Anti-Gun Group Shows Why the American Way Is Better, As U.S. Firearm
Production Soars
National Rifle Association of
America, Institute for Legislative Action
Anyone who
traveled behind the Iron Curtain back in those days probably didnt
have to look very hard to find groups of workers sitting
around doing pretty much nothing, except collecting a taxpayer-funded
government paycheck.
The American
way is better. Anti-gun group employees can still sit around doing
pretty much nothing and collect a paycheck, but the money lots
of it comes from donations, from foundations and individuals
who share their ideals. While the rest of us have to contend with
anything tangible they might produce, at least we dont have
to pay for it, most of the time.
Take the latest
from the so-called Legal Community Against Violence (LCAV), a handful
of gun-hater lawyers operating out of an office in San Francisco,
California. Mimicking the Brady Campaign probably not a good
business plan, given that Brady Campaign is not exactly a thriving
enterprise these days LCAV is now ranking
the states according to how strong their gun laws
are.
If by any chance
you are unfamiliar with the word ludicrous, now would
be a good time to look it up in your dictionary. On the other hand,
never mind, because once you go over LCAVs pseudo-scientific
poppycock, youll be able to write a good definition yourself.
Some examples
serve to make the point. LCAV ranks California best in the nation,
though its firearm-related death rate is higher than those of 16
other states, including Vermont, the gun owner-friendly laws of
which LCAV ranks third worst in the nation. LCAV ranks Maryland
7th-best, just ahead of New York and Rhode Island, the firearm-related
deaths rates of which are only 42 percent and 29 percent that of
Maryland. Joining the declaration of ideological war by some in
California against neighboring Arizona, LCAV ranks the Grand Canyon
State worst in the nation.
And it goes
on from there, with no correlation between LCAVs ranking and
the states widely divergent firearm-related death rates, no
recognition of the fact that most firearm-related deaths are suicides,
the frequency of which cannot be restrained by any gun control law,
and no recognition of the fact that the world is still waiting for
any evidence that any gun control law on the planet has ever prevented
individuals or regimes from committing crime.
LCAVs
point structure for the various gun laws doesnt even make
sense. LCAV gives states four points (the maximum for any gun law)
for requiring registration of all guns. We get that, since we know
that gun control supporters consider registration indispensable,
for purposes of enforcing a subsequent gun confiscation law. But
LCAV gives almost as many points (three) for banning .50 caliber
rifles (which are probably the type of gun least frequently involved
in firearm deaths, or darned close), three points for requiring
a dealer to be licensed (even though federal law requires that in
every state anyway), and . . . well, you get the
idea.
Similar to
Violence to Policy Center, LCAV is especially apoplectic about assault
weapons (three points for a ban), standard self-defense magazines
that hold more than 10 rounds (three points for a ban), and anything
at all to do with carrying a firearm for protection. Relative to
the latter, a state gets a minus-1 point for a shall issue
carry permit law, minus-1 for open carry without a permit, and minus-two
points for concealed carry without a permit. All this malarky, with
the number of carry states at an all-time high and the nations
violent crime rate at a 35-year low.
Were
not sure how often LCAV will have the opportunity to repeat its
state ranking exercise, though. One bad gun law at a time, NRA,
its members, and their friends elected to state office have been
eliminating gun control laws left and right for the last two decades
in most states. And, Americans have responded by exercising their
right to acquire arms in record numbers.
Some evidence
to that effect was put forward by the BATFE recently, in the form
of its report
on U.S. firearm manufacturing in the first half of 2009. In the
first half of 2009, U.S. manufacturers produced more rifles, more
pistols, more revolvers and more shotguns, than in all of 2008.
Coupled with increases in NICS checks of 11 percent between 2006
and 2007, another 14 percent between 2007 and 2008, and another
10 percent between 2008 and 2009, the evidence is pretty clear that
the gun control laws LCAV wants have been on the wane, while the
ones it most despises have become the norm.
August
26, 2010
Copyright
© 2010 National
Rifle Association of America, Institute for Legislative Action
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