Sensible Gun Ownership
(June 17, 2016 –
Washington, D.C.) NCNW expresses its sympathy for those who lives were savagely
taken at the Pulse nightclub and we are heartbroken for the loved ones of the victims
Orlando terror attack.
The National Council of
Negro Women (NCNW) agrees with efforts to prevent terrorism suspects from
acquiring guns or explosives. There is no reason to permit a person with
sufficient ties to terrorism that they are included on a no-fly list to obtain
a weapon.
NCNW also agrees that it is
time to close the gun show/Internet loophole.
Gun purchasers should undergo background checks no matter where the
purchase is made. There is no rational
distinction to be made between guns sold online, in a brick-and-mortar store or
at a temporary gun show. If anything, it
makes even more sense to conduct a background check in sales settings where the
buyers and sellers are even more anonymous than they are at the typical retail
store. That includes purchases made at
gun shows and Internet websites.
We would go further. Permitting a gun purchaser to obtain a weapon
if the background check cannot be completed in three days makes no sense,
either. Dylan Roof might have been
stopped from slaying nine Bible study students in Charleston had he been denied
a gun as a result of the crimes that a completed background check would have
revealed.
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