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Anarchy,
State, and Gun Ownership
by
David Greenwald
Recently
by David Greenwald: Laissez-Faire
Learning
The controversy
over whether the Federal Government should ban the possession by
citizens of certain types, or all types, of firearms has been raging
back and forth for a very long time. I remember as a child seeing
news coverage of horrific acts of violence involving firearms. I
also remember the seemingly interminable “national conversation”
that inevitably followed these events. It seemed, and still seems,
to rouse people’s emotions in a way that few other issues do. My
parents, like most of their friends, firmly supported gun-control
legislation, which meant that I did as well. When I was ten, our
Buick LeSabre sported an anti-NRA sticker on the rear fender. I
should know I put it there.
Not much has
changed since then. The LeSabre is long gone, but the occasional
mass shootings continue, each followed by yet another acrimonious
round of national self-flagellation and soul-searching. The first
time guns were featured on the cover of Time Magazine was
in 1968. They ran the same cover again in 1998.
The arguments,
for and against, gun control also don’t seem to be any different
under Barack Obama from what they were under Lyndon Johnson. Then
as now, there were:
- Property-rights-based
justifications for gun ownership (e.g., guns are like
any other property and so anyone may own them, provided they are
not used to violate the person or property of others), as well
as for gun prohibition (except as a decorative candle
holder, an AK-47 seems unlikely to be used for any purpose other
than to violate the person or property of others).
- Utilitarian
reasons for a ban (it would increase safety by reducing
the overall number of guns in society), and also for laissez-faire
(prohibition would at best disarm only peaceful citizens, rendering
them easy prey for criminals while creating yet another lucrative
black market for organized crime).
- Civil-liberties-based
arguments for leaving the citizen free (I have a right to defend
myself), and for regulating him (I have a right to walk down the
street without fear of being shot).
And today,
four and a half decades and nine gun-related Time covers
later, here we are again, still shaking our heads in disbelief at
the violence we see around us, and still asking the same question:
who is right?
My position,
as a libertarian anarchist, is that everyone is right.
There is no perfect solution to the problem of the use of firearms
for criminal purposes, and there are valid points on both sides
of the debate. This is one of the reasons why this issue never has
been and never will be resolved as long as we turn to the state
to solve it for us instead of solving it for ourselves.
Federal law
by nature imposes one solution on all members
of society. Whether a ban is enacted on all firearms for all citizens,
on only some types of guns, or for only some categories of citizens,
all must live under the same set of rules. Yet because only imperfect
solutions are possible, and because individual preferences rest
on subjective value judgments, the fastening of a single policy
on all parties by force of law must create social conflict.
The only way out of this impasse is to abolish the state’s monopoly
on the production of law and law enforcement and replace it with
a cooperative legal system or, more accurately, with the
vast and complex matrix of voluntary contractual arrangements known
as the market law society.
An analysis
of all the different possible types of institutions and contracts
that could arise in such a society for the settlement of disputes
is beyond the scope of this article.[1]
We will focus instead on two less technical points: (1) how the
state’s monopoly on the enforcement of law actively promotes
firearm ownership even among those who, ceteris paribus,
would prefer not to own them, and (2) how a competitive law enforcement
market would rectify this problem in a way that would largely satisfy
both “liberals” and “conservatives.”
How the State’s
Enforcement Monopoly Influences Gun Ownership Patterns
There are
at least two ways in which the state’s arrogation of police
power, to the exclusion of all potential competitors, encourages
individuals to own firearms who would not otherwise wish to do so.
First in this group are people who either consider themselves underserved
(or, in the worst case, not served at all) by their state or local
police departments or are distrustful or afraid of the police. Not
surprisingly, such people tend to be concentrated in poor urban
areas where police may be disinclined to patrol regularly and, in
some instances, may not even respond to calls for help. (Ironically,
these also tend to be the areas most plagued by violence stemming
from the state’s prohibition on drugs.)
Under such
conditions, it is inevitable that some individuals will turn to
gun ownership as the only viable alternative to adequate police
protection. Given that these are persons of modest means who would
otherwise probably not wish to own firearms, it is also likely that
many of them will be reluctant or financially unable to undergo
training in marksmanship and gun safety, and will tend to avoid
additional expenditures on safety features such as trigger locks
or gun vaults. The result must be a marked increase in both gun
theft and accidental shootings, the latter often involving children.
It is ironic that such incidents are often invoked as a justification
for the forced disarming of citizens by the state, when it is precisely
the black markets created by the state’s prosecution of victimless
crimes (e.g., drug use), together with its procurement of substandard
security services, that drives the demand for private gun ownership
in the first place.
The second
way in which government promotes firearm ownership follows from
the fact that, as the sole supplier of security services within
its jurisdiction, its officers cannot be everywhere at once. They
generally do not know that a crime is in progress until notified
by someone already at the scene. This produces a significant response
time lag.
This is not
to say that police are necessarily slow to respond. For example,
in 1996 the New York Times reported
average response times for New York's Finest of between 6 and 11
minutes, depending on the borough not too shabby, considering
the size and congestion of the Big Apple. Nevertheless, a present
good is, ceteris paribus, always preferred to a future
good, and being kidnapped, raped, or robbed at gunpoint tends to
raise a person's time preference for police protection rather sharply.
