Professor Walter E. Williams doesn’t think
so. “When I attended primary and secondary school — during the
1940s and ‘50s — one didn’t hear of the kind of shooting mayhem
that’s become routine today. Why? It surely wasn’t because of
strict firearm laws. My replica of the 1902 Sears mail-order catalog
shows 35 pages of firearm advertisements. People just sent in their
money, and a firearm was shipped. Dr. John Lott, author of ‘More
Guns, Less Crime,’ reports that until the 1960s, some New York City
public high schools had shooting clubs where students competed in
citywide shooting contests for university scholarships. They carried
their rifles to school on the subways and, upon arrival, turned them
over to their homeroom teacher or the gym coach and retrieved their
rifles after school for target practice.
Thursday, September 7, 2017
Are Guns the Problem?
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