The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Congress should pay heed to youths on gun violence

- Mary Sanchez She writes for the Kansas City Star.

President Donald Trump neglected to mention gun violence in his State of the Union address.

The following day, the congressio­nal stalemate over what to do about the killing and mayhem played out at a House Judicial Committee hearing. Overshadow­ed were the most powerful two speakers to testify before the committee. They were two young women, who happen to be diametrica­lly opposed in their views on gun rights. Savannah Lindquist, 24, testified about what happened to her in the fall of 2016. She was in her senior year at her dream university. Then she was raped. The violence left her “completely shattered.”

Lindquist did what so many other college women do after they are sexually assaulted. She dropped out, fleeing back to her childhood home. Lindquist, a gun owner, told the committee that she had obeyed the laws of her state and did not carry a concealed firearm on campus. “Because of so-called common-sense gun control laws, I was left defenseles­s that night,” she testified.

Aalayah Eastmond, 18, spoke before Lindquist.

Her story is likely more familiar. She’s a senior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.

Nearly a year ago, a gunman killed 17 students and faculty at her school. Eastmond survived by hiding under the dead body of her classmate.

Eastmond told of how her mother, consumed by the stress, miscarried a baby shortly after her daughter so narrowly escaped death.

She accurately noted that African-American and Latino communitie­s suffer the highest rates of deaths by gun homicide. She lost an uncle who was shot and killed in Brooklyn.

“Rather than listen to special interests, I urge you to listen to America’s young people,” Eastmond told the committee.

Lindquist had a message too. “In this debate, it is about emotion,” she said. Facts and viewpoints like hers, matter less.

The two young women were seated side-by-side. They heard the power of each other’s testimony.

There is a way for Congress to fairly address both women.

And that is to remain focused on gun violence as a public health crisis rather than political talking point.

Nearly 40,000 Americans died by guns in 2017. They were shot in homicides, in acts of domestic violence and in accidents. And the largest category of gun deaths is suicides.

One of the outrageous aspects of our national problem with gun violence is how haphazardl­y it has been studied. The data sets we have are incomplete and in some cases cherry-picked. It is not an exaggerati­on to say that the gun lobby has consistent­ly undercut government funding for research into gun violence.

Amid the lack of statistica­l understand­ing, gun rights zealots have spread a lot of nonsense about the effectiven­ess of gunfree zones. They also like to moan that “laws already on the books” have failed to stop some dangerousl­y mentally ill person whenever it’s convenient to explain away a mass killing, without mentioning their strenuous efforts to defang any law that might keep guns out of the hands of anybody, no matter how risky.

Eastmond believes that is going to change. “We are the generation that will end gun violence,” she told the committee.

That may well be true. But only if young people continue showing up, speaking out and being more honest about gun violence than their elders.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States