The current election cycle is no different with the notable exception of the conspicuously absent gun control advocacy, most usually cloaked in an expertly choreographed patriotic event replete with at least a dozen American flags, formally dressed police officers, Sarah Brady, and a gigantic black and white picture of an Uzi. Surely the State of Michigan with its pathetic economy, high unemployment rate, and infamously crime-ridden urban areas are fertile ground for vote pandering--despite the DNC's best efforts to disenfranchise Democrats in a recently very reliable blue state.
In 2001, Michigan significantly relaxed its concealed carry (CCW) requirements precipitating a massive increase in the gun-wielding citizenry, nearly six-fold. Essentially any sane citizen without a felony conviction is eligible to reenact the Alamo in his backyard. Since Liberal orthodoxy maintains that crime rates rise during economic downtimes, gun related violence necessary should increase: bad economy + more guns = more gun crime.
The Detroit Free Press reported that gun crime, and crime in general, has actually decreased since the law was enacted:
What...that a deluge of felons didn't flood local gun boards with CCW applications? That John Wayne movies didn't suddenly disappear from Blockbuster?Six years after new rules made it much easier to get a license to carry concealed weapons, the number of Michiganders legally packing heat has increased more than six-fold.
But dire predictions about increased violence and bloodshed have largely gone unfulfilled, according to law enforcement officials and, to the extent they can be measured, crime statistics.
The incidence of violent crime in Michigan in the six years since the law went into effect has been, on average, below the rate of the previous six years. The overall incidence of death from firearms, including suicide and accidents, also has declined.
More than 155,000 Michiganders -- about one in every 65 -- are now authorized to carry loaded guns as they go about their everyday affairs, according to Michigan State Police records.
About 25,000 people had CCW permits in Michigan before the law changed in 2001.
"I think the general consensus out there from law enforcement is that things were not as bad as we expected," said Woodhaven Police Chief Michael Martin, cochair of the legislative committee for the Michigan Association of Chiefs of Police. "There are problems with gun violence. But ... I think we can breathe a sigh of relief that what we anticipated didn't happen."
I suspect we're not likely to see gun control demagoguery during the general election this next Michigan autumn, either from the candidates nor the Detroit Free Press Editorial Board whose 2nd Amendment interpretation might even invoke a giggle from the likes of Justices Ginsberg and Stevens.
Then, again, why let facts subvert a perfectly illogical argument.
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