JUSTICE DEPARTMENT SHOOTS OBAMA’S GUN CONTROL AGENDA IN THE HEAD

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Posted on 24th February 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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It’s fascinating to watch the spin from the liberal MSM as they accuse the NRA of using this Obama Administration’s own Justice Dept report as a reason to oppose Obama’s gun control efforts. The liberal do-gooder control freaks somehow spin this as a diabolical NRA plot to undermine their Savior. The guy who wrote the report was appointed by Obama. Facts are so inconvenient to liberals. It messes up a great false storyline. The mass shooting hysteria is immediately undermined by the FACT that there are 35 fatalities per year from mass shootings. Obama and his minions are trying to obscure the true crime problem in America – the out of control gun violence in the Democratic party created urban shitholes like Chicago, Detroit, Phila, Camden, St. Louis, New Orleans, and dozens of other urban enclaves that have been controlled by liberals for decades. It’s their welfare entitlement policies that have created these ghetto kill zones. These cities have strict gun control laws so that only the criminals have guns. The liberals then use the crime statistics to hire more union policemen and expand their voter base. It works great until you run out of money and middle class workers willing to pay outrageous levels of taxes for the privalege of living in a shithole killing field.  

Justice Dept. Internal Memo Admits Gun Buybacks, ‘Assault Weapons’ Bans, and Large Capacity Magazine Restrictions Don’t Work

Feb. 19, 2013 9:42am

Gun control may still be very much a topic for national conversation, and the prospects of some variety of gun control legislation may look better for anti-gun forces than they have in nearly 20 years, but a Justice Department internal memo from early in the year that just got leaked to the public may scuttle all of that. The memo comes from the National Institute of Justice (NIJ), a subgroup within the Justice Department, which defines itself this way:

The National Institute of Justice — the research, development and evaluation agency of the U.S. Department of Justice — is dedicated to improving knowledge and understanding of crime and justice issues through science. NIJ provides objective and independent knowledge and tools to reduce crime and promote justice, particularly at the state and local levels.

In other words, when a policy is proposed that the department has to enforce, they go to this group with questions. No partisan agenda can be reasonably inferred, and if there were one, it would likely incline toward the administration’s preferred policy.

Not that you’d know it from reading the memo itself, which takes aim at nearly every form of gun control proposed by the Obama administration and its allies in Congress, and systematically shoots it all down (no pun intended), or argues for proposals that are completely politically untenable. Making matters worse for the administration, the memo wasn’t drafted by some low level flunky in the NIJ, but rather from Greg Ridgeway, its Deputy Director. Moreover, Ridgeway is not a Bush administration holdover, but was, in fact, hired last year right in the thick of President Obama’s reelection campaign.

 A few key excerpts from Ridgeway’s damning report follow.

On the prevalence of mass shootings (a key statistic used by gun control advocates such as Piers Morgan):

Fatalities from mass shootings (those with 4 or more victims in a particular place and time) account on average for 35 fatalities per year. Policies that address the larger firearm homicide issue will have a far greater impact even if they do not address the particular issues of mass shootings.

On the idea of the government buying back guns:

Twitter summary: Buybacks are ineffective unless massive and coupled with a ban[...]

Gun buybacks are ineffective as generally implemented. 1. The buybacks are too small to have an impact. 2. The guns turned in are at low risk of ever being used in a crime. 3. Replacement guns are easily acquired. Unless these three points are overcome, a gun buyback cannot be effective.

The 1997 Australia gun buyback and its associated regulations is an exception to this. 1. It was large, buying back 20% of the firearm stock. 2. It targeted semi-automatic weapons. 3. It coupled the buyback with a ban on certain weapons and a nationwide registration and licensing program. There is strong evidence that it reduced mass killings (before the initiative massacres occurred on average once per year and none have occurred in the 15 years since).

The Australia buyback appears to have had no effect on crime otherwise.

On large capacity magazine restrictions:

The 1994 ban on large capacity magazines had limited effectiveness because 1) Large capacity clips are a durable good 2) There were an estimated 25 million guns with large capacity magazines in 1995 3) The 1994 law exempted magazines manufactured before 1994 so that the importation of large capacity magazines manufactured overseas before 1994 continued through the ban 4) while the price of the clips increased dramatically (80% during the ban) they were not unaffordable. A 2004 study of the 1994 law found: “because the ban has not yet reduced the use of [large capacity magazines] in crime, we cannot clearly credit the ban with any of the nation’s recent drop in gun violence.” The 1994 ban essentially did little to affect the supply of large capacity magazines.

In order to have an impact, large capacity magazine regulation needs to sharply curtail their availability to include restrictions on importation, manufacture, sale, and possession. An exemption for previously owned magazines would nearly eliminate any impact. The program would need to be coupled with an extensive buyback of existing large capacity magazines. With an exemption the impact of the restrictions  would only be felt when the magazines degrade or when they no longer are compatible with guns in circulation. This would take decades to realize.

On universal background checks:

Twitter summary: Effectiveness depends on the ability to reduce straw purchasing, requiring gun registration and an easy gun transfer process[...]

