Clayton Cramer reviews what looks to be an interesting scholarly new work:
There are many parallels between the laws passed in the Weimar Republic and by the Nazis, and current gun control laws and proposals. For example: the nature and duration of the records that gun manufacturers and dealers were required to keep (p. 135); issuance of gun carry licenses “only to persons considered reliable and only if a need is proven” (p. 107); the use of relatively rare incidents to justify widespread disarmament of “enemies of the state” (p. 155); and the prohibition of firearms with features not generally used “for hunting or sporting purposes” (p. 134).
This is not to say that gun control advocates in America today are planning a police state, concentration camps, and mass extermination. As Halbrook points out, when the Weimar Republic pursued its campaign of strict licensing and registration, they were genuinely trying to deal with a serious violence problem. They picked a solution that did not work, as some police officials of the time pointed out, causing some German states to refuse to go along with the Weimar Republic’s mandatory registration regulations in 1931 (pp. 34-38).
The problem was that, as some pointed out when mandatory registration was under discussion in 1931, “in chaotic times, the lists of firearms owners would fall into the wrong hands, allowing unauthorized persons to seize arms and use them to commit unlawful acts” (p. 29). The lists did fall into the wrong hands — the Nazi government, after the 1933 elections. And they did use them to seize arms, especially from Jews and other “enemies of the state.”
You don’t say.
“This is not to say that gun control advocates in America today are planning a police state, concentration camps, and mass extermination . . . ” True; but if you wear a Che t-shirt and think Mao was the coolest blood-stained tyrant of the 20th Century, , I wouldn’t put anything past you.
The vast majority of gun control advocates are Ringer Type Three’s:
“Yes I cut your hand off when you reached for your chips, even though I assured you that such was never my intent.”
They’ll promise on the heads of their eldest sons that this little thing they want is the last thig they will ask for … and it is, but only until next time.