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Senator Barack Obama's presidential campaign slogan, "the
audacity of hope," should have instead been "the audacity of deceit."
After months of telling the American people that he supports the Second
Amendment, and only hours after being declared the president-elect, the
Obama transition team website announced an agenda
taken straight from the anti-gun lobby--four initiatives designed to
ban guns and drive law-abiding firearm manufacturers and dealers out of
business:
"Making the expired federal assault weapons ban permanent."
Perhaps no other firearm issue has been more dishonestly portrayed by
gun prohibitionists. Notwithstanding their predictions that the ban's
expiration in 2004 would bring about the end of civilization, for the
last four years the nation's murder rate has been lower than anytime
since the mid-1960s. Studies for Congress, the Congressional Research
Service, the National Institute of Justice, the National Academy of
Sciences, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have found
no evidence that gun prohibition or gun control reduces crime. Guns
that were affected by the ban are used in only a tiny fraction of
violent crime-about 35 times as many people are murdered without any
sort of firearm (knives, bare hands, etc.), as with "assault weapons."
Obama says that "assault weapons" are machine guns that "belong on
foreign battlefields," but that is a lie; the guns are only
semi-automatic, and they are not used by a military force anywhere on
the planet.
"Repeal the Tiahrt Amendment." The amendment--endorsed by the Fraternal Order of Police--prohibits
the release of federal firearm tracing information to anyone other than
a law enforcement agency conducting a bona fide criminal investigation.
Anti-gun activists oppose the restriction, because it prevents them
from obtaining tracing information and using it in frivolous lawsuits
against law-abiding firearm manufacturers. Their lawsuits seek to
obtain huge financial judgments against firearm manufacturers when a
criminal uses a gun to inflict harm, even though the manufacturers have
complied with all applicable laws.
"Closing the gun show loophole." There is no "loophole."
Under federal law, a firearm dealer must conduct a background check on
anyone to whom he sells a gun, regardless of where the sale takes
place. A person who is not a dealer may sell a gun from his personal
collection without conducting a check. Gun prohibitionists claim that
many criminals obtain guns from gun shows, though the most recent
federal survey of convicted felons put the figure at only 0.7 percent.
They also claim that non-dealers should be required to conduct checks
when selling guns at shows, but the legislation they support goes far
beyond imposing that lone requirement. In fact, anti-gun members of
Congress voted against that limited measure, holding out for a broader
bill intended to drive shows out of business.
"Making guns in this country childproof." "Childproof" is a codeword for a variety of schemes designed to prevent the sale of firearms by imposing impossible or highly expensive design requirements, such as biometric shooter-identification systems. While no one opposes keeping children safe, the fact is that accidental firearm-related deaths
among children have decreased 86 percent since 1975, even as the
numbers of children and guns have risen dramatically. Today, the
chances of a child being killed in a firearm accident are less than one
in a million. |