China Tallies Our Rights Record
The
U.S. and guns, according to them.
By
Dave Kopel of the Independence
Institute
March
18, 2002 9:35 a.m.
he
government of China has just issued this year's "Human
Rights Record of the United States." Much of the report consists of
pseudo-factoids created by Leftist interest groups, allegedly showing what
a terrible country America is. The leadoff item is an extended complaint
about American gun ownership.
The Chinese government frets that "The United States is the country with
the biggest number of private guns." We are also, of course, the country
with the biggest number of private books, private churches, private
newspapers, private computers, private single-family homes, and other
tools and incidents of freedom. It is no coincidence that America is a
simultaneously a well-armed and a prosperous nation, for both traits stem
from America's culture of freedom and individualism.
The Chinese report accurately states that "The US National Association of
Education estimates that about 100,000 students in the United States take
arms to school every day," although this factoid is utterly false. The
100,000 figure is very loosely taken from Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention surveys asking teenagers in grades nine through twelve, "During
the last 30 days, how many times have you carried a weapon, such as a gun,
knife, or club, for self-protection or because you thought you might need
it
in a fight?" [Centers for Disease Control, "Weapon-carrying among High
School Students — United States, 1990" Morbidity and Mortality Weekly
Report, vol. 40, (no. 40, Oct. 11, 1991): 681-84.]
The 100,000 factoid assumes that every respondent who carried a gun at
least once carried a gun to school every day. In fact, the data suggested
that most of the students did not carry a gun every day, but only
occasionally. And the students were not asked if they carried a weapon at
school. Thus, the "yes" answers applied to occasional carrying anywhere,
such as in an automobile when driving at night in dangerous neighborhoods,
or when driving a pickup truck while working on the family ranch.
Part I of the
Chinese report concludes: "In recent years, voices for controlling guns
and eliminating the culture of violence have been running high. On
Mother's Day on May 14, 2000, women from nearly 70 cities in the United
States staged a 'Million Moms Mother's Day March,' demanding that the US
Congress enact a strict gun control law. However, voices of the common
people can hardly produce any results." By providing the name of the
march, but not the actual number of marchers, the report elides the fact
that the so-called "Million" antigun protesters actually amounted to about
100,000. In 2001, the "Million"
dwindled to a mere hundred at the Washington rally.
Antigun bigots were far outvoted in November 2000 by human-rights
advocates, and even President Clinton acknowledged that Second Amendment
advocates were the main reason that George Bush is president and the House
is Republican. Thus, current pro-rights attitudes in the federal
government do reflect "the voices of the common people."
It is in China, of
course, where "the voices of the common people" are suppressed by a
dictatorship that is so afraid of the common people that no elections are
held and the press is rigorously censored. Further demonstrating the
Chinese government is not a "dictatorship of the proletariat," but a
dictatorship of a self-serving, rapacious, wealthy, and hegemonic elite is
China's very
repressive gun control, which authorize the death penalty for
"serious" cases of illegal gun sales or possession.
The gun-banning
Chinese regime unintentionally proves its illegitimacy by distributing
Mao's "Little Red Book," which contains
Mao's dictum: "Every Communist must grasp the truth, 'Political power
grows out of the barrel of a gun.'" (From "Problems of War and Strategy,"
Nov. 6, 1938.) Neither Mao nor his successors wanted "the common people"
to have any political power, and therefore the common people are prevented
from possessing arms. If the Chinese people were as well armed as the
American people, China would soon have a very different government.
As the Declaration
of Independence affirms, the only legitimate governments are those whose
power derives from the consent of the governed. Because, as China's gun
laws demonstrate, China's rulers lack such consent, China's dictators are
no more of a legitimate "government" than the hundred marchers in
Washington were really a "million" mothers.
Finally, the
Chinese human rights report omits any mention the most important human
rights effect of widespread firearms ownership: deterring genocide. Every
government which perpetrated genocide in the 20th century made sure that
its victims were
disarmed first. This includes the regime of the hideous tyrant Mao
Zedong, which the current Chinese government continues to extol as the
"Great Leader." If the Chinese people had been as well armed in the Mao
years as the American people are today, the wicked Mao wouldn't have been
able to murder so many of them.
The number of Chinese, Europeans, and others murdered by genocidal regimes
in just a few years far outnumbers the number of people killed by ordinary
criminals worldwide in the entire 20th century.
Germany has
confronted its genocidal past. China's failure to confront its own culture
of government-sponsored violence and genocide is one more reason why the
thuggish Chinese "government" is not a member of the community of
civilized nations. One day, though, China's gun-banning dictatorship will
join China's "human rights" reports on history's ash heap of discarded
lies.
|