Gun control: What is the agenda?
By Paul Craig Roberts
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Jun 29, 2009, 00:16
Some years
or decades ago, I researched and reported on the Sullivan Act, one of America’s
first gun control laws.
New York State
Senator Timothy Sullivan, a corrupt Tammany Hall politician, controlled
New York’s Lower East Side. Commercial travelers passing through the district
would be relieved of their valuables by armed robbers. In order to protect
themselves and their property, travelers armed themselves. This raised the risk
of, and reduced the profit from, robbery. Sullivan’s outlaw constituents
demanded that Sullivan introduce a law that would prohibit concealed carry of
pistols, blackjacks, and daggers, thus reducing the risk to robbers from armed
victims.
The
criminals, of course, were already breaking the law and had no intention of
being deterred by the Sullivan Act from their business activity of armed
robbery. Thus, the effect of the Sullivan Act was precisely what the criminals
intended. It made their life of crime easier.
As the
first successful gun control advocates were criminals, I have often wondered
what agenda lies behind the well-organized and propagandistic gun control
organizations and their donors and sponsors in the US today. The propaganda
issued by these organizations consists of transparent lies.
Consider
the propagandistic term, “gun
violence,” popularized by gun control advocates. This is a form of
reification by which inanimate objects are imbued with the ability to act and
to commit violence. Guns, of course, cannot be violent in themselves. Violence
comes from people who use guns and a variety of other weapons, including fists,
to commit violence.
Nevertheless,
we hear incessantly the Orwellian Newspeak term, “gun violence.”
Very few
children are killed by firearm accidents compared to other causes of child
deaths. Yet, gun control advocates have created the false impression that there
is a national epidemic in accidental firearm deaths of children. In fact, the
National MCH Center for Child Death Review, an organization that monitors
causes of child deaths, reports that seven times more children die from
drowning and five times more from suffocation than from firearm accidents. Yet
we don’t hear of “drowning violence,”
“swimming pool violence,” “bathtub violence,” or “suffocation violence.”
The
National MCH Center for Child Death Review reports that 174 children 18 years
old and under died from firearm accidents in 2000. The National Center for
Injury Prevention and Control reports that 125 children 18 years old and under died
from firearm accidents in 2006. In 2006, there were 77,845,285 youths in that
age bracket.
In 2006,
violence-related firearm deaths of 18 year olds and under totaled 2,191. A
large percentage of these deaths appear to be teenagers fighting over drug
turf.
According
to the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, drugs are “one
of the main factors leading to the total number of all homicides. . . . murders
related to narcotics still rank as the fourth most documented murder
circumstance out of 24 possible categories.”
According
to the National Drug Control Policy, trafficking in illicit drugs is associated
with the commission of violent crimes for the following reasons: “competition for drug markets and customers,
disputes and rip-offs among individuals involved in the illegal drug market,
[and] the tendency toward violence of individuals who participate in drug
trafficking.” Another dimension of drug-related crime is “committing an offense to obtain money (or
goods to sell to get money) to support drug use.”
Obviously,
decriminalizing drugs would be the greatest single factor in reducing
incarceration rates, the crime rate, and the homicide rate. Yet, gun control
advocates do not support this obvious solution to “gun violence.”
Those who
want to outlaw guns have not explained why it would be any more effective than
outlawing drugs, alcohol, robbery, rape, and murder. All the crimes for which
guns are used are already illegal, and they keep on occurring, just as they did
before guns existed.
So what is
the real agenda? Why do gun control advocates want to override the Second
Amendment? Why do they not acknowledge that if the Second Amendment can be
over-ridden, so can every other protection of civil liberty?
There are
careful studies that conclude that armed citizens prevent one to two million
crimes every year. Other studies show that in-home robberies, rapes, and
assaults occur more frequently in jurisdictions that suffer from gun control
ordinances. Other studies show that most states with right-to-carry laws have
experienced a drop in crimes against persons.
Why do gun
control advocates want to increase the crime rate in the US?
Why is the
gun control agenda a propagandistic one draped in lies?
The NRA is
the largest and best known organization among the defenders of the Second
Amendment. Yet, a case might be made that manufacturers’ gun advertisements in
the NRA’s magazines stoke the hysteria of gun control advocates.
Full page
ads offering civilian versions of weapons used by “America’s elite warriors” in US Special Operations Command, SWAT,
and by covert agents “who work
in a dark world most of us can’t even understand,” are likely to scare the pants off
people who are afraid of guns.
Many of the
modern weapons are ugly as sin. Their appearance is threatening, unlike the
beautiful lines of a Winchester lever action or single shot rifle, or a Colt
single action revolver, or the WW II 45 caliber semi-automatic pistol, guns
that do not have menacing appearances. Everyone knows that they are guns, but
they are also works of art.
A little
advertising discretion might go a long way in quieting fears that are
manipulated by gun control advocates.
The same
goes for hunters. Recent news reports of “hunters” slaughtering wolves from airplanes in Alaska and of a
hunter, indeed, a poacher, who shot a protected rare wolf in the US Southwest
and left the dead animal in the road, enrage people who have empathy with
animals and wildlife. Many Americans have had such bad experiences with their
fellow citizens that they regard their dogs and cats, and wildlife, as more
intelligent and noble life forms than humans. Wild animals can be dangerous,
but they are not evil.
Americans
with empathy for animals are horrified by the television program that depicts
hunters killing beautiful animals and the joy hunters experience in “harvesting” their prey. Many believe
that a person who enjoys killing a deer because he has a marvelous rack of
antlers might enjoy killing a person.
This is not
a screed against hunters. There are many families with the tradition of
bringing in the venison once or twice a year. With the near extermination by
man of deer predators, deer are so abundant in many localities as to have
become a nuisance and a danger to motorists. Nevertheless, the defense of gun
rights has little to gain from TV programs depicting the fun of killing Bambi’s
mother.
In the US,
shooting is a hand-eye coordination sport. It is likely that 99 percent of all
ammunition is fired at paper targets, metal silhouettes, or clay and plastic
discs. It is a sport for amateur physicists who are interested in ballistics
and who experiment with different combinations of powder and bullet seeking the
most accurate for their rifle or pistol. Few of these shooters hunt as their
interest in shooting is unrelated to killing.
Shooting is
a sport that offers comradeship and competition in which even old people can
participate, people who do not or cannot play golf or tennis or bowl. There is
a vast variety of events from black powder muskets to antique military and
frontier weapons to distance shooting.
Sports
shooters punching holes in paper targets comprise the vast majority of active
gun owners. They are a threat to no one. Accidents are extremely rare at gun
clubs. A large network of small businesses provide the parts and supplies
necessary for shooting. There is no reason to strip gun owners of their hobby
and possessions and family businesses of their livelihood, as has been done in
Great Britain and as the gun control lobby intends to do in the US.
The NRA is
correct to insist that “when guns are
outlawed, only outlaws will have guns.” We have known this since the
Sullivan Act.
Paul
Craig Roberts [email
him] was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during President
Reagan’s first term. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal. He has
held numerous academic appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair,
Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University,
and Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was
awarded the Legion of Honor by French President Francois Mitterrand. He is the
author of Supply-Side
Revolution : An Insider’s Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown:
Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the co-author with Lawrence M.
Stratton of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the
Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for
Peter Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent
epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.
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