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Are Gun Control Laws Discriminatory?
Creating economic barriers to gun ownership isn't the solution

by Markus Funk Illustration by Rick Barnes

Talk with a serious gun-control advocate about methods used to make gun
ownership more difficult, and you may hear an argument that runs something
like this: "Well, if we increase the prices of guns and bullets, those people
will not be able to afford them; after all, those people are the ones who
commit the greatest percentage of crimes." Who is this person referring to
when he/she says "those people"? The answer is clear--minorities and the
poor. Since substituting "blacks" for "those people" clearly renders the
statement racist and patronizing (not to mention unconstitutional), gun
control advocates, intent on making gun-ownership more costly, have devised a
variety of legislative means to camouflage their true motivations. Such
legislation merely represents a continuation of gun-control advocates'
long-standing affair with racial and socioeconomic discrimination.

WHAT ARE MELTING-POINT LAWS?
In 1990, an estimated daily average of 25 people were murdered with handguns,
33 women were raped at gunpoint, 575 people were the victims of armed
robberies, and 1,116 people were assaulted with a gun in the United States.
One of the methods that some states have opted for in an attempt to bridle
such illegal firearm violence is the use of "melting-point laws." The
Illinois, South Carolina, Hawaii and Minnesota legislatures have adopted
rigid melting-point schemes which are designed to remove so-called "Saturday
Night Specials" from the market; they basically do this by outlawing the sale
of all handguns which melt at set temperatures ranging from 800 to 1000
degrees Fahrenheit, or which don't have a certain tensile strength
(resistance of the metal to longitudinal stress).

The net effect on the handgun market is hard to determine precisely. However,
in South Carolina, the melting-point laws have thus far resulted in bans on
approximately ten percent of the available handguns. While the criminological
soundness of such laws is open to question, one issue over which there can be
no dispute is that the handguns which fail to meet the melting-point
requirements are made of cheaper materials and are the least expensive. While
there are manufacturers that produce handguns which both meet the
melting-point standards and are less expensive than the premium makes, the
sub-group of guns banned by the melting-point laws is the most affordable,
and therefore the most accessible, segment of the handgun market.
Melting-point laws take less expensive guns off the market, and while there
is no shortage of expensive guns, most poor citizens cannot afford to buy
them and must make due with what they can afford--namely, Saturday Night
Specials.

A handgun can often inspire a feeling of security and safety in a person
living in a crime-ridden segment of society, and inexpensive handguns can
provide affordable and reliable protection to lower income individuals.
Moreover, it is precisely these lower income individuals who are the most
frequent victims of crime. As Florida State Criminology Professor and author
Gary Kleck puts it, "Gun ownership costs more money than simple measures such
as locking doors, having neighbors watch one's house, or avoidance behaviors
such as not going out at night, but it costs less than buying and maintaining
a dog, paying a security guard, or buying a burglar alarm system.
Consequently, it is a self-protection measure available to many low-income
people who cannot afford more expensive alternatives."

Although handgun violence undeniably is a serious problem in American
society, preventing those who by law have the right to own a handgun from
doing so on the basis of socioeconomic considerations simply cannot be the
solution. Both the Constitution, as it is interpreted, and the history of the
United States grant the citizens the right to own a handgun. All of the
states and several territories of the United States, as well as the federal
government itself, recognize the sale of firearms as lawful activity. We are,
therefore, forced to consider the troubling prospect that melting-point laws
and similar legislative efforts, such as Senator Moynihan's proposed
bullet-tax, are instituted with the intention of increasing gun-prices and
purposefully reducing the poor citizens' access to handguns, removing from
them a self-defense option open to wealthier citizens. And while this
prospect may be troubling, it is certainly not unprecedented in the history
of the United States.

AMERICAN GUN CONTROL: A HISTORY OF DISCRIMINATION
One undeniable aspect of the history of gun control in the United States has
been the conception that the poor, especially the non-white poor, can't be
trusted with firearms. Keeping arms away from blacks has always been a
concern of white legislators; in fact, the first ever mention of blacks in
Virginia's laws was a 1644 provision barring free blacks from owning
firearms, and early (p.60)firearm laws were often enacted for the sole
purpose of preventing immigrants, blacks, and even agrarian agitators, from
owning guns.

Evidently, the intention of these lawmakers was to restrict the availability
of arms to both free blacks and slaves to the extent that the restrictions
were consistent with the regional ideas of safety. As U.S. Supreme Court
Chief Justice Tanney, writing for the majority in the infamous 1857 Dred
Scott decision, put it, "[if blacks were] entitled to the privileges and
immunities of citizens, ...it would give persons of the Negro race, who were
recognized as citizens in [all of the states] of the union, the right... to
keep and bear arms wherever they wanted... inevitably producing discontent
and insubordination among them, and endangering the peace and safety of the
state...."

Reflecting this attitude, Tennessee was the state that first attempted to
utilize creative draftsmanship to prevent gun ownership by blacks in the
1870's. Tennessee barred any sale of handguns except the "Army and Navy" guns
which were already owned by ex-Confederate soldiers. Since the poor freedmen
could not afford these expensive firearms, the "Army and Navy Law" can be
considered the predecessor of today's melting-point laws.

