Eric Wuestewald

The Worst Islamophobia of 2015 (VIDEO)

Fleeing from terror and indiscriminate violence in parts of the Middle East, millions of people have packed up and left their homes to start safer lives for themselves and their families elsewhere.

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Missing Piece of Gun Control Debate: America's Monster Role in International Arms Trade

As the tragic shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School has pushed the gun violence and gun control debate back into the political zeitgeist, one issue that has been largely ignored is the debilitating violence caused by the $80 billion global arms trade. According to propaganda by the National Rifle Association, the first United Nations treaty attempting to regulate that violence could threaten Second Amendment rights. The trouble is: the NRA is lying, and it’s distracting the U.S. from regulating one of the most corrupt businesses in the world.

In late December, the U.N. announced that it would once again take up a vote on an international Arms Trade Treaty at a conference from March 18–28. The treaty would regulate the largely uncontrolled world of international weapons exports while still leaving domestic laws untouched. Of course, a major misinformation campaign by the NRA wants Americans to think differently.

Mere days after the U.N. announcement, NRA President David Keane vowed to continue fighting a draft version of the treaty,  "We're as opposed to it today as we were when it first appeared. We do not see anything in terms of the language and the preamble as being any kind of guarantee of the American people's rights under the Second Amendment.”

The current draft version of the ATT clearly and decisively shows this theory wrong. The text explicitly acknowledges upholding domestic and constitutional laws in its preamble, “Reaffirming the sovereign right and responsibility of any State to regulate and control transfers of conventional arms that take place exclusively within its territory, pursuant to its own legal or constitutional systems.”

If that’s not guarantee enough, the U.S. State Department has further expressed its support for the treaty, declaring:

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