Protect Your Kids, Invest in Brady
In contemplating the scope and destruction wrought by gun violence, it is understandable to despair. But inaction won’t save your family and neighbors.
“We are fighting against this notion that the NRA wants everyone to believe, which is that this is hopeless,” says Kris Brown, president of Brady, a national leader in ending gun violence. “When I am asked, ‘Why should I get engaged? Why should I get involved?’ The answer is simple: there’s no other choice.”
Since 1974, Brady has enacted solutions through litigation, legislation, and educational efforts to give Americans hope in the face of a deepening crisis.
One key way Brady is saving lives is through its national PSA campaign, End Family Fire, which alerts gun owners that lives could be saved if firearms are stored safely.
Roughly 76% of school shooters, under the age of 18, used a gun from their home or the home of a relative or friend. And an unlocked gun in the home increases the risk of death from suicide by 300%.
Despite these harrowing statistics, 63% of Americans believe that guns make households safer and more than half of all gun owners store at least one gun without any locks or other safe storage measures.
Brady knows safe storage saves lives. End Family Fire is successfully encouraging the safe storage of guns to prevent the unintentional shooting of children, mass shootings, and gun suicide.
With generous support, Brady leverages each donor dollar 5 to 1 with pro-bono advertising investment. Across all media platforms, Brady is able to target specific groups, such as Black teenage girls who are disproportionately affected by gun-inflicted suicide, to stop this preventable carnage.
Gun owners who saw the ads were 400% more likely to seek out information about safe storage and 250% more likely to report talking to their family and friends about safe gun storage.
Most importantly, 48% of gun owners who saw the ads changed how or where they keep their firearms and stored them in a safer manner – a critical first step to ending the ravages of gun violence.
Brady | United Against Gun Violence
Donate now!www.bradyunited.org
(202) 352-2434
Chief Development and Engagement Officer: Liz Dunning
Mission
We’re uniting people from coast to coast, liberal and conservative, young and old, fed up and fired up, to end gun violence.
Begin to Build a Relationship
We know you care about where your money goes and how it is used. Connect with this organization’s leadership in order to begin to build this important relationship. Your email will be sent directly to this organization’s Director of Development and/or Executive Director.
I’m proud to support Brady’s groundbreaking Show Gun Safety campaign to be more intentional about how guns are portrayed on screen. We in the creative community must do our part to create a safer America free of gun violence — and that change can start in the characters we create and the stories we tell.
Be the Generation to End Gun Violence
Guns are the #1 killer of children in this country, an unacceptable reality. As they have done for over 40 years, Brady: United Against Gun Violence works to change the laws, change the industry, and change the culture around guns in the United States. Brady’s “Show Gun Safety” campaign and award-winning “End Family Fire” program save lives each and every day, but the scale of the impact depends on you.
With an additional $3 million dollars, Brady could increase their impact exponentially. For example, Brady could conduct a marketing campaign aimed at new gun owners to increase safe gun storage to reduce suicide, school shootings, and domestic violence. Eight children a day are killed or injured due to an unsecured gun in the home.
You can help end this. Donate today and free America from gun violence.
Key Supporters
BRADY CENTER 501(C)(3)
Dr. Joseph Sakran (Board Chair)
Kristin Brown (President)
Tony Porter (Treasurer)
Roberto Gonzalez (Secretary)
Gene Bernstein
Thomas Dixon
Roberto Gonzalez
Ricki Tigert Helfer
Lynn McMahon
Martina Leinz
Joshua Solomon
Helen Torelli
Joe Trippi
Kath Tsakalakis
David Wah