My next book - Catalog of Canards, due out during the next election cycle - explains to people how political lies are created and spread, and uses (surprise) the gun control industry as the case study.
The Lie of Fear has many variants, but as Ray accurately noted, is a primary weapon for the gun control industry. Eugene's definition is accurate as well, so we look then for examples of where irrational fear is invented to achieve legislation that would not otherwise pass. Distilling a lot a criminological data, we see that most serious violence centers in and around gangs and the drug trade, which overlap greatly. One Bureau of Justice Statistics report shows about 80% of all homicides (and thus likely more than 80% of all gang/gun homicides and a lion's share of wounding) were gang/drug related. However, such activity is primarily confined to poor neighborhoods of large cities - very isolated compared to the general population. However, when presented by the gun control industry or the media, the problem is generalized and portrayed as a national concern. This is one form of fear-mongering. Another example is worth repeating. The "13 child a day" myth in its original form was based on FBI UCS data that included victims upwards of 24 years of age. The goal of this inappropriate data usage was to inflate the number of "children" who died from gunshots and induce parental fear. In reading some of the amicus briefs in Heller, I see other ancient and well refuted "studies" which were the foundation of one or another fear campaign. Steven Breyer leaned upon these for his infamous balancing act. Thus I have to side with Ray on this point. Fear mongering - inciting unreasonable fear in the wide population - is a recurring theme in the public discussion and one that seeps into court decisions. Yours in Liberty Guy Smith _____ From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Volokh, Eugene Sent: Thursday, November 12, 2009 8:18 AM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: Playing the fear card in the 2nd Amend. incorp. debate. I think we'd need a more specific definition of "fear-mongering" for this to work. Much fear is perfectly rational, and a sound basis for lawmaking. The Revolution was fought partly because of a fear of further British abuses. The Constitution was created because of various well-founded fears. The Bill of Rights was enacted because of fear of government abuse. Likewise, fear of terrorism, drugs, gun crime, and so on is generally quite reasonable. Now perhaps "fear-mongering" means arguing based on unreasonable fears (in which case the objection isn't to "playing the fear card" but to "playing the fear card in a context where the fear is unreasonable"). But I don't think there's anything unreasonable in fearing that privately owned guns will be misused for criminal purposes - they are, hundreds of thousands times a year. The sound objection to gun bans, I think, is that while gun crime is properly feared, trying to ban guns would do more harm than good. But I don't think that talk of "fear-mongering" adequately captures the argument. Eugene From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Raymond Kessler Sent: Thursday, November 12, 2009 7:18 AM To: [email protected]; [email protected] Subject: Playing the fear card in the 2nd Amend. incorp. debate. IMHO & FWIW: One of the greatest threats to civil liberties comes from fear-mongering. Whether the fear comes from the left or right (e.g., of terrorism, fear of drugs, fear of guns, etc.), it is a threat. The fear campaign against incorporating the 2nd amend has started. (see link, there are numerous others) Look for amicus briefs for McD from Dave Kopel and Don Kates and others that deal with the gun-crime issue. The bloodbaths predicted after many states licensed concealed carry never occurred. Society has not collapsed since June, 2008. Nobody ever said the Second Amendment is absolute. In Heller the Court strongly hinted that many traditional gun control laws would be valid. Further, there is no convincing evidence that ordinary law-abiding citizens having common weapons is a cause of crime. Chicken Little is alive and well, prospering in this propaganda campaign. http://www.indystar.com/article/20091111/OPINION01/911110323/1002/OPINION/Ti me+to+re-examine+rights+of+Second+Amendment Ray Kessler Prof. of Criminal Justice Sul Ross State Univ.
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