home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
The Arsenal Files 4
/
The Arsenal Files 4 (Arsenal Computer).ISO
/
govwatch
/
sf031395.txt
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1995-03-21
|
5KB
|
96 lines
Finding Safety in Gun Ownership
By Samuel Francis
The Washington Times National Edition 03/13/95
Well now, Gun Gestapo, this is what you get for trying to push gun
control down the national guilet last year. The New York Times
reports that across the country there's an exploding movement to
enact "concealed carry" laws in state legislatures, and for once this
is news that's fit to print. "CCW," as the laws are called, is a
healthy regurgita tion of the gun control virus some lawmakers made
the mistake of swallowing.
Nearly 20 states have already enacted such laws, some of which allow
private citizens to carry concealed weapons if they can demonstrate a
"need" for doing so and let police or judges decide on the merits of
their claim of "need." Other states relax even these requirements
so any citizen who has no record of felony conviction, mental
illness, alcoholism or drug addiction can carry a weapon, and there's
a strong popular movement to adopt such laws.
The heroine of the movement is Suzanna Gratia, both of whose parents
were murdered by a crazed killer in an attack on a cafeteria in
Killeen, Texas, in 1991. Miss Gratia had a gun, but she left it in
her car while she and her parents were in the restaurant. Had she
had the gun with her when the killer started killing, she says she
could have stopped him-- forever--and her parents and most of the
other 21 victims he slaughtered that day would still be living.
Miss Gratia is to the gun rights and CCW movements what Jim Brady is
to the gun gestapo. "The other side has all the emotional tripe on
this issue," she told the Times. "What I'm providing is emotional
tripe on this side."
"Emotional tripe" may or may not be what she's shooting, but it seems
to be the only ammo left in the magazines of the gun controllers. One
woman at a recent Texas legislative hearing on a proposed CCW law
spoke of the "confusing message" the law would send children. "On the
one hand we're teaching conflict resolution in schools," she
frumped. "And on the other hand, we're allowing adults to carry
concealed weapons."
Of course, there is no contra- diction. Carrying a firearm doesn't
mean you resolve all conflicts by blasting whoever you're conflicting
with, but in so far as there is a contradiction it's easy enough to
solve. Aboiish the "conflict resolution" chicken doodle and go
with the CCW laws. Some conflicts can't be resolved except by
force, and every schoolboy discovers that truth early during
recess, even if his mother never learns it.
But if the emotional tripe the gun gestapo is peddling doesn't get
you, it also offers outright falsehoods at bargain basement prices.
If you use a gun to protect yourself, their salesmen claim, the
most likely result is that the criminal will get it away from you and
use your own weapon against you.
No. As criminologist Gary Kleck has shown, private citizens use
guns against criminals some 1 million times per year, "use"
consisting in anything from simply referring to or showing the gun to
giving your assailant his own personal air conditioning system in his
tho- rax. In the latter situations, when a victim actually shoots the
assailant, between 8,700 and 16,000 criminals are wounded and 1,500
to 2,800 take the long walk.
Analyzing data from the National Crime Survey from 1979 to 198~,
Professor Kleck has shown that "for both robbery and assault,
victims who used guns for protection were less likely to be either
attacked or injured than victims who responded in any other way." The
claim that using a gun to protect yourself results in being harmed is
a lie.
Then there's the claim that enacting CCW laws will only increase
crime and violence. Wrong again. Florida adopted a right-to-carry
law in 1987 and has seen just the opposite hap- pen. FBI statistics
show that handgun-related homicides in the state dropped by 29
percent between 1987 and 1992--at a time they were rising in many
gun-control cities like Washing- ton and New York. Of course Florida
is notorious for attacks on foreign tourists in the last few years.
Who would you attack if you knew Florida resi- dents could pack iron?
In the March issue of Chronicles, gun expert Jerry Woodruff shows
in detail how the gun gestapo in the last Congress passed the
"assault weapons" ban into law by twisting facts, playing on fear and
false information and vilifying opponents. Many of the congressmen
who got away with it then paid for it at the polls later.
Those days ought to be over for good, and now that citizens seem to
be in the process of taking back their country from the real
emotional tripesters concealed carry laws are one way of making sure
citizens can protect themselves from the real dangers the tripesters
do nothing to stop.
Samuel Francis, a columnist for The Washington Times, is nationally
syndicated.