Commentary: This time let’s follow the students and pass tough new gun laws
Published 12:00 am Monday, March 5, 2018
- (Thinkstock)
The writer is addressing the question, “Are tighter restrictions on gun owners the best way to prevent mass shootings?”
Delays and deflection on enacting tougher gun laws must end. Meaningful restrictions must be enacted now!
The aftermath from Parkland is an all too familiar and alarming scenario, but the response and outrage feels different this time.
The critical difference is that students are more aware. Thanks to them, the discussion is happening everywhere led by postings on social media and a steady stream of news and discussions on TV often featuring students, concerned politicians, journalists and parents.
The missing voices in past school shootings have been students, and these are perhaps the most important voices now.
Nationally, students have largely been unaware of past school shootings. Many are too young to remember them; others were perhaps shielded in some way from the news and the often far away incidents did not impact their daily lives as a result. They may have heard about it but never really understood their dreadful impact.
That peaceful bliss and ignorance on the issue has come to a screeching halt with the events of late.
The active and vocal student movement is taking hold as it becomes more and more clear that if we do not act and act now we will all be impacted. Students are speaking out, walking out, marching and taking action.
It is beyond ridiculous that Congress is too busy dividing itself along party lines to wake up and hear the gunfire.
Our schools should be a place to grow and learn, without worrying if today is the day that we or our children won’t come home — if today is the day that something will happen to us, our friends, our teachers, our classmates.
Children cannot vote or make campaign contributions, but politicians in this country have a responsibility to students, too.
Yet lawmakers are failing to act, with many continuing to justify their prideful and selfish actions with dismissive lines like, “This isn’t the time for gun legislation,” or by embracing small legislative tweaks in an effort to tamp down the outrage.
There are numerous ways elected leaders can take action and pass better laws to keep us safe.
Requiring background checks on all gun buyers, licensing firearm owners, firearm registration, regulation of firearm dealers and ammunition sellers, lost or stolen firearm reporting, waiting periods and purchasing limits are just a few.
Addressing mental health is important too but should be separated from the gun debate.
A popular deflection coming from the gun lobby and its allies now is the suggestion that teachers be armed to protect schools. This idea is as impractical as it is irrational.
How can that be a safe alternative? How can we be sure as students and parents that the teacher is properly trained? How can we be sure that the weapon will not be accessed by a child or someone else?
Enough! The time for distraction and deflection are over. Will politicians stand up now or wait to act until tragedy impacts their own community?
When their friends’ lives are cut short by automatic assault weapons, will they stop accusing people who speak out of using pain and hurt to pass gun control? When this happens in their community will they say it’s “not the right time”?
Americans do not let it come to that. March, speak out and vote them out if they don’t act.
— Ava Michelman is a middle school student in Virginia. Don Kusler is a parent of two school-age children, a former gun owner from Texas and the national director of Americans for Democratic Action.