The following article was originally
published in the in the Fall, 1993 issue of The Public Interest,
a quarterly journal of opinion published by National Affairs, Inc. It is
reprinted here for internet distribution with the permission of the
author, Jeffrey R. Snyder. You may freely forward copies to politicians
and others, provided that it is not distributed for profit. (Note that
this is a fairly long page--about 17 screens worth.) Get a PDF format
copy here.
An excellent book of essays, "Nation of
Cowards: Essays on the Ethics of Gun Control" by the same author is
available through Amazon.com [ISBN:
1888118075] and elsewhere.
A Nation of
Cowards
by Jeffrey R. Snyder
OUR SOCIETY has reached a pinnacle of
self-expression and respect for individuality rare or unmatched in
history. Our entire popular culture -- from fashion magazines to the
cinema -- positively screams the matchless worth of the individual, and
glories in eccentricity, nonconformity, independent judgment, and
self-determination. This enthusiasm is reflected in the prevalent notion
that helping someone entails increasing that person's "self-esteem"; that
if a person properly values himself, he will naturally be a happy,
productive, and, in some inexplicable fashion, responsible member of
society.
And yet, while people are encouraged to
revel in their individuality and incalculable self-worth, the media and
the law enforcement establishment continually advise us that, when
confronted with the threat of lethal violence, we should not resist, but
simply give the attacker what he wants. If the crime under consideration
is rape, there is some notable waffling on this point, and the discussion
quickly moves to how the woman can change her behavior to minimize the
risk of rape, and the various ridiculous, non-lethal weapons she may
acceptably carry, such as whistles, keys, mace or, that weapon which
really sends shivers down a rapist's spine, the portable cellular phone.
Now how can this be? How can a person who values himself so highly calmly
accept the indignity of a criminal assault? How can one who believes that
the essence of his dignity lies in his self-determination passively accept
the forcible deprivation of that self-determination? How can he, quietly,
with great dignity and poise, simply hand over the goods?
The assumption, of course, is that there is no inconsistency. The advice
not to resist a criminal assault and simply hand over the goods is founded
on the notion that one's life is of incalculable value, and that no amount
of property is worth it. Put aside, for a moment, the outrageousness of
the suggestion that a criminal who proffers lethal violence should be
treated as if he has instituted a new social contract: "I will not hurt or
kill you if you give me what I want." For years, feminists have labored to
educate people that rape is not about sex, but about domination,
degradation, and control. Evidently, someone needs to inform the law
enforcement establishment and the media that kidnapping, robbery,
carjacking, and assault are not about property.
Crime is not only a complete disavowal of the social contract, but also a
commandeering of the victim's person and liberty. If the individual's
dignity lies in the fact that he is a moral agent engaging in actions of
his own will, in free exchange with others, then crime always violates the
victim's dignity. It is, in fact, an act of enslavement. Your wallet, your
purse, or your car may not be worth your life, but your dignity is; and if
it is not worth fighting for, it can hardly be said to exist.
The gift of life
Although difficult for modern man to fathom, it was once widely believed
that life was a gift from God, that to not defend that life when offered
violence was to hold God's gift in contempt, to be a coward and to breach
one's duty to one's community. A sermon given in Philadelphia in 1747
unequivocally equated the failure to defend oneself with suicide:
He that suffers his life to be taken
from him by one that hath no
authority for that purpose, when he might preserve it by defense,
incurs the Guilt of self murder since God hath enjoined him to seek
the continuance of his life, and Nature itself teaches every creature
to defend itself.
"Cowardice" and "self-respect" have
largely disappeared from public discourse. In their place we are offered
"self-esteem" as the bellwether of success and a proxy for dignity.
"Self-respect" implies that one recognizes standards, and judges oneself
worthy by the degree to which one lives up to them. "Self-esteem" simply
means that one feels good about oneself. "Dignity" used to refer to the
self-mastery and fortitude with which a person conducted himself in the
face of life's vicissitudes and the boorish behavior of others. Now,
judging by campus speech codes, dignity requires that we never encounter a
discouraging word and that others be coerced into acting respectfully,
evidently on the assumption that we are powerless to prevent our
degradation if exposed to the demeaning behavior of others. These are
signposts proclaiming the insubstantiality of our character, the
hollowness of our souls.
