Showing posts with label gun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gun. Show all posts

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Separating Emotion from Logic on “Gun Free Zones”







Debate is raging across Idaho as the legislature considers a bill that would allow guns on university grounds. It’s an emotional issue, and perhaps for that very reason, we should strip away the emotion and consider the issue logically.


eliminate-gun-free-zones-battaile-politics-1357772357

eliminate-gun-free-zones-battaile-politics-1357772357



It seems that a disproportionate share of mass shootings occur in commercial establishments or school grounds clearly marked as “Gun Free” zones. As a sentient people, we are repulsed, angered, saddened, and outraged at such heinous acts. Perhaps the problem is more related to how “Gun Free” zones attract the attention of the delusional and disaffected who are intent on making a name for themselves.


Every shooting in a school is done illegally per federal law (1995 Gun Free School Zones Act). For those intent on inflicting harm, nothing’s quite so appealing as a gun free zone, for they know all the law-abiding citizens are going to be compliant, giving the perpetrator a veritable shooting gallery to work with, unfettered and undeterred from his mayhem by a legally armed citizen. In short, criminals aren’t the least deterred by gun free zones, and if anything, they’re likely to consider any signage indicating a gun free zone as a welcome sign.


The desire to keep guns far away from innocents, especially on school grounds, is instinctive, yet must be approached logically rather than emotionally, based on empirical data. And there is a lot of it available.


Psycho-Pete-5901

Psycho-Pete-5901



The city of Chicago currently has the most restrictive gun control laws on the books, and has been declared a “gun free zone” where handguns are banned, yet it is the bloodiest city in the world in terms of gun-related deaths. The city averages 40 deaths per month from guns, nearly 500 every year. Chicago’s murder rate is 19.4 per 100,000, which is by far the highest rate in the nation, at nearly 3 times New York which is at 6, and nearly 2 ½ times Los Angeles’ 7.5.


In fact, Chicago ranks as the number one deadliest Alpha city (significant urban center in the global economic system) on the planet. Since it is no longer possible for citizens to legally own handguns within city limits, the only ones who still have them are criminals. It doesn’t appear gun control works for Chicago. In fact, the city illustrates how correct the aphorism is that if guns are outlawed, only the outlaws have guns. The law-abiding citizens do not.


The Center for Disease Control (CDC), in 2003 thoroughly analyzed fifty-one in-depth studies dealing with gun control. Those studies included everything from the effectiveness of gun bans to laws requiring gunlocks. From their objective analysis, they “found no discernible effect on public safety by any of the measures we commonly think of as ‘gun control.’”


gun-free-zone-cartoon

gun-free-zone-cartoon



Since gun control doesn’t work, let’s look at increasing the ability of citizens to protect and defend themselves. Simi Valley, California is consistently listed among the safest of American cities. They have all of California’s gun control laws in force, but locals know it as the home to a lot of police officers from neighboring communities. Nothing like trained and armed homeowners to keep a community virtually crime free.


In 1982, Kennesaw, Georgia, witnessing an increase in local crime, did something counterintuitive to the likes of Chicago and New York; they passed an ordinance requiring heads of households, with some exceptions, to own a handgun. Crime dropped precipitously, and has stayed down. So much so, that Family Circle selected the town as one of the 10 best in the nation to raise a family in.


Our problems with violence and mass shootings have much more to do with cultural and societal issues, mental illness, and a lack of ability on the part of law-abiding citizens to defend themselves. Guns are not the root of the problem. Our nation was brought to its knees eleven years ago by 19 fanatics armed with box-cutters. The tool of destruction is not the perpetrator; the person using or misusing it is.


Gun control has proven impotent in curbing the problem, and “gun free zones” are absurd, since they practically advertise themselves to be potential venues of mayhem and violence. More gun control is not a solution, but only serves as a Band-Aid to our emotions so we feel like we’re doing something. The problems are much deeper in our society than Band-Aids can cure.


gun-free-cartoon-3

gun-free-cartoon-3



The emotional aspect of the issue that we cannot ignore is how the students feel. They must be able to feel safe while at school, and they likely wouldn’t feel safer knowing that anyone can come on campus toting a weapon. The way the legislation is drafted, it is only licensed and authorized personnel who can carry a weapon, which should allay such concerns.


The allowance of licensed and legally authorized personnel carrying a firearm on university grounds is logical. But let’s change the signage at all of our schools. Let’s remove the signs that are so inviting to malcontents and those intending to wreak havoc, and rather than advertise them as gun-free zones, let’s post “These grounds protected by armed and trained personnel. No other weapons allowed.” It may or may not serve as a deterrent, but at least it’s not a welcome sign like “gun-free zone” is!


Associated Press award winning columnist Richard Larsen is President of Larsen Financial, a brokerage and financial planning firm in Pocatello, Idaho and is a graduate of Idaho State University with degrees in Political Science and History and coursework completed toward a Master’s in Public Administration.  He can be reached at [email protected].




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Separating Emotion from Logic on “Gun Free Zones”

Thursday, November 14, 2013

VIDEO: Teen in custody in Pittsburgh shooting









A 16-year-old is in custody for questioning after a shooting injured three teenagers near Brashear High School in Pittsburgh.













