Trust the People: The Case against Gun Control
Contributing Organization(s): Cato Institute
Author(s)/Creator(s): David Kopel
Publishing Date: 1988-07-01
Issue Areas: Crime and Safety; Human Rights and Civil Liberties
Ownership/Rights Info: Please consult the copyright holder before using or repurposing this information.
Gun control is based on the faulty notion that ordinary American citizens are too clumsy and ill-tempered to be trusted with weapons. Only through the blatant abrogation of explicit constitutional rights is gun control even possible. It must be enforced with such violations of individual rights as intrusive search and seizure. It most severely victimizes those who most need weapons for self-defense, such as blacks and women.
The various gun control proposals on today's agenda--including licensing, waiting periods, and bans on so-called Saturday night specials--are of little, if any, value as crime-fighting measures. Banning guns to reduce crime makes as much sense as banning alcohol to reduce drunk driving. Indeed, persuasive evidence shows that civilian gun ownership can be a powerful deterrent to crime.
The gun control debate poses the basic question: Who is more trustworthy, the government or the people?
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