Statistics from the National Federation of State High
School Associations reveal that, in 1999, 15 students
perished while playing in high school football games.
This fact received little to no coverage in the national
media. Angry parents did not parade into Washington, D.C.,
in order to demand stricter regulation of high school
football. Politicos feigning intense anguish did not bemoan
football’s domination of most learning institutions’ sports
programs. The large majority of this country’s citizens
watched their favorite high school football teams oblivious
to the blood that soaked the pigskin and dripped onto
America’s playing fields.
Conversely, when 15 students died from gunshot wounds
during the 1998-1999 school year, as the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention indicate, the national media evangelized
endlessly about the evils of guns. Apparently forgetting
that many of the kid killers, such as Eric Harris and
Dylan Klebold, had obtained their weapons illegally, hordes
of crusaders seethed that if guns weren’t legal and available,
the school murders wouldn’t have happened. A few local
governments, hoping to score political points, filed lawsuits
against gun manufacturers, blaming them for the orgy of
death and violence that seemed to have consumed America’s
school system.
Why did 15 deaths related to high school football inspire
scant attention, while 15 deaths resulting from gun violence
kindled nationwide apoplexy?
Many right-wingers would simply answer, “Because the gun
grabbers want to seize our weapons, they will ignore any
fact that stands in their way!” These conservatives believe
leftists across America want to confiscate firearms for
the sole purpose of extending government control over
the citizenry. But really, the notion that an enormous
conspiracy, in which common liberals from all regions
of the country participate, exists to subjugate the American
people, is patently absurd. Most Americans care too little
about politics and government to sustain such a far-reaching
plot. Instead, the average gun control advocate honestly
does believe that laws tightly regulating firearms, if
not outright banning them, would reduce the number of
Americans who die as a consequence of criminal attacks.
Gun control advocates amongst the populace acquire their
ideas about firearms from news personalities and government
officials who use guns as convenient scapegoats for this
country’s high crime rate in order to avoid having to
search for genuine causes and solutions. Whenever an event
such as a school shooting occurs, the personalities and
officials shamelessly exploit the opportunity to vilify
guns and the individuals who own them. The real interest
here is not to save lives, but to exacerbate public opinion
against guns. That is why the whole world mourned the
tragic deaths of 15 students from gunshot wounds during
the 1998-1999 school year, but few people, if anyone,
seemed to care that 15 high school football players died
in 1999.
The truth about guns is that they save far more lives
than they take. According to the Fall 1995 issue of The
Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, law-abiding citizens
use guns to defend themselves an average of 2.5 million
times per year, and only in less than 8 percent of these
occurrences will citizens actually need to fire their
guns, because most criminals will flee at the sight of
a firearm. Of the 2.5 million annual instances of self-defense,
200,000 are cases of women defending themselves from sexual
abuse. In contrast, accidental deaths, suicides, and homicides
involving guns number, on average, less than 40,000 every
year. This means that American citizens usually employ
guns to defend themselves over 60 percent more times yearly
than they do to kill, intentionally or otherwise.
According to the August 28, 1996, issue of The Wall Street
Journal, states with looser gun control laws experience
less crime than states with tougher laws. For example,
in states that had begun to permit concealed weapons in
the early 90’s, the murder rates fell by an average of
8.5 percent, the rape rates by 5 percent, the aggravated
assault rates by 7 percent, and the robbery rates by 3
percent. Extrapolating from these data, if states that
forbade concealed weapons instead allowed them, 1,570
murders, 4,177 rapes, 60,000 aggravated assaults, and
11,000 robberies annually would not have taken place.
The story of Australia demonstrates what could happen
in the United States if the American government were to
ban guns. After a nut conducted a particularly brutal
massacre in the mid-90’s, Australia enacted laws disallowing
personal firearms. By the end of 1997, according to the
Australian Bureau of Statistics, crime had increased.
The homicide rate rose by 3.2 percent, the assault rate
by 8.6 percent, the armed robbery rate by 44 percent,
the unarmed robbery rate by 21 percent, the unlawful entry
rate by 3.9 percent, and the car theft rate by 6.1 percent.
Even supposing that Australia’s new gun laws did not directly
cause the increase in crime, the laws certainly did nothing
to help matters.
Because guns are not the forces for evil the media and
the government claim they are, no reason exists to forbid
or to constrict the right to bear arms for law-abiding
American citizens. Restrictions of freedom are only necessary
and proper when their design is to prevent individuals
from harming other people, which outlawing guns would
not accomplish. Indeed, all the criminalization of guns
would do is leave the average American defenseless against
murderers and thieves who would retain their own guns,
in natural contrivance of the law.
Rather than inhibiting freedom, the United States should
err on the side of liberty, as per the Constitution, and
allow its citizens to exercise their Second Amendment
rights as they have over the first 200 years of American
history. (Contrary to the notion that the Second Amendment
does not grant individuals the right to bear arms, the
Supreme Court ruled in its 1990 decision U.S. v. Verdugo-Urquidez
that the Second Amendment applies to “persons who are
a part of a national community.”) As Thomas Jefferson,
one of the most intelligent Founding Fathers, said, “I
would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending
too much liberty than to those attending too small a degree
of it.”
Article
Source: http://www.articledashboard.com
The author, Jason
Vines, a lifelong student of history and government,
maintains Hypersyllogistic: Partisanship Rehab at www.hypersyllogistic.com.
Hypersyllogistic eschews irrational rancor and partisan
backbiting in favor of independent thought and respectful
discussion. This article is © Jason Vines. All usage
of this article must include a citation to the author
and a link to Hypersyllogistic. |