One of the unavoidable tragedies of youth is the temptation to think that
what is seen today has always been. Nowhere is this more noticeable than in our
responses to the recent Parkland, Florida, massacre. Part of the responses to
those murders are calls to raise the age to purchase a gun and to have more
thorough background checks — in a word, to make gun purchases more difficult.
That’s a vision that sees easy gun availability as the problem; thus, the
solution is to reduce that availability.
The vision that sees “easy” availability as the problem ignores the fact of
U.S. history that guns were far more available yesteryear (http://tinyurl.com/y73sw4ev).
With truly easy gun availability, there was nowhere near the gun mayhem and
murder that we see today. I’m tempted to ask those who believe that guns are
today’s problem whether they think that guns were nicer yesteryear. What about
the calls for bans on the AR-15 so-called assault rifle? It turns out that
according to 2016 FBI statistics, rifles accounted for 368 of the 17,250
homicides in the U.S. that year. That means restrictions on the purchase of
rifles would do little or nothing for the homicide rate. Leaders of the gun
control movement know this. Their calls for more restrictive gun laws are part
of a larger strategy to outlaw gun ownership.
Gun ownership is not our problem. Our problem is a widespread decline in
moral values that has nothing to do with guns. That decline includes disrespect
for those in authority, disrespect for oneself, little accountability for
anti-social behavior and a scuttling of religious teachings that reinforced
moral values. Let’s examine elements of this decline.
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If any of our great-grandparents or even grandparents who passed away
before 1960 were to return, they would not believe the kind of personal
behavior all too common today. They wouldn’t believe that youngsters could get
away with cursing and assaulting teachers (http://tinyurl.com/ya5zhyu6).
They wouldn’t believe that some school districts, such as Philadelphia’s,
employ more than 400 school police officers. During my primary and secondary
schooling, from 1942 to 1954, the only time one saw a policeman in school was
during an assembly period where we had to listen to a boring lecture on safety.
Our ancestors also wouldn’t believe that we’re now debating whether teachers
should be armed.
There are other forms of behavior that would have been deemed grossly
immoral yesteryear. There are companies such as National Debt Relief, CuraDebt
and LendingTree, which advertise that they will help you to avoid paying all
the money you owe. So after you and a seller agree to terms of a sale, if you
fail to live up to your half of the bargain, there are companies that will
assist you in ripping off the seller.
There are companies that counsel senior citizens on how to shelter their
assets from nursing home care costs. For example, a surviving spouse may own a
completely paid-for home that’s worth $500,000. The costs of nursing home care
might run $50,000 a year. By selling her house, she could pay the nursing home
costs, but her children wouldn’t inherit the house. There are firms that come
in to shelter her assets so that she can bequeath her home to her heirs and
leave taxpayers to foot the nursing home bill. In my book, that’s immoral, but
it is so common that most of us give it no thought.
There is one moral failing that is devastating to the future of our nation.
That failing, which has wide acceptance by the American people, is the idea
that Congress has the authority to forcibly use one American to serve the
purposes of another American. That is nothing less than legalized theft and
accounts for roughly three-quarters of federal spending. For the Christians
among us, we should consider that when God gave Moses the commandment “Thou
shalt not steal,” he probably didn’t mean thou shalt not steal unless you get a
majority vote in the U.S. Congress.
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Walter E. Williams is the John M. Olin
distinguished professor of economics at George Mason University, and a
nationally syndicated columnist. To find out more about Walter E. Williams and
read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the
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