Posted on 08/09/2006 6:37:46 PM PDT by neverdem
United States justice statistics show Americans need firearms for defense of life and property, says gun law expert
An analysis of crime figures released Sunday by the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics indicates that law-abiding Americans should continue to enjoy legal access to the possession and use of firearms, gun law expert John M. Snyder said here this morning.
If anything, this access should be strengthened for the good of citizens and the safety of society, he added.
According to the justice report, 56 percent of the violent felons convicted in the nations 75 most populous counties from 1990 through 2002 had a prior conviction record, 38 percent had a prior felony conviction and 15 percent had been previously convicted for a violent felony.
Thirty-six percent of the violent felons had a least one active criminal status at the time of their arrest, including 18 percent on probation, 12 percent on release pending disposition of a prior case and seven percent on parole.
What these numbers show, for the umpteenth time, observed Snyder, is that there is a violent criminal class in our country. Law-abiding people have to be able to protect themselves and their families and their property from these thugs. In order to be able to do this, they need access to the tools with which to do it. There is no better self-defense instrument than a gun, in particular a handgun.
People who seek to deny citizens this access, no matter how well-intended they may be, and whether they come from political, academic, professional, business, media or ecclesiastical backgrounds, in reality work against the true interests of law-abiding citizens and in favor of the nefarious interests of the criminal class. To be blunt, they are allies of the violent criminal class. At some point, theyre bound to get whats coming to them.
Snyder pointed out that, at present, there are a number of proposals in Congress and in state legislatures to loosen current legal restrictions on the individual Second Amendment civil right of law-abiding American citizens to keep and bear arms for lawful purposes. One of the most significant of these is a congressional proposal to free law-abiding residents of our Nations Capital from the draconian gun control system to which they have been subjected for 30 years. Its time to overturn the D.C. gun law and allow law-abiding citizens in Washington, D.C. to own and carry handguns to protect themselves and their loved ones from the reign of violent crime that hand-wringing local officials seem incapable of effectively confronting.
There are a number of other proposals on deck at various stages for congressional consideration, including more than one to prohibit the use of federal funds for confiscation of guns from law-abiding citizens during times of public disaster. Congress should act favorably on them.
Guns save lives, Snyder said, and a number of scholarly studies, such as one conducted by Gary Kleck of Florida State University, and another conducted by John Lott of the American Enterprise Institute, clearly demonstrate this. Easing legal access to firearms for law-abiding private citizens correlates with precipitous decreases in rates of violent crime. Its time public policy reflected this truth.
A former Associate Editor of The American Rifleman, official monthly journal of the National Rifle Association, Snyder is Public Affairs Director of the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms, Public Information Officer of the American Federation of Police and Concerned Citizens, Treasurer of the Second Amendment Foundation, and Chairman of the St. Gabriel Possenti Society, Inc.
Guns are good....mmmmkay.
He makes it sound like someone can take that away from me.
Pls relay this to Santa if the opportunity arises.
What about the law abiding mentally ill ? or UNCONVICTED domestic violence suspects? When people say keep guns away from Felons they really mean thats just the start.
Guns in the hands of a private citizen, non felon are a good thing. Remember that a RIGHT (ie 2nd Amendment) is not something that can be taken away unless "you" let them take it away.
Meadow Muffin
"Guns are good....mmmmkay."
Guns in the hands of the law-abiding are GOOD.
Guns in the hands of criminals, most of whom are repeat offenders, are BAD.
Not too complicated I hope...
Add "mentally ill and domestically violent" to "criminals." One caveat re: domestic violence: Spouses in bad divorces (i.e., most of them) often lodge false claims of domestic violence without proof strictly for strategic advantage in the divorce. Those should NOT count (but they do in many states).
Thanks for clearing that up.
I'll go first.
We want them, we are entitled to have them, no further discussion is necessary.
One forfeits his/her rights when one commits a felony. De facto outlaws, they should be considered outside the protections and privileges conceded to Citizens by the U.S. Constitution--which does not guarantee continued 'life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness' to spies and traitors, nor guarantee continued funding to courts not displaying good behavior.
The ACLU has quite another opinion, of course--one by which John Kerry and others prosper.
Ping!
I'm quite willing to bet you don't live in D.C.
Fixed.
But only in so far as the court and jury which convicts them sets the punishement. They can't take away freedom of speech, except temporarily, and even then only on the basis of time, place and manner, not content. They can't take away your right to petition for redress. They can't take away most rights, except temporarily and as necessary to keep you confined and under control. Laws should not be able to take anyone's rights away by fiat. They can be taken away only as individually adjudicated.
Except for your right to keep and bear arms and your right to vote. You can petition for your right to vote to reinstated, and that will in general be granted, if you've served your time, including your probation time. By federal law, you can not petition to have your RKBA restored. Or more properly the agency (BATFE) charged with hearing that petition is forbidden to spend any funds to act on such petitions. And the courts say that they can only be appealed to if your petition is turned down, but not if it's merely not acted on. Think they'd rule that way with respect to any other right?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.