It is impossible to address the problem of rampant crime without talking
about the moral responsibility of the intended victim. Crime is rampant
because the law-abiding, each of us, condone it, excuse it, permit it,
submit to it. We permit and encourage it because we do not fight back,
immediately, then and there, where it happens. Crime is not rampant
because we do not have enough prisons, because judges and prosecutors are
too soft, because the police are hamstrung with absurd technicalities. The
defect is there, in our character. We are a nation of cowards and
shirkers.
Do you feel lucky?
In 1991, when then-Attorney General Richard Thornburgh released the FBI's
annual crime statistics, he noted that it is now more likely that a person
will be the victim of a violent crime than that he will be in an auto
accident. Despite this, most people readily believe that the existence of
the police relieves them of the responsibility to take full measures to
protect themselves. The police, however, are not personal bodyguards.
Rather, they act as a general deterrent to crime, both by their presence
and by apprehending criminals after the fact. As numerous courts have
held, they have no legal obligation to protect anyone in particular. You
cannot sue them for failing to prevent you from being the victim of a
crime.
Insofar as the police deter by their presence, they are very, very good.
Criminals take great pains not to commit a crime in front of them.
Unfortunately, the corollary is that you can pretty much bet your life
(and you are) that they won't be there at the moment you actually need
them. Should you ever be the victim of an assault, a robbery, or a rape,
you will find it very difficult to call the police while the act is in
progress, even if you are carrying a portable cellular phone.
Nevertheless, you might be interested to know how long it takes them to
show up. Department of Justice statistics for 1991 show that, for all
crimes of violence, only 28 percent of calls are responded to within five
minutes. The idea that protection is a service people can call to have
delivered and expect to receive in a timely fashion is often mocked by gun
owners, who love to recite the challenge, "Call for a cop, call for an
ambulance, and call for a pizza. See who shows up first."
Many people deal with the problem of crime by convincing themselves that
they live, work, and travel only in special "crime-free" zones.
Invariably, they react with shock and hurt surprise when they discover
that criminals do not play by the rules and do not respect these imaginary
boundaries. If, however, you understand that crime can occur anywhere at
anytime, and if you understand that you can be maimed or mortally wounded
in mere seconds, you may wish to consider whether you are willing to place
the responsibility for safeguarding your life in the hands of others.
Power and responsibility
Is your life worth protecting? If so, whose responsibility is it to
protect it? If you believe that it is the police's, not only are you wrong
-- since the courts universally rule that they have no legal obligation to
do so -- but you face some difficult moral quandaries. How can you
rightfully ask another human being to risk his life to protect yours, when
you will assume no responsibility yourself? Because that is his job and we
pay him to do it? Because your life is of incalculable value, but his is
only worth the $30,000 salary we pay him? If you believe it reprehensible
to possess the means and will to use lethal force to repel a criminal
assault, how can you call upon another to do so for you?
Do you believe that you are forbidden to protect yourself because the
police are better qualified to protect you, because they know what they
are doing but you're a rank amateur? Put aside that this is equivalent to
believing that only concert pianists may play the piano and only
professional athletes may play sports. What exactly are these special
qualities possessed only by the police and beyond the rest of us mere
mortals?
One who values his life and takes seriously his responsibilities to his
family and community will possess and cultivate the means of fighting
back, and will retaliate when threatened with death or grievous injury to
himself or a loved one. He will never be content to rely solely on others
for his safety, or to think he has done all that is possible by being
aware of his surroundings and taking measures of avoidance. Let's not
mince words: He will be armed, will be trained in the use of his weapon,
and will defend himself when faced with lethal violence.
Fortunately, there is a weapon for preserving life and liberty that can be
wielded effectively by almost anyone -- the handgun. Small and light
enough to be carried habitually, lethal, but unlike the knife or sword,
not demanding great skill or strength, it truly is the "great equalizer."
Requiring only hand-eye coordination and a modicum of ability to remain
cool under pressure, it can be used effectively by the old and the weak
against the young and the strong, by the one against the many.
