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From the Radio Free Michigan archives
ftp://141.209.3.26/pub/patriot
If you have any other files you'd like to contribute, e-mail them to
bj496@Cleveland.Freenet.Edu.
------------------------------------------------
You are free to distribute this paper as long as you distribute it
intact. I cannot be held responsible for any modifications you
make to it. It is my hope that you will send copies of it to your
Senators and Representatives along with an appropriate cover
letter of your own. Don't forget your state and local
representatives. I don't know what the chances of them actually
reading it are, but if some of their staff members will read it we
may be able to help to turn the tide in our favor. Facts and
reasoned arguments should count for something, shouldn't they?
I have had reasonably good success in converting some of my
anti-gun friends to whom I have shown it. By "converting" I don't
mean that they are ready to go out and buy a gun. It is just that
they now understand the broader issues involved and are no longer
"anti-gun".
Good Luck.
Lynn Clark
CompuServe: 72017,2471
A Summary of Pro-Gun Arguments
The Side of the Debate the News Media Doesn't Report
A Personal View
by
Lynn Clark
Lafayette, Colorado
Table of Contents
Purpose ............................ 1
Disclaimer ......................... 1
Acknowledgements ................... 1
Preface ............................ 2
Introduction ....................... 3
Saturday Night Specials ............ 3
Machine Guns ....................... 7
Semi-Automatic "Assault" Rifles .... 8
Cop-Killer Bullets ................. 11
Plastic Guns ....................... 12
Waiting Periods .................... 13
Conclusion ......................... 14
Appendix A ......................... 17
Purpose
Recently I have felt that the NRA has not done as good a job as it
could have in getting the pro-gun side of the message across to those
who should hear it. Most of the blame for this lies with the news
media through it's one-sided, unfair reporting about gun control
issues. This situation has been greatly aggravated since the Federal
Communications Commission abolished the fairness doctrine as it
applies to news coverage. The news media is no longer required to
even give the appearance of fairness concerning public issues. In the
recent battle about "Saturday Night Specials" in Maryland, the two
major newspapers in the area refused to run NRA-sponsored ads. The
broadcast media is just as bad. This paper is an attempt to get the
unadulterated facts to those in legislative circles who should know
all the facts before they cast their votes on gun-related legislation.
Disclaimer
Although I am a Life Member of the NRA, I am not an official spokesman
for the NRA. The views expressed in this paper are mine and should
not be construed as representing the "Official" views of the NRA.
Acknowledgments
While the views expressed in this paper are ones I have developed over
many years, I must give credit to the many knowledgeable authors who
have published books and articles about gun control issues. Quite
naturally, many of these articles have appeared in pro-gun magazines
over the years. I would like to express my appreciation to the many
authors who have taken the time to ferret out facts concerning gun
ownership issues in this country throughout our 200-year history, as
well as in other countries. I am particularly indebted to those
authors who have had their articles published in the monthly magazines
of the National Rifle Association, "The American Rifleman" and "The
American Hunter". I am also indebted to the NRA Institute for
Legislative Action which represents the interests of America's gun
owners in the halls of Congress.
Preface
The following "letter to the editor" appeared in an October, 1988
edition of the Boulder (Colorado) Daily Camera.
Editor:
F. A.'s letter echoes the propaganda the National
Rifle Association has been putting out recently, in
very costly magazine advertisements, to the effect that
the NRA is just a bunch of nice people who have hunting
rifles or indulge in a bit of target practice now and
then.
Perhaps that does represent what the NRA stood for
when it was founded many years ago, and undoubtedly it
still has members like that. But perhaps Dr. A has
been too busy with his medical practice to notice that
the NRA has now become the NRSNSPOMGCKBA, that is, the
National Rifle, Saturday Night Special, Privately Owned
Machine Gun and Cop Killer Bullet Association -- for it
fanatically defends unrestricted ownership of all the
above, no matter how irrelevant they may be to the
non-homicidal amusements that the NRA likes to talk
about for public relations purposes.
The real concern of the present-day NRA seems to
be to defend the rights of gun manufacturers and
sellers to make as much money as possible.
In the end Dr. A. may find that the NRASNSPOMGCKBA
has worked against him. If the organization insists
that all firearms, even machine guns which could never
be legally used for hunting, must be treated alike, the
public may take them at their word, and ban all of
them. People who are appalled at the flood of handguns
engulfing the country, and feeling that their personal
safety is threatened, are in no mood to split hairs.
If Dr. A. belongs to an organization without
looking at what it really is doing at the present time,
he is naive. The organization, exploiting its original
"Rifle" name while it promotes and protects so many
other things, can only be described as totally cynical.
This paper is a personal response to the ideas represented by this
letter and so many others like it which appear from time to time in
the ebb and flow of the gun control debate. The unsettling thing
about the ideas expressed in the letter is that so much of them are
based on misinformation and distortions provided by the (by and large)
anti-gun news media. Apparently, it is very easy for non-gun-owners
to be misled. Those of us who are NRA members know better. This
paper is an attempt to explain the pro-gun side of the arguments the
anti-gun media chooses not to report.
Introduction
I will discuss the following issues: Saturday Night
Specials/Handguns, Machine Guns, Semi-Automatic "Assault" Rifles,
"Cop-Killer Bullets", "Plastic" Guns and Waiting Periods. Finally, I
will discuss the NRA proposals for reducing gun-related crime.
