Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

A Georgia Town Once Required All Residents to Own a Gun: The Results Were Astonishing
NN ^ | 05-29-21 | Jay Greenberg

Posted on 05/29/2021 8:53:05 AM PDT by McQ444

click here to read article


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-28 last
To: McQ444; rustyweiss74; gaggs; ANDmagazine.com; hassan.mahmoud; WTanner1776; Steve1999; ...

Again with the spamming??

McQ444, you’re one of the few Hit and Run spammers left. The rest have mostly quit or been zotted. In the words of Chris Rock, “What are you, a Betamax?”

There is a FReepathon going on!

When you’re not posting clickbait, how about a donation?

This is the FreeRepublic “Post and Run” Ping List. The FR “Post and Run” Ping List is comprised of folks who post clickbait threads and then rarely if ever reply to posts.

“Post and Run” Ping list members: Your donations are needed during this FR Fund Raiser. FR members pay for you to post your hit and run threads for free. Your donations are needed to pay back FR members who pay for your free use of FR bandwidth.

Please donate here.

https://freerepublic.com/donate/

The “Post and Run” ping list is on my home page.

To be removed from this list, reply to this post.


21 posted on 05/29/2021 11:19:48 AM PDT by Larry Lucido (Donate! Don't just post clickbait!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: McQ444

Hey, McQ444, check out this thread:

Dear FRiends, Our FReepathon is lagging behind and we need your help to get caught up. [Thread XLIX]

https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3960569/posts

Oh, right, you don’t read posts. You’re a spammer!


22 posted on 05/29/2021 11:20:25 AM PDT by Larry Lucido (Donate! Don't just post clickbait!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: McQ444

Your blog is all cut and paste. No need to post as clickbait.

**********

As Joe Biden and the Left continue to go after the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding American citizens, we don’t have to go very far back in the history books to see an example that throws all their anti-gun arguments out the window.

In 1982, a town in Georgia introduced a law requiring all residents to own a gun.

And while many Democrats may balk at such a plan, the astonishing results speak for themselves.

Kennesaw, Georgia has grown quite a lot in recent years with the addition of Kennesaw State University.

However, in 1982 it was a relatively quiet suburb of Atlanta with a population of about 5,000.

At the time, Kennesaw City Council decided to pass an ordinance requiring all heads of households to possess a firearm at home.

Professor Gary Kleck studied the Kennesaw law and its impact

It began as a somewhat symbolic effort to protest the outright ban on handgun ownership in Morton Grove, Illinois, according to The Daily Wire.

This new ordinance, however, would lead to startling results in crime reduction.

TRENDING: A Georgia Town Once Required All Residents to Own a Gun The Results Were Astonishing

Professor Gary Kleck, a lauded criminologist and Professor Emeritus at Florida State University, detailed the outcome of the city ordinance in a 1988 study for the academic journal, Social Problems, that included an “89 percent decrease” in burglaries:

“Finally, the deterrent effect of civilian gun ownership is supported by the experience of Kennesaw, Georgia, a suburb of Atlanta with a 1980 population of 5,095…To demonstrate their disapproval of a ban on handgun ownership passed in Morton Grove, Illinois, the Kennesaw City council passed a city ordinance requiring heads of households to keep at least one firearm in their homes. In the seven months following passage of the ordinance (March 15, 1982 to October 31, 1982), there were only five reported residential burglaries, compared to 45 in the same period in the previous year, an 89 percent decrease…This drop was far in excess of the modest 10.4 percent decrease in the burglary rate experienced by Georgia as a whole from 1981 to 1982, the 6.8 percent decrease for South Atlantic states, the 9.6 percent decrease for the United States, and the 7.1 percent decrease for cities under 10,000 population…”

Of course, this is just one of the many examples Kleck provides in his innumerable studies on the subject of legal gun ownership as a highly effective deterrent against crime.

In the same study, Kleck noted that “subway robberies decreased by 43 percent” in New York City after an armed citizen “used a handgun to wound four robbers.”