As impressive as a 6-minute response time may be, to the victim
of a violent crime in progress, it is an eternity. The greater the
perceived likelihood of becoming such a victim is, the greater will
be the discount on the present value of police services which, from
the moment the need for them first arises, will not become available
until (at least) 6 minutes into the future. The incentive will then
be that much greater to supplant the discounted future services
with a present .357 Magnum.
Of course,
the reverse is also true: the very existence of a government security
force will also tend to discourage gun ownership among
those who live in more affluent, low-crime areas and who generally
trust the efficiency and professionalism of the police. Here we
have in view individuals who would become gun owners if
there were no government police, but who, because such a force does
in fact exist (and because they are compelled to pay for it despite
its relatively low marginal utility), elect to forego the added
expense of self-defense preparedness. Not surprisingly, most advocates
of gun control fall into this category. Since, however, the police
response time lag still exists even for them and can never be reduced
to zero, the effect may be to induce a false sense of security among
such people, leaving them unprepared for those rare instances of
violent crime that do occur. Some of the more recent mass shootings
may be cited as examples.
To Ban or
Not to Ban: Guns and Market Law Enforcement
Since everyone’s
real concern is security, what is needed is a set of voluntary social
arrangements that balances the widely divergent and sometimes mutually
exclusive conditions under which different people feel “safe.” As
those who self-identify as conservatives on the whole tend to associate
security with gun ownership, such arrangements would have to allow
for the private ownership of firearms. However, since “liberals”
tend to feel threatened by virtually anyone (except the
government) owning a gun, these same agreements would also have
to promote conditions under which even the most hoplophobic
would feel generally at ease, despite living among many potentially
armed neighbors.
I submit that
only a market-law approach to this problem has any reasonable prospect
of achieving this balance. There are several reasons for this, two
of which I will address here.
Monopoly vs.
Competition
The first
result of ending the state’s monopoly on police protection, and
replacing it with a competitive market composed of multiple private
security firms, would be an immediate and dramatic improvement in
quality of service. Not only would there be little reason for anyone
to fear harassment or brutality by employees of private security
firms, which would depend for their revenues on the voluntary patronage
of consumers, but also, in stark contrast to government policing,
the biggest markets for such firms would be where crime is most
prevalent, i.e., the inner cities. Indeed, many security firms might
well be “neighborhood-owned” and specialize in serving (and hiring
from within) those areas most neglected by government police.
Moreover,
the introduction of competition and price transparency would necessarily
lead to a vastly more efficient allocation of capital resources.
As a result, it is not unthinkable that most or even all of the
(now lower) cost of residential security services might be borne,
not by the residents themselves, but by area businesses, since the
economic gains they would reap from enhanced protection would easily
offset the cost of a subscription to a security service from which
all would benefit. Much as businesses today often pay for the “premium”
edition of a software program, thereby financing the free “basic”
version designed for home use, so shopkeepers, restaurant owners,
and other inner-city entrepreneurs might well be happy to pay a
premium for better security (e.g., more frequent patrols, officers
on site, sophisticated surveillance and communication systems, and
so on) that would cover at least the greater part of the cost of
the same firm’s patrolling of residential neighborhoods. This, in
turn, would significantly reduce call response times, making this
easily one of the best “free rider problems” ever.
All this taken
together would add up to a marked reduction in the demand for firearms
among private individuals, especially those least competent to use
them safely. Those on the left who are presently pushing for stricter
gun laws would therefore be doubly satisfied: first by better protection
services (and the resulting lower crime rates), and second, by the
overall decline in gun ownership. Meanwhile, traditional conservatives
could still maintain a strict from-my-cold-dead-hands posture if
they wished, without fear of being forcibly disarmed by the collectivist
zeal of their neighbors. But they would no longer have either poor
policing or the looming threat of state tyranny as a justification
for doing so.
In sum, under
conditions of untrammeled competition among private security firms,
all contracting parties would get at least some of what they wanted,
and just as importantly, all could claim in some sense to be “right.”
The ultimate result would be a decline in social conflict and an
increase in the tendency among the population at large to turn to
cooperative decision-making rather than to unilateral coercion as
the primary means of arriving at solutions to complex social problems.
Conclusion
It is only
by accepting the responsibility for solving a problem that one can
hope to solve it. That is ultimately why the market works and legislative
fiat does not. Market solutions to any social problem require honest
inquiry and widespread voluntary participation in an unfathomably
complex and spontaneously-evolving process of trial and error until
a set of arrangements emerges that works, as far as possible, to
the satisfaction of everyone. They also require that the provisions
thus arrived at be continually adapted to meet the demands of an
ever-changing world.
Legislated
solutions require someone to give an order, and someone else to
enforce it under threat of violent reprisal. And if the results
are not favorable, it is the world that is expected to adapt to
the legislation, and not vice-versa.
If we must
have yet another “national conversation” on the subject of firearms
and violence, this is what it should be about. Otherwise, I’m afraid
Time will be running the same cover for a third time in
2028.
David
Greenwald [send him mail]
received his BA in German from Hendrix College and his master's
in counseling studies from Capella University. He currently teaches
high school English in Slovenia, where he conducts extracurricular
projects on entry-level Austrian economics, banking and the business
cycle, and the sociology of violence. He is also a lecturer at
the Cato Institute's Liberty Seminars. See David Greenwald's article
archives at Mises.org.
Copyright
© 2013 by the Ludwig von Mises Institute.
Permission to reprint in whole or in part is hereby granted, provided
full credit is given.
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