Following the Civil War, several southern legislatures adopted comprehensive
regulations which were known as the "Black Codes," because, fearful of race
war and retribution, the mere sight of a black person with a gun was
terrifying to whites. These codes denied the newly freed men many of the
rights that were enjoyed by whites. In 1867, the Special Report of the
Anti-Slavery Conference noted that under the Black Codes, blacks were
"forbidden to own or bear firearms, and thus were rendered defenseless
against assaults." By way of example, the Mississippi Black Code contained
the following provision: "Be it enacted... [t]hat no freedman, free Negro or
mulatto, not in the military... and not licensed to do by the board of police
of his or her county, shall keep or carry fire-arms of any kind, or any
ammunition... and all such arms or ammunition shall be forfeited to the
former...."

Legislative intent to disarm blacks can also be found in the voiding of a
1941 conviction of a white man, where a Florida Supreme Court Justice stated
that "The [gun-control act] was passed for the purpose of disarming the Negro
laborers . . . [it was] never intended to be applied to the white population."

But blacks aren't the only ones whom legislators wanted to disarm; in the
nineteenth century, southern states also placed restrictions on gun-ownership
for certain "undesirable" whites. For example, the 1911 Sullivan Laws were
passed to keep guns out of the hands of immigrants (chiefly Italians--in the
first three years of the Sullivan Laws, roughly 70 percent of those arrested
had Italian surnames). Why single out foreigners? The answer can perhaps be
found in the popular press of the time. The New York Tribune, for example,
grumbled about pistols found "chiefly in the pockets of ignorant and
quarrelsome immigrants of law-breaking propensities," and the New York Times
pointed out the affinity of "low-browed foreigners" for handguns.

The more things change, the more they stay the same--today's melting-point
laws arguably reflect the old American prejudice that lower classes and
minorities cannot be trusted with weapons. While the legislative bias which
originated in the South may have changed in form, legislation like the
melting-point laws evidences that it apparently still exists. But pro-gun
groups are not the only ones to acknowledge this unfortunate reality. The gun
control advocate and journalist Robert Sherrill frankly admitted that the Gun
Control Act of 1968 was "passed not to control guns but to control blacks,"
and Barry Bruce-Briggs, writing in The Public Interest, stated in no
uncertain terms that "it is difficult to escape the conclusion that the
Saturday Night Special is emphasized because it is cheap and it is being sold
to a particular class of people. The name is sufficient evidence. The
reference is to 'Niggertown Saturday Night.'"

THE SOCIAL CONTRACT, AND CHOICES FOR SELF DEFENSE
Liberal theorists' differing political interpretations of the right to
self-preservation notwithstanding, it seems axiomatic that the government was
(and is) instituted primarily to secure individuals from threats to their
personal safety. Social contract theory is based on the notion that
individuals agree to give up certain natural rights to liberty in return for
political rights, so as to better protect their interest in self-preservation
and personal prosperity through benefits which only the state can provide.

In creating a national government of enumerated powers subject to numerous
express limitations, the Constitution specifies the exchange of rights and
powers that are made. The primary question, therefore, becomes whether the
government has shown that it has been able to sufficiently protect the
citizens from crime so as to make the possession of firearms for self-defense
unnecessary. Given nationwide crime rates, it seems clear that the government
cannot show that it is able to protect the citizenry from criminals, and,
thus, social contract theory indicates that the government cannot justify
taking away the citizen's right to defend themselves in the way they see fit.

Combining the fundamental right to self-preservation with the basic postulate
of liberal theory, which states that people surrender their natural rights
only to the extent that they are recompensed with more effective political
rights, leads to the conclusion that every gun control law must be justified
in terms of the law's contribution to the personal security of the citizenry.
Victims must be able to defend themselves against criminals as soon as crime
strikes, and the ability to defend oneself is much more critical in poor and
minority neighborhoods which are ravaged by crime and do not have adequate
police protection. Since the courts have consistently ruled that the police
have no duty to protect the individual citizen, and that there is, as the
Supreme Court put it, "no constitutional right to be protected by the state
against being murdered by criminals or madmen," citizens, regrettably, are
put in the position of having to defend themselves. While the deterrent
effect of the police surely wards off many would-be criminals (particularly
in areas where police patrol more--i.e., affluent areas), the many citizens
who need personal protection are forced to face the reality that the police
do not and cannot function as bodyguards for ordinary people. Therefore,
individuals must remain responsible for their own protection, with the police
providing only an auxiliary general deterrent.

Legislation such as the melting-point laws are intended to prevent the poor
from possessing a firearm even though the poor are disproportionately victims
of crime. What compounds this situation is the fact that the poorer areas of
cities (where most of the crime occurs) rarely get the same police protection
that the more affluent areas get (where the least crime occurs). Therefore,
any gun control which takes cheaper guns off the market, and thereby prevents
the poor from obtaining a handgun, is arguably doubly unfair. Like it or not,
gun ownership is legal in most parts of the country, and as long as we find
racial and socioeconomic discrimination by our lawmakers offensive (and have
a constitution which makes it illegal), there can be no place for laws whose
primary effect is to deprive the poor of their legal right to choose the same
means of protection available to those who can more easily afford it.

----

Markus Funk is a law student at Northwestern University.



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