Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

HR 2640: Sensible Solution or Trojan Horse?
SHOTGUN NEWS ^ | August 14, 2007 | Clayton E. Cramer

Posted on 08/14/2007 12:10:54 PM PDT by neverdem

Powered by  

 
  | |  

 


Clayton E. Cramer's
Column



HR 2640: Sensible Solution or Trojan Horse?

My last two columns addressed the problem of psychosis, violence and gun control. This column is about HR 2640, a mental illness and gun control bill currently before Congress that has split the gun rights community more than I can ever recall seeing.

What does HR 2640 purport to do? (Remember that I am talking about the HR 2640 as of the day that I wrote this column, July 21. Bills change as they work their way thorough Congress.) At least 28 states either intentionally, because of a shortage of money, or by bureaucratic incompetence, fail to turn over mental illness commitment information to the FBI's National Instant Criminal Background Check system.1

HR 2640 tries to improve the level of compliance by a combination of carrot and stick. The states that are failing to turn over the information can get additional money to upgrade their computer systems and hire more staff to solve this problem. States that still won't turn over the information will have their federal funding under the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 reduced.2

One very poorly thought out provision of the Gun Control Act of 1968 specified that if a person was found to be mentally incompetent, he lost the right to own a forever.3 What about people who have a mental illness episode in their teens or 20s, and never have another problem? Even 20 years later-no matter how many judges or doctors have declared you competent and safe to own a gun-you still can't legally own one under federal law. At the insistence of the NRA, HR 2640 adds a new provision to federal law that allows the federal government or states to relieve you from this disability.4

Now, a lot of gun rights organizations whose commitment to the cause I do not question have broken with NRA on HR 2640. Gun Owners of America and Jews for the Preservation of Firearms Ownership are notable examples of groups that are very concerned that HR 2640 is going to open a Pandora's Box of new gun restrictions, and they have managed to get this concern expressed to a large part of the gun rights community.

Partly, I think this is because NRA has worked with Rep. Carolyn McCarthy (D-N.Y.), one of our archenemies, to get this bill through the House. There is a grave suspicion that anything that McCarthy supports must be intended to harm gun owners.

I have spent a lot of time reading their concerns, and those of my many readers, trying to see if they are correct about the dangers of HR 2640. As much as I respect these organizations and their zeal, I'm just not finding anything in the bill that gives me reason to oppose it.

One of the concerns that lawyer Alan Korwin, author of Gun Laws of America expressed in a widely distributed email was that the language of the bill refers to "adjudications, determinations and commitments," and that it wasn't clear what "determinations" means. Korwin was concerned that any doctor could decide, quite arbitrarily, that you couldn't be trusted with a gun.

But federal regulations define this: "Adjudicated as a mental defective. (a) A determination by a court, board, commission, or other lawful authority that a person, as a result of marked subnormal intelligence, or mental illness, incompetency, condition, or disease:

(1) Is a danger to himself or to others; or (2) Lacks the mental capacity to contract or manage his own affairs. (b) The term shall include- (1) A finding of insanity by a court in a criminal case; and (2) Those persons found incompetent to stand trial or found not guilty by reason of lack of mental responsibility pursuant to articles 50a and 72b of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. 850a, 876b."5

This is a pretty high standard. The due process requirements for this are pretty darn high, at least partly because the ACLU in the late 1960s and 1970s made a very serious effort to end involuntary mental illness commitment.

They did not achieve their entire goal, but the courts put up many substantial barriers. Contrary to the claims that some have made, a doctor can't get you adjudicated insane, and the fact that you were given Ritalin as a kid won't qualify as "adjudicated as a mental defective."

Korwin was concerned that the language of HR 2640 refers to commitment, but not "involuntary commitment." It turns out that the legal language is a bit confusing on this. A person who enters a mental hospital and asks for help isn't, contrary to what you might logically think, "voluntarily committed." This is either "informal admission" or "conditional voluntary admission." A "voluntary commitment" means that you have voluntarily given over to the hospital substantial authority to decide when you are well enough to leave-and this is not all that common.6

Another concern was that Congress might not fund the appeal process for those who were involuntarily committed or adjudicated mentally incompetent. This is certainly a legitimate concern. There is a very similar appeal process by which those who have been convicted of felonies can request federal relief from this disability-and Congress has refused to provide any funds for this process since 1992. Two points, however.