The handgun is the only weapon that would give a lone female jogger a
chance of prevailing against a gang of thugs intent on rape, a teacher a
chance of protecting children at recess from a madman intent on massacring
them, a family of tourists waiting at a mid-town subway station the means
to protect themselves from a gang of teens armed with razors and knives.
But since we live in a society that by and large outlaws the carrying of
arms, we are brought into the fray of the Great American Gun War. Gun
control is one of the most prominent battlegrounds in our current culture
wars. Yet it is unique in the half-heartedness with which our conservative
leaders and pundits -- our "conservative elite" -- do battle, and have
conceded the moral high ground to liberal gun control proponents. It is
not a topic often written about, or written about with any great fervor,
by William F. Buckley or Patrick Buchanan. As drug czar, William Bennett
advised President Bush to ban "assault weapons." George Will is on record
as recommending the repeal of the Second Amendment, and Jack Kemp is on
record as favoring a ban on the possession of semiautomatic "assault
weapons." The battle for gun rights is one fought predominantly by the
common man. The beliefs of both our liberal and conservative elites are in
fact abetting the criminal rampage through our society.
Selling crime prevention
By any rational measure, nearly all gun control proposals are hokum. The
Brady Bill, for example, would not have prevented John Hinckley from
obtaining a gun to shoot President Reagan; Hinckley purchased his weapon
five months before the attack, and his medical records could not have
served as a basis to deny his purchase of a gun, since medical records are
not public documents filed with the police. Similarly, California's
waiting period and background check did not stop Patrick Purdy from
purchasing the "assault rifle" and handguns he used to massacre children
during recess in a Stockton schoolyard; the felony conviction that would
have provided the basis for stopping the sales did not exist, because Mr.
Purdy's previous weapons violations were plea-bargained down from felonies
to misdemeanors.
In the mid-sixties there was a public service advertising campaign
targeted at car owners about the prevention of car theft. The purpose of
the ad was to urge car owners not to leave their keys in their cars. The
message was, "Don't help a good boy go bad." The implication was that, by
leaving his keys in his car, the normal, law-abiding car owner was
contributing to the delinquency of minors who, if they just weren't
tempted beyond their limits, would be "good." Now, in those days people
still had a fair sense of just who was responsible for whose behavior. The
ad succeeded in enraging a goodly portion of the populace, and was soon
dropped.
Nearly all of the gun control measures offered by Handgun Control, Inc. (HCI)
and its ilk embody the same philosophy. They are founded on the belief
that America's law-abiding gun owners are the source of the problem. With
their unholy desire for firearms, they are creating a society awash in a
sea of guns, thereby helping good boys go bad, and helping bad boys be
badder. This laying of moral blame for violent crime at the feet of the
law-abiding, and the implicit absolution of violent criminals for their
misdeeds, naturally infuriates honest gun owners.
The files of HCI and other gun control organizations are filled with
proposals to limit the availability of semiautomatic and other firearms to
law-abiding citizens, and barren of proposals for apprehending and
punishing violent criminals. It is ludicrous to expect that the proposals
of HCI, or any gun control laws, will significantly curb crime. According
to Department of Justice and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF)
statistics, fully 90 percent of violent crimes are committed without a
handgun, and 93 percent of the guns obtained by violent criminals are not
obtained through the lawful purchase and sale transactions that are the
object of most gun control legislation. Furthermore, the number of violent
criminals is minute in comparison to the number of firearms in America --
estimated by the ATF at about 200 million, approximately one-third of
which are handguns. With so abundant a supply, there will always be enough
guns available for those who wish to use them for nefarious ends, no
matter how complete the legal prohibitions against them, or how draconian
the punishment for their acquisition or use. No, the gun control proposals
of HCI and other organizations are not seriously intended as crime
control. Something else is at work here.
The tyranny of the elite
Gun control is a moral crusade against a benighted, barbaric citizenry.
