The Gun Control Debate

Ban assault weapons or put armed guards in every school? Continue reading

When I started competing in debate in 1966 I learned that there was only one way to make a prima facie case for a significant change in policy. Every affirmative case began by portraying a compelling need that inhered in the present system. Inherency in this instance meant that the problem could not be addressed by tinkering with the system. The solution required a structural change. The second step was to provide a plan that solved the problem. This approach was based on a concept of burden of proof widely attributed to Richard Whately, an early nineteenth century Archbishop of Dublin in the Church of Ireland.

This line of reasoning has commonly been heard since the massacre of the children at Sandy Hook school. No one publicly denies that the need is compelling; after all, everyone cringes at the sight of blood-spattered youngsters. Those arguing in favor of gun control have asserted that the widespread availability of certain types of weapons systems make this kind of crime possible, and they should therefore be banned. The other side has argued that the only way to prevent these assaults is to increase security in all schools by hiring guards who, presumably, will be able to match the assailant in accuracy and firepower. “It takes a good guy with a gun to stop a bad guy with a gun.”

In the fifteen years in which I was involved in debate I heard many cases concerning gun control, but I never heard anyone propose either of the above plans. In the first place, of course, frustrated young (wait — the latest guy holed up in a survivalist bunker in Alabama is older than I am!) men in those days were not in the habit of taking semi-automatic weapons into public gatherings for the purpose of blowing people away. So, the compelling need was not at all evident.

The gun control plan that several debate teams did propose was the banning of handguns, which were generally defined as firearms with barrels of a limited length, less than a foot or so. These weapons were then and are now used in the vast majority of murders. No one would claim that eliminating them (if that were possible) would prevent all of those murders; some murderers would doubtless choose a different weapon. On the other hand the murder rates in countries that are otherwise comparable to the U.S. are so much lower that it is difficult to argue that there would not be a significant reduction in the total number of homicides. The psychology behind firing a gun, which is a rather obvious phallic symbol, is quite different from the psychology of stabbing or poisoning.

In all of those debates I only heard two cogent argument against the banning of handguns. The first was the claim that widespread gun ownership deters crime. The studies that support this notion are controversial, to say the least. Furthermore, even if the concept is plausible, the guns evidently do a very poor job of deterring murders, which have a permanence not associated with property crimes.

The second argument, which is much more prevalent now than it was at that time, was that we need an armed populace as an assurance against the government getting out of control. This argument is easier to ridicule than it is to refute. It clearly is the reason that the second amendment is in the constitution in the first place, and even if a fascistic or “Mad Max” scenario seems outlandish now, neither is inconceivable. Those supporting a ban on handguns, however, had little difficulty with this argument since a person armed only with a handgun would not pose much of a threat to heavily armed storm troopers or to Mel Gibson.

In a majority of the cases there is a common goal to which everyone is accountable and that policies, practices, and resources are aligned with the goal. Archbishop Whately’s approach began to lose favor in the world of competitive debate in the seventies. Instead, the concepts of systems theory began to be applied to policy considerations. The reasoning was this: “If one system were clearly superior to another, why not adopt it even if the new system does not solve a compelling and inherent problem?”

A ban on handguns (once again assuming that such a notion were practicable) would almost certainly lead to the advantage of fewer murders and suicides, and it is very difficult to imagine disadvantages that would come close to outweighing this benefit. Therefore, an attractive debate case can easily be made.

The same cannot be said of either of the current proposals. The assault weapons ban might prevent an incident like Sandy Hook, but the number of people killed by these weapons in the U.S. is still quite low by any standard. Some of those murderers might well be able to obtain an equally lethal way to accomplish their nefarious purpose. It could also be argued that assault weapons might be useful if the government runs amok. The difficulty of proving the likelihood of such an event could be offset by the importance of maintaining a free and civil society.

The best argument against the placing of armed guards in the schools is the cost. There are over 140,000 schools in the United States, and many of those have more than one building that would need guarding. Furthermore, there is not a scintilla of evidence that deployment of these guards would reduce the number of dead children. Introducing so many guns in schools would inevitably lead to their accidental or purposeful firing. Even if they did deter an assailant from shooting up a school, there are many other places where children congregate. Are we going to station armed guards at every soccer field, movie theater, and amusement park ride? Uh oh, I may have just given Wayne LaPierre an idea.

