John, Last weekend, we saw multiple mass shootings that devastated communities across the country.
Four people were killed and eight others were injured in a shooting at a Michigan church. In North Carolina, a gunman armed with a semi-automatic, short-barreled rifle killed three people and injured eight more. Four people were shot in a Raleigh, NC, parking lot. Four others were shot in Alexandria, LA. Two people were shot and killed and five others were injured at a Texas casino. But in a country where gun violence has become normalized, these shootings barely made headlines.
In any other country, a single mass shooting would be enough for leaders to take action and stop the violence, once and for all. We’ve seen that happen in Austria, Norway, and Australia. Yet, in America, numerous mass shootings in a single weekend find lawmakers silent, idle.
In fact, to make matters worse, the Trump administration continues to bow down to the gun industry, putting profits over our lives. Just days ago, the Commerce Department slashed restrictions on firearm exports, making it easier for criminals and terrorists across the globe to obtain illicit weapons.
We cannot accept these attacks on our safety, John. Gun violence affects every part of American life, from grocery shopping, going to the movies, and even going to church. Tragedy after tragedy has happened in spaces and in communities that were once thought to be safe.
We’re calling on our elected officials to finally take action on the gun violence epidemic. And as the federal government shuts down, we’re collecting names to show just how many of us have had ENOUGH. Are you with us? Please, speak out today and demand change. |
Firearm Safety and the Federal Shutdown |
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You’re Invited: “The Future of Firearm Safety Research — CDC & NIH Funding Under Threat”
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October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month |
Honoring with Action: Eight Years Since the Deadliest Shooting in Modern American History |
This week marked eight years since the deadliest mass shooting in modern American history.
On October 1, 2017, a gunman used an assault weapon with bump stocks and large-capacity magazines to kill 60 people and wound more than 800 others in mere minutes at the Route 91 Harvest Festival in Las Vegas.
This senseless tragedy, and others like it, could have been prevented.
In the year before the shooting, the gunman spent more than $90,000 on firearms and equipment, including 55 guns and hundreds of rounds of ammunition. If credit card companies had used something called “merchant category codes,” or MCCs, then these suspicious purchases could have been flagged, and authorities could have prevented the attack.
Credit card companies apply MCCs to nearly every type of business — including restaurants, gas stations, and liquor stores — and have long been used to flag dangerous activity, including human trafficking and fraud. It is far past time that MCCs are applied to gun and ammunition sellers. That way, we can take notice when people are building an arsenal of weapons, and stop gun violence before it starts. In honor of the lives lost at the Route 91 Harvest Festival eight years ago, learn more about the power of MCCs and how they can help prevent gun violence before it happens.
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