First, let me state the obvious. The NRA is opposed to restrictions
on the ownership and lawful use of firearms by law-abiding citizens.
Period. Of course, we cite the Second Amendment of the Constitution
as guaranteeing the right to keep and bear arms. We also believe that
restrictive gun laws have little, if any, affect on crime reduction
and further believe that this is demonstrated by the high crime rates
in such cities as New York, Washington, D.C., and others with
similarly strict gun control laws. The only people adversely affected
by restrictive gun laws are law-abiding citizens. The NRA supports
mandatory, severe penalties for the criminal misuse of firearms.
Anything I have to say in the following pages is in addition to these
ideas. Having said that, let's begin.
Saturday Night Specials/Handguns
The first issue mentioned in the quoted letter is the so-called
"Saturday Night Special" (SNS). The difficulty gun owners have with
this is one of definition. What makes a SNS different from other
handguns? The anti-gun crowd1 invariably defines it as a "small
caliber (.32 or less), short barrel (3" or less), cheap handgun which
has no legitimate sporting purpose" or words to that effect. The fact
is that convicted felons prefer large-caliber, high-quality, expensive
handguns.2 The "sporting purpose" part of this definition implies
that the anti-gun crowd concedes a legitimate "sporting purpose"
exists. If we take this to mean that these small handguns are not
well-suited for big game hunting, then we will have to agree. On the
other hand, if we include target shooting or plinking, then small, cheap
handguns have a legitimate sporting purpose. Hunters do not use small,
cheap handguns for big-game hunting. Indeed, most hunting regulations
exempt small handguns. Nevertheless, I know many people who own small,
cheap handguns. They just don't use them for hunting.
This notion that a gun has no utility if it doesn't have a "legitimate
sporting purpose" misses the mark. Small handguns, even the cheap
variety, have a very utilitarian purpose when it comes to personal
protection and that is undoubtedly why most of them are purchased,
whether the threat is perceived or real, immediate or potential. If
we agree that we each have the right to self-defense (Colorado State
Law guarantees it3, as do the laws of most states) it seems pretty
ludicrous to deny the means to successfully carry out such a defense.
What might we suppose the odds are that a frail, elderly man or woman
will overpower a young, strong assailant? What about a young, strong
man or woman against multiple attackers? Unfortunately, the police
are rarely there when the crime is in progress. Most criminals are
not quite that stupid. In any case, where does it leave us if we
should find ourselves in one of these unpleasant situations with no
means at our disposal to stop the attack? What if we decide, after
careful consideration, that we need to purchase a handgun for our
personal safety? What if we can't afford an expensive, quality
handgun? A small, cheap handgun would probably serve the purpose just
fine (we just described a SNS).
The Justice Department study mentioned earlier has also shown that the
thing convicted felons fear above all else is the possibility of
confronting an armed citizen. They fear this more than the
possibility of confronting an armed police officer. I haven't said
that anyone has to shoot anyone. The same study and others have shown
that the mere presence of a firearm is often enough to stop an attack
or prevent one from starting (it does seem to be helpful if the
attacker believes the intended victim will, in fact, use the weapon if
necessary). Several years ago I advised one of my non-gun-owning and
borderline anti-gun friends, who found herself in a very frightening
situation, that I didn't think she should buy a gun because I didn't
think she would use it if push came to shove. I also didn't think she
would invest the necessary time to become proficient with it. After
some discussion she agreed, but not everyone is like her. I have
another friend who had his life threatened several years ago. His
response was to buy a .357 Magnum. Again, I cautioned him at great
length about his use of that gun. When the threat passed, he sold the
gun. Nobody says you have to own a gun. Maybe your weapon of choice
is a baseball bat, but I am pretty certain that you will not deter
many attackers determined to commit mayhem, especially if they are
superior in size or numbers or are high on drugs or passion. The
cynical bumper sticker, "Smith and Wesson beats 4 aces" has a ring of
truth in it.
In 1977 Canada passed a restrictive gun law. "The crime that gun
ownership best deters is burglary of occupied residences. While only
one in 10 American burglaries is committed against an occupied home,
half of all Canadian burglaries are...The situation is even worse in
Britain, where gun control is stricter, and 59% of burglaries are
attempted against occupied residences."4 Canadian and British
burglars can be reasonably sure that the occupants will not be armed.
American burglars cannot be so sure, so they try to avoid burglarizing
occupied residences. Chalk up one benefit to private gun ownership in
America.
I have had my house burglarized before and have had occasion to ask
police officers about self defense. None of them has ever told me
that I would be better off not owning a handgun or other firearm for
personal protection, contrary to what the news media reports. If
police officers tell you that you would be better off not owning a
firearm for self defense, it may be a result of their assessment of
your lack of determination to use it if necessary, your obvious
unfamiliarity with firearms and a correct judgement about your
unwillingness to become proficient with it, more than the result of a
blanket policy of discouraging gun ownership for personal protection.
By the way, these were regular police officers, not police chiefs who
may be beholden to political forces more than the practical, every day
side of law enforcement. The cop on the beat understands very well
that he can't be everywhere and protect everyone all the time. It
might be well to consider, if you were a police officer in our
aggressively litigious society, what type of advice you might give to
people like yourself. It wouldn't be too surprising to find that many
police officers advise against gun ownership for personal protection
more out of fear of potential liability suits than anything else.
