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Peaceful societies do not need general gun bans,
and violent societies do not benefit from them.
Take a look at the facts the gun-grabbers
don`t want you to know.
By Don B. Kates
Americans have been gravely misled about foreign
gun ownership and the severity and effectiveness of foreign gun bans.
It simply is not true to state that "the U.S. has more gun
availability and far less restriction than any other modern
industrial nation."
That honor goes to Israel where, nevertheless,
murder "rates are much lower than in the United States despite ...
[Israel`s] greater availability of guns to law-abiding
civilians," writes Israeli judge Abraham Tennenbaum (formerly an
official with the Israeli National Police and then a professor of
criminology).
Europe
Equally erroneous is the impression that Europe is
uniformly anti-gun. Laws vary. Luxembourg totally bans all guns from
civilian ownership. France, Belgium and Germany allow citizens to own
handguns but these countries are more restrictive than most U.S.
states. In Austria, every law-abiding citizen has a legal right to
buy handguns, and roughly ten per cent of Austrians have done so
(compared to 16 per cent of U.S. citizens).
A
shooting festival in Switzerland, with the young folks
carrying their STGW 90 5.6mm assault
rifles.
Switzerland
And then there is Switzerland, where the laws are
similar to those in Israel and gun availability is comparable to that
in the U.S. In Switzerland, handgun licenses are available to any
law-abiding applicant. In half the Swiss cantons (similar to U.S.
states), licensees are free to carry their personal handguns
concealed. Beyond this freedom of ownership, every law-abiding
military-age Swiss male is issued a firearm and he must keep it at
home to perform his mandatory militia obligation.

Switzerland`s
enlisted men are required to keep at home the STGW 90 assault
rifle ("Sturmgewehr") (above), which fires both full- or
semi-auto. Retired militiamen may buy their issued firearms.
Below: The Walther P-38, one of several pistols that the
Israeli government furnishes to its citizens, including
teenagers.
For the 263,000 officers and non-commissioned
officers, the issued firearm is a 9 mm Parabellum semi-automatic
pistol, either the SIG-Sauer P210 or its successor, the SIG-Sauer
P220. For the millions of enlisted men, the issued firearm is an
assault rifle: the STGW 90. The STGW 90 is a version of the SIG-Sauer
550 semi-automatic rifle that is select-fire, meaning it may be fired
in either full- or semi-auto mode. When he retires, any Swiss
militiaman who wishes to buy his issued firearm may do so.
Homicides in Europe
Homicide rates are quite low in all the nations
mentioned above. However, the homicide rate in handgun-banning
Luxembourg is much higher than in the others: 2.1 per 100,000
population, versus 1.2 and 1.1 per 100,000 for "handgun-ridden"
Israel and Switzerland--which have the lowest homicide rates of all.
(The accompanying table provides the references for homicide and
suicide rate comparisons discussed in this article.)
Western Europe, in fact, has always had very low
homicide rates as compared to the U.S. This is not something caused
by strict anti-gun laws, because this low homicide rate existed
before such laws were adopted, and the low rate occurs also in
Switzerland and Austria which have no such strict anti-gun
laws.
European anti-gun laws only arrived after World
War I, and they were not passed in order to curb crime. They were
passed in response to the political violence of that tumultuous era
(1918-1939) between the two World Wars.
Whatever their purpose, European anti-gun laws
have miserably failed. They have not prevented assassination,
terrorism, and other political violence--problems occurring
throughout Europe on a fairly regular basis, but not so in the U.S.
Neither have these anti-gun laws stopped non-political crime, which
has steadily increased throughout Europe since World War
II.
To this issue, the further question has been
asked, "Why has Europe had so much less non-political violent crime
than the U.S.?" Yale University`s preeminent historian, Dr. C. Vann
Woodward, suggests an answer. He writes, "The impact upon Europe of
the emigration [to the U.S.] of 35,000,000 Europeans in the
Century between the Napoleonic Wars and World War I remains to be
acknowledged. The importance of the West as a safety valve for
American society has undoubtedly been exaggerated. But the
significance of America as a safety valve for Europe and the effect
of the closing of that safety valve after World War I remain to be
fully assessed." 1
Suicides in Europe
Nor, finally, have these anti-gun laws stopped
suicide, something which has always been a much greater problem in
Europe than in the U.S. In this respect, one can note a curious (but
invariable) omission when anti-gun articles compare the U.S. to
Europe.2
Anti-gun propaganda emphasizes suicide as well as
homicide. U.S. suicide rates have risen over the past quarter century
(while U.S. homicide rates have declined). However, anti-gun
advocates recently have taken to combining suicide and homicide
figures in the U.S. This allows them to conceal the decline in U.S.
homicide rates (and to exaggerate the so-called "societal costs" of
gun ownership). They have done this more particularly in the last few
years while the U.S. homicide rate has been declining (despite a 100
per cent increase in handgun ownership since the 1970s).
But then, inconsistently, when comparing the U.S.
to Europe, they only compare the homicide rates. They never use the
combined homicide-suicide figure--because it would refute their
entire argument; it shows that Europe`s homicide-suicide combined
rates are higher than that of the U.S.
