Last Saturday marked the one year anniversary of the shooting in Newtown, Connecticut where 26 victims — mostly children — were killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
After the shooting last December, President Obama forcefully urged the nation and members of Congress to take action on gun safety reform. “We can’t tolerate this anymore,” President Obama said, “these tragedies must end. And to end them, we must change.”
But over the year, we’re still waiting for that change at the national level. It’s been eight months since Congress failed to pass a bill expanding background checks. For a majority of Americans, the solution to the nation’s gun violence lies in stronger gun laws. Yet reasonable regulations have proved to be politically impossible in Washington, almost exclusively because of the power of the gun lobby in Washington. And it’s not just the N.R.A.