We constantly hear that a gun at home is more likely to hurt one of
the occupants than it is to deter a crime. Of course, it is up to a
responsible adult to insure that kids can't get their hands on a
loaded gun. That is what lock boxes are for. When you weigh the life
of a child against owning a gun for self defense, the $70 cost of a
lock box is a small price to pay. A lock box will keep a handgun
secure from the curious hands of a child while still allowing an adult
with the combination to access the gun in a matter of seconds should
the need arise. It seems to me that if the news media really wanted
to do something to prevent gun accidents at home, they would mention
lock boxes. People aren't going to give up their guns in spite of
what the news media tells them anyway, so why shouldn't the media do a
public service and inform people about safe ways to keep guns at
home? The NRA has the best educational program for "gun-proofing"
children. It is a "gun-neutral" approach that uses a coloring book to
emphasize three things about guns to children:
1) If you see a gun, stop -- don't touch it
2) Leave the area
3) Tell an adult
The NRA is introducing the coloring book into targeted school systems,
and while critics have predictably howled at the idea, the program has
received praise from educators and law enforcement groups. Far from
lauding the NRA's efforts to teach firearms safety to young children
in the schools, anti-gunners have denounced NRA's efforts in south
Florida and the Chicago area which were experiencing a rash of
firearms accidents involving children. The American Federation of
Police and the Congress of Racial Equality have praised the program,
and a few private schools have accepted it. Most public schools,
however, responding to anti-gun educators and outsiders, have yet to
accept the courses of the nations's leading authority on gun safety --
the NRA. So far, schools in Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska and Pennsylvania
have requested the program.
What do we do about suicides? Suicides rank far and away as the
highest percentage of gun-related deaths. The argument of the anti-
gun crowd is that the suicide rate will drop dramatically if we
eliminate private ownership of guns. The article about Canadian gun
laws referenced above also points out that "suicides involving
firearms fell noticeably after 1978, reversing the previous trend.
The overall suicide rate, however, did not drop, which leads to the
inference that the availability of particular weapons has no impact on
a nation's suicide rate. America's suicide rate, already slightly
lower than Canada's, declined some more."
As you can see, the discussion has changed from one about "Saturday
Night Specials" to handguns in general. If convicted felons spurn
small, cheap handguns in favor of their large-caliber, higher-quality
counterparts, why should anyone be so eager to ban them? Let's take
it a step further. The Justice Department study mentioned above also
pointed out that if all handguns were banned and confiscated,
criminals would simply cut off the barrels of rifles and shotguns to
concealable length. Professor Wright said it this way,
If a ban on handguns was enacted, 64% of the criminal
respondents said they would shift from a handgun to
sawed-off rifles and shotguns. That finding was
elicited from three-fourths of "handgun predators" and
five-eighths of those who had used a handgun more than
once in crime...We would do well, by the way, to take
this response seriously: most of the predators who
said they would substitute the sawed-off shotgun also
told us elsewhere in the questionnaire that they had in
fact sawed off a shotgun at some time in their lives
and that it would be "very easy" for them to do so
again. The possibility that even a few of the men who
presently prowl the streets with handguns would, in the
face of a
handgun ban, prowl with sawed-off shotguns instead is
itself good reason to think twice about the
advisability of such a ban. That as many as
three-quarters of them might do so causes one to
tremble.
Wright argues, then, that there are "sensible and humane" reasons for
opposing a handgun ban. In a turnabout from his previous gun-control
views, Wright concurs with NRA members in saying, "They oppose gun
regulation because they don't believe it will help control crime, and
so do I."5
Machine Guns
The second issue mentioned in the letter is that of unrestricted,
private ownership of machine guns. Again, this is another issue that
has received short shrift from the news media. On the surface, it is
very appealing to support such a ban. But I think we need a little
history before we can understand what is really behind NRA support for
the private ownership of machine guns.
First, a definition is in order. A machine gun is defined as a
firearm which will fire continuously as long as the trigger is
depressed and as long as ammunition is available to the weapon. A
machine gun is also properly referred to as a fully-automatic weapon.
Up until 1934 there were no restrictions of any kind concerning
ownership of machine guns. Unfortunately, John Dillinger, Bonnie and
Clyde and others began running around the midwest robbing banks. That
was bad enough, of course, but they made it worse by using Thompson
submachine guns in the course of their robberies. This caused such an
uproar that the congress passed the National Firearms Act of 1934 (26
USC 4181-4191, 5801-5872) as a way to regulate the ownership of such
weapons. The NFA act placed the following restrictions on the
purchase and ownership of machine guns:
1) The prospective purchaser had to pay a $200 transfer
tax for each machine gun purchased
2) The prospective purchaser had to undergo a very
thorough background check conducted by federal law
enforcement agencies
The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (BATF) has
testified that there is no record of any legally owned and registered
machine gun having been used in any crime since the NFA was enacted in
1934. Period. In fact, the BATF (which is the agency responsible for
regulating the ownership of machine guns) has consistently supported
the right of law-abiding citizens to purchase and own such weapons.
It is easy to understand that any citizen who is willing to undergo a
very thorough FBI background check in order to own such a weapon and is
willing to pay thousands of dollars for it, is going to be very
careful about safeguarding it.