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VIDEO: Teen in custody in Pittsburgh shooting

Monday, November 11, 2013

CJ Grisham Arrested at Austin Capitol for ‘Toy Gun’



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Staff Writer | November 11, 2013 | 1:10pm EST

A Veteran’s Day gathering at the Austin Capitol turned sour as police thugs arrested one man for carrying a toy gun.


(Image: Kory Watkins/UStream.com)

AUSTIN, TX – Veterans Day Protest (Image: Kory Watkins/UStream.com)



AUSTIN (INTELLIHUB) — “We are part of the American citizens and the United States Constitution”, said U-Streamer Kory Watkins, broadcasting live from the capital on Veteran’s Day, as he was addressing an officer of the law.


This comment came after CJ Grisham with OpenCarryTexas.org was arrested for carrying a toy gun. 


Watkins describes the police presence at the park Monday, as a bunch of “hungry thugs”.


Watkins walked around the capitol grounds asking others what they thought about the events that transpired. While some were in support of Watkins, others told him to move along, not liking what the group was doing.


All and all, it was a win for activists as this demonstration has brought attention to the matter. Watkins, the activist behind the camera, delivers a first person feel for the viewers at home with no mainstream media B.S. via U-Stream and wireless Internet technology.


At one point Watkins was antagonizing the police, later to get a handshake from another.


*****


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CJ Grisham Arrested at Austin Capitol for ‘Toy Gun’

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Why the Gun Lobby Is Terrified of California

California would ban the sale of all semiautomatic rifles that accept removable magazines, slap a hefty tax on ammo, and require every gun owner to take a yearly safety course under a new package of firearms laws that would give the Golden State the nation’s strongest gun controls.

These and many other proposed firearms laws were announced late last week by leading state Democrats and the mayors of San Francisco and Los Angeles. Many of the laws are expected to pass, in part because the Democratic Party in California now controls the governor’s mansion and a supermajority in the Legislature.

“As it is with many issues, California is out front on firearms regulations,” said Mark Hedlund, a spokesman for California Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg. “We don’t represent the NRA. We don’t think that the NRA represents the majority of Californians, by a long shot.”

California’s newly proposed gun laws would:

  • Ban the possession of ammunition magazines that hold more than 10 rounds
  • Prevent the future sale, purchase, manufacture, importation, or transfer of any firearms that can accept detachable magazines
  • Close the “bullet button” loophole by banning tools that allow the quick changing of gun magazines
  • Regulate ammunition sales like the state regulates gun sales. Ammunition dealers would need to be licensed and anyone buying from them would need to obtain a permit and complete a background check.
  • Create a 5 cent tax on each bullet purchased, for the purpose of funding crime prevention
  • Prevent felons and other adults barred from gun ownership from living in a house that contains any guns
  • Prohibit the loaning or sale of a firearm between people who know each other personally
  • Take steps to phase out legal possession of assault weapons that were purchased before California outlawed their sale
  • Require all firearms owners to take an hours-long gun safety course every year, similar to what the state now requires for obtaining a concealed-weapon permit
  • Require gun owners to purchase insurance to cover damage they may inflict
  • Require CalPERS and CalSTRS, two of the nation’s largest pension funds, to divest from companies that make, sell, or market firearms or ammunition

California has already enacted some of the nation’s strictest gun control laws, partly due to its experience with a Sandy Hook-style massacre: In 1989, a mentally unstable ex-con opened fire with an AK-47-style assault rifle on an elementary school playground in Stockton, killing five schoolchildren and wounding 28 others. The shooting contributed to the passage that year of California’s assault weapons ban.

Somewhat uniquely, California’s state constitution doesn’t guarantee the right to bear arms. The Golden State gives its cities the option of refusing to issue concealed-carry permits and doesn’t recognize permits issued by other states. It requires the reporting of all handgun sales, and it cross-checks the data against the names of convicted criminals and violent mental patients. And unlike most states, it requires background checks for firearms purchases between private parties, closing a loophole that accounts for 80 percent of gun acquisitions made with intent to carry out a crime.

Since the passage of California’s strict gun rules, the incidence of mass shootings has plummeted. “California used to be the mass-shooting capital of the country, but instead of throwing up their hands, they addressed the problem head-on and are reaping the benefits,” says Julie Piotrowski, a spokeswoman for the Violence Policy Center, a pro-gun-control group. “Their success will most certainly inspire action in other states and at the federal level.”

If enacted, the new laws might do for guns what California’s pollution and fuel economy rules did for the nation’s automobiles. In 2011 alone, Californians bought 600,000 firearms; only Texas sports more registered weapons. “The gun industry has a love/hate relationship with California,” Hedlund says. “They hate our gun regulations because they are among the toughest in the country, but they love our marketplace.”

Not to mention how the state essentially does their marketing. No matter what, the weapons industry can rest assured that there will be no shortage of guns in Clint Eastwood flicks.


Politics | Mother Jones


Why the Gun Lobby Is Terrified of California