By John Tabin on 10.17.06 @ 12:07AM
Rudy Giuliani causes gun controllers to shoot themselves in the foot.
The self-righteous ignorance that drives so much gun control
advocacy never ceases to amuse. Josh Feit's latest column for the Seattle alternative weekly the
Stranger is a classic of the genre.
It seems that as he stumps for fellow Republicans and paves the
way for a potential presidential run, Rudy Giuliani is prudently
backing off from his history of anti-gun demagoguery. Feit is
hopping mad:
The availability of assault weapons like AK-47s at gun
shows and gun shops has emerged as a major concern for U.S. law
enforcement grappling with terrorism in the post-9/11 era.
Giuliani's commitment to limiting access to assault weapons,
however, apparently evaporated this week when he came to Seattle to
stump for GOP U.S. Senate candidate Mike McGavick....
What's most galling about Giuliani's flip-flop on assault
weapons is that his pro-McGavick stump speech was squarely focused
on homeland security. "We need senators who understand that we have
to be on offense against terrorism," he said. "Cantwell's ambiguous
support for the effort against terrorism probably concerns me more
than anything else."
For someone who claims to be so vigilant, Giuliani's shirking of
his commitment to regulating AK-47s (which you can currently buy in
about 15 minutes at Butch's Gun Shop on Aurora Avenue North,
according to a salesperson there) is laughable.
An al Qaeda manual entitled How Can I Train Myself for
Jihad, found by United States Special Forces in the ruins of a
training camp in Afghanistan (and posted on a suspected terrorist's
website in 2004), tellingly singles out the United States for its
easy availability of firearms, and stipulates that al Qaeda members
living in the U.S. "obtain an assault weapon legally, preferably an
AK-47 or variations."
The existence of this manual may be a sign that there are some
unexpected strategic benefits to American journalists' chronically
deficient grasp of the basic issues they're supposed to be
covering. The AK-47s that you see Third World soldiers brandishing
and the AK-47s you can buy in Seattle are completely different
weapons. The former are fully automatic weapons, which have been
tightly regulated since the National Firearms Act of 1934. The Gun
Control of 1968 outlawed importation of foreign-made fully
automatic weapons for sale to civilians, and a 1986 amendment to
the Firearm Owners Protection Act banned the domestic manufacture
of fully automatic weapons for civilians. It is possible for a
civilian to legally obtain a fully automatic AK-47, but it is
extremely difficult: Before you can even begin to navigate your way
through a maze of state and federal regulations, you've got to find
someone with a weapon either made in the U.S. before 1986 or
imported before 1968.
The AK-47s that you can buy at the average gun store are
semiautomatic rifles; you only get one shot per trigger-pull. How
did the assault weapons ban that was in effect from 1994 to 2004
affect the availability of these? It didn't, in any meaningful
sense. The differences between the rifles that were legal
before the ban, during the ban, and now are entirely cosmetic.
FEIT'S SILLY COLUMN WOULDN'T BE quite so remarkable if not for how
it came to my attention, through an approving link from Andrew Sullivan. Sullivan is
ubiquitous these days, promoting a book entitled The
Conservative Soul: How We Lost It, How to Get It Back. His
comment on Feit's column: "As Jon Stewart said of John McCain,
Giuliani has turned his straight talk express into a bus to
bulls**t-town."
That's rather more vicious than a little light ribbing over a
flip-flop -- particularly striking given that Sullivan endorsed
John Kerry for President. But if we're to heap scorn on a
politician who shifts his emphasis on guns to appeal to
conservative voters, what are we to make of someone who calls
himself a conservative, and even poses as a savior of the
conservative soul -- while aligning himself with a guy like Feit on
an issue so central to both the libertarian and traditionalist
strains of American conservatism?
topics:
John McCain, Law, NATO, Conservatism