Date: Thu,  4 Jan 96 09:10:00 UTC 0000
From: [j--e--l] at [genie.com]
To: [gr conf] at [mainstream.com], [n--b--n] at [mainstream.com]
Subject: "Cease Fire, Ed Asner!"
Message-ID: <[199601040932 AA 082897922] at [relay1.geis.com]>

The following article is under submission. Reproduction
in computer file and message bases is permitted for informational
purposes only. Copyright (c) 1996 by J. Neil Schulman.
All other rights reserved.




                      CEASE FIRE, ED ASNER!

                       by J. Neil Schulman


     Been watching TV recently? Or picked up a magazine? You've
probably seen a TV spot with Ed Asner ("Lou Grant") speaking in
somber tones, or a full-page ad in _Time_ or _The National
Enquirer_, warning you about gun violence. This campaign is being
run by a group calling itself Cease Fire, and they're trying to
convince you that keeping a gun at home is more likely to cause
harm to you or to someone in your family than it's likely to
protect you from a criminal who invades your home.

     Ed Asner tells you about a young boy who "accidentally"
shoots his brother with a handgun he's been playing with. Of
course Asner _doesn't_ mention that, according to the National
Safety Council, firearms accidents account for only 3 percent
of accidental deaths for children aged 14 or under -- far fewer
deaths than those due to auto accidents, drownings, or fires.

     Cease Fire's ads claim that a gun kept in the home increases
the chance of a homicide in that home by three times. Of course
they never mention that, according to the 1993 National Self
Defense Survey conducted by criminologists at Florida State
University, 1.7 _million_ times each year a gun kept in the home
protects an American family from a criminal intruder. That's 216
times more often than a gun kept in the home takes the life of a
an innocent resident of that home.

     That's the whole trick which advocates of banning guns use
to convince the public that guns are too dangerous to keep
around. They just choose what they think will scare you the most.
They never tell you what Paul Harvey calls "the rest of the
story."

     Statistics are funny things. They tell you only what you
ask them about. Suppose you wanted to convince people that guns
are too dangerous to keep in their houses. You'd look at
death statistics until you noticed that while lots of Americans
who commit suicide at home do it with a gun, very few criminals
who break into houses are killed with guns. So you'd take these
suicides and just for good luck throw in the occasional
accidental gun death and family murder which uses a gun, and --
lo and behold! -- you have a "study" by Dr. Arthur Kellermann
published in the June 12, 1986 _New England Journal of Medicine_
which says that a gun kept in the home for protection is 43 times
as likely to kill a family member than to kill a burglar. By the
time the news media are done with their spin-doctoring, pundits
tell us that a gun kept in the home is 43 times as likely to
murder a family member than to _protect_ you from a burglar.

     I'm not exaggerating. A few weeks ago I participated in a TV
news discussion of gun control with Molly Selvin, who sits on the
editorial board of the _Los Angeles Times_, and Sandy Cooney of
Handgun Control, Inc. Molly Selvin misquoted that Kellermann
article in precisely that way.

     Of course Molly Selvin probably never read Kellermann's
article closely enough to discover that 37 of those 43 non-
burglars are those Americans who used a gun to kill themselves.
She undoubtedly is also unaware that five separate studies of
suicide show that people who are determined to kill themselves
just choose another way to die if their first choice isn't
available. In a study by Rich _et al_ reported in the March, 1990
issue of _The American Journal of Psychiatry_, Canadians who
wanted to commit suicide but found guns harder to come by due to
recent gun control instead jumped off bridges. The
unavailability of guns was statistically irrelevant. Further, in
Japan it's almost impossible for _anyone_ to get hold of a gun,
yet twice as many Japanese kill themselves than Americans.

     Cease Fire's campaign doesn't tell you that in the
overwhelming majority of cases where a gun is used in defense
against a criminal, the gun is never even fired, much less is
used to shoot or kill the criminal. So if you're only counting up
the criminals killed by guns for your comparison, as did
Kellermann, you're leaving out all the criminals who didn't
complete their intended crime -- burglary, rape, or even a serial
murder -- because the criminal's intended victim had a gun and
was prepared to use it in defense.

