The gun solution we're not talking about - YouTube

Channel: Vox

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Every time there’s another mass shooting in America — politicians have the same idea.
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It’s time to require a background check for anyone who wants to buy a gun.
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I’m one of the Republicans who does believe there should be background checks.
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It is an open secret that the existing background check system is broken.
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Oh I have an appetite for background checks. We’re going to be doing background checks.
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Here’s what they want to change: Right now, gun buyers in the US only have to go through
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a background check at a gun store.
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But they don’t have to go through one if they buy a gun from an unlicensed dealer,
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like at a gun show or a private sale. But with universal background checks, everyone
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who buys a gun would go through one.
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Pretty much every American is in favor of this.
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There’s only one problem. Universal background checks won’t solve America’s gun crisis.
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But there’s something else that might.
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To understand how background checks work, it helps to imagine two very different people,
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who both want to buy a gun.
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This first person is dangerous. Maybe he has a history of domestic violence or mental illness.
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And most importantly — he has a record.
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And the second one is not dangerous. He just wants a gun for protection or to go hunting
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or cause shooting guns is kinda fun.
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Before either one can buy a gun, they first have to go through an FBI instant background check.
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And I mean instant — it only takes an average of 108 seconds to get a response from the
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FBI’s database.
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That database is made up of records sent in by state police and other agencies. And it’s
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checked to see if the buyer has things like a criminal record, addiction, a restraining
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order or has been hospitalized for a mental illness.
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Under a universal background check system, anyone buying a gun — whether in a gun store,
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or through a private sale — would have to be checked through that database. That means
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our second person walks out with a gun. And our first person, with a criminal record,
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doesn’t.
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Or, at least he shouldn’t.
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I’ve done a lot of reporting on this, we have just seen time and time again background
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checks just do not stop people we don’t want having guns from actually getting the
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weapons.
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There are a couple problems with the background check system. One is that the FBI database
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is about as outdated as its logo.
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It’s missing millions of records.
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That’s why the Charleston church shooter was able to buy a gun, despite having a record.
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Or why the man who killed 26 Texan churchgoers was also able to pass a background check,
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after the Air Force failed to send his domestic abuse convictions to the FBI.
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So even with a background check for every type of sale, there’s still a chance this
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guy gets a gun.
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That’s partly why study after study has found that while background checks ā€œprevent,
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or make substantially more difficult, the criminal acquisition of firearms.ā€
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Making them universal doesn’t actually have any effect on the actual gun crisis in America:
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gun deaths.
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A Johns Hopkins study of California, where comprehensive background checks were implemented
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in 1991, found the law was ā€œnot associated with changes in firearm suicide or homicide.ā€
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Thanks in part to those incomplete and missing records.
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The other problem is that background checks only look at ā€œgoodā€ people and ā€œalready
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badā€ people. But there is an in between.
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The background checks are supposed to catch people who have a record already. It just
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misses all the people who haven’t done anything bad yet but might do something bad in the
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future.
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German is not advocating for a Minority Report situation.
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He’s talking about someone like this guy, who is also dangerous, but
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who doesn’t have a record.
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Under a universal background check system — he could get a gun. In 108 seconds.
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But there’s another system that could prevent this.
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Twelve states and Washington, DC have gone one step further and established a licensing
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system.
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How’s it different? Well, Here’s how it works in Massachusetts:
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Before you ever go to a gun store, you first have to take a firearm safety course.
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Then you go to the police department and submit an application, give references and give your
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fingerprints for a background check.
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Then not only is the FBI database checked, but all local law enforcement agencies wherever
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you’ve lived are directly contacted, along with the Department of Mental Health.
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That entire process in Massachusetts usually takes about 3 weeks. And most peopleā€š about
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97% — pass.
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Nothing about a gun licensing system will prevent a law-abiding citizen from going through
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the process and obtaining a firearm.
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That’s Dr. Cassandra Crifasi, she researches health policy at Johns Hopkins, and she’s
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one of the authors of the studies earlier.
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And she says the reason licensing works is that it’s designed to do both of the big
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things background checks fail at.
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A, to properly identify and screen out people who shouldn’t have guns.
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And B, create a system to reduce impulsive gun purchases.
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The licensing system is more comprehensive than the one-database background check system,
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so our criminal will be reliably denied a gun.
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But because it’s so meticulous it also stands a chance of keeping our third guy, without
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a record, from getting a gun.
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There are people who, may want to impulsively acquire a firearm, for example to harm themselves
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or others.
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And the process of obtaining a license can at least delay that person during that time
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of crisis or maybe deter them from getting that firearm at all.
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In 1995, Connecticut implemented a licensing system.
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Over the next 10 years, they saw a drop in gun homicides and gun suicides.
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Compare that to Missouri, which once had a licensing system, but got rid of it in 2007.
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Over the next decade, they had a huge spike in homicides and gun suicides.
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In both states there were lots of factors involved. But researchers say this shows that
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licensing works.
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It’s also… pretty popular. Among voters who live in a house with a gun, more than
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two-thirds think that it’s a good idea. Ask all Americans and more than three-quarters
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support it.
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Background checks are supposed to stop bad people from getting guns. But they often don’t.
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Licensing picks up that slack.
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By making sure that people are crossing these hurdles, we just make sure, in a much better, stronger
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way, that people are not getting firearms when they shouldn’t have them.