Thursday, January 17, 2013

Are We Looking At The Right Target?

We barely avoided going over the fiscal cliff.

We are now heading straight for a collision with a mountain of federal debt.

However, all we hear the President talking about right now are guns, guns and guns.

Are we looking at the right target in all of this?  What should we really be focusing on?


Credit: AccurateShooter.com


There is little doubt that gun violence is a big problem and an important issue. However, is it the biggest problem we have right now?  After all, we are less than a month from hitting that debt limit ceiling.  We continue to spend $1.00 for every .60 in revenues.  We are still looking at $1 trillion annual deficits.  We still have a U.S. Senate that has not passed a budget in almost four years.

What will all of the talk, proposals and executive orders on guns actually accomplish?

First of all, I am not a gun nut.  I have used firearms and at one time had obtained the NRA Sharpshooter classification.  I respect guns and what they can do.  More importantly, I respect the U.S. Constitution.  I believe the 2nd Amendment is pretty clear.
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
There is no doubt that the people have the right to keep and bear arms and that right is not to be infringed.  At the same type, it seems understood that some type of regulation is permitted with regard to that right.  The difficult question is at what point is the right to keep and bear arms infringed by regulations?

For example, does an individual have the right to keep and bear arms such as a nuclear weapon, surface to air missile or bazooka?  I have not heard anyone with the NRA or anyone else make that argument.  Machine guns and other military types of automatic weapons are already illegal and have been since the 1930's.  In fact, the use of these weapons by gangsters such as Machine Gun Kelly, Baby Face Nelson and John Dillinger led to the passage of the National Firearms Act in 1934 that made them illegal in the U.S.

If anything is going to be done that might infringe on that right in the Constitution it would seem that it should be clearly demonstrated to be a reasonable regulation.  To meet that standard government should have to show that vast numbers of the public are being killled (or could be killed) to outweigh the individual constitutional right.  This is clear with an atomic weapon, machine gun or SAM.  In other words, the public's interest to safety outweighs the individual rights to keep and bear arms.

Let's look at some surprising statistics that I found in researching this blog.   The following information on gun violence comes from the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence.  The other data is from research I did to put these deaths in context.

On average, over the three years 2008-2010, 31,537 people in America have died from gun violence.  This is a shocking number.  However, over the same time period, an average of 34,651 people died in auto accidents.  25,000 people die annually in accidental falls.  There are 39,000 deaths each year by poisoning, most due to abusing drugs.  There were also almost 800,000 abortions  in the U.S. in 2009 according to the CDC.  120,000 abortions were done in New York alone.

What I found interesting in looking at the gun violence deaths is how they were caused.

Only 11,583 of the total were homicides.  That is only 37%.

18,783 of the total deaths by gun violence were the result of suicides!  That is 60% of total deaths.

Only 334 of all gun deaths were caused by police intervention and 584 were the result of people being killed accidentally by guns.

When you consider that 60% of gun violence deaths are caused by people committing suicide you begin to get an idea of how ridiculous all of this gun talk is.  How many people kill themselves using an assault rifle or with a magazine with over 10 rounds?  Will any of this do anything substantial on curbing gun violence deaths that would justify infringing on the rights of law abiding citizens.  I think not.

Further to this point, John Hinderaker cites another interesting statistic in PowerLine that adds additional context to all of this.  In 2010, there were only 358 homicides that involved rifles (all rifles, not just "assault weapons") in the U.S.  That means that only 1% of all deaths by gun violence involved rifles of any type.  Again, are we looking at the right target?

Handguns are clearly the cause of almost all gun violence in this country. However, standard handguns are not even being discussed.  That is because the U.S. Supreme Court in D.C v. Heller ruled in 2008 that banning personal firearms possession is unconstitutional. The District of Columbia had banned the possession of all firearms by anyone but law enforcement officers beginning in 1976.  Of course, there are legitimate questions about how useful the ban on handguns in D.C was anyway as Jeffrey Scott Shapiro points out in this Wall Street Journal op-ed.  Murders in D.C. have actually declined by more than 50% in the four years since the handgun ban was repealed.

