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tv   An Armed Society  Deutsche Welle  October 11, 2020 10:15am-11:01am CEST

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as the negative trump has told cheering supporters he is feeling the range and the pandemic will quote disappear since. the news will be back at the top of the hour on a call for early for me and the entire team here and relent thanks for tuning in to . m.s.n. home many portions of old lunch on so now in the road climate change to bring home the story this is my plan siblings from just one week. can really guess. we still have time to our fun doing. this. plus a. little. what
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is being made here is for many part of the american dream but for others it's an increasingly frequent nightmare. underneath the girl all those parts in the trigger of the old college group they'll have to work together to give you the final product but really what we're after is a finished. weapon the. world. we are part of the n.r.a. the people that are fighting for your rights we've become part of those groups we like to be to a system in the fight for our rights here. every sense of the memberships and then they go to the lobbyists and they try to get the pro gun bills through or try to stop the anti weapon bills you know it's. got a picture colors if you don't quite know what you want we can help you get it exactly what you want for where you're headed we just had one that looks like a snake smell. scope. of joy everybody is looking out for you in washington
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so the other is full speed doing that for. 911 what is your emergency then. you don't believe anybody and there are. a lot of a lot of your every hour your honor in the air and ignore you didn't know you were going to be here talking i don't know on the. park on florida 28 but 19 year old returned to his former high school to unleash a deadly bomb with a legally purchased assault rifle. the park gun shooting left 17 people dead 14 of them students and
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a further 15 injured. as you can imagine it is a challenging difficult morning george is on the scene in florida where another community is in this belief as shocked by devastating violence. the most disturbing aspect about gun violence in america is that recent data shows that the frequency of mass shootings is only increasing over time. the students who survived the massacre are getting ready to go back to school for a much bigger fight taking on the n.r.a. . every year the united states sees about $350.00 mass shootings roughly one per day massacres like the one in parkland have led to read new cones for stricter gun laws resisting such reforms is the national rifle association which owes its very existence to the right of every american to bear arms in self-defense just stop a bad guy with a gun it takes good. guy with
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a guy the national rifle association as one of the most powerful political forces in america it has a simple message we have a constitutional right to own firearms and nobody can take that away from us. and the n.r.a. has connections at the very highest level of government. if you had a teacher with who was a dept of fire or. they could very well in the object very quickly. the n.r.a. is real money lawyers and it's mob being and has a huge network of dedicated supporters. to try 1000000 members in the n.r.a. today they've gained more and more of our small all the power of course is financial because they can ship board candidates trattoria elections they're more future we're the boys should be over again we're the boys in the front it's almost early in bergen to be at it but when you tell people who truly believe most of the
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we're going to abolish the right wing good luck but. how is the an army able to wield such influence over lawmakers who are these people who know no bounds when it comes to defending these constitutional rights the survivors of the parchman shooting are now among the most vocal of the gun lobby's opponents patted down a monument taking place today and i came upon. but what can they do in the face of the mob a seeming omnipotence to students from heartland really coming out in force as a new political movement that we have never seen before marching on washington lobbying their elected officials they're going up against history that hasn't been on their side of the problems and they're going up against a dedicated group of people in the n.r.a. that they sought this focus on as tragic as it is the kids that are coming out of heartland and. are there new to this political fight and the n.r.a.
