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US gun violence kills 123 per day

But conservative politicians push for more rights to purchase arms

By BELINDA ROBINSON in New York | China Daily Global | Updated: 2023-09-15 08:06

Mark Braden (center), whose son Daniel was killed in the Sandy Hook school shooting, hugs another attendee during an event calling for action on preventing gun violence on Wednesday in Washington, DC. WIN MCNAMEE/AFP

Gun violence has killed 123 people per day in the United States this year with the total deaths including 1,079 teenagers and 216 children, figures from the Gun Violence Archive showed.

US President Joe Biden renewed his calls for Congress to pass more gun control in July after a spate of mass shootings. But, in contrast, conservative politicians have pushed for more gun rights nationwide.

In Kentucky, Ohio, Nebraska, Texas and Virginia this year, Republicans have advocated for removing background checks, getting rid of red-flag laws and minimizing gun-free zones that limit where people can carry a firearm around others in public.

There were 30,235 deaths involving a gun as of Sept 1. At least 13,405 were homicides, murders or unintentional shootings. The majority, at 16,830 or 69 per day, were suicides by gun, the archive found.

Some states had far more suicides by gun than others, including Texas, California, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Illinois and Louisiana.

In two of these states — Texas and Georgia — Republican lawmakers have sought to have gun rights expanded while considering some gun control.

Additionally, the nation has had 498 mass shootings as of mid-September.

In Texas, there are ongoing calls to raise the minimum age for a person to purchase the assault-style weapon often used in mass shootings.

It comes over a year after an 18-year-old gunman shot 19 students and two teachers at the Robb Elementary School in May 2022.

Texas Republican Governor Greg Abbott, a staunch gun rights advocate, believes raising the age would be "unconstitutional".

Abbott and other right-wing politicians hold dear the Second Amendment, which gives all US people the "right… to keep and bear arms". They also oppose any interference from the federal government, say experts.

Carl T. Bogus, professor of law at Roger Williams University in Rhode Island, told China Daily: "We are a two-party system, and the Republican Party considers the gun lobby to be an essential component of its political coalition."

In at least 25 states, legal gun owners do not need a permit to carry a handgun in many public places. The number of states that have this law in place has risen since 2020, when only 16 states allowed it.

Abbott signed a law in 2021 allowing for "permitless carry", which enables residents of the state age 21 and older to carry handguns without a license or training.

He warned: "Politicians from the federal level to the local level have threatened to take guns from law-abiding citizens — but we will not let that happen in Texas."

In April 2022, Georgia followed Texas in eliminating the need for a permit to conceal or openly carry a firearm.

Monumental moment

The move was hailed as "a monumental moment for the Second Amendment" by the National Rifle Association, or NRA, which remains a powerful gun rights advocacy group.

"Half the country now rightfully recognizes the fundamental right to carry a firearm for self-defense as enshrined in our Constitution — as opposed to a government privilege that citizens must ask permission to exercise," Jason Ouimet, executive director of NRA's Institute for Legislative Action, said in a statement.

Last year, the Supreme Court, which has more conservative judges than liberal, expanded gun rights.

It also struck down a century-old New York gun law that required people to obtain a license to carry a gun outside their homes.

The US has more guns than people with approximately 390 million firearms in circulation in 2018 — compared to a population of 331.9 million people — according to the Small Arms Survey, a Swiss-based research project.

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