Tuesday, May 15, 2007
from the Kennebec Journal
Sport of Kings
New Medicaid billing system inspires doubts among some
Christmas spirit
Guidance counselor: Dismiss complaint based on criticism of same-sex marriage
CHELSEA: 'Practice burn' provides thrill for 9-year-old
Trust eyes orchard purchase
GOLFER OF THE YEAR: Bonenfant rises up Cony ranks
YOUTH SOCCER: Local team gives 'care package' to children in Afghanistan
All of today's:
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from the Kennebec Journal
from the Morning Sentinel
YES ON 1 BACKER REBUTS CLAIM
New system for Medicaid payments worries providers
After petition drive, Clinton police force budget will go a third time before voters
A rock musician makes trip home via Black Taxi
MADISON: After revaluation, abatement requests reviewed
Parks to have facelift
GOLFER OF THE YEAR: Sweet does job for Madison
YOUTH SOCCER: Local team gives 'care package' to children in Afghanistan
All of today's:
News | Sports
from the Morning Sentinel
-- National Rifle Association press release, April 27
n n n
The National Rifle Association is wrong.
Gun control laws can stop madmen. They can prevent evil.
History offers proof.
After a string of mass shootings in the 1980s and early 1990s, Australia was horrified by the slaughter of 35 people at the Port Arthur Historical Site in Tasmania. Martin Bryant, 28, sprayed death from an AR-15 assault rifle.
Within a few weeks, the government banned semiautomatic rifles and shotguns and launched a gun buyback program that destroyed nearly 700,000 weapons.
There were 13 mass shootings in the 15 years before the horror in Tasmania.
There have been none since.
Gun laws stopped the evil.
Britain banned semiautomatic rifles in 1987 after gun enthusiast Michael Ryan killed 16 people and wounded 13 others in a rural town. The next year, after Thomas Hamilton used four legally obtained handguns to kill 16 children and a teacher at a kindergarten in Scotland, Britain banned most handguns.
"Today, under laws that make it illegal for private citizens to own anything larger than a .22-caliber gun -- and subject them to thorough background checks -- Hamilton would have had a difficult time obtaining the guns he used ... two .357-caliber Smith & Wesson revolvers and a pair of 9mm Browning pistols," the AP reported.
Britain now has one of the world's lowest gun homicide rates -- 0.04 slayings per 100,000 people. The U.S. rate is roughly 100 times higher.
Disarmament such as that in Britain and restrictions as strong as those in Australia are not likely in this country; gun ownership, gun sports and hunting are deeply inbred in our culture. There are constitutional questions about some gun regulations. Neither culture nor Constitution, however demand that we ignore reality.
The reaction to the slaughter at Virginia Tech last month followed a familiar pattern.
First, the nation reels from shock with the news of another terrible crime.
Next, people ask how it could have happened, what motivated the killers. There are calls for stronger, tougher, better laws to control guns.
Then the gun lobby gets to work. You know: Guns don't kill people, people do. Don't trample our constitutional rights. We already have enough laws, just enforce them. The litany repeats itself.
Then nothing happens -- until the next time someone takes a gun and shocks the nation.
I was in the Army in Germany on Nov. 22, 1963, when John F. Kennedy was assassinated. I remember the shock -- American and German -- and the politicians who called for tougher gun laws.
In 1968, when Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy were shot, I was a reporter in Hartford, Conn. I covered the grief when a second Kennedy brother was killed, then the riots when King was assassinated. I remember the promises that, finally, something would be done.
I remember the failed efforts to gun down Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan. And more empty promises.
School shootings have become the norm in America, a tragic routine in our lives, shocking for a moment. Then forgotten.
More than 40 years ago -- Aug. 1, 1966 -- Charles Whitman climbed the tower at the University of Texas to gun down 27 people.
Too young to remember that? Ponder more recent events:
1999: Eric Harris, 18, and Dylan Klebold, 17, kill 14 and wound 23 at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo.
2005: Jeff Weise, 16, shoots his grandfather and his companion, then goes to school and kills a teacher, a guard, five students and himself in Red Lake, Minn..
2006: Carl Roberts shoots 10 Amish school girls, none older than 13, in Nickel Mine, Pa. Five die.
Now we add Virginia Tech. Seung-Hui Cho, 23, kills 32 people.
Following the Virginia Tech shootings, the National Rifle Association said it has long opposed selling guns to "violent criminals and those who have been adjudicated by a court as mentally incompetent."
That sounds good, but it hides reality.
The NRA has spent millions of dollars to intimidate politicians who support even the most gentle restrictions on firearms.
It has fought efforts to establish waiting periods for those seeking to buy guns to allow law enforcement officials time to conduct reasonable background checks.
