Gun
Shows –
The Truth Comes Out
by
Michael S. Brown
Times
have been tough for the anti-gun lobby. Political analysts have
declared gun control a dead issue, court cases are not going their
way, and gun shops are crowded with liberals seeking security in
gun ownership.
During
hard times it is natural to fall back on proven strategies, so anti-gun
groups are trying to revive an issue that was quite successful during
the glory days of the gun control movement. With the aid of a few
attention-seeking senators, including John McCain, they are renewing
their attack on gun shows, which their propaganda wizards once labeled:
“Tupperware parties for criminals.”
For
several years prior to the 2000 election, clever advertising campaigns
in many states convinced voters that gun shows were illegal arms
bazaars where sinister dealers sold machine guns to dangerous criminals
and innocent children alike. Their advertising dollars were leveraged
by sympathetic media outlets, which amplified and legitimized the
message.
One
of the most effective sound bites ever created by the gun control
propagandists was, “gun show loophole.” This refers to the private
sale exemption that was deliberately placed into federal law. The
purpose was to avoid the unproductive complications that would arise
if gun sales between friends, relatives, and collectors were forced
to undergo the same background checks as sales in gun stores.
Nobody
likes a loophole, as beleaguered gun owners discovered when the
media repeated the misleading term ad infinitum.
Politically
motivated police officials sometimes got into the act by reporting
that a large number of criminals admitted to obtaining guns at shows.
They neglected to mention that the last thing a crook wants to tell
the police is who really supplied him with his illegally owned firearm.
Saying, “I got it at a gun show,” is a very easy way out.
Another
important factor was that very few voters had ever attended a gun
show, so it was easy to portray these harmless middle class gatherings
as wretched hives of scum and villainy.
With
such a strong hand to play, it is no wonder that anti-gun forces
wish to revive this issue. However, the new offensive is marked
by a distinct change in tactics. Press releases from anti-gun organizations
are now claiming that gun shows are major sources of weapons for
terrorists.
This
wild claim is supposedly based on two isolated cases of foreign
terrorists who were arrested for buying guns to be shipped to their
associates overseas.
But
since the gun haters are constantly looking for ways to reduce the
number of guns in America, it is difficult to see the problem.
It
is also a very big stretch to connect gun shows with the current
crop of terrorists who hijack airliners with box cutters or blow
themselves up with explosives. Many observers are puzzled by this
strange new theme, but there is an obvious explanation. This seemingly
bizarre leap of logic is probably related to a report recently released
by the Bureau of Justice Statistics.
“Firearm
Use By Offenders” details the results of a 1997 survey of about
16,000 inmates in state and federal prisons. The report contains
many interesting facts, but the most embarrassing item for the gun
controllers is related to gun shows.
What
percentage of criminals obtained their crime guns from gun shows?
The anti-gun lobby has always been suspiciously vague about this
critical number, but their emotion-charged statements have always
been carefully designed to give the impression that gun shows are
highly popular with criminals.
Judging
by the intensity of their efforts, one would assume that the number
must be high, perhaps thirty percent, perhaps fifty, maybe more.
Now
we find out the truth. The real number is. seven tenths of one
percent.
Shocked?
Don’t take my word for it, read
it yourself.
The
real reason the anti-gun lobby is trying to link gun shows with
terrorism is that they know the “Tupperware party for criminals”
game is over.
One
might assume that the anti-gun lobby would simply move on to some
new “gun safety” issues. But their objection to gun shows was never
really about criminals, it was part of a cultural war.
For
people who truly hate guns, the thought of all those evil guns and
despicable gun owners gathered together in one place is unbearable.
Better to lie and mislead the public than to tolerate such an abomination,
they believe.
This
is not the first time that a public opinion campaign was based on
a false premise, but voters who cast ballots based on deceptive
information deserve to know that they were deliberately misled.
Journalists
who once wrote stories that were little more than digests of anti-gun
press releases now seem to be viewing the issue with a bit more
skepticism. Perhaps some even feel a bit of shame at the way they
suspended their ethics and jumped on the anti-gun bandwagon.
It
will be interesting to see if the media takes note of the remarkable
fact that less than one criminal in a hundred obtained their guns
at gun shows.
December
13, 2001
Dr.
Michael S. Brown (send him mail)
is an optometrist and member of Doctors
for Sensible Gun Laws.
Copyright
© 2001 LewRockwell.com
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