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Democratic Presidential Candidates Hold First Debate In Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS, NV – OCTOBER 13: Democratic presidential candidates Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) (L) and Hillary Clinton take part in a presidential debate sponsored by CNN and Facebook at Wynn Las Vegas on October 13, 2015 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Five Democratic presidential candidates are participating in the party’s first presidential debate. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

The former secretary of state and frontrunner took a huge risk by defending capitalism in Las Vegas against socialist Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders on Tuesday. However, according to a new Gravis Marketing Post Democratic Debate Poll, Hillary Clinton handily won round one sponsored by CNN and Facebook at Wynn Las Vegas.

When asked by Anderson Cooper if he was anti-capitalist, he said he was against the system of “casino capitalism,” though he defined it in generalities. Mrs. Clinton hit back in a modest defense of the model responsible for lifting more people out of poverty than any other, but it was a defense, nonetheless. Yet, Bernie’s anti-capitalist rhetoric is red meat to the far left Democratic base, though it didn’t seem to get him too far.

The nonpartisan Gravis Marketing (PPD Pollster Scorecard Rating: A-) surveyed 760 registered Democratic voters across the U.S. over the performance and opinions of the Democrats that took place in the first Democratic Primary debate. The poll, which was conducted for One America News Network (OANN), has a margin of error of ± 3.6% and was conducted using automated telephone calls (IVR technology) and weighted by party voting habits.

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Hillary runs away with 62% of Democratic voters saying she won the debate, with Sanders coming in at a distant second with 30%. Meanwhile, former Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee, who was the only one with the courage to challenge Clinton on character, which nearly two-thirds of general election voters say they view unfavorably, took a big hit over it. Forty-three (43%) of registered Democratic voters who saw the CNN Democratic debate say Gov. Chafee lost.

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Former Virginia Sen. Jim Webb, a war hero and conservative Democrat, also took a big hit for taking positions that are out of step with the far left-wing of the modern Democratic Party. A whole 51% say they now see Sen. Webb–again, a war hero who didn’t mention global warming as the No. 1 national security threat–less favorable than they did prior to the debate. However, he was seen as whining about time and Cooper, the CNN moderator, had to tell him he agreed to the rules of the debate ahead of time.

Ironically, it was Cooper who wasn’t abiding by his network’s own rules, allowing Clinton, Sanders, and former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley on numerous occasions to speak beyond their time. Further, each candidate did not receive an equal number of questions let alone afforded equal time for answering questions. Regardless, only Chafee at 57% received a more unfavorable “Before & After” mark than Webb.

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Worth noting, unlike Republicans, a sizable number of Democrats (37%) say they haven’t decided whether they would vote down party lines despite which candidate ends up the inevitable Democratic nominee. That is likely not an endorsement of the inevitable Republican candidate, but instead more likely a danger sign that some Democrats would stay home if either Sanders or Clinton prevail. Thus far, even with Donald Trump as the hypothetical nominee, we haven’t seen evidence of that voter sentiment across the aisle.

As PPD previously noted prior to the debate, polls suggested the media hype leading up to Tuesday night was unfounded. Clinton is still the overwhelming favorite of likely Democratic voters nationwide, with 75% who say she is the likely nominee including 40% who say it’s very likely. By comparison, only 10% think Joe Biden is very likely to be the nominee, and nine percent (9%) feel that way about Sanders.

Read Also — Why PPD Still Heavily Favors Hillary Clinton to Win Democratic Nomination

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According to a new Gravis Marketing Post

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Then-U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton delivers remarks at the OECD Ministerial in June, 2011.

Most normal Americans have never heard of the “Base Erosion and Profit Shifting” project being pushed by the tax-loving bureaucrats at the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

But in the world of tax policy, BEPS is suddenly attracting a lot of attention, mostly because the business community has figured out it’s a scheme that would require them to pay more money to greedy governments.

I’m happy that BEPS is finally getting some hostile attention, but I wonder why it took so long. I started criticizing the project from the moment it was announced. Given the OECD’s dismal track record of promoting statist policy, there was zero chance that this project would result in good policy proposals.

Though I will say that the Wall Street Journal quickly recognized that the BEPS scheme was a ruse for tax increases on the business community.

And the editors of the paper have continued their criticisms as BEPS has morphed from bad concept to specific policy. Here are some passages from an editorial earlier this week.

