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Friday, September 14, 2007
Jon Sanders :: Townhall.com Columnist
Unfortunately for D.C., there are no condoms for guns
by Jon Sanders
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The city of Washington, D.C., wants the Supreme Court to reverse an appeals court's decision to overturn its ban on private ownership of handguns. That pesky Second Amendment is involved. It's too bad D.C. doesn't approach the problem of its citizens being harmed by gun violence (even though guns are banned) the way it does the problem of citizens being harmed by contracting HIV.

First, about the gun ban. In March, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, citing the Second Amendment, ruled 2-1 against the city's ban, which allowed only active and retired law enforcement officers to own handguns, and it also frowned upon the city's law mandating trigger locks or disassembly of rifles and shotguns in private homes.

In appealing to the Supreme Court, District Attorney General Linda Singer called the city's ban "eminently reasonable" and stated, "Whatever right the Second Amendment guarantees, it does not require the District to stand by while its citizens die."

Mayor Adrian M. Fenty (D) declared, "The only possible outcome of more handguns in the home is more violence." Obviously the mayor and the city's leadership equate the presence of a handgun with an irresistible urge to use it.

Speaking of irresistible urges, D.C. isn't standing by while its citizens contract HIV, either, although its approach is entirely different. The district seeks to protect citizens from death via gun by banning or disabling guns. Delicacy prevents making the analogy explicit, but the tactic adopted by the city to protect citizens from death via sexually transmitted disease is to give away free condoms.

The free condoms are imported from China, emblazoned with the municipally sanctioned double entendre "Coming Together to Stop HIV in D.C." and offered in bowls displayed in laundromats, restaurants, and other locations. Rather than a cumbersome and unenforceable ban on unsafe behavior, the city opts to promote less-unsafe behavior without caveats. Why not avoid the constitutional problem altogether by adopting a similar approach with respect to guns?

What would be so laughable about having bowls on display in restaurants, convenience stores, laundromats and other locations that would offer free rubber bullets? If the only conceivable outcome (conceivable to a D.C. official, that is) of a privately owned handgun is the violent use of it, why not protect people from that violence by giving them rubber bullets?

Those bullets, some of which are made of metal encased in rubber, are safer than regular bullets and have been used by police worldwide for crowd control – expressly to fire on people without killing them. Studies have shown that rubber bullets cause no permanent harm when they are use at great distances and strike the legs.

Granted, studies have also found that rubber bullets can cause permanent damage when striking the torso, the neck, and the head, and that about 60 percent of rubber-bullet injuries were above the navel. In fact, rubber bullets have killed people, especially when fired at too close a range. They are safer than regular bullets, but this relative safety is rather dependent upon the strict adherence to proper firing procedures. Continued...

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About The Author
Jon Sanders is a policy analyst and research editor at the John Locke Foundation in Raleigh, N.C.

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Learn about that which you fear!
Stedes. you are a concerned parent, good for you, there I am on your side. However, I was raised in a house that had firearms. I was taught to respect them. Since the day I turned 21, I have always had a firearm in my home. They are not only my protection, but to also afford my neighbor a certain amount of protection, like my 86 year old neighbor. If you are concerned about your firearm and children, keep it in a bedside safe, where you alone arrange a combination, that can be operated by your fingers, without light. I was at the range day before yesterday, shooting a firearm that I had bought and had yet to try. (8 mm HiPoint, 10 shot, carbine.) My first grouping kept 8 out of 10 shots on the extreme right side of the target. I adjusted the sights, and the second grouping got a ten, several nines, several eights and a seven. Not good but not bad for someone 77 years old, that is forced to walk with canes. That makes me a potential victim, but not one who is totally helpless. My handgun skills, vary with the weapon I select to shoot. The one that I keep in my bedroom is a double barrel 12 gauge, with 00 Buckshot in it. Will it protect me. Of course, and there is not a burglar, with an ounce of brains, who does not fear firearms, especially shotguns. I have a pump shotgun next to it, but prefer to use the double barrel for protection, for their is not sound in preparing it to fire, just quietly slip the safety off and it is ready to do what it was designed to do. You speak like a man, with limited or no experience with firearms and with your attutude toward them, your Dad and Mom did not raise you to respect them, just to fear them. If you have any questions, I would be more than happy to answer them, if you were my neighbor, I would be more than happy to instruct you in their proper use and safety.

fenty's constituent
Do you really think OSHA does anything for safety? If you do you need a large does of wake up and smell the coffee. In any event, this column has nothing to do with OSHA.

As for the gun bans, all of the legitement studies that have been done show that the anti gun laws have no impact on crime reduction and in most cases, have an adverse impact. That is, as the number and strictness of gun laws increase, the crime rate increases. You can't blame that on being bordered by low gun control States either. The Australian experiment has shown what happens. They introduced draconian gun laws, confiscated hundreds of thousands of guns, and crime skyrocketed.

BTW, are you in favor of opening up the borders because you can’t fiind and deport 12 million illegals?
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