If you're wondering why anyone should have a right to own machine
guns, I'll give you three reasons. First, machine guns are incredibly
fun to shoot, albeit very expensive to do so. Second, there are
legitimate collectors who want to have one as part of their
collection. Third, contrary to the letter's assertion, machine guns
are legal for hunting in some states. I don't have any figures, but I
believe that most people who own machine guns own them for the first
two reasons. I doubt that any machine gun owners actually use them
for hunting.
Well, something probably sounds funny here. After all, the news media
has been quite active in the last few years reporting crimes in which
machine guns have been a factor. And BATF has said that no legally
owned and registered machine gun has ever been used in any crime. The
simple fact is that every time you have heard of a crime involving a
machine gun, that machine gun was an unregistered, illegally
manufactured or imported machine gun, the mere possession of which
carried penalties of fines up to $10,000 and/or imprisonment up to ten
years as well as civil penalties and property forfeitures. The NFA is
a law which has worked remarkably well over the last 50 years. It is
a shame that the news media has made no distinction between legally
owned and registered and illegal unregistered or imported machine
guns. That blurring of the difference leads people to completely
erroneous conclusions about what the NRA is up to. Of course, it is
the legally owned and registered machine guns which the NRA supports.
Unfortunately, from my viewpoint, the NFA has been effectively
nullified by an amendment to the Firearm Owners Protection Act of 1985
(FOPA). Representative Bill Hughes (D-NJ) managed, over BATF
opposition, to get an amendment attached to the FOPA which put an end
to the legal private ownership of new machine guns. In fact, this is
the first time any category of firearms has been brought under an
outright ban. The irony is that the category of firearms that got
banned is the only category which has never been used in any crime.
The NRA has the overwhelming support of its membership to work to
repeal Representative Hughes' amendment. As an aside, Representative
Hughes admitted that most of his understanding of crime involving
machine guns came from television shows like Miami Vice. So much for
being an informed Congressman. Apparently, many American's source of
information about guns is the same.
Semi-Automatic "Assault" Rifles
The latest gambit of the anti-gun crowd is the hysteria about
semi-automatic "assault" rifles . Again, this is an example of the
anti-gun crowd hurrying to ban a category of firearms without first
acquiring the facts.
A semi-automatic firearm is defined as one which fires a single
cartridge with a single pull of the trigger and which automatically
loads another fresh cartridge in preparation for the next pull of the
trigger. The trigger must be released and pulled again before the
next cartridge will fire. Please note the difference from a machine
gun discussed above.
Since the early part of this century, the United States Government has
supported, through the National Board for the Promotion of Rifle
Practice (NBPRP), an on-going, very active program of high-power rifle
competition. It is administered by the Director of Civilian
Marksmanship (DCM) of the Department of the Army with the assistance
of the NRA. Millions of shooters, men and women, have participated
over the years with each year's program culminating at the national
matches at Camp Perry, Ohio. The matches are shot in "strings" of 10
or 20 shots and consist of shooting at targets up to 600 yards away in
three positions: prone, sitting and standing. Some strings are shot
in "slow fire" (about 1 minute per shot) and others are shot in "rapid
fire" (about 10 seconds per shot). This is all done without the use
of telescopic sights. As you may surmise, this requires much skill
and concentration, especially at the long distances involved. The
purpose of the program is to promote rifle marksmanship among the
civilian population in order to insure that an adequate pool of
trained marksmen is available in the unlikely event that we should
become involved in another major war. The primary intent is that
these marksmen will be available to help train large numbers of
military recruits should the need arise.
Here is what the anti-gun crowd does not know or will not admit to
knowing. Probably 95% (perhaps more) of those who participate in this
program use semi-automatic rifles of military origin. The use of a
semi-automatic rifle is a decided advantage in such competition,
particularly in the rapid fire events. Very few shooters use
bolt-action rifles anymore. Indeed, since the current standard-issue
military rifle is the M-16, more and more shooters are using the AR-15
which is the civilian, semi-automatic version of the M-16.
Having said this, I must ask, "How do you ban semi-automatic firearms
without penalizing the tens of thousands of law-abiding shooters who
participate in the high-power rifle program?" Bear in mind that this
program provides considerable recreation to those who participate in
the sport. Please understand also that these are not the people who
shoot up school yards. They don't deal in drugs, either. Nor do they
belong to street gangs. There are many hundreds of thousands of other
law-abiding citizens who own and lawfully use semi-automatic "assault"
rifles as well. Do you really believe that banning firearms will keep
them out of the hands of smugglers and other criminals? They already
smuggle drugs. Do you think they won't smuggle firearms? The only
people who would be adversely affected by a ban would be the
law-abiding citizens who enjoy the shooting sports. I have heard
estimates of the number of semi-automatic "assault" rifles in civilian
hands ranging from one to nine million. It is ludicrous to think that
any appreciable dent will be made in the crime problem by banning such
firearms when it is so obvious by the numbers that the overwhelming
majority of these firearms are used for legal "sporting purposes".
The use of these types of firearms in crime is almost universally
related to the drug problem. We should be focusing on the cause of the
problem rather than trying to cure it by treating the symptoms.
The anti-gun crowd asserts that semi-automatic weapons' sole purpose
is to kill people. Technically, that is incorrect. It is much
preferable to wound enemy soldiers and that was one of the design
criteria that went into the development of our military M-16, (see the
extended discussion of "Cop-Killer Bullets" in Appendix A).
