Obama: Gun Control Won’t Lead to Confiscation Because ‘I Am Constrained by a System Our Founders Put in Place’
DENVER,
CO – APRIL 03: U.S. President Barack Obama addresses gun control issues
during a speech at the Denver Police Academy on April 3, 2013 in
Denver, Colorado. Obama commended Colorado’s newly passed gun control
laws. Credit: Getty Images
DENVER (TheBlaze/AP) — Ratcheting up
pressure for Congress to limit access to guns, President Barack Obama
said Wednesday that recent steps by Colorado to tighten its gun laws
show “there doesn’t have to be a conflict” between keeping citizens safe
and protecting Second Amendment rights to gun ownership.
“I believe there doesn’t have to be a
conflict in reconciling these realities,” Obama said in Denver, where he
stepped up his call for background checks for all gun purchases and
renewed his demand that Congress at least vote on banning assault
weapons and limiting access to large-capacity ammunition magazines.
The president dismissed gun owners’
concerns that gun control legislation could be a stepping stone to gun
confiscation in the U.S., saying “I am constrained by a system our
founders put in place.”
Pres
Obama rejects concerns new background checks might lead to gun
confiscation: "I am constrained by a system our founders put in place."
Obama noted that more than 100 days
have passed since the shooting rampage that killed 20 first-graders and
six adults at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn., and reignited the
national debate o wait to do something
about it, even more of our fellow citizens are stolen from our lives by
a bullet from a gun. Now the good news is Colorado has already chosen
to do something about it,” he said.
See 1.6 billion rounds of ammo here:
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/04/03/obama-gun-control-wont-lead-to-confiscation-because-i-am-constrained-by-a-system-our-founders-put-in-place/
In danger of losing congressional momentum on the issue, Obama went to Colorado – which has a deep-rooted hunting tradition and where gun ownership is a cherished right – to use its example and public pressure to prod Congress to act.
In danger of losing congressional momentum on the issue, Obama went to Colorado – which has a deep-rooted hunting tradition and where gun ownership is a cherished right – to use its example and public pressure to prod Congress to act.
Colorado suffered two of the worst mass
shootings in U.S. history – at Columbine high school in 1999 and at a
movie theater in Aurora last year. It recently expanded background
checks for gun purchases and placed restrictions on ammunition
magazines.
Prospects for passage of similar
measures by Congress appear bleak, largely because of concerns by
conservative Republicans and moderate Democrats who come down more on
the side of gun rights.
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