The following is a letter I posted on another cop
bulletin board in reply to a posting from a New Zealand cop
Dear Lindsay:
I enjoyed reading your post. You made some good points
that we should never forget, such as the time it took for us to correct
legislated discrimination. It was unfortunate that it took so long, but perhaps
it was inevitable that we went through that period. Sort of like going through
your teen years. I think America turned out pretty well, though.
As you may have surmised, I'm not concerned so much
about crime as I am about the vulnerability of a disarmed citizenry from tyranny
by their own government. You may think that is a reckless statement about crime,
but it isn't. I base it on evidence which indicates to me that crime is not our
greatest danger. In my humble opinion, crime is manageable through law
enforcement.
You say that the pro-gun counter-argument claims that
the U.S. has a murder rate 5 times higher than the "unfree" countries
(which do not allow handgun ownership.) This is untrue. Perhaps you were
referring to the total number of murders. The "total" may be higher
than in some of those "unfree" countries, but so is the population.
There are many "unfree" countries with much higher rates than the
U.S.; Russia and South Africa come to mind, for instance. And the rate isn't
higher just in those miserable places.
But old impressions die hard: Americans still think of
Britain as a low-crime country. Conversely, the British still think of America
as a high-crime country. Neither impression is true. For instance, in America
about 12% of all burglaries are "Hot" (while the owners are present,)
while in Britain it is over half. Americans would be outraged if such statistics
existed in the U.S. And while the odds are higher that you can be shot to death
here in America, in Briton you are more likely to be strangled to death there.
Take your pick.
As for mis-perceptions about guns, one may ask why
people believe that guns in the hands of law-abiding citizens is so dangerous?
It is because they are inundated by a liberal media with stories of children
being killed by guns. The media have a saying here: "If it bleeds, it
leads" (meaning it becomes the lead story.)
Even our disgraceful president, an ardent advocate of
gun control, loves to say that 12 "kids" die each day from gun
violence. What he doesn't mention is that 80% of those "kids" are
between the ages of 15 and 19, nearly all of whom are involved in gangs,
convenience-store hold-ups, and drug deals, etc. When confronted with that
statistic, the socialists immediately leap to the argument that so many young
children die from guns found in the home that errant fathers leave lying around.
So lets look at that: Taking a typical year, say 1996, there were a total of
1,134 accidental firearm deaths in the entire U.S. Of that number, 42 were under
the age of ten. That's less than one per state. In comparison, during the same
period the same age group suffered 2,404 motor-vehicle deaths, 805 lost their
lives drowning, and 738 were killed by fire and burns. (Source: National Center
for
Injury Prevention, Injury Mortality Statistics, (Atlanta:
Centers for Disease Control, 1999)).
Almost twice as many children drown in their own
bathtubs each year than die from ALL types of firearm accidents. Should we
license, register, and confiscate bathtubs? In fact, a lot more infants die from
drowning in 5-gallon buckets. Lets ban buckets! Since we are getting silly here,
lets look at the other side of cause-and-effect... If we banned bathtubs, a lot
more kids (possibly thousands) would die from diseases because of uncleanliness.
Cleanliness has been the #1 contributor to longer life-expectancy rates in the
last century.
Or how about the study which found that child-resistant
bottle caps have resulted in 3,500 additional poisonings annually of children
under the age of 5 from aspirin-related drugs because people have been lulled
into a less-safety-conscious mode of behavior by the existence of safety caps.
(Source: W. Kip Viscusi, "The Lulling Effect: The Impact of Child-Resistant
Packaging on Aspirin and Analgesic Ingestion," American Economic Review
(May, 1984): 324-27.) What does that say for the hue-and-cry for safety locks on
guns? Not that I'm personally opposed to them in households with kids, I'm just
asking. The point is, 42 kids are accidentally killed with guns, which is
terrible, but a hundred times that number are accidentally killed by vehicles,
drowning and fire, and an additional 3,500 are poisoned by just one common legal
product... and what gets on the news?
Yup... Guns!
If one is so fervent about the dangers of guns, they
should be positively astonished at learning how few people, out of nearly
300-million in the United states, actually die by guns each year.
Mathematically, the number looks something like this: 0.00012
So the real question should be: are more lives lost or
saved by law-abiding citizens having guns? The answer is unequivocal: More guns
in the hands of law-abiding citizens results in less crime. The largest study
ever conducted on this question found overwhelming and conclusive evidence that
more guns = less crime. (Source: Dr. John R. Lott, Jr., "More Guns, Less
Crime: Understanding Crime and Gun Control Laws" University of Chicago
Press, 1997, 1st ed.; ditto: 2000, 2nd ed. (Dr. Lott is a senior research
scholar in the School of Law at Yale University; hardly a bastion of
Conservatism.))
As I said in the beginning, my primary concern is not
with crime, it is with tyranny in government. When I look at recent history, I
see tens-of-millions murdered by their own governments, and in each case, the
government first disarmed them, thereby taking away their ability to resist.
When I weigh that against the few who die each year by guns (unfortunate as that
is,) I immediately conclude that it is much safer for law-abiding society to be
armed. And that doesn't even place on the scales the benefit of less crime
perpetrated upon an armed society. You say that there are places in the world
where there is stability despite a shortage of guns. You also say that you see
U.S. foreign policy as patchy, though well-intentioned. I don't know if the two
are related, but I'd question how stable anywhere in the world would be if
Americans hadn't defended freedom around the globe (with the notable exception
of the lunatic foreign policy of the present U.S. Administration, which blithely
"Wags The Dog" every time a new revelation is about to surface about
how our disgraced president may have raped another woman.)
I, too, have traveled in many countries throughout
Europe, North America and the Far East (including the People's Republic of
China,) and I think I have a fair impression of various societies. I would say
that as long as America remains a strong and free nation, the rest of the
industrialized world, on the whole, can safely practice internal gun-control
without consequence to their sovereignty. But God have mercy on them if America
should ever fall, because there'll be no one to come to their aid. Some say that
China will be the premiere world power within this century. How does the
prospect of China defending your liberty strike you? And people shouldn't lull
themselves into thinking that it couldn't happen to America. All nations
eventually decay and disintegrate. That's History 101. The unknown is: When?
The one thing that will most surely hasten it in America
is gun control, and most heavy-duty thinkers on the subject are of the opinion
that the liberal socialist gun-abolishionists, with the help of a sympathetic
liberal press, are winning the PR game. You said that Constitutions are not
immutable. That is correct; we changed ours about 70 years ago abolishing booze,
then changed it back again. It is entirely possible that the socialists will
win, and get our Second Amendment repealed. I don't think it will happen, but it
is possible. All I can say is: God help us (and you) if they do. I don't think
that if they are successful we will be able to reverse it before it is too late.
The bottom line is, whether we are talking about crime
or about liberty, forbidding law-abiding people to have guns is absolute folly.
Thanks for your kind words recognizing our most important holiday. (July 4.)