Saturday, 25 August 2007

The Lazy Road to Oceania


This should come as a surprise to no one (emphasis added):
Despite a ban on handguns introduced in 1997 after 16 children and their teacher were shot dead in the Dunblane massacre the previous year, their use in crimes has almost doubled to reach 4,671 in 2005-06. Official figures show that although Britain has some of the toughest anti-gun laws in the world, firearm use in crime has risen steadily. This year eight young people have been killed in gun attacks: six in London and one each in Manchester and Liverpool.

“Illegal firearms have become increasingly accessible to younger offenders who appear more likely to use these firearms recklessly,” a report on gun crime commissioned by the Home Office cautioned last year.
One of the reasons that I am so vehemently opposed to the sort of police state measures that have crept into Britain over the years isn't just that they are oppressive, but that they don't even accomplish what they set out to do in the first place. In fact, they have exactly to opposite effect. Draconian gun bans result in more gun crimes, treating terrorism as a civil offence rather than a tactic of a military enemy results in Jihadists and IRA killers walking Scot free, the more CCTV cameras are put up the worse our town centres become, and every attempt to control illegal immigrants by implementing ID cards and similar database schemes makes the borders look like a more than usually battered about sieve.

This isn't surprising. Authoritarian measures are self-defeating because they spring from a mind-set born of pure sloth. They are not meant to actually solve a problem, but to go after the softest target available-- and that is almost invariably the respectable, the law-abiding and the peaceful (who are always the ones really to blame in the minds of the authoritarian, anyway). Their purpose is not to protect but to control. To the nascent Thoughpoliceman, having a failed gun ban resulting in a tiny criminal element preying on the majority is an acceptable price to pay if it means that the majority are now disarmed and easier to control. To such minds, the problem is not gunmen or Jihadists or hoodies; it's liberty.

Don't believe me? Consider the counter example from Mark Steyn:
I live in northern New England, which has a very low crime rate, in part because it has a high rate of gun ownership. We do have the occasional murder, however. A few years back, a couple of alienated loser teens from a small Vermont town decided they were going to kill somebody, steal his ATM cards, and go to Australia. So they went to a remote house in the woods a couple of towns away, knocked on the door, and said their car had broken down. The guy thought their story smelled funny so he picked up his Glock and told 'em to get lost. So they concocted a better story, and pretended to be students doing an environmental survey. Unfortunately, the next old coot in the woods was sick of environmentalists and chased 'em away. Eventually they figured they could spend months knocking on doors in rural Vermont and New Hampshire and seeing nothing for their pains but cranky guys in plaid leveling both barrels through the screen door. So even these idiots worked it out: Where's the nearest place around here where you're most likely to encounter gullible defenseless types who have foresworn all means of resistance? Answer: Dartmouth College. So they drove over the Connecticut River, rang the doorbell, and brutally murdered a couple of well-meaning liberal professors. Two depraved misfits of crushing stupidity (to judge from their diaries) had nevertheless identified precisely the easiest murder victims in the twin-state area. To promote vulnerability as a moral virtue is not merely foolish. Like the new Yale props department policy, it signals to everyone that you're not in the real world.
If you went to the Home Secretary and suggested that perhaps the proper way to handle the violent crime problem would be to come back to reality, lift the various bans and allow ordinary subjects of the Crown to keep a loaded shotgun over the mantelpiece again, what do you think his answer would be?

I rest my case.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Amen, David.

Just another in a long line of scenarios why I hold firearm liberty above all others: it secures freedoms existing and opens doors to freedoms deserved.

Now if you excuse me, I have some .357 perusing to do again.

Anonymous said...

I've never been too sure about legalised gun ownership, being a british citizen.

Eldias, a question; how does gun ownership "open doors to freedoms deserved"?

Anonymous said...

Certainly, Wunderbear.

Consider the lamentable situation in your own backyard. You know better than I—being an American--just how perfectly Orwellian the British Isles has morphed. You have lost your liberty to walk the streets without being spied upon. You have lost the right to be considered innocent before fingered guilty. All of which has been done for the “greater good”. All of which is a blatant slap in the face to any good-natured Englishman; mankind in general. And it is only going to worsen.

The general course of government is to stave off the tide of anarchy by imposing restrictions on the people. But any power designated to the government is for the long-term. (Income tax, anyone?) The only manner by which these powers can be rescinded is through a confrontation. But all the protesting isn’t going to carry a modicum of weight unless it is backed up by a true bargaining chip: an *armed* disgruntled citizenry. It is merely the *threat* of rebellion that make all the difference between a government that serves and a government that rules.

Anyone who thinks that their government is going to continually respect the core tenets of democracy--life, liberty and property--without an empowered citizenry is foolhardy and near deserving of losing their liberty. What keeps a government from trampling over an unarmed peoples’ right to free speech, habeas corpus and redressing of grievances? Not a damn thing. Even the most benevolent of governments can—and will—spin anything and everything to make their actions seem justified for the “greater good”. It takes an enlightened people, an active people and above all an armed people, to halt that despicable advance.

Britons deserve the right to walk the streets without being gazed upon by a ever-watchful eye. They deserve the right to have their children live as *children* and not as up-and-coming criminals. They deserve the right to protect their home and property from malevolent interlopers without being placed on the same level in the eyes of their courts.

The people that bestowed John Locke and the Magna Carta unto the world; the nation I hold nearest and dearest to my heart save for my own, deserves all this and more. But they need the tool to unbolt the door.

And that’s my channeling P.J. O’Rourke for the day.

Anonymous said...

Whilst some of your points do make a bit of sense (you've answered my original question), I'm still not too sure.

Well, I'd support gun ownership if there were sensible limits and restraints attached. I for one don't see the need to allow anything with more power than a pistol. I think it would be insane to allow anyone to own sniper rifles, assault rifles, or any other kind of automatic weapon.

Would that be a good approach, eldias?

(Word verification: KLLRR. Heh, how apt.)

Anonymous said...

Tactful registration and backround checks do make sense, and I support them wholeheartedly.

All the same, one must keep in mind that all the legislation in the world cannot stop insane people from accomplishing insane goals.

Consider the incident in North Hollywood, California in February 1997. Two men robbed a bank armed with fully automatic AK-47 assault rifles, rampaging the surrounding area for 44 minutes. Officers only managed to dispatch the two after requisitioning similar-quality (albeit semi-automatic) rifles from a nearby gun shop.

Understand that this all took place two years and five months *after* the Federal Assault Weapons Ban was passed.

When you ban a valuable commodity, you create a black market. Gangbangers here in the states have freely admitted that they can get their hands on Kalishnikovs for about $1200. Peanuts for drug runners.

Now I don't believe that folks have to stock up a Branch Davidian-style arsenal, but the least we can do is put a handicap on the course.

And when it comes to the government, I think paraphrasing Penn Jilette will suffice:

"Sure, you can resort to calling the police for help. But who do you call against the police?"