447 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
447 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
Japan: Gun Control and People Control
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By David B. Kopel
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{This article appeared in the December 1988 issue of The American
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Rifleman.}
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For gun controllers, Japan is a dream come true. The law is
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simple: "No-one shall possess a fire-arm or fire-arms or a sword
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or swords."
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Japan's crime rate is very low, and its gun crime rate
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virtually nil. Anti-gun lobbies tout Japan as the kind of nation
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that America could be, if only we would ban guns. Handgun
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Control quotes a Japanese newspaper reporter who writes: "It
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strikes me as clear that there is a distinct correlation between
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gun control laws and the rate of violent crime. The fewer the
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guns, the less the violence."
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But while Japan may be a gun-banner's dream, it's a civil
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libertarian's nightmare. Japan's low crime rate has almost
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nothing to do with gun control, and everything to do with people
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control. Americans, used to their own traditions of freedom,
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would not accept Japan's system of people controls and gun
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controls.
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Japanese Firearms Laws
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Besides the police and the military, the only group that is
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allowed to posses guns is hunters, and that possession is
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strictly circumscribed. The police even check hunters'
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ammunition inventory, to make sure that there are no unaccounted
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shells or bullets.
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Hunting licenses themselves are not particularly difficult
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to obtain. A prospective hunter must take an official safety
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course; and then pass a test which covers maintenance and
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inspection of the hunting gun, methods of loading and unloading
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cartridges, shooting from various positions, and target practice
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for stationary and moving objects. The hunting license is valid
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for three years. Total permit fees for hunting rifles and
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licenses are 15000 (about 125 American dollars). When not
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hunting, gun owners must store their weapons in a locker.
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Trap and skeet shooting are also tightly restricted.
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Civilians cannot obtain handgun target licenses. Even
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possession of a starter's pistol is only allowed under carefully-
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detailed conditions.
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The section of the gun law which specifies who may be
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licensed offers no standards, just the vague statement that
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licenses must be denied "any person (taking into consideration
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also relatives living with him) who there is reasonable cause to
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suspect may be dangerous to other persons' lives or properties or
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to the public peace." Thus, the police have broad discretion in
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rejecting applicants.
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As in Britain, shotguns are far easier to obtain than
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rifles. In a nation with half the population of the U.S., there
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are only 27,000 rifle licensees. There about half a million
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licensed shotguns, although their numbers have declined by about
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20% in this decade.
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Crime Control
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Japan's strictly-regulated guns play very little part in
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crime. In 1985, for example, only 35 crimes, including 10
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murders, were committed with hunting guns.
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Although handguns are completely forbidden to civilians,
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they still figure somewhat more often in crime. Handguns were
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used in 209 crimes in 1985. About 2/3 of all gun crimes are
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committed by Boryokudan, organized crime groups.
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As the gun-banners point out, the Japanese crime rate is
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dramatically lower than the U.S. rate. Tokyo, the world's safest
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major city, suffers muggings at the rate of 40 per year per one
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million inhabitants. New York City's rate is 11,000.
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According to government statistics, Japan has 1.5 homicides
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per 100,000 citizens each year, and America has 7.9. Actually,
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the gap between U.S. and Japanese homicide rates is not quite as
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large as the official statistics indicate. The real Japanese
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murder rate is about twice the reported rate; unlike the U.S.,
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Japan does not count an attempt to injure, but which accidentally
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causes death, as a homicide. The F.B.I. also over-counts
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American murders, by listing the 1,500 - 2,500 legal, self-
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defense fatal shootings of criminals as illegal homicide. Still,
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Japan's actual homicide rate is two to three times lower than the
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U.S. rate. As for handgun murders, the U.S. rate is 200 times
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higher than Japan's.
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Robbery in Japan is about as rare as murder. Japan's annual
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robbery rate is 1.8 per 100,000 inhabitants; America's is 205.4.
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Do the gun banners have the argument won when they point to
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these statistics? No, they don't. A realistic examination of
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Japanese culture leads to the conclusion that gun control has
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little, if anything, to do with Japan's low crime rates. Japan's
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lack of crime is more the result of the very extensive powers of
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the Japanese police, and the distinctive relation of the Japanese
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citizenry to authority. Further, none of the reasons which have
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made gun control succeed in Japan (in terms of disarming
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citizens) exist in the U.S.
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The Japanese criminal justice system bears more heavily on a
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suspect than any other system in an industrial democratic nation.
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One American found this out when he was arrested in Okinawa for
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possessing marijuana: he was interrogated for days without an
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attorney, and signed a confession written in Japanese that he
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could not read. He met his lawyer for the first time at his
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trial, which took 30 minutes.
