Statistics don't support scary stories about concealed-carry
Point of View by DR. RONALD BRACE
Mar. 04, 2004
http://www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/duluthtribune/news/opinion/8102666.htm
The Feb. 13 Point of View column by Dr. Greg Bachhuber --
"Concealed-carry laws place guns into hands of unskilled people" -- (and
your newspaper's editorial as well) contains all the misinformation and
mistrust that every opponent of concealed-carry believe. The problem is it
just isn't true.
The fact that concealed-carry laws have a 10-plus-year record that is open
and available to the public in most states refutes the worries he expressed.
The consensus is that at worst there is no harm done by these laws, and at
best crime decreases, up to 8 percent in a few studies.
Let's review Bachhuber's. Anyone can get a concealed-carry permit with
minimal training. This is true as long as you can legally purchase a
handgun, take the course and pay the fees (about $200).
The vast majority of individuals getting their concealed-carry permit have
years of experience with firearms. The point is that they are taking
responsibility for their own self-defense, and with it comes a tremendous
responsibility to know how to handle the firearm correctly as well as when
it is wise to use it.
I know of two people who had no firearm experience who have gotten their
permits to carry. They did this as a political act to show how easy it is to
get a permit. They do not carry. Should they frighten me? No. I do not
believe the fact that they have a permit will suddenly give them visions of
being in the Wild West and shooting up the streets. And if they do carry,
the chance of them having to use a gun in self-defense in a public place is
quite low.
Yet should we as a society decide that they should be disarmed and risk not
being able to defend themselves? To attempt to compare the training police
get in the use of deadly force and that of a civilian is like comparing
apples and oranges. The police have a duty to carry their firearms and
protect the public (and, incidentally, such protection does not extend to
any individual but to the community as a whole, as has been upheld several
times by the U.S. Supreme Court).
Police should be held to a much higher standard concerning defensive
shootings, yet routinely are not. Police are given three days of
administrative leave before being interviewed about the events. I can
promise that if a civilian is involved in a defensive shooting, they will
not get three days to settle their nerves and collect their thoughts. They
will be grilled for hours and will most likely end up behind bars for at
least a short time.
And if Bachhuber wishes to talk about suicides with guns (truly a tragic
number, yet firearms bear no relationship to suicides in most studies on the
subject except in the elderly population), how many concealed-carry permit
holders in the United States committed suicide while carrying legally in the
past five years? How about the past year? Any that you've heard of in the
past two weeks? None have been reported in any of these time frames. Yet at
least two police officers have committed suicide with a firearm in the past
two weeks, and one of them killed his wife first with his service gun.
Statistics like these could be used to say that the police shouldn't be
allowed guns -- ridiculous. The studies that Bachhuber claims show how
dangerous guns in the home are have been proven false several times. The
same study showing a certain increase in household members being shot if
they have guns in their home can also show that in homes without firearms,
there is a 300 percent higher likelihood of being killed at home compared to
homes with firearms.
Studies like these take into consideration robberies and drug shootings
involving even the most casual acquaintances, and people who brought the gun
used to shoot someone into the home as "having a gun in the home." If you
invite a friend over for a game, and he brings someone you barely know who
has a gun on him, and that person shoots you, you are listed as having a gun
in the home. It is often easy to find the numbers you want when a study is
selective in its subject group.
Firearm injuries and deaths are a tragedy. As an emergency physician myself,
both Bachhuber and I have seen our share of gun tragedies. Our difference is
that Bachhuber blames the gun. I blame the shooter (or their parents in the
case of childhood accidents and shootings). He believes that removing guns
from society would reduce gun injuries and crime. I know this is not the
case. Firearm ownership is part of the fundamental right of self-defense,
not a privilege granted by the government. It is up to us as individuals to
exercise that right in an honorable fashion. If every gun owner did this,
then the incidents of accidental shootings and suicides, and perhaps even
violent crime, will fall.
RONALD BRACE, M.D., of Elk River, Minn., is a board-certified emergency
physician practicing at the Cambridge Medical Center in Cambridge, Minn. He
has worked at emergency departments in the Twin Cities, Colorado, North
Carolina and Texas and was part of the support forces in Bosnia in 1997-98.
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