…the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development this week released its final proposals for combatting “base erosion and profit shifting,” or BEPS. …The OECD claims governments lose anywhere between $100 billion and $240 billion in revenue each year to such legal strategies, and it has spent two years concocting complex rules and new compliance burdens to stop it. Perhaps the worst of the OECD’s ideas is…country-by-country reports to every jurisdiction in which a company operates would detail operations in that area, and where it has paid tax on any relevant profits.

The WSJ is particularly concerned about proposals to require sharing of information with irresponsible and corrupt governments.

Ostensibly this…data would be kept confidential. Fat chance about that, especially if a high-taxing government thinks it has spotted an opportunity to grab more revenue or indulge some political grandstanding. A related proposal would require companies to hand over their so-called master files to governments. Those files, which detail global operations and intra-company transfers, are essentially guides to proprietary business strategies. Passing them to the authorities, and especially governments that run state-owned enterprises competing with multinational firms, is an invitation to mischief.

The OECD’s proposals also will mean higher compliance costs.

Companies could also be forced to spend years in courts and arbitration challenging potential new instances of the double taxation the current global tax system was developed to avoid. …Underlying all of this is the belief that the fiscal problems of the world result from insufficient tax collection, when the real culprit is anemic growth.

The final point in the above passage deserves special attention. Economic growth in many industrialized nations is relatively anemic because of bad government policy. And since people are earning less income and businesses are earning fewer profits, this means less revenue for government.

But rather than fix the policies that are causing sub-par growth, the politicians want to impose higher tax rates.

Needless to say, this will simply lead to less taxable income, making it even harder to collect revenue (this is the core insight of the Laffer Curve).

It’s also worth citing what the Wall Street Journal wrote over the summer on the BEPS issue. The editors started with an important observation about companies being able to invest in high-tax nations because they can protect some of their profits.

The global war on low tax rates entered a new stage… Hang onto your wallets—and your proprietary corporate data. …Governments have noticed that companies try to protect themselves from rapacious tax policies. …This is all legal for now, and a good thing too. Shielding profits from growth-killing taxes helps make investment and job creation in high-tax jurisdictions more economical.

And the editorial also warns about the dangers of giving dodgy governments access to more information, particularly when some of them will be incapable of protecting data from hackers.

The compliance burden these rules would impose counts as a new tax in itself. Despite some attempts to allow companies to file only one global disclosure in the jurisdiction of the corporate headquarters, in practice firms are likely to have to submit multiple, overlapping documents around the world. Sensitive corporate financial information would then be shared among global tax collectors. If you believe the OECD’s claim that all this will be kept confidential, have a chat with any of the millions of federal employees whose personnel files Uncle Sam allowed China to hack.

By the way, I don’t doubt for one second that companies push the envelope as they try to protect their shareholders’ money from government. But less money for government is a good outcome.Particularly when politicians are imposing taxes – like the corporate income tax – that hurt workers by impeding capital investment.

The main thing to understand, at least from an American perspective, is that businesses have a big incentive to shift money out of the United States because politicians have saddled our economy with the world’s highest corporate tax rate, combined with the globe’s most punitive worldwide tax system.

Dealing with those problems is the right approach, not some money grab from an international bureaucracy. I shared these ideas in this brief presentation I made to an audience on Capitol Hill.

[brid video=”17960″ player=”1929″ title=”Dan Mitchell Warns of OECD Scheme to Increase Tax Burden on Capitol Hill”]

For what it’s worth, the chart I shared is all the evidence you could ever want that governments aren’t suffering from a lack of corporate tax revenue.

Moreover, while I don’t like OECD schemes to enable higher tax burdens, the BEPS project won’t equally affect all businesses.

Let’s look at how the project specifically disadvantages American companies (above and beyond the self-imposed damage from Washington).

Aparna Mathur of the American Enterprise Institute explains how BEPS will make a bad system even worse for US-based multinationals.

The U.S. has much to lose from a shift to this system. …the U.S. today has the highest corporate tax rate in the OECD. Under BEPS, this would affect the real decisions of firms to locate jobs and capital investment in the U.S.. In a recent report Michael Mandel points out that the BEPS principles will give multinationals a strong incentive to move high-paying creative and research jobs out of the U.S. since that is the easiest way to take advantage of low tax rates. …The current U.S. system of corporate taxation has many flaws. …the changes envisaged under the OECD’s BEPS project would make matters even worse.

This doesn’t sound good.

