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Back-door gun control


Date: Tue, 14 Aug 2001 10:06:30 -0700 (PDT)
From: robert n lyman <rlyman@u.washington.edu>
To: editpage@seattle-pi.com
Subject: "Hold gun makers liable for safety"

To the editor, Seattle PI

In your Aug. 14 editorial, you quite reasonably conclude that gun makers, much like knife makers and car makers, cannot be held liable for the criminal use of non-defective products. You back up this conclusion with sound logic and helpful analogies.

Then, at the tail end of your commentary, you turn a full 180 degrees and declare that while gun makers aren't responsible for criminal misuse, they ARE somehow liable when children find their parent's gun, supposedly because the industry has not moved quickly enough to develop "safety" technology. This makes absolutely no sense.

The most cursory glance through any gun magazine will reveal a myriad of products designed prevent unauthorized use of firearms, ranging from the downright dangerous $10 trigger lock to the nearly impenetrable $3000 hardened steel safe. For a price which is usually a fraction of the price of their gun collections, parents can easily secure their firearms out of reach. The only people responsible for failing to do so are the parents themselves, and certainly not the manufacturers.

As for "accidental" discharges, very few gun safety experts will acknowledge that there is such a thing. The proper term is "negligent discharge," and it results, again, not from defective design, but from the failure of the person holding the gun to obey safe handling rules. Guns are SUPPOSED to go bang when you pull the trigger; if you pull it when you aren't supposed to, that is entirely your fault. No safety device can correct for stupidity.

Modern firearms, even without the meddling of ignorant liberal nanny-statists, are among the safest, best designed consumer products on the market. Death and injury due to defects are extraordinarily rare. It is frankly difficult for this gun owner to believe that the government can improve on the record of quality which reputable manufacturers enjoy. I have no objection to lawsuits over defective products, but that would mean none against the gun industry. Nor is their any justification for the Consumer Product Safety Commission to begin harassing gun makers and their customers.

Your editorial looks to me like a call for back-door gun control.

Robert Lyman
Seattle

P.S. By the way, the claim that "gun violence" "costs" $100 billion annually is a fraud. Educate yourselves by reading: https://www.keepandbeararms.com/information/XcIBViewItem.asp?id=2010 or else just pick up the book Gun Violence: The Real Costs by Ludwig and Cook and see if you think their methodology makes sense.


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