It fights proposals for gun registration and opposes limits on gun ownership for military veterans with records of mental instability, including post-traumatic stress.
And, of course, the NRA fights efforts to regulate sales at gun shows.
The slaughter will not end until ordinary people demand action and politicians find the courage to face down the NRA.
Don't expect that to happen soon.
David B. Offer is the retired editor of the Kennebec Journal and the Morning Sentinel. E-mail davidboffer@hotmail.com

Reader comments
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There is plenty of evidence refuting Mr. Offer's flimsy claims about crime in countries that have moved to ban guns.
"HALF a billion dollars spent buying back hundreds of thousands of guns after the Port Arthur massacre had no effect on the homicide rate, says a study published in an influential British journal.
"The report by two Australian academics, published in the British Journal of Criminology, said statistics gathered in the decade since Port Arthur showed gun deaths had been declining well before 1996 and the buyback of more than 600,000 mainly semi-automatic rifles and pump-action shotguns had made no difference in the rate of decline"
SOURCE: http://tinyurl.com/uwetn
If gun control works, why is was Washington D.C., the city with the strictest gun control laws, one of the biggest crime capitals of the country?
"Since September 24, 1976, D.C. residents have lived under the nation's most restrictive gun laws: Police enforce a citywide handgun ban, and local statutes require residents to keep long guns disassembled, unloaded and locked up. The law even forbids target shooting.
"D.C.'s gun-control regime has aroused surprisingly little controversy until recently. Had the law worked, the relative lack of controversy wouldn't surprise anyone. But, if one looks at the data, it is clear that the law hasn't done anything to reduce violence. Over the last five years, the District, never far out of the running, had in three of those years the highest murder rate among cities over 500,000 people. The other two years the city ranked second and third."
John Lott's testimony to Congress on the DC gun ban. SOURCE: http://tinyurl.com/2ceokgreport abuse
Actually, there was at least one more school shooting in Australia six years after the ban at Monash University in Melbourne. One student with a bag full of handguns walked in, killed two people, and wounded five more. He was only stopped when the teacher and another student risked their lives to tackle him.
"Britain now has one of the world's lowest gun homicide rates"
And it was even lower BEFORE the ban. In 1996, the year before the ban, England and Wales had a total of 47 gun homicides. In 2002, they had 97. That's more than a 100% increase. In 2006, the number dropped back down to 50, which is still three more than in 1996.
They've also seen non-fatal handgun shootings go from 279 in 1996, to 1024 last year. Almost ten years after the things were banned entirely! Not to mention the fact they have an overall violent crime rate seven times higher than the US..
Furthermore, while they may have one of the lowest rates of gun homicides in the world, both Norway and Switzerland have a lower total homicide rate than the UK. Switzerland has more gun owners per-capita (35.7%) than the US (32%). Norway only trails us by about half a percent in gun ownership (31.5%), yet apparently still has a lower gun homicide rate (0.02) than the UK.report abuse
I'm glad that the author used the word, "disarmament" instead of some other catchphrase. At least he's being honest.
Disarmament may very well work in those nations that do not offer the freedoms we enjoy in America. In Britain, there are as many cameras as citizens. We would never tolerate that.
A disarmed population is one more easily controlled. It is not just another silly amendment, up for interpretation, that allows the right of American citizens to rise up against its government, to eliminate it if neccessary, by the use of armed rebellion.
For every example of disarmament "working" to stem violence (I disagree with that conclusion) there are hundreds of instances where violence was stopped by an armed person. There have been several planned mass murders foiled by the shooter being killed by an armed samaritan. Shall we then, based upon this evidence, pass a law requiring all adult citizens to be armed? No, that would be silly, as silly as passing a law requiring all citizens to be disarmed.
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Well, figures don't lie, but liars figure. I made it as far as the mention of the UK before I saw this article for what it was - a deceptive sham. It's too bad that Mr. Offer had to make up and distort his "facts" before presenting them to support his case.
From a recent article in Reason magazine:
"From 1991 to 1995, crimes against the person in England's inner cities increased 91 percent. And in the four years from 1997 to 2001, the rate of violent crime more than doubled. Your chances of being mugged in London are now six times greater than in New York. England's rates of assault, robbery, and burglary are far higher than America's, and 53 percent of English burglaries occur while occupants are at home, compared with 13 percent in the U.S., where burglars admit to fearing armed homeowners more than the police."
http://www.reason.com/news/show/28582.html
Yes, boys and girls, in "gun safe" Britain, crime is rising rapidly, and in many categories surpassing the crime rate in the U.S. I am sure that Mr. Offer will tout the few statistics that show the opposite effect, but to do so out of context is deceptive.
