Did California Do-Gooders Finally Go Too Far?
By Vin Suprynowicz 
[email protected]
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
          Is it possible that -- even in California -- folks have finally 
had enough of Big Brother?
          In recent years, the Golden State has become infamous as a testing 
ground for new limits on personal freedom.  California led the nation 
with seatbelt and helmet laws, as well as strict emission controls 
which effectively banned some imported cars and motorcycles.
          At a Jan. 28 press conference in Rocklin, California, Air Force 
veteran William Doss turned in to local police for confiscation his 
SKS sporter semi-automatic rifle.  In a 1995 letter, the California 
Department of Justice had told Doss it was legal to bring his rifle 
with him when he moved from Florida, even though it had a legally- 
purchased aftermarket detachable magazine.
          But last Nov. 24 state Attorney General (and now gubernatorial 
candidate) Dan Lungren reversed himself, issuing a letter that 
declared such 40-year-out-of-date weapons are now illegal under the 
state's Roberti-Roos "assault weapon" ban, and -- unless thousands of 
law-abiding Californians can prove they acquired their rifles prior to 
June 1, 1989 -- "must be relinquished to a local police or sheriff's 
department" ... a taking without compensation.
          Another first for California!  "We are no longer debating gun 
control.  We are now debating gun confiscation," said NRA spokeswoman 
Tanya Metaksa, "a nightmare faced by thousands of law-abiding 
Californians who were told all would be well if only they registered 
their guns."
          Radios on the beach?  Bottles of beer?  In some parts of 
California it's even illegal to cook outside over a charcoal grill.
          And public resistance was slow to mobilize.  While, on other 
issues, California has led the nation with grassroots campaigns to 
limit property taxes and to legalize marijuana for medical use, the 
average Californian apparently just couldn't bring him or herself to 
oppose anything peddled as furthering the "public health and safety."
          But as the dragnet spread wider, the first spark of resistance did 
appear last year.  When Los Angeles banned powered leaf-blowers (noise 
pollution and fumes, for heaven's sake,) the gardeners whose jobs 
depend on such equipment promptly staged noisy blow-ins, and even went 
on hunger strikes.
          Then, on Jan. 1, a new state law went into effect, banning smoking 
in all California bars and card rooms.
          Bar owners reported business reductions of 30 to 70 percent.  Bay 
101, the San Jose card club, reported a drop of only 10 percent ... 
but found that sufficient to require the lay-off of 70 employees.
          Downtown San Jose's Cinebar complied with the ban for two weeks -- 
until business fell on weekends from full houses to a half-dozen 
regulars.
          Then a funny thing happened.  To all appearances, Californians 
just snapped.
          "Barely a month into California's ban on smoking in bars, the law 
is being attacked, defied and just plain ignored in a backlash that 
has spread from neighborhood watering holes to the state Legislature," 
report Ariana E. Cha and Elise Banducci of the San Jose Mercury News. 
"In San Jose, barkeepers are mailing thousands of 'I'm a Constituent, 
Not a Criminal!' postcards to legislators.  In Sacramento, a judge has 
temporarily barred police officers from citing smokers at bingo 
parlors."
          So loud and widespread has been the civil disobedience that the 
state Assembly on Jan. 28 voted 42-24 to scrap the law for at least 
two years.
          Not only that, it appears freedom may be contagious.  On the same 
day, the California Assembly actually voted 41-30 to once again allow 
adults to choose for themselves whether to ride motorcycles without 
safety helmets.
          Oh, the humanity!
          Of course, neither of those votes is yet confirmed by the state 
Senate, or signed by Gov. Pete Wilson.
          But the trend is encouraging.
          Now -- before California liberties reach the degraded state of the 
Japanese, who cheerfully welcome police into their homes in an annual 
search for drugs, guns or any other contraband -- if the gang in 
Sacramento would only find enough residual backbone to rip up that 
"assault weapons" ban, and cry "Enough, no more!"
#  #  #
          Also from the Golden State, Dr. Edgar Suter, national chairman of 
Doctors for Integrity in Policy Research, reports Prof. Gary Kleck's 
new book, "Targeting Guns: Firearms and Their Control" is now 
available for $24.95 from the publisher, Aldine de Gruyter, at 
914-747-0110, or from http://www.Amazon.com.
(CLICK TO ORDER)
          "Of special interest to the medical community is the extensive and 
meticulously documented chapter on deceit in the scholarly 
literature," reports Dr. Suter.  "Of special interest to Canadians is 
the scrupulous exposition of Thomas Gabor's deceit in his report to 
the Canadian Department of Justice, a report that was so influential 
in Great Britain's post-Dunblane gun legislation hysteria."
Vin Suprynowicz is the assistant editorial page editor of the Las 
Vegas Review-Journal.  Readers may contact him via e-mail at 
[email protected].  The web site for the Suprynowicz column is at 
http://www.nguworld.com/vindex//  The column is syndicated in the 
United States and Canada via Mountain Media Syndications, P.O. Box 
4422, Las Vegas Nev. 89127.  Vin's forthcoming book, a collection of 
columns with the working title Send In The Waco Killers, will be 
published this May by Huntington Press.