Posts Tagged ‘gun control’

More Flintlocks, Less Crime

Friday, August 13th, 2010

Don B. Cates, writing at Cal Guns:

[The following is from an article that Carlyle Moody and I are writing on the theory that more guns in a society will cause more crime. This part of the article was written by Prof. Moody an economist at William & Mary College.]

If more guns cause murder, and more guns cause more murder, it would seem societies with no guns at all should be the safest possible states. There are few gun free societies in the world today. However, if we look back in history to the time before the invention of firearms, we can judge for ourselves whether those societies were tranquil and safe. Remarkably good homicide data is available for England, beginning in the 1200’s. Those data indicate a pre-gun homicide rate in England of roughly 20 per 100,000 [roughly four times greater than the U.S. today]

Firearms were introduced into England in the 1400’s and were in wide use by the 1500’s, coincident with a decline in the homicide rate to 15 per 100K. However these early guns were predominately of the matchlock design. This design featured a slow burning fuse held in a clamp at the end of a serpentine lever. When the trigger was pulled the clamp dropped down so that the end of the lit fuse touched the powder in the flash pan, firing the weapon. The design was simple and the weapons relatively inexpensive. The major problem with the design from the point of view of personal defense was that, because of the need for a lit fuse, the weapon could not be kept and carried loaded and primed for quick use against a sudden attack.

The first firearm that could be carried loaded and primed was the flintlock, introduced into England around 1630. In this design the fuse is replaced by a piece of flint. When the trigger is pulled the flint strikes a piece of steel producing a shower of sparks that ignite the powder in the flash pan. This technology persisted through the early 1800’s. While matchlocks were almost exclusively long guns, flintlock technology was readily adapted to produce handguns, which were particularly useful for self defense. The flintlock pistol was relatively inexpensive, could be comfortably carried, was ready for action in an instant, and did not require a great deal of physical strength or expertise to operate. The flintlock could be fired in an instant, making it the ideal self- defense weapon. Armed with a flintlock, the physically weak found themselves on an equal footing with the physically strong in a confrontation.

The introduction of the flintlock coincided with the largest decline in homicide in English history. The homicide rate plunged to 6 per 100K in the 1600’s. The English homicide rate continued to decline slowly and steadily until well into the 20th century. For example, in 1900 the homicide rate was 0.96 per 100K.

The last hundred years of English history tells the reverse story. The first modern gun law in England was the Pistols Act of 1903 which required Englishmen to purchase a permit in order to acquire a firearm. Since 1920, the English government’s policy has been ever more restrictive. The Firearms Control Act of 1920 imposed a true permit requirement to possess rifles as well as all types of pistols and empowered local authorities to determine if the applicant would be allowed to purchase arms. This permit requirement was administered progressively more stringently and was amended to increase restrictions over time in an attempt to reduce the civilian gun stock. The Prevention of Crime Act of 1953 and the Criminal Law Act of 1967 redefined the right to self defense more restrictively making any act of self defense potentially criminal. The Firearms Acts of 1968 and 1998 brought shotguns under strict regulation; the Firearm Act of 1997 effectively banned the private ownership of handguns and provided for the confiscation of all legally owned handguns.
According to the more guns more crime hypothesis, all this restriction of civilian guns should have resulted in England enjoying lower and lower rates of violent crime. Unfortunately, the facts reveal a pattern that is almost opposite. [as of 2000 England had twice the violent crime rate of the U.S.] and I are writing on the theory that more guns in a society will cause more crime. This part of the article was written by Prof. Moody an economist at William & Mary College.]

If more guns cause murder, and more guns cause more murder, it would seem societies with no guns at all should be the safest possible states. There are few gun free societies in the world today. However, if we look back in history to the time before the invention of firearms, we can judge for ourselves whether those societies were tranquil and safe. Remarkably good homicide data is available for England, beginning in the 1200’s. Those data indicate a pre-gun homicide rate in England of roughly 20 per 100,000 [roughly four times greater than the U.S. today]

Firearms were introduced into England in the 1400’s and were in wide use by the 1500’s, coincident with a decline in the homicide rate to 15 per 100K. However these early guns were predominately of the matchlock design. This design featured a slow burning fuse held in a clamp at the end of a serpentine lever. When the trigger was pulled the clamp dropped down so that the end of the lit fuse touched the powder in the flash pan, firing the weapon. The design was simple and the weapons relatively inexpensive. The major problem with the design from the point of view of personal defense was that, because of the need for a lit fuse, the weapon could not be kept and carried loaded and primed for quick use against a sudden attack.

The first firearm that could be carried loaded and primed was the flintlock, introduced into England around 1630. In this design the fuse is replaced by a piece of flint. When the trigger is pulled the flint strikes a piece of steel producing a shower of sparks that ignite the powder in the flash pan. This technology persisted through the early 1800’s. While matchlocks were almost exclusively long guns, flintlock technology was readily adapted to produce handguns, which were particularly useful for self defense. The flintlock pistol was relatively inexpensive, could be comfortably carried, was ready for action in an instant, and did not require a great deal of physical strength or expertise to operate. The flintlock could be fired in an instant, making it the ideal self- defense weapon. Armed with a flintlock, the physically weak found themselves on an equal footing with the physically strong in a confrontation.