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Unlike in the United States, where the Miranda rule limits
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coercive police interrogation techniques, Japanese police and
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prosecutors may detain a suspect indefinitely until he confesses.
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(Technically, detentions are only allowed for three days,
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followed by ten day extensions approved by a judge, but defense
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attorneys rarely oppose the extension request, for fear of
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offending the prosecutor.) Bail is denied if it would interfere
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with interrogation.
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Even after interrogation is completed, pretrial detention
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may continue on a variety of pretexts, such as preventing the
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defendant from destroying evidence. Criminal defense lawyers are
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the only people allowed to visit a detained suspect, and those
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meetings are strictly limited.
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Partly as a result of these coercive practices, and partly
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as a result of the Japanese sense of shame, the confession rate
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is 95%.
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For those few defendants who dare to go to trial, there is
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no jury. Since judges almost always defer to the prosecutors'
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judgement, the trial conviction rate for violent crime is 99.5%.
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Of those convicted, 98% receive jail time.
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In short, once a Japanese suspect is apprehended, the power
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of the prosecutor makes it very likely the suspect will go to
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jail. And the power of the policeman makes it quite likely that
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a criminal will be apprehended.
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The police routinely ask "suspicious" characters to show
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what is in their purse or sack. In effect, the police can search
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almost anyone, almost anytime, because courts only rarely exclude
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evidence seized by the police -- even if the police acted
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illegally.
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The most important element of police power, though, is not
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authority to search, but authority in the community. Like school
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teachers, Japanese policemen rate high in public esteem,
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especially in the countryside. Community leaders and role
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models, the police are trained in calligraphy and Haiku
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composition. In police per capita, Japan far outranks all other
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major democracies.
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15,000 koban "police boxes" are located throughout the
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cities. Citizens go to the 24-hour-a-day boxes not only for
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street directions, but to complain about day-to-day problems,
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such as noisy neighbors, or to ask advice on how to raise
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children. Some of the policemen and their families live in the
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boxes. Police box officers clear 74.6% of all criminal cases
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cleared. Police box officers also spend time teaching
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neighborhood youth judo or calligraphy. The officers even hand-
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write their own newspapers, with information about crime and
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accidents, "stories about good deeds by children, and opinions of
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residents."
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The police box system contrasts sharply with the practice in
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America. Here, most departments adopt a policy of "stranger
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policing." To prevent corruption, police are frequently rotated
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from one neighborhood to another. But as federal judge Charles
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Silberman writes, "the cure is worse than the disease, for
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officers develop no sense of identification with their beats,
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hence no emotional stake in improving the quality of life there."
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Thus, the U.S. citizenry does not develop a supportive
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relationship with the police. One poll showed that 60% of
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police officers believe "it is difficult to persuade people to
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give patrolmen the information they need."
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The Japanese police do not spend all their time in the koban
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boxes. As the Japanese government puts it: "Home visit is one of
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the most important duties of officers assigned to police boxes."
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Making annual visits to each home in their beat, officers keep
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track of who lives where, and which family member to contact in
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case of emergency. The police also check on all gun licensees,
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to make sure no gun has been stolen or misused, that the gun is
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securely stored, and that the licensees are emotionally stable.
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Gun banners might rejoice at a society where the police keep
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such a sharp eye on citizens' guns. But the price is that the
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police keep an eye on everything.
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Policemen are apt to tell people reading sexually-oriented
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magazines to read something more worthwhile. Japan's major
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official year-end police report includes statistics like
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"Background and Motives for Girls' Sexual Misconduct." In 1985,
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the police determined that 37.4% of the girls had been seduced,
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and the rest had had sex "voluntarily." For the volunteers,
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19.6% acted "out of curiosity", while for 18.1%, the motive was
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"liked particular boy." The year-end police report also includes
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sections on labor demands, and on anti-nuclear or anti-military
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demonstrations.
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Broad powers, professionalism, and community support combine
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to help Tokyo police solve 96.5% of murders, and 82.5% of
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robberies. In America, the police clear 74% of murders, but only
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a quarter of all robberies. 70% of all Japanese crimes end in a
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conviction; only 19.8% of American crimes even end in an arrest.
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A mere 9% of reported American violent crimes end in
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incarceration. Compared to the Japanese criminal, the American
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criminal faces only a minuscule risk of jail. Is it any wonder
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that American criminals commit so many more crimes?
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Additionally, Japan's tight, conformist social culture does
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an excellent job of keeping citizens out of crime in the first
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place. As the head of Tokyo's Police Department explains, "A man
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who commits a crime will bring dishonor to his family and his
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village, so he will think twice about disgracing them."
