Poetic justice!
THE KIDS SET HIM UP--Washington, D.C. has a gun ban, and gun bans stop crime. That's the ruse the gun ban lobby and
Marion Barry Inadvertently Exposes the Fallacy of D.C.'s Gun
Ban
their cronies would have you believe. That's what Washington, D.C. Council member and former mayor Marion Barry
(D) would have you believe. But, in an ironic twist of fate, Barry's anti-gun premise has been challenged by
circumstances involving none other than Barry himself.
This week, the ex-mayor was the victim of a violent crime
in "gun-free" Washington, D.C. He was robbed at gunpoint by two young men who entered his apartment, held a gun to
his head, and robbed him of his wallet, cash, and credit cards. The nearly three-decades-old ban did nothing to
protect Barry. Despite the ban, Barry admitted that "guns are everywhere." What he didn't say is that those guns
are in the hands of criminals, while the District's law-abiding citizens are prohibited from possessing them.
Clearly, the ban has done nothing to stem the tide of armed criminals carrying out violent crimes.
While not
suffering any physical injuries during the ordeal, Barry did indicate that his feelings were hurt. "There is a sort
of an unwritten code in Washington, among the underworld and the hustlers and these other guys, that I am their
friend....I was a little hurt that this betrayal did happen."
Councilman Barry, himself a convicted felon, says
he does not want to prosecute the perpetrators (if they are ever caught), but also says that he will push the city
council to pass a bill he introduced that would increase penalties for carrying a gun in the District! Such is the
contradictory logic of the ex-mayor. Pass more gun laws, and don't enforce existing ones.
Of course, violent
crime in D.C. is nothing new. Homicide had been declining in D.C. before the 1976 ban, but increased after the ban
was imposed. By 1991, D.C.'s homicide rate had risen more than 200%. By comparison, the U.S. homicide rate rose
only 12% during the same period. Since then, the District has ranked at, or near, the top of the list for highest
per capita murder rate of major cities in the nation. If gun bans work, how can this tragic and shameful
distinction possibly be?
In the wake of his most recent ordeal, Barry called for a summit of the city's leaders
to address the "pandemic" of gun violence in the District. Clearly, he and the law-abiding citizens of the District
of Columbia would be better served by a summit convened to call for the enactment of S. 1082 and H.R. 1288--the
Senate and House versions of the "District of Columbia Personal Protection Act."
As we continually note, this
legislation seeks to restore the constitutionally-guaranteed Second Amendment rights of the law-abiding residents of
the District of Columbia. It would allow these citizens to lawfully defend themselves and their families from
violent crime. It is time to pass this critically important and obviously necessary law.
Please be sure to
contact your U.S. Senators and Representative and ask them to cosponsor and support S. 1082 and H.R. 1288.
For a
list of Senate cosponsors, please visit
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?
d109:SN01082:@@@P.
For a list of House cosponsors, please visit
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?
d109:HR01288:@@@P.
You can call your U.S. Senators at (202) 224-3121, or your U.S. Representative
at (202) 225-3121.
Poetic justice!
To compel a man to subsidize with his taxes the propagation of ideas which he disbelieves and abhors is sinful and tyrannical.
Thomas Jefferson
Poetic justice indeed! And
despite all the evidence,he still clings to flawed ideal that guns are the problem.I find it cute that his little
criminal buddies had the audacity to hold him at gun point.After all,he did try to make nice and be thier
friends.What wonderful friends criminals make.
If nothing else, it was good
for a chuckle this morning. It couldn't have happened to a better person.
To compel a man to subsidize with his taxes the propagation of ideas which he disbelieves and abhors is sinful and tyrannical.
Thomas Jefferson
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