The introduction of the flintlock coincided with the largest decline in homicide in English history. The homicide rate plunged to 6 per 100K in the 1600’s. The English homicide rate continued to decline slowly and steadily until well into the 20th century. For example, in 1900 the homicide rate was 0.96 per 100K.

The last hundred years of English history tells the reverse story. The first modern gun law in England was the Pistols Act of 1903 which required Englishmen to purchase a permit in order to acquire a firearm. Since 1920, the English government’s policy has been ever more restrictive. The Firearms Control Act of 1920 imposed a true permit requirement to possess rifles as well as all types of pistols and empowered local authorities to determine if the applicant would be allowed to purchase arms. This permit requirement was administered progressively more stringently and was amended to increase restrictions over time in an attempt to reduce the civilian gun stock. The Prevention of Crime Act of 1953 and the Criminal Law Act of 1967 redefined the right to self defense more restrictively making any act of self defense potentially criminal. The Firearms Acts of 1968 and 1998 brought shotguns under strict regulation; the Firearm Act of 1997 effectively banned the private ownership of handguns and provided for the confiscation of all legally owned handguns.
According to the more guns more crime hypothesis, all this restriction of civilian guns should have resulted in England enjoying lower and lower rates of violent crime. Unfortunately, the facts reveal a pattern that is almost opposite. [as of 2000 England had twice the violent crime rate of the U.S.]

[Emphasis in the original.]

Here it is again: the key tactic in any argument with a gun control advocate is to demand the citing of any instance where relaxing gun control laws has increased crime. And, I suspect, you can also do well by demanding the citing of any instance where imposing gun control on the general population has decreased crime. (The “on the general population” proviso is aimed at excepting closed, tightly controlled areas such as prisons. Presumably, most gun control advocates would not be willing to voluntarily live in a prison.)

===

Ack, I’ve lost the via.

Thomas’ McDonald Concurrance, Digested

Saturday, July 24th, 2010

The Richmond Times-Dispatch has done the hard work of editing it down, presenting “The Ugly Racial History of Gun Control”.

Via Arms and the Law.

When Seconds Count….

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

…The police are putting on you hold for an hour.

…[T]he afternoon of May 5, at Phoenix Park near Turner Field, Jackie Gordon watched a middle-aged man in a yellow jumpsuit chasing children on the playground while exposing himself.

Gordon grabbed her cellphone and dialed the familiar number for help: 911. The police, she was told, were on their way.

They weren’t.

Instead, the 911 operator sent an electronic message to a dispatcher for the Atlanta Police Department, who held the call — for 56 minutes and five seconds — before sending an officer to Phoenix Park. The dispatcher had no choice: The police department had no one available to promptly respond to a report of a man demanding sex from children.

With too much crime and too few officers on the streets, Atlanta police dispatchers routinely hold such emergency calls even longer than the time in which officers are supposed to reach the scene, an investigation by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution shows.

Via War On Guns.


I’ve been asked recently what my stand on gay rights is.

How about this? My stand is that if you try to assault or kill someone for being gay, your victim should be armed and capable of defending themselves.

Talking about the the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, recently signed into law by President Hopey, Kurt Hofmann points out:

Even the title of the bill is misleading: ” . . . Hate Crimes Prevention Act”? Laws don’t “prevent” crimes; they punish them, after the fact. Sure, it’s to be hoped that laws, and the negative consequences of breaking them, will act as a deterrent, but if that deterrence were very reliably effective, we would presumably not have a prison population of over 2 million.

Will the family and friends of the next Matthew Shepard or James Byrd, Jr. take much comfort in the fact that the killers will now face these new, federal penalties? Would they not instead vastly prefer that the “hate criminals” were stopped in their tracks?

Hofmann includes the obligatory link to the Pink Pistols.


Speaking of self-defense, for any reason, here’sPhilip Van Cleave, the President of Virginia Citizen Defense League, arguing for concealed carry on college campuses — and, by the way, concealed carry, open carry, night stand carry, what ever:

Myth after myth, shot down by cold hard facts.

On the Virginia Tech campus.

And, yeah, it’s all anecdotal evidence. But here’s the thing: these kinds of incidents are so rare, all the evidence on both sides is, essentially, anecdotal. What the available statistics do show is that at the very least, permitting people to arm themselves does not increase the number of bad things happening. Like seatbelts, yes, wearing a seatbelt sometimes causes problems — but the way to bet is that you are safer wearing a seatbelt, or a gun.

“What does it matter if I’m standing here, or if I leave campus…? Why is my life not valuable on one side of a line…and totally valuable and I’m a great citizen on the other…?”

“What’s so bad about self-defense, and what’s so good about being a helpless, unarmed student being murdered?”

