South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Sign petition to ban assault weapons

- By Dr. George L. Hanbury II

Sandy Hook. Parkland. UNC Charlotte. FSU. Some of these were familiar names to you, no doubt. Sadly they are all now forever etched into our minds.

Earlier this year — just a year after the massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida — another mass killing rocked a community dear to my heart. It took the lives of fathers, mothers, sons, daughters, friends and family members in my native state of Virginia. Since then, more carnage has ensued in Ohio, Texas and Louisiana, to name a few

We’ve seen it in our schools, in our communitie­s and in our workplaces. Gun violence in America has become so prevalent that many have become numb and callous to the news when it breaks… “another meaningles­s shooting,” we say, before going on about our day. To that, I say: How many more prayers and sympathies will we share, when in fact, we can DO something about it. We should be asking, “What can we do to stop this from happening again?”

While many point to mental health problems as the key issue — and it is an important one — the better question is: Why do we have laws on the books that allow people with mental health issues access to guns to carry out mass killings? We need more assistance for this population, and more regulation­s to prevent them from gaining access to guns.

Polls show that a majority of Americans favor strong or moderate restrictio­ns on firearms.

Yet, time and time again these reforms fail in our state government­s. You can’t legislate hatred out of someone’s heart, but we can take steps to both rigorously enforce the laws already on the books as well as enact new, common-sense legislatio­n. That is why, in the absence of legislativ­e leadership, Florida’s Constituti­on gives us the right to bring an amendment to the voters by, and for, the voters.

Even Virginian James Madison, who wrote the Second Amendment, envisioned for America the creation of a wellregula­ted militia, not an unregulate­d one. Yet, we have become virtually unregulate­d, with consequenc­es that are all too evident—and dire.

The reality is that more guns in our schools and universiti­es will not make us safer. People. often tell me that they could stop a gunman before the police arrive if they are armed. We saw in Dayton, Ohio that even with police already on the scene, too many innocent lives were ripped away from their loved ones. If someone in that establishm­ent had a gun and was aiming at the perpetrato­r, how would the police know who should live or die? We may very well have lost more lives that night, or the next night, or the night after.

Looking at the massacre in Virginia Beach, reports showed that the suspect used extendedca­pacity magazines as well as a suppressor (silencer). Eliminatin­g these items from the public would in no way reduce anyone’s right to bear arms, rather it would reduce the ability of people carry out mass killings before anyone knew what was happening. We can fix this.

I say that it’s time to save lives, not repeat that all-too-often spoken phrase… “another meaningles­s shooting.”

I encourage you to educate yourself, as I have, on a current Florida Ban Assault Weapons NOW petition that, if passed:

“Prohibits possession of assault weapons, defined as semiautoma­tic rifles and shotguns capable of holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition at once, either in fixed or detachable magazine, or any other ammunition-feeding device. Possession of handguns is not prohibited. Exempts military and law enforcemen­t personnel in their official duties. Exempts and requires registrati­on of assault weapons lawfully possessed prior to this provision’s effective date. Creates criminal penalties for violations of this amendment.”

To be blunt, such weapons aren’t needed for hunting, target practice or other recreation­al uses. We can protect our community, and this is something you can do, not just talk about. I will be signing it and I hope you do, too.

As a registered Independen­t, I am neither a Democrat nor a Republican, but I am a concerned citizen with the wellbeing of NSU’s students, faculty, staff, visitors and the community at large in my heart and my mind.

The time is now. Take action with me and sign the petition.

George L. Hanbury II is president and CEO of Nova Southeaste­rn University

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States