The Arrogant Ignorance of Supporting Gun Control

January 8, 2013 07:34


[T]he self-same people who favor gun confiscation are the very same ones who plead for all manner of excuses for criminal behavior. They tend to be the same type of people who feel that everything and everyone is responsible for criminal behavior, other than the criminal himself.

 

by Michael J. Hurd, Ph.D.

 

The arguments for gun control or gun confiscation basically boil down to this: “If guns were illegal, they would not be available. If they weren’t available, people like that crazy killer in Connecticut would not be able to use them.”

This assumes that a crazy psychopathic killer, hell-bent on murder, would let an obstacle like finding a gun legally stop him. This is absurd. A crazy psychopathic killer, by definition, has decided that he must do his evil deed, and indeed is even entitled to do it. There will be an underground “market” for guns, if they are outlawed, just as presently there is an underground “black market” for marijuana, heroin and cocaine.

The people who claim that violence can be controlled by outlawing guns show how little they understand about the nature of criminals and criminal psychology. They assume — they must assume, to take the position they do — that these killers are for the most part semi-reasonable, although troubled souls who rush out to the gun equivalent of a convenience store, mostly on impulse, to purchase their gun. If this purchase were made more difficult or impossible, the implied reasoning goes, this poor troubled soul would refrain from his violent actions.

I suppose this is why the self-same people who favor gun confiscation are the very same ones who plead for all manner of excuses for criminal behavior. They tend to be the same type of people who feel that everything and everyone is responsible for criminal behavior, other than the criminal himself.

They can’t understand, or perhaps don’t want to understand or come to grips with, the psychology of evil. It’s admittedly disturbing to try and do so. But this is no excuse for eliminating the right of the nonviolent, noncriminal majority to protect themselves from violence by making it harder or impossible for them to purchase weapons for self-defense.

Look at it this way. Do you want to live in a world where a violent criminal knows that all the nonviolent, noncriminals out there are disarmed? Do you think this will actually alleviate crime or contribute to its rise — especially as economic conditions continue to worsen in a society where government now acts mostly as an economic wrecking ball?

Of course, the people who want guns outlawed for the peaceful, nonviolent majority are usually the same ones who think that government is capable of literally anything. Too much sugar in sodas? There ought to be a law. Some people unable or unwilling to buy health insurance? There ought to be a law. Mind you, not just a law affecting those individuals; a law imposed on everyone, a one-size-fits-all “solution” to a problem guaranteed only to make the problem worse.

Back in the days of Prohibition, people who wanted to drink got their alcohol. Outlawing alcohol didn’t do a thing to change society, other than make society more dangerous and give the government more to do. Similarly, the “war on drugs” has done nothing to eliminate or even reduce addiction to heroin, cocaine or marijuana. It turns people who enjoy these drugs into criminals, but it doesn’t change their behavior one bit. We could decriminalize their behavior tomorrow and that would end the dangerous black market for drugs, as well as give the government much less to do, allowing it to focus on really important things like — oh, I don’t know, capturing terrorists. And decriminalizing that behavior would not do a thing to change the nature or extent of all the substance addiction problems out there. Those would go on just as before, no more or no less — perhaps a bit less, if anything.

It’s the same with gun ownership. Those who support gun control view gun ownership as something akin to, if not worse than, abuse of heroin and cocaine. They think that if the government outlawed guns tomorrow, and took them away from peaceful people, that criminals would somehow be pressured or even shamed into not killing. It’s beyond ridiculous. I guarantee that if guns are outlawed in the near future, you’re going to see lots of changes in the lives of the peaceful, but not a bit of change in the minds and behaviors of the violent. In fact, violence will grow, if anything, because the violent will now know the peaceful are disarmed, with only an unaccountable or unavailable police force to aid them.

Worst of all, it’s the intellectually superior and self-congratulating who are the most in favor of gun control. It’s taken as ignorant and mentally unsophisticated to have any other position on the subject. You would think the intellectually superior and sophisticated would at least have some remote grasp of how a criminal mindset works. “Criminal” by definition refers to someone who considers himself outside and above the law, and entitled to do whatever he pleases in life, even if it means initiating force against another.

These are the sort of people who will sleep better at night if we pass restrictive or confiscatory gun laws. And it’s the supposedly intellectually superior among us who are hell-bent on protecting the nonviolent by making life more comfortable for the violent.

 

Dr. Hurd has a Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Psychology, Saybrook Institute, San Francisco, CA, November 1991. Degree awarded With Distinction. Master’s of Social Work (M.S.W.), Clinical, The University of Maryland at Baltimore, May 1988. Bachelor’s of Arts (B.A.), Psychology, Catholic University of America, Washington, DC, May 1985. Distinguished Psychology Student Award, Phi Beta Kappa, Summa Cum Laude. Dr. Hurd blogs at DrHurd.com

 

Also please consider:

The Domestic Triad

Gun Culture and Gun Control Culture

School Shooting Caused by Sinful Soul, Souless Education

 



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