I didn’t get past that point in his little essay, to tell you the truth. Clearly Mr. Offer has no interest in intelligent and informed readers.
The subscription rates for the Morning Sentinel must be rosy indeed if the paper thinks it can dismiss any potential reader who might be able to reason and do their own research.
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In 1929, the Soviet Union established gun control. From 1929 to 1953, about 20 million dissidents were exterminated.
Germany established gun control in 1938 and from 1939 to 1945, 6 million Jews and countless others who were unable to defend themselves were rounded up and exterminated. (Some estimates bring the total closer to 13 million!).
China established gun control in 1935. From 1948 to 1952, 20 million political dissidents were rounded up and exterminated.
Guatemala established gun control in 1964. From 1964 to 1981, 100,000 Mayan Indians were rounded up and exterminated.
Uganda established gun control in 1970. From 1971 to 1979, 300,000 Christians were rounded up and exterminated.
Pol Pot's Cambodia established gun control in 1956. From 1975 to 1977, over 2,000,000 people, were rounded up and exterminated.
1992-95 Bosnia-Herzegovina conflict; 200,000 dead.
1994 Rwanda, Hutu militia kill 800,000 Tutsis.
Defenseless people rounded up and exterminated in the 20th Century because of 'gun control' or from the lack of being able to defend themselves: about 64,700,000.
Spelled out, that is; SIXTY-FOUR MILLION, SEVEN-HUNDRED THOUSAND PEOPLE!
http://gunshowonthenet.com/SecondAmend/GunControl.htmlreport abuse
You've got some backwards values when you think a youngster spending time with his mother or father in the woods learning respect for nature and living things warps his mind, while your touting the value of abortion for population control elsewhere in this paper. report abuse
Allowing the pervasive use of guns to kill animals as sport is, in my opinion, lowering the moral standard of us all.
What do we expect young people to think when the “adults” pick up a gun to take out for a day of power and control, hunting down and killing a hapless animal? For the child or other immature mind it isn’t much of a jump to pick up a gun to fulfill an immature, childish desire to live out a fantasy of power and control to kill us.
Like the hunter, the child sees guns as an exciting symbol of power.
The problem the way I see it, the immature mind doesn’t always see the difference between what the adult does in his “legal” way of playing with guns and what the child wants to do to get recognition from his peers demonstrating his personal power and control.
Guns were designed to fight wars with and not to use in some sort of perverted sport.
Handguns though have a definite use for self-defense but should be kept in the hands of people of known stability and self-restraint. Having citizens armed with concealed weapons in random places while at the same time curbing the mystique that guns are for fun, might go a long way to making our society a much safer and productive place for all of us.
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Quoting the journal--"Data were gathered for all 170 U.S. cities with a 1980 population of at least 100,000. The cities were coded for the presence of 19 major categories of firearms restriction, including both state- and city-level restrictions. Multiple indirect indicators of gun prevalence levels were measured and models of city violence rates were estimated using two-stage least-squares methods. The models covered all major categories of intentional violence and crime which frequently involve guns: homicide, suicide, fatal gun accidents, robbery, and aggravated assaults, as well as rape.
Findings indicate that (1) gun prevalence levels generally have no net positive effect on total violence rates, (2) homicide, gun assault, and rape rates increase gun prevalence, (3) gun control restrictions have no net effect on gun prevalence levels, and (4) most gun control restrictions generally have no net effect on violence rates.
There were, however, some possible exceptions to this last conclusion—of 108 assessments of effects of different gun laws on different types of violence, 7 indicated good support, and another 11 partial support, for the hypothesis of gun control efficacy."
That says it all...report abuse
The people screaming the loudest about banning guns, regulating guns, passing laws against this and that and the other thing. They know the least about guns, criminals, maniacs, crime, hunting, hunters, gun owners, or the consitution.
Anybody else see the interview on CNN where Carolyn MacCarthy was asked what a "Barrel Shroud" was by the reporter. She tried to ignore him, so he outed her by asking directly, "Mrs. McCarthy, what is a barrel shroud? It says right here in your bill you want to ban it. What's a barrel shroud, and why should we ban it?" She said, "I have no idea. Isn't it the thing that swings up...?" Then it was put behind them both. A barrel shroud screws onto the threaded muzzle of a rifle barrel. It protects the crown of the muzzle from being banged on something and damaged, resulting in poor accuracy.
The stories go on and on and on. Foolishness. They don't know the first thing about the issue. They've never so much as met a criminal, held a gun, dealt with a maniac. But I am a closed minded lying no good for nothing SOB who knows nothing, because I have and say they're full of crap?
If I thought any of this would actually work, I'd be behind it. We'd all be behind it, if it would work as advertized. It won't, we're not.
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