Some people have complained about corporate inversions, but it doesn’t hurt America when a company technically redomiciles in a nation with better tax law. After all, the jobs, factories, and headquarters generally remain in the United States.

But the way BEPS is structured, companies will have to move economic activity out of America.

Last but not least, Veronique de Rugy of the Mercatus Center identifies some major systematic flaws in the BEPS project. She starts by pointing out what the OECD wants.

Europe’s largest welfare states…are leading the charge through the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development to raise corporate tax rates globally. …The underlying assumption behind the base erosion and profit shifting, or BEPS, project is that governments aren’t seizing enough revenue from multinational companies. …Its solution is to force those companies that wisely structured their operations to benefit from low-tax jurisdictions to declare more income in high-tax nations.

And then she explains what will be the inevitable result of higher tax burdens.

Far from filling government coffers in order to continue funding massive redistributive welfare regimes, BEPS will strangle global economic output and erode tax bases even further. …Corporations provide an easy political target for tax-hungry politicians, but the burden of corporate taxes falls on ordinary citizens. Employees, shareholders, and investors will bear the brunt of the OECD’s corporate tax grab, all because European politicians refuse to accept responsibility for building bigger governments than their economies can sustain.

So what is the Obama White House doing to protect American companies from this global tax grab?

The good news is that some folks from the Treasury Department have complained that the project is targeting U.S. multinationals. The bad news is that the minor grousing from the United States hasn’t had an impact. Not that we should be surprised. Because of a shared belief in statism, the Obama Administration has worked to expand the OECD’s power to push bad tax policy around the world.

P.S. Since today’s topic is arcane yet important international tax issues, allow me to share an update on the horribly misguided FATCA law. As is so often the case, the op-ed page of the Wall Street Journal is the source of great wisdom.

Or, in this case, maybe it would be best to write “the source of great sadness and frustration.”

America is the only country that taxes citizens on their global earnings, and in 2010 Washington exacerbated that by passing the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, or Fatca. As this law comes into force, it is doing immense harm to…the 8.7 million U.S. citizens living abroad, who have essentially been declared guilty of financial crimes unless they can prove otherwise. …American leadership overseas, from volunteer organizations to the business world, has diminished. No one wants an American involved when their citizenship attracts a maze of rules, regulations, potential fines and criminal penalties. …It’s painful to witness the anguish of patriotic Americans as they contemplate giving up their U.S. citizenship, as record numbers have been doing. In 2014, 3,417 renounced their citizenship, a 266% increase over 2012, before Fatca came fully into effect.

Interestingly, the way to solve the FATCA problem is the same way to deal with the corporate inversion issue.

Simply shift to a territorial system.

The best solution is for the U.S. to join the rest of the world in taxing based on residency rather than citizenship. …Doing so would advance American fairness, mobility and economic competitiveness.

Sadly, only a handful of lawmakers, most notably Senator Rand Paul, are making noise on this issue.

The OECD and BEPS is attracting a

Producer-Prices

Producer Price Index (PPI): A worker in a wholesale foods production and distribution warehouse.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on Wednesday that the Labor Department’s Producer Price Index (PPI) fell 0.5% in September, missing expectations. The report on U.S. business prices is the latest sign of low inflation pressure and indication that the Federal Reserve will not get evidence that their long-held 2% target for raising interest rates will be met.

Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal had expected overall prices would fall 0.2%, and core prices would rise 0.1%.

The PPI, which measures the prices companies receive for goods and services, fell 0.5% in September amid cheap gasoline and a relatively strong dollar. the Labor Department said Wednesday. Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, so-called core prices were down 0.3%.

Overall producer prices fell by 1.1% in September on a year-ver-year basis. While Fed officials have blamed weak inflation on temporary factors, including depressed energy and import prices, the report now marks the the eighth straight 12-month decline. So-called core prices were up 0.5%. The index measures prices from the perspective of the seller. However, historically it is in line most closely with other measures of inflation for consumers.

The Federal Open Markets Committee (FOMC), the Fed policy-making committee that will weigh the timing and trajectory of a rate hike, uses their own gauge to measure inflation and will not consider the PPI.

In September, producer prices for goods decreased by 1.2%, which is the sharpest fall since January. Energy prices fell 5.9%, represented the vast majority of the decline, though food prices fell 0.8% and service prices fell 0.4%.