This is demonstrated not only by the ineffectualness of gun control in
preventing crime, and by the fact that it focuses on restricting the
behavior of the law-abiding rather than apprehending and punishing the
guilty, but also by the execration that gun control proponents heap on gun
owners and their evil instrumentality, the NRA. Gun owners are routinely
portrayed as uneducated, paranoid rednecks fascinated by and prone to
violence, i.e., exactly the type of person who opposes the liberal agenda
and whose moral and social "re-education" is the object of liberal social
policies. Typical of such bigotry is New York Gov. Mario Cuomo's famous
characterization of gun-owners as "hunters who drink beer, don't vote, and
lie to their wives about where they were all weekend." Similar
vituperation is rained upon the NRA, characterized by Sen. Edward Kennedy
as the "pusher's best friend," lampooned in political cartoons as standing
for the right of children to carry firearms to school and, in general,
portrayed as standing for an individual's God-given right to blow people
away at will.
The stereotype is, of course, false. As criminologist and constitutional
lawyer Don B. Kates, Jr. and former HCI contributor Dr. Patricia Harris
have pointed out, "[s]tudies consistently show that, on the average, gun
owners are better educated and have more prestigious jobs than
non-owners.... Later studies show that gun owners are less likely than
non-owners to approve of police brutality, violence against dissenters,
etc."
Conservatives must understand that the antipathy many liberals have for
gun owners arises in good measure from their statist utopianism. This
habit of mind has nowhere been better explored than in The Republic.
There, Plato argues that the perfectly just society is one in which an
unarmed people exhibit virtue by minding their own business in the
performance of their assigned functions, while the government of
philosopher-kings, above the law and protected by armed guardians
unquestioning in their loyalty to the state, engineers, implements, and
fine-tunes the creation of that society, aided and abetted by myths that
both hide and justify their totalitarian manipulation.
The unarmed life
When columnist Carl Rowan preaches gun control and uses a gun to defend
his home, when Maryland Gov. William Donald Schaefer seeks legislation
year after year to ban semiautomatic "assault weapons" whose only purpose,
we are told, is to kill people, while he is at the same time escorted by
state police armed with large-capacity 9mm semiautomatic pistols, it is
not simple hypocrisy. It is the workings of that habit of mind possessed
by all superior beings who have taken upon themselves the terrible burden
of civilizing the masses and who understand, like our Congress, that laws
are for other people.
The liberal elite know that they are philosopher-kings. They know that the
people simply cannot be trusted; that they are incapable of just and fair
self-government; that left to their own devices, their society will be
racist, sexist, homophobic, and inequitable -- and the liberal elite know
how to fix things. They are going to help us live the good and just life,
even if they have to lie to us and force us to do it. And they detest
those who stand in their way.
The private ownership of firearms is a rebuke to this utopian zeal. To own
firearms is to affirm that freedom and liberty are not gifts from the
state. It is to reserve final judgment about whether the state is
encroaching on freedom and liberty, to stand ready to defend that freedom
with more than mere words, and to stand outside the state's totalitarian
reach.
The Florida experience
The elitist distrust of the people underlying the gun control movement is
illustrated beautifully in HCI's campaign against a new concealed-carry
law in Florida. Prior to 1987, the Florida law permitting the issuance of
concealed-carry permits was administered at the county level. The law was
vague, and, as a result, was subject to conflicting interpretation and
political manipulation. Permits were issued principally to security
personnel and the privileged few with political connections. Permits were
valid only within the county of issuance.
In 1987, however, Florida enacted a uniform concealed-carry law which
mandates that county authorities issue a permit to anyone who satisfies
certain objective criteria. The law requires that a permit be issued to
any applicant who is a resident, at least twenty-one years of age, has no
criminal record, no record of alcohol or drug abuse, no history of mental
illness, and provides evidence of having satisfactorily completed a
firearms safety course offered by the NRA or other competent instructor.
The applicant must provide a set of fingerprints, after which the
authorities make a background check. The permit must be issued or denied
within ninety days, is valid throughout the state, and must be renewed
every three years, which provides authorities a regular means of
reevaluating whether the permit holder still qualifies.
Passage of this legislation was vehemently opposed by HCI and the media.
