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Donald Trump’s mixed gun platform
Hot Air.com ^ | September 19, 2015 | TAYLOR MILLARD

Posted on 09/19/2015 3:14:52 PM PDT by Kaslin

Donald Trump’s gun platform is out and it’s a mixed bag. From a strategy standpoint it seems odd to release it late on a Friday afternoon. That’s traditionally in the “Friday News Dump” category, but perhaps Trump was hoping to change the topic from his skipping of the Heritage Action Forum in South Carolina and the “we’re going to be looking at that” comment over Muslim camps from Thursday. Where Trump’s gun platform is good, it’s pretty good. But where it’s bad, it’s pretty bad.

From a conceal carry standpoint, Trump is spot on.

NATIONAL RIGHT TO CARRY. The right of self-defense doesn’t stop at the end of your driveway. That’s why I have a concealed carry permit and why tens of millions of Americans do too. That permit should be valid in all 50 states. A driver’s license works in every state, so it’s common sense that a concealed carry permit should work in every state. If we can do that for driving – which is a privilege, not a right – then surely we can do that for concealed carry, which is a right, not a privilege.

It’s a good position to have and a stance no other candidate has really taken. The closest are probably Rand Paul and possibly John Kasich. All other candidates tend to promise to defend the Second Amendment without saying how. Trump is right that conceal carry permit holders should be able to carry in all 50 states. It’s ludicrous for them to have to look up the laws of states they’re either passing through or just visiting before they travel. It’d be nice if a presidential candidate would support constitutional carry, but this strikes me as something which will take another decade as more states adopt it. Trump is also right on letting people own whatever guns they want to and allowing military members to carry on campus. He deserves praise for this and it’s nice to see him have this position.

The problem is the rest of the plan isn’t “freedom and liberty,” but just more government. From his “Enforce The Laws On The Books” section:

Several years ago there was a tremendous program in Richmond, Virginia called Project Exile. It said that if a violent felon uses a gun to commit a crime, you will be prosecuted in federal court and go to prison for five years – no parole or early release. Obama’s former Attorney General, Eric Holder, called that a “cookie cutter” program. That’s ridiculous. I call that program a success. Murders committed with guns in Richmond decreased by over 60% when Project Exile was in place – in the first two years of the program alone, 350 armed felons were taken off the street.

Why does that matter to law-abiding gun owners? Because they’re the ones who anti-gun politicians and the media blame when criminals misuse guns. We need to bring back and expand programs like Project Exile and get gang members and drug dealers off the street. When we do, crime will go down and our cities and communities will be safer places to live.

There are a few problems with this proposal. Mandatory minimums, like the ones in Project Exile, just end up putting more people in prison without a real effect on crime. The National Research Council did an entire study on mandatory minimums last year which showed they really didn’t help.

Effects on crime. The shift toward more incarceration and longer sentences reflected a widespread view that incarceration was a key way to control crime. This has not proven to be the case. During the four decades when incarceration rates steadily rose, crime rates showed no clear trend. The crime reduction effect of incarceration on is highly uncertain and is unlikely to have been large. In addition, the crime-reduction benefits of very long sentences are likely to be small; one reason is that rates of re-offending drop significantly as people age, and so very long sentences incarcerate people whose likelihood of committing further crimes is low even if they were not imprisoned.

Mandatory minimums also end up costing taxpayers more money. FreedomWorks’ Jason Pye wrote in February on how the debt has increased because of an exploding prison population.

Mandatory minimums have been cited as a reason for the exponential growth in the federal prison population, which, in FY 2010, numbered 208,118 inmates, up from 24,252 in FY 1980. “The [United States Sentencing Commission] reported that the number of inmates in the federal prison system who were convicted of an offense that carried a mandatory minimum penalty increased 178%, from approximately 40,000 in FY 1995 to nearly 112,000 in FY 2010,” the Congressional Research Service explains. “Of these offenders, nearly 30,000 in FY 1995 and approximately 80,000 in FY 2010 were actually subject to a mandatory minimum penalty.”

So Trump’s proposal would actually expand government, instead of decreasing it. If he were really a “small government conservative” he wouldn’t be pushing this sort of policy. There are also questions as to whether Project Exile actually worked. Larry Pratt of Gun Owners of America wrote in 2002 about how expanding gun rights did more to reduce crime than Project Exile (emphasis mine).