The price index for personal consumption expenditures, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, increased by just 0.3% on a year-over-year basis in August.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on

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Retail sales shopper walks down the street in New York City. (Photo: Reuters)

The Commerce Department said on Wednesday U.S. retail sales barely rose in September, inching up slightly 0.1% last month after also being flat in August. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast retail sales to rise by 0.2% in September after a previously reported 0.2% increase in August.

Retail sales excluding automobiles, gasoline, building materials and food services fell by 0.1% after a downwardly revised 0.2% gain in August. These so-called core retail sales correspond most closely with the consumer spending component of gross domestic product (GDP).

Core retail sales were initially reported to have gained 0.4% in August, which economists had forecast core retail sales rising 0.3% last month. The mixed report indicates somewhat modest domestic demand amid a weakening global economy and a slowdown in job growth over the past two months, which have disrupted expectations of a U.S. rate hike in September this year. Now, following an abysmal jobs report last month, the Federal Reserve’s policy-making committee is not expected to call for a rate hike until December, at least.

However, financial markets are only pricing in an increase early next year as the U.S. central bank has kept its short-term interest rate near zero since late 2008. Economic growth has been stifled in recent months as is evident in weak exports, declining capital in the energy sector largely due to lower oil prices and a complete contraction in the manufacturing sector in September.

The retail sales report showed receipts at service stations fell 3.2 percent, which is the largest fall since January and follows another 2.0% decline in August. Excluding gasoline, retail sales increased by 0.4% last month. Sales at auto dealerships gained 1.7% after increasing by just 0.4% the month prior. Clothing store sales saw an increase of 0.9% in September, while receipts for building materials and at garden equipment stores fell 0.3%. Furniture stores increased by 0.6%.

Meanwhile, sales receipts at sporting goods and hobby stores gained 0.9%, sales at restaurants and bars rose 0.7%, and at electronics and appliance stores they fell 0.2%. Sales at online stores also fell by 0.2%.

The Commerce Department said on Wednesday U.S.

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Democrat presidential candidates arrive on the stage at the debate sponsored by CNN and Facebook at Wynn Las Vegas on October 13, 2015 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Ron Fournier, of National Journal reporter and known Clintonian Democrat, slammed Hillary Clinton following the CNN Democratic debate in Las Vegas, Nevada.

“Hillary Clinton won . She won be­cause she’s a strong de­bater. She won be­cause Bernie Sanders is not. She won be­cause the first Demo­crat­ic pres­id­en­tial de­bate fo­cused on lib­er­al policies—and not her email scan­dal or char­ac­ter,” Fournier wrote Wednesday morning in the National Journal. “The em­battled front-run­ner won her­self a news cycle or two, be­cause she stretched the truth and played to a friendly audi­ence. It won’t al­ways be so.”

Though it wasn’t widely reported, Team Hillary and the Democratic National Committee Chair Debbie Wasserman-Schultz put the word out to the other candidates regarding attacking the frontrunner. In short, any serious challenge to Hillary on Benghazi, the email scandal or her prior statements that proved false would not bode well for their political career. Fournier, who has repeatedly reported on Clinton’s campaigning shortfalls and crisis mismanagement, noted the candidates took the threats seriously and fell in line.

“It took more than an hour be­fore CNN’s An­der­son Cooper asked Clin­ton about the cov­ert email sys­tem she es­tab­lished as sec­ret­ary of State in de­fi­ance of fed­er­al reg­u­la­tions, sub­vert­ing the Free­dom of In­form­a­tion Act, thwart­ing con­gres­sion­al over­sight, and jeop­ard­iz­ing U.S. secrets,” Fournier added. “And, even then, her chief rival offered Clin­ton cov­er.”

There are many people, in­clud­ing me, who know a side of Clin­ton that is strong (2012: “What I Learned Cov­er­ing Hil­lary Clin­ton”) and com­pel­ling (2013: “Best Bet for a Third Clin­ton Term is If She Runs as the ‘Real Hil­lary’—warm, open, and hon­est”), which makes her ac­tions this year shame­fully in­ept (“Memo to Hil­lary: You’re Still The Prob­lem”).

In his article, which served as a continuation of his prior criticism, Fournier noted the moment in the debate when socialist Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders said “the American people are sick and tired of hearing” about Hillary Clinton’s “damn” emails. Except, while that certainly played well to the clapping seals in the crowd, it doesn’t to the general election electorate. In the most recent poll, Hillary trails all of the top GOP candidates and 58% of Americans believe she is lying about her emails.