These weapons were designed to continue to work in the harshest
possible conditions. They will operate at 60 degrees below zero, at
120 degrees above zero and everywhere in between, and will function
when they are clean, or covered with mud (only a slight
exaggeration). In short, they are the most reliable firearms
available and are desirable for that reason alone. Because they are
used to kill people doesn't mean that every civilian who buys one does
so for that reason. Millions of law-abiding, semi-automatic-owning
people in this country strenuously object to such a characterization
because it doesn't fit.
These semi-automatic "assault" rifles are also legal for use in
hunting in most states. However, most states limit the magazine
capacity to five rounds when used for big-game hunting (deer and
larger). Some states also limit the use of .22 caliber cartridges to
small game. For example, in the state of Colorado, the Colt AR-15 is
illegal for hunting large game animals because it uses a .22 caliber
cartridge. Colorado hunting regulations require a minimum .24 caliber
cartridge. In the state of Utah it is legal for the same game.
However, the Chinese-made AK-47 is legal in both states because it
fires a .30 caliber cartridge. Both of these "assault" rifles are
sufficiently accurate for use in hunting at distances up to about 300
yards, just like other hunting rifles. One reason some people use
"assault" rifles for hunting is due to their light weight. It is a
whole lot more enjoyable to lug a six-pound "assault" rifle up and
down the mountains than it is to lug a nine-pound "sporting" rifle.
Three pounds makes a big difference.
Let me explain two other reasons people find these weapons so
desirable. First, the current generation of "assault" rifles are also
incredibly fun to shoot. Why? Because one of the problems the
military has had over the years is that it is difficult to teach good
marksmanship skills to recruits who have had no shooting experience,
especially when the rifle hurts them so badly when they shoot it. All
current generation military firearms have buffering systems which
absorb most of the recoil energy developed by the rifle when it is
fired. Therefore, it doesn't hurt. This is even true of those
"assault" rifles available in .30 caliber such as the Chinese AK-47
and the German HK-91. Besides any .22 caliber rim-fire rifle,
semi-automatic "assault" rifles are perhaps the best choice to use for
teaching new shooters how to shoot. In fact, anyone who has gone
through basic military training in the last 20 years will tell you
that drill instructors routinely demonstrate the low recoil of the
M-16 by firing it while holding the butt of the rifle against their
crotch, forehead or chin. No one in their right mind would even think
of doing that with anything other than a semi-automatic "assault"
rifle. Doing so with a bolt-action rifle could be fatal or eliminate any
possibility of having children.
Second, many newer generation semi-automatic military rifles are
designed around, or are available in, a smaller caliber cartridge,
usually about .22 caliber (most older generation military rifles were
based on a .30 caliber cartridge). This contributes to less recoil
energy which in turn means less pain. The military reason for a
smaller caliber is that it allows the individual soldier to carry more
ammunition and increases the chances of wounding, rather than killing
an enemy soldier. The smaller caliber also costs less to shoot, i.e.,
more bang for the buck (no pun intended). The advantage of lower
costs is not lost on civilian or military shooters.
All of this information is totally lost on the anti-gun crowd because
they have little personal experience with firearms. It is silly for
non-gun-owning "experts" to proclaim why certain classes of firearms
are of no use to private citizens. With no personal experience with
firearms, what qualifies them to make such assertions? We all agree,
however, that something must be done to prevent these, or any other
firearms, from easily finding their way into the hands of criminals.
More about that later.
Cop-Killer Bullets
The last issue mentioned in the letter was "Cop-Killer Bullets".
First, let me point out that no police officer has ever been shot with
so-called "Cop-Killer Bullets". The term "Cop-Killer Bullet" was
adopted by the anti-gun crowd for it's obvious emotional appeal. The
proper terminology is armor-piercing bullets.
The "Cop-Killer Bullet" legislation which the anti-gun crowd tried to
pass would have outlawed all firearm ammunition which would penetrate
the bullet-proof vests commonly worn by police officers. Not only
would this have outlawed the teflon-coated, hardened, armor-piercing
bullets designed for police use, but it would also have outlawed
almost all rifle bullets commonly used for hunting, since almost all
rifle bullets will easily penetrate such body armor. In other words,
if this legislation had passed as written by the anti-gun crowd, it
would have had the practical effect of ending all "legitimate
sporting" uses of rifles by outlawing the ammunition. The NRA had no
choice but to oppose such ridiculous legislation. The legislation
which was finally passed had the desired effect of outlawing civilian
use of bullets specifically designed for police use in piercing armor
while leaving rifle bullets exempt, as well they should have been.
This compromise legislation was passed with the NRA's full assistance,
cooperation and support.
Please refer to Appendix A for further discussion of "Cop-Killer
Bullets".
This leads us to an issue not mentioned in the letter but which is
similarly misleading if you rely on the news media for your
understanding of it. That issue is the so-called "Plastic Gun".
Plastic Guns
During the latter part of 1988, Senator Howard Metzenbaum (D-OH) and
Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA) introduced legislation under the guise
of "airport security". It really had nothing to do with airport
security, but rather set an arbitrary limit on the minimum amount of
steel a handgun could contain. It also would have given discretionary
power to unelected bureaucrats to change the definition of "not
readily detectable" as applied to handguns and airport security
equipment.
