
USA TODAY
Disclaimer: USA Today has partnered with AllSides and other bridging organizations, such as America Talks, to promote and support conversation events in which people on the left and right come together to bridge divides. This is work AllSides applauds and is a part of. This media bias rating page serves purely as an analysis of the bias of USA Today's news reporting; AllSides' bias analysis is independent, and partnerships with USA Today did not impact news bias analysis.
USA Today has published articles about AllSides' work, including:
USA Today has also published op-eds written by AllSides staff, including:
- Here's how technology can help reduce political polarization (Jan. 2020, CEO John Gable and Head Editor Henry A. Brechter)
- Political incivility is at crisis point in America. Here's how we can fix it (Nov. 2020, Brechter and COO Stephanie Bond).
- What Bruce Springsteen's Super Bowl ad gets right about reuniting Americans in 'the middle (Feb. 2021, Brechter)
Law enforcement officers across the country increasingly find there is no way to trace certain guns they recover from crime scenes. Because these guns are not marked with serial numbers, there is no way to track their origins or their owners. And because they are sold without a background check, anyone can buy them.
They truly are "ghost guns."
These unmarked guns are easy to buy, particularly in the form of a build-your-own kit that allows someone to quickly turn parts in a box into a gun capable of firing a bullet.
Last year, President Joe Biden and I announced that I had directed the federal agency responsible for regulating firearms, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, to modernize our regulations to reflect the fact that today's firearms need not be cast or forged but can be created from kits and by 3D printers. The Department of Justice committed to take action to prevent criminals and other prohibited people from easily purchasing untraceable guns.