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September
10, 2007
SOC 357:
The Sociology of Ballistic Idiocy
by Mike S. Adams, Ph.D.
In
the fall of 1997, I started collecting guns I
really didn't need to own. One Saturday in October
of that year, I headed to the outdoor range with a
few of my friends, our assault rifles, and a few
hundred rounds of ammunition. While we were there,
one of my friends complained bitterly about the
anti-gun rhetoric spewed by one of his former
sociology professors -- a man we shall refer to as
Gary (because that's his real name).
Specifically, my friend was annoyed that Gary
spent valuable class time arguing that the 2nd
Amendment protects the citizen's right to own guns
but not to own bullets. With a straight face, his
professor had argued that the key to reducing gun
violence in America is to enact a legislative ban
on the manufacture, distribution, and sale of
bullets. This, he thought, would actually pass
constitutional muster.
Gary's proposed bullet ban makes him sound a lot
like the segregationists I knew when I was a child
in Mississippi in the 1960s. They didn't like
"colored people" and didn't want them to vote. But
they could not actually keep them from voting so
they found ways to construct laws that would have
the same effect without actually banning blacks
from the voting booths. After all, a law that
required literacy among voters was really just a
way to promote public education, which, after all,
is in the best interests of all, regardless of
race.
As a professor in a Department of Sociology and
Criminal Justice, Gary should have some familiarity
with the case of Griffin v. California (1965).
After the case of Malloy v. Hogan (1964), all
states were required under the Fourteenth Amendment
to extend the Fifth Amendment "self-incrimination"
privilege to defendants in criminal cases. The case
also extended the privilege to witnesses who were
not defendants, even in pretrial proceedings such
as preliminary hearings.
However, since prosecutors did not like this
particular constitutional right, they tried to
subvert it indirectly by asserting, for example,
that the defendant's choice to "take the fifth" was
itself unequivocal evidence of guilt. The
assertion, generally made during the prosecutor's
closing argument, was sometimes the last thing the
jury heard before the onset of the process of
deliberation. But, thanks to Griffin v. California,
this act of allowing a government agent (a
prosecutor) to indirectly subvert a constitutional
right -- simply because he found it distasteful
(and/or dangerous) -- was ruled unconstitutional by
the end of 1965.
At first, I was under the impression that Gary's
support of a federal law banning ammunition was
born of constitutional ignorance. But, in April of
2007, another student approached me with yet
another complaint about his anti-gun rhetoric.
Again, it was his specific assertion that the 2nd
Amendment allows citizens to own guns but not
ammunition. In other words, he has been making the
same silly argument for over a decade while drawing
a paycheck from the very citizens whose rights he
wishes to subvert.
This kind of persistence leads me to believe
that Gary's problem is not born of ignorance of the
constitution. Instead -- just like the prosecutors
subverting the "self-incrimination" privilege in
the 1960s -- he is hostile to those portions of the
constitution that interfere with his specific
occupational goals. More ambitious than the
prosecutor's goal of restricting the freedom of the
criminal is the sociologist's goal of restricting
the freedom of the lawful gun owner.
Until now, no one (to my knowledge) has publicly
challenged Gary's silly proposal. But imagine he
had a different goal; namely, that of restricting a
woman's so-called constitutional right to have an
abortion. Imagine further that he took a similar
tactic by indirectly attacking that constitutional
right, which, unlike the right to bear arms, is
written nowhere in the Bill of Rights.
Specifically, imagine him going into a sociology
class and suggesting that a woman has a right to an
abortion but that abortion clinics could be
lawfully banned. Or imagine him saying that forceps
or suction tubes could be similarly banned. The
possibilities are almost endless but the reaction
from feminists would be uniform and loud.
Our college campuses need an organized response
to anti-gun extremists like Gary -- one that has
the same level of enthusiasm and visibility that
the campus feminists have enjoyed for decades.
