Put Prospective Gun Owners Under The Microscope
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- Anyone who can't withstand a rational debate on the subject of gun
control -- particularly in light of last week's Sandy Hook Elementary School
massacre in Connecticut -- should be automatically prohibited from ever owning a
firearm. In fact, this should be the number-one requirement of gun ownership:
Can someone applying for ownership of a deadly weapon withstand an hour-long
debate against someone in favor of gun control without resorting to physical or
verbal assault?
Is it too much to ask that every person wanting to possess a firearm be subject
to a battery of tests -- everything from intelligence and emotional quotient
exams to a psychological evaluation and background check? When America's
Founding Fathers drew up the Second Amendment, they didn't do so with the
mentally stunted, emotionally disturbed and deeply insecure in mind. Back in
their time, life was relatively challenging unto itself, and they must have
figured that anyone who could survive day-to-day existence could surely handle a
firearm if need be.
A question that has repeatedly come up since the Sandy Hook shootings is why
America has so much more gun violence than other Western nations. The best
explanation is that the Constitution defines and underpins culture. In fact,
nearly every element in any Western democracy can be traced back to its
constitutional roots.
The Second Amendment gives Americans the right to bear arms, but in other
countries -- Canada, for example -- the right to own a gun is not a given. The
onus is on an individual to prove he's mature, competent and sane enough to own
one. As a result, no one in Canada grows up thinking of guns as a natural
appendage. Gun ownership is seen as a privilege one must earn. Is there really
anything so backward about that? Or is it preferable to arm everyone and pray
for the best?
Canadian law requires a license and a safety course in order to own, borrow or
store any sort of firearm. Police conduct a criminal background check and a
safety screening to ascertain whether an applicant has "threatened or attempted
suicide, suffered from or been diagnosed or treated by a medical practitioner
for: depression; alcohol, drug or substance abuse; behavioral problems; or
emotional problems," or "been reported to the police or social services for
violence, threatened or attempted violence, or other conflict in your home or
elsewhere," or recently suffered a relationship breakdown, job loss or
bankruptcy. If an ex-wife tells the cops that perhaps you are not sane, then too
bad for you.
Such a regulatory process also means fewer guns floating around. But what if a
criminal did happen to be packing heat? Would you wish that you had a weapon so
you could have a movie-style shootout? No, you would swallow your pride and let
him take what he wanted, then call the insurance company.
Believe me, I understand the acute frustration one feels when being robbed or
otherwise victimized. I was mugged on the subway in Paris last year. We both
could have had guns, but thankfully neither of us did in a country with tight
gun control. (The perpetrator would have had the advantage of foresight anyway,
while I would have fumbled around trying to find mine.)
So how can America go about fixing its gun laws? Well, it's complicated, because
all the crazies are mixed in with the sane gun owners. Since there was no sanity
litmus test at the outset, how about implementing mandatory license renewal
complete with psychological evaluations and background checks? Anyone failing to
comply with a basic psychological competency test should have his weapons
revoked.
It would likely take at least a generation to better balance individual gun
rights with everyone else's right to their own day-to-day freedom and safety,
but the shift in cultural mind-set needs to start somewhere.
COPYRIGHT 2012 RACHEL MARSDEN