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has been fighting and gun rights advocates have been fighting this fight i saw. a battle that is being waged even in this sleepy looking small town at the foot of the rocky mountains in western colorado it's named appropriately enough his rifle. it's a place that looks like a relic of the wild west it's home to a former saloon and now a restaurant called shooters grew up. carrying a weapon here is not just permitted it's openly encouraged the restaurant prides itself on having armed waitresses its founder serves customers with a 9 millimeter semiautomatic pistol the interior is adorned with john wayne vintage guns and even a crucifix framed by bullets for sure israel is an open carry restaurant by wait staff and myself we all carry firearms to work and they are loaded there are real we all practice we all train we are efficient with our firearms we pack
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this safety with them. and i think that it's good for more people to have them because you feel safer this is the safest restaurant the world ever known is always ready in case anything happen and nothing ever has to go colorado is one of the $32.00 states in the us where citizens have a constitutional right to openly carry a gun which might be a pistol or an automatic assault rifle. it's awesome to stop a bad guy with a gun you need a good guy with a gun because the criminals have free range they know you have nothing to stop them with they can go in and try to rob you at gun point and you're not going to shoot back because you are a law abiding citizen and you are obeying the government and not carrying your firearm and so they know they can go in and they can have whatever they want they can go. wouldn't take if they could shoot whoever they want because there's no one
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stopping them here in rifle colorado there's people they're going to stop. a pistol is as normal an accessory as a piece of clothing she also carries her gun at home in the presence of her 4 children. she and her husband have around 20 guns around the house out of sight for safety reasons my goodness she's proud to be a lifelong member of the n.r.a. . family. and i like that because there's a lot of transparency the n.r.a. wants us to know what they're doing they want us to know what they're fighting for why gun control topic is on the table today and they want to let us know how they're fighting. the n.r.a. currently has some 5000000 members with almost 800 employees coordinating the lobbying work of over 10000 local branches the association was founded in 1871 by civil war veterans and nationally as
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a club for hunters and recreational shooters advocated training children in the use of guns from an early age. the national rifle association commonly referred to as the. national organization of sportsmen in the united states. but in the 1960 s. or your gun control legislation had been introduced following a string of high profile assassinations the n.r.a. switched its mission to gun ownership and because and became one of the most powerful lobby groups in the us. going to interfere with the state of his brother. those who wrote the death of martin luther king this tragedy must bring americans together to legislate but. one of the most important chain. as was with all of the violence in our society and
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other societies in the late 1960 s. and with the assassinations of martin luther king and robert kennedy in 1968 president johnson began to push for more restrictions on the cause and that he americans even democrats who had supported johnson became very worried because they were afraid that if they didn't have their guns they would be unprotected when they saw in particular they were afraid of black power and what of. that. was effective crime control. remains in my judgment effective gun control. a warning shot to the country's traditionalists. there was a small group of members of the n.r.a. that believed that gun rights were about to be curtailed dramatically and there
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were these conversations about gun rights and they decided to rise up within the n.r.a. and they effectively took over the entire organization and it went from a moderate. less powerful group of sportsmen to a very staunch conservative organization 100 percent focused on the idea of ensuring that the right of an individual to own a gun would not be curtailed at all. looking for new ammunition to further his campaign the n.r.a. he found an argument rooted in the united states constitution and amendment 1791. we believe in our current dream we believe in our bill of rights and we believe in our 2nd amendment to the united states constitution all of our 2nd amendment because we believe in. freedom and the safety. and that is. it hello
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guarantees absolutely our freedom and our safety. the 2nd amendment says a well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed and there's a lot of debate about what the founding fathers meant doesn't mean people have the right to join together to ensure that the government isn't acting as a dictatorship or does that mean every single person has the right to have a gun on them at all times no matter where they are we're all over the british you're growing. boy going to what i think sometimes people miss is that when it was written the weapons the right to bear arms those arms were muskets they
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were weapons that maybe in a best case scenario you can get off 3 shots in a minute if you were an expert. so at that time mass shootings were impossible because there were not weapons that would make someone capable. in virginia where hundreds demonstrated outside the n.r.a. headquarters afternoon protestors held rifle association helpings of blocking gun control. n.r.a. is powerful enough to prevent any meaningful change thanks to its political ties and insistence on the constitutional right to bear arms among the anti-gun activists is time to him and one of a number of young people here who are survivors of the parkland high school massacre where from the cowardice building because that's where they all stay behind closed doors so that they have balls they come and talk to us like people there. howards i fight is the winning fight because too many die that's how much
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blood has shed and when we say enough is enough because it was are you guys we're tired of so many children having to wake up and look at their wraps around things and realize that. it's not pro-gun protesters brandishing an assortment of high powered firearms are present in this state this particular state it says i'm from a joke and carry this is always a money bill and not the criminals which i am no more people are going to face me the way things look so obvious more about. me just not in my own business. in a country in which one in 3 adults owns at least one firearm the young gun control and the kids are widely seen as hopeless idealists an estimated 300000000 guns are owned by civilians half of the world total of privately owned firearms. fallon from colorado is an n.r.a.