This last proposal reminds me of the government’s reaction to the 9/11 attacks. A handful of jihadists figured out that airport security was incredibly lax in the U.S. and that onboard security was essentially nonexistent. They had no difficulty hijacking four planes and used them to kill 3,000 people. The federal government responded by creating the gigantic Transportation Security Administration, which was apparently mandated to serve as such a visible annoyance that people would not be worried about another hijacking. Surely no one could argue that all of these labor-intensive airport security procedures are worth the money and effort. The agency’s budget is over $8 billion per year! If each passenger wastes fifteen minutes being screened, and their time is valued at $10 per hour, that is another $2 billion lost. If you think that this much spending might be necessary to prevent another terrorist event, then why have there been no attacks on the poorly screened methods of transportation — trains, subways, and ships? No sensible debate team would have ever proposed such a stupid approach to an easily soluble (by locking the cockpit doors on airlines) problem.

In my opinion we would be a lot better off if political decision-makers and pundits thought like debaters, but I am not naive enough to think that it will ever happen.

Beats Me

Some things that make no sense to me. Continue reading

I am already old. I fear that I will never understand some things. Or maybe I do.

Why can virtually any American buy a handgun and why do so many people want to? A handgun is good for one thing and one thing only — killing someone or something at close range. It might be useful for putting a horse with a broken leg out of its misery. Otherwise, the only reasonable use is to kill another person (or oneself).

Handguns are worthless for hunting for the simple reason that almost no one can hit anything at any distance with a handgun. When I was in the army I could hit a man-sized target with an M-16 rifle at distances up to 300 meters. With a .45 caliber handgun I could not hit the same type of target at ten meters when I shot “from the hip” — with the gun at waist level. I was only little more accurate when I was allowed to take careful aim. The rest of the people trying to qualify with the .45 were only a little more accurate.

The officers responding to the shooting at the Empire State Building got off sixteen shots. One of them hit the perpetrator. Here is what CNN reported about the remaining shots:

Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said the (eleven) bystanders were not hit directly by police, but rather the officers’ struck “flowerpots and other objects around, so … their bullets fragmented and, in essence, that’s what caused the wounds.”

I have personal familiarity with this phenomenon. After I had finished firing my rounds when trying to qualify with the .45, I could see that about half of my bullets had hit the target. Of those, about half were ricochets, which make rectangular holes, rather than direct hits, which make round holes. The sergeant who gave me a passing grade said that I had achieved the required 75 percent mark because “some of those holes look like they have several bullets in them.”

Many people claim that they need their handguns for self-defense. Nonsense. I can understand wanting body armor or Wonder Woman’s bracelets to defend oneself against someone with a gun, but of what use is a gun? Are people planning on shooting the other guy’s bullets in mid-air before they reach them? Or maybe they expect to be able shoot the gun out of the other person’s hand as the Lone Ranger often did on TV in “those thrilling days of yesteryear.” I don’t think so. They either hope to kill the “bad guy” — or maybe deter him.

Some studies have indeed shown that handguns can have a small deterrent effect on crime, but those studies refer to the crime rate, not murder, and they generally refer to gun ownership, not handgun possession. I suppose that a potential victim might conceivably deter a thief, especially an unarmed thief, if the latter knows that the subject has a gun (within reach). No one can convince me that it would deter a murderer with a gun, especially not a psychopath like the guy who shot up the theater showing the Batman movie or the white supremacist who mistook Sikhs for Arabs. All that the gunman needs to do is wait until the subject is within range and then shoot first. I suppose that one could use the “Bungalow Bill” approach — “if looks could kill, it would have been us instead of him” — but shooting first while deferring questions until later is frowned on in many circles. In some states you might even get some prison time.

It is a well established fact that in industrialized countries the murder rate is closely connected to the rate of handgun ownership. The strength of the correlation is so great that it approaches causation.

One other point: Handguns are long and hard, they heat up in your hand, and they ejaculate bullets. Would Freud find it strange that most people who murder with them are frustrated males?

