Did you know that about 60 Million Americans own an estimated 300 million guns. The average total civilians gun ownership in the U.S. outnumbers anyone else with India in second with 46 million civilian gun ownership’s.
While these numbers are a source of controversy, is disarming the population a solution to the violence we face? Even when we try to restrict gun ownership it does not effectively deter crime. Thus, if we as a country focus on controlling violence, rather than guns themselves, then the right to bear arms as the Second Amendment grants us, may not be as lethal as those on the left may think.
Joining the Cyclists to discuss this controversial issue is New York Times editor Craig Whitney who re-examines America’s relationship with guns in his book Living with Guns: A Liberal’s Case for the Second Amendment.
Be sure to tune in at 3:40 p.m. for the full conversation and check out an excerpt from his book below.
Excerpt from Living with Guns: A Liberal’s Case for the Second Amendment by Craig R. Whitney. Copyright 2012 by Craig R. Whitney. Excerpted with permission of PublicAffairs, a member of the Perseus Books Group.
America grew up with guns, my generation learned when we were kids in the 1950s. The West was won with guns, John Wayne and James Arness told us on screens big and small. G Men, The Untouchables, and Bonnie and Clyde, all seem pretty tame today, with movies that show bullets tearing into flesh and gore spurting out, or brains slowly sliding down blood-spattered walls after a shot to the head, in one film after another, not to speak of video games where you can inflict terminal injury yourself, at least on digital adversaries.
Entertainment aside, Americans identify themselves in part by metaphors and symbols based on firearms, and myths whose power derives from their basis in truth — the shot heard ’round the world, the Minutemen who won (or at least started) the Revolutionary War, Wild Bill Hickok and the gunslingers who tamed the West. Even our language smells of gunpowder. “She’s a real pistol.” “I’ve got him in my sights.” “Half-cocked.” “Loaded for bear.” “Stick to your guns.” “Under the gun.” “Gun-shy.” “Trigger-happy.” “Lock, stock, and barrel.” If it hadn’t been for a .38 pistol that little Louis Armstrong found in his mother’s trunk one Christmas week in New Orleans, we wouldn’t have “Satchmo” — he was arrested for illegal possession of a firearm after firing off six blank shots one night during street celebrations and sentenced to the Colored Waifs’ Home for Boys. There he learned to play the cornet, and changed the course of American music.
In those days, a hundred years ago, gun rights were not the controversial subject they later became. Guns were in common use then, not just in New Orleans but all over America. Regulations abounded — state and local regulations, for safety and order — as they had since colonial days. The national problem of organized crime that arose in the wake of Prohibition prompted the first federal gun-control laws, but there was little public objection to keeping the mob from getting its hands on machine guns, which had not been used in militia service in the early days of the republic and therefore were considered not to be protected by the Second Amendment. The guns that were owned by civilians were, by and large, long guns, meaning rifles and shotguns, and they were used mainly for hunting. In the 1930s, long guns outnumbered handguns seven to one.









