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Washington Peace Letter
Washington Peace Center
The Washington Peace Letter is published monthly for the social justice community of the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. Its purpose is to support local, national and international struggles against oppression. It seeks to present a radical analysis of current events, covering information not readily available in the corporate media.
The Peace Letter welcomes submissions of calendar announcements, articles, letters to the Editor, and artwork from the progressive community. Articles may be from 300-1200 words, but may be edited for space considerations. Preference is given to materials that cover actions or organizing campaigns in the D.C. metropolitan area.
We reserve the right to select or reject any submission.
Except as noted, Peace Letter items are copyright free and may be reproduced. Please give credit and send us a copy if you do use something.
The Washington Peace Letter is a project of the Peace Talks Working Group of the Washington Peace Center. If you are interested in joining us, call!
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Congress Takes Aim At District's Gun
Ban
By Roger Newell
January 2005
Volume 41, Number 1
In a direct assault on home rule in the District, the U.S. House of
Representatives voted (250-171) to dismantle the city's 28-year old
ban on handgun ownership. Despite objections from District residents,
elected officials, police officials, and educators, among others, the
House passed a measure that invalidates the city's firearm restrictions.
Under the measure, gun registration requirements and bans on semi-automatic
assault weapons, as well as armor-piercing ammunition, would be illegal.
The District's non-voting Delegate to Congress, Eleanor Holmes Norton,
pointed out that "Congress
has not known how to give up
on guns or to respect the home rule prerogatives of local government."
Northern Virginia Congressmember Tom Davis (R-VA), who took issue
with the Republican-led effort to strip the city's gun ban, supported
Norton's position.
"This is clearly a home rule fight," noted Davis, rejecting
the argument that the move to dismantle the District's ban was being
carried out in defense of the Constitution's Second Amendment right
of citizens to bear arms. "Otherwise, why wouldn't Chicago or
Evanston [IL] or other cities with handgun bans be included in this
bill?"
The House's action comes at a time when, despite a declining overall
homicide rate, a record number of young people have been killed this
year in the District, with most of the deaths due to gunshots. The
House passed measure would allow children to purchase and own weapons.
While passing in the House, the National Rifle Association-supported
measure failed to make it through the United States Senate.
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