All's Quiet on the Potomac - Except for the
Gunfire
by
Joseph Pickett
June 8, 2003
KeepAndBearArms.com -- Each
summer, bright-eyed, bushy-tailed college graduates descend upon Washington,
D.C. to start their careers by working in the marbled halls of Congress and in
the plush offices of powerful lobbyists and attorneys with Important Hair. They
are young, single, and idealistic.
They take up residence in the
hip parts of the city - Dupont Circle, Adams Morgan, Capitol Hill. They rub
elbows with Important People, soak up the city's rich night life and revel in
the hustle and bustle of an Important City in the flower of their youth. After a
few years, most of them fall in love and marry (or co-habit, then marry).
When the time comes to raise
their families, however, most of them turn tail and run for the suburbs of
nearby Maryland and Virginia like bats out of hell. The District is fine for
making a living and for looking at marble statues, but when the sun sets, those
of above-average intelligence head across the river. This mass exodus is real
and persistent, year after year. Washington, D.C. has lost about 250,000
residents since the mid-70s, many of them upper middle class professionals.
Why?
Particularly since the advent
of home rule in 1973, the city has been transformed into a high crime
mini-welfare state. Under convicted
crackhead Mayor Marion Barry (elected 4 times, which solidified D.C.'s
national laughingstock status), the D.C. government expanded to a mind-blowing
48,000
employees between 1982 and 1990. Impressive -
almost 1 bureaucrat for every 10 residents. Most families looking to
settle down avoid D.C. like the black death, unless
they are rich elites like Hillary Clinton, who can afford the super-expensive,
super safe parts of the city, or the working poor who lack the resources (or
knowledge) to pick up and move.
The biggest reason many don't
want to raise their children in The District is that D.C. is an exquisitely safe
community - for criminals. Innocent people have an unfortunate tendency to be
stabbed or shot there on a daily basis. Young parents find this a
less-than-ideal area to raise their children (it's hard for a little one to
learn to read when bullets are flying past his head). More than 300 people were
killed in D.C. in 2002 - about a 1 per day average. Police Chief Charles Ramsey
has admitted the department has a less than 50% solve rate on murders, with some
detectives solving none at all. In typical D.C. fashion, Ramsey didn't offer his
resignation for this travesty. In fact, there is talk of Ramsey even getting a
$25,000 pay raise! In D.C., nothing pays like catastrophic incompetence.
A look at D.C.
crime rates bears this out. Shield your kids' eyes, this
ain't pretty:
1999 Statistics (Per 1,000
residents):
DC - 81
Prince George's County MD -
53
Alexandria City VA - 47
Arlington City VA - 33
Montgomery County MD - 31
Prince William Country VA -
29
Loudoun County VA - 24
Fairfax County VA - 24
And in 2000,
D.C. was among the
nation's leading cities, in the murder rate per 100,000 residents. What
sentient human would raise a child in an environment where guns are banned from
the hands of the law-abiding and blood runs in the streets?
Given that much safer
environs are just a few miles away, across the Potomac, it's easy to see why
young families move away from the District. Nearby Maryland and Northern
Virginia have significantly lower crime rates, with Northern Virginia ranking
the lowest. A big reason for this is gun control, but not in the way many think.
A typical person who gets
news from the mainstream press might think that the more difficult it is to buy
a gun, the less crime for the area.
Wrong.
The wise city fathers
virtually banned legal ownership of firearms in the city in 1976. The result was
a skyrocketing crime
rate. For example, in 1976, there were 702,000 citizens living in D.C.
There were 188 murders. In 1996, there were 543,000 residents in D.C. and
397 murders. The average criminal doesn't obey the law in any case, so gun laws
mean nothing to them. Restrictive gun laws are usually obeyed only by the
law-abiding, which leaves them defenseless to criminals. In D.C., they have a
high crime rate and virtually no gun ownership by law-abiding citizens. This is
a recipe for disaster that is supported by the statistics.
In Virginia, it is much
easier to purchase a gun, and quite easy to obtain a concealed-carry permit.
This terrifies gun control folks, but think about it:
If a criminal has a choice to conduct business between a region where some
average citizens carry guns (Virginia) and one where no one does (D.C.), where
will most criminals go to do their dirty work? Look at the crime statistics for
proof - guns in the hands of private citizens lower crime. In Maryland, it is
more difficult to buy guns and very difficult to obtain a permit to carry. The
crime rates there are naturally higher.
Another reason for the high
crime rate in D.C. is the lack of a death penalty. D.C. citizens like to treat
their murderous felons with compassion, and the horrid crime rates show it.
Maryland is a bit better, where 3 people have been executed since 1976. But
Virginia is decidedly criminal-unfriendly, with 81 executions since 1976, the
second highest in
the nation behind Texas. Criminals understand - if you want to kill someone,
stay out of Virginia. Maryland, and especially D.C., are
much safer for the criminal element.
There is some hope for those
in D.C. who obey the law. A group of D.C. residents are
suing
the city for denying them their Second Amendment rights. Perhaps in the
future, citizens will have the right to defend themselves again in the District,
and young families will consider taking up residence in the city again. For now,
however, the criminals rule D.C., and the law-abiding vote with their feet by
taking their families and tax dollars to safer suburbs in Virginia and Maryland.
Joseph Pickett is a
full-time and freelance writer from Winchester, Va. He lived in Russia for three
years and brought home a number of souvenirs, including a wife and son. Since
returning to America, he has become a so-called 'extremist' - that is, a
supporter of the Bill of Rights as written. He has had a variety of conservative
political commentary published at The Washington Times, The Washington Dispatch,
CNSNews.com, the Sierra Times, and also history and family articles at
Countrylife.net and CWiPremium.com. He is also a CCW holder and is the proud
owner of a Kahr K-9 9mm. Visit his website at
www.josephpickett.com.