An article in the Richmond Times-Dispatch newspaper (4/01/02) says that, according to a study by the liberal Brookings Institution, “the highly touted Project Exile had little to do with a decline in Richmond’s firearm homicide rate…. The researchers found that the drop in gun homicide rates after the implementation of Project Exile in 1997 was not unusual. They say it would have been likely to occur without it.”

In other words, enforcing the existing gun laws — the core of Project Exile — has no impact on crime.

In fact, GOA found that the murder rate in Richmond began to decline two years before Project Exile began — when a concealed firearm carry law went into effect.

So Trump’s just wrong on Project Exile and the “benefits” of the program. He also neglects to point out the existence of Project Safe Neighborhoods which does exactly what Project Exile did. It already costs $2B… is he wanting to expand it to $4B? Or is Trump interested in just creating a whole new program which would completely duplicate what’s already being done on a national level? Either one needs to be resisted because it’ll cost taxpayers more money and may have only a negligible effect on crime across the country.

Then there’s the mental health aspect of Trump’s proposal. To say the least, it’s troublesome and not something which protects “freedom and liberty” (emphasis mine).

All of the tragic mass murders that occurred in the past several years have something in common – there were red flags that were ignored. We can’t allow that to continue. We need to expand treatment programs, because most people with mental health problems aren’t violent, they just need help. But for those who are violent, a danger to themselves or others, we need to get them off the street before they can terrorize our communities. This is just common sense.

This isn’t common sense, it’s a policy which endangers freedom more than it helps. Jazz wrote last year on the New York SAFE Act which saw people lose their right to own guns without a hearing. While Trump isn’t promoting this, he is agreeing with Dewey Cornell of the Virginia Youth Violence Project who told USA Today “society” has to be protected from the mentally ill.

“Our civil commitment laws are broken. They are designed to protect individuals from being held against their will. But they have gone too far. They no longer protect society. We’ve had many cases where people who should have been hospitalized have been allowed to languish and they deteriorate into a violent act.”

But this might not be true. Jacob Sullum wrote at Reason last month on how those in favor of forcibly putting people in mental hospitals may not be telling the whole truth.

In any case, according to the American Psychiatric Association, “96% of people with serious mental illnesses never act violently.” Presumably that is why [[ Columbia University psychiatrist Jeffrey ]] Lieberman adds “known risk factors for violence” to his criteria for coercive treatment. It is debatable whether [[ Virginia TV reporter shooter Vester ]] Flanagan had a history of violence. While his coworkers had alarming encounters with him, it looks like none rose to the level of assault. So far I have not seen any references to drug abuse. In short, Lieberman latches onto this case to argue that more use of court-ordered psychiatric treatment would stop the “vast majority” of mass shootings, but he does not even show how the policy he advocates could have stopped Flanagan, let alone most other murderers.

This is why Trump’s gun policy is a mix of good and bad. He should be praised for wanting people to be able to buy whatever gun they want and allowing concealed carry permits to work in all 50 states. But Trump is flat out wrong on Project Exile and mental health issues. His proposals don’t go far enough to actually protect the Second Amendment and won’t actually “make America great again.”


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2ndamendment; banglist; donaldtrump; guncontrol; guns; mentalhealth; secondamendment; trump
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To: TexasGator

Agreed, their conclusions were nothing more than liberal fabrication.


21 posted on 09/19/2015 3:58:32 PM PDT by Robert DeLong (u)
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To: berdie

Actually that happened back in the late 60s. Here in CA it was under Gov. Reagan. However it was a result of the Federal courts ruling that it was unconstitutional to involuntarily commit the mentally ill unless they were convicted of a crime, or a specific threat to themselves or others.


22 posted on 09/19/2015 4:01:07 PM PDT by Hugin ("First thing--get yourself a fire"arm!" Sheriff Ed Galt, Last Man Standing.)
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To: AAABEST

I agree wholrheartedly! All that is needed is for the SCOTUS to quit picking at the 2A like it’s some kind of festering sore and rule that it says what it says. With that ruling should be the admonition that the states DON’T have any “right” to regulate the carrying of a firearm so long as the individual is law abiding and not mentally impaired. No licences, no permits, nothing. You don’t have to tell a cop you are carrying just because you’re speeding,
and as Trump rightly points out, you cannot be restricted (a la California) to a limited number of “safe” guns.


