McClintock and readers respond to Bee editorial on gun control

The following is Tom McClintock’s reponse to a Bee editorial. And a reader’s response, critical of our Congressman, is here:

On August 5, the Sacramento Bee published an editorial entitled “Why Does Anyone Need a 100-Round Rifle Clip.”

Congressman McClintock offered the following response, which the Sacramento Bee refused to publish.

What’s the Sacramento Bee Afraid Of?

In its editorial (“Why Does Anyone Need a 100-Round Rifle Clip,” August 5), the Bee notes that I “failed to respond” to its inquiries. The editorial amply demonstrates the reason: the Bee is notorious for stating one-sided political manifestos, listing its heroes and villains, and offering no opportunity for a balanced debate.

In the event I am mistaken and the Bee actually welcomes a differing viewpoint, here is mine.

The inherent fallacy of all gun bans is that only law-abiding citizens obey them. Violent predators already operate in an extensive underground economy and such laws merely incentivize and reward an additional criminal class to traffic in the contraband.

Gun bans might make it more difficult for lunatics to obtain them, but they make it impossible for the law-abiding. The Bee notes that guns make it easier for a criminal to commit a crime, but forgets that guns also make it easier for the law-abiding citizens to defend themselves, as thousands do every year.

Indeed, the theater in Aurora that banned firearms on its premises became a tragic microcosm of the world the Bee’s policy would produce: a defenseless civil society in which the gunman is king.

The Bee lost this argument long ago and is now reduced to chipping away at ancillary issues like limiting ammunition clips. After all, no legitimate target shooter or hunter can justify a gun with more than ten rounds. The Bee wonders why any decent citizen would want more?

I certainly wouldn’t.

Unless, perhaps, I worked the night shift at a convenience store; or I owned a theater where such an attack could happen again; or I owned a ranch or home near the border where drug cartels often operate; or if I were planning to take a sailboat into international waters; or one of countless other reasons the law simply cannot anticipate.

The Bee asserts that gun related deaths have dropped faster in California than the rest of the nation and credits its strict gun laws. True, according to the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reports, between 1994 and 2010 violent crime in California declined 56.5 percent while falling 43.4 percent nationally – a 13-point difference. But the Bee somehow missed the other half of this statistic: non-violent crime in California (unaffected by its gun laws) dropped by a nearly identical spread, (48.9 percent compared to 36.7 percent nationally).

What would account for an equal decline in both violent and non-violent serious crimes in California since 1994 relative to the rest of the nation? Perhaps harsher sentencing laws in the 1980’s, culminating with California’s “Three Strikes” law of 1994 that locks up repeat offenders for both violent and non-violent serious crimes explain the statistics far better.

Of course, the Bee opposed the “Three Strikes” law when voters enacted it. The editorial was ironically entitled, “Shooting Ourselves in the Foot.”

New: Ice skating rink sponsorships in downtown Grass Valley

With temperatures climbing into the triple digits this week, a whirl around the ice rink in downtown Grass Valley sounds wonderful.

“Seize your opportunity to have the most spectacular attraction in Nevada County,” according to the Grass Valley Downtown Association’s new flyer. “There are three options available to help us provide this winter spectacular and provide a service to your friends, neighbors, employees and customers.”

•Book a private party for $1,000. Includes 2 hours of uninterrupted skate time exclusively for your group. (Up to 70 people). This package includes skate rental for everyone in your group, admission, beverages, light snacks and entertainment (additional catering services available for additional fee). Placement on the GVDA web advertising circuit. (Value of $250 for 2 months).

•Sponsor a free stake session for our community. Your company will be advertised as offering a free session for anyone who comes between the hours specified. $2,000 for two yours or $1,000 for 1 hour. Your company banners and promotional materials exclusively for that night. Placement on the GVDA web advertising circuit (Value of $250 for two months).

•Donate $250 to be a penguin sponsor. A penguin displaying your company name will be displayed throughout the season at the rink. All sponsors will be listed on promotional materials.

Choose from any of the dates (November 23 to January 6) to sponsor a night of free staking for our community. Contact the GVDA at 272-8315 or email Gvdowntown2@gmail.com.

Walgreens building in Grass Valley’s Brunswick Basin in escrow

The new Walgreens building in Brunswick Basin is in escrow, a lawyer for the buyer said last night at a Grass Valley City Council meeting.

The building had been listed for $13.2 million, as I reported previously.

The Council rejected a request to remove a condition requiring an easement within the Walgreen’s parking lot to allow for potential vehicle access to the CHP/DMV site located to the north, citing concerns about long-term use of the properties — not just a single real-estate transaction (AKA “city planning”).

LUMBERJACK’S REDUX?

“Open and close the public hearing, find that the approved condition
cannot be fully implemented, and delete condition of approval number 40,” is what city’s new Community Development director Tom Last recommended.

Last, you might recall, also supported an 11-foot lumberjack statue in Brunswick Basin — a recommendation that also was rejected.

It will be interesting to see how Grass Valley sets community development policy under Last, the longtime city planner who just got promoted into a vacant spot.

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