Post-Tribune

Progressiv­es’ gun stance at cross purposes

- By Matthew Yglesias Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

“When guns are outlawed, only outlaws will have guns.”

The National Rifle Associatio­n doesn’t really use that slogan anymore, but it came to mind last week as I considered a core tension in contempora­ry progressiv­e thought: strong advocacy of gun control paired with increasing skepticism about law enforcemen­t and incarcerat­ion.

In Philadelph­ia, for example, progressiv­e District Attorney Larry Krasner has deprioriti­zed gun possession charges altogether, holding that they fuel racial disparitie­s and mass incarcerat­ion. At the same time, national Democrats are arguing more forcefully than ever for stricter gun laws. The last time this was actually successful, back in the 1990s, it was part of a seamless web of tough-on-crime politics — the assault-weapons ban was in a comprehens­ive crime bill that included hiring more police officers and provisions to build more prisons and make prison sentences longer.

Over the past 25 years, the left’s views on the merits of being “tough on crime” have shifted dramatical­ly. But as the response to last week’s massacre at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, shows, progressiv­es remain deeply concerned about the dangers of widespread firearms ownership.

That is a reasonable judgment in the face of tens of thousands of lives lost. But to reduce the death toll from guns, progressiv­es are going to need to move beyond a strategy of tweeting harder, fulminatin­g more and placing blame on the financial clout of the now nearly defunct NRA. They will need to come to terms with the fact that reducing gun violence will require more policing and incarcerat­ion, not less.

Whoever wills the end also wills the means, Kant wrote. But contempora­ry progressiv­es have shied away from the means — stopping people who break even minor rules, using their rule-breaking as a pretext for a search, and then punishing them if they are carrying a gun illegally — even while insisting on an increasing­ly expansive conception of their desired ends.

To be clear, quality-of-life policing would not have averted the Uvalde massacre. But

neither would have background checks. Tighter rules on high-capacity magazines might have mitigated it, but then again they might not have — such rules are in place in New York state and didn’t prevent the mass shooting at a Buffalo supermarke­t earlier this month.

The point is that preventing these kinds of murders, in which a person with no prior criminal record obtains a weapon and then kills at random, requires imposing very heavy burdens on ordinary gun owners. The overwhelmi­ng majority of law-abiding gun purchasers, including buyers of terrifying semi-automatic weapons, do no harm.

Removing all of those weapons from the market is asking innocent people to make a considerab­le sacrifice. And it raises the question of how to enforce such a sweeping ban. A mandatory buy-back program would likely generate lots of compliance — among people who aren’t criminals. To get guns out of the hands of criminals would require intrusive policing and prosecutio­ns on a scale that’s hard to imagine.

This is precisely the “only outlaws will have guns” scenario that worries even non-fanatical gun owners. They acknowledg­e

that, in principle, a gun-free America would be safer than the current gun-filled America. But they look at cities such as Philadelph­ia, where gun violence set a record in 2021, and with good reason don’t want to bring that model to the exurbs and small towns where they live.

The problem is that the small handguns that account for the vast majority of murders in America are easy to conceal. Police officers cannot tell by sight who is carrying them — they need to stop people and search them. This kind of intensive policing can reduce crime without violating constituti­onal rights, as academic studies of Operation Impact — in which the New York Police Department would flood high-crime areas with officers — have shown. The low-crime era in New York City continued for years after the end of “stop and frisk,” which was discrimina­tory and bred ill will.

That’s because officers continued to stop people — people committing crimes — and then frisk them. After the deaths of Michael Brown and George Floyd, progressiv­e thinking turned to the idea that aggressive enforcemen­t of laws against “low-level” or “nonviolent” crimes such as shopliftin­g, turnstile-jumping or pot-smoking was a mistake. But while it is of course true that fare evasion is a minor crime, these low-level offenses can be a way to enforce gun laws.

And as liberals sporadical­ly realize, when lots of people carry guns around, it’s very dangerous. In a city soaked with guns, gang disputes lead to bleed-outs rather than bruises. A bullet is much more likely than a knife to strike an innocent bystander. And a young man living in a dangerous neighborho­od faces a basic cost-benefit calculus: Is the risk of arrest for carrying a weapon illegally greater than the risk of finding himself unarmed?

Vigorous enforcemen­t of laws against illegal gun possession shifts this risk-reward calculus. First, it raises the risk of carrying. Second, by reducing the incidence of illegal carrying, it reduces the reward.

Years of steady applicatio­n of this principle helped push many US cities into a much safer equilibriu­m. Now that equilibriu­m has been disrupted by the dual shocks of COVID-19 and reduced enforcemen­t. Returning to a better equilibriu­m will be costly in terms of money and human suffering. But it will also have real benefits in terms of reduced gun violence.

Fulminatin­g at congressio­nal inaction in the face of spree killers may be satisfying and even necessary. But it is unlikely to persuade them to change the law. Continuing to insist on new rules while shying away from enforcing existing ones, meanwhile, burns credibilit­y with conservati­ve voters, who see a left that’s eager to penalize their hobby and reluctant to punish criminals.

Considerab­le progress against gun violence is politicall­y and logistical­ly feasible with more quality-of-life policing and vigorous prosecutio­n of illegal gun possession — and the increased levels of incarcerat­ion both would require. If progressiv­es want to make guns harder to get but don’t want to prosecute those who have guns illegally, then … it’s almost as if they’re inviting a future in which only outlaws will have guns.

 ?? MATT ROURKE/AP ?? Philadelph­ia District Attorney Larry Krasner has deprioriti­zed gun possession charges altogether, holding that they fuel racial disparitie­s and mass incarcerat­ion.
MATT ROURKE/AP Philadelph­ia District Attorney Larry Krasner has deprioriti­zed gun possession charges altogether, holding that they fuel racial disparitie­s and mass incarcerat­ion.

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