23 posted on 09/19/2015 4:05:00 PM PDT by vette6387
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To: berdie
Ok Carter:


"The final report of the commission to President Carter contained the recommendations upon which the Mental Health Systems Act of 1980 was based....

By the start of the Carter administration in 1977, involuntary commitment had been restricted to those who were deemed as potentially dangerous to themselves or, perhaps more significantly, those around them.2 Typically, the commitment had to be sponsored by a family member and/or ordered by the court.

A result of this policy was that the mentally ill patient who refused treatment typically did not receive any at all. If the patient had lost contact with family members, she or he would not be committed unless found to be a threat by the court. Often, those arrested ended up in jail rather than in treatment if they had not been found to be a threat but had committed a crime (Abramson, 1972; Conrad and Schneider, 1980). On e result was a high degree of stress and frustration experienced by the relatives of the patient. Throughout the 1970s, family members organized with the purpose of correcting a policy that they perceived was wrong."

http://www.sociology.org/content/vol003.004/thomas.html

24 posted on 09/19/2015 4:05:37 PM PDT by Red Steel (Ted Cruz: 'I'm a Big Fan of Donald Trump')
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To: AAABEST
Yup. That means GOOD PEOPLE get to carry in New York City, Chicago and DC.

Not exactly. Trump uses the phrase "national right to carry," but if you look at the actual proposal, what he's really proposing is national reciprocity for right to carry. So, if you have a Texas permit, you can carry on NY. It would do nothing to ease restrictions on getting permits in New York and similar places, which are virtually impossible to get (Donald Trump has one, but you or I? Forget it.).

25 posted on 09/19/2015 4:20:43 PM PDT by Conscience of a Conservative
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To: Red Steel

Thank you..I appreciate the reply.

I’ll certainly look more at the cases referenced.

I had a temp job not long ago entering data for a close by state mental hospital from their archives. In the past, many husbands committed their wives for “unruly behavior”. Pretty scary.


26 posted on 09/19/2015 4:46:04 PM PDT by berdie
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To: AAABEST

I agree. I own guns-—don’t do concealed carry, yet. And I’m not an activist who follows a lot of the NRA stuff, but this sounded like a brilliant plan, and certainly the most radical pro-2A plan I’ve ever seen.


27 posted on 09/19/2015 4:47:28 PM PDT by LS ("Castles Made of Sand, Fall in the Sea . . . Eventually" (Hendrix))
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To: Hugin

It’s pretty hard to determine these days who is genuinely coo-coo. There are plenty of undiagnosed mental patients running around...as is evidenced by recent crimes.


28 posted on 09/19/2015 4:50:00 PM PDT by berdie
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To: Kaslin

Hot Air: “Mixed bag”

Do I even have to say it?


29 posted on 09/19/2015 5:20:00 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (It's beginning to look like "Morning in America" again. Comment on YouTube under Trump Free Ride.)
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To: joshua c

The second amendment is an incorporated right just like the first amendment. A state does not have the legal right to deprive you of that individual right. There is nothing wrong with using the power of the federal government to compel states to abide by the constitution. That’s what this election is all about IMO.


30 posted on 09/19/2015 5:21:18 PM PDT by RC one (....and subject to the jurisdiction thereof,)
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To: joshua c

And when 50 states get their nose under that tent?


31 posted on 09/19/2015 5:25:50 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (It's beginning to look like "Morning in America" again. Comment on YouTube under Trump Free Ride.)
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To: joshua c

Here’s why I asked that.

We have 50 states in various stages of trying to infringe on our 2nd Amendment rights. Some are doing nothing and others are coming up with more legislation all the time.

The activist anti-Second Amendment states do their darnedest to come up with something that will slip past the appellate courts and the SCOTUS. When a state gets one through, it hurts every state,

It opens the door to a new law that has been approved by the SCOTUS.

Eliminating the state impact on this would narrow the efforts down to one voice, the federal government.

In theory that should eliminate the tag-team effort we have today, with multiple states doing their best to deny us our rights. Eliminate their ability to impede the 2nd Amendment.

All anti-gun cases should have to go through the federal courts.

That will eliminate a lot fo nonsense.

State Legislatures, sorry, no jurisdiction...


