By Doug Pennington
Assistant Director, Communications
After the shooting massacre at Fort Hood, commanding Lt. Gen. Robert W. Cone was asked whether personnel in the Soldier Readiness Center on base would have been armed during the attack.
Gen. Cone answered:
No. We would not. As a matter of practice, we do not carry weapons. This is our home. So, we do have security guards that are here, the M.P.s and the Department of the Army civilian police. But soldiers on Fort Hood do not carry weapons.
I will say that we are, as a matter of assurance to the local community, we are going to increase our security presence here in the coming days. But the fact is that soldiers do not carry weapons routinely unless they‘re in a training event, et cetera, or something of this nature.
So, even as the National Rifle Association tries to arm America to the teeth, soldiers — America’s professional gun users — do not carry weapons on base “as a matter of practice.”
Why? Because it’s their home.
You just knew that had to hit the gun zealots where it hurts most.
Sure enough, Jacob Sullum of Reason came out yesterday to show he knows better than a commanding General how to run America’s largest Army base.
What is Sullum’s brilliant answer to the Fort Hood massacre?
“More guns,” of course.
…If someone else at the processing center had a gun when Hasan started shooting, it seems likely that fewer people would have been killed or injured….
“It seems likely“? And if wishes were horses, Reason editors would ride….
Here we see the counterfactual — the last refuge of gun advocates without facts, desperately trying to force guns into every aspect of American life.
Conveniently, they never openly consider the opposite possibility: that even more people would be dead.
(An aside: isn’t it ironic how some libertarians want government to stay out of their lives, yet have no problem with forcing other people to live with loaded, concealed weapons everywhere they turn? The grocery store; the park; the school; the airport. Apparently, we have the “freedom” to live with what these so-called libertarians tell us to live with. After all, they have the guns, right?)
Sullum also cited what he called the “breathtaking inanity” of the Brady Campaign’s belief that more guns aren’t the answer to gun violence.
Okay, fine. Let’s step back for a moment.
Enough reporting of the Fort Hood massacre has been done to reach some tentative conclusions about the accused shooter and the shooting itself.
- The shooter was issued a Virginia concealed carry permit in 1996. (See his permit application here. ) This means, according to people like Jacob Sullum and John Lott/”Mary Rosh,” the alleged Fort Hood murderer was, by definition, a “law-abiding citizen”… right up to the point he massacred 13 people and wounded another 30. This also means that Sullum’s “more guns” policy would help put guns in the next “law-abiding” mass murderer’s hands, and make it legal for him to carry them virtually anywhere he chooses.
- The shooter apparently purchased “several high-capacity gun magazines” when he bought the FN FiveSeveN pistol at a Killeen, Texas gun store appropriately named “Guns Galore.” The 20-round magazine comes standard with the FiveSeveN. Had President Bush and the U.S. Congress not been so weak to allow the Federal assault weapons ban to expire in 2004, those magazines would not have been legally sold from Guns Galore. A shooter limited to using only 10-round magazines is forced to reload twice as often as one who uses 20-round magazines, creating more opportunities to attack him when he isn’t shooting, thus possibly saving lives. Sullum breezily dismisses this as “matter[ing] little.”
All these warning signs. All these holes in the ability of law enforcement to do their job, shot through by lobbying from the NRA.
The ease with which America’s weak gun laws permitted a deranged killer to arm himself and massacre so many of our servicemen and -women should be a national tragedy.
Yet the only answer Sullum can manage is the “breathtaking inanity” to play the gun lobby’s broken record of “more guns… more guns…more guns….”
Of course, his conclusion can only follow from an equally inane assumption that mass shootings beset us like natural disasters, as if nothing can be done to prevent them.
Taking his assumption to its logical extension, Sullum’s libertarian dystopia would deregulate gun ownership and gun-carrying entirely, so as to give everyone a gun who wants one; always assume some number of them are mass murderers; and then either duck or engage in the crossfire when bullets start to fly. (Thomas Hobbes would call this a “state of nature.”)
In fact, Sullum’s answer is the equivalent of waving the white flag of surrender. Surrender to a permanent armed insanity in America — a culture of shooting deaths and injuries that cripple our efforts to build a stronger, more peaceful society in the belief that building such a society is futile.
What Sullum ignores is the inconvenient truth that shootings are not natural disasters. They are man-made massacres aided and abetted by America’s almost non-existent gun laws — designed by the gun lobby — which take a “see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil” approach to putting firearms in the hands of killers.
Give in to that violent futility? No, thank you.
That would be breathtakingly inane.
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UPDATE: For readers referred from Joe Huffman, guns are not speech.
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By Doug Pennington
Assistant Director, Communications
No. We would not. As a matter of practice, we do not carry weapons. This is our home. So, we do have security guards that are here, the M.P.s and the Department of the Army civilian police. But soldiers on Fort Hood do not carry weapons.
I will say that we are, as a matter of assurance to the local community, we are going to increase our security presence here in the coming days. But the fact is that soldiers do not carry weapons routinely unless they‘re in a training event, et cetera, or something of this nature.