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VIOLENCE IN SOCIETY

Nothing does more to tear our families apart than violent crime, guns, gangs, drugs, and
the fear that walks alongside those terrors. Violent crime and victim rights have become
a major concern for most citizens in the United States of America. Statistics indicate a
decline in violent crimes in our country and an increase in our national prison
population. Released prisoners commit most violent crimes. Gun control legislation,
reform programs, victim rights awareness, and other programs are abundant in our country,
but do little to alleviate violent crime. In this paper I will try to present the liberal
and conservative views on this issue as well as my own views. 
Violent crime is a complex problem and can only be responded to in complex ways. Quick
fix solutions to the problem are likely to be misguided. 
There was a decline in crime during the 1990s. Our country enjoyed seven years of
declining crime for the period 1991-98, the most recent data available. During this
period crime declined by 22% and violent crime by 25%. These are welcome developments,
particularly following the surge of crime and violence of the late 1980s. This decline
occurred during a time when the national prison population has increased substantially,
rising from 789,60 in 1991 to 1,252,830, a 59% rise in just seven years and a 47%
increase in the rate of incarceration, taking into account changes in the national
population (Mauer 21-24).
Many observers have drawn a simple correlation between these two trends. Putting more
offenders in prison caused the reduction in crime. The Sentencing project has just
completed a study that examines this issue in great detail and concludes that any such
correlation is ambiguous at best. In examining the relationship between incarceration and
crime in the 1990s the picture is complicated by the seven year period just prior to
this, 1984-91. In this period, incarceration also rose substantially, at a rate of 65%.
Yet crime rates increased during this time as well, by 17% nationally. Thus we see a
continuous rise in incarceration for fourteen years, during which crime rose for seven
years, then declined for seven years. This does not suggest that incarceration had no
impact on crime, but any such connection is clearly influenced by other factors. A
comparison with other nations is instructive in this regard. The United States
incarcerates its citizens at a greater rate than any other nation and at a rate 5-8 times
that of most other industrialized nations. This differential is in part due to a higher
rate of violent crime in the U.S. and in part to more severe criminal justice policies.
The reasons why other industrialized nations have less violent crime than in the U.S. is
clearly not because they lock up more offenders and thereby reduce crime. We could debate
the various factors that contribute to our high level of violence but a failure to
incarcerate is clearly not one of them (Mauer 21-24). 
In order to analyze the decline in crime in the 1990s in greater detail the project team
examined the relationship between imprisonment and crime at the state level from 1991 to
1998. The reason for doing so is that national trends often obscure substantial
variations among the states in the degree to which imprisonment is utilized as a response
to crime. During the seven year period, for example, Texas led the nation with a 144%
rise in its rate of incarceration. Maine increased its prison population by just 2%. The
national average increase in the rate of incarceration was 47% (Mauer 21-24). The
statistics are significant and they are gratifying. We must be honest, too many families,
and too many communities, still live in fear. Violent crimes may be at their lowest
levels in a generation, but even a single crime is one too many.
Even if statistics indicate a decline in violent crime, citizens are still concerned
about becoming a victim of a crime. Our children cannot reach for their dreams if they
are ducking for cover. We cannot restore a sense of community and decency if people are
afraid to walk in any neighborhood, if they feel they have lost the public spaces that
are rightfully theirs. A parent struggles to pass on the right values in a culture that
practically screams out that chaos and cruelty are cool. A good parent is undermined in
trying to teach the great, simple lessons of right and wrong, of the rule of law and
responsibility, when a burdened justice system lets criminals off too easy. The liberals
have fought for ages to instill a sense of security and safety to our nation. They are in
favor of enforcing tougher penalties against drug and sex offenders. Liberals are pushing
hard to create more gun laws that are written for families, not for gun lobbyists and
their apologists. They are working on raising the age for handgun possession from 18 to
21 and to pass strict background checks for those who buy guns at gun shows. Liberals are
in favor of enacting stiff, new penalties for adults who sell guns to minors and to
require child-safety locks on guns. Liberals believe we need tougher penalties for gun
trafficking and all crimes committed with guns. The Brady Law is one of many laws that
the democrats have passed. Since the Brady waiting period law was passed, gun crimes have
dropped by 38 percent. The liberals feel that the Brady Law has stopped nearly a quarter
of a million felons and fugitives from buying guns and saved countless lives.
(www.algore.com/guncontrol) 
The liberals have endorsed a constitutional amendment to expand the rights of crime
victims. The amendment would grant victims & their families the right to reasonable
notice of court proceedings involving their cases, the right to have a voice in those
proceedings, and the right to notice of an offender's release from prison. Conservatives
assert that those rights can be ensured without an amendment, and that the measure would
violate the civil rights of the accused (New York Times A18). 