1. If you were declared incompetent by a state agency or court, HR 2640 allows you to request relief from the body that declared you incompetent. For states to receive any funding for improving their records under this act, they are required to offer such a disability relief appeal process. They are not required to do so now.

2. Under the current law, once you have been "adjudicated mentally defective," there is no appeal process under federal law. Yes, if Congress refuses to fund a federal disability appeals process, you will not be able to get your firearms rights back. But that's no worse than today-where there is no appeals process at all.

HR 2640 does not change the requirements for determining who can a gun. If you were adjudicated mentally incompetent in say, 1980, but your state did not pass the information to the National Instant Criminal Background Check system, you might still be able to pass a firearms background check-but if you are in possession of a gun, you have committed a federal felony. If for any reason the authorities discover that you have a gun, you are in serious trouble.

HR 2640 does not change this-but at least it reduces the risk that a person might unintentionally or unknowingly break the law by buying a gun from a dealer.

Alan Korwin also expressed concern that: "The mental health community is entrusted with the ability to restore a person's rights by declaring them fit (I'm paraphrasing a lot of legalese here). Doctors are by-and-large among the most anti-gun-rights groups in society (check the med journals, AMA, CDC, etc., but I know you know that)." I've looked through the bill and the current laws and regulations, and I just can't find anything that fits this. The decision as to whether someone is fit is not made by a doctor.

Indeed, one of the defining characteristics of the last 40 years has been the increasing unwillingness of the courts to trust that psychiatrists know anything at all. The ACLU has taken the position (and the courts have to a large extent bought it) that psychiatric opinion is like flipping a coin in its accuracy, and not taken very seriously.

Korwin is concerned that HR 2640 would allow illegal aliens to legally own guns if the amnesty bill that was under consideration in early July had passed. "In other words, if the Amnesty Bill removes the illegal status from the people here illegally, they cannot be put in the NICS denial list!" Very true. But if the amnesty bill had passed, and HR 2640 did not-illegal aliens would doubtless have been allowed to own guns, anyway. That's a problem of the amnesty bill-not HR 2640.

Gun Owners of America put out an alert on July 10 that warned about a Horatio Miller in Pennsylvania who "said that it could be worse than Virginia Tech" if someone broke into his car, because there were guns there." Miller was arrested, but not charged.

Nonetheless, the district attorney instructed the sheriff to revoke Miller's concealed carry permit, and according to GOA's press release, the district attorney "asked police to commit him under Section 302 of the mental health procedures act and that was done. He is now ineligible to possess firearms [for life] because he was committed involuntarily."7

The district attorney might want to consult a lawyer (or someone who knows how to read). Section 302 of the Pennsylvania Mental Health Procedures Act is not an involuntary commitment under federal law at all. The title is "Involuntary emergency examination and treatment authorized by a physician." It is limited to 120 hours, and does not involve the due process requirements necessary for adjudication under federal law.8

I suppose that I should point out that Miller's problems may be a bit larger than a thoughtless remark. I wouldn't bet the farm on this guy being right, but one gun rights activist in the area where Miller was arrested has been following the case, and reports that local newspaper coverage indicates that the police have been called to Miller's apartment building 22 times in the previous year.9 Maybe the district attorney completely overreacted. But maybe there's some history of inappropriate behavior. Without more data, I would not make too many assumptions.

I appreciate the concerns that gun rights groups have about HR 2640. Anytime that Carolyn McCarthy wants a bill passed, we should definitely read it carefully, and consider if there might be something nasty hiding in the woodwork. But so far, all of the objections that I have seen raised to HR 2640-at least as it is written today-seem to be erroneous. Clayton E. Cramer is a software engineer and historian. His sixth book, Armed America: The Remarkable Story of How and Why Guns Became as American as Apple Pie (Nelson Current, 2007), is available in bookstores. His web site is http://www.claytoncramer.com.

1Tom Breen, Associated Press, "Gun database omits many mental health†records," Lawrence [Kansas] Journal-World and News, April 26, 2007, http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2007/apr/26/gun_database_omits_many_mental_health_records/, last accessed May 20, 2007.

2 H.R. 2640 (Referred to Senate Committee after being Received from House), ßß 103-104, as of July 21, 2007.

3 18 USC 922(g)(4) (2007).

4 H.R. 2640, ß105, July 21, 2007.

5 27 CFR 478.11 (2007).

6 Alexander D. Brooks, Law, Psychiatry and the Mental Health System (Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1974), 736-9.