Why are cigarettes legal? I remember reading the Surgeon General’s report on smoking when I was in high school, from which I graduated over forty-six years ago. Why in the world do we still allow anyone to sell products that cause cancer, emphysema, and all kinds of other horrible things and are smelly, useless, and highly addictive to boot? How is it possible that one can still buy these noxious objects almost anywhere?

Not long ago the obvious answer was the tobacco lobby. Now, however, I think that the state governments have become addicted to tobacco sales. In the Land of Steady Habits the cigarette tax is now $3.40 per pack. In the 2010 fiscal year the state took in over $500 million because of cigarette smokers in a time of severe fiscal crisis. If this source of revenue dried up, the crisis would have been much worse.

I don’t care. Tax me. I don’t want my friends and relatives dying from lung cancer.

Why is television so awful? Don’t get me wrong; I do not long for the golden years of TV. American television has always been awful. Temple Houston was no better than American Hoggers. The Monkees won an Emmy in 1967. In the old days, however, there were only three networks. Now there are hundreds. One might suspect that the law of large numbers should now be working for us, but that does not seem to be the case.

I can only remember one program in the last thirty years that excited me, Terry Jones’ four-part series on the Crusades. As I recall it was used to promote the launch of the History Channel, which now is dominated by shows about ghost-hunting and UFO’s. O tempora, o mores!

What is the justification for the Electoral College? Let us pass over without mentioning that it is obviously ridiculous that the three electors from Wyoming represent about 190,000 people each while the ones from California represent over 677,000 people. The biggest problem, to my way of thinking, is that the candidates now concentrate all of their pandering on the so-called swing states. The candidates think that the only state in New England is New Hampshire, and even those who wish to “Live Free or Die” are forgotten after the primary is over.

If there were no Electoral College, everyone’s vote would count the same. Neither candidate could write off a state just because it looked hopeless. The candidates would have to advertise just as heavily in Connecticut as they do in Ohio.

Wait a minute. Forget that I mentioned this one.

Why do we declare war on concepts? First there was the war on poverty, then the war on drugs, and then the war on terror. Use of the word “war” provides cover for politicians because it is considered unpatriotic to question a war no matter how idiotic the justification or how great the cost.

Here is the essence of the problem: When you declare war on a country, the war is over when the country’s government or military leaders surrender. Unfortunately, concepts cannot surrender. A secondary result is that the nation’s leaders tend to employ military tactics and personnel to solve the problem whether they are appropriate or not. The synergy of these two issues is devastating: since a military leader never admits defeat unless there is literally a gun at his head, the “war” can never end!

When the concept is a tactic, the use of the military can obviously be counterproductive. When we bombed Tokyo and Dresden, there was not much resentment outside of Japan and Germany, and the native people were already our enemies. The Chinese, for example, did not wish to join up with the Japanese out of sympathy. In contrast, when we bomb places that hold terrorists in the middle of neutral or allied countries, the families and friends of the dead can easily become angry and resentful enough to join the cause of the terrorists. When the dead people are “collateral damage,” the likelihood is even greater.

Finally, by changing the meaning of words the government opens the door to abuses by other institutions. Putin used the “war on terror” and the Bush Doctrine of preemptive war to justify his crackdown in Chechnya. Funding for the war on terror has apparently become a lucrative profit center for the government of Yemen. The funds will only stop flowing if the government’s anti-terrorism effort succeeds. Can anyone see a potential problem here?

Why are Americans not outraged about preventive detention? I always thought that perhaps the most important principle on which our republic is based was the right to a trial. Surely, this is an inalienable right that is not linked to where we or our parents were born. Indefinite detention of individuals is therefore the most abusive use of governmental power, but its use in Guantanamo (for eleven years!) has generated almost no public outcry whatever. President Obama promised that he would put an end to the practice, but that statement is no longer operative. In plain English it was a lie.

Do people in the United States not know that there are still 197 human beings who, although they have never been charged with a crime, are still being held in Cuba? Or do Americans just not care? I think that it is probably a case of “out of sight, out of mind,” but this might be a result of the high regard that I hold for the moral fiber of my fellow citizens.

It is worth noting that the Obama administration has designated forty-six individuals for “indefinite detention.” I presume this means that they will be held until we win the war on terror or they die, whichever comes first.