This article has been submitted to the Waco “Tribune-Herald”
as a possible guest column. Whether or
not they choose to use it, this article
needs to be seen. This is what the issue
looks like when you ditch the politics,
the party agendas, and the lobby
money. This issue has gotten lost in the
glare of the impeachment inquiry, but it
is still very important to resolve.
-----------------------------------------------
I’m taking on gun violence,
but know this up front: screw the
politics, just use your plain common
sense on actual facts! Ignore the
lobbyist, social media, and party-hack trash (from both sides).
Just look at the real facts,
and decide for yourself. Then
vote. And quit electing (and re-electing)
party hacks who value party advantage above the common good. True for both parties.
There are four gun control proposals seriously being
considered currently:
Expanded
background checks – something with wide public approval.
Red flag
laws – also something with wide public approval.
Bans on high-capacity magazines and
"assault rifles" – something with majority public approval but also with
some very serious opposition.
Mandatory buy-back (confiscation)
of "assault weapons" – something currently with substantial public disapproval
(at least in Texas), to the point of
risking armed revolution (and rightly so according to the writings of the
signers of the Constitution).
There is not yet much talk yet about the changing nature
of the mass shooting threat,
although there needs to be! In
prior decades, these mass shooters were
mostly “crazies” in possession of guns,
by whatever means. Some examples
include the Sandy Hook shooter Adam Lanza,
and the Columbine High School shooters Klebold and Harris.
In the last few years,
more of the mass shooters (or bombers) have been political or religious
extremists, nominally sane, but motivated by extremist propaganda to
do violence. Restricting gun
acquisition for “crazies” does not address this new threat! Examples include the El Paso shooter (far
right), the Dayton shooter (far left), and the Tsarnaev brothers (religious) who
bombed the Boston Marathon.
Things not under consideration, but which should be included
at the very least:
The guns are already out there, we must deal with that! We cannot “get them back” without provoking
armed revolution (and rightly so, since
the documented purpose of the Second Amendment was to arm the populace
in order to make the threat of armed revolution credible, so that the government would behave better).
Defending “sitting-duck target”
gun-free zones properly – a thing which worked “just fine” in 19th
century frontier towns. This has some
nuances that make compliance with a gun-free zone easy and convenient. Its successful history of application is
totally forgotten today, especially on
both coasts.
Doing “something” about the extremist
media outlets that call for (incite) violence,
which is the motivation for the (not-nominally-insane) “domestic
terrorists”. This has received almost
no attention at all!
Determining the “right way” to look
at prohibiting things deemed a public menace,
something with a long history in all the states of these United States, including Texas, despite the propaganda you have heard so
much.
Many people are aware of the 1934-vintage ban on machine
guns. Because of the triple combination
of firing rate, stopping power, and magazine size, of the Thompson submachine gun, this weapon in private (and therefore crime
gang) hands led to unacceptable death rates among the public.
This problem generated wide support for the machine gun ban
still in effect today, which is based
only on the exact mechanism-of-repeated-fire,
unfortunately. It needs updating.
This is just applied physics that you cannot credibly argue
with: you have to use that triple consideration
when looking at so-called "assault rifle" and “big magazine” bans. You must consider all three effects
simultaneously, without so much
regard for the exact mechanism of repeated fire (that takes care of bump stocks
and trigger cranks).
We can
always debate the exact numbers, but
these are roughly a firing rate exceeding about 2 or 3 shots per second
(however obtained), a bullet big enough
and fast enough to have “1-shot-stopping power”, and a magazine capacity exceeding about 10-to-15
rounds.
Any weapon considered for a ban must exceed all three
criteria simultaneously to be a credible mass death threat! Period!
Just forget about banning those guns which do not meet the three
criteria simultaneously. There’s
no point to that.
The firing rate criterion comes from the fastest a human can
pull the trigger on a semi-automatic gun of any kind: about 2-3 shots per second. Those cannot generally be aimed shots, but if you are firing indiscriminately into a
crowd in a gun free zone, you will hit
lots of people regardless. That’s
just a single component of the actual threat it poses.
“One shot stopping power” is a combination of bullet size
and muzzle velocity. The old Thompson
submachine gun fired “45 caliber ACP” ammunition. These bullets were fairly slow (just barely
supersonic), but made up for that by
being quite large (0.45 inches diameter and relatively heavy).
30 caliber weapons like the AK-47 and M-1 Garand have
smaller bullets (0.30 inch diameter and somewhat lighter) that are quite a bit
faster: well over Mach 2 muzzle
velocity. The AR-15-type weapons fire a
223 caliber (0.223 inch diameter) bullet at muzzle velocity speeds around Mach
3+.
All three of these weapons have roughly about the same
“stopping power”: one shot to the
chest puts a man down. He might or
might not be immediately dead, but he will
not get up! That’s what “stopping power” really means! Your typical 22 caliber rifle or handgun does
not have that, not even with “22 long
rifle” ammunition. A 44 or 45 caliber
pistol has it, but not so much a 32
caliber or a 9 mm.
For hunting larger game,
you need the stopping power, but
not the firing rate or magazine size. For
smaller game, you don’t need the
stopping power either.
For sport shooting,
you do not need stopping power,
but a higher magazine capacity is useful. In some cases a higher firing rate is also useful.
For self-protection (such as home invasion), stopping power and firing rate are
essential, big magazine size not so
much. If you haven’t stopped him with 10
or 15 shots, he’s already killed
you. It’s that simple, and that stark.