A Step-by-Step Guide to Killing Kids With Guns

Sunday, October 4th, 2009

I’ve slept on this since I made my last substantive comment on the “76 Reasons” thread with venomlash, re-read the whole thread several times, and I want to change my strategy.

venomlash, the reason I moderated and deleted your comments, other than on the “76 Reasons” posts, was not to censor facts and ideas I couldn’t tolerate, but to focus your attention, to get you to step through the logic and evidence on a single point, the deal about accidental gun deaths among children.

You proved unable to do that on your own. So, please, let me show how to work a debate point like this.

You accused me thus:
“You have yet to post a single statistic or number. You just ask me to find them on my own. If you want to refute my arguments, refute them with EVIDENCE and I will do the same.”

It does seem unfair, doesn’t it, that I’m imposing a standard on you that I myself seem to be ducking.

I’m hearing your confusion and frustration, which is partially my fault, because I’ve been having way too much fun in this fight, and forgot that my goal here is not to win, but to explain. I apologize for that, truly.

I’m going to explain now why I’ve been holding back on the stats and other details, in order to demonstrate what’s been going on that you may well not be aware of. Think of this as me standing at the blackboard and working through a sample problem for the class, an experience you should be very familiar with. But remember, there will be homework, and if I help you with that, you won’t learn how to do it yourself.

Unfortunately, I’m going to have to say some things that will likely be very uncomfortable for you. I know this because I know how uncomfortable they were for me as I came to grips with them. Please, then, slow down, scan through the whole post, so you can see where I’m going, then go back and read through again, carefully, working the exercises as you come to them.

I’m not asking you to trust me, because you absolutely shouldn’t, but I am asking you to try to see the argument as I did, to follow my thoughts, and to see why I came to the conclusions I did. (This is, by the way, an excellent technique to find flaws in your opponent’s argument.)

I am now going to step through the argument on accidental child death from guns. Steady yourself, this is going to take some time.

You opened with “How about all the kids who die because their parents leave their guns lying around loaded?”

Now, to those of us who have been following the gun rights debate for more than a few years, this pops out as a standard line from the gun control play book. (And if you’re going to play this game on that team, you need to understand that there’s not much you can say that isn’t a standard line with a pretty widely accepted meaning. If you mean something else, you need to be very careful to say exactly what you mean.)

In fact, “kids die because their parents leave their loaded guns lying around” is usually shorthand for, “Gun owners are incredibly irresponsible, often drunken, idiots who leave their loaded, unlocked weapons lying around on the coffee table, and their neglected little kids end up shooting themselves and their playmates. And this happens all the time; it’s a major cause of child death. If we banned just a few more kinds of guns a little harder than we do, it would save the lives of many, many cute little innocent children.”

For instance, here’s a post where I responded to someone else making that claim, someone who did a better job of it than you did. I used WISQARS [explained below] on him, too. This why I say I’ve already done my homework.

Again, it doesn’t matter whether that’s what you meant or not. That’s the way it’s been used for many years now, and that’s the way it will come across in debate. Just so you know, almost everything in the gun-control playbook is loaded in the same way.

In your case, I elected to accept the statement as a fairly innocuous proxy for “accidental gun deaths of young children.” In other words, suspecting your inexperience, I gave you a lot of slack.

I responded: “Yeah, how about them? How many, exactly? Look ‘em up, and get back to us. And please, no outdated lies from the Brady Bunch or Violence Policy Center. Try the FBI, or the CDC, primary sources. Remember that ‘anecdote’ is not the singular of ‘data’. Give us the numbers, please.”

(The “anecdote” comment referred to a link you provided of a typical gun-related Darwin moment. Yeah, they happen, always will, and there’s not a darn thing we can do to stop them all. They’re necessary — please consider the true meaning of the word “Darwinism”)

I’ve learned not to trust the numbers from The Brady Campaign and the Violence Policy Center. That’s a long story, beyond the scope of this post. I’m not asking you to trust me on this, but please just accept, for now, for the sake of the argument, that I insist on numbers from a source that does not couch them in terms of the gun control v. gun rights debate on either side. A neutral source. (“Non-partisan” is meaningless. There are RKBA Democrats, and gungrabbing Republicans. To most of the gun-control groups, the parties are puppets.)

Instead, I strongly recommend the WISQARS tool from the Federal government Centers for Disease Control. CDC is by no means a Second Amendment advocate (it suffers from a close association with doctors, who treat gunshot wounds, and therefore have a bit of a skewed outlook), but as far as I know, the WISQARS data is honestly collected and reported. The tool is a little clumsy to use, but it can be massaged into presenting very enlightening reports at amazing levels of detail, and I strongly encourage you to play around with it for awhile. You will never have to trust anybody else’s numbers again. As I type, the last year for which data is available is 2006.

[One problem with it is that the charts are dynamically generated according to your specific request, so I can't, literally can't, link to specific results. You'll just have to play with it. Sorry about that.]

Your response to my demand for data was, “In 1999, 3,385 kids under 19 died from firearm-related deaths, according to the U of Michigan Health System, which got its facts from the 2002 edition of Injury Facts from the National Safety Council.”