WATCH: Bernie Sanders: The American People Are Sick and Tired of Hearing About Hillary’s Damn Emails

Even though Sanders and O’Mal­ley hit Clin­ton over trade, not­ing that she only re­cently flip-flopped on her prior sup­port of the Trans-Pa­cific Part­ner­ship (TPP) “to curry fa­vor with the party’s uni­on friends,” her rivals and the moderator once again let her slide on what is a major presidential issue.

“I did say when I was sec­ret­ary of State three years ago that I hoped it would be the gold stand­ard,” Clin­ton said.

That’s not exactly accurate, and Fournier and others, including PPD’s editor and political analyst, caught on.

“She was mis­quot­ing her­self, adding the ‘I hoped’ caveat,” Fournier noted. “See how she does it? It worked Tues­day night. She won. She sur­vived and won with a per­form­ance that was as dis­hon­est as it was im­press­ive, that be­nefited from a friendly crowd and weak field.”

Still, according to most polls, most Democratic voters and obviously the debate crowd don’t seem to care much about honesty and character. Here’s how Fournier saw it:

When Lin­coln Chafee, the field’s Rhode Is­land cipher, dared to cri­ti­cize Clin­ton on the email is­sue, Cooper asked her if she wanted to re­spond.

“No,” she replied.

The crowd roared.

Ron Fournier, a National Journal reporter and

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Bank of America branch office. (Photo: Reuters)

Bank of America Corp. (NYSE:BAC) reported a quarterly profit, compared with a year-earlier loss due to a multi-billion dollar settlement with the U.S. government over mortgages. Following J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM), BofA posted reported net income of $4.5 billion, or $0.37 per diluted share, for the third quarter of 2015, compared to a net loss of $232 million, or $0.04 per share, in the year-ago period.

“We saw solid results this quarter by continuing to execute our long-term strategy,” Chief Executive Officer Brian Moynihan said in a statement. “The key drivers of our business — deposit taking and lending to both our consumer and corporate clients — moved in the right direction this quarter and our trading results on behalf of clients remained fairly stable in challenging capital markets conditions. Our balanced approach to serving customers and clients is on track as the economy continues to move forward.”

The No. 2 U.S. bank by assets said its non-interest expenses declined 31% to $13.81 billion in the third quarter. BofA’s non-interest income, which includes revenue from equity and bonds trading and mortgage banking, rose 1.6 percent to $11.17 billion. BofA, which has paid more than $70 billion in legal expenses since 2008, said its legal costs fell for the third straight quarter, dropping to $231 million from $6 billion a year earlier. BofA reported net income of $4.07 billion, or 37 cents per share, attributable to shareholders for the quarter ended Sept. 30.

The report follows comments by BofA’s and Citigroup Inc. (NYSE:C) executives stating that revenue at their units trading equities, bonds, currencies and commodities were expected to fall about 5% in the third quarter.

“Our results this quarter reflect our ongoing efforts to improve operating leverage while continuing to invest in our business,” Chief Financial Officer Paul Donofrio added. “We built capital and liquidity to record levels and grew total loans for the second consecutive quarter while continuing to operate within our risk framework.”

In the year-earlier period, the bank had a loss of $470 million, or 4 cents per share, as it took a $5.6 billion charge related to the mortgage settlement.

Analysts on average had expected earnings of 33 per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. It was not immediately clear if the figures reported on Wednesday were comparable.

Total revenue on fully taxable equivalent basis fell 2.4 percent to $20.91 billion.

BofA shares were up 1.2 percent in premarket trading.

Bank of America Corp. posted net income

[brid video=”17946″ player=”1929″ title=”Anderson Cooper to Hillary Clinton “Will You Say Anything To Get Elected””]

CNN Democratic debate moderator Anderson Cooper pressed Hillary Clinton on whether she “would say anything to get elected,” citing numerous flip flops.

TRANSCRIPT

ANDERSON COOPER, CNN: I want to begin with concerns that voters have about each of the candidates here on the stage that they have about each of you. Secretary Clinton, I’ll start with you. Some Democrats believe you changed your positions based on political expediency. You’re against same-sex marriage. You defended President Obama’s immigration policy. You supported his trade deal and called it the gold standard. Suddenly last week you’re against it. Will you say anything to get elected?

HILLARY CLINTON: I have been consistent over the course of my entire life. I have always fought for the same values and principles, but like most human beings, including those of us who run for office, I do absorb new information, I do look at what’s happening in the world.

