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NRA: Mayors misled on gun issue
Intelligencer Journal
Lancaster New Era
Oct 06, 2009 08:51 EST
TO THE EDITORS:
Your article, "Akron mayor resents being target of NRA" (9/19), contains some bogus claims that warrant a response. We appreciate Mayor John McBeth publicly resigning from Mayors Against Illegal Guns. However, Mayor McBeth is ill-informed to believe that MAIG has "no objection whatsoever to a legal gun owner."

MAIG opposed the Thune Amendment, which would have allowed concealed carry permit holders a chance to defend themselves outside their home states. If MAIG is only going after "illegal guns," then why is it opposed to a self-defense measure for law-abiding people who have been through background checks and satisfied other law-enforcement prerequisites to get their right-to-carry permits? There is nothing "illegal" about the firearms these people own. MAIG would also like to repeal the Tiahrt Amendment, a move that the Fraternal Order of Police opposes because it would allow sensitive firearms trace information to be made public - even to criminals.

The Intelligencer Journal /Lancaster New Era negligently published a story that questions the NRA's solution to the problem of "illegal guns" without calling and asking us.

Our position is clear: To reduce crime, we must enforce the more than 20,000 gun laws already on the books and mandate the harshest possible punishments for criminals who misuse guns.
Alexa Fritts
Media Liaison

National Rifle Association

Institute for

Legislative Action

Fairfax, Va.

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The idea of an organization dedicated to reducing the number or "illegal guns" in their cities is rather disingenuous at best, and should make any mayor wonder about the real agenda. Consider: What is an "illegal gun?" A machine-gun? No, it is legal if you have the appropriate license; a concealed handgun? ditto; a "short-barreled rifle or shotgun? Still no, and for the same reason. In fact, there is essentially no such thing as an "illegal gun" in the USA. What is illegal is not the gun itself, but either 1) its possession by certain types of individuals (felons, the unlicensed, those who obtained the gun by criminal means - burglary, illegal sales transaction, etc.), 2) its possession in certain prohibited places (airports, bars, etc.), or much more commonly, 3) the use of a gun in the commission of a crime. The use of a firearm in the commission of a crime typically adds to the penalty at trial, but the trial is always based, not upon the gun, but upon the fact that a crime was committed, whether or not a gun was used. The point is simply that we already have laws that prohibit things like rape, robbery, or murder (regardless of how they are committed), and no one suggests that we have a campaign against "illegal" knives, cars, clubs, condoms, etc. If mayor Bloomberg and his ilk want to reduce crime, they have only to enforce existing laws (which is already in their job descriptions). If this were actually their objective, the NRA would be their strongest supporter, as strict enforcement of existing gun laws has been the NRA's mantra for several decades now. "Mayors Against Illegal Guns" indeed; how about being a tad more honest and calling themselves either "Mayors Against Criminals," (if that's really what they mean), or just "Mayors Against Guns?"
Oldshooter
Do guns embolden criminal types to commit crimes they wouldn't without guns? Would crimes of passion be less deadly if a gun wasn't handy? I say yes to both. Don't you feel more empowered with a gun in your hand? Well so do they. Mayors are under pressure from their constituants to do something about gun violence and they try to think outside the box for anything that will be effective in reducing the amount of guns out there that aren't being used legally. Guns taken out of the hands of criminals before they commit a crime is far better than punishing them after the deed is done.
clanker
QUOTE (clanker @ Oct 7 2009, 12:39 PM)
Do guns embolden criminal types to commit crimes they wouldn't without guns? Would crimes of passion be less deadly if a gun wasn't handy? I say yes to both. Don't you feel more empowered with a gun in your hand? Well so do they. Mayors are under pressure from their constituants to do something about gun violence and they try to think outside the box for anything that will be effective in reducing the amount of guns out there that aren't being used legally. Guns taken out of the hands of criminals before they commit a crime is far better than punishing them after the deed is done.

So you are in favor of taking the rights away from law abiding citizens due to the actions of a very small percentage of the population who chooses to commit crimes with guns?

We could always try the alternative? Give them more guns so they kill themselves off, less to bother arresting and convicting then.
FDR06-10
QUOTE (FDR06-10 @ Oct 7 2009, 12:51 PM)
So you are in favor of taking the rights away from law abiding citizens due to the actions of a very small percentage of the population who chooses to commit crimes with guns?

We could always try the alternative? Give them more guns so they kill themselves off, less to bother arresting and convicting then.

No.
clanker
QUOTE (clanker @ Oct 7 2009, 12:53 PM)
No.

Glad you clarified that.
FDR06-10
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