Wall of Death

BAB

New member
The wall of death, eh? Note the cities these were taken from, and the sizes...the smallest was 27,500. And note that a third of the victims were between 18-25 years of age. You just know that a great percentage of these poor, poor victims of evil guns were gangbangers, druggies, and all other kinds of thugs. But to them, and the sheeple, the circumstances matter not, just the fact that a gun was involved.

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Mayors Call for Tougher Gun Laws

WASHINGTON (AP) — Calling on Congress to pass more stringent gun laws, the nation's mayors displayed on Thursday a ``wall of death,'' filled with the names of nearly 3,100 Americans fatally shot since the killings at Columbine High School.

``Our hope is the tragic message of this wall will not be missed on Capitol Hill,'' Denver Mayor Wellington E. Webb said, standing before a black, 10-foot board with victims' names recorded in white and the date of their deaths in red. ``It's time for Congress to do its part.''

Webb, who is president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors meeting here this week, called on Congress to renew its work on gun restrictions.

Last spring, in consideration of a juvenile justice bill, the Senate passed new provisions requiring background checks at gun shows. But a similar set of proposals died in the House when Republicans complained the measures were too strong and some Democrats said they were too weak. Work on the gun legislation continues.

The bloodshed didn't end with Columbine, Webb said, noting last year's other high-profile school and workplace shootings, which included the November slaying of seven at a Xerox office building in Honolulu.

Mayors are on the front lines of the battle, New Orleans Mayor Marc Morial said in releasing a survey on gun deaths. ``We attend the funerals,'' he said. ``We comfort the families. We clean up the blood.''

The 3,094 victims' names and ages on the movable wall were reported from the group's survey of 100 cities, which recorded gun-related homicides from April 20, 1999 — the date of the high school shootings in Littleton, Colo. — through Dec. 31, 1999.

Chicago, with a population of about 2.7 million, was the largest city in the survey. It recorded the largest death toll at 343. The smallest city surveyed — Superior, Wis., which has a population of 27,500 — reported a single death.

Eleven cities had no gun violence deaths in the period reported, but among the other 89 cities surveyed, not a day went by without a gun fatality.

The next highest death counts were reported in: Detroit with 273; Baltimore, 197; Houston, 186; Miami-Dade County, Fla., 169; and Philadelphia, 164. Denver, the nearest city to Littleton, reported 35 deaths.

The victims ranged in age from 2 to 96, but one in three were 18 to 25 years old. Most of the deaths were homicides. Not all cities distinguished accidental shootings or suicides.

The mayors want congressional action on gun control, but a separate conference meeting on school violence, it was the mayors who were asked to take action.

``I wish school violence was something that educators could solve alone, but it is not,'' said Pam Rafferty, a teacher at Heath High School in Paducah, Ky., where three students were killed in 1997. ``It is a community issue.''

Judy Forney-Hantle, another teacher from the school, said cities must help schools hire school officers and nurses, counsel students and families, and develop emergency plans.

``We don't like to think of having a mass crisis at a school, but the reality is that we live in a world where it happens,'' she said.
 
Well, when city governments won't allocate the money to improved or increased police patrolling, and they have to create the illusion of "doing something", and they can get a taxpayer-paid junket to appear in front of TV cameras...Why, Bunkie, you get more smoke and mirrors, is what you get!

:(, Art
 
Too bad they didn't tell everyone that the vast majority of those deaths were of crackheads, junkies and other violent criminals. I personally do not care about these people and neither does most of the country. If this fact was widely publisized, we would not have anti's breathing down our necks. They simply use this statistic to hammer us without revealing the true facts because it would blow their support out of the water.


Glad I got another AK yesterday.

------------------
Thane (NRA GOA JPFO SAF CAN)
MD C.A.N.OP
tbellomo@home.com
http://homes.acmecity.com/thematrix/digital/237/cansite/can.html
www.members.home.net/tbellomo/tbellomo/index.htm
"As nightfall does not come at once, neither does oppression.
In both instances there is a twilight when everything remains
seemingly unchanged. And it is in such twilight that we all
must be most aware of change in the air - however slight -
lest we become unwitting victims of the darkness."
--Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas
 
bestdefense--

Good point...one that I didn't really think about at first. To expand on that, how many more names would be on that wall (names of good people) if intended victims of violent crime had not been armed? For the time period they're concerned with, we're talking, what, 1.5 million instances of self-defense with firearms? Hmmmm....
 
Mayor Morial: "We clean up the blood."

Oh, please, Mr. Mayor, spare us your self pity. Are we supposed to believe that you, yourself, actually go to crime scenes with a mop and bucket to perform janitorial services? I doubt it. I doubt you even have one of your bodyguards make a few token swipes with a sponge. I doubt that you've cleaned up any blood lately that wasn't shed from a shaving accident or an under-cooked steak.
 
'Tis a shame that someone can't get to that "Wall o' Death" and set up sandwich boards proclaiming the (estimated) number of people who have died during the same period via other causes. Such as the people killed in car crashes, patients killed by medical malpractice, children killed by abortion, etc, with a tag line that reads "Where are our priorities?"

heh.

der schueler
 
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