Against Gun Bans and Restrictive Licensing: Essays in Philosophy
Against Gun Bans and Restrictive Licensing: Essays in Philosophy
Against Gun Bans and Restrictive Licensing: Essays in Philosophy
Volume 16
Article 3
Issue 2 Philosophy & Gun Control
7-7-2015
Recommended Citation
Hsiao, Timothy (2015) "Against Gun Bans and Restrictive Licensing," Essays in Philosophy: Vol. 16: Iss. 2, Article 3. http://dx.doi.org/
10.7710/1526-0569.1531
Essays in Philosophy is a biannual journal published by Pacific University Library | ISSN 1526-0569 | http://commons.pacificu.edu/eip/
Against Gun Bans and
Restrictive Licensing
Timothy Hsiao
Florida State University
Abstract
Arguments in favor of an individual moral right to keep and
bear firearms typically appeal to the value of guns as a
reasonable means of self-defense. This is, for the most part, an
empirical claim. If it were shown that allowing private gun
ownership would lead to an overall net increase in crime or
other social harms, then the strength of a putative right to own
a gun would be diminished. But would it be defeated
completely? I do not think so, and indeed I want to suggest in
this paper that even if the harms outweigh the benefits, that
neither an outright ban on handguns nor restrictive
discretionary ownership policies are justified as an initial
reaction. In other words, given that the overall harms outweigh
the overall benefits, the default position is still one in favor of
reasonably permissive gun laws over a total ban or restrictive
discretionary policies.
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i
Wurzelbacher (2014).
ii
See Wheeler (1997), Hughes and Hunt (2000), Huemer (2003), Hall
(2006), Stell (2006), Hunt (2011), and Bernstein et al. (2015:
forthcoming). I use ‘guns’ and ‘handguns’ synonymously in this paper.
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iii
This is a dubious assumption, but one that I grant for the sake of
argument. Kovandzic et al. (2013) found that a 10% increase in
noncriminal gun prevalence would substantially reduce both the gun
homicide and total homicide rates. Kleck (2015) assessed 41 English-
language studies and found that those claiming to support the ‘more
guns, more crimes’ hypothesis failed to control for three critical
methodological problems. However, “research that avoids or minimizes
these flaws consistently finds no support for the hypothesis.”
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iv
Leshner et al. (2013: 15). Those interested in reading about particular
instances where guns were used defensively can consult the National
Rifle Association’s Armed Citizen database, which collects news stories
of defensive gun uses. <http://www.nraila.org/gun-laws/armed-
citizen.aspx>
v
Critics of Kleck and Gertz sometimes argue that their numbers are
inconsistent with estimates taken from the National Crime
Victimization Survey (NCVS). However, as Kleck (1997a; 1997b;
2001) points out, the NCVS is not specifically designed to measure
defensive gun use. Additionally, an anonymous reviewer objects that
‘the reporting of self-defense with a gun is problematic because in
many of these studies, the stats can be skewed because an individual
can believe that owning a gun has led to greater safety by preventing
harm. Hence, according to the gun owner, the gun has helped defend
his or her family.’ However this is simply not true. The surveys in
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and Santana (2010) found that the odds of robbery and rape
completion were decreased by 93 and 92 percent when a
victim resisted with a gun. It should also be noted that in
the vast majority of cases where guns were used
defensively, the gun was not fired. According to Kleck
(1999: 297), “there are about 7,700 to 18,500 reported legal
shootings of criminals a year, which would be less than 1%
of all defensive gun uses. The rest of defensive gun uses,
then, involve neither killings nor woundings but rather
misses, warning shots fired, or guns used to threaten, by
pointing them or verbally referring to them.” Lott (2010)
found that in most cases, simply brandishing a gun was
sufficient to repel an attack.
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viii
See Baker (2014) and Hunt (2011) for a critique of their derivation
of the right to own a gun.
ix
For example, Wheeler (1997) and Hall (2003) analyze the strength of
gun rights in terms of risk, whereas Huemer (2003), Hunt (2011), and
Baker (2014) analyze gun rights in terms of a basic means-to-end
condition.
x
Even outweighed rights exert residual force that require us to ensure
that any trumping is no more than is necessary to uphold a more
important interest, and perhaps to render restitution for damages
incurred.
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Consider other risky activities that the state does not ban
wholesale, even though the harms seemingly outweigh the
benefits. Excessive alcohol consumption, for instance, is
associated with more than 88,000 deaths annually. xi Yet
the state does not ban alcohol, even though the health
benefits of alcohol consumption are relatively minor when
compared to the lives saved by using guns in self-defense.
Instead, the state enacts measures so as to minimize the
irresponsible consumption of alcohol while
simultaneously recognizing the rights of those who can
responsibly consume alcohol by allowing qualified
persons to imbibe. A complete ban on alcohol may, we
suppose, achieve the end of harm-reduction, but such a
policy needlessly eliminates the many social benefits
associated with alcohol. If such a policy is justified with
respect to alcohol, then it is all the more justified when it
comes to gun ownership, especially given the substantial
benefits of guns considered earlier.
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xii
Dixon (2011: 161).
xiii
Also see Baker (2014) for a response.
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xiv
Huemer (2003: 303) suggests this response on behalf of the
prohibitionist.
xv
If we look at data regarding the firearms-related revocation rates of
individuals licensed to carry concealed weapons, we can see that at
least one form of pre-screening schema is effective at excluding those
for whom some kind of firearms-related activity is counterproductive.
Lott et al. (2014) notes that revocation rates for Florida, Michigan, and
Texas (states which account for 2.5 million of over 11.1 million current
licensees) are extremely low. In the case of Florida, the annual rate of
firearms-related violations by concealed weapons license holders is
0.003 percent, compared to a national rate of 0.007 percent for police
officers. Those who are licensed to carry concealed weapons appear to
be extremely law-abiding. It is not far-fetched to think that a similar
system would be effective at detecting those for whom gun ownership
in general is counterproductive.
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xvi
DeGrazia (2014a: 17).
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xvii
Thanks to Victor Hohlacov for discussion on this point.
xviii
One might wonder if this rules out training requirements as well,
since training requirements require an applicant to demonstrate
competence, which might seem to assume that one’s right to own a gun
is defeated until proven otherwise. This is not the case. Need-based
requirements are unjustified because the very idea of having a right to
engage in some activity precludes the need to give an additional reason
to do so (the right itself functions as the reason). But since competence
is presumed in having the right to own a gun (having the right to own a
gun for self-defense assumes that one is capable of using a gun for that
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V. CONCLUSION
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REFERENCES
xxii
James Stacey Taylor, Caroline Buchanan, C’Zar Bernstein, an
anonymous reviewer, and an audience at the University of Kentucky
provided very useful feedback on earlier versions of this paper.
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202
Wurzelbacher, S. (2014). “An Open Letter: To the Parents
of Victims Murdered by Elliot Rodger.” Joe for America.
<http://joeforamerica.com/2014/05/open-letter-parents-
victims-murdered-elliot-rodger> (Accessed 2/20/14)
203