Gun Control And Gun Research Paper

PAGES
5
WORDS
1865
Cite

Gun ownership is constitutionally protected in the United States, embedded in the Second Amendment to the Constitution, which reads, "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed," (Bill of Rights, 1789). The interpretation of this constitutional right has become the topic of heated debate in the United States. As the Library of Congress points out, the meaning of the Second Amendment is "not self-evident," as are many items in the Constitution that were written, deliberately or not, in a vague manner that left matters up to future interpretations of the law by the judiciary. While other countries in the world find the American gun control issue perplexing, Americans continue to grapple with how to form and defend their own personal militias. The Supreme Court has ruled on several Second Amendment cases, always upholding the validity of the Second Amendment and never questioning its efficacy as part of the Constitution. After all, the United States was founded on the principles of freedom and liberty and that does mean that individuals do have the right to take up arms against their government or against anyone else they perceive to be a threat. Americans also have the right to commit suicide, which accounts for sixty percent of all gun-related deaths (Masters, 2016). One of the most recent Supreme Court rulings related to the Second Amendment was in the 2008 case District of Columbia v. Heller, in which the Court struck down a local Washington, D.C. handgun restriction law. Thus, while states and municipalities can pass laws that restrict, regulate, or control gun sales or possession, they cannot pass laws that completely and outright ban the sale or possession of firearms.

For radical groups like the National Rifle Association (NRA), gun ownership and sales has become much more than about protecting the Second Amendment from being infringed upon. The Second Amendment is safe. Liberals who advocate for gun control rarely, if ever, request that the Second Amendment be revoked or even amended, only that it be interpreted differently and in accordance with evidence, facts, science, and reason.

The NRA and Rabid Unreasonableness

The NRA (2016) has become an organization that reflexively opposes any type of gun control or gun regulation. Commentators like Davidson (2015) use logical...

...

Being too difficult is not a reason for not mandating background checks. Davidson (2015) also claims that assault weapons are "not more powerful" than other guns, without explaining exactly why (p. 1). Generally, the position of hard-lined gun advocates is less about logic, reason, and constitutionality as it is about anger, emotional responses, and contrarian liberal bashing. As Melzer (2015) puts it, gun rights organizations like the NRA and their "deeply committed supporters also purchase firearms for a more symbolic reason: to send a warming to the federal government that individuals have the rights and are willing to fight," (p. 793). People with guns can intimidate both people without guns and other people with guns, making gun ownership integral to a culture of fear and violence. As Lott (2010) also points out, many people who own guns claim that they have scared off intruders simply by brandishing the weapon, indicating a relatively high prevalence of nonviolent the use of guns in self-defense scenarios. Self-defense is indeed on the of the most common arguments in favor of relaxed or non-existent gun regulations. The argument is that people need guns to defend themselves from other people who have guns, which leads to another argument: which is that there are too many guns already on the market for gun control to be of any use. "Too many Americans already own weapons," (Spitzer, 2015, p. 7). Yet just like the fallacies inherent in the argument that background checks would be too difficult to implement, there is also a fallacy in claiming that it would be too difficult to control guns because too many guns exist. There are workable options for both cases; it was difficult to build the Erie Canal and the Brooklyn Bridge, but those were completed. As Masters (2016) also points out, countries that used to have high rates of gun ownership but who decided to place tighter controls on guns have successfully implemented government buy-back programs. Davidson (2015) claims those programs do not work, but evidently they do, because the rates of gun violence in other wealthy, industrialized countries does not come close to the rates of gun violence in the United States. In fact, the rates of gun violence in the United States ranks near the top.
The Extent of the…

Sources Used in Documents:

References

Acosta, J. (2008). United States: Gun ownership and the Supreme Court. Library of Congress. Retrieved online: https://www.loc.gov/law/help/second-amendment.php

Barry, C.L., Mcginty, E.E. Vernick, J.S. & Webster, D.W. (2015). Two years after Newtown -- public opinion on gun policy revisited. Preventative Medicine 79,pp. 55-58.