7 "Pennsylvania Case Reveals How McCarthy Bill Could Threaten All Gun Owners -- Troubling questions in HR 2640 still go unanswered," Gun Owners of America, July 10, 2007, http://www.gunowners.org/a071007.htm, last accessed July 21, 2007.

8 Penn. Stats. Ann., Title 50, ß 7302 (1997), available at http://www.psychlaws.org/LegalResources/StateLaws/Pennsylvaniastatute.htm, last accessed July 21, 2007.

9 http://www.thehighroad.org/showthread.php?p=3535430, last accessed July 21, 2007.

 

 

 

Find this article at:
http://www.shotgunnews.com/cramer

 

  | |  

 Check the box to include the list of links referenced in the article.

 

 

Copyright © Primedia Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved.



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: banglist; hr2640
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-8081-99 next last
To: claytoncramer
Fed and State legislators have a power to reasonably regulate, -- not to infringe upon [or to prohibit] our rights.

So there's no authority to disarm convicted murderers? On what basis do they disarm people who are in jail or prison?

While in jail, they are disarmed. Once freed, they should have the right to be armed in self defense, and to defend our free republic -- as per the 2nd.

All levels of gov't have a very questionable authority to adjudicate who is mentally defective, -- particularly when the objective is to disarm 'the people' protected by the 2nd.

Sorry, but even at the time of the Revolution, governments had the authority to determine that a person was mentally ill and lock them up if dangerous.

Exactly my point. Lock them up if dangerous, -- and once freed, they should have the right to be armed in self defense, and/or to defend our free republic -- just as the the 2nd specifies.

And the primary objective of determining that someone is mentally ill is not to disarm them.

Dream on that this has not become a primary goal of the Brady bunch crowd. To them 'crazy people' want guns, -- and crazy people can be denied that right.. -- Catch 22.

I will agree that when the Framers wrote the Second Amendment, these issues tended not to come up. Partly this was because psychosis was much rarer in early America than it is today. Psychosis rates, for example, increased about 9x from 1880-1980.

Good grief; - I'd sure like to see the proof of that remarkable bit of info.

E. Fuller Torrey and Judy Miller, The Invisible Plague: The Rise of Mental Illness from 1750 to the Present (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 2001).

The authors opinion is proof of a 'plague' and justifies gun controls? - Get real.

Are you actually claiming that small towns in America used a power [majority rule?] to disarm mental defectives? Again, I'd sure like to see the proof of that remarkable bit of info. Got any?

Actually, what I was claiming was that people that were clearly a bit dangerous had a hard time buying a gun. If you lived in a town of 250 people, and Old Joe was widely recognized as paranoid schizophrenia--blathering on about voices telling him to do things--would you sell him a gun? Would anyone in town do so?

Given the prevelence of guns, old joe probably had one long before he became paranoid. Do you claim a community power to disarm him?

Partly this is because the procedures in effect for hospitalization of the mentally ill were much more informal in those days than they are now.

Yep, and they should stay that way, imho.

Then how do you deal with the problem of psychotics with weapons? Wait until they go on a rampage and kill someone?

Under our constitutional system [as written] we have to wait for a person to exhibit criminal behavior before we jail them and deprive them of their rights.

Liberals and socialists have been arguing against our Constitutional rights for years. -- They want the power to adjudicate criminality, -- to prohibit behavior [and dangerous objects] before they become a 'problem for society'.
You've bought into this mindset, imo, and history proves it doesn't work.

61 posted on 08/15/2007 9:51:26 AM PDT by tpaine (" My most important function on the Supreme Court is to tell the majority to take a walk." -Scalia)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 59 | View Replies]

To: tpaine
So there's no authority to disarm convicted murderers? On what basis do they disarm people who are in jail or prison?

While in jail, they are disarmed. Once freed, they should have the right to be armed in self defense, and to defend our free republic -- as per the 2nd.

Why is it okay to disarm them in jail?

All levels of gov't have a very questionable authority to adjudicate who is mentally defective, -- particularly when the objective is to disarm 'the people' protected by the 2nd.

Sorry, but even at the time of the Revolution, governments had the authority to determine that a person was mentally ill and lock them up if dangerous.

Exactly my point. Lock them up if dangerous, -- and once freed, they should have the right to be armed in self defense, and/or to defend our free republic -- just as the the 2nd specifies.

I would prefer that those who are dangerously mentally ill should be hospitalized. For a variety of bad reasons, the law does not currently allow this. What's the alternative?

