Banning
Swords and Laser Pointers
by
John R. Lott, Jr.
by John R. Lott, Jr.
AUSTRALIANS
are a dangerous lot. Weapons that would hardly cause a second thought
in the hands of a citizen in another country generate concern when
held by an Australian.
Fortunately,
some Australian state governments have understood the dangers of
letting ordinary Australians get access to weapons such as laser
pointers, a popular device for making business and academic presentations
in countries such as the US.
Americans
may feel safe when an academic addresses a conference using a laser
pointer. In the hands of an Australian, however, there is understandable
fear that these devices could do untold harm. An Australian academic
with a laser pointer would cause real panic.
Now
the Victorian Government is achieving international recognition
for protecting Australians from a danger that has been around for
far too long: swords. After July 1, swords will be banned and violators
will face penalties that previously have been reserved for laser
pointers six months in jail and a $12,000 fine.
Swords
are broadly defined as a cutting or thrusting weapon with a long
blade, a hilt and one or two sharp edges. Although this unfortunately
exempts knives with either no sharp or three or more sharp edges,
or knives without handles, not specifying a blade length in the
legislation hopefully ensures many knives will be banned.
A
licensing process will be set up so that a select few will be granted
an exemption and pay a $135 fee, but they will have to lock their
weapons in sturdy safes and put in burglar alarms. If properly enforced,
the law could produce other benefits, such as ensuring that dishes
are promptly washed after dinner so that any offending steak knives
can be placed back in their safe. On the downside, the knives would
still be available during dinner when many family arguments might
get out of hand. It is also not clear if the family will be able
to use the knives if the license holder is not present.
And
if Australians can’t be trusted with laser pointers or swords, they
surely can’t be trusted with guns. Citizens in other countries are
obviously much more trustworthy. Americans, for example, can own
all these items. Indeed, 46 states in the US even trust millions
of law-abiding Americans to carry concealed handguns when walking
on the street or eating in restaurants.
And,
yes, in most states an academic addressing a conference or a class
can carry a gun along with a laser pointer. Over the decades, concealed
handgun permit holders in the US have proven to be extremely law-abiding,
losing their permits at only hundredths of thousandths of one percentage
point for any type of firearms-related violation.
If
dangerous weapons made citizens in other countries dangerous, no
one would visit Switzerland. There, all able-bodied men between
the ages of 20 and 42 are trusted to keep a machinegun in their
homes as part of their military service. (Not the wimpy centre-fire
semi-automatic rifles everyone is afraid to trust Australians with.)
Yet the trust in the Swiss is well placed. Switzerland has one of
the lowest murder rates in Europe.
Letting
law-abiding citizens in the US and Switzerland own guns lowers crime
because would-be victims are able to deter criminals or, if confronted,
protect themselves. Australians are clearly quite different. They
understand the risks of letting Australians own guns. The International
Crime Victimization Survey shows that Australia’s violent crime
rate is already twice that of the US or Switzerland. Australia’s
violent crime rate is about as high as England’s, a country that
bans handguns.
It
would be simple enough just to blame Australia’s high crime rates
on its largely English heritage or its convict history, but for
much of the past century Australia had lower crime rates than the
US or the UK. Violent crime rates have gone up dramatically in Australia
since the 1996 Port Arthur gun control measures. And violent crime
rates averaged 20 per cent higher in the six years after the law
was passed (from 1997 to 2002) than they did in 1996, 32 per cent
higher than the violent crime rates in 1995. The same comparisons
for armed robbery rates showed increases of 67 per cent and 74 per
cent, respectively; for aggravated assault, 20 per cent and 32 per
cent; for rape, 11 per cent and 12 per cent; murder, attempted murder
and manslaughter rose by 5 per cent in both cases.
Perhaps
six years of crime data is just not enough to evaluate the experience.
Yet Australian governments seem to believe that if gun controls
don’t work at first, more and stricter regulations (like getting
rid of swords) are surely the solution. Remember, never second-guess
government regulations.
While
the ban on swords is modeled on the gun control measures, the Victorian
Government obviously hopes that its new measure is more successful
in reducing crime. Australian gun laws also require people to lock
their guns in safes and ban many types of guns. But requiring an
alarm for storing any swords, unlike the 15 or more rule for guns
in Victoria, is a nice touch and may make the crucial difference.
Metal
swords have been around since the Bronze Age, 4600 years ago. Yet
citizens in few countries have so clearly posed dangers to themselves
and it is fortunate that Victoria recognizes this.
Possibly,
Australians can turn now to solving some really important problems.
One suggestion: 240-volt electrical currents can kill you. Is it
really true that Australians have these overpowering urges to try
sticking metal in electrical sockets?
March
24, 2004
John
Lott [send him mail], a resident
scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, is the author of The
Bias Against Guns (Regnery 2003).
Copyright
© 2004 John Lott
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