The news media did not bother to report that the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
(BATF), among others, opposed this legislation. Representatives of
both agencies testified before Congress that the proposed legislation
was unnecessary and would do nothing to enhance airport security.
They also pointed out that there is no firearm which is not readily
detectable by present airport security devices, nor is anyone on the
threshold of developing such a firearm. Hence, this proposed
legislation was aimed at a non-existent target.
The compromise bill that was finally passed requires that all handguns
manufactured and sold in this country have enough metal in them to
insure that they generate a sharp x-ray image. Contrary to what the
news media chose to report, this legislation was passed with the full
support and cooperation of the NRA.
Let's discuss "plastic guns". The gun which started all of this
nonsense is the Austrian made Glock 17. It is a semi-automatic 9 mm
pistol which is 83% steel by weight (19 ounces). The lower half of
the pistol, the receiver, is mostly a polymer material. This results
in a durable, lightweight pistol. Even though the pistol has a large
amount of polymer in its construction, it still looks like a pistol
under airport x-ray equipment. Astrophysics Research Corp., the
world's largest manufacturer of x-ray security screening equipment and
the manufacturer of the units currently used at over 90% of U.S.
airports, in a response to Representative Mario Biaggi (D-NY) stated,
"Fully assembled, the Glock 17 looks exactly like any other automatic
pistol when viewed on the television monitor of our Linescan airport
x-ray security machine. Further, it causes our Mark 100 Metal
Detector to alarm at the normal setting just as any other pistol
does. When the Glock 17 is broken down into its three basic
components...all three components are still visible and identifiable
on the television monitor of the x-ray system by a trained security
operator. In all tests, the Glock 17 was x-rayed while inside a
standard briefcase with a normal amount of paper (approximately 1"
thick) and other items usually found in a briefcase. Even the plastic
frame shows clearly...".6 You didn't read this in your local
newspaper because they chose not to report it.
Waiting Periods
Let's take one more issue. Again, in 1988, Senator Howard Metzenbaum
(D-OH) and Representative Edward Feighan (D-OH) attempted to attach a
previously rejected anti-gun bill, the so-called "Brady" bill, onto
the Omnibus Drug Bill. Their amendment would have done the following:
1) Impose de facto nationwide handgun registration
2) Give the government control over the sale, transfer,
trade, loan or gift of a handgun
3) Create a multi-million dollar bureaucracy that could
arbitrarily deny handgun ownership
4) Make federal law of legislation already rejected by
a majority of states -- including Metzenbaum's and
Feighan's home state of Ohio
It is really beyond me how anyone could have the audacity to introduce
legislation on the national level which has previously been soundly
rejected by their own constituents. There ought to be a law against
that! This legislation was advertised as anti-drug legislation.
Representative Feighan made that claim on the MacNeil/Lehrer News
Hour. The presumption was that a one-week waiting period would
prevent felons from obtaining guns. The Justice Department study
mentioned earlier "showed just the opposite: Criminals don't buy guns
through regulated channels; they don't get permits or register their
guns; and the more serious they are as criminals, the less likely they
are to get guns from licensed dealers, directly or indirectly".7 The
only people who would be affected by such proposals are law-abiding
citizens.
This legislation was obviously just another veiled attempt at gun
registration. Fortunately, the House adopted a substitute proposal
that directs the Justice Department to try to create a computer system
for gun dealers to identify felons who attempt to purchase firearms.
The NRA supported this bill. I believe that such a system is very
workable. Indeed, we already have prototypes of what such a system
might be like in the current nationwide computer information networks
like CompuServe, The Source, Genie and others.
By the way, a waiting period would not have prevented John Hinckley
from purchasing the handgun with which he shot President Reagan and
the others. At the time he purchased the gun, he "had no felony
record, had not been adjudicated a mental incompetent by any court,
and would have been approved to purchase a handgun under any waiting
period system yet devised".8 The Stockton schoolyard murderer,
Patrick Purdy,
had also purchased five handguns in California after going through
their two-week waiting period and police background check. All of his
previous felony arrests had been plea-bargained to misdemeanors.
Conclusion
Restrictions on the lawful ownership and use of any firearm are
ill-advised. I believe the facts support the notion that restrictive
gun laws adversely affect only law-abiding citizens. The letter to
the editor quoted at the beginning of this paper implied that a total
ban of all firearms would be the ideal solution to the crime problem.
I suggest that this would result in an increase in criminal activity
the likes of which we have not seen in modern history. A total ban on
private ownership of firearms would have the practical result of
disarming law-abiding citizens without disarming criminals. To
suggest that banning the private ownership of firearms will decrease
crime is to display a supreme ignorance of how easy it is to
manufacture or smuggle firearms, not to mention a severely
pollyana-ish view about what motivates violent criminals. We can't
even keep criminals from manufacturing guns in prisons! The only way
a total ban would work would be to also erase all record of firearm
technology and eliminate all access to charcoal, sulfur and potassium
nitrate, the three main components of gunpowder (potassium nitrate is
readily available in lawn fertilizer). The mechanics of firearms is
no big secret. Fortunately, or unfortunately depending on your point
of view, we have come too far to seriously consider banning firearms
as a means of decreasing gun-related crime.