And the primary objective of determining that someone is mentally ill is not to disarm them.

Dream on that this has not become a primary goal of the Brady bunch crowd. To them 'crazy people' want guns, -- and crazy people can be denied that right.. -- Catch 22.

The adjudications of mental illness date back centuries before the Brady bunch ever appeared. You are right to be concerned that such adjudications can be misused, but to suggest that the primary purpose of mental illness commitments is to disarm people is false.

E. Fuller Torrey and Judy Miller, The Invisible Plague: The Rise of Mental Illness from 1750 to the Present (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 2001).

The authors opinion is proof of a 'plague' and justifies gun controls? - Get real.

The authors present a pretty persuasive body of evidence of rising psychosis rates over the period in question, and in several different nations. They rely on not just incarceration records, but a variety of censuses that sought to count every psychotic, whether hospitalized or not. Increased alcohol and drug abuse have been shown to increase psychosis rates; the Lancet, of all places, recently published a paper that showed about a 40% increase in psychosis among heavy pot smokers--and the the Lancet reversed a long-standing editorial position in favor of legalization of marijuana because of it. Urbanization has also been linked to increase psychosis rates as well.

The book above doesn't even mention gun control.

Actually, what I was claiming was that people that were clearly a bit dangerous had a hard time buying a gun. If you lived in a town of 250 people, and Old Joe was widely recognized as paranoid schizophrenia--blathering on about voices telling him to do things--would you sell him a gun? Would anyone in town do so?

Given the prevelence of guns, old joe probably had one long before he became paranoid. Do you claim a community power to disarm him?

He might have had a gun--and he might not have. Gun ownership was common but not universal in the Colonial period, and by the 18th century, especially among the very poorest whites back from the frontier, you do start to see evidence that at least some free people don't own guns. My book Armed America: The Remarkable Story of How and Why Guns Became as American as Apple Pie (Nelson Current, 2007), examines this question.

And yes, Colonial governments did all sorts of things in the interests of the community. They forced people to own guns; they forced people to carry guns; in times of crisis, they confiscated guns from private owners to arm members of the militia that weren't armed; during the American Revolution, state and local governments disarmed people who weren't politically trustworthy. My book examines these statutes and how they were used in detail.

Then how do you deal with the problem of psychotics with weapons? Wait until they go on a rampage and kill someone?

Under our constitutional system [as written] we have to wait for a person to exhibit criminal behavior before we jail them and deprive them of their rights.

You are mistaken. From Colonial times through the Revolution, the drafting of the Constitution, and into the 1950s, persons could be jailed for a variety of reasons, including mental illness or carrying a contagious disease.

There are a lot of people who have a mistaken belief that early America was libertarian. The federal government was, to the extent that its powers were limited, but the state governments were not. You need to spend some time reading the statutes and newspapers of the period. It is not what you think.

Liberals and socialists have been arguing against our Constitutional rights for years. -- They want the power to adjudicate criminality, -- to prohibit behavior [and dangerous objects] before they become a 'problem for society'.

This is not a new concept, and you can find similar laws throughout American history. State laws regulating the sale of alcohol appear in the Colonial and early Republic periods because alcohol abuse was a "problem for society." Laws regulating sexual conduct appear in the Colonial period, and remain commonly accepted as proper actions of government into the 1960s.

You've bought into this mindset, imo, and history proves it doesn't work.

Your argument would be stronger if you knew some of the history involved. You clearly have a libertarian understanding of American history--but America's history isn't libertarian.

62 posted on 08/15/2007 10:26:43 AM PDT by claytoncramer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 61 | View Replies]

To: neverdem

“At least 28 states either intentionally, because of a shortage of money, or by bureaucratic incompetence, fail to turn over mental illness commitment information to the FBI’s National Instant Criminal Background Check system.”

Some of the states have laws that prevent medical information being transferred for any reason other than for medical need. I would think that this would also violate HIPAA.


63 posted on 08/15/2007 10:45:09 AM PDT by looscnnn (DU is VD for the brain.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Brucifer

This is nothing more than a backdoor attempt to disarm us.


64 posted on 08/15/2007 10:50:38 AM PDT by DaiHuy (I think owning a gun doesn't make you a killer, it makes you a smart American. (George Carlin)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 52 | View Replies]

To: neverdem
"A determination by a court, board, commission, or other lawful authority that a person, as a result of marked subnormal intelligence, or mental illness, incompetency, condition, or disease"

Sorry, but there is no ajudication when a "board, commission or other lawful authority" determins you are "marked subnormal intelligence, or mental illness, incompetency, condition, or disease." That alone should cause a person to be against the bill, not to mention that it expands the Brady law (which was considered gun control).

