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  32
 | L. Neil Smith's
 THE LIBERTARIAN ENTERPRISE
 Number 32, August 1, 1997
 
 
 
Rights vs. Social Utility
By Sarah Thompson, M.D.
[email protected]
 
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
 
         I recently 
received an e-mail from some gun rights advocates which 
proposed the following:
 
 
    1. The Constitution is the standard argument for the right to 
       keep and bear arms.2. "Joe and Jane Sixpack", not to mention "Joseph and Janet
       Champagne", don't think the Constitution matters.
 3. Scholars such as Kleck, Kates, and Lott have demonstrated 
       that firearms ownership has social utility.
 4. Therefore, we should abandon the Second Amendment as the 
       basis of our arguments and attempt to persuade the public 
       to accept gun ownership on emotional terms as having "social
       utility".
 
         My response follows.
It is true 
that "Joe and Jane Sixpack" don't care a bit about the 
Constitution.  It is sad, but true, that most of the justices don't 
either.  But think about what you're proposing.  Do you really want to 
concede, a priori, that the Constitution is irrelevant, that all 
that matters is "social utility"?  Do you want to change the rules of 
engagement so that pragmatism trumps rights?  If you do so, I maintain 
that the battle, and the war, are irrevocably lost.
 Rights are 
unchanging and immutable, because they are of nature, 
or God, if you're so inclined.  "Social utility" is so inconstant and 
capricious as to be virtually meaningless.  If, someday, someone comes 
up with statistics that refute Kleck and Lott, will you then willingly 
turn in your firearms?
 And who 
gets to define "social utility" anyway?  It was of 
tremendous social utility for the British to disarm the lawless and 
rebellious colonists.  It was of equally great social utility for 
Hitler to disarm Jews and anyone else who didn't support him.  The 
current administration thinks it is social utility to label any and 
all dissenters "terrorists", and then to deprive them of all rights, 
harass, disarm, and imprison them. Is that really what you want?
 Make no 
mistake:  the argument is most assuredly not about the 
relative niceties of self-defense against muggers and rapists.  I'm 
not discounting this aspect; as a woman, and former victim, I know how 
important it is.  But ultimately the argument is about tyranny; not 
just the tyranny of one stronger person against one weaker person, but 
the tyranny of any government, state, church or group that wishes to 
inflict its will on any other individual or group by force.
 There's 
nothing wrong with Kates's, Kleck's or Lott's work.  It's 
excellent, but it's totally irrelevant to rights.  Its utility is 
in demonstrating conclusively that those who favor gun control are de 
facto supporting murder, rape and assault against innocent citizens. 
However, if you use social utility as your primary argument, you are 
playing the enemy's game.  But the enemy, and its ministry of 
propaganda, the media, are infinitely better at playing it, and have 
infinitely more resources, than the right to keep and bear arms 
movement ever will.  Never, ever agree to play by the enemy's rules!
 While 
it's true, as was stated in the letter, that the law rarely 
establishes norms but rather follows cultural norms, this is no 
argument for basing laws on opinion polls and then trying to influence 
the polls.  It's bad enough that Congress operates that way.
 Perhaps 
I'm confused, but I thought the goal of all this was to 
create and preserve a culture where respect for the Constitution, 
respect for individual rights and liberties is the norm!  If, 
instead, the goal is for us gunowners to be safe from "bad guys", 
while we ignore our neighbors being dragged off to prison in the 
middle of the night, maybe we all need to reevaluate what we're doing 
and why.
 Remember 
that Prime Minister Tony Blair admitted openly that the 
disarmament of British subjects had nothing to do with safety and 
everything to do with eliminating the influence of the "American gun 
culture".  He was successful, and the vast majority of British 
"sheeple" happily agreed to be disarmed, foolishly believing that they 
were creating a "safer society".
 Expect no 
less here.  We are living in a fascist state that is 
just beginning to consolidate its powers.  I predict that genocide 
will be attempted against gun owners here as well.  We will be 
declared "enemies of the state" and "social utility" will be defined 
as disarming, or exterminating, gunowners and anyone else misguided 
enough to take the Constitution literally.  The reason we are being 
"allowed" "permits" is to drug us into forgetting about rights, and to 
lure us into putting our names and firearms and fingerprints into 
databases.
 Legislation 
is meaningless.  The Constitution is all the 
"legislation" we need.  What we must do is to reclaim our rights 
regardless of what Congress does or does not do.  An unconstitutional 
law is no law at all.
 We do need 
to educate the people, but not to accept the social 
utility of firearms.  Those who would be citizens of a free state must 
be educated to understand the concepts of  individual rights, 
responsibilities and liberties.  Any other path is tyranny.  Any other 
path is doomed.
 Sarah Thompson is a writer, physician, ex-activist and self-proclaimed 
pot-stirrer.  She has written on topics including the Constitution 
(particularly the Second Amendment), activism, Waco, Jews and 
firearms, and is currently working on her first novel.  Sarah is also 
Director of Women's Affairs for Doctors for Integrity in Policy 
Research and has testified and lectured on the social utility of 
firearms.  She lives in Sandy, UT with her husband and two cats.
 
 
 
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