What then do we do about crimes involving firearms? I believe that we
are seeing worse crimes because the deterrent value of prison time is
much diminished from what it used to be. As long as we continue to
tolerate a system which provides revolving-door justice and allows
capital crimes to go unpunished we will continue to see crime rates
increase and/or crimes to become more heinous. We must face up to the
fact that it will cost money to make felony convictions a useful
deterrent. Banning guns won't decrease violent crime. Criminals will
always get the guns they need.
The NRA has proposed three specific things we can do to reduce gun-
related crime without punishing law-abiding gun owners:
1) Not allow a person to plea bargain a felony charge
down to a misdemeanor except once in a five-year
period.
2) Find funds to build more prisons, even if it means a
special tax to get these violent offenders off the
streets. (The NRA won a statewide referendum on
this in Oregon in the November, 1988 election.)
3) Call on the U.S. Justice Department to stop the
practice of coddling criminals by refusing to
enforce the four-year old NRA-sponsored
McClure/Volkmer Act (FOPA). This act gave the
federal government the
tool to take drug traffickers carrying firearms off
the streets with a mandatory five to twenty year
prison sentence with no parole possible.
If the first proposal were in effect, Patrick Purdy would have been in
prison and not in that Stockton schoolyard killing children. Before
that tragic incident, Purdy was arrested for soliciting sex -- and
released. He was arrested for the possession of narcotics -- and
released. He was arrested on dangerous weapons charges -- and
released. He was arrested for attempted robbery -- and released. And
he was arrested for receiving stolen property -- and released. Even a
police psychiatrist, in a written report, warned that Purdy was a
danger to himself and to society -- a warning repeatedly ignored by
the criminal justice system. Because of the failure of the criminal
justice system to indict Purdy on even one of those felony charges, he
legally purchased five handguns in California after going through the
14-day waiting period and police background investigation.
Let's review. The news media has misrepresented each of the issues
mentioned in the letter to the editor as well as every other gun issue
they have covered. Lately, the news media has accused the NRA of
going "off the deep end" (words straight out of Handgun Control, Inc.
literature) and being out of step with the American public. On the
contrary, it is the NRA which is in step with the 70 million adult
Americans who own guns. It is the anti-gun crowd, who have little
personal experience with guns, who keep going off the deep end. It is
the news media which continues to go off the deep end through biased,
one-sided reporting. Through misinformation and misrepresentation
they keep trying to chip away at the right which may ultimately
preserve the republic. Noted environmentalist Edward Abbey said,
"When the government bans guns, only the government will have guns".
I believe the founding fathers understood what Abbey meant. It is
worthy of serious reflection. It is significant that the "right to
keep and bear arms" is the second of the ten rights in the Bill of
Rights.
On February 13, 1989 the same newspaper mentioned at the beginning of
this paper, in a gun control editorial stated:
The Second Amendment is not about duck hunting. It is
a step back to a time when men thought of armed
uprising, of fighting off our own government when and
if it became too burdensome.
Most of our rules of conduct and laws have evolved to
reflect a more permanent view of government and
society's relationship to it.
They certainly have more confidence in government than many people
do. The lessons of history prove that we must be ever vigilant if we
truly desire to preserve our liberty. Every great civilization
throughout history has crumbled under it's own weight. Ours may
suffer the same fate if we don't stay alert and protect the
Constitution -- all of it.
When all is said and done, it is the news media in this country which
bears primary responsibility for the misinformation and
misrepresentation which leads people to erroneous conclusions. The
claims of the anti-gun crowd are the only claims the news media
uncritically reports. Both sides of most issues get some news
coverage. That is decidedly not the case when it comes to gun issues
and the NRA. The news media generally portrays the NRA in a negative
light. Is it possible that is an accurate representation of an
organization which represents the interests of over 70 million
people? The following tidbit appeared in the September 15, 1988,
"Alarums and Diversions" column of the LIBRARY JOURNAL.
"A highly placed library source in Washington, D.C.
told A
and the National Rifle Association lobby are the only
ones whose information was considered consistently
truthful and reliable by legislators. We will not even
consider the 'strange bedfellows' variations possible
to that remark."
I can't vouch for the source of the above quotation, but I think it
should be obvious that the people who are best qualified to address
the technical merits of the gun-control debate are those who own and
use guns on a regular basis. Non-gun-owners speak totally from
emotion, not facts (their passionate assertion about the non-sporting
capabilities of semi-automatic "assault" rifles is a perfect
example). It seems natural to fear that which we don't understand. I
believe that is why non-gun-owners react the way they do when the
subject of gun control comes up. The facts concerning gun-related
crime are on the side of the NRA and law-abiding gun-owners.
Implicit in criticisms of the NRA is the idea that the NRA is
duplicitous in it's purposes. The "Cop-Killer Bullet" episode is a
classic example of the anti-gun crowd doing something with the best of
intentions, but failing because of their ignorance about firearms. At
least, that is the charitable view. It could also easily be construed
as another covert attempt to ban firearms in this country without
coming out and saying that is what they're trying to do. It would be
a lot easier to deal with anti-gun groups if they would just be up
front with the American people about what their goals are. Instead,
they deceive the public about their motives by focusing attention on
invented, emotional non-issues cloaked in such terms as "Cop-Killer
Bullets" and non-existent "Plastic Guns". They say they just want to
restrict gun ownership "a little". Nobody really believes they will
disband their organizations and go save the whales if we allow them to
restrict gun ownership just "a little". Their ultimate goal is the
total disarmament of the American people. They won't come out and say
it because they know a majority of citizens won't support them. You
need to go no further than anti-gun organizations in America to learn
what duplicitous means.
