The Myths and Truths about Gun Ownership
Studies show that gun laws make us safer.
December
29, 2004 -- This month the National Academy of Sciences issued
a 328-page report on gun-control laws. The big news is that the academy's panel
couldn't identify any benefits of decades-long effort to reduce crime and injury
by restricting gun ownership. The only conclusion it could draw was: Let's study
the question some more (presumably, until we find the results we want).
The academy, however, should believe its own findings. Based on 253 journal
articles, 99 books, 43 government publications, a survey that covered 80
different gun-control measures and some of its own empirical work, the panel
couldn't identify a single gun-control regulation that reduced violent crime,
suicide or accidents.
From the assault-weapons ban to the Brady Act to one-gun-a-month
restrictions to gun locks, nothing worked.
The study was not the work of gun-control opponents: The panel was set up
during the Clinton administration, and all but one of its members (whose views
on guns were publicly known before their appointments) favored gun control.
It's bad enough that the panel backed away from its own survey and empirical
work; worse yet is that it didn't really look objectively at all the evidence.
If it had, it would have found not just that gun control doesn't help solve the
problems of crime, suicide and gun accidents, but that it can actually be
counterproductive.
The panel simply ignored many studies showing just that. For example, the
research on gun locks that the panel considered examined only whether accidental
gun deaths and suicides were prevented. There was no mention of research that
shows that locking up guns prevents people from using them defensively.
The panel also ignored most of the studies that find a benefit in crime
reduction from right-to-carry laws. It did pay attention to some non-peer
reviewed papers on the right-to-carry issue, and it also noted one part of a
right-to-carry study that indicated little or no benefit from such laws. What
the panel didn't point out, however, is that the authors of that particular
study had concluded that data in their work did much more to show there were
benefits than to debunk it.
James Q. Wilson, professor of public policy at UCLA, was the one dissenting
panelist and the only member whose views were known in advance to not be
entirely pro-gun control. His dissent focused on the right-to-carry issue, and
the fact that emphasizing results that could not withstand peer-reviewed studies
called into question the panel's contention that right-to-carry laws had not for
sure had a positive effect.
Wilson also said that that conclusion was specious given that the panel's
own reanalysis confirmed that right-to-carry laws reduced crime. The panel's
findings to the contrary he called "quite puzzling."
While more research is always helpful, the notion that we have learned
nothing flies in the face of common sense. The NAS panel should have concluded
as the existing research has: Gun control doesn't help.
Instead, the panel has left us with two choices: Either academia and the
government have wasted millions of dollars and countless man-ours on useless
research (and the panel would like us to spend more in the same worthless
pursuit), or the National Academy is so completely unable to separate politics
from its analyses that it simply can't accept the results for what they are.
In either case, the academy, and academics in general, have succeeded mostly
in shooting themselves in the foot.
John R. Lott Jr. is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute,
and the author of "More Guns, Less Crime" and "The Bias Against
Guns."
Copyright © 2004-2008 Parma Rod & Gun Club