Bill of Rights (1789). Retrieved online: https://www.archives.gov/founding-docs/bill-of-rights-transcript

Cage, F. (2013). Gun laws in the U.S.: seven things you need to know about the data. The Guardian. Jan 16, 2013. Retrieved online: https://www.theguardian.com/world/us-news-blog/2013/jan/16/gun-laws-need-to-know
Davidson, J. (2015). A Criminologist's Case Against Gun Control. Time. Dec 1, 2015. Retrieved online: http://time.com/4100408/a-criminologists-case-against-gun-control/
Edge, A.J. (2013). Final Portfolio Project: Gun Control. Walden University. Retrieved online: http://www.ajwolffedge.com/uploads/2/6/5/2/26527687/critical_thinking.pdf
Goldberg, J. (2012). The case for more guns (and more gun control). The Atlantic. Dec 2012. Retrieved online: http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2012/12/the-case-for-more-guns-and-more-gun-control/309161/
Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence (2016). Retrieved online: http://smartgunlaws.org/
Masters, J. (2016). Gun Control Around the World: A Primer. The Atlantic. Jan 12, 2016. Retrieved online: http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2016/01/worldwide-gun-control-policy/423711/
Melzer, S. (2015). Guns Across America [Review]. Retrieved online: http://csx.sagepub.com/content/45/6/793.short
NRA (2016). Retrieved online: https://home.nra.org/
United States vs. Cruikshank, 92 U.S. 542 (1875), full text online: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/92/542/case.html


Cite this Document:

"Gun Control And Gun" (2016, December 04) Retrieved April 27, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/gun-control-and-gun-2163817

"Gun Control And Gun" 04 December 2016. Web.27 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/gun-control-and-gun-2163817>

"Gun Control And Gun", 04 December 2016, Accessed.27 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/gun-control-and-gun-2163817

Related Documents
Gun Control Vs. Crime Rate
PAGES 10 WORDS 2852

Gun Control vs. Crime Rate Gun ownership in Virginia and the effects it has on crime rates There is much controversy regarding gun laws and the effects that they have on crime levels, as many are inclined to believe that they reduce the number of gun-related offences while others believe that they actually amplify the chances of a person being shot. American culture has come to be a gun culture, considering that

GUN CONTROL & PUSH FOR GUN CONTROL Surname The research paper is on gun control and the push for gun control. To respond to the topic the paper first lays down in the first paragraph basic concepts of the gun control ideals and the pro-gun movement. The introduction explores the basic tenets and motivations of the pro-gun and gun control activists in America. The paper uses the motivation and opposition of both

Guns Control Gun control Gun control is a law or policy passed with the aim of limiting the possession and use of guns or firearms by private citizens. Gun and firearm control have been a subject of extensive debate in the U.S. The establishment of a balance between the personal rights of individuals to own and the government's commitment to maintain law and order has proved a tricky affair. The ownership of

Gun Control Laws
PAGES 10 WORDS 2710

Gun Control Laws and the Reduction of Homicides in the United States The objective of this study is to determine whether gun control laws will serve to bring about a reduction in the number of homicides in the United States. Toward this end this study will conduct an extensive review of literature in this area of inquiry. It is held by many that gun control laws will serve to bring about a

Gun Violence in America
PAGES 10 WORDS 2849

Gun Violence in America There are raging political debates about gun control in America. Most poor urban cities are characterized by gun violence always attributed to gang violence. These gangs always comprise of young adults and juvenile males. Increased cases of highly organized mass killings have orchestrated gun laws, even as the scenarios become rare. Reports released by researchers indicate that gun murders in the U.S. totals to 7,000 using firearms.

Gun Control: Restricting Rights or Protecting People The article carried on the New York Times dated 28 February 2013 christened 'Guns and Gun Control' highlights a number of issues that relates to the whole issue of guns. The debate surrounding the issue of gun possession and a prohibition of the same is a thorny issue and as such, it has been an elicited debate at different levels of government in the