I read this in The Atlantic Monthly (hardly a right-wing Tea Party rag) a few days before the shooting in Connecticut.
It's easily the most reasonable piece I've seen on the subject of guns in America. Jeffery Goldberg is the author.
Go here. Kinda long, but worth it.
Here are the final paragraphs.....
It's easily the most reasonable piece I've seen on the subject of guns in America. Jeffery Goldberg is the author.
Go here. Kinda long, but worth it.
Here are the final paragraphs.....
But even some moderate gun-control activists, such as Dan Gross, have trouble accepting that guns in private hands can work effectively to counteract violence. When I asked him the question I posed to Stephen Barton and Tom Mauser—would you, at a moment when a stranger is shooting at you, prefer to have a gun, or not?—he answered by saying, “This is the conversation the gun lobby wants you to be having.” He pointed out some of the obvious flaws in concealed-carry laws, such as too-lax training standards and too much discretionary power on the part of local law-enforcement officials. He did say that if concealed-carry laws required background checks and training similar to what police recruits undergo, he would be slower to raise objections. But then he added: “In a fundamental way, isn’t this a question about the kind of society we want to live in?” Do we want to live in one “in which the answer to violence is more violence, where the answer to guns is more guns?”
What Gross won’t acknowledge is that in a nation of nearly 300 million guns, his question is irrelevant.
2 comments:
A good closing quote.
I noticed another Atlantic article that was good on the gun subject.
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2012/12/the-us-already-had-a-conversation-about-guns-and-the-pro-side-won/266335/
We've already had this debate.
In other news, the beer industry said the best way to combat drunk driving is to do away with open container laws.
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