John R.
Lott Jr., a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, is
the author of the newly released "The Bias Against Guns" (Regnery,
2003).
Banning
guns from schools seems the obvious way to keep children safe. Utah,
though, is doing the opposite, and is stirring up debate across the
nation.
Acting
under a new state law, school districts across Utah have started
drawing up regulations allowing teachers and other public employees to
carry concealed guns on school property. Opponents are still trying to
fight the law, and at first glance their concern about firearms in
schools is understandable. Last Sunday in New Jersey, an attack by
armed teenagers against three fellow students and randomly chosen
townspeople was narrowly averted.
But
that's not the whole picture. Consider an analogy: Suppose a criminal
is stalking you or your family. Would you feel safe putting a sign in
front of your home saying, "This Home Is a Gun-Free Zone"? Law-abiding
citizens might be pleased by such a sign, but to criminals it would be
an invitation.
In
1985, just eight states had right-to-carry laws — laws that
automatically grant permits for concealed weapons once applicants pass
a criminal background check, pay their fees and, when required,
complete a training class. Today, 35 states do.
Examining
all the multiple-victim public shootings in the United States from 1977
to 1999 shows that on average, states that adopt right-to-carry laws
experience a 60% drop in the rates at which the attacks occur, and a
78% drop in the rates at which people are killed or injured from such
attacks.
To
the extent such attacks still occurred in right-to-carry states, they
overwhelmingly take place in so-called "gun-free zones." Indeed, the
attack last week in Meridian, Miss., in which five people were killed
took place in a Lockheed Martin plant where employees were forbidden to
have guns.
The
effect of right-to-carry laws is greater on multiple-victim public
shootings than on other crimes for a simple reason: Increasing the
probability that someone will be able to protect himself improves
deterrence. Though it may be statistically unlikely that any single
person in a crowd is carrying a concealed handgun, the probability that
at least one person is armed is high.
Contrary
to many people's impressions, before the federal law was enacted in
1995 it was possible for teachers and other adults with
concealed-handgun permits to carry guns on school property in many
states.
Many
of the concerns about accidents and other problems are unwarranted. The
real problems at schools occurred only after the ban. The rash of
student shootings at schools began in October 1997 in Pearl, Miss.
Public
reaction against guns is understandable, given the horrific events
shown on TV. But the more than 2 million times each year that Americans
use guns defensively are never discussed. In more than 90% of those
cases, simply brandishing a weapon is sufficient to cause a criminal to
break off an attack. My research also shows that citizens with guns
helped stop about a third of the post-1997 public school shootings,
stepping in before uniformed police could arrive.
Last
year, news broadcasts on the three main TV networks carried about
190,000 words on gun crime stories. Not one segment featured a civilian
using a gun to stop a crime. Newspapers are not much better.
Police
are extremely important in deterring crime, but they almost always
arrive after the crime has been committed. Annual surveys of crime
victims in the United States by the Justice Department show that when
confronted by a criminal, people are safest if they have a gun.
Just as the threat of arrest and prison can deter criminals, so can the fact that victims can defend themselves.
For
multiple-victim shootings, the biggest factor determining the amount of
harm is the length of time between when an attack starts and when
someone with a gun can stop the attack. The longer the delay, the more
are harmed.
Good intentions do not necessarily make good laws.
What counts is whether the laws ultimately save lives. Unfortunately,
too many gun laws primarily disarm law-abiding citizens, not criminals.
Posted on
Friday, June 27, 2008
by John R. Lott Jr.