The law, they said, would lead to citizens shooting each other over
everyday disputes involving fender benders, impolite behavior, and other
slights to their dignity. Terms like "Florida, the Gunshine State" and
"Dodge City East" were coined to suggest that the state, and those seeking
passage of the law, were encouraging individuals to act as judge, jury,
and executioner in a "Death Wish" society.
No HCI campaign more clearly demonstrates the elitist beliefs underlying
the campaign to eradicate gun ownership. Given the qualifications required
of permit holders, HCI and the media can only believe that common,
law-abiding citizens are seething cauldrons of homicidal rage, ready to
kill to avenge any slight to their dignity, eager to seek out and
summarily execute the lawless. Only lack of immediate access to a gun
restrains them and prevents the blood from flowing in the streets. They
are so mentally and morally deficient that they would mistake a permit to
carry a weapon in self-defense as a state-sanctioned license to kill at
will.
Did the dire predictions come true? Despite the fact that Miami and Dade
County have severe problems with the drug trade, the homicide rate fell in
Florida following enactment of this law, as it did in Oregon following
enactment of similar legislation there. There are, in addition, several
documented cases of new permit holders successfully using their weapons to
defend themselves. Information from the Florida Department of State shows
that, from the beginning of the program in 1987 through June 1993, 160,823
permits have been issued, and only 530, or about 0.33 percent of the
applicants, have been denied a permit for failure to satisfy the criteria,
indicating that the law is benefiting those whom it was intended to
benefit -- the law-abiding. Only 16 permits, less than 1/100th of 1
percent, have been revoked due to the post-issuance commission of a crime
involving a firearm.
The Florida legislation has been used as a model for legislation adopted
by Oregon, Idaho, Montana, and Mississippi. There are, in addition, seven
other states (Maine, North and South Dakota, Utah, Washington, West
Virginia, and, with the exception of cities with a population in excess of
1 million, Pennsylvania) which provide that concealed-carry permits must
be issued to law-abiding citizens who satisfy various objective criteria.
Finally, no permit is required at all in Vermont. Altogether, then, there
are thirteen states in which law-abiding citizens who wish to carry arms
to defend themselves may do so. While no one appears to have compiled the
statistics from all of these jurisdictions, there is certainly an ample
data base for those seeking the truth about the trustworthiness of
law-abiding citizens who carry firearms.
Other evidence also suggests that armed citizens are very responsible in
using guns to defend themselves. Florida State University criminologist
Gary Kleck, using surveys and other data, has determined that armed
citizens defend their lives or property with firearms against criminals
approximately 1 million times a year. In 98 percent of these instances,
the citizen merely brandishes the weapon or fires a warning shot. Only in
2 percent of the cases do citizens actually shoot their assailants. In
defending themselves with their firearms, armed citizens kill 2,000 to
3,000 criminals each year, three times the number killed by the police. A
nationwide study by Kates, the constitutional lawyer and criminologist,
found that only 2 percent of civilian shootings involved an innocent
person mistakenly identified as a criminal. The "error rate" for the
police, however, was 11 percent, over five times as high.
It is simply not possible to square the numbers above and the experience
of Florida with the notions that honest, law-abiding gun owners are
borderline psychopaths itching for an excuse to shoot someone, vigilantes
eager to seek out and summarily execute the lawless, or incompetent fools
incapable of determining when it is proper to use lethal force in defense
of their lives. Nor upon reflection should these results seem surprising.
Rape, robbery, and attempted murder are not typically actions rife with
ambiguity or subtlety, requiring special powers of observation and great
book-learning to discern. When a man pulls a knife on a woman and says,
"You're coming with me," her judgment that a crime is being committed is
not likely to be in error. There is little chance that she is going to
shoot the wrong person. It is the police, because they are rarely at the
scene of the crime when it occurs, who are more likely to find themselves
in circumstances where guilt and innocence are not so clear-cut, and in
which the probability for mistakes is higher.