Weapons of war require all three characteristics
simultaneously. You need a high
firing rate (preferably a machine gun but not absolutely required), high stopping power, and a really big magazine. That’s how you identify a real weapon
of war.
By the way, there
is a huge fundamental difference between military and civilian (hunting)
ammunition. Military ammunition is
required by international law to be steel-jacketed, so the bullet does not appreciably expand or
fragment as it passes through the body, although
it is tumbling.
It still does lethal damage at the one-shot stopping power
level, but does not feature the giant
exit wounds and massive organ destruction typical of hunting ammunition.
Civilian hunting ammunition is not jacketed and may even
feature a hole in the nose (“hollow point” or “cross-cut”) that facilitates really-rapid
expansion and massive-fragmentation.
This is to ensure a very fast kill by the truly enormous damage inflicted
passing through the target animal’s body.
Such was internationally outlawed for the battlefield.
So, for the same caliber
and muzzle velocity, civilian hunting
ammunition inherently has higher stopping power than military ammunition! You need this super-enhanced stopping power
for hunting, and for self defense, but not for sport shooting. Unfortunately, this kind of ammunition is what the mass
shooters have been using, generally.
In considering such bans,
it is critical to be sure public acceptance dominates by far over
any public resistance, before
implementation. The 1934 machine gun ban
had that general approval. The old
“assault weapons” ban did not, and was
allowed to expire for political purposes.
The real fundamental unknown here is exactly how to deal
with extremist media provoking or inciting violence. This is very definitely a free speech
issue.
You must be very careful of improperly restricting free
speech, but on the other hand there are very
real limits to any “Constitutional right”.
For one, your right to swing your
fist ends before you hit my nose.
For another, we do not
allow public utterance of lies that kill or injure people (example:
yelling “fire” in a crowded theater, when there is none).
That second example is the template I propose: “public utterance of lies that kill or
injure”. It has to be a lie, and it has to run the risk of inciting the killing
or injuring of people in some way. There
is a huge volume of exactly this kind of stuff out there on the internet and on
social media, that no one can deny!
I am proposing that we-as-a-country locate extremist sites
and media by appropriate searches,
screen for those that provoke or incite violence; and then shut those down as fast as they can
be found. And, that we prosecute authors and operators of
these extremist lies. This WILL
require appropriate legislation from Congress!
My Summary Recommendations in order of priority:
Defend your gun-free zones adequately (there
are perfectly good reasons for them). We
can debate about who exactly is responsible for doing this. But, the
19th century model requires properly trained peace officers, arriving at the scene of a threat within about
60 seconds, and able to outgun the threat.
It also requires that there be an easy way to check-in legal
weapons upon entering the gun-free zone,
and that these checked weapons are easy to retrieve upon leaving. That literally IS the well-proven 19th
century model. It’s not
perfect, but it worked rather well, and should make a large difference in the
mass shooting toll.
Enacting some sort of “red flag” laws reduces crazies
getting guns, but this does NOT
address the (supposedly-sane) extremists at all! By itself,
this will be increasingly ineffective,
as the threat shifts instead to extremists. But the “crazies” will always be with us at
one level or another, so this is
definitely worthwhile, as
ex-Congresswoman Gabby Giffords can testify.
We must take down extremist media that incites
violence, and prosecute its authors and
operators. This requires some
new legislation. Such actions reduce the
motivation for extremists. This is a new
threat, and we can (and should) debate
exactly how we want to do this, without
infringing upon free speech. That debate
has yet to start. It is already overdue!
Any bans on firearms or components should address
rate-of-fire, stopping power, and magazine size simultaneously, not separately! Any such “ban” must have predominant public
support before implementation. You have
to ditch the high-dollar politics and lobby propaganda to do this successfully.
The private sale (and similar) background check loopholes
are a much smaller effect, but closing
them might help a little.
Doing separate bans on bump stocks, “assault” weapons, and large magazines as separate items
CANNOT work! There’s no point to
those as separate proposals.
Note that none of this does anything about the main cause
of most gun deaths: ordinary
street crime (including gang violence) with handguns, not so-called “assault” weapons. There's not much can be done about this until
the root causes of people resorting to crime have been dealt with. That’s a far different topic.
--------------------------------
The following list is earlier related articles on this
topic. This latest article may (or may
not) supersede these earlier articles.
The list shows date and title,
plus the search filter keywords associated with each. To see one,
use the navigation tool on the left of the page. Click on the year, then the month, then the title. As you can see, I have long been active on this topic.
2 June 2018, “Yet
Still Another School Shooting”, bad
government, current events, guns,
idiocy in politics
24 February 2018,
“Yet Another School Shooting”,
bad government, guns
2 October 2017,
“Machine Guns in Las Vegas?”,
current events, guns
21 June 2016, “What
The Gun Violence Data Really Say”, bad
government, current events, guns,
idiocy in politics
7 October 2015,
“Oregon Mass Shooting and Gun Control”,
bad government, bad manners, current events, guns,
idiocy in politics
31 May 2014, “On
Calls for More Gun Control”, current
events, guns
20 September 2013,
“Gun Control? No Way!”, bad government, current events
5 February 2013,
“Real Problems With the Proposed Gun Control Legislation Items”, bad government, bad manners,
idiocy in politics
20 December 2012, “On
the Tragedy in Connecticut”, current
events, idiocy in politics
14 December 2012,
“School Shooting in Connecticut”,
current events
13 January 2011, “On
the Shooting Rampage in Tucson”, current
events
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