[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 139 (Wednesday, September 14, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H5444-H5445]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GUN VIOLENCE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Illinois (Ms. Kelly) for 5 minutes.
Ms. KELLY of Illinois. Mr. Speaker, I rise today disappointed by the
lack of leadership on display in this House. Gun violence is a terror
in many of our communities, and we must stop it. In 2016, we have had
more than 10,000 preventable gun deaths in America.
Consider this: this past Labor Day, the city I represent, Chicago,
saw its 500th homicide of the year. We have seen 3,000 people, alone,
shot in 2016--3,000 shot, 500 dead, and 90 murdered in August, alone,
in one city.
Too often we write gun violence off as an urban condition. But the
gun deaths we are facing are not only urban; it is everywhere and
impacts us all:
Kids died in Newtown; people were murdered on live TV in Roanoke and
massacred in Orlando. Gun violence has altered the lives of Speaker
Ryan's constituents in Oak Creek, Wisconsin. It turned fatal for Nykea
Aldridge, a mother of four young children in Chicago, who was just
walking back from
[[Page H5445]]
registering her children for school. It turned family movie night into
a horrific final act for 12 people in Aurora, Colorado. Gun violence
turned a fun night out in to a final terrifying moment for 49 people in
Orlando and left indelible emotional wounds in the hearts of more than
50 others who suffered injury.
Mr. Speaker, what will you do before this year ends to prevent even
more unnecessary and preventable gun violence? What are you and your
caucus going to do to change the fact that American children are 4
times more likely to be killed by a gun than Canadian children, 7 times
more likely than Israeli children, and 65 times more likely than
British children?
There is no room for your deafening silence. There is no
justification for your gavel to drown out the cries of families being
terrorized by gun violence. It is said that ``the blood brother of
apathy is the inability to prioritize that which is important.''
Mr. Speaker, your apathy is America's agony. Our constituents elected
us to work together to solve our Nation's biggest problems. If gun
violence is not monumental, then what is? Right now, anyone can buy a
gun online or at a gun show without a background check. Why does that
make sense? We have a gaping hole in our system that must be closed.
Some States and municipalities already have strong, comprehensive
background check laws, but many others do not, preventing laws from
truly having their fullest impact. This is the case in Illinois.
I represent communities plagued by gun violence. Despite Chicago and
Illinois having strong gun laws, our neighbors have very weak gun laws;
so a criminal, a domestic abuser, a terrorist, or a person who is
dangerously mentally unstable cannot get a gun in Illinois, but they
can jump in their car, drive to a gun show in a bordering State like
Wisconsin to buy a gun, and drive back to commit a horrible and
preventable crime.
In a 4-year period from 2010 to 2014, 10,000 crime guns recovered in
Illinois were from other States. Nearly 1,000 of the guns killing my
fellow Illinois residents came from the Speaker's home State of
Wisconsin. Wisconsin's lax gun laws are tied to 10 percent of Illinois
crime guns.
This demonstrates what is all too obvious to 90 percent of the
American public: it is the duty of Congress to pass comprehensive
background checks to ensure that no matter where a dangerous person
lives or travels, they cannot access a firearm.
If you are too dangerous to buy a gun in Illinois, you are too
dangerous to buy a gun in Wisconsin. Forty percent of gun sales are
online or at gun shows, where a background check is not required.
What if 4 out of every 10 people at an airport or right here in the
Capitol didn't have to go through security? Would we enjoy the same
level of safety as we do?
Requiring comprehensive background checks is a simple, logical
measure. It is embarrassing that we are even having this discussion.
This isn't about taking away our constitutional right to bear arms.
Law-abiding citizens who aren't dangerous and can pass a background
check will still have access to their firearms for hunting, self-
defense, and for personal, legal use.
So, if you are not a danger to yourself or others, is undergoing a
background check in order to maintain and buy a gun really that much of
a big burden? Second Amendment rights, like all other Amendments
guaranteed by our Constitution, have logical limits.
Keep guns out of the hands of the terrorists killing our children,
off our playgrounds and streets, and away from people who are killing
police officers like the one we just heard about. Once again, I ask:
Who has to get shot, and just how many have to die before you do your
job, Mr. Speaker?
____________________