     The funny thing about the people who tell you these
statistics is that even when you prove to them that their
statistics are deceitful, they still refuse to believe it. So,
when two criminologists at Florida State University released the
results that the National Self Defense Survey had determined
2.45 million private gun defenses in America during the preceding
year (the 1.7 million is just those that occurred in or around the
gun-defender's own home), gun-ban advocates did everything they
could to attack the results.

     In that same TV news show with Molly Selvin and me, Handgun
Control, Inc.'s, Sandy Cooney called the National Self Defense
Survey "obscene" and threw _ad hominem_ slurs at its lead
researcher, professor of criminology, Dr. Gary Kleck. Mind you,
since Kleck is an impartial social scientist with no links to
gun advocates or manufacturers -- in fact he's a liberal
Democrat -- it appears that Kleck's only sin is doing research
which produces results that challenges the gun-control agenda of
Handgun Control, Inc., and Cease Fire.

     On that program opposite me, when I argued defensive-gun-use
statistics from the National Self Defense Survey, Cooney charged
that Kleck, the lead criminologist who designed the study, had
kept changing his figures. That is simply wrong. Kleck had
previously only analyzed the results of a dozen surveys conducted
by others including Democratic Party pollsters and _Time_
magazine. This had already produced estimates of a million gun
defenses per year. Kleck included his analysis in his book _Point
Blank: Guns and Violence in America_ (Aldine de Gruyter, 1991).
When Kleck analyzed the data from the National Self Defense
Survey, he found that the number of yearly gun-defenses was
simply higher than previously reported due to the incompleteness
of each of the previous surveys, none of which attempted to
quantify gun defenses comprehensively.

     Cooney also charged that the results of the National Self
Defense Survey had never been peer-reviewed. But it was my fault
that he believed that. In 1993 when the survey was first
conducted, I convinced Gary Kleck to give me preliminary results
of the survey in a newspaper interview I did with him, because
his previous analysis was being widely quoted in other news
articles. Dr. Kleck generously allowed me to include some of
these figures in my interview with him in the September 19, 1993
_Orange County Register_ [*] and these preliminary results,
drawn from my interview, were widely quoted, including in
testimony before the House Subcommittee on Crime in March, 1995.
Because of the slowness of the academic publishing and peer-
review process, the formal report on the survey titled "Armed
Resistance to Crime: The Prevalence and Nature of Self-Defense
with a Gun" by Gary Kleck and Marc Gertz, was only just published
in Northwestern University Law School's _Journal of Criminal Law
and Criminology_, Volume 86, Number 1, Summer, 1995 issue ... and
it wasn't actually printed until December, 1995. If that's not
tediously slow enough for you, I spoke to Dr. Kleck today,
January 3, 1996 ... and he _still_ hasn't received his personal
copy in the mail.

     But the foremost criminologist in the country, Dr. Marvin
Wolfgang -- who has been a consistent advocate of banning guns --
wrote in that issue of the _Journal of Criminal Law and
Criminology_ that the National Self Defense Survey was indeed
conducted properly and that he (Wolfgang) must revise his
opinions on the common usefulness of firearms in defense
accordingly.

     That, Mr. Cooney, is called "peer review."

     Because I was one of the first laymen to discuss the results
of the National Self Defense Survey with Dr. Kleck, and
consequently have been thinking about these results for longer
than other writers, every once in a while I've been calling
Dr. Kleck and asking for other comparisons between the criminal
uses of guns and their defensive uses. Usually, Dr. Kleck would
either tell me the figures were in his book _Point Blank_, or he
told me that nobody had studied the particular question I was
asking and, to the best of his knowledge, nobody knew the answer.

     Today I did somewhat better. I said to Dr. Kleck, "We're
always being told by gun-ban advocates that the majority of
homicides in this country are committed with guns. Has anybody
looked at the percentage of _justifiable_ homicides committed
with guns ... that is, a number which tells us how often guns are
legitimately used by a private individual to kill a criminal in
self-defense as opposed to other types of weapons?"

     It turned out that these figures _were_ available. At my
request, Dr. Kleck today took them out of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation's "Supplementary Homicide Reports public use
tapes," distributed by the Inter-University Consortium for
Political and Social Research, National Archive of Criminal
Justice Data, P.O. Box 1248, Ann Arbor, MI  48106-1248.

