As
columnist Paul Craig Roberts has put it, "Law, once a
shield of the innocent, is now a weapon in the hands of
government."
Roberts is referring to a long and dangerous trend to
expand the concept of crime to actions and non-actions in
which no individual is harmed or threatened with harm. In
our time one can be convicted of a felony and put in jail
for killing a turtle, chopping down a tree, draining a
swamp, polluting a body of water, and generally not doing
everything that some bureaucrat says you have to do.
When we study socialist countries -- be they Nazi
Germany, the Soviet Union or too many others -- we find a
concept in the law called "crimes against the
state." These are also sometimes called crimes
against the people. In earlier days, they might have been
called crimes against the king's peace. Biblically and
constitutionally, crimes are against individuals and
should result in capital punishment, restitution or
acquittal. Non-criminal damages should lead to
restitution. In the 17th and 18th centuries, this was how
the criminal justice system operated in America.
Add to these crimes against the state that of
possessing a prohibited object, specifically a firearm.
Several local jurisdictions in the U.S. have banned a wide
range of guns, and the federal government has banned a
bunch as well. One need not commit a crime to risk being
sent to jail for possessing a combination of metal, wood,
and plastic parts.
What our founders required by law -- carrying guns --
is now illegal in many jurisdictions. And in all but
Vermont and Alaska, permission is needed to exercise the
"right" to bear a concealed firearm.
To the extent that the United States has imposed gun
controls on a population "protected" by our Bill
of Rights, we have a measure of how socialist our country
has become. Our government was founded on the idea that
individuals have God-given rights that need to be
protected from that same government. Furthermore,
government was seen as having no rights, but only a few
well-defined duties. Socialism requires the reversal of
our founding premises.
In Joyce Lee Malcom's study of Guns and Violence: The
English Experience we find the record of how gun control
came to England. It began to get very restrictive
following World War II. Now that most guns have been
confiscated (all legal guns were registered long ago),
England is roaring into the socialist pit.
(Listen to my interview with Professor Malcolm about
her book on the GOA website. Go to http://gunowners.org/radio.htm
and click on Previous Episodes.)
Margaret Thatcher sold off many government-owned
industries when she was Prime Minister, but as we can see
in the U.S., socialism through regulation can be just as
stultifying as socialism in which the government owns the
productive sector. Regulatory socialism was the Nazi
model, proving that nominal private ownership does not
prevent control from the center.
England is moving to crush other personal freedoms now
that gun ownership has been virtually eliminated. Prime
Minister Tony Blair has proposed restricting jury trials,
eliminating the prohibition on double jeopardy and most
ominously, proposing that an anonymous complaint be enough
to put somebody in jail because he is deemed a danger to
himself or the community.
Worse still, self-defense -- even without a gun -- is
penalized. Everything else is monopolized in socialist
England, so it is no surprise that self-defense becomes a
monopoly of the state.
At the core of the Christian common law, the people are
understood to be the owners of the law. Socialism
considers law (and everything else) to belong to the
government or to be controlled by it. The police are under
the control of whoever owns the law.
Consider who are the most ardent gun control advocates
in America. Senators Charles Schumer, Hillary Clinton and
Diane Finestein are among the most eager to ban guns, and
they are among the most socialist of our national
politicians.
In the House, a dedicated opponent of firearms
ownership and self-defense is Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi,
an avowed socialist. This can be said because she is a
member of the House Progressive Caucus, which is
affiliated with the Democratic Socialists of America,
which is affiliated with Socialist International.
Socialism is based on the arrogant assumption that
there are a few (elected or in power by force) who are
uniquely suited to decide all issues of life. Folks who
think like that are hardly likely to make an exception for
their subjects to take personal responsibility for their
own defense.
As a rule, the more socialist the politicians, the more
they want to restrict gun ownership to those who protect
politicians -- whether that be law enforcement agencies or
private security guards (such as the NY City armed
detective who travels as an armed guard for Sen. Schumer).
Law enforcement is in place largely to tell the subjects
of the socialists to obey the regulations of the regime or
risk being put in jail.
Socialists do not like bad attitudes among their
subjects, as we saw at Ruby Ridge and Waco, or as we saw
in Chicago when Secret Service officers threatened a woman
who expressed her disgust with Bill Clinton.
Socialists have an "us versus them" view of
society. They are angry and feel threatened when they hear
criticism of their policies. Did you see Sen. Clinton
screaming at the top of her lungs when some of her
subjects disagreed with her position on the Iraq war? As
one wag quipped, he thought she was talking to Bill when
she first heard her.
In any case, a government that sports a "bad
attitude" combined with the belief that one is
everyone else's Big Brother will result in a socialist
crusade against guns.
Fight socialism. Buy a gun.
