|
Gun-control advocates should change their tune
By Matt Rosenberg
January 16, 2002
Times are hard for gun-control advocates. Following Sept. 11, firearm
purchases spiked 10 to 20 percent nationwide. It's not about terrorism,
but personal security.
Even in pacific Seattle the numbers are up, police say. You can almost
picture trust-fund liberals from Leschi and Laurelhurst laying down their
copies of the Utne Reader and Mother Jones to buy pistols and take target
practice in Bellevue.
The old anti-gun rhetoric sounds dated. As when state Democratic Party
Chairman Paul Berendt told the Olympian newspaper that Eastern Washington
GOP activists doorbelling in suburban Seattle legislative races this fall
were "... gun nuts and religious nuts from Spokane, Yakima and Moses
Lake... "
The media haven't done much better, parroting speculation that the
mysterious murder of Assistant U.S. Attorney Tom Wales, an outspoken gun
opponent, might have been perpetrated by a gun-rights extremist.
Piggybacking on local reports, People magazine asked, "Was it someone he
prosecuted, or a pro-gun zealot?" The magazine then quoted a friend
certain the killer was "trying to silence Tom and his cause."
Law-enforcement authorities have reached no such conclusion.
The evil plot by the National Rifle Association to brainwash America must
be working. The overall number of guns owned in the U.S. was around 200
million in the early '90s. That grew to 240 million by 2000, according to
Yale Law School scholar John Lott. About 80 million are handguns, still
widely available despite regulatory hoops, decreased international
production and higher prices.
Concurrently, the Department of Justice's Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS)
reports that robbery and overall violent crime in 2000 reached their
lowest points since measurements began.
There's more. Lott, the co-author of "More Guns, Less Violence," examined
18 years of FBI crime data for all 3,054 U.S. counties. He found violent
crime dropped most significantly within the 30-plus states issuing "right
to carry" concealed handgun permits, especially in more populous counties.
Painstaking research by Florida State University criminologist Gary Kleck
indicates guns are used to scare off criminals some 2.5 million times a
year in the U.S. That's several times more than the total number of
gun-related crimes.
Gun fatalities are among the tragedies that befall some children and
teens, especially where gangs and drugs are involved. The Centers for
Disease Control (CDC) reported such incidents were down 35 percent between
1994 and 1998. They've dropped further in subsequent years, too.
The CDC also notes gun deaths for all ages reached a 30-year low in '98,
then dropped another 6 percent in '99. Further, 57 percent of all U.S. gun
deaths in 1999 were suicides, according to the National Center for Health
Statistics. This is a typical percentage, and points toward the individual
rather than the means chosen.
Another oft-stated concern is accidental gun deaths. The National Safety
Council's "Deaths Due to Unintentional Injuries, 2000" report sheds some
light here. It shows accidental death rates for all ages combined are far
greater from motor vehicles, drownings, fires and burns, falls, poisonings
by solids and liquids, and suffocation than from firearms. For youths and
teens, the rates are dramatically higher for cars and drownings than for
guns; and somewhat higher for fires and burns than guns.
Let's go back to the record lows in violent crime and robbery, achieved as
gun ownership rose. Experts say the changes are due in part to the strong
economy of the mid-to-late '90s, a fading crack epidemic, an aging
population, better policing, and perhaps stiffer sentencing.
And there's some concern the first half of 2001 shows a less-steep crime
decline. But it's increasingly difficult to tie more firearms to more
crime when the opposite happens to be the case.
Nonetheless, proposed legislation extending background checks to customers
of all sellers at gun shows is on the mark. So is a continued emphasis on
safety, to help prevent the mishaps that still occur.
In Seattle, the city's voluntary gun-lock program is getting emphasis at
the neighborhood level. Some nonprofit agencies are fighting the urban
crime cycle that disproportionately affects minorities by encouraging
stronger dual-parent families. Other programs focused on mentoring, block
watch groups and community policing are part of the anti-violence arsenal,
too.
In his composition, "Gun," streetwise social critic and songwriter Gil
Scott-Heron grudgingly concedes:
The philosophy seems to be
At least as near as I can see
When everybody else gives up theirs
I'll give up mine
This is the more realistic counterpoint to John Lennon's wistful
entreaty in the much-quoted song "Imagine" to picture "a world without
guns."
One need not imagine. Look to Lennon's native England, which has seen a
surge in gun crimes after a 1997 handgun ban. Black markets endure like
cockroaches. No laws or naïve utopian schemes will ever get guns out of
the wrong hands.
Even with crime down dramatically in the U.S., plenty of domestic-issue
creeps are still looking to victimize good, law-abiding folk. What would
you like to reach for if someone broke into your home at night? A cell
phone?
Matt Rosenberg is a Seattle writer and regular contributor to the
editorial pages of The Times.
Copyright © 2002 The Seattle Times Company
|