INTERNATIONAL SUICIDE/HOMICIDE
TABLE*
(*Ranked according to highest combined
suicide-murder rate; nations ranked higher than the U.S. in either
suicide or murder rates are in bold face)
|
Country
|
Year
|
Suicide
|
Murder
|
Combined
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ESTONIA
|
1995
|
39.99
|
22.11
|
62.1
|
|
RUSSIA
|
1992
|
26.6
|
15.3
|
41.9
|
|
LATVIA
|
1990
|
26.
|
9.2
|
35.2
|
|
LITHUANIA
|
1990
|
26.
|
7.5
|
33.5
|
|
FINLAND
|
1994-95
|
27.3
|
3.3
|
30.6
|
|
UKRAINE
|
1990
|
20.6
|
8.0
|
28.6
|
|
DENMARK
|
1991
|
22.
|
5.0
|
27.0
|
|
AUSTRIA
|
1991
|
22.3
|
1.5
|
23.8
|
|
SWITZERLAND*
|
1994-95
|
20.8
|
1.1
|
21.9
|
|
FRANCE
|
1990
|
20.2
|
1.1
|
21.3
|
|
BELGIUM
|
1987
|
19.3
|
1.4
|
20.7
|
|
UNITED STATES*
|
1995-96
|
11.5
|
7.3
|
18.8
|
|
SWEDEN
|
1990
|
17.2
|
1.3
|
18.5
|
|
GERMANY
|
1995
|
15.8
|
1.8
|
17.6
|
|
LUXEMBOURG
|
1991
|
15.1
|
2.1
|
17.2
|
|
NEW ZEALAND
|
1989
|
13.9
|
1.9
|
15.8
|
|
CANADA
|
1995
|
12.9
|
2.0
|
14.9
|
|
ISRAEL
|
1989
|
7.3
|
1.2
|
8.5
|
*All information in this table dated before 1993
comes from the U.N. Demographic Yearbooks for 1993 and 1992. All
information dated 1993 and thereafter comes from a draft study
prepared for the U.N. Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal
Justice`s Vienna Session 28 April-9 May, 1997, except: a) the U.S.
homicide figure comes from FBI preliminary data for 1996, and b) the
Swiss homicide and suicide rates come from the Swiss national
police.
Combined
Homicide-Suicide
Look to the accompanying table for the result
obtained when the anti-gun forces` combined homicide-suicide approach
is applied to the international figures: The U.S. combined
homicide-suicide rate falls in the middle of the nations, and is
lower than eight European nations. Even compared to the nations with
lower combined rates, the U.S. rate is only slightly
higher.
Of the 18 nations shown in the table, the U.S.
ranks in the middle as to murder and suicide combined. The lowest
rate of all is for Israel, the nation where guns are the most
available and supplied to citizens, including teenagers.
My point is not that gun availability reduces
suicide, or even murder. Statistics show that the relatively
crime-free nations don`t appear to need or benefit from severe
anti-gun laws.
Western Europe
The table clearly shows that, regardless of their
gun laws, Western European nations have roughly comparable rates of
both murder and suicide. This cannot plausibly be attributed to
severe handgun restrictions because the highest murder rates among
these nations are in the nations with the most restrictive gun laws
(Luxembourg, Denmark, Germany). In those restrictive nations, the
average murder rate of 2.73 per 100,000 population is over twice as
high as the 1.26 average rate of Switzerland, Israel and Austria,
where gun laws are least restrictive).
Russia and the Baltic
Countries
Even less do gun control laws benefit high crime
nations like Russia and its former possessions, the countries of
Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and the Ukraine. When these and other
countries were under the control of the former Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics, the central Soviet government totally banned
civilian handgun ownership.
The Soviet government uniquely implemented the ban
by creating after World War II a unique caliber cartridge for Soviet
handguns (9 x 18 mm). This cartridge is too short to interchange with
handguns using the familiar European standard 9 x 19 cartridge (9 mm
Parabellum, or 9 mm Luger, as Americans commonly call it); it`s too
long to interchange with handguns shooting the .380 cartridge. This
meant that anyone smuggling foreign handguns into the USSR (for
example, soldiers returning from foreign wars) would find ammunition
unavailable.3 Nevertheless, though exact statistics were never
released, analysis clearly indicates that Soviet homicide rates far
exceeded those in the U.S. 4
With the USSR no longer in existence, the homicide
rates in the former Soviet republics and Russia continue to exceed
those in the U.S., as shown in the accompanying table. Under the
Soviet regime, with strict gun control, the weapons used for
homicides were largely knives, clubs, and other non firearms. Today,
though handguns remain virtually unavailable to ordinary Russian
citizens, homicide rates remain high, being committed by those
criminals in Russia, Latvia, Lithuania, etc., who seem to have no
difficulty acquiring both Russian and foreign-made handguns and
suitable ammunition.
Violence in Any
Society
Such international statistics show the
pointlessness of gun bans. In any society, truly violent people are
only a small minority. We know that law abiding citizens do not
commit violent crimes. We also know that criminals will neither obey
gun bans nor refrain from turning other deadly instruments to their
nefarious purposes.
It is obvious and well-proven that the amount of
violence in any particular society is determined not by the mere
availability of any particular form of weapon, but by cultural,
socio-economic and institutional factors that produce people willing
to engage in extreme violence.5
How much violence occurs in any given society will
depend on the proportionate size of truly violent people.
In sum, peaceful societies do not need general gun
bans and violent societies do not benefit from them.
Don B. Kates is a San Francisco-based
criminologist, professor, and constitutional lawyer. Among his many
published works is, The Great American Gun Debate: Essays in
Firearms and Violence (Pacific Research Institute, 1997), by Don
B. Kates and Professor Gary Kleck of the Florida State School of
Criminology (available for $17 plus $3 for postage and handling, and
8.5% tax for California residents, from the Pacific Research
Institute, 755 Sansome St., San Francisco, CA 94111; telephone (415)
989-0833).
This article first appeared in The American Guardian, October, 1997.
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