By Robert A. Levy on 4.25.07 @ 12:07AM
Rash advice from the gun controllers.
"What is needed, urgently, is stronger controls over the lethal
weapons that cause such wasteful carnage." So said the New York
Times in its predictable but wrongheaded editorial the day
after the horrific events at Virginia Tech. Anti-gun advocates,
however noble their motives, help create the environment in which
horrors like Virginia Tech occur.
Possession and use of guns on the Tech campus violated
state-imposed restrictions. But crazed fanatics, undeterred by laws
against murder, will not be dissuaded by laws against guns. More
such laws will accomplish nothing. Indeed, liberalized laws might
have enabled responsible, armed citizens on campus to defend the
hapless victims. It took two hours for the killer methodically to
massacre 32 people and injure another 15. Why did nobody intervene
sooner to stop the killer?
For one possible explanation, consider this report from a
Roanoke Times article: A bill, introduced on behalf of the
Virginia Citizens Defense League, would have given properly
licensed public college students and employees the right to carry
handguns on campus. The bill died on January 30, 2006 in the
Virginia General Assembly. Virginia Tech spokesman Larry Hincker
was pleased with the outcome. "I'm sure the university community is
appreciative of the General Assembly's actions because this will
help parents, students, faculty and visitors feel safe on our
campus." Tell that to the ill-fated victims of April 16 and their
families.
The article goes on to relate that most universities in Virginia
require students and employees, other than police, to check their
guns with police or campus security on entering campus. The
proposed legislation would have eliminated that requirement for
anyone who possessed a valid concealed handgun permit. Ironically,
Tech's governing board had approved in June 2005 a violence
prevention policy reiterating the school's ban on students,
employees, or visitors -- even those properly licensed -- from
bringing handguns onto campus.
At the Virginia Tech press conference after the slaughter of 32
defenseless people, the university's president cautioned that it
wouldn't be possible to have police guard every classroom and dorm.
What he omitted was this cold, hard fact: By making the university
a "gun free zone," his administration and the state legislature had
fostered a climate in which ubiquitous police would be necessary.
Without a means to protect themselves, Virginia Tech students,
faculty, and other employees were more likely to be victimized by
the only people on campus who had readily available guns: killers
and lunatics.
Meanwhile, the New York Times, the Brady Center, and
the rest of the usual suspects continue their clamor for more gun
regulations -- apparently oblivious to the destructive effects of
their own proposals. The evidence is clear: more guns in the hands
of responsible owners yield lower rates of violent crime. Gun
control does not work. It just prevents weaker people from
defending themselves against stronger predators.
Here are the numbers, as summarized by legal scholar Don B.
Kates: Over the 30-year period from 1974 to 2003, guns in
circulation doubled, but murder rates declined by a third. On a
state-by-state basis, a 1 percent increase in gun ownership
correlates with a 4.1 percent lower rate of violent crime. Each
year, approximately 460,000 gun crimes are committed in the United
States. But guns are also used to ward off gun criminals. Estimates
of defensive gun use range from 1.3 million to 2.5 million times
per year -- and usually the weapons are merely brandished, not
fired. That means defensive uses occur about 3-to-5 times as often
as violent gun crimes. Just as important, armed victims
who resist gun criminals get injured less frequently than
unarmed victims who submit. In more than 8 out of 10 cases
where the victim pulls a gun, the criminal turns and flees, even if
he's armed. "So much for the quasi-religious faith that more guns
mean more murder."
Finally, two federal government agencies recently examined gun
control laws and found no statistically significant evidence to
support their effectiveness. In 2004, the National Academy of
Sciences reviewed 253 journal articles, 99 books, and 43 government
publications evaluating 80 gun-control measures. The researchers
could not identify a single gun-control regulation that reduced
violent crime, suicide, or accidents. A year earlier, the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention reported on an independent
evaluation of firearms and ammunition bans, restrictions on
acquisition, waiting periods, registration, licensing, child access
prevention laws, and zero tolerance laws. Conclusion: none of the
laws had a meaningful impact on gun violence.
When will the gun controllers learn?
topics:
Environment, Books, Law