I objected to this, strongly, because first of all, you did not provide links, as requested. And, second, when I searched on Google (what, you think I couldn’t find it from your hints? That I work blind?) I discovered your numbers came from a report with a specific, anti-gun bias — exactly what I wanted to avoid. Two strikes against you, albeit small ones. The implication was that you were running a script, but were probably not aware of it.

Most disturbingly, though, you shifted the terms of the argument, a tactic known as “moving the goal posts”, and you did so in two dimensions.

First, you moved from “accidental death” to “firearm related death”. As I noted at the time, “firearm related” includes anything and everything that results in a child getting shot. This is a much larger set than simple accident.

Second, you went from “kids”, which is meant to conjure up images of cute little grade school kids, toddlers, and infants, to “under 19″. That means, at 18, at least some “kids” who have graduated from high school. “Kids” who are old enough to vote. “Kids” old enough to drive. “Kids” old enough to be parents. Most importantly, “kids” old enough to be in gangs, something that starts in earnest around 14 or 15. Old enough to be in gang fights. Old enough to commit armed robbery. Old enough to commit rape. Old enough to be in juvie, even prison. These “kids” are not playing with guns found in their parents homes, as your “what about…?” implies; these “kids” walk around all the time with guns stuck in their pants, looking to shoot and waiting to get shot on purpose.

Do you understand now why this goal-post shift set off loud alarm bells? When you did that, you didn’t just shoot yourself in the foot; you cut yourself off at the knees. You blew the fight, right there, and if I weren’t such a nice guy, I’d have pitched you out the door on the spot as a lying jerk not worth the trouble of sparring with. I didn’t just flat-out ban you, though, because, again accounting for your evident inexperience, I actually felt sorry for you.

Sit tight, now, and learn. Here’s what the real deal is:

The number of gun deaths due to outright murder, as well as legitimate self defense on the part of intended victims, goes way up at about fifteen, which is why I encourage you to plot, year by year, in an actual graph, gun deaths as a function of age, newborns to twentyone. Do it now, please. I’ll wait.

See what happened when they included the fifteen-to-nineteen year olds?

Pretty sobering, eh?

For those of you playing along at at the office, here’s roughly what you get:

A quick glance at WISQARS shows these firearm-homicide numbers, by age group:

 5- 9    62
10-14   175
15-19 1,940

From the 5-9 group to the 10-14 group, firearm homicides double, which admittedly is pretty grim.

But when we look at the 15-19 group, homicides go up by an order of magnitude, a factor of ten. This one group completely swamps the numbers for the groups comprising what most of us think of as “kids”. Adding that group into the mix, as the study you cited did, tells a filthy, lousy lie with completely valid numbers. Neat trick, huh?

In these ranges, firearm homicide is the top cause of violence-related death. In the 1-4 age range, it’s third, with 42 deaths. However, firearms, apparently, are not the weapon of choice when dealing with the under-1 baby threat; they’re not even in the top ten.

Now look at accidental death.

For ages 5-14, firearms accidents are ranked eighth. In the 15-19 group, it’s still only fifth, at 100 deaths over the course of an entire year.

Now, here’s why I like WISQARS: the chart that I’m looking at shows all top ten causes of accidental death, not just the gun deaths of the report you referenced. Here’s what beats out guns:

For infants under the age of one, “Unintentional suffocation” is top-ranked. I bet this means that most of these babies died in their cribs, strangled by their pillows, blankies, and teddy bears. Eight hundred and forty three of them died this way in 2006. That’s right: 843, just under half the number of gun homicides among teen gang-bangers. You wanna pass a law that takes away the babies’ lovies that help them sleep through the night? You are going to have a lot more than 843 angry, exhausted parents beating on your door at three o’clock on a work day morning.

In the one to fourteen age group, the number one accidental killer is “accidental motor vehicle traffic”, at about 500/year. At 15-19, that category shoots up to just under five thousand a year, as those crazy teens get the car keys.

In any case, cars and traffic are ranked number one. Number two is drowning or poison.Then comes fire/burn or “other land transport”. A lot of kids seem to die of suffocation; I have no idea what that’s about.

Now do you understand why I asked you, in a later post, about what else you would have to ban if you want to save as many children as you (allegedly) would by banning guns?

Go back to WISQARS. Play with the charts. Study the age groups, look at the causes, the rankings, the numbers.

The ugly truth is, guns are simply not an important cause of death in young children, accidental or intentional. Guns only become a problem when kids get old enough to shoot each other with malice aforethought, and even then it’s a fraction of what cars do. What matches and stoves do. What bug spray and weed killer do. What, for crying out loud, water does. You really want to ban water?

Anyway, guns are not the problem.

Now do you see why I wanted you to do the research and run the numbers yourself? If I’d just come out and said, “According to the CDC, gun deaths are a negligible cause of death in children under the age of fifteen”, and spat a couple of numbers at you, would you have believed me? Would it have meant anything to you? (And you wouldn’t have learned how to use WISQARS.)

