By Kevin D. Williamson
Tuesday, January 31, 2023
I’m trying to get out of the habit of writing columns
that are responses to other people’s columns, but this Nicholas
Kristof piece on gun policy—full of sloppiness bordering on intellectual
dishonesty—needs a response.
Kristof’s argument is that we can use “gun safety
measures” to reduce violent crime in the United States. But most guns sold in
the U.S. market are not lacking in safety features—the problem is not “gun
safety” but the fact that people point perfectly functional, well-designed
firearms at other people and then pull the trigger for the purpose of killing
them. “Gun safety” is not the issue. Murder is the issue. Suicide is, by the
numbers, an even greater issue.
But that’s a view-from-35,000-feet issue. Kristof’s
nonsense is worth addressing point-by-point.
Kristof writes:
Just as some kids will always sneak
cigarettes or people will inevitably drive drunk, some criminals will get
firearms — but one lesson learned is that if we can’t eliminate a dangerous
product, we can reduce the toll by regulating who gets access to it.
That can make a huge difference.
Consider that American women age 50 or older commit fewer than
100 gun homicides in a typical year. In contrast, men 49 or
younger typically kill more than 500 people each year just with their fists and
feet; with guns, they kill more than 7,000 each year. In effect, firearms are
safer with middle-aged women than fists are with young men.
We’re not going to restrict guns to
women 50 or older, but we can try to keep firearms from people who are under 21
or who have a record of violent misdemeanors, alcohol abuse, domestic violence
or some red flag that they may be a threat to themselves or others.
The law already prohibits retailers from selling firearms
to people who have most of the “red flags” Kristof mentions: people convicted
of felonies, people convicted of serious misdemeanors including nonviolent
crimes (“any other crime for which the judge could imprison you for more than
one year”), people who have not been convicted of such crimes but are under
indictment for them, people convicted of misdemeanor domestic violence, etc.
Federal law already restrict commercial sale of handguns—by far the most common
sort of gun used in violent crimes—to people at least 21 years of age. We even
prohibit gun sales to many classes of people that don’t make Kristof’s
list—people with anything other than an honorable discharge from the military,
people under restraining orders, illegal aliens, unlawful marijuana users, etc.
This is pretty typical stuff in this debate: Proposing policies that we already
have.
Kristof goes on to cite federal regulations of fully
automatic weapons as a model.
To buy a machine gun made before
1986, you need a background check, a clean record and $200 for a transfer tax —
a process that can take several months to complete. Then you must report to the
authorities if it is stolen and get approval if you move it to another state.
To buy a machine gun made after 1986 is more complicated.
None of this is terribly onerous,
but these hoops — and stiff enforcement of existing laws — are enough to keep
machine guns in responsible hands. In a typical year, these registered machine
guns are responsible for approximately zero suicides and zero homicides.
The background check you go through to buy a pre-1986
machine gun looks for the same things as the regular background check; all it
does is add fingerprints and a photograph to the process, along with several
months of waiting for paperwork to be processed. And it is true that firearms
sold through this process rarely turn up in crimes: As with the case of New
York concealed-carry permits, the people who have used legally owned fully
automatic weapons to commit crimes historically have been—almost
exclusively—police officers. But, here’s the thing: Firearms sold through the
regular retail process are rarely used in crimes, either. From my soon-to-be-updated Dispatch guide to
gun questions and gun policy:
The problem with the regulatory
approach is that it targets licensed dealers and the people who do business
with them, who represent a vanishingly small share of criminals: Less than 2
percent of the criminals in custody today who had a gun with them when they
committed their crimes acquired that gun from a licensed gun dealer, and only
0.8 percent from one of those gun shows we hear about all the time. Most
violent crimes in the United States are committed by people with prior arrests
and convictions for serious and often violent crimes, and the majority of
murders in our country are committed by people who would not be legally eligible
to purchase a firearm under existing law.
But it isn’t regulation that keeps people from using
weapons from that stock of legally available machine guns to shoot up Chicago
street corners. It’s money.
Do you know what a pre-1986 AR-15 costs? About thirty grand.
Nobody robs a 7-Eleven with a $30,000 AR-15 for the same reason nobody robs a
7-Eleven with a $30,000 Holland & Holland safari magnum. For one thing, you
can’t stick it in the waistband of your pants, but—the main thing!—it costs
$30,000. Most criminals favor less expensive firearms, because, as one might
expect a New York Times columnist to know, most criminals are poor.
