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- LETTERS, Page 7DEATH BY GUN
-
- Your article brought me to a shocking realization of the
- many who have died because of guns (NATION, July 17). Those shot
- to death were not just nameless, faceless statistics. They were
- real people. They were someone's son, daughter, wife or husband.
- I had never comprehended before the extent of killing that took
- place in America during a single week.
-
- Susan E. Murphy Louisville
-
- To present a complete overview of guns in America, you
- should also print pictures of those people who used a firearm
- to prevent or end a violent assault on an innocent person. Until
- you inform your readers of the human suffering that guns have
- averted, you have done only half your job.
-
- William B. Zieburtz Jr. Deerfield Beach, Fla.
-
- I was appalled by the number of young people who took their
- own lives. According to your story, more than 20 youths under
- the age of 21 used a gun to commit suicide. Many were described
- as depressed or otherwise emotionally disturbed. What type of
- society is it that fails to see the problems of its young and
- allows them access to firearms? Guns are ending lives that have
- barely begun.
-
- Karen E. Hunt Camillus, N.Y.
-
- America's Founding Fathers meant exactly what is stated in
- the Second Amendment to the Constitution about the right of
- citizens to keep and bear arms. But I seriously doubt that they
- meant for us to have the right to kill ourselves or one another
- at the rate of hundreds a week. The surest way for us to lose
- our Second Amendment right is to continue shooting one another
- at this pace.
-
- William A. Varnell Woodstock, Ga.
-
- Compelling. Riveting. Horrifying. I defy anyone to read the
- obituaries of 464 victims and then tell me there's no need for
- handgun control.
-
- Gregory R. Smith North Reading, Mass.
-
- The poignancy of your gallery of victims should not blind
- us to the central point about freedom: it does not guarantee
- human goodness. Hence freedom can give rise to sorrow and
- suffering. The gun is simply an instrument in a tragedy.
- Eliminate the gun, and the tragedy remains.
-
- Ben M. Carter University Park, Ill.
-
- TIME is to be congratulated for this eye-opening public
- service. Mandatory registration of firearms, training,
- criminal- and mental-record checks and a 14-day waiting period
- will not deprive people of their constitutional rights any more
- than waiting for a credit check deprives them of a loan.
-
- F. Lee Meyer Cincinnati
-
- The subtle exploitation of personal misfortune to heighten
- the current gun hysteria is reprehensible. The rights of
- responsible gun owners should not be threatened or curtailed
- because of the actions of individuals who choose, for whatever
- reasons, to abuse firearms.
-
- John Berg Wisconsin Rapids, Wis.
-
- The National Rifle Association emphasizes that we all have
- the right to bear arms. But can we afford to have more than
- 30,000 people dead right every year?
-
- Catharine E. Olive Duxbury, Mass.
-
- My son Jeremy, 20, feeling that there was nothing worth
- living for, shot himself. He was found dead on May 6, 1989. His
- death brings to 465 the number of people who died from guns
- during the week covered by your article.
-
- Robert W. Schutz Eugene, Ore.
-
- Although my sister's picture was not in your gallery, her
- story certainly was. On May 31 she was shot to death by her
- boyfriend, who then killed himself. You could have chosen any
- week at random; the faces would have changed, but the same
- pattern of deaths would have emerged over and over.
-
- Jane P. Lenz South Orange, N.J.
-