Also the law does not define what those are except the vague/grey wording. Some "board, commission or other lawful authority" determin that being a Christian is a mental illness or that gun ownership is a disease.

65 posted on 08/15/2007 10:55:26 AM PDT by looscnnn (DU is VD for the brain.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: looscnnn
Sorry, but there is no ajudication when a "board, commission or other lawful authority" determins you are "marked subnormal intelligence, or mental illness, incompetency, condition, or disease." That alone should cause a person to be against the bill, not to mention that it expands the Brady law (which was considered gun control).

Huh? Different states have somewhat different procedures (hence the statute uses "board, commission or other lawful authority") for determining that a person is incompetent, but these are all subject to the due process requirements of an impartial decision maker, the right to notice, the right to cross-examine witnesses, etc.

Also the law does not define what those are except the vague/grey wording. Some "board, commission or other lawful authority" determin that being a Christian is a mental illness or that gun ownership is a disease.

If we have reached the point where this starts to happen, then it doesn't much matter what the laws are, does it?

66 posted on 08/15/2007 11:15:05 AM PDT by claytoncramer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 65 | View Replies]

To: DaiHuy
This is nothing more than a backdoor attempt to disarm us.

How do you figure that? This doesn't change the legal definition of firearms disability at all--except to restore the rights of PTSD suffering veterans improperly disarmed by the Clinton Administration, and to provide a mechanism for restoring firearms rights under state laws--something that does not exist today.

67 posted on 08/15/2007 11:17:03 AM PDT by claytoncramer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 64 | View Replies]

To: looscnnn
Some of the states have laws that prevent medical information being transferred for any reason other than for medical need. I would think that this would also violate HIPAA.

HR 2640 doesn't require them to hand over the information, either. It does provide improved funding for their backgrounc check systems for those who are willing to do so.

68 posted on 08/15/2007 11:18:28 AM PDT by claytoncramer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 63 | View Replies]

To: claytoncramer

Thanks for your comments, and thank you for clarifying the issue. I never really expected a parade, but neither did I expect what did happen.

I’d do it all again.


69 posted on 08/15/2007 11:30:31 AM PDT by Brucifer (G. W. Bush "The dog ate my copy of the Constitution.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 58 | View Replies]

To: RedStateRocker

Then they should not be walking around in public. If they are a risk to the public to own a firearm, they are a risk to the public. If they are walking around in public, they can get their hands on a firearm (don’t have to do background checks) and it would be no different than if they weren’t added to the database. Just like criminals, if they want a gun bad enough they will get one.


70 posted on 08/15/2007 11:44:13 AM PDT by looscnnn (DU is VD for the brain.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

To: looscnnn
Then they should not be walking around in public. If they are a risk to the public to own a firearm, they are a risk to the public. If they are walking around in public, they can get their hands on a firearm (don’t have to do background checks) and it would be no different than if they weren’t added to the database. Just like criminals, if they want a gun bad enough they will get one.

I am not happy about the current situation. It is bad for the general public, and bad for many of the mentally ill. The rate of Americans freezing to death (largely a problem of the homeless mentally ill) more than doubled from 1974 to 1984 because of deinstitutionatlization. But this is the hand we have in front of us, and we can either play this hand or fold.

Mentally ill persons are a bit different from criminals in one rather important way. At least some psychotics are so scary that no one will sell them a gun, out of fear of being a victim.

71 posted on 08/15/2007 11:52:49 AM PDT by claytoncramer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 70 | View Replies]

To: looscnnn
Let me tell you a little story about mental illness and persons that shouldn't be walking around in public. Some years back, my pastor asked me to talk to someone that had been showing up at church, who was camped out in the fields outside of town.

This guy was clearly mentally ill--very confused, disconnected thinking, as is symptomatic of schizophrenia. He had this tale of governmental oppression, how his kids had been taken away from him, compared it to Waco, etc.

Then he showed me the paperwork--and the fact that he showed me this paperwork without trying to explain the claims in it was a pretty good indication that he was mentally ill.

He had two children. His wife had been committed for physical abuse of the kids. His children had been taken away from him because he was showing them pornographic movies and molesting them.

