The Right Opinion
Guns Save Lives
You know what the mainstream media think about guns and our freedom to carry them.
Pierre Thomas of ABC: "When someone gets angry or when they snap, they are going to be able to have access to weapons."
Chris Matthews of MSNBC: "I wonder if in a free society violence is always going to be a part of it if guns are available."
Keith Olbermann, who usually can't be topped for absurdity: "Organizations like the NRA ... are trying to increase deaths by gun in this country."
"Trying to?" Well, I admit that I bought that nonsense for years. Living in Manhattan, working at ABC, everyone agreed that guns are evil. And that the NRA is evil. (Now that the NRA has agreed to a sleazy deal with congressional Democrats on political speech censorship, maybe some of its leaders are evil, but that's for another column.)
Now I know that I was totally wrong about guns. Now I know that more guns means -- hold onto your seat -- less crime.
How can that be, when guns kill almost 30,000 Americans a year? Because while we hear about the murders and accidents, we don't often hear about the crimes stopped because would-be victims showed a gun and scared criminals away. Those thwarted crimes and lives saved usually aren't reported to police (sometimes for fear the gun will be confiscated), and when they are reported, the media tend to ignore them. No bang, no news.
This state of affairs produces a distorted public impression of guns. If you only hear about the crimes and accidents, and never about lives saved, you might think gun ownership is folly.
But, hey, if guns save lives, it logically follows that gun laws cost lives.
Suzanna Hupp and her parents were having lunch at Luby's cafeteria in Killeen, Texas, when a man began shooting diners with his handgun, even stopping to reload. Suzanna's parents were two of the 23 people killed. (Twenty more were wounded.)
Suzanna owned a handgun, but because Texas law at the time did not permit her to carry it with her, she left it in her car. She's confident that she could have stopped the shooting spree if she had her gun. (Texas has since changed its law.)
Today, 40 states issue permits to competent, law-abiding adults to carry concealed handguns (Vermont and Alaska have the most libertarian approach: no permit needed. Arizona is about to join that exclusive club.) Every time a carry law was debated, anti-gun activists predicted outbreaks of gun violence after fender-benders, card games and domestic quarrels.
What happened?
John Lott, in "More Guns, Less Crime," explains that crime fell by 10 percent in the year after the laws were passed. A reason for the drop in crime may have been that criminals suddenly worried that their next victim might be armed. Indeed, criminals in states with high civilian gun ownership were the most worried about encountering armed victims.
In Canada and Britain, both with tough gun-control laws, almost half of all burglaries occur when residents are home. But in the United States, where many households contain guns, only 13 percent of burglaries happen when someones at home.
Two years ago, the Supreme Court ruled in the Heller case that Washington, D.C.'s ban on handgun ownership was unconstitutional. District politicians then loosened the law but still have so many restrictions that there are no gun shops in the city and just 800 people have received permits. Nevertheless, contrary to the mayor's prediction, robbery and other violent crime are down.
Because Heller applied only to Washington, that case was not the big one. McDonald v. Chicago is the big one, and the Supreme Court is expected to rule on that next week. Otis McDonald is a 76-year-old man who lives in a dangerous neighborhood on Chicago's South Side. He wants to buy a handgun, but Chicago forbids it.
If the Supremes say McDonald has that right, then restrictive gun laws will fall throughout America.
Despite my earlier bias, I now understand that striking down those laws will probably save lives.
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29 Comments
JJStryder
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 12:38 AM
"When Guns are Outlawed only Outlaws will have Guns!". A bumper sticker I saw first in the 1960's with an axiom that is timeless. Welcome to the party John!
agapitto gordian
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 9:35 AM
That is so right,when guns are outlawed in chicago only gang bangers will have Guns!! so rigth, (jjstryder.