A perfect universal background check system can address the gun shows and might deter many unregulated private sellers. However, this does not address the largest sources (straw purchasers and theft), which would most likely become larger if background checks at gun shows and private sellers were addressed. The secondary market is the primary source of crime guns. Ludwig and Cook (2000) compared states that introduced Brady checks to those states that already had background checks and found no effect of the new background checks. They hypothesized that the background checks simply shifted to the secondary market those offenders who normally purchased in the primary market.

Supply sources can vary in different parts of the country. An NIJ funded study of the Los Angeles illicit gun market noted: “Results showed that many crime guns were first purchased at local—that is, in county—licensed dealers, rather than from out of state. That is, contrary to the conventional wisdom that crime guns were being trafficked across state borders from places with less stringent regulations, such as Arizona and Nevada, we found that a majority of the guns used in crimes were purchased in Los Angeles County.” Thus, gun markets can be highly local.

And, finally, on the idea of “banning” so-called assault weapons:

Twitter summary: Assault weapons are not a major contributor to gun crime. The existing stock of assault weapons is large, undercutting the effectiveness of bans with exemptions[...]

Guns are durable goods. The 1994 law exempted weapons manufactured before 1994. The exemption of pre-1994 models ensures that a large stock, estimated at 1.5 million, of existing weapons would persist. Prior to the 1994 ban, assault weapons were used in 2-8% of crimes. Therefore a complete elimination of assault weapons would not have a large impact on gun homicides.[...]

Since assault weapons are not a major contributor to US gun homicide and the existing stock of guns is large, an assault weapon ban is unlikely to have an impact on gun violence. If coupled with a gun buyback and no exemptions then it could be effective. The 1997 Australian gun buyback was massive in scale and, while it appears to have had no effect on gun homicide, Australia has had no mass shootings since the ban was put in place.

7 Comments
  1. Administrator says:

    Mr. Ridgeway will be resigning for personal reasons next week. Book it Dano.

    Well-loved. Like or Dislike: Thumb up 13 Thumb down 0

    24th February 2013 at 9:46 am

  2. underfire says:

    Another example of the long held notion in DC that perception is reality. Or, don’t go with the facts if it undermines ones position. Or, it doesn’t really matter if one builds upon a foundation of lies. What matters is if I get out with mine before it collapses.

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 2 Thumb down 0

    24th February 2013 at 10:13 am

  3. Thunderbird says:

    There are two types of criminals in our society; natural born and society made. It seems that the natural born gravitate to positions in the top ranks of government, finance, and general law enforcement, while the society made populate the gangs and fill the prisons.

    Law abiding citizens that own guns are the first line of defense against these two types of criminals. Take the guns away from the law abiding citizens and the natural born and society made criminals will run wild; and murder, rape, robberies, break-ins, and all forms of crime will overcome us.

    The fundamental line of defense against crimes against the people rests with an armed citizenry. Law enforcement protects property; government and corporate property, not people. It is foolish of those in government not to recognize this; even the criminals in government.

    Order in our society comes from the people, not the government.

    One other thing. Lawyers are a scourge in our society. They use the law to prevent justice, then use the law to manufacture false justice. They are manipulators that aid the natural born criminals while on the other hand manufacturing false justice from the laws to create more society made criminals for the prison business. Lawyers are not moral people and the laws they practice have no moral foundation. Lawyers are sharks of the darkness. This is my perception of them from years of observation and study of administrative law.

    Well-loved. Like or Dislike: Thumb up 21 Thumb down 1

    24th February 2013 at 11:15 am

  4. KaD says:

    Here’s some more gun control for you: Law student schools LEO in gun rights: http://co-ironwill.blogspot.com/2013/02/law-student-schools-policeman-on-his.html

    44 gun companies have now stopped selling guns to anti-second amendment states: http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/02/23/gaining-momentum-now-42-gun-companies-have-stopped-selling-to-law-enforcement-in-anti-2nd-amendment-states/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=story&utm_campaign=Share%20Buttons

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 4 Thumb down 0

    24th February 2013 at 12:22 pm

  5. Hiper says:

    Bailouts and the state military complex for the wealthy

    and…

    austerity and gun control for the rest

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 2 Thumb down 0

    24th February 2013 at 2:25 pm

  6. AWD says:

    “Lawyers are a scourge in our society”

    Yes indeed, as in Rome so it is here. Lawyers; destroying what’s left or morals, ethics, and values. Lawyers, the lobbyists that make anything right and feed the criminal politicians.

    First, kill all the lawyers….

    Hot debate. What do you think? Thumb up 6 Thumb down 2

    24th February 2013 at 3:36 pm

  7. IndenturedServant says:

    No surprise here but Mr. Ridgeway concluded that “Assault weapons are not a major contributor to gun crime.” So the govt manufactures and spreads lies via the complicit, lap-dog MSM that Adam Lanza used a military style assault weapon in the mass killing at Sandy Hook (which he did not) and then declares outright war on assault style weapons before they bothered to gather any actual acts on the subject. This war on assault weapons causes millions of Americans to go out and purchase somewhere in the neighborhood of 65,000,000 assault weapons. According to the article, prior to the 1994 AWB, there were an estimated 1.5 million assault weapons out there.

    Only the government could bring this kind of insanity to such a non-issue. Dumbfucks!
    I_S

    Well-loved. Like or Dislike: Thumb up 7 Thumb down 0

    24th February 2013 at 11:29 pm

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