In fact, as I am obliged to repeat about once a week,
semiautomatic rifles account for a tiny share of homicides in the United States—all
rifles together account for about 2.6 percent of homicides, meaning only 364 of
the 14,000 or so homicides the United States saw in 2021. Kristof cites this
fact, too, but doesn’t take the obvious lesson from it.
From my gun-policy guide:
Are AR-type rifles especially
dangerous? Look at the FBI data: In 2019, there were almost 14,000 homicide
victims in the United States. All rifles
combined—not just AR-type rifles, but all rifles—accounted for only 364 of
those incidents. Even if we assume that all of those rifles were
AR-type rifles (and they weren’t), we’d still have four times as many murders
with knives, more murders with blunt objects, more murders with fists and feet,
etc. For crimes short of murder, rifles are even more scarce: Only 13 show up
in robberies in the 2019 FBI statistics, three in burglaries, eight in
narcotics cases, and two in domestic-violence cases—in a country of 345 million
souls, these are not big numbers.
For as long as we have been keeping records, the most
common sort of firearm used in violent crimes in the United States is whatever
handgun happens to be in widest use at the time: Back when people were robbing
stagecoaches, it was the cap-and-ball revolver; back when people wore fedoras,
it was the snub-nosed .38; today, it’s the 9mm automatic. All of the murders
carried out with, say, an AK-47-pattern rifle in the United States in any given
year will amount to a rounding error, but people enjoy pronouncing the
syllables “AK-47” because they sound so interesting and authoritative. In
reality, exotic weapons are a poor fit for the needs of a typical career
criminal in the United States. And even when it comes to mass shootings, many
more lives are lost to handguns than to scary-looking black rifles with
military-sounding names.
At this point, Kristof really goes off the rails,
implying that it is more difficult to adopt a dog in Mississippi, or to vote,
than it is to buy a firearm. He uses the following two graphics:
He lists the ID-requirement to vote, but not for buying a
gun—and, of course, it is required. Not only is a photo-ID required, but, to
buy a gun—unlike the case of voting in most jurisdictions—all of the
information on the license must be up-to-date. Have you moved since your
driver’s license was issued? You can’t buy a gun with that license. (The
questionnaire asks for a Social Security number as well, though this is not,
strictly speaking, required.) You can “mail or hand deliver” a voting
application, as Kristof notes, but you cannot buy a firearm by mailing in your
application. You can buy a gun on the Internet, but a licensed dealer will ship
it only to another licensed dealer, at which point you’ll have to go through
the regular background-check process. You can try to mail somebody a pistol,
but that is a federal offense.
As for the dog-adoption stuff, Kristof is citing the
practices of one pet-adoption agency as though they were law—which they are
not. In fact, Mississippi pet-adoption law is an example of—angels and
ministers of grace defend us!—self-regulation. If you adopt a pet and fib to
the pet-adoption agency about how big your yard is, you don’t go to federal
prison. Lie on the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives form and
you could. (If the ATF could be bothered to, you know, do its job.)
Pet-adoption agencies do not subject you to a federal background check—the FBI
is not involved at all! This does not demonstrate the point Kristof thinks it
does.
Presenting these situations as though it were in any
meaningful way easier to buy a gun from a licensed retailer than it is to adopt
a greyhound or vote in Biloxi is deeply and fundamentally dishonest. Kristof
should be ashamed of writing this, and the New York Times should be
ashamed of publishing it—it is journalistic malpractice.
Making things worse, Kristof offers this flourish:
Why should it be easier to pick up
military-style weapons than to adopt a Chihuahua? And why do states that make
it difficult to vote, with waiting periods and identification requirements, let
almost anyone walk out of a gun shop with a bundle of military-style rifles?
The answer is: It isn’t. Gun shops have identification
requirements, and they most certainly do not “let almost anyone walk out of a
gun shop with a bundle of military-style rifles,” unless by “almost anyone” you
mean “anyone who is not a felon or under felony indictment, who has not been
convicted of a high-level misdemeanor or is under indictment for one, who
hasn’t been dishonorably discharged from the military, who hasn’t been ruled
mentally unsound by a court of law, who hasn’t been convicted of domestic
violence or currently facing such charges, who isn’t the subject of a
restraining order, who isn’t an illegal drug user, who isn’t an illegal alien,
who isn’t buying the gun for someone else,” etc. I’m open to putting other
people on the no-no list: Do we want to mandate a 700 Experian credit score and
an eye exam? Fine, let’s have that conversation—but it is, again, fundamentally
and obviously dishonest to pretend that we “let almost anyone walk out of a gun
shop with a bundle of military-style rifles.”