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member and has a penchant for high caliber weapons i grew up in a household were if i was a good kid and i did all my chores and i did what my parents asked me to do i would actually get incentive by them giving me ammunition to shoot by 22 caliber rifle. honestly the main thing i worry about is that someone is going to endanger myself or my family or my friends and do i have the ability to protect myself and those i care about around because unfortunately as you very well know where you are even a foreign france it's a big bad world out there. alan also trains father n.r.a. members in his free time he expects actions not just words for his $1500.00 lifelong membership or state senator john morse concedes in his recall race tonight's historic vote. leading to the 1st recall in state history. attempting to
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make the recall of a state legislator punished as it goes for passing gun restriction legislation in his state. democrat john morse spent 7 years as a state senator in colorado shortly after his appointment as president of the senate in 2013 he successfully proposed new legislation to restrict the sale of assault weapons the n.r.a. retaliated by launching an initiative to force morse and other legislators out of office via a recall vote. in december of that same 2012 newtown happened and we had. nearly 2 dozen people killed there most of them 6 and 7 year old children so our sessions started in january and i knew that we needed to do something about gun
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violence in colorado since much of that violence that occurred here in colorado so by that time the n.r.a. had. support for its position and so one of the days when we heard these bills in the senate they surrounded the capitol with about 20 cars that just drove around the block from about 8 30 in the morning until about midnight that night just honking their horns trying to disrupt the hearings so the gun lobby did a great job of making it look like people were really opposed to these mass of these measures senate president john motors is taking come to full and in the wrong direction forces pushing major changes swiftly list for the n.r.a. invested over a $1000000.00 in a media campaign to oust the. state senate president to british paid for the
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national rifle association committee to restore coloradans winnings this is pretty much their standard stick you know i mean they just lie cheat and steal and for whatever reason too many americans buy into it in as a result too many americans and the dead just pure lies all the way through but you can see it's just marketing and there's very little that's very specific in there you know morse is going to give us freedom how is that even possible after serving careers in the police force and then in politics morris now works as a certified accountant in denver colorado but he continues to observe how the n.r.a. has been increasing its political clout in the state senate and house of representatives . you know my biggest disappointment in losing was that it sent a very clear message to elected officials around the country that if you do anything even if it's just common sense gun safety we took out the president of the
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colorado states we can take us to and it has worked. there hasn't been much in the way of gun law changes in the entire country since what we did and we did barely anything and the fact that it actually costs human lives and we're willing to pay that cost i mean it makes me ashamed very ashamed to be an american at this point in time. when john morse had to leave office in 2013 the n.r.a. was headed by david keene an experienced strategist considered a powerful opponent then president barack obama he has since openly acknowledged his role in the removal of the colorado senate leader claiming that there was simply too much at stake back then. we when i went out there lobbied against it. as did every other organization and 2nd amendment that was very important in that
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in that whole battle that was going on. because you could almost hear statehouse doors all over the country closing where they were saying oh no it's not something that we should be looking at because the fact is that there are consequences to to to to passing legislation that really riles up your constituency political revenge and the demonstration that if you if you go against the 2nd amendment there's a price to be paid. the n.r.a. tries to ensure its opponents pay that price and that politicians and public officials are aware of that threat. the conservative state of texas had never caused major problems for the n.r.a. people in the south have traditionally been firm supporters of the 2nd amendment.
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so the emergence of opposition to the gun lobby here came as something of a surprise a few weeks before the midterm elections in 2018 the city of austin hosted a debate on gun violence former soldier and n.r.a. critic stephen claiming ran for election in the texas state senate. a you know i you can ignore me no no no i was. his grassroots activism made him a popular candidate and despite pressure from the lobbyists he was not afraid to confront the n.r.a. and make guns the key theme of his campaign. that history ari is really just a lobbying organization for the firearms industry they make billions and billions of dollars in this the united states a very unique and open market where nothing strays that makes the united states it's one reason the united states is the foremost export of weapons both legally
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and illegally and i would stress the last i care about moral clarity and i care about making sure that we give a voice to the people but i haven't had one of the n.r.a. wants to come in here and challenge me i'll take that challenge any day. among those participating in the forum discussion we're a former police officer and a number of victims of gun violence as well as public officials all of them determined to bring about change every year the united states registers up 260000 incidents involving firearms in 2019 they cost the lives of almost 15000 people and left 28000 others injured or in most states reaching the age of 18 in titles you to purchase a gun. and without having to prove that you can use one responsibly many americans say those laws are too lax but the n.r.a. makes a huge effort to ensure that those laws are not compromised it invests millions of
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dollars into the election campaigns of politicians to ensure that the status quo is maintained. so this is a picture of the incumbent senator donna campbell she's chosen not to be here today she felt like this wasn't a friendly forum we tried to give her assurances that we would be respectful and that we will listen to all sides of this issue her position isn't really or she doesn't really have a position she defers to the n.r.a. for her position and that i think is part of the problem is they use their heavy handed tactics when it comes to. our elections are pouring money into them and overwhelming the other side of the argument with with money oftentimes foreign money is a big part of the problem and why are legit are going legislations don't reflect the popular will. the n.r.a. is constant push for political leverage has given a major boost to the careers of prominent members of congress in washington the majority of them republicans. the n.r.a.
