Rosie's Dead Wrong
Rosie's Dead
Wrong
by C.
Dodd Harris IV
Rosie O'Donnell is a modern day wonder of the
world. American liberals do not have a monopoly on making their own hypocrisy
into virtues, but Rosie takes the cake and eats it, too. An ardent supported of
what she calls "sensible gun legislation" (defined as "licensing
and registering of all guns in America") she was shunted not so long ago
from making a little cash on the side by flacking for K-Mart because that
company is the third-highest volume seller of firearms. Now she's back, making
even bigger waves because her bodyguard has applied for a concealed carry
permit.
Now Rosie is by no means the first gun-grabber
to decide she herself needs the protection of a firearm while continuing to work
to the rescind that right for the unwashed masses. Every constitutionalist worth
his salt will spew a steady and reliable stream of invective merely at the
mention of the name Dianne Feinstein. We all know, as well, that Saint Hillary's
bodyguard recently left her purse in a washroom and that it was found to contain a
handgun. Sly Stallone, not the most liberal guy in Hollywood (which, I suppose,
is akin to saying Deng Xiaoping was an admirer of Edmund Burke), has openly
advocated house-to-house searches to confiscate other people's handguns, but he
himself maintains an apartment he never visits in Culver City, CA because the
local sheriff is pretty easy to get a concealed carry permit from - if you
happen to be a celebrity, anyway.
But, even compared to such luminaries of the
do-as-I-say-not-as-I-do set, Rosie is in a class by herself. She has the
requisite blind spot for her own behaviour that is the hallmark of the liberal,
to be sure. But few are as blatant about their hypocrisy. Steven Spielberg is
rumoured to have one of the largest private firearms collections in Los Angeles
County yet he donates considerable time and money to the likes of Bubba, Algore,
Boxer and Feinstein. For myself, I don't call that hypocrisy, because I've never
personally heard the man express a desire to take a right he enjoys from others.
Rather, I call it doing a poor job of looking out for one's own interests.
Rosie, by contrast, positively wallows in such fine distinctions.
If the inconsistencies were all there was to
it, we could write her off as an ordinary limousine liberal. But she's more
dangerous than that. First of all, she has a bully pulpit from which to opine at
will to a loyal following. Second, she has a distinctly skewed view of the facts
and isn't shy about spreading it around.
Pressed, surprisingly, to justify the apparent
hypocrisy by Katie Couric on a recent episode of the Today Show, Rosie
demonstrated her willful ignorance in Technicolor. Lets consider some of her
statements (on Today and elsewhere) and see if she knows of what she speaks….
"[O]ur main goal is… not to take
anyone's gun. Not to take away Charlton Heston's gun or any other law abiding
citizen's gun. We're trying to regulate an industry that's not regulated. The
Consumer Product Safety Commission regulates every product made in the United
States, it has to adhere to safety standards. Every product except guns…. Well
you can make a gun, it doesn't have to adhere to any safety standard, it can
drop it, it can shoot, it can have as many clips loaded into it as they want.
You know it's basically, totally an unregulated industry because of the pressure
that they've had in the Congress and Senate."
Seems reasonable on the surface, I suppose, but
it's flawed in several ways. For one, the CPSC only regulates every product in
America in Hillary Clinton's dreams. For another, firearms are subjected to very
strict quality assurance - without the help of government regulators - if for no
other reason than that our out of control tort system (a subject for another
column) assures the industry that they will be sued down to the fillings in
their teeth if they put out a shoddy product and someone gets hurt by a
malfunction. I could go on, but this is just smoke she's blowing. It gets worse.
"I hate to disappoint the gun lobby but
it would've been a big feather in their cap had they found an unlicensed,
unregistered gun on the bodyguard of one of America's most vocal gun control
advocates."
She's speaking here of the allegedly illegal
search of her bodyguard by police in Connecticut. And she's right, to a point.
It would indeed have been a feather in our caps, of a sort, had her bodyguard
been found to be carrying a weapon illegally. But then, given the proclivities
of the mainstream media - the media that essentially ignored similar revelations
about the First Lady, perhaps it wouldn't have mattered much. In any event,
Rosie's providing us plenty of fodder as it is. This one's a trifle.
"[T]he Second Amendment has been
interpreted by the Supreme Court to be regarding 'a well-regulated militia.'
That the Second Amendment refers to 'a well-regulated militia.' The Supreme
Court has continually upheld this and it never ever was interpreted that the
Second Amendment meant individual's rights to bear arms."
