Tag Archives: newtown

Watch Betsy DeVos Say She’d Allow Guns In Schools "To Protect From Potential Grizzlies”

Mother Jones

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At Tuesday’s confirmation hearing, longtime gun control proponent Sen. Chris Murphy asked Michigan billionaire and Donald Trump’s pick for education secretary Betsy DeVos outright whether guns had any place around schools.

“That’s best left to locales and states to decide,” DeVos responded. When pressed further by Murphy, who represented the district covering Newtown where the nation’s deadliest school shooting took place more than four years ago, DeVos looped back to a question asked earlier by Sen. Mike Enzi of Wyoming about an elementary school in his state. “I would imagine that there’s probably a gun at the school to protect from potential grizzlies,” DeVos noted.

Watch the exchange below.

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Watch Betsy DeVos Say She’d Allow Guns In Schools "To Protect From Potential Grizzlies”

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This Was the Most Powerful Moment From Obama’s Tearful Plea for Gun Control

Mother Jones

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Surrounded by victims and family members of those who have suffered from gun violence, President Barack Obama on Tuesday made a passionate plea for Americans to support a new suite of executive actions aimed at curbing gun crime, including expanded background checks on gun sales.

Toward the end of the speech, as he spoke about students around the country who have been killed by guns, the president grew visibly emotional. He paused and then began to tear up. Watch the clip above.

“From high schoolers at Columbine and from first graders at Newtown,” Obama said, wiping away tears. “First graders. And from every family who never imagined that their loved one would be taken from our lives by a bullet from a gun. Every time I think about those kids, it gets me mad. And by the way, it happens on the streets of Chicago every day.”

You can watch the press conference in its entirety here.

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This Was the Most Powerful Moment From Obama’s Tearful Plea for Gun Control

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Exclusive: Jay Leno Cancels Performance at Gun Lobby Trade Show Following Pressure from Newtown Group

Mother Jones

Update: Late Wednesday, Jay Leno said in a brief phone interview that he had called the National Shooting Sports Foundation to cancel his scheduled performance at the SHOT Show. He also said that he’d spoken with Po Murray of the Newtown Action Alliance to let her know. “I understand it’s Newtown, and of course I get it,” Leno told Mother Jones. “It’s just sometimes, mistakes get made.”

Gun control advocates aren’t laughing about Jay Leno’s next move.

On Tuesday, several gun violence-prevention groups called on the comedian to cancel his appearance at January’s Shooting, Hunting, Outdoor Trade Show (SHOT), an annual event put on by the National Shooting Sports Foundation, which is based in Newtown, Connecticut. A petition posted by the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence accuses Leno of “helping to legitimize a crass commercialism which values profit over human lives” by speaking to this group, which lobbied against the background checks bill in Congress following the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012. The drive is backed by the Campaign to Unload, which pushes for divestment from gun companies, and the Newtown Action Alliance, founded by residents of the Connecticut town who support gun-safety legislation. Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America, which has pushed corporate restaurants and retailers to take a stand against open-carry activists in their stores, has also launched a social media campaign against Leno.

“I’m not sure if Jay Leno has done his research and understands that NSSF is the corporate gun lobby and they spend a significant amount of money to lobby congressional leaders to not pass significant gun reform legislation,” says Newtown Action Alliance chairman Po Murray, whose children previously attended Sandy Hook. “It’s a disheartening as a Newtown resident to see him make this appearance at the SHOT Show. So we’re urging him to cancel his appearance.”

Seats for the event, held at the Venetian hotel in Las Vegas, go for $135 apiece. Leno’s publicist did not respond to a request for comment.

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Exclusive: Jay Leno Cancels Performance at Gun Lobby Trade Show Following Pressure from Newtown Group

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Letters to Newtown

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Editor’s note: This story was produced in partnership with Tumblr’s Storyboard. For more information about the Letters to Newtown project, and for additional images daily, follow our newly-launched Tumblr blog. What follows is an essay by Newtown resident Ross MacDonald.

Walk into the Newtown town hall and you see bin after bin of cards and lettersâ&#128;&#148;some 500,000 at least, more arriving every day. They line both sides of the long main hall, and fill up the branching halls and offices. Posters, paintings, quilts, and flags cover the walls. There are banners from students at Columbine and Virginia Tech; there are letters from school kids across America and from people as far away as France and Australia. And there are boxes of Kleenex on every table for those who read them.

We are overwhelmed. Residents like me, who were lucky enough to have our children come home that night; town leaders struggling to support the community and deal with the deluge of letters, toys, school supplies, and other donations sent to Newtown; and the volunteers who have been opening and sorting it all.

The spontaneous outdoor memorials that sprang up in Newtown after the shootingsâ&#128;&#148;the angels, teddy bears, Christmas trees, and other displaysâ&#128;&#148;became one of the symbols of this tragedy. But the many letters and cards and drawings that were mailed are less well known.

In their shock and grief, people were compelled to make these intensely raw, personal expressions, and send them to a town they probably hadn’t heard of before, not knowing if they would even reach us. They offered help, love, condolences, prayers. They came from children, parents, families, school classes, church groups, soldiers, mayors, survivors, inmates, and entire towns. The letters on display at town hall form a massive tapestry of a world’s sorrow.