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spends a considerable amount of its resources in influencing our lawmakers in order to prevent them from happening or even proposing gun legislation. senator john mccain for example received $8000000.00 richard burr from north carolina $7000000.00 roy blunt representing missouri 4 and a half 1000000 and marco rubio from florida $3000000.00 the gun lobby also donated 30000000 dollars to donald trump's $26000.00 election campaign an investment that paid off. for a share in the white house. to federal agencies the coming after a lot. binding gun owners. behind the scenes that political influence is meticulously documented by the n.r.a. elected politicians are assessed according to their usefulness to the gun lobby and
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those grades have a big impact on their chances of reelection. and ari does rate political candidates and elected officials on a scale that we rate our school children on so a is good at is bad and all of the major candidates will get an n.r.a. rating what they often do is they take all the speeches that the person running for office has done they have people that work for them at the n.r.a. and they scanned all of the speeches and of course you can do this on computers as well for any type of comments that might seem negative and you know just a few negative comments is enough to you know basically push their button and they go after you so you know typically if you want to a plus you have to basically you know bow down to the n.r.a. you have to basically come out you know in favor of the 2nd amendment without any types of restrictions but i want to say at the outset that from there mark you just
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heard this is a guy that gets it you know think you do this is donald trump's later chief of staff ryan's priebus back in 2013 this is a guy that built and helped elect the kind of people that electrified this crowd today in a great mechanics and you need great candidates need them thank you very much god bless ship. probably. endorse about $1400.00 candidates each year at the various levels if you have an incumbent who's in a rated. officeholder and a challenger who's a rated then the incumbent gets the advantage because his record is real because he didn't just talk. he or she did actually order. it's not uncommon for children in the u.s. to learn to shoot a gun before they can read and write. just outside of austin texas we find what is
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for gun reform activists a shocking example of elementary education 6 year old kate. about school shooting suitable with you and your 1st time when you were 4 right yes . first time shooting. a shop at target and the picture on the cover is kate with her $22.00 caliber rifle so this is the one that you shoot the most is what she kind of started with it's easy for her to use it because it is very small and light weight. and he fits her pretty well all right to shoot it it's probably she did it. oh it's actually. there she used the term rifle. she trained jujitsu and she does ballet and other things that helped him develop the strength that she would need to shoot pavior go
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right i don't know if it's sunday morning and a group of families meet up at a shooting range. kate and her friends have come out here to the desert with their parents to let off a bit of steam. but this is no toy gun so her dad gives her some practice lessons so let's do the 1st one dry ok out of the target for us. ok good more. the targets and i am pretty ok nice work but the children here are aged between $6.12 texas has no minimum age for firing guns kates $22.00 caliber rifle does not have a strong recoil but it's as deadly as most other common firearms. but a nice piece of a database out loud they don't shoot like we did i get all the high. i
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like can't be counted by. 5 if you want this shot tonight kate's gun is a semiautomatic a ar 15 which is not just the weapon of choice for some elementary school girls similar guns were used in parkland and the pittsburgh synagogue shooting in 2018 as well as notorious mass killings in monster vegas orlando sand bernadino and the sandy hook elementary school shooting each ended the lives of dozens of people americans now own an estimated $15000000.00 a ar 15 which has become an almost iconic symbol of the gun control debate some states have even restrictions up to 21 to buy handguns but not in our 50 and so you can buy a ar 15 legally when you're 18 again all you can do you don't have to show any ability to be able to use it you don't have to show you know any sort of real mental competency you know you you there's no waiting period to get one either walked out with a ar 15 and
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a 100 rounds of ammunition 20 minutes later. the same guy you can't go buy a 6 pack of beer there is no better fire on the from their homes against realistic threats than they are 15 semiautomatic it's easy to learn easy. i think there are 2 reasons people find these attractive one and it gives the sense of power 2nd people are also afraid well if you limit that weapon then you allow limits on other weapons too so there is this purity the sense that we have to have no limits at all which is what the n.r.a. argues the n.r.a. does not defend the a r 15 as the a r 15 they defend the right to own all guns it's become a focus in america now because people who want to enforce gun control say that there's really no reason for someone to have an ar 15 there's no good reason and they're not great for hunting. it what it really is purpose is to kill the maximum
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amount of things in the smallest amount of time. the biggest donor to the n.r.a. is the arms industry itself various companies make direct financial contributions confident that their investments will bring their own kind of dividends. connecticut based group makes no secret of the fact that it diverts $2.00 to the n.r.a. from every weapon so totaling $4000000.00 over a period of 2 years just one of countless examples that explain why the lobby group boasts an annual budget of a quarter of a $1000000000.00 money that ultimately translates into a handsome payback for the arms trade. the obvious reason the manufacturers would give to the n.r.a. is because the air n.r.a. drive sales i mean every time there was a shooting. people would buy more guns because they thought this is the one where they're going to start taking away our guns and they're going to start making it harder to buy guns. and sounding that alarm was the n.r.a. the n.r.a.
