Thoughts on this? I'm thinking of sending it to Councilman Chang:
Aloha Councilman Chang
I have read a draft of the resolution in the subject and hereby lodge my disagreement with it. I strongly urge you to avoid proceeding with it.
The primary reason why I disagree with the resolution is the fact that the steps it suggests will not address the issues identified.
We have seen what happens in cities with strict gun laws. Chicago has some of the strictest gun laws in the United States, yet there were 514 murders there in 2012, 441 of which involved guns. Of those 441 that involved guns, ALL of them were perpetrated with handguns. None involved rifles or "other firearms."
Note that these numbers are AFTER the laws preventing private ownership of handguns were lifted and marked a DECREASE in overall crime rates - nearly 20,000 fewer violent crimes than 10 years prior and 6,000 fewer than the last year the handgun ban was still in effect (2009.)
The point to make here is that the vast majority of gun crimes across the US (not just Chicago) involve guns that aren't the scary, 'evil black rifle' type on which your resolution would place such stringent restrictions.
The second reason I object to this resolution is that, historically, imposing strident gun control measures usually results in an INCREASE in crime and does very little to reduce crime involving firearms. By definition, criminals just don't care about gun laws, so the only people affected are the normal, well-adjusted average citizens who are subsequently bereft of their most immediate defense against someone that wishes to do them or their families harm in their own homes.
I want to bring up a third point. I think this is a good thing, but you may disagree: By attempting to push this resolution through you serve to unite people in opposition to it, thereby undermining your position as a gun control advocate. I am one of them and I don't even own a firearm; I just believe that Hawaii's gun laws are ALREADY too burdensome and our 2nd amendment rights are restricted tightly enough - more so, even, than they should be.
In closing, I think you could take a lesson from my oldest son. When he turned 13, he and I attended a L.I.F.E handgun training course and obtained our affidavits, allowing us to purchase a gun if I so wished. I've also taken my youngest son (9) to the Shooting Sports Fair at the Koko Head Shooting Complex on Father's Day, after our (I'm a member of the Hawaii Kai Lions Club) annual pancake breakfast at Kaiser High School. Both of my children have learned that guns are just tools - they hold no magic for good or evil. Restricting them as if they did is, in my opinion, myopic and ineffectual as anything but theater.
Sincerely,
Crass!