You know, take the trade deal. I did say when I was Secretary of State three years ago, that I hoped it would be the gold standard. It was just finally negotiated last week. In looking at it, it didn’t meet my standards. My standards for more new good jobs for Americans, for raising wages for Americans and I want to make sure that I can look into the eyes of any middle class American and say this will help raise your wages and I concluded I could not.

COOPER: Secretary Clinton, with all due respect, the question is about political expediency. In July, New Hampshire, you told the crowd you take a back seat to no one when it comes to progressive values. Last month in Ohio you say you pled guilty to being kind of moderate and center. Do you change your political identity based on who you’re talking to?

CLINTON: No. I think like most people that I know, I have a range of views. But they are rooted in my values and my experience. And I don’t take a back seat to anyone when it comes to progressive experience and progressive commitment…

COOPER: Just for the record, are you a progressive or a moderate?

CLINTON: I am a progressive who likes to get things done.

CNN Democratic debate moderator Anderson Cooper pressed

[brid video=”17945″ player=”1929″ title=”Sanders “The American People Are Sick and Tired of Hearing About Your Damn Emails””]

In the first Democratic Debate, Vermont socialist Bernie Sanders said “the American people are sick and tired of hearing” about Hillary Clinton’s damn emails. The exchange, which benefited Hillary Clinton more than Bernie Sanders, was met with a loud applause and the former secretary of state thanking the socialist with a handshake.

“Thank you Bernie,” Hillary said.

However, while Democratic primary voters may be sick of it, polling shows the American people want a congressional investigation to continue to move forward, and say Hillary is lying by nearly 2 to 1.

In the first Democratic Debate, Vermont socialist

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An image from video posted online shows masked gunmen just before one of them appears to shoot a Paris police officer at close range, following an attack on the office of weekly newspaper Charlie Hebdo, Jan. 7, 2015, in Paris, France.

The grand illusion of zealots for laws preventing ordinary, law-abiding people from having guns is that “gun control” laws actually control guns. In a country with many millions of guns, not all of them registered, this is a fantasy and a farce.

Guns do not vanish into thin air because there are gun control laws. Guns — whether legal or illegal — can last for centuries. Passing laws against guns may enable zealots to feel good about themselves, but at the cost of other people’s lives.

Why anyone would think that criminals who disobey other laws, including laws against murder, would obey gun control laws is a mystery. A disarmed population makes crime a safer occupation and street violence a safer sport.

The “knockout game” of suddenly throwing a punch to the head of some unsuspecting passer-by would not be nearly so much fun for street hoodlums, if there was a serious risk that the passer-by was carrying a concealed firearm.

Being knocked out in a boxing ring means landing on the canvas. But being knocked out on a street usually means landing on concrete. Victims of the knockout game have ended up in the hospital or in the morgue.

If, instead, just a few of those who play this sick “game” ended up being shot, that would take a lot of the fun out of it for others who are tempted to play the same “game.”

Even in places where law-abiding citizens are allowed to own guns, they are seldom allowed to carry concealed weapons — even though concealed weapons protect not only those who carry them, but also protect those who do not, for the hoodlums and criminals have no way of knowing in advance who is armed and who is not.

Another feature of gun control zealotry is that sweeping assumptions are made, and enacted into law, on the basis of sheer ignorance. People who know nothing about guns, and have never fired a shot in their lives, much less lived in high-crime areas, blithely say such things as, “Nobody needs a 30-shot magazine.”

Really? If three criminals invaded your home, endangering the lives of you and your loved ones, are you such a sharpshooter that you could take them all out with a clip holding ten bullets? Or a clip with just seven bullets, which is the limit you would be allowed under gun laws in some places?

Do you think that someone who is prepared to use a 30-shot magazine for criminal purposes is going to be deterred by a gun control law? All the wonderful-sounding safeguards in such laws restrict the victims of criminals, rather than the criminals themselves. That is why such laws cost lives, instead of saving lives.

Are there dangers in a widespread availability of guns? Yes! And one innocent death is one too many. But what makes anyone think that there are no innocent lives lost by disarming law-abiding people while criminals remain armed?

If we are going to be serious, as distinguished from being political, we need to look at hard evidence, instead of charging ahead on the basis of rhetoric. Sweeping assumptions need to be checked against facts. But that is seldom what gun control zealots do.

Some gun control zealots may cherry-pick statistics comparing nations with and without strong gun control laws, but cherry-picking is very different from using statistics to actually test a belief.