32 posted on 09/19/2015 5:34:19 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (It's beginning to look like "Morning in America" again. Comment on YouTube under Trump Free Ride.)
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To: joshua c; Kaslin
As someone who travels quite a bit and confined most of it to the US, I'd love to see national concealed carry. For a minute of two. You're both correct, it's a state issue, and there are states I avoid. Not just for concealed carry, but transport. DC and Maryland come to mind. They won't get my tourist dollars, but I don't want the Federal government regulating this.

For those who say state regulation of carry is a 2nd Amendment violation, I'd suggest that is the issue. When you advocate Federal regulation of concealed carry, you've conceded that argument to the Feds, and open the door to Federal regulation of the issuance of concealed carry permits. Or at least permits to be recognized. Bad idea, other than those who consider 280 hours of instruction, perhaps, reasonable.

33 posted on 09/19/2015 5:48:51 PM PDT by SJackson (Everybody has a plan until they get hit. Mike Tyson)
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To: SJackson

but I don’t want the Federal government regulating this.


Repeat LOUD and OFTEN................................


34 posted on 09/19/2015 5:58:05 PM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: Kaslin

Libertarians believe we shouldn’t criminals behind bars and we shouldn’t seek the commitment of crazy people.

They are exactly the things we need to do more of and as a conservative, I believe the first responsibility of government is to protect society.

This is why I back the Trump platform. I’m not anti-government; I’m for government fulfilling its core responsibility to assure the public safety - without it, we don’t have a decent and law-abiding society.


35 posted on 09/19/2015 6:14:32 PM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives In My Heart Forever)
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To: joshua c

We need a federal law because our freedom to RKBA should be uniform no matter where we live.

You don’t want states to have different rules for freedom of speech do you?

We have too many confusing, complicated and overly restrictive gun laws on the books in this country.

A federal concealed carry law would make order out of this mess and ensure that your right is the same no matter where you live or travel to in the country.


36 posted on 09/19/2015 6:35:17 PM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives In My Heart Forever)
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To: goldstategop

That’s the biggest load of dog squeeze I’m read in a while (and that’s saying a lot w/ the amount to pro v. con Trump on this board). But, if you have a platform position backing up your claims, I’m all for hearing/reading and adjusting my affiliation thusly...

(L) are, for the few laws that SHOULD be on the books), one pays the time for the crime. If one is an ex-con, one is again a Citizen (with all the Rights and privileges thereof). If one is a danger to themselves, others, they should not be OUT of prison or the funny-farm.

Hint: It’s NOT the (L) releasing the illegals, homeless (nutty) back on the streets to terrorize the Citizens of this Nation...it’s the Socialist+ Left whom believe no one is any worse than another (IE: we’re all ‘good @ heart’).


37 posted on 09/19/2015 6:41:35 PM PDT by i_robot73 ("A man chooses. A slave obeys." - Andrew Ryan)
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To: joshua c
I have mixed feelings about National Conceal Carry. I am not sure how it would work. Shouldn’t it remain with the states?...

It would work just like your driver license. That is exactly what DT uses as an example. If I am licensed in my home state I can drive in every state. "Full faith and credit..." is in the Constitution. If I am licensed to carry in my home state, I could carry in every state.

If a particular state wants to limit the ability of their own residents to carry, that might be their right. But, they should not be able to disarm me if I am visiting.

Given what the Obamanation has done, I think Trump could accomplish reciprocity almost by executive order. He could certainly order the Justice Department to defend anyone charged in a state other than his home state, and might even be able to bring civil rights charges against whatever authority harassed people carrying with an out of state permit.

38 posted on 09/19/2015 6:43:46 PM PDT by CurlyDave
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To: Conscience of a Conservative

The NRA’s proposal is a least restrictive carry standard. Which pre-empts any state or local law that doesn’t meet it.

And it should be added places like NY, CA, HI and DC are in practice no carry jurisdictions.

In a perfect world, we wouldn’t need to bring in a federal law. But we do.


39 posted on 09/19/2015 6:45:47 PM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives In My Heart Forever)
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To: Red Steel

Thanks for posting that... years ago I had somebody trying to tell me Reagan was the reason they were all closed... I did not believe him but I had no argument either.


40 posted on 09/19/2015 7:06:08 PM PDT by AzNASCARfan
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