enormous contribution to debunking many of the NRA’s talking points with hard data. Mike Weisser (a.k.a. Mike the Gun Guy), an expert on guns and the gun business, has challenged my views by asking the tough questions about the practicality of some of the solutions I advocate.
I’m also indebted to my many friends and groups on Facebook with whom I exchange views on a regular basis. Ladd Everitt of One Pulse for America, Marji Hope of WAAR, Palm Beach Indivisibles, Women’s March of Florida, Repeal the Second Amendment, Gays Against Guns, and many others have been highly supportive and often shared my posts. Rose Rowland, who facilitates an online gun violence book club, selected my book last year for their discussions and helped spread my message advocating the establishment of a national licensing system for gun owners. Also, I had the opportunity to address many audiences at churches and synagogues (including a group of atheists!), community centers, concerts, panels, rallies, and meetings of various gun safety groups and non-profit organizations.
Many fellow peace warriors in the gun violence prevention movement have been accidental activists, committed to the cause after they survived a gun attack or catastrophic personal loss. Angela Williams, founder of Mothers Against Murderers Association in West Palm Beach (Florida) has lost 14 family members to gun violence and attended hundreds of funerals in her community. Former Congresswoman Giffords of Tucson (Arizona) survived an assassination attempt in which 18 other people were shot and eventually formed a group with her husband, Mark Kelly, dedicated to the prevention of gun violence. Sandy Anglin Phillips and her husband, Lonnie, who lost their beloved daughter, Jessi, in the Aurora (Colorado) theater shooting, have been motivated by their personal tragedy to support and empower survivors around the country.
I also have had the opportunity to meet many intelligent, committed, and dynamic leaders who are trying to make a difference in gun policy. My friend, Barry Silver, both an attorney and a rabbi, is a relentless agent for change, as are the many interfaith groups he leads. The ubiquitous Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America, the largest grassroots organization in the country, offers great hope. I know that at the end of the day their desire for a life free of violence for their children will supersede any zealot’s love for his guns. My affiliation with the League of Women Voters also has brought me into contact with many dedicated volunteers from the state to local levels in Florida. I also served on panels with student leaders from Parkland and met their family members.
This book is dedicated to the activists who are battling gun violence at so many levels throughout the country. As I strive to make my own contribution by laying out a road map for change in America, I am especially grateful for the love, partnership, and support of my beloved wife, Christene.
Thomas Gabor, Ph.D., Palm Beach County, Florida, 2019
1
America’s Gun Violence Crisis
America is engulfed by gun violence, testing the sense of security of its people as they go about their daily lives. The United States has 5 percent of the world’s population but experiences a third of the planet’s mass shootings.³ The gun homicide rate is 25 times the combined rate of other high-income countries.⁴ With nearly one school shooting a week, the US had 288 school shootings from January 2009 through May 2018.⁵ No other G7 (major industrialized) country has had more than two school shootings during that nine-year period. Every 18 months, civilian gun deaths in America equal those of US military personnel during the entire Vietnam war.
These numbers are perhaps not surprising given the level of gun ownership in the US. A recent international survey showed that there are now approximately 393 million privately-held firearms in the US (120 firearms for every 100 people), more than five times that of India, a country with the next largest civilian arsenal and four times America’s population.⁶
Gun violence takes more than a physical toll on its victims. Millions of American women have been threatened or shot at by an intimate partner, and the psychological impact of abuse is magnified when guns are involved.⁷ Bystanders to violence also may be profoundly affected. A health team assessing witnesses to a mass shooting in Killeen, Texas, in the 1990s found that 28 percent met the criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder one month after the incident.⁸ A year later, 18 percent still suffered from PTSD. Few had no symptoms of posttraumatic stress. Even those not present at a shooting may be affected emotionally. An American Psychological Association survey has found that for 15- to 21-year-olds, mass shootings constitute the greatest source of stress, with three out of four feeling stressed about the possibility of encountering a mass or school shooting.⁹
Consider the impact of a mass shooting on the friend of a victim who was not even living in the same town. Jessica Ghawi, a 24-year-old aspiring sportscaster, was murdered in 2012 during the mass shooting at the Century Theater in Aurora, Colorado. Just prior to the sixth anniversary of the shooting, her best friend posted the following on Facebook:
In 22 days, it will mark the six year anniversary of when my best friend was murdered with 11 others,