When my wife and I visited them in early January, we ended up taking hundreds of photos, returning again and again. Others have been moved to do the same.

The town very respectfully cleared away most of the outdoor public memorials after a couple of weeks for incineration, the ash to be incorporated into a future permanent memorial site. When it announced that it would be doing the same with the cards and letters, we knew we had to try to save them. The town is emotionally overtaxed and lacks the funds and space to preserve them. But they are important to saveâ&#128;&#148;as an ongoing reminder of what happened and as a record of the world’s response.

So I reached out to the editors of Mother Jones, who’d published my account of the day of the shooting. They in turn reached out to Tumblr, and together we launched this project. We already have thousands of images, we’re gathering more, and we’ll be publishing batches every day until we run out. We have approached town officials about creating an extensive digital archive; it is my hope that we might also find a physical home for all these letters. Because the wisdom they express should not be lost to history. Take the words of one little girl named Brynn:

“Dear students and staff. I am sorry about your friends. I hope your school is safe from now on. I feel so bad for you. I don’t like to see people go. I am so sad. I wish people would stop being so mean.”

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Letters to Newtown

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The lesson to be learned from the politics of gun control

The lesson to be learned from the politics of gun control

askjoanne

Newtown, Conn., from a distance.

What’s amazing about the tragedy in Connecticut today is how little we do to prevent things like it from occurring. The American people, the putative leaders of a democratically elected government, see shooting after shooting play out — in movie theaters, shopping malls, elementary schools — and get saddened or outraged until our emotions dissipate. This is why opponents of gun control insist that the time is never right to discuss gun violence. When we’re angry, when our passion is tangible, literally can be tasted on our tongues, the condescending demand is to wait. To calm down. Let that anger dissipate, so nothing is done. Fury is a powerful motivator but a fleeting one. And once it fades, those who righteously or cynically want to continue America’s gun culture exhale and move forward.

The bias among elected officials is toward two things: inertia and capitalism, to do nothing unless money is at stake. Doing something carries risk; changing the status quo means that some people will be forced to change their behavior. This is why it’s much easier to pass legislation affecting the poor and dispossessed — they have less power to exercise. What tips that balance is when politicians see a coming surge of opposition or have a groundswell of support they can leverage. Popular movements of those outside the established power structure are rare because they are hard and they are incremental and they are easily defused or redirected.

The most recent popular movement seeking to upend the entrenched power structure was Occupy Wall Street. It surged forward, but fell apart for a variety of reasons: the onset of winter, a lack of direction, and the progressive obsession on derived consensus. It also fell apart because the powerful sapped the rage of the protestors, redirected it for other purposes or flowed with it to build credentials. In the end, all that was left were the endlessly furious, the mad. Occupy was the closest we’ve come to reshaping a more egalitarian society, and it didn’t come close at all.

Earlier today, a kid walked into a school where his mother taught and shot 20 children to death. Standing in a classroom, with desks that came up to his knees or maybe on a brightly colored mat that displayed the letters of the alphabet, this kid still in his 20s aimed a gun at small children and shot them dead. Imagine that scene. Stop and think about what that looked like. The children’s drawings on the wall. The cartoonish, oversized lettering of the teacher on laminated posters. Think about being one of the last children to die.

What happened today was as bad a scenario as can be imagined in a country where gun laws are so lax as to be a punchline. And think about what was happening today among those whose careers or income are predicated on ensuring that those laws are kept lax, places like the NRA. At the NRA today, they had a conversation about how to counteract the predictable push for new regulation. Maybe the NRA even had to cancel another round of focus groups it had scheduled, part of an expensive, long-term effort to generate phrases like “it’s too early to politicize this” or “if more people carried guns, we’d be safer” — phrases that have resulted in looser gun control after tragedies, not stricter. Think about the institutionality of America’s gun culture, written into the Constitution under some interpretations and fueling millions of dollars a year in gun sales to perpetuate a particular impression of self-importance. This is the political and economic force working to dissipate and co-opt America’s fury.

After more than 200 years and countless mass shootings, we as a self-governing people have weaker restrictions on gun ownership than even two decades ago. The rigid political wall presented by advocates of laissez-faire murder is undented. And in a week, the fury over it will almost certainly have faded again, as it has four times before during Obama’s first term alone — even after this unspeakably horrible day.

I mourn deeply for those killed today, both the children and the adults the town of Newtown hired to teach and protect them.

But consider this: On any other day, my obsession would be on climate change, a much different and less immediate threat, with much richer and more powerful interests advocating against action. Climate activists hold out hope that public opinion is shifting in the wake of Sandy, seize on every poll showing that people see a link between storms and global warming.

This morning, multiple children were shot to death in a room likely festooned with holiday decorations and their own tentative attempts to figure out what their handwriting would someday look like. If this horror isn’t enough to spur reasonable limits on gun ownership, why would we ever think that a flooded subway would be enough to halt Exxon?

Philip Bump writes about the news for Gristmill. He also uses Twitter a whole lot.

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The lesson to be learned from the politics of gun control

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