In the wake of the mass shooting at the Washington Navy Yard that left
12 people dead, dozens of gun control activists, many from the Newtown
Action Alliance, convened on Capitol Hill Wednesday to try to revive a
bill that would expand federal background checks of gun buyers. Speakers
included Shundra Robinson, whose 18-year-old son Deno Wooldridge was
shot dead on his grandmother’s front porch in Chicago nearly three years
ago. "We’ve got to go home to empty rooms because our childrens’ lives
were taken away by people who should not have had guns anyways,"
Robinson testified. "It’s beyond an epidemic. This is genocide in
America." Robinson joins us from Chicago where she serves as an
anti-violence activist and an evangelist with Radical End Time
Ministries International.
Video
Source: democracynow.org
Author: --
Video
Source: democracynow.org
Author: --
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