My heart goes out to the family of Nykea Aldridge, who was killed this weekend in Chicago by what police said was an errant bullet intended for someone else. It goes out, too, to the families of the other 10 people fatally shot in Chicago this weekend alone — each of them leaving behind loved ones just as Aldridge, and my own 17-year-old son Jordan Davis, did.
Aldridge was killed pushing a stroller on Chicago’s South Side. Jordan was fatally shot by an angry man who didn’t like his loud music. While the settings vary, each day in this country, far too many families like ours are experiencing the pain of a loved one killed by gun violence.
After Aldridge was killed, Donald Trump tweeted: “Dwyane Wade’s cousin was just shot and killed walking her baby in Chicago. Just what I have been saying. African-Americans will VOTE TRUMP!”
I had to read that tweet a few times for it to sink in. Donald Trump has proudly accepted the gun lobby’s endorsements and voiced support for its dangerous agenda. It’s the reckless ideas put forward by the NRA’s leadership, and pushed through by fearful legislators, that have allowed systemic gun violence to expand, wreaking havoc on communities of color for decades. How does Trump think that he can win the black vote as he supports policies that make our cities more dangerous?
Chicago, my hometown, offers a good illustration of why Trump is so wrong.
Chicago is home to hundreds of homicides every year, the vast majority of them by guns. Defenders of the gun lobby, including Trump, have used this fact to argue against Illinois’ strong gun laws, saying they’re clearly ineffective — but they’re wrong. While law enforcement officers are working hard in Illinois to keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people, they face a nearly impossible task because of weak gun laws in surrounding states.
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Between 2009 and 2013, nearly 60 percent of guns recovered at Chicago scenes were first purchased in other states, according to the Chicago mayor’s office. Many of these states do not require background checks, including Indiana — home to Trump’s vice presidential pick, Mike Pence — which was the leading out-of-state source for guns used in Chicago crimes.
As a June report by Everytown for Gun Safety and the National Urban League documents, there are some local programs that are reducing gun violence on neighborhood-by-neighborhood levels. But ask anyone involved, and they’ll tell you: The list of challenges they’re up against is long.
In this country, 32 states — including Indiana, which borders the city of Chicago — have what’s called a “private sale loophole” in which criminals and other dangerous people can obtain guns online or at gun shows, without a background check, no questions asked. Across the U.S., these states contribute a disproportionate share of the guns traced from crime scenes to a sale in another state.









