- Serbia denies link to Kosovo canal blast amid heightened tensions
- Plastic pollution talks fail to reach landmark deal
- Lille slip up to late Montpellier equaliser
- Senegal marks 80th anniversary of troop killings after France acknowleges colonial 'massacre'
- McTominay keeps Napoli top in Serie A with Torino winner
- Man Utd boss Amorim earns first Premier League win, Chelsea climb to third place
- Romanians vote as far right hopes for breakthrough
- US ski star Shiffrin has puncture wound, 'severe muscle trauma' after crash
- White House says 'not there yet' on Gaza ceasefire and hostage deal
- VW's German workers to strike from Monday
- Zelensky says Ukraine needs arms, NATO invite before Russia talks
- World chess champ Ding, teen challenger even after six games
- Indigenous groups call for health protections in plastic deal
- Divided plastic pollution negotiators call for more time
- Georgia PM rules out re-run of contested vote
- Serbia denies behind Kosovo blast, says attack aimed at Belgrade
- Syria's second city slips from government control: monitor
- Harry Kane sidelined with hamstring tear
- Centre-right parties set to hold power in Ireland
- Social Democrats set to overtake ruling party in Iceland snap election
- Afghanistan must participate in future climate talks: Taliban
- India's Jay Shah starts term as world cricket boss
- Bangladesh court quashes convictions for grenade attack on ex-PM
- With Angola trip, Biden fulfills his promise to visit sub-Saharan Africa
- Romanians return to the polls with far right hoping to gain ground
- New EU chiefs visit Kyiv on first day of mandate
- 'Lethal Weapon' Johnston and Shin Ji-yai win Australian Open titles
- Poland border fence divides officials and rights groups
- Near Chechnya, tracing the life of a Georgian-Ukrainian soldier
- For Georgia's opposition, protest is the cure for melancholy
- Kayaker 'stable' after leg amputated in Australian river rescue
- Durant and Booker lead NBA Suns over Warriors
- Stokes fit for second New Zealand Test despite injury scare
- 'Red carpet treatment': Taiwan's Lai feted during US stop on Pacific trip
- Glittering dreams: India's big push for solar power
- Trump announces loyalist Kash Patel as choice to lead FBI
- The farm fires helping to fuel India's deadly air
- Philippine Eagle hatchling dies in conservation setback
- Red Bulls reach MLS Cup final with win over Orlando
- Debutant Bethell leads England to eight-wicket win over New Zealand
- Turmoil overshadows Romania vote as far right hopes to gain ground
- Nations warn of 'obstruction' at plastic talks
- Driver in Australia finds deadly tiger snake on her leg
- Malaysia's jailed ex-PM Najib to argue appeal for house arrest
- US wine merchants urge exclusions from blanket tariffs
- Mitchell's 84 sets England 104 target to beat New Zealand
- Australian PM ready to 'engage' with Musk on social media teen ban
- Ten-man Botafogo win Copa Libertadores
- Russell on pole as Verstappen given grid penalty for Qatar Grand Prix
- Brazil's ten-man Botafogo win Copa Libertadores
Advocacy groups ask US to crack down on gun industry ads
Likening "unfair and deceptive" firearms advertising to that of tobacco products, gun safety advocates Thursday asked US regulators to crack down on the industry.
A coalition of three groups asked the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which regulates advertising, to "investigate and regulate the gun industry's unfair and deceptive advertising," according to their 40-page petition.
"The FTC is failing consumers, failing our democracy, and failing the millions of Americans who have lost their lives or their loved ones to gun violence," the petition said.
"No industry -- regardless of its political clout -— should be immune from scrutiny of its marketing and advertising."
The effort, brought by the Giffords Law Center, Brady United and the March for our Lives, revives a 1996 appeal by Brady to the same agency that the groups said resulted in no public action.
An FTC spokesman said the agency had no comment on the petition.
The groups cite data showing a shift in gun industry marketing from an emphasis on hunting and sports shooting in the decades through the early 2000s to an overwhelming focus on self-defense themes over the last decade.
These messages have been compounded by the heavy presence of arms companies like Remington, Smith & Wesson and Beretta on social media.
"If the gun industry's primary message were true -- if guns actually made Americans safer -— then, as gun ownership has increased, violence should have decreased, making America an extraordinarily safe nation," said the petition.
"But the horrifying reality shows the opposite," the document said, citing mass shootings and data showing a gradual rise in firearms deaths.
Despite federal and state minimum age requirements to purchase or posses firearms, "the gun industry places no age-verification restrictions on its online content or advertising, making it an outlier among industries selling inherently dangerous products" such as alcohol and tobacco, the petition said.
The FTC did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
E.Paulino--PC