Now that you’ve spent some time looking at the details yourself, the real numbers, in context, are you beginning to feel as cheated and lied to as I did when I ran across this the first time (in a much cruder fashion), lo these many years ago on Usenet?

I know, I know, the pre-programmed defense lies are kicking in about now, and causing you to feel angry. They’re not there to defend you, venomlash. They’re there to defend the core boss lie, to re-direct your anger from the people who fed you those lies to me and people like me. We haven’t talked about the Core Boss Lie yet, but we’re close. Get up, pee, do some breathing exercises. Clear your head.

I’ll wait.

[While waiting, Good Old Uncle Dave reads through the comments again, and stumbles across -- Oh, lordy!]

Back now? OK, venomlash, here’s something else you said:

Give me a statistic and I will find one to refute it with.

Kid, I just gave you the entire United States of America Federal government National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (one of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) official Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System. Not just “a statistic”, but a whole dataset, along with the online front end tool to view it with. This dataset is what the U.S. government bases public policy on; Congress even uses it to design laws, when Congress can be bothered to look at the facts, not the polls. It’s as official and thorough and complete as this sort of thing gets.

What the hell are you gonna put up against that?

You tried to fight me with a half-lie and a grossly unfair tactic, stuff entirely typical of the gun-control movement and its propaganda.

I’ll bet you didn’t come up with this. I bet you read it somewhere.

Somebody fed you this lie. Somebody wound you up, gave you a nice safe can of dollar store pepper spray, and sent you out to do battle for the Glorious Cause of Citizen Disarmament.

Eventually, you ran up against a real opponent with real guns and real ammo.

If this were a real fight, I’d be wiping spray-can taco sauce from my face, and you’d be dying of two sucking chest wounds and massive blood loss.

Don’t hate me, venom. Not yet. Just wait. This next bit will be short, not least because I need to get up for work in less than six hours.

At some point in the original thread, it looks like you began to realize that the numbers really didn’t line up on your side. And you typed, “Personally, it does not matter to me if one kid dies in a firearm accident or one hundred do vis a vis safety-oriented gun regulation. One death is one too many….”

“One death is too many.” Is 843 deaths also too many? How about the six thousand five hundred kids between the ages of 1 to 19 killed by cars? Is that too many? Are you seriously gonna take people’s cars away from them? Really?

Compared to other risks, accidental child death by firearms barely rises above the noise.

Even if you could, in fact, take away the guns — which you can’t, particularly not from the bad guys — it would barely make a dent in accidental child death.

Do you really think you can make people safe by taking away their tools?

Do you really think you can make people safe by taking away their liberty, their freedom, their control over their own safety, their control over their own lives?

Do you really think that tyranny is safer than liberty?

That’s the Core Boss Lie, venomlash, that people cannot be trusted with their own lives.

Gun control isn’t about controlling guns, kid. It’s about controlling you.

That’s why the Second Amendment prohibits infringing the right of the American People to own and carry the only class of tools, other than the printing press, protected by the Constitution.

Together, the First and Second Amendments establish a Fourth Branch of government: We, The People, ourselves. We rule here, venomlash. We rule across every square inch of America. We have the right to speak our minds, the right to argue, even the right to shout at our Congress Creeps at town meetings ["peaceably assemble and petition the government for the redress of grievances", it says here] — and we have the right to back up the babble with deadly force if we can’t our dedicated public servants a.k.a. the State to pay attention any other way. Good help is so hard to find, you know.

Let me turn your comment around, venomlash. Vis a vis the Second Amendment, it doesn’t matter to me if one kid or a thousand die in gun accidents.

Not that I don’t care about the kids themselves; I do, and I hate it that we can’t save each and every one of them. Not because I love me my guns more than I love the lives of all the little children.

It’s because I believe history shows, unequivocally, that the alternative to a thousand accidental child deaths a year is children and their parents dying by the tens and hundreds of thousands, by the millions, at the hands of jack-booted thugs on the orders of tyrants who swear they are honestly, really, truly, only trying to protect us from ourselves and each other.

I may shoot myself in the foot. I may shoot my niece in a range accident. I may go crazy and shoot up the office.

But I will be go to hell and fry in the devil’s skillet before I will meekly get on that train, and take my free ride to the showers, or kneel in front of the ditch and wait for the bulldozer to push me in still breathing.

You’ve been lied to, venom. You’ve been lied to, and used, and wadded up and thrown away, by people who think you are an idiot who will shut up and do as he’s told, because, hey, it’s not like you can fight back or anything, you having voluntarily given up your arms, and the force of will to use them.

Here’s Poor Richard himself, good old Ben Franklin, “The only President of the United States who was never President of the United States”:

They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.

As I said, I’m opening comments, as a gesture of good faith.

But before you start shitting all over my blog again, comment here and let me know that you read this.

Don’t try to argue every point, because, guess what? I really don’t care. Just let me know: Are you still willing to stand by “all the kids who die because their parents leave their guns lying around loaded” debate point? If so, explain exactly what changes in the law will achieve that. (Note that “changes” means you will have to explain what the law is.)

Are you still willing to trade liberty for safety?

