Guns and violence
Paul Craig Roberts
Blaming violence on guns and fanning hysteria over accidental deaths to children from firearms are staples of antigun propaganda. Media help gun-control zealots spread false information that gun ownership and self-defense are certain paths to injury and death. Handgun Control Inc., gives erroneous advice that if you are attacked, the best way to avoid injury "is to put up no defense." Anti-gun zealots blame the actions of criminals on guns and argue that disarming law-abiding gun owners is the best way to reduce the crime rate.
Scholars such as Gary Kleck, Don Kates and John Lott have demonstrated the falsity of these claims. Now comes an important new book from Harvard University Press. "Guns and Violence" by Bentley College history professor Joyce Lee Malcolm brings new evidence that guns reduce violence.
Professor Malcolm's carefully researched book is a study of guns and violence in England from the Middle Ages through the present day. When the English were armed to the teeth, violent crime was rare. Now that the English are disarmed, violent crime has exploded. Indeed, crime in England is out of control.
Offering instruction for the U.S., the English experience will be covered in a subsequent column. Professor Malcolm presents many facts about guns and violence in America, and it is to these we turn first. Did you know that water is 19 times more dangerous to a child than a firearm? In 1996, 805 children died from accidental drownings and 42 died from firearm accidents. (Gun control zealots inflate "child" firearm deaths by including teenage drug gang members killed in turf battles.)
Bathtubs are twice as dangerous to children as guns. Fire is 18 times more dangerous to children than guns. Cars are 57 times more dangerous. Household cleaners and poisons are twice as dangerous.</>
Did you know defensive gun use prevents far more crimes than the police? National polls of defensive gun use by private citizens indicate that as many as 3.6 million crimes annually are prevented by armed individuals. In 98 percent of the cases, the armed citizen merely has to brandish his weapon.
As many as 400,000 people each year believe they saved a life by being armed. Contrary to Handgun Control's propaganda, in less than 1 percent of confrontations do criminals succeed in taking the gun from the intended victim.
Did you know that the testimony of incarcerated felons supports the large number of defensive gun uses? Thirty-four percent of felons said they were scared off, wounded or captured by victims who turned out to be armed.
Convicted felons say they are more deterred by armed victims than by the police. In the U.S. where roughly 50 percent of households are armed, only 13 percent of burglaries occur with residents at home. In contrast, in Britain, where homeowners are disarmed, 50 percent of home burglaries take place with the residents present.
Gun control zealots claim that the availability of guns is the primary cause of homicides. Between 1973 and 1994, the number of guns in private ownership in the U.S. rose by 87 million. During this period, both the homicide rate and the percent of homicides committed with firearms dropped.
Another test of the relationship between guns and violence is provided by the concealed-carry laws now in force in 33 states. Gun control zealots predicted that traffic accidents and other altercations combined with an armed public would result in a bloodbath. Professor Malcolm confronts this false prediction with empirical evidence:
"In all the decades of experience with concealed-carry laws in an increasing number of states, there is only one recorded incident of the use of a permitted handgun in a shooting following a traffic accident, and that was determined to be a case of self-defense."
The 17 states and the District of Columbia without concealed-carry permits enjoy an 81 percent higher rate of violent crime. Their restrictive gun laws produced 1,400 more murders, 4,200 more rapes, 12,000 more robberies, and 60,000 more aggravated assaults.
Professor Malcolm disproves the claim that family members are the main victims of gun ownership. This myth results from FBI reports that most victims are "known" to the murderer. In the category of "known to the murderer," the FBI includes members of rival drug gangs, prostitutes and their pimps, and even cabdrivers killed in robberies by "customers."
Far from the picture of hot-tempered spouses turning the family firearm upon one another in moments of rage, it turns out that 90 percent of adult murderers have prior criminal records involving major felonies. Three-quarters of juvenile murderers and their victims have an average of 10 prior criminal arraignments.
The English Bill of Rights guarantees English citizens "arms for their defense." Politicians and bureaucrats stole this right from the people by subterfuge. In England today, only outlaws have guns. Sens. Joseph Lieberman, Connecticut Democrat, John McCain, Arizona Republican, and Charles Schumer, New York Democrat, are working to duplicate the English calamity by stealing gun rights from the American people. Do these three senators represent the criminal lobby? Are they trying to create a black market in guns?
This is the first of two parts. Paul Craig Roberts is a nationaly syndicated columnist.
http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20020730-23396541.htm
Unlikely Allies Join on Senate Gun Bill
WASHINGTON - Unlikely Senate allies on Tuesday promoted a bill designed to force states to fill in gaps about mental illness, spousal abuse and criminal convictions in background records for gun purchases.
Idaho Republican Sen. Larry Craig, one of the staunchest advocates of gun rights in the Senate, joined with Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain, who has backed some gun control legislation, and New York Democratic Sens. Charles Schumer and Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, two fierce advocates of stricter gun regulation.
"This legislation fixes a huge hole in our system -- a hole that delays legitimate firearms purchases and allows criminals and other prohibited buyers to obtain guns," McCain said.
The legislation calls for states to improve the National Instant Criminal Background Check System, known as NICS, by requiring states and federal agencies to provide the FBI with all relevant records, including mental health records and records of domestic violence convictions.
Those records can be utilized when instant checks are done on gun purchases.
Companion legislation recently passed the House Judiciary Committee by a 30-2 vote and has a good chance of passing the House of Representatives later this year.
The bill is called "Our Lady of Peace Act," for a church in New York Democratic Rep. Carolyn McCarthy's district where a mentally ill man killed a priest and parishioner during Mass last March.
McCarthy, whose husband was killed by a deranged gunman on the Long Island Railroad in 1993, is a House sponsor of the legislation.
It would allow federal grants to states worth about $250 million for each of the next three years. The legislation does not address larger issues that have been dividing lawmakers, such as requiring background checks of up to three days at gun shows.
A summary of the bill notes that improving the NICS data base will speed up background checks, reducing delays for law-abiding gun buyers.