Urban advocates say new gun control talk overdue


                     
              FILE - In this Jan. 23, 2009 file photo, pallbearers carry the casket of 4-year-old Roberto Lopez Jr., outside Our Lady of Angels Church in Los Angeles. The boy was shot in the chest a week earlier as he walked with his 5-year-old sister in a gang-plagued Echo Park neighborhood. In the wake of the Dec. 14, 2012 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in the small town of Newtown, Conn., there is now much political discussion about gun control. For urban advocates, this new emphasis on gun control is long overdue. (AP Photo/Mark Boster, Pool, File)
            
                  FILE - In this Jan. 23, 2009 file photo, pallbearers carry the casket of 4-year-old Roberto Lopez Jr., outside Our Lady of Angels Church in Los Angeles. The boy was shot in the chest a week earlier as he walked with his 5-year-old sister in a gang-plagued Echo Park neighborhood. In the wake of the Dec. 14, 2012 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in the small town of Newtown, Conn., there is now much political discussion about gun control. For urban advocates, this new emphasis on gun control is long overdue. (AP Photo/Mark Boster, Pool, File)
By JESSE WASHINGTON
AP National Writer /  December 23, 2012
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‘‘If a white cop kills a black man, there’s this huge outcry. But when you have the vast majority of young black men being killed by other young black men, you don’t get that kind of response,’’ said Drummond, who is black.

‘‘In order to look at that you have to look at yourself,’’ she said. ‘‘You have to say there are issues in this community.’’

Big cities have long dealt with the perception that gun violence is an urban problem. John Feinblatt, who works for New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and is chief policy advisor for the Mayors Against Illegal Guns organization, said that Newtown has spurred action because of the age and number of victims, and that they were killed in school.

‘‘There is no doubt that something has changed,’’ Feinblatt said. ‘‘America’s heart has been broken.’’

At the Violence Policy Center, a national organization that combats gun violence, an unprecedented surge of donations has arrived since the Newtown killings, as well as many emails from people asking how they could help, said executive director Josh Sugarmann.

Why hasn’t this happened before, during decades of urban violence?

‘‘There’s an element of race to it,’’ said Sugarmann, who has been working against gun violence since 1983. ‘‘There’s a belief among all too many people about young black males, if you’re shot you’re in a gang or someplace you shouldn’t be, or a bad kid doing things you shouldn’t be doing. But in Chicago, there are reports of kids walking to school getting gunned down.’’

‘‘The fact that these killings can’t shape people’s view that something needs to be done,’’ he said, ‘‘is incredibly disturbing.’’

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Jesse Washington covers race and ethnicity for The Associated Press. He is reachable at www.twitter.com/jessewashington.end of story marker

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