Among the cherry-picked statistics is that England has stronger gun control laws than the United States and much lower murder rates. But Mexico, Brazil and Russia all have stronger gun control laws than the United States — and much higher murder rates.

A closer look at the history of gun laws in England tells a very different story than what you get from cherry-picked statistics. The murder rate in New York over the past two centuries has been some multiple of the murder rate in London — and, for most of that time, neither city had strong restrictions on the ownership of guns.

Beginning in 1911, New York had stronger restrictions on gun ownership than London had — and New York still had murder rates that were a multiple of murder rates in London. It was not the laws that made the difference in murder rates. It was the people. That is also true within the United States.

But are gun control zealots interested in truth or in political victory? Or perhaps just moral preening?

The grand illusion of zealots for laws

Chick-fil-A

A vandalized Chick-fil-A in response to the owners position on gay marriage.

Support for the idea that it’s good to hear all opinions, even offensive ones, is thin. A plurality of Americans now support laws against “hate speech.”

Conservatives once wanted to ban Playboy magazine, violent rap lyrics and offensive depictions of Jesus. Leftists then were right to fight such bans, but today leftists encourage censorship in the name of “tolerance.”

Scientist Matt Taylor helped land a probe on a comet for the first time in history. But because he explained his achievement while wearing a T-shirt that had cartoons of sexy women on it (designed by a female friend of his), writer Rose Eveleth of The Atlantic tweeted that Taylor “ruined” the comet landing. The public outcry against him was so great that he cried at an apologetic press conference.

Silicon Valley entrepreneur Brendan Eich created JavaScript and helped start Mozilla Firefox. But when activists discovered that he’d once donated $1,000 to support California’s Proposition 8 banning gay marriage, they attacked him as “a hater.” A year and a half later, Eich still can’t find a job.

When Eich donated the money, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton opposed gay marriage, too. But in just five years, such opinions have become so “unacceptable” that a tech genius is ostracized by his own industry.

As long as the leftist mobs don’t use law or violence, they’re still engaged in free speech. Private employers can impose most any speech rule they choose. The First Amendment applies (SET ITAL) only (END ITAL) to government. But now some government officials are as eager to censor as the leftist mobs.

After the owners of Chick-fil-A said they oppose gay marriage, the mayors of Chicago, San Francisco and Boston said Chick-fil-A is “not welcome” in their cities. San Francisco’s mayor said, “The closest Chick-fil-A is 40 miles away and I strongly recommend they not try to come any closer.”

Since mayors may influence permits and zoning, their threats aren’t idle. And no new Chick-fil-A outlets have opened in those cities. This is a clear violation of the First Amendment, although the politicians seem oblivious to that.

Of course, much worse than today’s left are those who censor through violence. Al Qaeda’s magazine names people who should be killed, chirping, “A bullet a day keeps the infidel away.”

Writers and artists heed the threats. CNN, NBC and the New York Times will no longer show Mohammed cartoons.

I was surprised that liberal commentators were so eager to cave in to the terrorists’ threats. Chris Matthews said, “Wanting to pick a fight with Islam is insane.”
Such cowardice just invites more censorship.

When the TV series “South Park” was censored by its own network for depicting Mohammed, a fan of the show, liberal cartoonist Molly Norris, showed her support by drawing her own cartoons of Mohammed. For doing so, she received death threats. Fearing for her safety, she went into hiding.

Columnist Mark Steyn was appalled that “Her liberal newspaper — the way they put it in announcing that she’d gone, (SET ITAL) ceased to exist (END ITAL), was: ‘There is no more Molly.'” She hasn’t been heard from in five years.

“The only way we’re going to move to a real sense of freedom is if every time somebody puts a bullet in a cartoonist for drawing a cartoon of Mohammed,” says Steyn, “every newspaper … displays that picture.”

Steyn argues that societies that censor create more violence by driving hate speech underground.

“You can have a society with free speech where I call you names, and you do rude drawings of me, and I say you’re a hater, and we hatey-hatey-hate each other,” said Steyn on my TV special, “Censorship in America,” but “the alternative is the Muslim world where there’s no open debate, and so there’s nothing left to do but kill and bomb and shoot.”

Free speech matters. If we give in to those who would shut us up, the censors will push and push until we have no freedom left. If we’re going to sort out which ideas are good and which are bad, everyone must be allowed to speak.

Leftists then were correct to fight bans

People's Pundit Daily
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