Arms and liberty
Classical republican philosophy has long recognized the critical
relationship between personal liberty and the possession of arms by a
people ready and willing to use them. Political theorists as dissimilar as
Niccolo Machiavelli, Sir Thomas More, James Harrington, Algernon Sidney,
John Locke, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau all shared the view that the
possession of arms is vital for resisting tyranny, and that to be disarmed
by one's government is tantamount to being enslaved by it. The possession
of arms by the people is the ultimate warrant that government governs only
with the consent of the governed. As Kates has shown, the Second Amendment
is as much a product of this political philosophy as it is of the American
experience in the Revolutionary War. Yet our conservative elite has
abandoned this aspect of republican theory. Although our conservative
pundits recognize and embrace gun owners as allies in other arenas, their
battle for gun rights is desultory. The problem here is not a statist
utopianism, although goodness knows that liberals are not alone in the
confidence they have in the state's ability to solve society's problems.
Rather, the problem seems to lie in certain cultural traits shared by our
conservative and liberal elites.
One such trait is an abounding faith in the power of the word. The failure
of our conservative elite to defend the Second Amendment stems in great
measure from an overestimation of the power of the rights set forth in the
First Amendment, and a general undervaluation of action. Implicit in calls
for the repeal of the Second Amendment is the assumption that our First
Amendment rights are sufficient to preserve our liberty. The belief is
that liberty can be preserved as long as men freely speak their minds;
that there is no tyranny or abuse that can survive being exposed in the
press; and that the truth need only be disclosed for the culprits to be
shamed. The people will act, and the truth shall set us, and keep us,
free.
History is not kind to this belief, tending rather to support the view of
Hobbes, Machiavelli, and other republican theorists that only people
willing and able to defend themselves can preserve their liberties. While
it may be tempting and comforting to believe that the existence of mass
electronic communication has forever altered the balance of power between
the state and its subjects, the belief has certainly not been tested by
time, and what little history there is in the age of mass communication is
not especially encouraging. The camera, radio, and press are mere tools
and, like guns, can be used for good or ill. Hitler, after all, was a
masterful orator, used radio to very good effect, and is well known to
have pioneered and exploited the propaganda opportunities afforded by
film. And then, of course, there were the Brownshirts, who knew very well
how to quell dissent among intellectuals.
Polite society
In addition to being enamored of the power of words, our conservative
elite shares with liberals the notion that an armed society is just not
civilized or progressive, that massive gun ownership is a blot on our
civilization. This association of personal disarmament with civilized
behavior is one of the great unexamined beliefs of our time.
Should you read English literature from the sixteenth through nineteenth
centuries, you will discover numerous references to the fact that a
gentleman, especially when out at night or traveling, armed himself with a
sword or a pistol against the chance of encountering a highwayman or other
such predator. This does not appear to have shocked the ladies
accompanying him. True, for the most part there were no police in those
days, but we have already addressed the notion that the presence of the
police absolves people of the responsibility to look after their safety,
and in any event the existence of the police cannot be said to have
reduced crime to negligible levels.
It is by no means obvious why it is "civilized" to permit oneself to fall
easy prey to criminal violence, and to permit criminals to continue
unobstructed in their evil ways. While it may be that a society in which
crime is so rare that no one ever needs to carry a weapon is "civilized,"
a society that stigmatizes the carrying of weapons by the law-abiding --
because it distrusts its citizens more than it fears rapists, robbers, and
murderers -- certainly cannot claim this distinction. Perhaps the notion
that defending oneself with lethal force is not "civilized" arises from
the view that violence is always wrong, or the view that each human being
is of such intrinsic worth that it is wrong to kill anyone under any
circumstances. The necessary implication of these propositions, however,
is that life is not worth defending. Far from being "civilized," the
beliefs that counterviolence and killing are always wrong are an
invitation to the spread of barbarism. Such beliefs announce loudly and
clearly that those who do not respect the lives and property of others
will rule over those who do.
In truth, one who believes it wrong to arm himself against criminal
violence shows contempt of God's gift of life (or, in modern parlance,
does not properly value himself), does not live up to his responsibilities
to his family and community, and proclaims himself mentally and morally
deficient, because he does not trust himself to behave responsibly. In
truth, a state that deprives its law-abiding citizens of the means to
effectively defend themselves is not civilized but barbarous, becoming an
accomplice of murderers, rapists, and thugs and revealing its totalitarian
nature by its tacit admission that the disorganized, random havoc created
by criminals is far less a threat than are men and women who believe
themselves free and independent, and act accordingly.