So why was this guy out on the streets? Why was he not locked up in prison? The children were 4 and 6. My guess is that a prosecutor had looked at the trauma of putting these children on the stand, and concluded that it would have been hard to get a conviction. It was simpler just to have the courts permanently terminate his parental rights. (This is not something that courts do lightly.)

Should this guy have been out wandering the streets? No. But our current legal system doesn't give us a lot of good alternatives.

72 posted on 08/15/2007 12:03:48 PM PDT by claytoncramer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 70 | View Replies]

To: claytoncramer
So there's no authority to disarm convicted murderers? On what basis do they disarm people who are in jail or prison?

While in jail, they are disarmed. Once freed, they should have the right to be armed in self defense, and to defend our free republic -- as per the 2nd.

Why is it okay to disarm them in jail?

Desperate question? -- If armed they could escape; obviously.

All levels of gov't have a very questionable authority to adjudicate who is mentally defective, -- particularly when the objective is to disarm 'the people' protected by the 2nd.

Sorry, but even at the time of the Revolution, governments had the authority to determine that a person was mentally ill and lock them up if dangerous.

Exactly my point. Lock them up if dangerous, -- and once freed, they should have the right to be armed in self defense, and/or to defend our free republic -- just as the the 2nd specifies.

-- the primary objective of determining that someone is mentally ill is not to disarm them.

Dream on that this has not become a primary goal of the Brady bunch crowd. To them 'crazy people' want guns, -- and crazy people can be denied that right.. -- Catch 22.

The adjudications of mental illness date back centuries before the Brady bunch ever appeared.

Yep. -- And we changed such adjudication standards with our Constitution.

You are right to be concerned that such adjudications can be misused, but to suggest that the primary purpose of mental illness commitments is to disarm people is false.

It is not 'false' to realize that the Brady bunch are using this theory to disarm people.

E. Fuller Torrey and Judy Miller, The Invisible Plague: The Rise of Mental Illness from 1750 to the Present (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 2001).

The authors opinion is proof of a 'plague' and justifies gun controls? - Get real.

The authors present a pretty persuasive body of evidence of rising psychosis rates over the period in question, and in several different nations. They rely on not just incarceration records, but a variety of censuses that sought to count every psychotic, whether hospitalized or not. Increased alcohol and drug abuse have been shown to increase psychosis rates;

Ah yes, - the prohibitionist mindset.
I've seen statistics that show alcohol and drug 'abuse' were considerably higher in the 1800's, -- then now. -- Perhaps self medication worked, and prohibition is responsible for psychosis rates?

the Lancet, of all places, recently published a paper that showed about a 40% increase in psychosis among heavy pot smokers--and the the Lancet reversed a long-standing editorial position in favor of legalization of marijuana because of it. Urbanization has also been linked to increase psychosis rates as well. The book above doesn't even mention gun control.

It doesn't need to. Prohibition is a socialistic disease.
Drugs/guns/booze, -- they're in favor of prohibiting most anything or any behavior.

Actually, what I was claiming was that people that were clearly a bit dangerous had a hard time buying a gun. If you lived in a town of 250 people, and Old Joe was widely recognized as paranoid schizophrenia--blathering on about voices telling him to do things--would you sell him a gun? Would anyone in town do so?

Given the prevalence of guns, old joe probably had one long before he became paranoid. Do you claim a community power to disarm him?

He might have had a gun--and he might not have. Gun ownership was common but not universal in the Colonial period, --

And we fought a revolution to make it a constitutional right.

-- and by the 18th century, especially among the very poorest whites back from the frontier, you do start to see evidence that at least some free people don't own guns. My book Armed America: The Remarkable Story of How and Why Guns Became as American as Apple Pie (Nelson Current, 2007), examines this question. And yes, Colonial governments did all sorts of things in the interests of the community. They forced people to own guns; they forced people to carry guns; in times of crisis, they confiscated guns from private owners to arm members of the militia that weren't armed;

Sure, colonial governments did all sorts of things in the interests of the community. -- And we ended that type of undelegated power with our Constitution.

during the American Revolution, state and local governments disarmed people who weren't politically trustworthy. My book examines these statutes and how they were used in detail.

And you agree that they had and still have a power to disarm?

Then how do you deal with the problem of psychotics with weapons? Wait until they go on a rampage and kill someone?

Under our constitutional system [as written] we have to wait for a person to exhibit criminal behavior before we jail them and deprive them of their rights.