     According to Dr. Kleck's analysis of this FBI data reporting
civilian (non-police) justifiable homicides in the United States
between 1976 and 1991, 87.3 percent of justifiable homicides are
accomplished using a gun. Of those justifiable homicides where the
_type_ of gun was recorded, 78.6 percent of these justifiable
homicides was conducted with a _handgun_.

     Compare this with homicides in general (65.1 percent use a
gun) or _other_-than-justifiable civilian homicides, where only
64.7 percent of the homicides involved the use of a gun.

     So here's a brand new sound bite for you, courtesy of my
question today to Dr. Kleck, and his analysis of FBI statistics:

     "Almost nine out of ten times that Americans had to kill a
criminal in defense, they used a gun. And that's about 25
percent more often than guns are the weapon of choice for
a murder."

     Got all that, Ed Asner? "Lou Grant" always told the truth.
You may not be a newspaperman, but you played one on TV. I'm
eagerly awaiting the TV spots in which you do what newspapers
do when they learn they've made a mistake: issue a retraction
and inform the American people that you didn't tell them the
whole story.

                               ##

     [*]Reprinted in _STOPPING POWER: Why 70 Million Americans
Own Guns_ by J. Neil Schulman (Synapse-Centurion, 1994).


 J. NEIL SCHULMAN is the author of two Prometheus award-
 winning novels, _Alongside Night_ and _The Rainbow Cadenza_,
 short fiction, nonfiction, and screenwritings, including the
 CBS Twilight Zone episode "Profile in Silver."  His previous
 nonfiction book was _STOPPING POWER: Why 70 Million Americans Own
 Guns_. Dr. Walter E. Williams says of Schulman's latest book,
 _SELF CONTROL Not Gun Control_, "Schulman interestingly and
 insightfully raises a number of liberty-related issues that we
 ignore at the nation's peril. His ideas are precisely those
 that helped make our country the destination of those seeking
 liberty. The book's title says it all: personal responsibility,
 not laws and prohibitions, is the mark of a civil society."

     Schulman has been published in the _Los Angeles Times_ and
 other national newspapers, as well as _National Review_,
 _Reason_, _Liberty_, and other magazines. His _LA Times_ article
 "If Gun Laws Work, Why Are We Afraid?" won the James Madison
 Award from the Second Amendment Foundation; and in November,
 1995, the 500,000-member Citizens Committee for the Right to
 Keep and Bear Arms awarded Schulman its Gun Rights Defender
 prize. Schulman's books have been praised by Nobel laureate
 Milton Friedman, Anthony Burgess, Robert A. Heinlein, Colin
 Wilson, and many other prominent individuals. Charlton Heston
 said of _STOPPING POWER_: "Mr. Schulman's book is the most
 cogent explanation of the gun issue I have yet read. He
 presents the assault on the Second Amendment in frighteningly
 clear terms. Even the extremists who would ban firearms will
 learn from his lucid prose."

                              ***

"Schulman interestingly and insightfully raises a number of
liberty-related issues that we ignore at the nation's peril.
His ideas are precisely those that helped make our country
the destination of those seeking liberty. The book's title
says it all: personal responsibility, not laws and prohibitions,
is the mark of a civil society."
     Professor Walter E. Williams, Chairman Department of Economics
     George Mason University Fairfax, Virginia

"I kept wanting to share this essay or that poem with someone who
would get the same sense of confirmation I had."
     Andrea Millen Rich, LAISSEZ FAIRE REVIEW

SELF CONTROL Not Gun Control
by J. Neil Schulman
Publisher: Synapse--Centurion
$24.95 U.S.; $32.95 Canada
ISBN: 1-882639-05-7

PLEASE encourage all gun rights activists to ask the manager or
assistant manager of their local chain bookstore -- Barnes &
Noble/Bookstar/BookStop/B. Dalton, Waldenbooks/Borders, Crown,
etc. -- about when they are getting in _SELF CONTROL Not Gun
Control_. This will be an enormous help in getting the chains
to order the book.

    Reply to:
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