When I look at the statistics the obvious answer is that the primary target on gun violence needs to be focused first and foremost on the people firing the weapon.  It seems to me we need to be focusing more on the mental health side than on the gun side.  You start with the fact that suicides are the cause of 60% of gun deaths.  The recent mass shootings in Aurora, CO and Newtown, CT clearly seem to point to serious mental health issues being the primary reason for the killings.  The same was true with Jared Loughner in the Gabby Giffords shootings in Arizona last year.

Much more of this debate and discussion should be looking at the issue of mental health than the size of the magazines in firearms.  That debate should also include what effects (if any) video games and other entertainment might have on the mental state of mass killers like we saw in Aurora (Batman) and Newtown ("Call of Duty" video game).  It may be coincidental or circumstantial but it bears looking into in some depth.  We have introduced a lot of external factors and influences into our environment that were not present 20, 30, 50 or 200 years ago.

It should not be easy to infringe on individual constitutional rights.  Should any of this be done by Executive Orders?  I know that is easy for the President. However, what happened to the idea of passing bills in the legislative branch first and having the President sign them into law?

As for the issue of gun violence, let's start where the numbers tell us the real underlying problem is.  Mental health is being talked about but not with the same vigor and rigor that guns are being talked about. As a result, it seems that most of the focus in this debate is on the wrong target.  And we are also spending a lot of time talking about an issue that, while important, is far less critical than the looming debt and budget crisis that should be #1 on every person's mind in Washington right now.

We are not going to solve any part of the gun issue in this country in the next 60 days.  We have to solve some part of our debt and budget crisis in the next two months.  Time is wasting and the President is fiddling.  I just don't want all of us getting burned in the process.

5 comments:

  1. Good article, concise and backed up with links to sources.

    Two things to be wary of though. First, using the Brady Campaign as a source for fact based arguments will get you discredited immediately.

    Secondly, the use of the term "gun violence" as it relates to death or injury by a gun. "Gun violence" should only be used as a reference to an act of aggression with a gun, not every time a gun is involved.

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  2. I used the Brady data (which actually is sourced from CDC statistics) because Brady would be called a "hostile witness" on this topic if we were in a courtroom. Therefore, the data coming from them actually should be more credible as they would like to ban most guns.

    I used "gun violence" because that is the term Brady uses. I understand your point but the fact is that almost every death with a gun towards a human being is done as an act of aggression. That includes suicides which are an act of aggression against yourself. The only exception to the above would be accidental deaths by firearms. However, this accounted for less than 2% of deaths.

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  3. re: "It should not be easy to infringe on individual constitutional rights. Should any of this be done by Executive Orders? I know that is easy for the President. However, what happened to the idea of passing bills in the legislative branch first and having the President sign them into law?"

    you may want to actually read the executive actions, as you'll be pleased to find out that none of them come even close towards infringing upon your 2nd amendment rights.

    http://www.slate.com/blogs/weigel/2013/01/16/read_president_obama_s_new_proposed_executive_orders_and_legislation_on.html

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  4. Ashley,

    I have read them. However, if they are so clear cut and so reasonable why not put them in a bill and take it to our elected representatives as the Constitution intended and have a vote on them. Its seems to me that we are undermining our system by trying to work around the Constitution all the time.

    This is not solely an Obama phenonemon. It has become all too common for all Presidents to use Executive Orders when they should be working with elected representatives in Congress. Abraham Lincoln understood this. The Emancipation Proclamation was an Executive Order but he did not want to rely on it once the War was over. He knew to truly rid the country of slavery we needed a constitutional amendment. It was not the easiest path but it proved to be the best path.

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  5. Good post. I would be interested to know what percentage of gun violence is conducted by people who are the registered owners of legally obtained firearms used in the violent act. Something tells me that these are not the people or guns we should be worried about, thus restricting access to to how we obtain firearms may not go very far in solving the problem.

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