The Liberals and Conservatives have many different views regarding guns. However, both
parties do agree on some gun issues. They are both in favor of supporting the current ban
on assault weapons, prohibiting juveniles from possessing assault weapons and banning
imports of high capacity ammunition clips. Both parties are also in favor of raising the
minimum age for possessing a handgun from age eighteen to twenty one. (Los Angeles Times
C2)
The Conservatives are strongly opposed to government mandated registration of guns owned
by people who do not break the laws. Conservatives feel their safety and power to protect
their families are in jeopardy if the government enforces gun prohibition. They strongly
support the Second Amendment, the right of the people to keep and bare arms. They feel
that the Liberals and their federal agencies have declared a civil war on law abiding
firearm owners. They declare that what the Democrats label as the "Gun Culture" only
targets peaceable gun owners. It is a naked attempt to strip the next generation of the
Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. (American Hunter 10) To conservatives "Gun
Culture" means our history, our heritage, our future and our freedom. Marion Hammer, 1998
President of the NRA made the following statement about the Liberals definition of gun
culture. "It is just another contrived, divisive, polarizing term. It is an attempt to
cast law abiding gun owners in a negative light. They want to portray guns and gun
ownership as sinister and evil." (American Hunter 11)
The conservatives defend their gun rights and often argue that gun prohibition will not
eliminate violent crime. The war against guns was sparked by the terrible murders of
school children in Jonesboro, Arkansas and the Columbine High School Shooting.
Conservatives conclude that nothing the government could ever propose would have
prevented these twisted youths from obtaining the firearms, stealing a vehicle, stealing
ammunition and stealing the lives and futures from their classmates and families. Every
action they took violated an existing law. No man made law could have prevented this
awful violent crime. 
Conservatives do support many laws that can decrease violent crimes. They have voted for
increased penalties for repeat domestic violence offenders and those who violate
protective orders. The support victim rights by requiring law enforcement officials to
notify victims of violence upon the offender's release from custody. The want more police
officer protection. They support legislation in making it a felony to assault police
officers and other public servants. They voted for the "two strikes and you're out" law
for sex offenders. The law removes the two priors provision and requires automatic life
upon a second sex-related offense. They support the abolishment of mandatory release of
inmates and increased parolee supervision. (www.georgebush.com)
Conservatives feel state and local authorities are largely responsible for combating
violent crime. They believe the federal government's role in criminal justice is
primarily international and multi-jurisdictional including tough policies against
organized crime, drug cartels, and international terrorism. In addition to this, they
believe the Federal government can do more to improve our criminal justice system.
Conservatives are advocates for providing comprehensive juvenile justice reform, tougher
sex offender laws, longer sentences for violent repeat offenders, and zero tolerance for
drunk driving. (www.georgebush.com)
I believe that the best way to protect the innocent is to fully enforce the law and to
ensure swift and sure punishment for criminals. Government's most basic duty is to ensure
law and order and keep citizens safe from crime. I strongly support the second amendment.
I think it should be every citizen's right to own a gun for hunting or protection
provided that they have a license and are educated about gun safety. I am in favor of
laws that keep guns out of the hands of criminals and away from children. I support
increasing the number of community police on our streets, and give them the high-tech
tools and the training they need to keep crime down. I am for strengthening the laws
against serious criminals. I am strongly for victim rights. I support the "Megan's Law"
requiring that people should be told if a sex offender lives in their area. (Federal
Sentencing Reporter 10). 
Statistics indicate that strangers commit only one percent of violent crimes against
women (The New American Magazine). I want to be protected, if I am in this small
percentage. When a woman awakens and sees a male stranger crawling through her window and
heading toward her bed, he is not a small percentage. He is a 100 percent fiend. But, if
she had a pistol under her pillow and knew how to use it, she could make him a 100
percent corpse, and the world would be a far better place (The New American Magazine).
That is my reason for supporting the second amendment. 
Bibliography
Hammer, Marion. "United We Stand, Divided We Fall." American Hunter June
1998
James Dao, New York Times, p. A18 May 3, 2000
Lee, Robert, "Gun Report" The New American Magazine, November 11, 1996 
Mauer, Marc. Preventing and Fighting Crime, What Works? FDCH 
Congressional Testimony, 10/02/2000
"Where They Agree: Regarding Guns," Associated Press. Los Angeles Times
April 21, 2000
www.AlGore2000.com/issues/crime. May 16, 1999
www.georgebush.com/crime

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