During the Democratic sit-in last night, one Congresswoman made it personal. Rep. Debbie Dingell had a childhood marked by domestic abuse and threatened gun violence. This is not the first time she has made a stand that those convicted of domestic violence should be denied access to guns. Detroit News:
U.S. Rep. Debbie Dingell, D-Dearborn, invoked a personal experience in her childhood with gun violence during a sit-in on House floor by Democrats in the chamber that began on Wednesday and continued into Thursday morning in a bid to force a vote on a gun control measure.“I lived in a house with a man that should not have had access to a gun,” Dingell said in a floor speech that began after midnight Wednesday. “I know what it is like to see a gun pointed at you and wonder if you were going to live. And I know what it is like to hide in the closet and pray to God ‘Do not let anything happen to me.’ ”“We don’t talk about it,” she continued. “We don’t want to say that it happens in all kinds of households and we still live in a society where we will let a convicted felon who was stalking somebody of domestic abuse still own a gun.”
The National Coalition against Domestic Violence reports that
The presence of a gun in a domestic violence situation increases the risk of homicide by 500%.
Women in the US are 11 times more likely to be murdered with a gun than in other developed nations.
1 in 3 female murder victims are killed by intimate partners
2/3 of females murdered by intimate partners were killed with guns
1 in 15 children are exposed to intimate partner violence each year, and 90% of these children are eyewitnesses to this violence.
No comments:
Post a Comment