Here's where we begin to get into the serious
errors. She's deluding herself in the same way that so many of her ilk are prone
to do. The Supreme Court has never - not once - held that the Second Amendment
serves only to secure a well-regulated militia. In fact, the Court has scarcely
ever heard a Second Amendment case. The closest they have come to this was in Miller
v U.S.. In that case, they upheld the defendant's conviction on an interstate
firearms violation on the grounds that the sawed-off shotgun could not be shown
to have any reasonable relationship to maintaining a well-regulated militia.
It's not such a stretch to get to the position that that case stands, therefore,
for the proposition that the Amendment exists to secure a militia, but even that
position does not rule out the correct interpretation: That the Second Amendment
was ratified to codify an already existing, individual right.
In fact, so ubiquitous is this constitutional
interpretation that one of the lone legal scholars who agrees with Rosie has
dubbed it the Standard Model. And the Supreme Court agrees, though you won't
hear this from Rosie. The Court unanimously affirmed in United States v.
Verdugo-Urquirdez (1990) that, where the Constitution uses the phrase "the
People" - and, yes, they did explicitly include the reference to The People
in the 2nd Amendment - that usage consistently refers to individuals and, where
they meant the States, the Founders said so explicitly.
"There are 12 children killed everyday in
America. When I stand up and say cystic fibrosis, pediatric AIDS, childhood
cancers everyone says isn't she great? More kids die from gunshot wounds than
those three diseases combined every year. It is an issue of child advocacy for
me. And the NRA and the gun lobby can try as hard as they want to scare me, to
threaten me, to make me into a hypocrite. This is what I believe and I will not
be quiet about it."
This "statistic" is so typical of
gun-grabbers it tires me to deal with it. The stat is true if you define the
word children to include 19 year-old drug dealers - which is how the people who
are promulgating it defined the term. But, as with the apparently specific but,
in fact, meaningless term "assault weapons", the purpose of their
usage is not to inform but to obfuscate. People will be horrified to learn that
12 children die from guns a day because they will envision a crowd a tots on
their way to second grade viciously mown down in the street.
The reality is that only a handful of such
(real) children are killed by firearms every year. In 1997, the National Center
for Health Statistics reported a total of 21 accidental handgun deaths for
children through age 14. You read correctly: 21. Check
it yourself if you don't believe me (look under ICD 922.0 for handgun
accidental deaths). Each and every one is a tragedy, yes - and no-one means to
belittle it by pointing out how the gun-grabbers are abusing those tragedies -
but the fact remains that more children die by drowning in bathtubs or by
ingesting household chemicals.
On whether the NRA cares about children:
"I would say, maybe their own kids, but not kids in general. The only life
that is important to them is white, Republican life. Regardless of skin color,
it offends me when someone is shot dead in America. [The NRA's position] is
based on financial gain, not patriotism or love of children."
So there you have it: The NRA only cares about
white, Republican lives. As an NRA member, I do not feel I need to dignify this
comment with a response (note to the chuckling detractors: This does not mean I
don't have one!).
Rosie perceives a threat to her family (in
Greenwich, CT!), allegedly because she's a gun control advocate, and see no
contradiction in hiring armed guards to meet that threat. Yet she would deny you
and me - who cannot afford bodyguards - the same right to take responsibility
for our own protection. I do not believe her when she says she only wants
licensing and registration. Those measures always lead to confiscation. Her
allies admit that their goal is an outright ban on civilian ownership of
handguns. (cf. - Peter Shields, Founder, Handgun Control, Inc., 1976:
"We'll take one step at a time, and the first is necessarily... given the
political realities... very modest. We'll have to start working again to
strengthen the law, and then again to strengthen the next law and again and
again. Our ultimate goal, total control of handguns, is going to take time. The
first problem is to make possession of all handguns and ammunition (with a few
exceptions) totally illegal.")
I for one, will not stand idly by while
hypocrites try to strip me of my Constitutional rights - and call me a greedy
racist to boot. I urge everyone to boycott Rosie's show, her movies, and any
products she endorses. We Constitutionalists are the real silent majority -the
NRA would have no clout were we who are its members not so numerous. It's time
we stood up and were heard, instead trying to placate our enemies to avoid
sounding like "extremists."
C. Dodd Harris IV writes a
regular column for The
Potato, and can be reached at muaddib@free-market.net