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Having lived together for several thousand years without
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significant immigration, the Japanese have developed the world's
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most homogenous and unified society. America's ethnic diversity
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causes tensions and crime, as the first or second generations of
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immigrants sometimes have difficulty adjusting to American ways.
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But even if immigration does cause some crime, our policies
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certainly seem more humane than the ethnic policies of Japan.
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When Japan, under severe American pressure, admitted 100
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Vietnamese boat people, a leading publication called them "the
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sword of an alien culture pointed at Japan."
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Many Korean families have lived in Japan for longer than
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Michael Dukakis' family has lived in America. Although born in
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Japan, the Koreans have "impure" blood, which makes them forever
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ineligible for Japanese citizenship
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Partly because the Japanese are so unified and homogenous,
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they accept and internalize social controls. It is this attitude
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of obedience and impulse control that matters most in the low
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Japanese crime rate. Guns or not, the Japanese are simply the
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world's most law-abiding people.
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Japanese-Americans, who of course have access to firearms,
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have an even lower violent crime rate than do Japanese in Japan.
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Likewise, prisoners in jails in Japan and in America prisoners
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have no guns, but American prisoners commit about a hundred
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murders annually, and Japanese prisoners none.
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Dr. Paul Blackman of NRA/ILA points out that if gun control
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were really the major cause of the low Japanese crime rate, it
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would be impossible to explain why Japan's non-gun crime rate is
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so much lower than America's non-gun crime rate. America's non-
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gun robbery rate, for example, is 60 times Japan's.
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If gun control were really such an important factor in
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Japan's low crime, it would also be hard to explain why Japan's
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murder rate is higher than Britain's (a shooter's paradise
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compared to Japan). Both Switzerland and Israel have many more
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guns per capita than even America, and require citizens to own or
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train with pistols and fully automatic rifles. Yet these
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countries have less murder and violent crime than Japan, and
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almost no gun crime.
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In short, it is not the presence or absence of physical
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objects that matters, but how they are treated. In America,
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scaffolding collapses kill about 2,500 workers over the course of
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a decade. Japan, though, has not had a single scaffolding
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fatality in the past decade. Japan has not outlawed scaffolding;
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rather, the Japanese business culture simply takes workplace
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safety more seriously than does American culture.
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Suicide
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Japan's experience also indicates that gun control has
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almost no effect on a nation's suicide rate. While the Japanese
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gun suicide rate is one-fiftieth of America's, the overall
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suicide rate is twice as high as America's.
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American gun controllers argue that in America, more males
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die from suicide attempts because males are more likely to choose
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a gun as a suicide weapon. Yet in Japan, males are still twice
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as likely to die in a suicide attempt as are females.
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Japan suffers from many double or multiple suicides, called
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shinju. Suicidal parents often kill their children, at the rate
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of one per day, in oyako-shinju. In fact, 17% of all Japanese
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homicide victims are children murdered by suicidal parents. Thus,
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Japan's tight family structure, which keeps the crime rate low,
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is not an unalloyed blessing.
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Even America's leading gun control scholar, Stanford's
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Franklin Zimring concedes: "Cultural factors appear to affect the
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suicide rates far more than the availability and use of firearms.
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Thus suicide rates would not seem to be readily affected by
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making firearms less available."
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Zimring's observation fits with the evidence in America.
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All ethnic groups have equal access to firearms, but Jews are
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less likely to use guns as their suicide method, while Blacks and
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Southerners are more likely to use guns. Although American
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Blacks are more likely to use guns in suicide, the black suicide
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rate is below the American average.
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Gun Culture
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While Japan's gun control has been irrelevant to crime
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control or suicide prevention, it has been successful in another
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sense: virtually no-one in Japan, except for some carefully-
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controlled hunters, has a gun. Japan is truly a gun-free
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society. Most of the Japanese tourists who shoot at the Hawaii
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Gun Club on Oahu have never even seen a gun before.
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Yet it is doubtful that America could imitate even this
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limited "success" of Japan's gun control. Americans possess many
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more guns than the Japanese ever did; and, unlike the Japanese,
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Americans seem determined to keep their weapons.
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Japan never had a significant stock of non-military guns, so
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gun control was simple to mandate. But in America, there are
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already over 100 million long guns, and 60 million handguns. In
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1985, the Japanese police seized a record high 1,369 illegal
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guns. A big-city police force in the U.S. might confiscate that
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many in a few months.
