-Caveat Lector-

------- Forwarded message follows -------
Date sent:              Thu, 4 Oct 2001 12:28:27 -0400 (EDT)
To:                     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:                LP RELEASE: Tennessee bus hijacking
From:                   Libertarian Party Announcements <owner-
[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Send reply to:          [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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===============================
NEWS FROM THE LIBERTARIAN PARTY
2600 Virginia Avenue, NW, Suite 100
Washington DC 20037
World Wide Web: http://www.LP.org
===============================
For release: October 4, 2001
===============================
For additional information:
George Getz, Press Secretary
Phone: (202) 333-0008 Ext. 222
E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
===============================


Tennessee bus hijacking shows need
for 50-state concealed-carry gun laws

WASHINGTON, DC -- In the wake of the Tennessee bus hijacking
yesterday
that left six people dead, every state should immediately pass
Vermont-
style concealed-carry gun laws so Americans can defend
themselves
against terrorists or deranged murderers, the Libertarian Party said
today.

"Let's put the Second Amendment to work to protect Americans,"
said the
party's national director, Steve Dasbach. "The best defense against
hijackers -- or run-of-the-mill copycat madmen -- is to give every
American the legal right to own a gun and carry it everywhere."

Early Wednesday, a Croatian man used a box cutter to slash the
throat
of a Greyhound bus driver just outside Manchester, Tennessee.

The man then grabbed the steering wheel and attempted to drive
the bus
into oncoming traffic. The bus tipped over, killing at least six people
including the hijacker, and injuring 34 others.

Greyhound temporarily suspended bus service following the attack,
but
the U.S. Justice Department said the hijacking was probably not
related
to the September 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center
and the
Pentagon. Police speculated that the hijacker was a mentally
unbalanced
copycat criminal.

Whatever the man's motivation, the attack points out that no form
of
transportation is safe from potential attack, said Dasbach -- which
is
why every law-abiding American needs the right to carry a
concealed
weapon.

"After terrorists hijacked four airliners on September 11, the
consensus was that greater airport security could stymie such
attacks,"
he said. "That may be true, but a similar solution won't protect
Americans who use buses, trains, taxicabs, or other forms of travel.
There are simply too many modes of public transportation.

"The only way to keep Americans safe is to decentralize protection:
Give every law-abiding citizen the right to carry a weapon at all
times.

"No, that won't stop every attempted hijacking -- and may not even
have
stopped the tragedy in Tennessee -- but criminals and terrorists will
be far less likely to attack if they know they'll be staring down the
business end of a dozen American guns."

Currently, 31 states have "shall-issue" concealed-carry laws, which
require the state government to issue a gun permit to any resident
who
is not disqualified by a felony conviction, mental illness, or similar
objection.

Tennessee has a "shall-issue" law, but its permit is reciprocally
honored in only 12 other states, and Tennessee honors only nine
other
states' permits.

That's a problem, said Dasbach, because the bus that was hijacked
in
Tennessee originated in Chicago, Illinois and was heading for
Atlanta,
Georgia. Only one of those states (Georgia) had a reciprocal
permit
agreement with Tennessee -- making it impossible for passengers
to
legally carry a weapon for the duration of the trip.

"America needs 50-state reciprocity," he said. "A gun permit valid in
one state should be equally valid in all 50 states. That's the only
way
to protect people on interstate trips."

To make that protection as easy as possible to acquire, every state
should pass gun permit legislation modeled after Vermont's gun
law,
said Dasbach.

In Vermont, any citizen can carry a firearm without getting a permit,
without paying a fee, and without any government-mandated
waiting
period.

Despite the ease with which people can acquire guns -- or perhaps
because of it -- Vermont enjoys the 49th lowest crime rate in
America,
noted Dasbach.

"The conventional wisdom is that more guns equal more crime," he
said.
"But Vermont is stark proof that more guns, and easier access to
guns,
are the best possible deterrent to crime."

However, evidence of the "More Guns/Less Crime" principle
extends
beyond Vermont, said Dasbach.

In October 2000, the FBI released a report showing that gunshot
wounds
inflicted during crimes decreased by 40% from 1992 and 1997 --
falling
from 64,100 to 39,400 nationwide.

During the same five years, the number of guns in America
increased by
12% -- surging from 205 million to 230 million, according to the
National Association of Federally Licensed Firearms Dealers.

Also, according to a study by John Lott and David Mustard at the
University of Chicago, concealed-carry handgun laws reduced
murder
rates by 8.5% in those states that passed such laws, compared to
states
which make gun ownership difficult or impossible. Had such right-
to-
carry laws been in effect all 50 states, there would be 1,600 fewer
murders every year, they reported.

Given all this evidence, Job #1 in the war against terrorism should
be
to give Americans the right to own and carry a firearm, said
Dasbach.

"In memory of the victims of the Tennessee bus hijacking, every
state
should immediately pass a Vermont-style gun law, and make it
reciprocal
with every other state," he said.

"Politicians need to make it as easy for every American to buy and
carry a gun as it is to buy a bus ticket. By doing so, they'll make it
easier for the next would-be terrorist to buy a one-way ticket to an
early grave."

------- End of forwarded message -------
--

Best wishes

You must understand, therefore, that there are two ways of fighting:
by
law or by force.  The first way is natural to men, and the second to
beasts.  But as the first way often proves inadequate one must
needs
have recourse to the second.
-Niccolo Machiavelli in "The Prince"

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