John
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 10:01 AM
My gun kept me from getting a gang beating last year. I never even took it out of the holster. Just lifted my shirt, put my hand on the grip and said "Don't!". The punk with the softball sized rock that was coming after me wisely decided bringing a rock to a gun fight was a bad idea.Fortunately, when I made the decision to carry a gun I committed to carrying everyday and everywhere. This incident reaffirmed this decision. A gun at home in the safe is useless.I'm not paranoid, angry, macho, compensating for something or any of the other silly things people say about those who choose to carry a gun for protection. I am however, cautious and very observant of my surroundings at all times. Thugs love people that are too preoccupied to see them coming.As is with most people who carry a gun, I avoid conflict and argument as much as I can. Its easier to just walk away if I can. But don't mistake this for my ability and willingness to defend myself and family. After all, it's why I carry a gun.John
kevin
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 10:36 AM
The sheer lack of common sense is what makes liberals so dangerous. And liberals are doing a 'Darwin' - criminals will naturally migrate to those whom are unarmed - liberals - thus slowly removing them from the gene pool.
Will
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 10:44 AM
I always liked John
John A
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 10:45 AM
The Republic of Rome banned the carrying of knives and swords in the City of Rome. Which saved one citizen, Senator Julius Caesar, right?
Rich
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 10:46 AM
Etimates by the the Clinton Admistration are 1.5 million self defense uses by firearms in the USA every year. In the last 2 years Americans have gone on an unprecidented gun buying spree. Guess what violent crime is down in the USA. Whereas where you have England, an island where guns are for all praticality banned, the violent crime rate is upwards of 4 times of the USA.
Walt
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 10:51 AM
John: Please get your facts straight before you make accusations. The NRA did NOT make ANY deal with Congress. They are OPPOSED to H.R.5175. Because they were exempted from the bill, it will likely fail. It will fail because the people that wanted this bill were aiming it at the NRA and now that the NRA is exempted the bill has lost its backing.
Pete D
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 11:54 AM
in DC "just 800 people have received permits"And it's a pretty good bet that all of them are in one way or another connected to Capitol Hill - you know, what's good for me is bad for you!
Zak
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 12:12 PM
I am a 68 year old male. You wonder why I carry a pistol? It's because a rifle will not fit under my jacket.
Joe
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 12:39 PM
John,The following excerpt from the Fifty Caliber Institute newsletter states the NRA position more clearly than I can and, indeed, more clearly than the NRA itself has.To those who are claiming H.R. 5175 as an "NRA sell out": Simply put, there was no sell out. And to suggest that there was a "sell out" is to either deny the facts or not be aware of the facts.On the contrary, NRA does not and will not actively support H.R. 5175, in any form. Chris Cox and his staff have but one loyalty and that is to protect and defend the rights of law-abiding Americans to keep and bear arms, and to position NRA so as to be an effective advocate for firearms freedom in America. Neither they nor NRA are allowed to be partisans or to tie NRA’s ability to successfully execute its mission to any other group, organization or cause. NRA is and remains a single issue organization - its Bylaws require absolute fealty to that principle.Before you criticize NRA for understanding that this isn’t your grandpa’s checker game or even your college dean’s chess game, you need to thank them for treating this as an extremely complex exercise more akin to Mister Spock’s three dimensional chess. A chess game demanding a very sophisticated and highly intellectual approach to the very serious problem at hand. We ask you to examine the facts and watch what happens in Congress over the next several weeks and months. Don’t be fooled or misled. Wait until all of the facts are in; watch how NRA’s "Mister Spock" (Chris Cox) moves the various pieces on the political game board we call Congress; and understand that if NRA wins, all gun owners and all those who believe in the entire Bill of Rights - including the First Amendment, will ultimately win.The stakes are high - nothing less than the ultimate survival of American freedom is at stake.
Kalashnikat
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 12:46 PM
I carry a pistol because a Cop is too bulky and heavy...
Denny
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 1:11 PM
Joe;NRA has never said that that the support H.R.5175, but they have committed "NOT" to fight it if they are allowed exemption from its provisions. NRA has just become another political entity in bed with the other politicians.
Joe
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 1:43 PM
Denny,Please read what is written. NRA bylaws DO NOT ALLOW the NRA to fight against H.R.5175 if they are exempted. However, that very exemption has cost support for the bill from the most rabid NRA haters. Remember, the avowed purpose of the first bill (McCain-Feingold) was "to silence the NRA".
Da Dog
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 1:50 PM
I'll be 60 this year. I carry a gun at all times when away from home. Why? It's becuase I'm too old to fight and too slow to run.