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was driving those sales. and so it's no surprise that gun manufacturers and gun shops would have these arrangements where they give back a portion of the profits to the n.r.a. . and in return the n.r.a. promotes the sale of firearms in the us which amount to around $3000000.00 guns every year but that's not all the n.r.a. exert its influence on lawmakers to ensure that votes on legislation go the right way in 2005 for example congress passed a law exempting arms manufacturers from liability should their products be used in a crime for the n.r.a. its biggest triumph on the legal front in recent history. on the bill is passed last amended. we lobbied congress very heavily we made it
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a priority we judge people on the basis of their position on that. ultimately they agreed they supported the. republicans or democrats will like it was a very important to the foreign ministry and it was very important to american gun owners and very important to the survival of the 2nd amendment as something real what it has served to end up doing really is for moving guns from the conversation so it's now almost impossible to talk about guns and relations in these mass shootings and you see that now today sort of the chain reaction events of consequence is that there was a commission stood up to such studies school safety in the wake of parkland and last week that sort of os who is the secretary of education who's the head of the commission announced that they weren't going to look at guns they weren't going to talk about guns at all with regards to school safety. and she cited this act as part of it the say well you can't you can't blame guns say you know we have
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an act in congress that says guns aren't the problem yours are it's this whole guns don't kill people people kill people argument that you know it's just because of the bad person who had a gun the gun has nothing to do with it and so the n.r.a. really pushed it again to protect the manufacturers that are. giving them money that are supporting them. the n.r.a. shapes the national agenda and has ensured that firearms have become sacrosanct and an inviolable right. to lobbies young critics want to challenge that. like 60 percent of americans they want to see new stipulations on the purchase of weapons a clean police record and they want a ban on the sale of assault weapons to those under the age of $21.00 today those young activists are protesting outside congress in washington. saying evan thomas and. jonathan who
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a big and since the parkland high school shooting survivors have attended a number of demonstrations to mark new killing spree together with other gun reform activists they want their fellow americans to sense their anger and frustration over the government's inaction. i am tired of politicians who step down there were 4 before actually sitting down and having this discussion i'm tired of interim leadership good lord mocking but don't bounce awareness in bashing young people who are changing the literal. marcelle mcclinton from texas is part of a gun violence prevention group. today he's organized a dyin in symbolic memory of the parkland massacre a demonstration that is also an indictment. will soon die is you're assuming a mass of bodies will visit you later tonight and you make. more great as we're
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going to do what we are going to do are the ones going home building bridges and we're going over the capital they take so much money from the n.r.a. we don't care about. who we care about their money and they speak on behalf of how it dollars they get they don't want to have to go to the wall he said if you want to sort of also. marcel mcclinton has him self experience the horrors of a mass shooting in his hometown of houston in 2016 he recalls how the murderous rampage began one sunday morning. 2 years ago in my church and there was a shooter on on the campus. he was outside of the parking lot and. he killed i think just one person but injured 6 and i want to save shot 2 police officers were there 15 this sounds going to your head and. says you know what that's how i get i didn't get into government activism i didn't think anything of
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it. it's this gusting as a country as we call ourselves the leading country in the world and yet we kill most of our people and i say we call our people because our politicians are the ones doing nothing about it and so there's blood on their hands and yet they have the nerve the audacity to say that we're the number one country in the world i know i think i'm proud to be an american i love their life i want to live anywhere else but it's sad that as a country we can't come together as one and say this is a problem let's fix it. marcel mcclinton and his fellow activists know that bringing about change is immensely difficult is native to. this is a stronghold of the gun lobby and it was no coincidence that the n.r.a. chose dallas to host its annual convention in 28. the organization boasted of $80000.00 freedom loving patriots attending the event including guest of honor donald trump. the president pledged his unwavering support to make his point
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about gun ownership he mimicked the massacre that killed 89 people in paris in 2050 they were brutally curio by a small group of terrorists. they took their time and i gonna let them down one bar one below come over here boom come over here boom oh but if you want to employ. we're just going to page how to get on. or everyone of course is in this room. had been there was going. to record. the terrorist would have the lead. and it would have been a whole different story thanks. in the short run he's a very good president for the n.r.a.
