|
The newly appointed CIA Director Porter Goss, believes that
terrorists may bring urban warfare techniques learned in Iraq to our
homeland. If he is right, we could have a whole new war on our hands.
The prospect is indeed scary.
The idea of terrorist cells
operating clandestinely in the United States, quietly amassing handguns
and assault rifles, and planning suicide shooting rampages in our
malls, is right out of Tom Clancy’s most recent novel. If not for the
fact that the 9/11 attacks were also foreshadowed in a Clancy novel, I
would have given the idea no further thought.
However,
rather than facing this potential threat publicly, the Bush
administration is only focused on terrorist attacks involving missiles,
nuclear devices and biological weapons. Stopping terrorists with WMDs
is a good thing, but what about the more immediate threat posed by
terrorists with guns? The potential threat of terrorist attacks using
guns is far more likely than any of these other scenarios.
This
leads to a bigger policy issue. In the post 9/11 world where supposedly
“everything has changed,” perhaps it is time for Americans to
reconsider the value of public gun ownership.
The idea of
public gun ownership simply does not make sense anymore. The right to
bear arms, as enumerated in the Second Amendment, was meant for the
maintenance of a “well-regulated militia.” At the time the amendment
was adopted, standing armies were viewed with a great deal of
suspicion, and therefore, gun-owning individuals were seen as a
protection mechanism for the public. These gun owners were also seen as
guardians of the republic against the tyranny of the rulers. The
framers of the Constitution saw the right to bear and use arms as a
check against an unruly government. That state of affairs no longer
exists.
Today, only a handful of citizens outside of
neo-nazi and white supremacist goups view gun ownership as a means of
keeping the government in check. Even those citizens who continue to
maintain such antiquated views must face the reality that the United
States’ armed forces are too large and too powerful for the citizenry
to make much difference. Quite frankly, the idea of the citizenry
rising up against the U.S. government with their handguns and assault
rifles, and facing the military with these personal arms is absurd. The
Branch Davidian tragedy at Waco, Texas, was one such futile attempt.
The
more important consideration is public safety. It is no longer safe for
the public to carry guns. Gun violence is increasingly widespread in
the United States. According to the DOJ/FBI’s Crime In The United
States: 2003 report, 45,197 people in the United States were murdered
with guns between 1999 and 2003. That averages out to more than 9,000
people murdered per year. Nearly three times the number of lives lost
in the tragic 9/11 attacks are murdered annually as a direct result of
guns.
Examples of wanton violence are all around. One particularly heinous
incident of gun violence occurred in 1998 when former Aryan Nation
member
Buford Furrow shot and wounded three young boys, a teenage girl and a
receptionist at the North Valley Jewish Community Center in Los Angeles
and
then shot and killed a Filipino-American postal worker.
Another occurred in July 1999 when white supremacist Benjamin Nathaniel
Smith, a member of the World Church of the Creator, went on a weekend
shooting spree, targeting Blacks, Jews and Asians. By the time Smith
was
done he had wounded six Orthodox Jews returning from services, and
killed
one African-American and one Korean-American.
Just recently, in Ulster, NY, a 24 year old man carrying a Hesse Arms
Model
47, an AK-47 clone assault rifle, randomly shot people in a local mall.
While the Justice Department did not label this murder a terrorist
attack,
all the signs were there. The Ulster, New York shooting is an ominous
warning of what lies ahead. Terrorism can be a homegrown act committed
by
anyone with a gun and is not unique to a “Middle Eastern-looking man
with a
bomb.” As long as the public is allowed to own guns, the threat of
similar
terrorist attacks remains real.
The idea of curtailing rights in the name of homeland security does not
seem
implausible given the current state of civil liberties in the United
States.
The war on terror has already taken an enormous toll on the First,
Fourth,
Fifth and Sixth Amendments, and thus far, very few Americans have
objected.
In light of this precedence, it seems reasonable that scaling back or
even
repealing the right to bear arms would be an easy task.
In fact, it will be a very difficult task. So far the civil liberties
curtailment has affected generally disenfranchised groups such as
immigrants, people of color and religious minorities. An assault on
the
Second Amendment will impact a much more powerful constituency.
According to the DOJ’s Bureau of Justice Statistics, in 2002 41 percent
of
American households owned at least one gun. According to these same
statistics, 50 percent of the owners were male, 43 percent were white
and 48
percent were Republican. More than 50 percent of the gun owners were
college educated and earned more than $50,000 per year. Regrettably,
these
folks are going to marshal their considerable resources to protect
their
special interest.
This is a shame. Instead of laying waste to the civil rights and civil
liberties that are at the core of free society, and rather than
squandering
precious time and money on amending the U.S. Constitution for such
things as “preserving marriage between a man and woman,” the nation ought to
focus its
attention on the havoc guns cause in society and debate the merits of
gun
ownership in this era of terrorism.
So long as guns remain available to the general public, there will
always be
the threat of terrorists walking into a crowded restaurant, a busy
coffee
shop or a packed movie theater and opening fire upon unsuspecting
civilians.
The Second Amendment is not worth such risks.

Junaid M. Afeef is a Research Associate at the Institute for Social
Policy & Understanding. His articles are available at www.ispu.us. He can be
reached
at junaid.afeef@gmail.com.
|