By Charles C. W. Cooke
Thursday, October 08, 2015
With the notable exception of Jim Webb, whose many
talents seem better suited to another time and place, every single one of the
Democratic party’s presidential candidates is in favor of banning at least some
of America’s “in common use” firearms. In her recent gun-control missive,
Hillary Clinton contended that “military-style assault weapons” are “a danger
to law enforcement and to our communities,” and therefore “do not belong on our
streets.” On his campaign website, Martin O’Malley boasts that, while he was
governor there, “Maryland prohibited the sale of assault weapons and limited
the size of magazines,” and proposes that the federal government, should “adopt
similar, commonsense reforms.” In 2012, CBS reports, then–Rhode Island governor
Lincoln Chafee “backed a state measure to ban semi-automatic assault weapons
and high-capacity magazines.” And, although he has stayed pretty quiet on the
question this time around, Bernie Sanders voted to ban “assault weapons” during
the failed Senate push of 2013, and would, he confirmed last week, happily do
so again.
All in all, this focus is a little strange, for, as Lois
Beckett explained extremely clearly last year in the pages of the New York Times, there
is in fact no such thing as an “assault weapon.” Functionally speaking, the
term is entirely meaningless. It does not mean “machine gun”; it does not mean
“especially powerful rifle”; it does not mean “child killer” or “cop murderer”
or “armor-piercer.” Except insofar as it nods to an aesthetic style that is
popular among people who have watched a lot of 24, it means nothing much at all. To draw an analogy, it’s the
“organic food” of the self-defense world.
Don’t believe me? Just ask the Violence Policy Center’s
Josh Sugarmann, who, in a publicly available 1989 position paper, announced his
intention to mislead the public into supporting a ban on everyday rifles by
pretending that they were machine guns. “Until someone famous is shot, or
something truly horrible happens,” Sugarmann wrote, “handgun restriction is
simply not viewed as a priority.” But maybe, he continued cynically, another area might be ripe for
exploitation instead:
Assault weapons — just like armor-piercing bullets, machine guns, and plastic firearms – are a new topic. The weapons’ menacing looks, coupled with the public’s confusion over fully automatic machine guns versus semi-automatic assault weapons – anything that looks like a machine gun is assumed to be a machine gun – can only increase the chance of public support for restrictions on these weapons. In addition, few people can envision a practical use for these weapons.
Contrary to popular belief, Sugarmann did not invent the
term “assault weapon”; marketing departments within the firearms industry did
that. Nevertheless, he and his supporters have been more than happy to abuse it
in order to advance their agenda, and to do so in the full knowledge that they
are perpetrating a fraud. It is thus that a phrase that started life as little
more than glossy retail pabulum has become a sharp and effective tool with
which the enemies of the right to keep and bear arms have sought to sow
confusion, fear, and ignorance. It is thus, too, that a set of quotidian
weapons that have never posed much of a problem to anybody come to sit at the
center of the national debate.
It is difficult to overstate just how absurd this is.
Even if we were to swallow whole the novel set of definitions that the
advocates of “assault”-weapons legislation have imposed upon our national
deliberations, the case in favor of their coveted laws would remain all but
nonexistent. Between 1994 and 2004, Americans were flatly barred from
purchasing or transferring 660 arbitrarily selected semi-automatic firearms and
from obtaining any magazine that could hold more than ten rounds. This
prohibition had no discernible impact whatsoever. Charged in 1997 with
evaluating the short-term impact of the measure, the National Institute of
Justice reported bluntly that “the evidence is not strong enough for us to
conclude that there was any meaningful effect (i.e., that the effect was
different from zero).” A second study – commissioned to coincide with the ban’s
expiration in 2004 — calmly echoed this conclusion, while noting for the record
that there hadn’t been much of a problem in the first instance. No subsequent
inquiry has contradicted these assessments.
How about now, a decade later: Have things changed? Nah.
In 2014, the FBI reports, there were 11,961 murders in the United States, of
which 8,124 were carried out with firearms. (Happily, this represents a
now-typical four percent drop from 2013.) Of those 8,124, fewer than 3 percent
were carried out with rifles of all sorts
and so few were executed with so-called assault weapons that the agency didn’t
even bother to keep statistics. If she so wishes, Hillary Clinton can contend
theatrically that cosmetically altered rifles are “a danger to law enforcement
and to our communities.” But that will not make it true — not even close.
In fact, rifles are the least popular killing tools in
the United States. Per the FBI, this is how Americans killed each other in
2014:
Handguns:
5,562 (47 percent)
Unknown firearms:
2,052 (17 percent)
Other weapons:
1,610 (13 percent)
Knives and Cutting
Instruments: 1,567 (13 percent)
Hands, feet,
fists, pushing: 660 (6 percent)
Shotguns: 262
(2 percent)
Rifles: 248 (2
percent)
By definition, we cannot know what is inside that
“unknown firearms” category. So, for the sake of argument, let’s distribute it
proportionately among the existing firearms groups:
Handguns:
7,442 (62 percent)
Other weapons:
1,610 (13 percent)
Knives and Cutting
Instruments: 1,567 (13 percent)
Hands, feet,
fists, pushing: 660 (6 percent)
Shotguns: 350
(3 percent)
Rifles: 332 (3
percent)
Were Clinton, Sanders, O’Malley & co. to shed the
hysteria and the nonsense and to rest their political platforms upon the host
of useful information that is available to them, they would inevitably conclude
that America’s problem is handguns and not rifles, and that it is preposterous
to argue otherwise. All things being equal, they would comprehend also that
those who are prepared to cross the Rubicon and propose a limited federal ban
should be making the case that everyday pistols are the culprits in the mix,
and that it is they, not AR15s, that should be prohibited. Alas, by refraining
from engaging seriously they do little but confuse. Addressing this issue,
Hillary Clinton likes to submit mawkishly that she is not willing to “accept as
‘normal’ 30,000 gun deaths every year,” and then to bang on about a type of
weapon that is used about as frequently in crime as is the human elbow. Were
she serious, she would understand that this position is farcical, and that she
is beclowning herself by proposing it. Assault weapons, aschmault weapons. It
is time to put away childish things.
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