"We Don't Have to Live Like This": March for Our Lives Unveils Sweeping Plan to Address Gun Violence and Strengthen Democracy

After spending a year and a half traveling the country to register young people to vote and urging high school and college students to participate in the 2020 election, the national organization March For Our Lives released a sweeping gun control proposal Wednesday, calling on the federal government to listen to the demands of young voters.

In its Peace Plan for a Safer America, the group—which was born out of the February 2018 school shooting in Parkland, Florida in which 17 people were killed—calls on the next president to treat the epidemic of gun violence and mass shootings in the U.S. as what it is: “a national public health emergency.”

“We have to seismically shift how we respond to gun violence—from inaction to action,” said David Hogg, co-founder of the March For Our Lives and a Parkland survivor.

The cover of the plan proclaims it was “created by survivors, so you don’t have to be one.”

The group released it just weeks after 31 people were killed and more than 50 were injured in mass shootings in Dayton, Ohio and El Paso, Texas.

“We don’t have to live like this: in fear for our lives and our families,” declares the plan. “The federal government has failed in its responsibility to protect the safety and well-being of the public with regard to the nation’s gun violence epidemic. The time for comprehensive and sweeping reform is now.”

To curb rampant gun ownership in the U.S., where “there are more guns than people,” the six-point peace plan would:

  • create a national registry of guns and require licenses for all gun owners—just as cars are registered and drivers are required to be licensed—and subject gun purchasers to a 10-day waiting period
  • ban semi-automatic military-style firearms, commonly called assault weapons, and high-capacity magazines, which have been used in numerous mass shootings including at Parkland and in two mass shootings this month in El Paso, Texas and Dayton, Ohio
  • implement a mandatory buyback program for assault weapons modeled on Australia’s program, which cut gun-related deaths by 57 percent
  • appoint a National Director of Gun Violence Prevention to lead the federal government’s response to the gun violence epidemic, which has killed more than 8,000 people so far this year according to the Gun Violence Archive

The group claims the restrictions proposed in the plan could cut American gun deaths in half over a decade.

The plan will have a greater chance of being implemented by the federal government if the nation prioritizes voter turnout among young people, March For Our Lives says.

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