You are mistaken. From Colonial times through the Revolution, the drafting of the Constitution, and into the 1950s, persons could be jailed for a variety of reasons, including mental illness or carrying a contagious disease.

No mistake. You need to read our Constitution from the standpoint that its principle objective is to protect our rights to life, liberty or property.

There are a lot of people who have a mistaken belief that early America was libertarian.

Call it what you will, the Constitutions emphasis on protecting individual liberty is quite clear.

The federal government was, to the extent that its powers were limited, but the state governments were not.

Reread the 10th. - It clearly says that States are constitutionally prohibited [limited] in powers. - Then read the 14th. - Same thing.

You need to spend some time reading the statutes and newspapers of the period. It is not what you think.

You need to read the Constitution to understand its principles. It is not what you think.

Liberals and socialists have been arguing against our Constitutional rights for years. -- They want the power to adjudicate criminality, -- to prohibit behavior [and dangerous objects] before they become a 'problem for society'.

This is not a new concept, and you can find similar laws throughout American history. State laws regulating the sale of alcohol appear in the Colonial and early Republic periods because alcohol abuse was a "problem for society." Laws regulating sexual conduct appear in the Colonial period, and remain commonly accepted as proper actions of government into the 1960s.

Yep, State and local governments have routinely infringed on our basic rights under the socialistic/statist theory that the Bill of Rights only applied to Congress.

You've bought into this mindset, imo, and history proves it doesn't work.

Your argument would be stronger if you knew some of the history involved.

I'll match my knowledge of history with yours any day.

You clearly have a libertarian understanding of American history--but America's history isn't libertarian.

You clearly think that calling me a 'libertarian' discredits my facts regarding our Constitution. Get a new line.

73 posted on 08/15/2007 12:08:05 PM PDT by tpaine (" My most important function on the Supreme Court is to tell the majority to take a walk." -Scalia)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 62 | View Replies]

To: claytoncramer

Perhaps I misread the article.

I thought that they were trying to force doctors to hand over mental health records to the govt so they could deny firearms to anyone deemed “mentally Ill”


74 posted on 08/15/2007 12:32:26 PM PDT by DaiHuy (I think owning a gun doesn't make you a killer, it makes you a smart American. (George Carlin)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 67 | View Replies]

To: DaiHuy
Perhaps I misread the article. I thought that they were trying to force doctors to hand over mental health records to the govt so they could deny firearms to anyone deemed “mentally Ill”

No. It strongly encourages the states to hand over records of those who have been found mentally incompetent in due process conformant proceedings.

75 posted on 08/15/2007 1:46:37 PM PDT by claytoncramer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 74 | View Replies]

To: tpaine
Reread the 10th. - It clearly says that States are constitutionally prohibited [limited] in powers. - Then read the 14th. - Same thing.

Here's the text of the 10th Amendment:

The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

Powers that are not explicitly given to the federal government (and it wasn't a long list), and that were not explicitly prohibited to the states (and that was an even shorter list), are reserved to the States, or to the people. Had they left out "are reserved to the States" you might be able to make your claim. But "reserved to the States" is pretty darn clear.

The Fourteenth Amendment also doesn't say what you think. The provision that you are thinking of says:

No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

This isn't a complete prohibition on state action that you want to imagine. It says that "privileges and immunities" are protected from state action. Proponents of the 14th Amendment intended this to impose the Bill of Rights (including an individual right to keep and bear arms) onto the states.

The "due process of law" provision does not prohibit the states from regulatory actions, either sensible or stupid, but simply requires that when they do so, they give you the benefit of hearings, at least a pretense of impartiality, notice, etc.

The "equal protection" provision was to guarantee that blacks and Republicans in the South didn't get injured by unequal application of the laws. This isn't a ban on the states regulating actions--only requiring that if the laws made distinctions, they could not be arbitrary.

I'll match my knowledge of history with yours any day.

My master's degree is in history. I've read thousands of pages of newspapers of the Colonial, Revolutionary, and early Republic period. I've read hundreds of books of the time. Your statements about the Constitution show a fundamental ignorance of the basic materials in question.

76 posted on 08/15/2007 2:00:34 PM PDT by claytoncramer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 73 | View Replies]

To: claytoncramer
Liberals and socialists have been arguing against our Constitutional rights for years. -- They want the power to adjudicate criminality, -- to prohibit behavior [and dangerous objects] before they become a 'problem for society'.

