| What are the
two most ridiculous words in modern political
lingo? "Random violence." Calling
violence "random" implies that crime is
just a "random" event, like hail or
falling rocks. During the Los Angeles riots,
truck driver Reginald Denny, by this theory, just
had the misfortune to happen into some random
violence emitting from sociologically deprived
victims just as if he had taken a wrong
turn into a sandstorm. The theory
that violence, like hail and sandstorms, is the
result of environmental conditions is popular
among those who believe the standard sociological
hypothesis that people who commit crimes are sick
or somehow socially deformed as a result of our
maladjusted society. We are told that unless we
radically change the social order and spend
billions on rehabilitating these "sick"
people, we will continue to suffer the
"public-health" epidemic of
"random violence." While this theory is
widely believed, it is wrong.
Several
years ago, economists Gordon Tullock and Richard
B. McKenzie mounted a search for statistically
sound studies to support the "sick
criminal" hypothesis. They found none.
Instead, they found a great deal of support for
the hypothesis that most criminals are rational
individuals bent on breaking the law in search of
profits. Or, as one specialist in armed robbery
told the Washington Post, "I want to
go to barber school, but I know there's not that
kind of money in barbering."
The
"public-health" nostrums suggested by
the "sick criminal" theory are at odds
with the solutions offered up by the
"rational criminal" school. "Sick
criminal" theorists teach that punishment
does not deter crime. Just as we send people with
pneumonia to hospitals instead of prison, we
should, according to this voguish theory,
shepherd "sick" criminals off to
halfway houses and other rehabilitative
institutions.
The
"sick criminal" theorists insist that
we must seal the criminal records of young thugs
to protect their fragile self-esteem. While the
theorists can "understand" and forgive
the "sick" people who commit violent
crime, they demand zealous prosecution of
law-abiding citizens who would even consider
using guns to protect their property.
In contrast,
folks who believe in the rational criminal theory
argue that crime will be reduced when it doesn't
pay. They believe that individual citizens
interested in protecting their lives and property
form society's first line of defense against
criminals. Buying door locks and firearms thus
raises the costs of stealing by increasing the
number and potency of obstacles with which the
criminal must contend. As John Lott demonstrates
in More Guns, Less Crime, when more
citizens carry guns for lawful protection, rates
of violent crime fall. So, if the personal costs
of a life of crime climb high enough, it stands
to reason that some criminals will be on the
lookout for other lines of work.
Conversely,
laws inhibiting individual action against
malefactors reduce the costs of lawlessness. When
landlords cannot evict unsavory tenants, when
property owners cannot oust suspicious
trespassers, and when teachers cannot eject rowdy
students from class, crime rates will increase.
And as Lott details in a new
research paper, when state laws force guns to be
locked up, crime rises.
If the risks
of crime fall, then crime increases. And
vice-versa. It's that simple. There's no need to
send all those "sick" people out there
who are perpetrating rapes and robberies to a
psychiatrist's couch. Increase the odds that
they'll go to prison or get shot, and they'll
cure themselves.
In one study
of major felonies, the rate of robberies
decreased by about 1.3 per cent in response to
each 1 percent increase in the probability of
punishment. In a study of crime rates in England,
the fall in imprisonment rates between 1954-1967
was found to have contributed to a 44 percent
increase in aggregate crime. These studies also
explain why overly harsh mandatory sentences
often have no deterrence effect. Life in prison
means little if would-be criminals believe that
their chances of conviction are slim.
Our
legislators, although they often posture about
being tough on crime, too often miss the point of
"rational criminal" theory. Example:
Because so much prison space has been squandered
on lengthy mandatory minimums for drug offenders,
burglars rarely go to prison. Then legislators
wonder why burglary is increasing.
Meanwhile,
politicians like Chicago Mayor Richard Daley and
Gov. Parris Glendening of Maryland attack the
very principle of self-defense while
enjoying the protection of well-armed government
bodyguards. They display little patience for the
theory that people who live in rough
neighborhoods should have just as much right as
politicians to defend their lives. But making it
harder for law-abiding citizens to possess and
carry guns only means that rational criminals
will face a smaller risk of armed resistance.
Chances are the politicians will then blame the
NRA for the surge in "random violence."
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