While gun control proponents and other advocates of a kinder, gentler
society incessantly decry our "armed society," in truth we do not live in
an armed society. We live in a society in which violent criminals and
agents of the state habitually carry weapons, and in which many
law-abiding citizens own firearms but do not go about armed. Department of
Justice statistics indicate that 87 percent of all violent crimes occur
outside the home. Essentially, although tens of millions own firearms, we
are an unarmed society.
Take back the night
Clearly the police and the courts are not providing a significant brake on
criminal activity. While liberals call for more poverty, education, and
drug treatment programs, conservatives take a more direct tack. George
Will advocates a massive increase in the number of police and a shift
toward "community-based policing." Meanwhile, the NRA and many
conservative leaders call for laws that would require violent criminals
serve at least 85 percent of their sentences and would place repeat
offenders permanently behind bars.
Our society suffers greatly from the beliefs that only official action is
legitimate and that the state is the source of our earthly salvation. Both
liberal and conservative prescriptions for violent crime suffer from the
"not in my job description" school of thought regarding the
responsibilities of the law-abiding citizen, and from an overestimation of
the ability of the state to provide society's moral moorings. As long as
law-abiding citizens assume no personal responsibility for combating
crime, liberal and conservative programs will fail to contain it.
Judging by the numerous articles about concealed-carry in gun magazines,
the growing number of products advertised for such purpose, and the
increase in the number of concealed-carry applications in states with
mandatory-issuance laws, more and more people, including growing numbers
of women, are carrying firearms for self-defense. Since there are still
many states in which the issuance of permits is discretionary and in which
law enforcement officials routinely deny applications, many people have
been put to the hard choice between protecting their lives or respecting
the law. Some of these people have learned the hard way, by being the
victim of a crime, or by seeing a friend or loved one raped, robbed, or
murdered, that violent crime can happen to anyone, anywhere at anytime,
and that crime is not about sex or property but life, liberty, and
dignity.
The laws proscribing concealed-carry of firearms by honest, law-abiding
citizens breed nothing but disrespect for the law. As the Founding Fathers
knew well, a government that does not trust its honest, law-abiding,
taxpaying citizens with the means of self-defense is not itself worthy of
trust. Laws disarming honest citizens proclaim that the government is the
master, not the servant, of the people. A federal law along the lines of
the Florida statute -- overriding all contradictory state and local laws
and acknowledging that the carrying of firearms by law-abiding citizens is
a privilege and immunity of citizenship -- is needed to correct the
outrageous conduct of state and local officials operating under
discretionary licensing systems.
What we certainly do not need is more gun control. Those who call for the
repeal of the Second Amendment so that we can really begin controlling
firearms betray a serious misunderstanding of the Bill of Rights. The Bill
of Rights does not grant rights to the people, such that its repeal would
legitimately confer upon government the powers otherwise proscribed. The
Bill of Rights is the list of the fundamental, inalienable rights, endowed
in man by his Creator, that define what it means to be a free and
independent people, the rights which must exist to ensure that government
governs only with the consent of the people.
At one time this was even understood by the Supreme Court. In United
States v. Cruikshank (1876), the first case in which the Court had an
opportunity to interpret the Second Amendment, it stated that the right
confirmed by the Second Amendment "is not a right granted by the
constitution. Neither is it in any manner dependent upon that instrument
for its existence." The repeal of the Second Amendment would no more
render the outlawing of firearms legitimate than the repeal of the due
process clause of the Fifth Amendment would authorize the government to
imprison and kill people at will. A government that abrogates any of the
Bill of Rights, with or without majoritarian approval, forever acts
illegitimately, becomes tyrannical, and loses the moral right to govern.
This is the uncompromising understanding reflected in the warning that
America's gun owners will not go gently into that good, utopian night:
"You can have my gun when you pry it from my cold, dead hands." While
liberals take this statement as evidence of the retrograde, violent nature
of gun owners, we gun owners hope that liberals hold equally strong
sentiments about their printing presses, word processors, and television
cameras. The republic depends upon fervent devotion to all our fundamental
rights.
###
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