Kleck was quick to point out that there may have been some correlative value to that finding due to an additional increase in police presence.

Still, such transparency and academic rigor only bolster his comprehensive research.

Elsewhere in the study, Kleck details how, in 1967, the Orlando Police Department trained some 2,500 women in the use of firearms after a spike in sexual assaults.

As a result, incidences of rape plummeted by 89 percent in Orlando, while “[t]he rape rate remained constant in the rest of Florida and in the United States.”

Not only did training a large number of women in the proper use of firearms act as a massive deterrent against sexual assault, Kleck noted that it prevented other criminal activity as well, pointing out that it also lead to “a substantial drop” in burglaries throughout the city.

Kleck’s tireless research going back decades alongside Kennesaw’s unusual but effective city ordinance demonstrates time and again that a civilian population trained in the proper use of firearms serves as an effective deterrent against violence and crime.

A deeper dive into gun ownership and crime prevention

Far from being some antiquated study, Kleck’s findings on the Kennesaw city ordinance are as true today as ever.

Unfortunately, such details are often buried, hidden, or simply discarded by the legacy media in their dogged efforts to ban firearms.

Writing for the Foundation for Economic Education, Lawrence W. Reed argues that “[l]iberty isn’t the only thing likely to be lost when gun laws are passed to appease emotions over reason.”

Reed then asks in the exhausting, decades-long debate, “How many lives are actually saved by gun ownership?”

A compelling question the “grandstanders and ideologues” on the Left refuse to acknowledge or answer.

He offers some noteworthy facts which — at the very least — foster an actual discussion on the many merits of gun ownership:
•Guns prevent an estimated 2.5 million crimes a year, or 6,849 every day. Most often, the gun is never fired, and no blood (including the criminal’s) is shed.
•Every year, 400,000 life-threatening violent crimes are prevented using firearms.
•60 percent of convicted felons admitted that they avoided committing crimes when they knew the victim was armed. Forty percent of convicted felons admitted that they avoided committing crimes when they thought the victim might be armed.
•Felons report that they avoid entering houses where people are at home because they fear being shot.
•Fewer than 1 percent of firearms are used in the commission of a crime.

The Heritage Foundation also provides an extensive database of Americans who “successfully defended their liberties, lives, or livelihoods with the lawful use of a firearm.”

The database is reinforced by the findings of the CDC and provides conclusive evidence contrary to all the hubris and hoodwinking of anti-gun crusaders:

“According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,” The Heritage Foundation continues, “almost every major study on defensive gun use has found that Americans use their firearms defensively between 500,000 and 3 million times each year.

“There’s good reason to believe that most defensive gun uses are never reported to law enforcement, much less picked up by local or national media outlets…[I]t highlights just a fraction of the incredible number of times Americans relied on the Second Amendment — not the government getting there in time — to protect their inalienable rights.

“Despite the limitations on data, these confirmed cases of defensive gun use help prove that the ‘good guy with a gun’ is not a myth, but an integral part of American society.”

Finally, Amy Swearer of The Daily Signal gives a wise summation of legal gun ownership after providing an extensive list of Americans who successfully defended themselves with a firearm in one month alone: “The exercise of Second Amendment rights in defense of self or others is not a rare or extraordinary event, but a daily occurrence in the lives of ordinary Americans doing ordinary things.”

What about the constant specter of mass shootings?

Charles C.W. Cooke’s brilliant 2018 essay for the National Review written in the wake of the El Paso shootings is proving to be a prescient piece on the pressing issue of mass shootings and gun control.

To be sure, Cooke is quick to denounce the El Paso shooter as “a young white-supremacist man” compelled by an “abhorrent, villainous ideology.”

Cooke, however, adamantly refuses to cede to the overtures from the Left that such horrific events serve as an indictment against “the United States as a whole” and — by extension — the Second Amendment.

“Now, as ever,” Cooke writes, “the quality of a free society is measured by how that society protects its liberties when they have been abused, not by how well it celebrates them when they are under no strain.

