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Snafu | A&M should allow concealed firearms

By: David Morris

Issue date: 2/15/08 Section: News
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A cross the nation, the death toll on college campuses continues to climb. Virginia Tech, 21 wounded, 33 dead. Louisiana Tech, two dead. Northern Illinois University, at least 16 wounded, six dead. The travesty is, these deaths might have been prevented had students been allowed to carry firearms on campus.

In the wake of the Luby's massacre in 1991, the Texas legislature took the appropriate step, liberalizing concealed carry laws in 1994 despite a veto by Gov. Ann Richards. Shortly after the Virginia Tech massacre in 2007, Gov. Rick Perry spoke in support of further expanding concealed carry rights, "It's time for us to have that debate in Texas from the standpoint of whether or not a law-abiding citizen in the state of Texas can take their appropriately licensed and permitted weapon anywhere in this state, whether it's on a college campus or wherever." We have yet to see similar action from either the legislature or University officials.

Many gun control proponents oppose any measure allowing concealed carry on campus because they believe it would put students and faculty at a greater risk. This belief is not, however, supported by the facts.

The Uniform Crime Report published by the FBI in 2006 stated that 400,000 crimes were committed using firearms, while, according to a survey conducted in 1993 by Gary Kleck, a criminologist at Florida State University, they are used defensively 2 million times a year. That's a rate of five defensive uses for every criminal use.

The Texas Department of Public Safety found that from 1995 to 1999, the five year period after the liberalization of Texas gun laws, the rate of aggrevated assault declined by 14 percent, robbery by 18 percent, rape by 16 percent and murder by 32 percent.

In 2007 in Texas, 91,000 concealed handgun licenses were issued. In the same year, only 483 were suspended and 422 revoked - a rate of less than one percent. Concealed handgun license holders have been shown time and again to be more law abiding than the average citizen.

If we can be trusted to carry a gun nearly everywhere else, why can we not be trusted on campus? Are we presumed to be so volatile that we might explode from the frustration of not understanding a calculus problem? Fly off the handle because we disagree with a professor's politics? Commit mass gendercide because of what we learn in Introduction to Feminism?

There is no reason to believe that concealed handgun license holders would pose a threat to fellow students, and there is no justification to continue to keep them from carrying legally licensed firearms on campus.

Allowing concealed carry on campus is not a guarantee that we won't have our own rampage, but by not allowing it we guarantee that our campus remains a gun-free zone where everyone is defenseless.

Every school shooting sparks a debate regarding gun policy - let's have that debate at Texas A&M before we become another grisly statistic.

David Morris, a senior psychology major, is opinion editor.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 10 of 45

Anand

posted 2/15/08 @ 12:55 AM CST

you are a fool. guns arent allowed in airports. or on planes. or near important high security events. or near the president.

so why the fu*k should they be allowed to fly around on college campuses? it is known that all the college shootings recently were done with LEGALLY OWNED weapons. (Continued…)

(4 replies)   Details   Reply to this comment

Moonfish

posted 2/15/08 @ 5:44 AM CST

Thank you for a well-written article. You presented your position in a professional manner and supported it with facts and logic. You have a lot of support behind you. (Continued…)

Clint

posted 2/15/08 @ 9:32 AM CST

Texans who possess concealed handgun licenses are one of the most law abiding segments of society. Applicants have to pass a firearms handling proficiency class which also includes education about when it is lawful to use deadly force. (Continued…)

Steven '11

posted 2/15/08 @ 10:53 AM CST

It takes time t obtain a concealed carry permit and your average psychopath probably wouldn't wait to obtain a permit just so that they could legally bring guns on campus in order to illegally murder a bunch of people. (Continued…)

Ry

posted 2/15/08 @ 11:19 AM CST

Good point, David. I agree that the problem isn't that there are too many guns in our culture, but too few. After all, if everyone went armed, the crazy people would be too intimidated to try anything, right? After all, this latest murderous nutter obviously attacked these unarmed students because he knew that he'd get away with it. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Ed

posted 2/15/08 @ 12:11 PM CST

This begs to question the logic that all lives will be protected with concealed handguns on campus. no doubt that license owners are the most abiding citizens in this nation, but i highly doubt that they will be able to bring back to life the first victim that gets shot. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Gene Whitehurst

posted 2/15/08 @ 12:35 PM CST

Good article. While school shootings are very rare, inspite of what we read in the main-stream media, the prospect of violence on, and off, campus remains. (Continued…)

agmd

agmd

posted 2/15/08 @ 1:54 PM CST

Let's start by arming the Corps.
TAMU '79, TAMU Med School '82

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

hsteacher

posted 2/15/08 @ 3:07 PM CST

Do you have any idea how inappropriate it is to print snafu in a newspaper? Do you even know what 'snafu' stands for?

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Ed

posted 2/15/08 @ 3:16 PM CST

Dear cab0154,

And that is where we disagree. I am suggesting as a fact that it can be possible to minimize and reduce the risk of school shootings. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

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