| “Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.” –
Thomas Jefferson
Okay, so we had a good election cycle for the pro-liberty movement. I
hope it gave you a reason for a celebratory mood at Thanksgiving. Now
it’s time to get back to work. The people who fought so hard against
your Second Amendment rights are still in Congress. They intend to
maintain their course, as declared by their erstwhile presidential
nominees:
"You can be disappointed, but you cannot walk away," Edwards
said. "This fight has just begun."
To his supporters and volunteers, Kerry said, "Don't lose faith. What
you did made a difference. The time will come when your work and your
ballots will change the world ... It's worth fighting for." (1)
The Democrats intend to maintain their party’s direction, believing they
merely didn’t get their message out quite right, that it’s merely a
matter of “comfort level.”
"We've got to make voters for whom traditional values are paramount
more comfortable with the Democratic Party," said Steve Murphy, a
Democratic strategist. "We're not anti-religion, anti-church and
anti-gun. They think we are." (2)
I will leave Mr. Murphy’s first two protestations to my esteemed
compatriots, but let’s look at the veracity of the claim the Democrats
are not anti-gun, focusing on the Senate for a concise discussion.
S. 1805/6, the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, states at the
beginning “Citizens have a right, protected by the Second Amendment to
the United States Constitution, to keep and bear arms.” (3) The bill
clearly states that lawsuits are still allowable when there was
malfeasance on the part of the manufacturer or dealer, or if the
manufacturer sold a defective product. The Act’s only goal was tort
reform, doing away with nuisance lawsuits wherein a criminal used a
properly manufactured firearm to commit a crime, or a person misused a
non-defective firearm in a negligent manner that resulted in death or
injury to an innocent party. These nuisance suits have been brought by
individuals and municipalities with the intention of somehow proving that
manufacturers of firearms are responsible for the improper use of their
product. While the cases have been consistently dismissed or resulted in a
finding for firearms manufacturers, the legal costs alone threaten this
relatively small industry, and could result in bankruptcy. As these
companies go out of business, the gun banners get their desired outcome
via attrition: stopping the sale of civilian firearms.
So how did the Democrats, who claim to not be anti-gun, behave on this
bill? Well, they didn’t exactly vote against S. 1805. What they did was
to load it with “poison pill” amendments that rendered it unacceptable
in its final version, resulting in it being pulled from the floor.
The entire anti-gun leadership remains in the Senate: Dianne Feinstein,
Ted Kennedy, Charles Schumer, Frank Lautenberg, John Kerry, and Hillary
Clinton. You will find their names on all the anti-gun amendments added to
S. 1805/6 that resulted in its dismissal.
Senator Feinstein added an amendment renewing the “assault weapons”
ban. (4) All the Democrat anti-gun leadership voted for this amendment.
(5)
John McCain added the “gun show loophole” amendment that could have
created such a load of additional red tape and costs to gun show promoters
as to put them out of business, effectively closing gun shows. (6) All the
Democrat anti-gun leadership voted for this amendment. (7)
Such additions resulted in the entire bill being voted down as amended.
(8)
Frank Lautenberg submitted S. 1431, the Assault Weapons Ban and Law
Enforcement Protection Act of 2003, a permanent enactment and expansion of
the assault weapons ban, and the anti-gun leadership signed on as
cosponsors. (9) The bill would ban a list of “semi-automatic assault
weapons” and strengthen the ban on magazines over 10 rounds capacity.
The intent remains to reauthorize a ban on semi-automatic firearms that a
stroke of a pen turns into “assault weapons,” despite the fact that
the Department of Justice found that the 1994 ban had no impact on crime.
(10)
Conclusion
Mr. Murphy is correct; the Democrats are not anti-gun. They believe that
governments should have free and unrestricted access to any firearms they
desire. You, on the other hand, do not deserve the same privilege. This is
because guns kill people, and in the interests of public health and
safety, your guns are a danger to society.
Why do governments never hold themselves to the same standards to which
the private citizen is held? History is replete with horrifyingly similar
tales of government-condoned genocide and wars which slaughtered well over
100 million people in the 20th century alone. Yet they never ban the guns
that enabled these horrors. Has any government ever disarmed itself
because guns killed?
History also shows that once governments have total control, they revise
history to promote their “goodness.” Then they make similar claims
about the freedom of speech, so that discourse such as this paper are
banned as well, in the interests of protecting society from the
“danger” of questioning the government that needs us to believe it is
taking care of We the Inept Subjects.
Every gun banned is a nail in the coffin of liberty. The battle lines are
clearly drawn, and the enemy’s leadership is intact. The troops are
being actively recruited from the ranks of those well-meaning Americans
who are ignorant about firearms and shooting sports. The war is still on.
The enemy will never stop with so much power at stake.
Arm yourself with the facts and educate people enough to at least reduce
the enemy’s support. Take a new shooter to the range and introduce them
to the fun of shooting sports. As an ounce prevention is worth a pound of
cure, preemptive actions on your part now will save much wear and tear
during the next election cycle.
Footnotes
(1) Kerry Concedes, Vows To Keep Fighting For Americans, KTVU.com,
November 3, 2004. http://www.ktvu.com/news/3887635/detail.html
(2) Social conservatives turn out in force to fuel Bush, GOP victories,
Matt Stearns and Charles Homans, Knight Ridder Newspapers, November 3,
2004. http://www.realcities.com/mld/krwashington/10091652.htm
(3) Library of Congress, Legislative Information on the Internet. http://thomas.loc.gov
(Enter S. 1805 in Bill Number search box)
(4) Bill Summary & Status. http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d108:SP02637
(5) U.S. Senate Roll Call
http://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_lists/roll_call_vote_cfm.cfm?congress=108&session=2&vote=00024
(6) Text of Amendment SA 2636.
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/R?r108:FLD001:S52007
(7) U.S. Senate Roll Call
http://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_lists/roll_call_vote_cfm.cfm?congress=108&session=2&vote=00025
(8) U.S. Senate Roll Call
http://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_lists/roll_call_vote_cfm.cfm?congress=108&session=2&vote=00030
(9) Library of Congress, Legislative Information on the Internet. http://thomas.loc.gov
(Enter S. 1431 in Bill Number search box, then select Congressional Record
References, and search for additional co-sponsors.
(10) Impacts of the 1994 Assault Weapons Ban: 1994-1996. National
Institute of Justice, March 1999. http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/173405.pdf |