Even as a special session generally
devoted to fiscal matters – more specifically excuses to raise taxes – looms,
the Louisiana Legislature’s regular session approaches and presents the state a
chance to follow the lead of other states this year in safeguarding Second
Amendment rights and the additional public safety benefits that come from that.
Some states, in light of the
occasional but all too regular occurrences of shootings on college campuses,
will review legislation this year to allow concealed
weapons carried on school property by qualified registrants, not just by public
safety personnel. Prior to 2012, Louisiana legislators typically filed similar
but unsuccessful bills, yet that seemed to dry up with a new set of lawmakers.
The case to enact a law like this remains
as compelling as it has in the past. At the theoretical level, human
psychology and, at the empirical level, data continue to bear out that if those
who intend to bring harm against others see the chances increased that they
could face firearms in opposition, the less likely they become to use deadly
force. Poorly-reasoned inferior analysis trying to assert the opposite fails
to pass muster.
In an attempt to keep higher
education institutions’ ability to impose a ban, some administrators now additionally
argue that the higher chances of students’ desire for suicide and of firearm
use by those engaging in binge drinking at colleges would create more carnage.
Yet these say more about colleges’ failings to provide services to address
mental illness and to educate young adults to abjure alcohol abuse than provide
any justification to curtail Second Amendment rights and to elevate risks of
shootings, and represents treating the symptoms rather than the disease.
Along with this reform, Louisiana
also should pass a law to protect the gun industry from inappropriate
discrimination in access to business services, particularly from the insurance
industry. Anecdotal
evidence continues to mount that some insurers in blanket fashion refuse to
insure establishments that manufacture or sell guns and/or ammunition while welcoming
all other businesses under commercial policies. This appears to derive from the
Pres. Barack
Obama Administration’s move a few years ago to allow financial institutions
greater latitude to discriminate in doing business with alleged “high risk”
industries, lumping in firearms firms.
This appears to have trickled down
in insurer guidelines that prices in risk arbitrarily, even though the program supposedly
ended. Legislation would prevent pricing or refusal to insure based more on
prejudice against the industry than actual evaluable conditions of particular
individual businesses.
If insurers can decide on the basis
of politics to set higher rates or not to write insurance at all concerning the
gun industry as a whole, ignoring the usual underwriting standards, this would
lead to higher insurance prices for these firms, which they would pass along to
consumers and ultimately would discourage purchases. In turn, this reduces
public safety, for the reasons noted above, as well as limits citizens’ protection
against potentially tyrannical government. As such, for the good of the public states
must pass laws to ensure that political fad and prejudice does not inhibit the
gun industry from getting a fair shake from insurers. These laws would not
force insurers to write policies to the gun industry, but just guarantee fair
treatment.
On this account and with concealed
carry at colleges, Louisiana in its upcoming regular legislative session should
seek to emulate these other states’ efforts.
No comments:
Post a Comment