-Caveat Lector-

[Note:  Although dated, this is an excellent article.  However, I take
issue with one point, there are no totally safe neighborhoods, where you
are safe to let down your guard, no one can guarantee when and where a
criminal will strike. - Tony]



Excerpt:

"According to research by Harvard's Kip Viscusi, the federal mandate about
safety caps on medicine bottles made people more careless about storing
medicine out of the reach of children. No cap can be really "child proof"
(any bottle can be broken with a hammer), but careless parents left
medicine bottles where children could get them, children defeated the
"child-proof" caps and poisoning deaths increased.

Similarly, mandatory gun locks would encourage parents to stop being
careful to keep loaded guns out of the reach of small children. "



June 1, 1999

Loaded Guns Can Be Good for Kids
by Dave Kopel and Eugene Volokh

Dave Kopel teaches law at New York University Law School, and Eugene Volokh
teaches at UCLA Law School.

At the behest of President Clinton and gun control lobbyist Sarah Brady,
the Senate recently voted to require that every firearm be sold with a
lock. The next step is to require that all guns be locked up in the home --
as is currently required in Washington, D.C., and in Canada, whose gun laws
President Clinton has fulsomely praised. This next step will likely be
taken when there is another horrible gun crime that (like the Littleton
massacre) couldn't possibly have been prevented by a trigger lock. That
crime will give the Republican congressional leadership another opportunity
to make concessions that will immediately prompt the Democrats to escalate
their demands for further concessions.

Are gun locks, as President Clinton says, a "no brainer"? Yes, indeed. The
lock-up-the-guns proposal is great -- as long as one doesn't think about it
carefully.

Contrary to the impression created by sensationalist media, fatal firearms
accidents involving children are far from common. In the United States,
about half of all homes contain guns; the total gun supply is about 240
million, and there are tens of millions of children in the country. Yet
according to the National Safety Council, in 1995 there were about 30 fatal
gun deaths of kids aged 0 to 4 and fewer than 40 of kids aged 5 to 9. This
shows that, even without legislation from Washington, the overwhelming
majority of families with firearms already knows how to act responsibly.

Any parent knows that a single child's death is unspeakably tragic. Yet the
number of toddlers who die from gun accidents is smaller than the number
who die from drowning in buckets. And it's much lower than the 500 who die
in swimming pools.

More generally, the total number of fatal accidents involving kids aged 0
to 14 in 1995 was 6,500, and fatal firearms accidents accounted for just 3
percent of the total. Yet the president is not scoring political points
inveighing against bucket manufacturers, or demanding federal laws against
unfenced pools on private property. Politics, not saving children's lives,
is the foundation of the current anti-gun campaign.

But doesn't it make sense to require parents to keep guns locked if it will
save even one child's life? Unfortunately, the analysis can't be that
simple, because such a restriction will not only save lives; it would also
cost lives.

President Clinton -- and Liddy Dole at a recent speech at Yale -- compare
gun locks to "child-proof" safety caps on medicine bottles. It's a good
comparison, because the safety caps increased accidental deaths, and gun
locks would do the same.

According to research by Harvard's Kip Viscusi, the federal mandate about
safety caps on medicine bottles made people more careless about storing
medicine out of the reach of children. No cap can be really "child proof"
(any bottle can be broken with a hammer), but careless parents left
medicine bottles where children could get them, children defeated the
"child-proof" caps and poisoning deaths increased.

Similarly, mandatory gun locks would encourage parents to stop being
careful to keep loaded guns out of the reach of small children.

Even worse, many kinds of gun locks (such as locks that fit on the
trigger), could cause accidents for both children and adults. A modern
firearm won't discharge if it is dropped accidentally; but if the firearm
has a trigger lock on it, the firearm often does discharge. That's why lock
manufacturers warn consumers never to use the lock on a loaded gun.
Mandatory use of locks could thus undo 50 years of improvements in firearms
design that have helped reduce gun accidents by more than 75 percent. In
addition to increasing gun accidents, mandatory locks would likely increase
deaths from crime. Guns are used quite commonly in self-defense; estimates
of defensive gun uses per year range from 110,000 (National Crime
Victimization Survey) to 1.5 million to 2.5 million or more (studies by
criminologists Gary Kleck and Philip Cook). A very large majority of
defensive uses simply involve display of the firearm (without a shot being
fired), followed by the criminal's hasty retreat. Nobody knows what the
exact count is or how many of those uses save the lives of kids or other
innocents.

Nor does anyone know how many of those defensive uses would have been
frustrated by potential crime victims having to fumble with trigger locks
or safes -- perhaps in the dark while an intruder advanced toward a child's
room. But we do know what happens in countries like Canada where the laws
require that firearms be locked up: the burglary rate is significantly
higher than in the United States. U.S. burglars almost always avoid
occupied homes, for fear of being shot. But Canadian burglars are three
times more likely than American burglars to break into a home when people
are there. From the Canadian burglar's viewpoint, a "hot burglary" (victims
present) is often superior, since the alarm system will be turned off and
there will be wallets and purses to grab.

Of course many burglaries of occupied homes turn into assaults or rapes
perpetrated against the victim, and some turn into murders.

You might wonder how President Clinton and Mrs. Brady account for all this
extra danger caused by gun lock laws. The answer is that they don't care,
because they do not support defensive gun use (except by government
employees, such as the president's bodyguards).

Although President Clinton claims that his gun control proposals won't
cause too much trouble for hunters or target shooters (true), he does not
claim that his laws won't substantially interfere with defensive gun use.
Mrs. Brady told the Tampa Tribune in 1993, "To me, the only legitimate
reason for guns in civilian hands is for sporting purposes." If a person
morally opposes defensive force, then making it impossible for innocent
people to defend themselves counts as progress.

If a family with small children lives in a safe neighborhood, then keeping
the guns locked up may indeed be the safest choice. But if a family must
live in a dangerous neighborhood, and if the parents have taught gun safety
to responsible older children, then having the gun ready for immediate
protection might be safer. Parents, not members of Congress, are best
suited to make these kinds of decisions.





[Forwarded For Information Purposes Only - Not
Necessarily Endorsed By The Sender - A.K. Pritchard]

------------------------------

A.K. Pritchard
http://www.ideasign.com/chiliast/
http://rosie.acmecity.com/songfest/189/

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