Read, study, think. Talk. Ask questions, even here. You’re still young, you may not even be a member of the unorganized militia yet (USC TITLE 10 > Subtitle A > PART I > CHAPTER 13 > § 311, by the way, if you want to check.), you’ve get plenty of time to get things straight now; before you’re an old fart like I was even ten years ago.

Please, please, please: Read the Reference links in my side bar. Look up the Washington D.C. v Heller Supreme Court case, read the decision[PDF], read at least the briefs of the two principals (That would be D.C. and Heller, themselves) if not the all the amicus briefs (there’s more than a hundred of those, and they’re heavy going.)

Check out the laws in your state, and figure out how hard your elected officials have made it for you to exercise one of your fundamental, constitutionally-protected, un-infringe-able liberties.

Go back to the original thread, and read my comments again. Every time I say “do your homework, and report back”, that’s a flag that I could do an analysis like this one on that point, because I myself have already done that homework. You should learn to do that too, now that I’ve showed you how.

Think about the people who set you up for this fight, and ask yourself if you really want to trust them with you life. They don’t trust you with their lives, or even your own.

That’s the big difference between them and me. They think that they are competent to judge you and me, to decide if we’re competent to take care of ourselves. (Answer: almost always “no”.) They’ve tricked you into agreeing with them.

I, on the other hand, assume you are competent to own, carry, and operate even a real, honest-to-Stoner assault rifle.

If you can, get a gun. Get trained. Practice. Become “well regulated”.

If you want to see the sort of thing “well-regulated” could turn into if the control freaks meant what they said about “right to form a militia”, the sort of thing that would be an actual compromise in gun policy, check out my plan for training a real citizens’ militia, here and here.

Choose your ground well. Stand your ground. And equip yourself to do so.

Understand that if you do all the homework I’ve assigned, and still don’t agree with me, you will have become a formidable debating opponent. You might have a career in the law, or even politics. You might even convince me. I’d rather have that, than continue to see you as the wishy-washy weakling you’ve shown yourself to be in this debate.

(The last time somebody made such a poor showing in front of me, it was my toddler niece, crumbs all over her face, trying to convince me that no, she hadn’t stolen any of the forbidden cookies, and besides, she didn’t know they were forbidden. She was a lot cuter than you are, though.)

You are my fellow citizen, and I trust you with my life, if only because I can shoot back if it turns out you are untrustworthy. (And because I frankly think you’re probably a decent guy, when you’re not being a statist mouthpiece.) I hope you can trust me in the same way.

The day may come, soon, before I die of old age, when we might meet in the trenches, in an alley, in some dark dungeon, and please that we would meet as brothers in arms, and not as enemies.

We will certainly not meet as fellow slaves, because I, for one, will be dead first.

Good luck, and God Bless, whatever that may mean.

[Good morning! I left this thing in kind of a mess last night, but I'm back at the keyboard again, briefly, and have made a few edits. There may be more edits later, particularly to the last part with all the fiery, ill-considered rhetoric, if I get the chance. Till then....]

[More edits, nothing substantial. Except for minor typos, I'm probably pretty well done.]

[More edits, mostly adding links. Fixes for clarity and flow. Thanks, venom, for goading me into writing this. I'm tweaking it because I have a feeling I'm going to be referring to it often.]

McDonald v. City of Chicago, 08-1521

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

Washington, D.C. v. Heller determined that the Second Amendment means what it says, that the right to keep and bear arms is a fundamental right. However, it only applied to Federal law.

Now comes McDonald v. City of Chicago, docket number 08-1521, which will determine if state and local governments must also respect that right.

QUESTION PRESENTED:

Whether the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms is incorporated as against the States by the Fourteenth Amendment’s Privileges or Immunities or Due Process Clauses.

Chicagoguncase.comhas all the case filings.

This Volokh Conspiracy post is a goldmine of links to background reading. This is my weekend, folks.

Kurt Hoffman’s St. Louis Gun Rights Examiner column is as good an intro to the case as any.

It should also be kept in mind that a ruling in favor of incorporation will be far from a “knockout blow” for gun rights. Such a ruling would serve only to make the Heller ruling apply everywhere, and it has become rather apparent that Heller will be interpreted as permitting nearly every gun law short of an outright ban.


I need to make one thing clear, going in: I am not looking to the Supreme Court to determine whether or not any given jurisdiction can infringe my right. It’s a right. Plus, I can read the Constitution for myself. I can’t believe the Founders meant for hairsplitting over the general, broad meaning of the text.

The case is important to the degree that it shows just how badly governments have slipped their bonds. It’s the weather cock, not the wind.

Registration Equals Confiscation

Friday, September 25th, 2009

“Nobody wants to take your guns,” say the control freaks. “We just want to make sure that dangerous guns don’t fall into criminal hands. And a good first step is to register guns, so we know who has what, and can make sure that owners are law-abiding, properly trained, and certified.”

Uh Huh. “First step.” Sure. You betcha. Da, Comrade Officer.

