[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 158 (2012), Part 13]
[House]
[Page 17284]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                       CONGRESS HAS DONE NOTHING

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from 
Illinois (Mr. Quigley) for 5 minutes.
  Mr. QUIGLEY. Madam Speaker, Albert Einstein once said, ``The world is 
a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of 
those who look on and do nothing.''
  Madam Speaker, we have looked on and done nothing. We in this body, 
we in this Congress, we in this government, have done nothing, nothing 
to protect the innocent lives of 20 defenseless children gunned down in 
Connecticut last Friday. Nothing to protect the 87 people killed each 
day from guns across America. Nothing to stop the epidemic of senseless 
gun violence that plagues not only our major cities like New York and 
Chicago, but countless small towns throughout our Nation, towns with 
names like Newtown, Aurora, Tucson, Dekalb, Blacksburg, and Littleton.
  In the nearly 4 years I've been a Member of this body, this House has 
not held a single hearing, not one, to address gun violence, while over 
30,000 Americans die each year from gun violence, while over 400 lives 
have been lost to gun violence in my hometown of Chicago. People are 
dying every day, and we in this body have been afraid to even talk 
about it.
  This crisis demands our action. The time has come for us to stop 
listening to the gun lobby and start listening to the American people. 
The fact is, the majority of Americans, gun owning and not, desire 
commonsense, reasonable gun regulations.
  Congress must no longer stand in the way of reasonable regulation. 
Instead, we must champion it. The American people want to see 
background checks required on all firearm purchases instead of the 
fraction of sales that get them today.
  Forty percent of U.S. gun sales are by private sellers who are not 
required to perform background checks. You can be a three-time 
convicted felon, a serial domestic abuser, severely mentally ill, or 
even on a terrorist watch list and still go to a gun show or go on the 
Internet and buy whatever gun you want.
  The American people want to strengthen databases to prevent the 
mentally ill from buying guns. But over a million disqualifying mental 
health records are still missing from the national background check 
database. Ten States have failed to flag a single person as mentally 
ill in their database, and 17 States list fewer than 100 people.
  Americans want to see the assault weapons ban reinstated and keep 
military weapons off our streets and large capacity ammunition clips 
banned to keep dangerous ammunition out of the hands of madmen.
  Let's face it, when you put a 30-round clip in an assault weapon, 
you're not protecting your home, you're not hunting deer; you are 
hunting people.
  We have hid from this fight for too long. For too long we have used 
politics and the Second Amendment to cover up our lack of action. Yes, 
the Supreme Court affirmed that we have a right to bear arms, but in 
that same ruling, the Court made clear that right is not unlimited.
  We do not, as Justice Scalia put it, have an unlimited right to keep 
and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever, for whatever 
purpose. Our individual right to bear arms is limited by our right, 
among others, to keep our children safe.
  Any of those children could have been one of ours, and for 20 
parents, it was.
  We may not be able to stop every crime. We know that no single law or 
set of laws can prevent every act of senseless violence in our society, 
but we have the ability and the know-how to prevent many of them. We 
must simply find the courage.
  We can no longer be bystanders to injustice. We cannot continue to 
look on and do nothing.
  As Shakespeare said, ``The fault, dear Brutus, lies not in our stars 
but in ourselves.''
  We must act.

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