Ban People – They Kill
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
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The tragic
murders of Virginia Tech students, apparently by an insane person,
will prompt new attempts to ban private ownership of guns. Once
guns are banned, crime will explode. Households and vulnerable members
of society will lose the ability to defend, which will invite more
intrusions and attacks. Knife crimes will rise as they have in Great
Britain.
Gun prohibition
will create a new industry for criminals – gun running and black
market sales. Police will conduct stings by posing as black market
gun dealers and entrap innocent citizens driven by fear and threat
to secure means of personal protection.
A large industry
of family businesses dedicated to meeting the needs of shooters,
who would never shoot at anything but a paper or clay target, will
be wiped out. Gun clubs will close their doors. Collectors of valuable
Winchesters and Colts, beautiful pieces of Americana, will have
to give them up or be at risk of prison sentences.
Gun banners
might be surprised at the number of Americans who provide parts
and repairs for firearms that have been out of production for 70
or 80 years. Other businesses provide components from which dedicated
hobbyists fashion ammunition that is no longer commercially produced.
Marksmanship
is an Olympic sport. A large number of marksmanship events are hosted
all over the country, with the national championships at Camp Perry
being the best known. I have been a member of gun clubs for decades,
and no member has ever shot anyone, accidentally or intentionally.
For an older person, marksmanship is one of the few outdoor convivial
pursuits, and the challenge of mind-eye-hand coordination and windage
calculation is rewarding.
Guns have been
around for a long time, but these crazy shootings are a new development
that point to a failure of culture to produce people with a sense
of responsibility and self-control. When I was a kid, a youngster
could walk into a local hardware store and buy a gun. There were
no restrictions. If a kid was so young that he couldn’t see over
the counter, the store owner might call a parent for approval. We
all had guns, and we never shot ourselves or anyone else.
One of my grandmothers
thought nothing of me and my friends playing with the World War
II weapons my uncle had brought back. My other grandmother never
batted an eye when I collected my grandfather’s shotgun from behind
the door and went off to match wits with the crows that raided the
pecan trees or the poisonous cottonmouth snakes that could be found
along the creek that ran through the farm.
My grandmother
never worried about me until I got a horse, a more dangerous object
in her view than a gun.
We also all
had knives, which we carried in our pockets to school every day.
We never stabbed anyone and very seldom cut our own fingers.
We often had
fights, more often wrestling each other to the ground than fist
fights. No one ever thought of pulling a knife or a gun on his antagonist.
Parents and teachers did not exactly approve of fights, but they
considered them natural. We were not arrested, handcuffed and finger-printed
for being in a fight.
Except for
war films, movie violence was rare. I still remember the shock we
all experienced when the hero in a cowboy movie actually shot and
killed the outlaw. Until that film, the hero would shoot the gun
out of the outlaw’s hand, knock him out with a punch to the jaw,
and deliver him rope bound to the sheriff.
I began my
teaching career at Virginia Tech when the institution still had
its Cadets. Students marched in uniforms with powerful military
weapons that as far as I can remember still had firing pins. No
one ever loaded a rifle and shot someone. Indeed, as a high school
and Georgia Tech student, we had to take R.O.T.C. We knew how to
field strip an M1 30-06 rifle and could have procured surplus army
ammunition with ease, but no one was ever irresponsible enough to
load one of the weapons. When we had marksmanship practice, it was
at a firing range.
The change
is in the behavior of people, not the presence of guns. Banning
guns does not address the cause of gratuitous violence. We need
to find the cause of the sickness in our society that produces people
who deal with their problems by murdering others.
England has
discovered the truth of the NRA’s motto – "When guns are outlawed,
only outlaws will have guns." The gun ban has only disarmed
the honest citizens. Drugs are banned, but they are available almost
everywhere, as was alcohol during Prohibition. If a deranged person
can’t obtain a black market gun, he will make a bomb.
Indeed, the
Iraq war has greatly stimulated interest in, and knowledge of, bomb-making.
The longer the senseless occupation of Iraq continues, the more
likely that Americans, like residents of Baghdad, will awaken each
day to the news of 100 dead and 100 injured.
Gun rights
are constitutionally protected, because the Founding Fathers did
not trust even the limited and constrained government that they
created. To infringe this constitutional right makes it easier to
infringe others. Certainly the Bush administration has shown no
reluctance to infringe such foundations of our political and legal
existence as habeas corpus and the requirement that warrants be
obtained before privacy is invaded.
If we lose
the Constitution, we have lost our country.
Responsibility
goes with accountability. Government, like people, becomes less
responsible as accountability declines. Indeed, it is impossible
to have irresponsible people and responsible government as the government
is staffed by people.
In my day,
parents and teachers had authority. Today teachers have no authority,
which is why they have to call the police to control the kids. Child
Protective Service has stripped parents of authority. Children are
taught at school to call CPS if they are spanked by parents. Apparently,
teachers cannot recognize the decline of their own authority in
the decline of parental authority.
I
remember when a misbehaving kid picked up by the police was turned
over to his parents. Today, the kids are taken to jail.
Humans are
fallible and will fail in their responsibilities to others and do
bad things. However, today they fail more often than in the past.
The cause is not guns.
April
17, 2007
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail] wrote the Kemp-Roth bill and was Assistant Secretary
of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor
of the Wall
Street Journal
editorial page and Contributing Editor of National
Review. He
is author or coauthor of eight books, including The
Supply-Side Revolution
(Harvard University Press). He has held numerous academic appointments,
including the William E. Simon Chair in Political Economy, Center
for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University and
Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
He has contributed to numerous scholar journals and testified before
Congress on 30 occasions. He has been awarded the U.S. Treasury's
Meritorious Service Award and the French Legion of Honor. He was
a reviewer for the Journal
of Political Economy
under editor Robert Mundell. He
is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
He is also coauthor with Karen Araujo of Chile: Dos Visiones
– La Era Allende-Pinochet (Santiago: Universidad Andres Bello,
2000).
Copyright
© 2007 Creators Syndicate
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