(Set aside the tomfoolery of “military-style rifles” as a
construction for the moment, even though the rifles you can buy in most gun
shops are not the kind of rifles actually issued by militaries, which generally
choose “select-fire” rifles.)
Kristof notes that age is a factor here, and suggests
that reforms take that into consideration:
This may be more politically
feasible than some other gun safety measures. Wyoming is one of the most
gun-friendly states in America, but it establishes a minimum age of 21 to
buy a handgun.
This is kind of a funny one: Almost every
state in the country has a law prohibiting a gun dealer from
selling a handgun to anyone under 21, and all these laws together add up to
nothing—because federal law already
prohibits gun retailers, all of whom are federally licensed,
from selling handguns to people under 21. What varies is possession laws:
Can an 18-year-old legally possess a pistol given to him by someone
else, one inherited from his granddad, one he is just using during
handgun-hunting season, etc.? That gets a little weird at times: Texas had
sought to defend its law prohibiting those under 21 from carrying a
handgun and recently gave up the effort. (A Trump-appointed federal judge ruled
that Texas’ “constitutional carry” rule applies an unconstitutional age limit.)
It is not clear whether the state legislature will revisit the issue. In
reality, even certain rifle parts can’t be sold to those under 21, because they
could, in theory, be used to assemble a handgun.
Kristof holds up Massachusetts as an example of good
policy:
In effect, Massachusetts applies to
firearms the sort of system that we routinely use in registering vehicles and
licensing drivers to save lives from traffic deaths. Gun registration
unfortunately evokes among some gun owners alarm about jackbooted
thugs coming to confiscate firearms, which is another reason to
work to lower the temperature of the gun policy debate.
Massachusetts is kind of an interesting case. As Kristof
notes, it has relatively strict gun laws and relatively low gun crime. The
neighboring states of New Hampshire and Vermont have very libertarian gun
laws—and even lower rates of gun crime. Vermont has been a
“constitutional carry” state for as long as there has been a constitution and
enjoys quite low rates of violent crime. The people who imagine themselves to
be social engineers who can guide the course of 345 million souls have trouble
dealing with the fact that public policy, as such, often is a minor
factor. There are lots of reasons you don’t worry too much about getting
murdered in Vermont in spite of its liberal gun laws. Mobile, Ala., is one of
the most dangerous cities in the country when it comes to violent crime; El
Paso, Texas, is one of the safest—and the two states have similar, relatively
loose gun laws.
Kristof plays the hits: “We should reassure gun owners
that we’re not going to come after their deer rifles or bird guns,” he writes,
ignoring the fact that AR-style rifles are almost certainly the single most
common hunting rifle in the United States; he writes about hollowpoint bullets
as being especially dangerous without noting that hollowpoints often are chosen
precisely because they are in some ways less dangerous than non-expanding
bullets, for example, being less likely to pass through the intended target and
hit someone else; etc. He then descends into imbecilic fan service, suggesting
that we apply shocking “graphic” warning labels to ammunition: “ One proposed
ammunition label has a photo of a bloody face and states that a
gun increases the risk of someone in a home being killed.” If there is one
thing we know about guns and ammunition, it is that the scarier they seem, the
better they will sell: The example of Death brand cigarettes, with its
skull-and-crossbones packaging, leaps to mind.
And, predictably, he focuses on gun stores and their
customers (who commit very few crimes) while ignoring the actual correlations:
The majority of
U.S. murderers already have a prior felony conviction at the time of the
killing for which they are charged. The vast majority of all
violent crimes in the United States are committed by people with prior criminal
records. The shooters are the problem and always have been.
Violent crime in the United States is largely the work of habitual criminals. The people who can buy guns in gun shops have clean criminal records. The overlap between the people the gun-controllers seek to regulate and the people who commit the violent crimes is very, very small. Pretending that this is not so is foolish and dishonest.
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