They used to be legal firearms, but now they’re either unregistered or outright banned, and they’re wanted by police before there’s a chance burglars put them in Toronto’s underground and underworld markets.

Since March 1, Project Safe City swept 400 unregistered weapons — 150 of them handguns — from homes throughout the city. No charges were filed.

It’s part of a plan to ensure that neglected firearms don’t fall into criminal hands, Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair said yesterday.

Police are reviewing thousands of gun ownership files to determine which weapons have lapsed registrations and which are now banned, he said.

It’s your property. It was on the approved list. You bought it, quite likely for going on a thousand bucks or more. You were just doing your duty as a lawabiding citizen when you filled out the paperwork.

Now the “approved” list has been edited, and your property is no longer on it. Or you forgot to send in the renewal form, and now you are a felon.

And the Control Freaks have your name, your address, and a list of what you are no longer trusted to possess, but which you have childishly, irresponsibly, criminally refused to hand over when ordered.

Because although you’ve never hurt anybody with it, you’re so stupid, so careless, so unprofessional, you might let it slip into the hands of somebody who not only doesn’t care about the laws against illegal gun ownership, but doesn’t care about the laws against robbery, rape, and murder, either.

Understand this: It’s not about the damn guns, and it’s certainly not about the poor innocent victims of society that rob, rape, and kill.

It’s about control, and it’s about you. You must be controlled. Politicians, cops, and other crooks must be protected from you.

You cannot be trusted, and your life is not worth protecting.

The guns are just the excuse.

[Edit: inserted sense-reversing "doesn't"]

Quote of the Day: Me!

Monday, May 25th, 2009

Joe Huffman over at The View From North Central Idaho, quotes a comment I made at The Smallest Minority:

Ah, yes, gun control: the debate where reciting facts and analysis actually counts against you since it proves you are a rabid fanatic.

Reasonable people just know that guns are bad, and gun owners are dangerous lunatics.

And Turk Turon replies there with a more concise version:

Gun control is perhaps the only area of public controversy where actually knowing something about the subject is considered a disqualification.

Looking at his other QotD links, he’s put me in pretty heady company.

Jamaica: Another Island Gun Control Paradise

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Often and often, when the talk turns to the amazing effectiveness of gun control, Great Britain is offered up as a shining example of what can be achieved. It is, after all, an island populated by a people of world-renowned politeness and common decency. Being an island, any thinking person would immediately conclude that guns can be easily excluded, ushering in an unprecedented era of law-abiding peace.

Of course, Britain isn’t the only island in the world. It’s not even the only island with really strict gun control. And let’s face it: it is uncomfortably close to that ancient hell-hole, the European continent, making it more difficult than you might think to keep out those evil guns. Then there’s the dreary weather, which always puts tempers on edge.

But how about Jamaica? It really is out in the middle of nowhere, comparatively speaking. It’s sunny. They have beautiful beaches. They have pretty women in pretty clothes. They have happy music. They have good food. They have the good ganga. They have a charming accent that makes you smile just listening to it.

They have gun control, too:

Since 1974 Jamaica has had in place some of the toughest gun laws in the world. They are simply banned for 99% of the population; officially anyway. The very rich can pay a police chief to authorize issuance of a revolver and a box of rounds. But for the great majority of Jamaicans guns are officially out of reach. The penalty for unauthorized possession of any firearm is an automatic life sentence…no appeal…no parole. You get picked up today, and by next week you’re starting your sentence.

So, naturally, Jamaica is a happy, peaceful place. A place without guns, without violence, without…uh….wait a minute:

The newspapers every morning were awash in stories of pure carnage and gratuitous killing on a scale far surpassing anything one could equate with little Jamaica! I have seen front page photos of headless corpses with the headlines indicating it was friends who argued over politics! I have seen numerous instances of obvious innocents murdered simply because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time. And in Jamaica, that wrong place can be even your home. They LIVE in neighborhoods according to their political party! And it’s very dangerous to live in the wrong neighborhood come election time in Jamaica.

“Imagine a world without guns!” shriek the peaceful ones, the non-violent, the pure, the liberal, the good-intentioned.

Always before, I’ve answered: Don’t have to imagine it, we know what a world without guns looks like. It looks like most of human history, ruled by big strong male testosterone monsters who have nothing better to do than practice with their swords and engage in plunder and rape and mass-murder of entire villages, limited only by other sword-wielding testosterone monsters defending their private reserves. Then came the Kentucky Long Rifle, and Samuel Colt, and the sainted John Moses Browning, and all of a sudden, farmers and philosophers, cute girls and little old ladies, and even grouchy old cripples in wheel chairs could hold their own against the swordsmen.

Now I can add, We have Jamaica.

One horrible tale sticks in my mind over all the others; no mean feat I assure you after all I saw there ultimately. There was an entire family, deemed by the community they resided in, to be in the wrong place. Their zinc wall house, and zinc door, was kicked in by thugs supporting the dominant political party of the area. All sixteen members of the extended family; women, kids, old people…were slaughtered with machine guns…right in their own home. And if that wasn’t enough, the gravediggers who came to bury these poor people, were chased away from the cemetery by the people of the neighborhood who didn’t want the family buried among their folks. Wrong party! And this happened twice as I recall, until the police were dispatched to see that the victims were interred successfully.

