Wednesday, December 26, 2012


A MODEST PROPOSAL TO HELP PROTECT OUR SCHOOL KIDS, AND REDUCE THE RESULTING BUDGET IMBALANCE, WITH THE PATRIOTIC HELP OF AMERICA’S KINDLY GUN OWNERS

Good for Wayne LaPierre, the head honcho of the National Rifle Association!

After a godawful silence concerning the Sandy Hook gun massacre of innocent children and their teachers by a gun maniac (who killed his own mother with her licensed guns), although before the massacre of firemen by yet another unhinged nut in upstate New York, LaPierre finally had something to say that we can wrap our minds around – not to mention our teeth.

We should have more guns in schools, he said. In fact, he insisted, we should have an armed guard at every school. He made no estimate that I’m aware of the cost of doing this, although others estimate that it would be a bare minimum of $5,500,000,000 (that’s five billion, five hundred million dollars) a year.

Who’s supposed to pay for it? Why, you and me, of course.

“Waiter! This is not my check!
Please send it over to Mr. La Pierre's table.”

But why should any taxpayer who doesn’t want to own a gun, or who is horrified by the proliferation of guns, pay for protection against the misuse of an arsenal of guns owned by his cranky neighbor with the slightly off-kilter son, the one who lives in the attic and really hasn’t held a steady job since he got fired from a fast food joint for general insubordination and surliness?

Hold that thought while I mention this:

So, uh, I own the home I live in. And whaddya know – surprise, surprise! – I pay taxes on it.

It’s called a property tax because
governments can tax your property

Not only do I pay annual real estate taxes. If I sell my home at a profit  I’ll have to pay capital gains taxes. People complain about taxes on their homes, of course. Doesn’t matter. There’s an old principle of law that says, “If you own property, you owe the government.” Goes back to the founding of the Republic in this country. And to the English Crown under the legal system on which our legal system is based.

In fact, some states, like Connecticut, have a general property tax. You pay tax not only on the assessed value of your home, but also on your car. And of your snowmobile or your horse if you happen to own any of those, as some Connecticut citizens do. [Connecticut taxation statutes, chapter 203 - Sec. 12-71)]

Which brings me back around to, uh, guns. And to bullets. And to high capacity magazines. They’re personal property. And they’re personal property designed to kill people, and sometimes to kill large numbers of people in a very short amount of time, which they are doing with increasing regularity.

Which means any government in whose jurisdiction you reside, or in whose jurisdiction you keep your weapon, has the right to tax you even if you don’t personally ever shoot your weapon – just as you might not ride your snowmobile or your horse.

Introducing the Guns, Bullets,
and High Capacity Magazine Tax

So why not charge gun and ammunition owners with a federal, and state, and local “Guns, Bullets, and High Capacity Magazine Ownership Tax?” That would put the cost of all those armed guards in schools right where it belongs – in the tax bills of those who are the source of the problem.

Hey, I cross a bridge, I pay a toll. I go through a tunnel, I pay a toll. I use the Pennsylvania Turnpike or the Garden State Parkway, or the New York State Thruway, I pay a toll. It’s a user tax.

What’s that? You say you never use your weapon? Listen, even if you keep it locked in a safe and only want it to ward off a violent home invasion, or you hang your automatic rifle on the wall in your den as a decoration, you’re using it for that purpose. So you’re a gun user. If you live in Connecticut, you can't escape the tax on your horse and snowmobile by demonstrating you never ride either the vehicle or the animal. If you own it, that's enough. Pay up, dude.

Or don’t pay and go to the pokey

How would we enforce a guns, bullets, and high capacity magazine tax? The same way we enforce income and other taxes. Willful failure to pay taxes – say, by not registering and reporting your guns, bullets and high capacity magazines – is a felony, punishable by fine and imprisonment.

With other taxes, we don’t catch every tax cheat, but we catch and punish enough of them to keep most citizens honest. If we can have honest business owners, doctors, and ribbon clerks, there’s no reason we can’t have honest gun, bullet and high capacity magazine owners.

Ultimately, the only thing that will reduce the amount of gun-and-bullet violence in this country is to get rid of, or largely get rid of the guns and bullets. But until we can have that, let’s at least make the people who manufacture, distribute, sell, keep, and play with lethal weapons pay to keep all the rest of us safe from their....oh, call it a pastime.

It’s perfectly legal. And it will lay the cost of protecting our kids – with a plan the representatives of the gun owners themselves are calling for – right at the feet of the cost creators.

Cross-posted at the New York Crank

4 comments:

  1. Me likey!

    Of course, I've been advocating this for years.

    I've always said, never mind the 'part of an organized militia' clause, that the revered 2nd Amendment gives one the right to own arms - but nowhere does it say a word about bullets, or musketballs.

    The government can, and should control those.
    And, a high tax on guns, and an even higher tax on ammo, might solve the problem.

    And, after all, there's a precedent for the taxations of guns and ammo - we ALREADY tax them! - if, that is, they're bought legally.

    So yeah, NY Crank, I'm widcha!

    Now, try to telling that to cowardly, non-Kevlar-wearing Congress members, that, when Wayne LaPierre puts them in the NRA's crosshairs.

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  2. Add this great idea to registering guns as we do cars, requiring skills and laws training to be licensed to own and operate (again, like cars), and mandatory liability insurance (ditto), and you have a sensible package of useful reforms that the NRA will call in every possible chit to kill deader than a Newtown schoolkid.

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  3. And while he was speaking in DC, in rural Pennsylvania about 75 miles from me, another mass murderer killed a woman decorating a church hall for a children's Christmas party, a neighbor, and another man, before he entered a gunfight with state police and wounded three of them, one of whom would be dead, were he not wearing a Kevlar vest.

    Is it time to stop worrying about overpopulation and start buying stock in funeral parlor chains?

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  4. I don't disagree but passing any kind of tax has become extraordinary difficult. That's why I think requiring liability insurance is the way to go. Let the insurance companies assess the risks of various persons,places,gun type, circumstances, etc. It obviously would be prohibitively expensive for many people. Possessing an uninsured gun would become a serious offense.

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