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- <text id=89TT0569>
- <link 93TO0076>
- <title>
- Feb. 27, 1989: Have Weapons, Will Shoot
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Armed America
- Feb. 27, 1989 The Ayatullah Orders A Hit
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 22
- Have Weapons, Will Shoot
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As the toll grows, a survey shows Americans want to crack down
- </p>
- <p> Brandishing a Chinese-made AK-47 semiautomatic rifle, a man
- rose from his seat at a hearing of the California assembly in
- Sacramento last week and announced to some 80 startled
- listeners, "Ladies and gentlemen, take a look at your watches
- and start counting. You are lucky that I am the attorney
- general and not some nut. Because if I had the ammunition, I
- could shoot every member of the assembly by the time I finish
- this sentence--about 20 seconds."
- </p>
- <p> California Attorney General John Van de Kamp could be
- forgiven his 20 seconds of melodrama. His state was still
- reeling from the massacre wrought when a crazed man murdered
- five children in a Stockton schoolyard, wounded 29 others and a
- teacher, and then killed himself with a pistol.
- </p>
- <p> Van de Kamp was making a sobering point: the nation's body
- count keeps mounting as reckless gunplay continues at an
- alarming rate. In Bethesda, Md., last week, an emotionally
- disturbed office worker shot and killed three people and then
- committed suicide by turning his weapon on himself. An exchange
- of hard looks in a Woodbridge, Va., high school corridor ended
- when a visiting teenager shot a student in the groin. A man who
- was asked to leave a sweet-16 party took his revenge by
- spraying a New York City subway platform with a 9-mm automatic
- handgun, wounding six.
- </p>
- <p> The District of Columbia alone has counted 75 homicides
- during the first 45 days of 1989, many involving guns. In one
- wild 24-hour period last Tuesday, 13 people were killed or
- wounded. Some of these shootings were committed by "ordinary"
- citizens; others could be tied to drug criminals, who continue
- to produce their own separate necrology, turning inner cities
- into so many Dodge Cities. Then there are the now familiar
- cases of children found carrying weapons to the classroom; only
- last week a New York City fifth-grader brought a sawed-off
- shotgun to school.
- </p>
- <p> To the relief of many, what is also finally on the increase
- is the feeling among Americans that enough is enough. A
- TIME/CNN poll conducted by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman last week
- found that 86% of those interviewed believe crime is getting
- worse and 84% think violence resulting from the use of guns is
- becoming a bigger problem. Fully 57% worry about becoming
- victims, 22% say they or members of their families have been
- threatened by someone with a gun, and 30% are so fearful of
- being assaulted on the street that they would just as soon carry
- a gun themselves. An overwhelming 89% favor a two-week waiting
- period for gun purchasers, and 65% want stricter gun-control
- laws.
- </p>
- <p> While Americans would welcome harsher gun-control measures,
- they are skeptical and ambivalent on the subject. Most do not
- want to ban gun possession entirely; 84% say people have a
- right to own guns, perhaps because 53% feel they are
- inadequately protected by police. As for semiautomatic weapons,
- 51% would make civilian ownership of these guns illegal. In any
- case, 48% believe new restrictions would not reduce the amount
- of violence.
- </p>
- <p> Aware that the public is getting fed up, legislators at the
- city, state and federal levels are proposing more restrictive
- rules. To dramatize the problem, California radio announcer
- Chris Collins, after collecting a batch of assault-style rifles
- from his listeners, paired up in Sacramento with Assembly
- Speaker Willie Brown to smash the weapons with a steamroller.
- Less dramatically but nonetheless significantly, the Washington
- city council has made it a misdemeanor to bring a firearm
- within 500 ft. of a public school or a school event. The council
- is considering making handgun manufacturers and distributors
- liable for injuries inflicted by their products. This measure
- could encounter serious legal obstacles. For example, Colt
- Industries, manufacturers of the AR-15 assault rifle, filed suit
- to protest a newly passed Los Angeles law banning the sale of
- paramilitary semiautomatic rifles--then last week dropped the
- case.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever they may try, gun-control forces will have to
- contend with the National Rifle Association, which has usually
- been successful in fighting off tough regulation. But gun
- opponents have been improving their political skills. Last fall
- they prevailed in a Maryland referendum battle that ended with
- approval of a curb on cheap handguns. This prompted the N.R.A.,
- which had scheduled a national convention in Baltimore in 1992,
- to look for another site. Wherever the N.R.A. meets, it may
- want to discuss a Yankelovich finding indicating that 54% of
- Americans think the organization "has too much influence in
- keeping stricter gun-control laws from being passed."
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the one man in the U.S. who more than any other
- could steer his brethren in a more benign direction is N.R.A.
- life member George Bush. Yet Bush remains opposed to tougher
- gun laws, even those that would ban or restrict the sale of
- assault weapons. Last Thursday he reiterated that position,
- adding, "I would strongly go after the criminals who use these
- guns...The states have a lot of laws on these things. Let
- them enforce them." That view could change, however. The First
- Lady has different ideas. Barbara Bush told a reporter that she
- is "afraid" of guns and would "absolutely" favor banning
- assault weapons. This could make for some very interesting
- pillow talk.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-