Um, but, I thought you said Jamaica had the good control?

Oh, yes. The good gun control. They’ve got it. They’ve got plenty:

…They expedite gun crime cases, cause they have so many. They’ve had to set up a special court that only handles gun crime; called appropriately enough “Gun Court”.

It’s been thiry-five years since these laws were put in place. I recently saw some crime statistics from Kingston and they showed that city’s population of just over 800,000 had about 1,400 murders last year; most of them…by gunfire.

The law can be made no tougher, unless you execute the lawbreaker. Yet it hasn’t worked. Thirty-five years, and it hasn’t worked! The police have guns. The rich and politicians have guns, or armed bodyguards. The Jamaican Army has guns. The criminals have guns. The political thugs have guns.

The ONLY group in Jamaica that has no guns: The law-abiding citizenry!

Hey! Gun controllers!

You! Are! Wrong!

You are killing people. Killing the innocent, the weak, the underdogs. You are killing liberty, killing the rule of law, killing peace itself.

You are wrong, and your leaders are outright evil. They have guns, or at least bodyguards with guns.

It’s only you, and me, and the law abiding they want defenseless.

It’s only Liberty Herself they want to see disarmed.

They are The Swordsmen, come again, ready to ride again…and you are clearing the path for them, spreading the palms on the road, bowing down and accepting your chains.

Shame on you. Shame!

[update]

Let me add something that is rapidly becoming a mantra on the side of liberty:

This Debate Would Be Over
If the Other Side was Rational

[Jamaica article found Sipsey Street Irregulars.]

More On 20/20′s Hatchet Job on Gun Owners

Monday, April 13th, 2009

Say Uncle links to David Rittger’s Cato Institute piece on ABC’s “If I Only Had a Gun” appalling anti-liberty propaganda.

Rittger does a good job summarizing some of the most important objections to the show, but he makes one misstep, which Say Uncle quotes:

Picking people without concealed carry permits to represent the armed citizen and rigging the scenario to ensure that they don’t defeat your narrative is propaganda, not journalism.

…And which I respond to, at length, in comments:

I don’t think “Picking people without concealed carry permits to represent the armed citizen” is a problem; after all, most armed citizens do not have concealed carry permits.

Rigging the scenario is a problem. Portraying spree shootings as a typical gun-crime is a problem. Choosing a highly trained, very disciplined police officer to portray the shooter is a problem.

Failing to mention that nowhere near all cops are that well trained is a problem. Failing to mention David Codrea’s “Only Ones” effect is a problem. Failing to mention that spree-shootings overwhelmingly take place in posted “gun-free zones” is a problem.

But setting concealed carry permit holders as typical gun owners is opening the door to calls for abusive registration and licensing requirements that reduce our rights rather than regulate them.

The fact is, most crimes stopped by law-abiding gun owners are one-on-crimes like rapes and robberies. Moreover, while my anecdotal impression is that many of those involve defenders with good credentials, many do not, including accounts like little old ladies shooting through-the-window intruders with their deceased husband’s all but forgotten nightstand gun. Then there’s the many, many crimes deterred by merely displaying a firearm.

Training is good. I like training. I think Congress should use its Constitutional mandate to establish a militia to fund and equip high school militia courses equivalent to drivers’ ed courses, and I have no objection to the kind of loose licensing drivers’ ed results in — the effort is to license everyone, not to limit licenses to a select few.

But the RKBA should not be dependent on any level of training, at all. A militia license should confer additional privileges above and beyond the simple right to keep and bear (along with additional responsibilities, such as being on the phone tree). Concealed carry would be a good example of such a privilege.

Nevertheless, if your only training is that you should point the barrel away from you before pulling the trigger, that’s enough to exercise the right, and my belief is that the more citizens we have who exercise that right, regardless of training, the safer we all will be.

I am immensely pleased to see the overwhelming response to “If I only….” This is typical of the gun control debate these days: The controllers trot out the same thread-bare excuses and lies, and the gunnies reply with an ever-increasing array of facts and arguments. The gun control camp is in decline, and simply has nothing new to say, while the liberty camp is vital and growing.

Island Off the Coast of France: The British Gun Control Paradise

Sunday, April 12th, 2009

Speaking of guns, you should head over to The Smallest Minority and read Kevin Baker’s long, fact-filled piece taking apart, no, completely annihilating the oft-repeated assertion that Britain is safer because they’ve got real gun control.

No. Just…No.

Britain is an island. They have some of the strictest national gun control laws in the West.

Britain is being flooded with guns, of all descriptions, all in the hands of the criminals.

You think gun control reduces violence? You think if there are no guns, the worst we have to worry about are a few cuts and bruises? You think we should all just get along? You’re in favor of gun-control? Here’s what you’re in favor of, sweetheart:
annie_kendrick

You are on the side of violence, crime, and tyranny. You are wrong.