“What happened in El Paso was an unconscionable disgrace, and, when we have finished reflecting upon it, we should exert great effort in considering how we might prevent its like from happening again.

“But if we turn against our key strengths in the process, we will achieve a Pyrrhic victory at best, and, at worst, end up dismantling our inheritance for a mess of pottage.”

Cooke also cites the findings of the RAND Corporation whose “relevant academic research… failed to find a single gun-control policy that has been proven to reduce mass shootings in the United States” at the time.

As heinous and frightening as mass shootings are, they do not contribute in any statistically significant way to the supposed data on gun violence.

It’s the staggering and tragic spectacle of such macabre events that provide fodder to the many irrational arguments put forth by the detractors of the Second Amendment.

In 2018, UC Davis Health reported that mass shootings contributed to only “0.2% of total firearm deaths.”

More importantly, firearm-related homicides are far below the peak that occurred almost fifty years ago in 1974, according to the Pew Research Center:

“On a per-capita basis, there were 12 gun deaths per 100,000 people in 2017 — the highest rate in more than two decades, but still well below the 16.3 gun deaths per 100,000 people in 1974, the highest rate in the CDC’s online database.”

the left continues to attack the second amendment rights of law abiding americans
© press

The Left continues to attack the Second Amendment rights of law abiding Americans

Sadly, suicides dominate the majority of firearm deaths, indicating — once again — far, deeper and malignant issues in our nation that so many refuse to consider or acknowledge.

That something as simple as a city ordinance requiring gun ownership could dramatically cause the crime rate to plummet should be evidence enough on the merits of firearms as a deterrent.

Yet, the fatiguing, dogmatic refrains opposed to the Second Amendment continue to drown out common sense, let alone actual data and evidence.

As this shrill chorus continues to grow, one can’t help but conclude that many on the Left stand in opposition to the very idea of America itself.


23 posted on 05/29/2021 11:22:23 AM PDT by Larry Lucido (Donate! Don't just post clickbait!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Bob434
Usually people get arrested for owning a gun

If the government treated the first amendment like the second people would be arrested for owning a newspaper OOPS I forgot the hate speech laws are coming where you will get arrested for owning the wrong sort of paper.

24 posted on 05/29/2021 12:17:04 PM PDT by from occupied ga (Your government is your most dangerous enemy - EVs a solution for which there is no problem)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 19 | View Replies]

To: libertylover

Early on, states had gun laws requiring firearms ownership - with specified supplies - and exceptions for such as the infirmed. The penalties were fines, which were directed to be used to buy firearms for those who could not afford them.

One of the arguments that had been used against states attempts to outlaw or limit firearms ownership is that it deprives the federal government of the ability to call upon the citizens of those states as militia.


25 posted on 05/29/2021 1:59:28 PM PDT by lepton ("It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into"--Jonathan Swift)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: McQ444

Used to be several states that required you to bring a shotgun to church. Most of those laws repealed once the Indian attacks subsided. :D


26 posted on 05/29/2021 2:00:15 PM PDT by LeoTDB69
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Larry Lucido; SunkenCiv; Liz; Kaslin

Ah, but two people have been shot to death since the gun law was enacted in 1982. (The town is now about 40,000, including many tens of thousands of liberal students at KSU - a definite threat to peace.) The first gun death was a woman fromout-of-state shot in a Motel 6 in Kennesaw by her boyfriend. She was, of course, unarmed.) The second was a Kennesaw resident, a Kennesaw police woman shot to death while on duty. By a Marietta cop. On the Marietta police range.


27 posted on 05/30/2021 6:51:21 PM PDT by Robert A Cook PE (Method, motive, and opportunity: No morals, shear madness and hatred by those who cheat.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 23 | View Replies]

To: Robert A Cook PE; AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Arthur Wildfire! March; Berosus; Bockscar; ...
Thanks RACPE.

28 posted on 05/30/2021 6:53:25 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 27 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-28 last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson