No Guns
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
I'm ready
at last to support gun control. I believe every police agency in
the United States local, state and federal should
be disarmed.
After all,
the gun-control people have been saying for years that we private
citizens have no need for firearms. Well, if that's true for us,
it's true for the police. We are the inhabitants of the country.
We live in the neighborhoods, we are the victims of crime, and if
we don't need guns, then who does?
I've yet to
hear of a police officer being mugged or raped, and certainly not
an FBI agent, as the feds spend most of their time in offices, except
on weekends and holidays.
The Secret
Service doesn't need guns. Look at the bad record it has. Even with
guns, we've lost more heads of state than any industrial nation
I can think of. If somebody tries to shoot the president, the agents
can stand in front of him. Whether they do so promptly or with slow
deliberation will probably depend on the personality of the president.
It's safer that way for everyone concerned.
We will still
need tough penalties for those who use guns to commit a crime, but
as soon as criminals realize they're not going to be shot by the
cops, many of them will ditch their guns. Why risk an extra-heavy
prison sentence when all you really want to do is steal something?
Naturally,
police could still carry pepper spray and clubs. I wouldn't even
object if they wanted to carry a pocketful of rocks for throwing.
If you practice, you can get to be a pretty accurate rock thrower.
I believe
this effort is necessary to stop the militarization of our police.
Some police departments these days will turn out a crew of people
who look like Darth Vader, with bulletproof vests, masks, helmets,
submachine guns, sniper rifles, hand grenades, etc., even if the
call is for some little old lady who had too much to drink or a
mouse heard in a gun store.
There is a
fundamental problem with Special Weapons and Tactics teams (SWAT).
They train more than they are ever needed, and therefore they begin
to show up when they really aren't needed. For example, if there
is a rowdy drunk in one apartment, you don't have to empty out the
whole apartment building.
In saner days,
a policeman, usually wearing a plaid jacket and rayon slacks, would
go to make an arrest with only a snub-nosed .38 in his coat pocket.
If he had to, he'd shoot you, but he didn't show up yelling and
cursing. He came on reasonable and friendly, and tried to talk you
into surrender. Most of the time it worked.
Nowadays,
if one guy wants to off himself, a whole SWAT team will show up,
block off the street, tie up traffic and diddle around for hours.
I've never understood why police wish to interfere in somebody's
suicide in the first place.
Naturally,
I know that we once had a better class of criminals in this country.
Even in the heyday of gangsters like Bonnie and Clyde, they were
generally careful not to shoot civilians, and there was practically
no crime against ordinary people. My cousins and I, even when we
were not long past the toddler stage, often went to downtown Atlanta
on the trolley and spent a pleasant and safe day.
I suppose,
with our society growing increasingly authoritarian, there is no
hope for disarming the police. Well, then, leave the guns for private
citizens alone. If the sorry, no-good criminals are going to act
without restraint, then let's make sure the few remaining good people
can defend themselves.
June
23, 2007
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2007 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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