This is not a new concept, and you can find similar laws throughout American history. State laws regulating the sale of alcohol appear in the Colonial and early Republic periods because alcohol abuse was a "problem for society."
Laws regulating sexual conduct appear in the Colonial period, and remain commonly accepted as proper actions of government into the 1960s.

Yep, State and local governments have routinely infringed on our basic rights under the socialistic/statist theory that the Bill of Rights only applied to Congress.
You've bought into this mindset, imo, and history proves it doesn't work.

Your argument would be stronger if you knew some of the history involved.

I'll match my knowledge of history with yours any day.

My master's degree is in history.

Big deal. Hundreds of thousands have 'Mastered in History'. Your mastery of our Constitution is sorely lacking, - as we see from your inept arguments.

I've read thousands of pages of newspapers of the Colonial, Revolutionary, and early Republic period. I've read hundreds of books of the time. Your statements about the Constitution show a fundamental ignorance of the basic materials in question.
You clearly have a libertarian understanding of American history--but America's history isn't libertarian.

You clearly think that calling me fundamentally ignorant and a 'libertarian' somehow discredits my facts regarding our Constitution. Get a new line.

Reread the 10th. - It clearly says that States are constitutionally prohibited [limited] in powers. - Then read the 14th. - Same thing.

Here's the text of the 10th Amendment:

The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

Powers that are not explicitly given to the federal government (and it wasn't a long list), and that were not explicitly prohibited to the states (and that was an even shorter list), --

Do you deny that list included our Bill of Rights?

-- are reserved to the States, or to the people. Had they left out "are reserved to the States" you might be able to make your claim. But "reserved to the States" is pretty darn clear.

So is Article VI, which also clearly says that officials and "Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary, notwithstanding. --"

States have powers, - limited by the supremacy of the US Constitution. --- The 2nd is a complete prohibition on state actions infringing on our right to own and carry arms.

The Fourteenth Amendment also doesn't say what you think. The provision that you are thinking of says:

No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

This isn't a complete prohibition on state action that you want to imagine.

You are simply imagining it isn't. Guns are property. -- Some States are prohibiting ownership of assault weapons. In effect, you are arguing that they have that power.

It says that "privileges and immunities" are protected from state action. Proponents of the 14th Amendment intended this to impose the Bill of Rights (including an individual right to keep and bear arms) onto the states. The "due process of law" provision does not prohibit the states from regulatory actions, --

It prohibits them from infringements.

-- either sensible or stupid, but simply requires that when they do so, they give you the benefit of hearings, at least a pretense of impartiality, notice, etc.

There you go. You admit such laws are stupid [infringements] yet you would allow them. Go figure that for fundamental ignorance.

The "equal protection" provision was to guarantee that blacks and Republicans in the South didn't get injured by unequal application of the laws. This isn't a ban on the states regulating actions--only requiring that if the laws made distinctions, they could not be arbitrary.

The 14th's overall thrust was and is to stop States from making arbitrary 'laws' banning arms, property, life and liberty. Your knowledge of the 14ths history is pathetic.

77 posted on 08/15/2007 3:14:28 PM PDT by tpaine (" My most important function on the Supreme Court is to tell the majority to take a walk." -Scalia)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 76 | View Replies]

To: claytoncramer

So your saying that we should expand an unConstitutional law? Justifying it by stating “our current legal system doesn’t give us a lot of good alternatives” is as bad as “for the children”. It does nothing to solve the problem for the mentally ill person, for gun owners or most importantly for the Constitution. Why did I include the Constitution, because this just enforces the notion that gun control laws are Constitutional.


78 posted on 08/15/2007 4:25:02 PM PDT by looscnnn (DU is VD for the brain.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 72 | View Replies]

To: claytoncramer

Only if they are basing it on currently defined mental illnesses. There is no due process or adjudication during the defining of new mental illnesses.


79 posted on 08/15/2007 4:30:31 PM PDT by looscnnn (DU is VD for the brain.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 40 | View Replies]

To: claytoncramer

Here is the way to fix these problems, make it easier for people to get guns and allow them to carry (concealed or otherwise). Spend the money currently spent to restrict people’s ownership and carrying on encouraging ownership and carrying. This would provide the ultimate cure for any mentally ill or criminal that would harm people. This bill will have as much impact on gun crime as the “Assault Weapon” (aka scary looking black military style rifles) Ban did.


80 posted on 08/15/2007 4:38:32 PM PDT by looscnnn (DU is VD for the brain.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 44 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-8081-99 next last

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.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson