[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 172 (Wednesday, October 25, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H8147-H8148]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
EPIDEMIC OF 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, yet again, because
Americans are dying each and every day. The epidemic of gun violence
has ended too many futures before they have begun, left too many empty
seats at the dinner table, torn too many families apart, and left too
many communities asking: How many more before Congress acts?
Mr. Speaker, I can't blame them. With 90 Americans dying from guns
every day, this House and this Speaker continue to turn a blind eye to
this epidemic.
Mr. Speaker, earlier this month, one man carried out this Nation's
worst mass shooting in history in just 11 minutes, leaving 58 Americans
dead. These are mothers and friends, sons
[[Page H8148]]
and brothers, people just trying to enjoy some country music.
Instead of going home to their loving families, instead of going home
and being greeted at the door by their toddler, they were carried away
in bags. They are now another tragic statistic, another empty seat at
Christmas dinner--lives taken, not lost--lives with such potential,
lives that were doing amazing things, lives that were raising families
and serving their community--lives taken, not lost--lives surrounded by
hundreds of other lives that will never, never be the same.
Each life taken is a tragedy, but the hundreds of other lives
impacted forever in those 11 minutes are, equally, now made tragic.
489 people were injured. Mr. Speaker, let me say that again, because
we often focus on those killed but forget about the hundreds fighting
for their lives in the intensive care unit. We forget about those who
will need to learn to walk again or will never walk again. We forget
about the mom who will never hold her baby again because her arms are
paralyzed, the other grandfather who will never see his grandchildren
again because he has been blinded.
Mr. Speaker, while Las Vegas marked that largest mass shooting in
U.S. history, just 477 days earlier, the largest mass shooting was a
preventable tragedy at Pulse nightclub in Orlando that took 49 lives
and wounded 58.
How can you say there isn't a problem with gun violence when it takes
less than 500 days for one horrific mass shooting to eclipse another as
the deadliest in American history?
How can you say there is nothing we can do, as Americans die, as kids
get shot and are never the same?
How is one man able to be so destructive in such a short amount of
time?
The answer is in an after-market modification called the bump stock
that turns an assault weapon into a machine gun, something outlawed by
this House during the days of Al Capone. Yet it is still possible to
walk into a gun store, purchase this device, and, within minutes, have
a gun of war in your hands.
Mr. Speaker, how did we let this happen? More importantly, how are we
still letting this happen? Why haven't we acted to outlaw these devices
that allow people to make machines in their backyard?
There is a commonsense bipartisan bill awaiting action. Why haven't
you called it to the floor? Is it because the NRA changed its mind and
now opposes the bill?
Crickets--that is what I thought.
How can we keep our families safe when this House and this majority
is beholden to the gun lobby dedicated to profits over people?
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