Coming to you directly from the Hart Senate Office building
where the Senate Judiciary Committee is conducting the
first hearing on
gun regulation since the Newtown mass shooting, entitled, “What
Should America Do About Gun Violence?”
In his remarks, Senator Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) continued a
trend of citing emotionally wrenching anecdotes involving
particularly vulnerable individuals, up to that point roughly a
dozen dead children and one young mother. And then there were
two.
Graham discussed an incident in which a Georgia woman hiding
from an intruder with her two infant children emptied a revolver
into his face, striking him five times. He displayed a poster
comparing a revolver with a semi-automatic handgun and a
high-capacity magazine side-by-side, as well as a wood-bodied rifle
and a black military-style rifle.
Gayle
Trotter’s earlier assertion that she speaks for millions of
women in advocating lawful access to assault weapons for personal
defense had elicited widespread laughter from the public gallery.
Mr. Graham pointed to this as an illustration of honest
differences in perspective and life experience, which he
understood. He also noted that he has an AR-15 in his home because
he thinks that is the best option for his personal self-defense.
His discussion hung on a single question: “Am I an unreasonable
American?”
“Yes,” murmured someone in the public gallery, rejecting his
desire to give law-abiding citizens, such as the Georgia mother,
access to high-capacity magazines. What if she had faced a second
intruder, he queried.
“I do not think I am an unreasonable person because I think
there are some circumstances in which a fifteen-round magazine
makes sense,” he ultimately concluded, offering this as his reason
for opposing “the legislation” that would broaden the definition of
and ban assault weapons.