Thanks to some fairly recent decisions by the
Supreme Court such a response is entirely possible
because colleges collecting mandatory student
activity fees are no longer able to deny funding to
student organizations they deem to be offensive.
This applies to all clubs -- even those celebrating
the 2nd Amendment.
There can be no better response to an anti-gun
extremist like Gary than to establish a 2nd
Amendment club at the local state college or
university. And to those who have already done so I
would suggest making a funding request to your
university for an afternoon's supply of ammunition.
Taking your 2nd Amendment club to the gun range at
the taxpayer's expense will surely get under the
skin of your liberal administrators.
Professors like Gary think they are exploring
fertile intellectual ground with their latest anti
gun schemes. It's up to us to show them they are
shooting blanks and, therefore, just a generation
away from extinction. Dr. Adams article also
appears in the September issue of Shooting
Sports Retailer.
Adams
Archive
©2007 by Mike S. Adams and reprinted with
permission of the author.
Because
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Dr. Adams' Book
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An irreverent, disturbing look at
higher education through the eyes of a
former Leftist radical whose
disillusionment with the politics of
diversity and political correctness turned
him into a "token" campus
Conservative.
Portrayed by the university
administration and mainstream media as a
"flame-thrower," Professor Adams lampoons
sacred cows such as affirmative action,
Gay Pride, cultural sensitivity training,
multi-culturalism, censorship and other
"sins" committed in the name of academic
freedom.
Dr. Mike S. Adams, a professor of
Criminal Justice at the University of
North Carolina at Wilmington, is a regular
contributor to conservative web and print
publications. He recently defended himself
against a charge of libel in a
high-profile free-speech controversy that
landed him on numerous top-ranked national
TV and radio shows, including Rush
Limbaugh, CNN and Hannity &
Colmes.
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Welcome
to the Ivory Tower of Babel: Confessions
of a Conservative College
Professor,
by
Mike S. Adams
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Mike
S. Adams was born in Columbus, Mississippi on
October 30, 1964. While a student at Clear Lake
High School in Houston, TX, his team won the state
5A soccer championship. He graduated from C.L.H.S.
in 1983 with a 1.8 GPA. He was ranked 734 among a
class of 740, largely as a result of flunking
English all four years of high school. After
obtaining an Associate's degree in psychology from
San Jacinto College, he moved on to Mississippi
State University where he joined the Sigma Chi
Fraternity. While living in the fraternity house,
his GPA rose to 3.4, allowing him to finish his
B.A., and then to pursue a Master's in Psychology.
In 1990, he turned down a chance to pursue a PhD in
psychology from the University of Georgia, opting
instead to remain at Mississippi State to study
Sociology/Criminology. This decision was made
entirely on the basis of his reluctance to quit his
night job as member of a musical duo. Playing music
in bars and at fraternity parties and weddings
financed his education. He also played for free
beer.
Upon
getting his doctorate in 1993, Adams, then an
atheist and a Democrat, was hired by UNC-Wilmington
to teach in the criminal justice program. A few
years later, Adams abandoned his atheism and also
became a Republican. He also nearly abandoned
teaching when he took a one-year leave of absence
to study law at UNC-Chapel Hill in 1998. After
returning to teach at UNC-Wilmington, Adams won the
Faculty Member of the Year award (issued by the
Office of the Dean of Students) for the second time
in 2000.
After
his involvement in a well publicized free speech
controversy in the wake of the 911 terror attacks,
Adams became a vocal critic of the diversity
movement in academia. After making appearances on
shows like Hannity and Colmes, the O'Reilly Factor,
and Scarborough Country, Adams was asked to write a
column for the Heritage Foundation's
Townhall.com.
Today
he enjoys the privilege of expressing himself both
as a teacher and a writer. In his spare time, he
loves spending time with his wife, Krysten. He is
also an avid hunter and reader of classic
literature.
Visit his website at http://www.DrAdams.org.
E-mail: adams_mike@hotmail.com
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