By John Tabin on 4.17.07 @ 12:43AM
Until yesterday, Virginia Tech was a gun-free zone.
In January 2006, Virginia Delegate Todd Gilbert introduced House
Bill 1572, which was meant to guarantee, with a few exceptions,
that students with concealed handgun permits would be allowed to
carry guns on college campuses. The bill died in subcommittee later
that month. Like many schools, Virginia Tech had a policy
prohibiting guns on campus, and Virginia Tech spokesman Larry
Hincker expressed pleasure at the bill's defeat. "I'm sure the
university community is appreciative of the General Assembly's
actions," said Hincker, "because this will help parents, students,
faculty and visitors feel safe on our campus."
As we all know by now, the gun ban didn't insure safety.
Virginia Tech was the site of the worst shooting spree in American
history yesterday. Thirty-two people are dead -- not including the
shooter, who committed suicide -- and at least fifteen are injured.
Mightn't a law-abiding armed student have stopped the spree in its
tracks? We'll never know.
Perhaps some school administrators still think that declaring a
"gun-free zone" makes a campus safer; that was what legislators
thought when they started passing gun bans at high schools in
response to the late-'80s youth-crime spike. But it's likely that
at the college level, fear of litigation plays a large role in
shaping such policies. No school or business has been successfully
sued following an on-site incident involving a gun, but according
to David Kopel, director of the Second Amendment Project at the
Independence Institute, "that doesn't stop administrators from
being scared." Kopel notes that big business is afflicted by the
same lawsuit-paranoia. "If you look in these corporate counsel
manuals...you'll find these things all over the place, saying that
you should adopt a no-guns policy so you don't get sued -- when
there's really never been a case of a successful suit," says
Kopel.
The irony, Kopel points out, is that Virginia Tech may have
opened itself up to a lawsuit anyway. Two people were killed
several hours before the rest of the victims, and many have
complained that the school didn't warn people of the situation
before the killing started again. "This interval and failure to
warn, after having affirmatively disarmed them...I'm not a Virginia
tort expert," says Kopel, "but that strikes me as a good start" for
an enterprising litigator. Perhaps the reluctance to release the
news flowed from the same central-command instincts that led
administrators to disarm their students.
To gun control advocates, the failure of an anti-gun regulation
just proves the need for more anti-gun regulations. The Brady
Campaign's website had a newly
designed "Donate Now" button referencing Virginia Tech almost
immediately. It's worth asking, though, if guns aren't that
different from information, and if it wouldn't be better to loosen
control over both.
topics:
Business, Law