Freedom Under Fire: 5 takeaways from AP’s series on rising tension between guns and American liberty

Janet Paulsen points to where she collapsed in her driveway in 2015 while trying to flee as her estranged husband shot her six times at their Acworth, Ga., home, Monday, Aug. 7, 2023. “It took me five years to get up the courage to divorce him, because I knew I would pay a price. And you know what happened when I did? He shot me,” said Paulsen, 53, a former property manager and endurance athlete who was left partially paralyzed in the 2015 shooting. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

In a country shadowed by the threat of mass shootings and neighborhood violence, courts have embraced an increasingly absolute reading of the right to guns. That raises difficult questions about how to protect the full range of freedoms Americans cherish.

With nearly 400 million guns in civilian hands, the violence they enable feels to many like a threat to their right to worship in peace, go to school and be safe at home. To many others, an unfettered right to own and carry guns is essential to protecting those liberties.

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