Retrieved from https://studentshare.org/other/1419585-gun-control
https://studentshare.org/other/1419585-gun-control.
Your Street Address Your Zip Mr. Jim Walsh Editor-in-Chief The Courier Post Dear Mr. Walsh: As a and a citizen of this country, I have been active in solving social problems through my writings. At this time, I would like to formally publish one of my literary works tackling about gun control under your humble newspaper company, The Courier Post. Through this writing, I am hopeful that the general public would be made aware of the need to control the proliferation of guns within the American community.
I am also optimistic that the literary work could enlighten the American people with regard to the laws adopted by the different administrations aiming to reduce gun violence. In America, it is estimated that guns claim eighty-four (84) lives and wound about two hundred (200) people every day (“Gun Violence” 1). In a year, more than thirty thousand individuals (30,000) die, (three thousand of which are children and teens) and over seventy thousand (70,000) are injured due to gun violence (“Gun Violence” 1).
Based on this finding, guns are mostly used to execute homicide. Others used the gun to perform robbery and other petty crimes. This fact is very alarming considering that America is a high-income and industrialized country (Fontana and Keene 6). It is even considered by other states as a hegemonic and strong state. This description connotes that US has a strong mechanism with regard to its security. It is usually expected that a financially stable country could responsibly address social problems such as gun violence and crimes.
Nevertheless, this is not happening in the United States today. It has been found out that America’s firearms death rate is nearly eight times higher compared to the gun-related death rate of other high-income countries in the world (“Gun Violence” 1). This fact implies that the American government has not been effective in deterring the proliferation of guns within its society. Despite the presence of new technologies detecting hidden guns, the death rate associated to gun violence and crime has not decreased.
For the past years, there are known solutions to decrease America’s rate in relation to gun violence and crime. The 1993 Brady Law, the 1994’s assault weapon ban and other policies implemented by Clinton administration had effectively lessen the number of firearms’ death rate in America (“Gun Violence” 1). During the first ten years enforcement of the Brady Law, gun homicide dropped to almost thirty-seven (37) percent while the other gun crimes lowered to about seventy-three (73) percent (“Gun Violence” 1).
Nonetheless, during the Bush administration, crimes and violence related to the use of gun substantially increased (“Gun Violence” 1). The Congress back then weakened the provisions under the Brady Law, allowed the expiration of assault weapons ban, granted special legal protection to the gun industry and applied many counterproductive rules (“Gun Violence” 1). When Obama and Biden were elected as the respective president and vice-president of America, they introduced commonsense measures respecting the rights of gun owners while keeping the guns away from criminals and children.
They instituted a safe and organized approach by conducting background checks for all gun sellers (“Gun Violence” 1). At this juncture, I look forward to receive a kind response from you to talk more about my literary works which could be of help to the American community. Thank you so much for your time and consideration. Sincerely, Your Name Works Cited Brady Campaign to Prevent Violence. Gun Violence in America: A Proposal for the Obama Administration. 18 Dec. 2008. Web. 2 May 2011. . Fontana, Andrea, and Jennifer Reid Keene.
Death and Dying in America. United Kingdom: Polity, 2009. Print.
Read More