With just a few days left until the new year, 2022 has already set a grim record: so far at least 6,036 children across the United States have been killed or injured by gunfire,Ā according toĀ the Gun Violence Archive.
As of Tuesday, 306 childrenĀ under age 12Ā were killed by guns and another 668 were injured nationwide. For thoseĀ ages 12-17, 1,328 were killed and 3,734 were injured.
Those figures include the 19 kidsābut not the two adultsākilledĀ in the May 24 mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, and come just a few weeks after the nationĀ markedĀ the 10th anniversary of the massacre of 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.
Launched in 2013, the Gun Violence Archive (GVA) is an online project thatĀ aimsĀ “to document incidents of gun violence and gun crime nationally to provide independent, verified data to those who need to use it in their research, advocacy, or writing.”
GVA’s annual figures for child deaths and injuriesĀ go backĀ to 2014. As the group highlighted in a tweet Monday, this year is the first in recorded history that the overall number has topped 6,000āwhich Project UnloadedĀ called “heartbreaking and preventable.”
Jacob Sumner, who is pursuing a master’s degree in public administration at Arizona State University as a Sackton fellow,Ā tweetedĀ of GVA’s figures that “we should not and cannot allow that to be normal. We need lifesaving commonsense gun safety measures.”
NotingĀ ABC News‘Ā reportingĀ on the record, Brady PACāa political action committee that supports candidates who champion policies to reduce gun violenceādeclaredĀ that “our children have the right to live.”
AnotherĀ ABCĀ readerĀ describedĀ the development as “an absolute fucking disgrace.”
U.S. President Joe BidenāwhoĀ signedĀ some gun safety reforms into law after the Uvalde shootingāsaidĀ on the Sandy Hook anniversary that “we have a moral obligation to pass and enforce laws that can prevent these things from happening again.” However, with the GOP set to take control of the U.S. House next week, progress on the issue over the next two years is unlikely.
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