[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 160 (Wednesday, December 12, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H6703]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GUN VIOLENCE ECLIPSES FISCAL CLIFF DEBATE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. It's difficult to focus on the task at hand in the
aftermath of a shooting rampage in my district yesterday. With at least
10,000 people in a shopping mall, a young man allegedly, say some
eyewitnesses, in body armor, and armed with a semiautomatic weapon
discharged 60 or more shots. There were two people killed and a young
15-year-old girl seriously wounded.
Mr. Speaker, one is haunted by these events. We had one in Aurora,
Colorado, at the theater where there were 12 people killed, 60 wounded;
six people killed at the Sikh temple this summer; and the day spa in
Milwaukee, where three women were killed before the shooter turned the
gun on himself. We had a horrific episode earlier in my congressional
career in Springfield, Oregon.
It is hard to have meaningful conversations on a variety of subjects.
I was going to deal with that problem with the fiscal cliff today, but
gun violence is another area in America where it seems we can't have a
discussion without delusional claims of overreach and taking away
hunting rifles. Congress won't even allow statistics on gun violence to
be gathered, and we certainly have made no progress towards closing the
gun show loophole.
Yet I come today, in the aftermath of this tragedy, with a small ray
of hope. When nearly half of all military suicides are committed with
privately owned weapons, the Pentagon and Congress are moving towards
establishing policies to separate at-risk servicemembers from personal
private weapons. Congress is poised to enact legislation to end a
prohibition about the military collecting information about firearms
kept at home. These are simple, commonsense steps for an armed services
where more military personnel take their own life than who die in
battle.
Perhaps if we can take these reasonable steps to protect our
servicemen and their families, perhaps we can develop the courage to
treat the epidemic of gun violence with the same thoughtful, small
steps when it comes to protecting the rest of our families. Until then,
we will mourn the victims and thank God that our families were not at
that mall.
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