Appendix A -- An Extended Discussion of "Cop-Killer Bullets"
What I'm about to say may sound morbid, but please understand that I
am trying to show how complex this "Cop-Killer Bullet" issue really
is. The Geneva Convention laid down specific rules concerning what
type of bullets may be used by military forces. The basic rule is
that all small arms (rifles and handguns) ammunition must be
non-expanding. That is, it must have a full-metal jacket around the
lead (pronounced 'led') core of the bullet, especially on the pointed
end that will initially impact an enemy soldier. This full-metal
jacket (usually a copper alloy) is intended to prevent the bullet from
doing what all bullets tend to do on impact. That is, they flatten
out, or expand, to perhaps two or three times their diameter. When
this happens, a bullet transfers most of its kinetic energy to the
target. The more kinetic energy a bullet transfers to a target, the
more damage will be done. This is why hunting bullets are required to
be expanding bullets. Expanding bullets maximize the likelihood that
a quick, painless kill will result. If we allowed non-expanding
bullets to be used for hunting, most animals would be simply wounded
because the bullet would pass right through them and they would run
off and hide somewhere to die a slow painful death from blood loss.
If a bullet can be prevented from expanding, it will transfer minimum
kinetic energy to the target thus minimizing the potential damage. At
the same time, the likelihood of survival is maximized. So the Geneva
Convention requires that military forces use non-expanding, or
full-metal jacket bullets. Armor-piercing bullets are the ultimate
non-expanding bullets.
You may be wondering what all this has to do with "Cop-Killer
Bullets". Just this; not all police officers wear bullet proof vests
all the time. If a police officer without a bullet-proof vest is
going to be shot, he or she may have a better chance of survival if
shot with an armor-piercing bullet rather than an expanding bullet,
which is what virtually all other bullets are. An armor-piercing
bullet will go through a human body and do virtually no serious damage
unless it passes through a major organ (like the heart or brain) or
impacts a major bone. This assumes that competent medical attention
is available reasonably quick.
On the other hand, anyone shot with a typical bullet is likely to
suffer major damage regardless of the location on the body which the
bullet hits. This has to do with the hydrostatic shock effect of an
expanding bullet. It is like you or me falling into water. If we
fall into water from a height of three feet, it is no big deal,
because the water can flow around us. On the other hand, if we fall
into water from a height of 500 feet, the impact will probably kill
us. An expanding bullet traveling at 1000 feet per second or faster
will likely deliver most of its kinetic energy into the body. Since
our body is about 70% water, this energy will send shock waves through
the body and disrupt tissue over a large area potentially causing a
lot of damage. An armor-piercing bullet has a great likelihood of
causing minor damage because it will take most of it's energy with it
as it passes through the body.
Appendix A -- An Extended Discussion of "Cop-Killer Bullets"
continued
Understand, these statements are not meant to minimize the tragedy of
police officers being injured in the line of duty. Rather they are
intended to provide a better understanding about the physics of
firearms. The anti-gun crowd doesn't understand this. Many Americans
have a similarly shallow level of understanding.
Footnotes
---------
1 The major players on the anti-gun side of the debate are Handgun
Control, Inc. (HCI), the National Coalition to Ban Handguns (NCBH) and
the news media in general.
2 "The Armed Criminal in America" by Dr. James W. Wright and Peter
H. Rossi. Study commissioned by the U.S. Department of Justice in
1985. Dr. Wright is a professor of sociology and director of the
Social and Demographic Research Institute (SADRI) at the University of
Massachusetts, an expert on survey research, and a reformed advocate
of harsh gun laws. In a 1975 article entitled: "The ownership of the
Means of Destruction: Weapons in the United States", Wright attacked
the NRA and gun ownership. In 1979, Prof. Wright joined with Mr.
Rossi -- also from SADRI at U. Mass., and a former president of the
American Sociological Association -- in studying the gun issue more
thoroughly. This caused a dramatic shift in their views.
Although Wright currently supports so-called "permissive" gun
laws, he no longer espouses "gun control" as an effective form of
"crime control". And while Prof. Wright's previous anti-gun research
gained massive media attention, his more recent voluminous and
scholarly research has been all but ignored by the news media.
3 Sections 18-1-704, 18-3-4/202/203
4 "Canadian Gun Laws and Crime", the AMERICAN RIFLEMAN, September,
1988, page 56, by David B. Kopel, a Colorado lawyer and a former
assistant district attorney for the Manhattan (N.Y.) District
Attorney's office. Kopel is the author of "Trust the People: The
Case Against Gun Control", a policy analysis published by the Cato
Institute in July, 1988.
5 "The Armed Criminal in America", an article by Dr. Paul H.
Blackman in the August, 1985 issue of the AMERICAN RIFLEMAN.
6 Letter from Astrophysics Research Corporation to Representative
Mario Biaggi (D-NY), excerpted in the September 1987 issue of the
AMERICAN RIFLEMAN.
7 Excerpted in the AMERICAN RIFLEMAN, August 1988, page 56.
8 Testimony of David B. Kopel, concerning the Metzenbaum waiting
period bill (S.466), before the Senate Judiciary Committee's
Subcommittee on the Constitution, August 2, 1988.
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