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because he does their bidding he does what they want in the long run he's a terrible president for the n.r.a. because he's a useful adversary to mobilize the other side right with the n.r.a. i really would like would be someone like george w. bush because george w. bush is a gun owner a gun user but he's not so offensive to people on the other side don't worry about the n.r.a. the rumors you guys hear for yourself fruit of the n.r.a. there's nothing to be afraid of i think the clearest example of how the. n.r.a. influences present time in the carbon ministration is the fact that you have the president sit down with members of congress. at that meeting at the white house that was televised and you had you know the president sit with some of the victims from parkland and from other shootings. and appear. to policy ideas that would specifically help reduce easy access to guns we're going to
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work with you or you are. going to be somebody and then that evening he had dinner with wayne la pierre and chris cox from the n.r.a. and we've never heard. about any of these policy ideas ever again. but those ideas have not been forgotten by young gun control advocates who have managed to secure some progress. to visit for your florida high school that was the site of a meshuggah are taking a road trip for change florida has now raised the age limit on buying a ar 15 guns from $18.00 to $21.00 courts in the state can have weapons taken away from individuals considered potentially dangerous but tyra hammonds and other activists are already planning the next steps in their campaign of prevention which also involves calling for action from the nation's centers for disease control and
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we have our template policy which is the c.d.c. saying that they need to understand that this is an epidemic that is happening and it's crucial because they still don't believe that this is a problem in our society so they have not made it a priority to let the public know that gun violence is a huge topic that is or what we've been doing a 2nd is the safe storage policy that we want parents to know that we've got to keep your body and only the 1st part of the gun owners should know where your gun is because you are the one who walked into the store and purchase it and you're the one who walked out and he sold responsible and of course universal background checks there's a couple more about like those are these are made with. police sooner survivors of parkland and other school shootings are now adding their voices about rage to the debate on the country's gun laws but so far those voices have been falling on deaf or closed years meaningful reforms that still seem unattainable but the n.r.a. is not lowering its guard because this younger generation is determined to see a less violent and safer america. they're able to keep up. the call
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they're able to mobilize people they become public figures. when i talk to people who work for america they they often ask me you know why don't you just. get rid of them i don't want to you make guns illegal i try to remind people that there are so many kinds we have so many hundreds of millions of guns in america. that's beginning to change because the way to change happens in american society is we go into a part of the cycle people see how bad it is and then they were folks feel the way this is the beginning of something moving forward we'll see that change there is plenty that can be done short of banning guns that could happen in the future it's just a question of you know are we out an inflection point are we at a point where it actually is changing. or is the n.r.a.
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going to remain the powerful institution that is america's deadly love of guns is hugely divisive an ongoing battle for power corporate influence and money. what's going on here. a house of your very own from a printer. computer games that are healing. my dog needs electricity. shift to explosions delivers facts and shows what the future holds. yet living in the digital world shift. in 15 minutes on d w. in good shape the topic of this episode affects every single one of
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us how is the coronavirus affecting our lives what impact does it have on our spirits. our work. and our relationships. plus one of the long term effects. good shooting. in 30 minutes on d w. literature invites us to see people in particular that i like to see as the kids find it. might. be good on you to.
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the state of the news live from berlin and donald trump's doctor says the u.s. president is no longer at risk of transmitting the coronavirus trying tells cheering supporters at the white house he feels great but his medical team stops short of saying the president is cured also coming up. a measure of tolerance returns to the contest civilians take advantage of a cease fire between 2 warring former soviet republics but many 2 year of fighting will flare up again. and come.

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