One day
after President Obama unveiled the administration’s plan to curb gun violence,
Vice President Joe Biden today defended their intentions, answering critics who
have spoken out against the plan for potentially infringing on the Second
Amendment rights of Americans.
“The
president and I support the Second Amendment,”
Biden said definitively.
Biden, who’s
led the task force on gun violence since the December shooting at Sandy Hook
Elementary School, noted that he owns guns.
“I have two
shotguns, a 20-gauge and a 12-gauge shotgun,” he said. Later in the speech he
said his son Beau was a better shot than he is but that is because Beau is in
the Army.
Biden spoke
today before the annual U.S. Conference of Mayors’ meeting in Washington, D.C.
Not everyone in the audience, Biden noted today, agrees with recommendations
the White House put forward yesterday. But he defended the administration’s
move to push this issue, at one point addressing the roomful of mayors as if he
were speaking to them individually, saying that “murder rates in both of our
towns are … well beyond … what’s
remotely tolerable for a civilized circumstance.”
“We’re going
to take this fight to the halls of Congress,” he said. “We’re going to take it
beyond that. We’re going to take it to the American people. We’re going to go
around the country making our case, and we’re going to let the voices, the
voice, of the American people be heard. ”
Biden again
noted that there will not be consensus across the nation, given cultural
differences among the states. In many states, he added, hunting is “big deal.”
But, he
quipped, addressing the use of high-capacity magazines in hunting, “As one
hunter told me, if you got 12 rounds — you got 12 rounds, it means you’ve
already missed the deer 11 times. You should pack the sucker in at that point.
You don’t deserve to have a gun, period, if you’re that bad.”
High-capacity
ammunition magazines “leave victims with no chance,” Biden said.
He summed up
saying, “Recognizing those differences doesn’t in any way negate the rational
prospect of being able to come up with common-sense approaches how to deal with
the myriad of problems that relate to gun ownership.”
Biden said
the “time is now” to make these changes and scoffed at some alternative
strategies, like the proposal from the NRA for an armed guard to be placed in
every school.
“We don’t
want rent-a-cops in schools armed,” he said. “We don’t want people in schools
who aren’t trained like police officers.”
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