What
does Craig R. Whitney, New York Times career man and
self-avowed liberal, say to frustrated gun owners, users, and
enthusiats who feel that many in the ongoing debate about their
rights are speaking from ignorance? “I sympathize with them,”
Whitney told the audience at a Cato Institute book forum Wednesday.
“I often see AR-15s described as automatic, which they are
not.”
Mr. Whitney, author of the
new tome Living with Guns: A Liberal’s Case for the Second
Amendment, spent much of the event calling on gun
control advocates to be less hostile and presumptuous in the heated
debate over packing heat.
Cato’s host soberly opened the forum by noting it had been
planned months ago and wishing that the book were not so
timely. Whitney began working on it when he retired from the
Times three years ago, convinced that gun regulation
merited a national, coherent conversation. He grimly pointed to
Newtown as the latest in a string of “inevitable” mass shootings
for which he implicates an unacceptable status quo.
Whether one agrees with him to the letter — and I doubt many
people in Cato’s marvelously named Hayek Auditorium did — it is
self-evident that the gun regulation debate has become
dysfunctional.
Alan Gura, counsel for Dick Heller in the landmark
case D.C. v. Heller, emphasized the need for gun
control advocates to understand why so many of their neighbors own
guns and are so passionate about the Second Amendment. He said that
to a large swath of Americans, gun ownership has become exotic and
unusual, easy to fear and misunderstand, so that any assoicated
risk, however minimal, triggers calls for sweeping restrictions. He
argued that civilian gun ownership and gun culture in the United
States are not primarily about self-defense; they are about
freedom. And with freedom comes responsibility.
Alan Morrison, an associate dean of law at George Washington
University, said that virtually everyone agrees in principle
with some restrictions (perhaps background checks, bans on violent
felons owning guns) that do not place an undue burden on
law-abiding citizens. The rub comes in agreeing on the definition
of “undue.”
Whitney, despite the subtitle of his book, appears to be on a
crusade primarily for conciliatory policy. On one hand, he said
that, “Making AR-15s illegal would not prevent people with no
respect for the law from using them illegally to commit crimes.” On
the other, he said he would entertain restrictions on
high-capacity magazines to ranges combined with a buyback program,
or even a complete ban. (Though as a former
Navy lieutenant, he presumably knows an experienced
shooter can change magazines faster than you can spell
Mississippi.)
Still, at one point, he smiled recalling the fun he had shooting
at a range in researching his book. One senses he is a man who
sees greater value in learning about what he does not understand
than in fearing it.