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An island nation, Japan can more or less seal its borders
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against illegal gun imports. Yet even if gun manufacture in
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America vanished, and all present guns were confiscated, illegal
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imports would quickly rebuild the American gun supply. If the
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United States imported illegal handguns in the same physical
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volume it imports marijuana, 20 million handguns would cross our
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borders every year. (The legal market for handgun purchases is
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about 2.5 million annually.)
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For the vast majority of Japanese, never seeing a gun is
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hardly a deprivation, for Japan developed only the most minimal
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cultural attachment to firearms.
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When Portuguese trading ships arrived in the middle of the
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16th century, Japan's many feudal rulers investigated guns for
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use in the ongoing civil wars. Long before the "Southern
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Barbarians" (Western traders) ever arrived, Japan had far
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outpaced Europe in metallurgy. Within a few decades, the various
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Japanese armies had more, better-built guns than most European
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armies.
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A military dictator named Hideyoshi was particularly expert
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firearms tactics, and Hideoyoshi finally conquered Japan and
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ended the civil wars. In 1588 Hideyoshi decreed the "Sword Hunt,"
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and banned possession of swords by the lower classes. The
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pretext was that all the swords would be melted down to supply
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nails for a hall containing a huge statue of the Buddha.
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Instead, Hideoyoshi had the swords melted into a statue of
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himself.
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After Hideoyoshi, the Tokugawa Shogunate took power, and
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ruled Japan until the late 19th century. The Shogunate used guns
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extensively in its invasion of Korea. But after the invasion was
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repelled, Japan turned inward, rejecting all forms of
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Westernization. Western contact was limited to a single Dutch
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trading mission, which was required to stay on a small island in
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Nagasaki harbor.
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The Tokoguwa began the gradual process of eradicating all
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Western influence from Japan, including the use of firearms.
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Under the Tokugawa, peasants were assigned to a five-man group,
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headed by landholders who were responsible for the group's
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behavior. The groups arranged marriages, resolved disputes, kept
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members from traveling or moving without permission, maintained
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religious orthodoxy, and enforced the rules against peasants
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carrying firearms or swords.
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The Shogunate's gun control eventually disarmed not only the
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peasantry, but also the Samurai warriors. Gun-smiths were
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restricted in the number of apprentices they could adopt, and
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eventually sales to anyone besides the military government became
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illegal.
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The Samurai did not mind, though. While American pioneers
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considered their guns a symbolic "badge of honor," the Samurai
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revered swords as the true symbol of knighthood. For combat,
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Samurai disdained guns because they allowed fighting from a
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distance, rather than face to face, and required the combatant to
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assume an undignified crouching position. Further, there was
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little practical use for long guns, since there was almost no big
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game to hunt.
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Thus, in the 1850's, when Commodore Perry re-opened Japan,
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Japanese were still using primitive matchlock guns similar to the
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type the Portuguese had introduced over 300 years ago. Led by
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American manufacturers, the rest of the world had replaced
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matchlocks with flintlocks. In 1872, the Samurai and the
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Tokugawas were deposed. The Samurai had used swords to fight
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against a conscript army, which was armed with rifles. (Although
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the army now had firearms, villagers still did not.)
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In America, on the other hand, guns were owned by virtually
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all adult males. In response to the tremendous American demand
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for guns, America developed the world's leading firearms
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companies. Mass production of firearms led America into the
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Industrial Revolution, and became our first major manufactured
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export.
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Japan, however, has never had much of a firearms industry.
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MITI, Japan's Ministry for Trade, is hardly encouraging Japanese
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companies to capture the world's growing market for high-tech
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plastic/metal alloy guns. Indeed, Japan has only one handgun
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factory. The manufacturer's main business is heavy electrical
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equipment; the guns are just a courtesy for the government.
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Factory spokesmen will not even reveal the factory's location.
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Without a culture of civilians firearms ownership, the
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Japanese never saw strict gun control as anything out of the
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ordinary. And because the crime rate is so extraordinarily low,
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the Japanese, unlike many Americans, perceive no need to own a
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gun for individual self-defense.
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Perhaps the most important reason the Japanese voluntarily
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accept disarmament is that their government does the same. After
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the disaster of World War II, war was perceived as an unmitigated
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horror, and the army was abolished.
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The police carry guns, but rarely shoot them, instead using
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their black belts in judo or police sticks. In an average year,
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the entire Tokyo police force only fires six shots. Even if guns
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vanished from America, it is difficult to imagine a big-city
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American police force firing only six times in an entire year.
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Likewise, there is obviously a strict gun prohibition in American
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prisons, but the guards are still armed; the vast majority of
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Japanese prison guards carry only police sticks.
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In a top-down society such as Japan, when the government
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disarms itself, it creates a powerful moral climate for citizens
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to do the same. Needless to say, a disarmed military and police
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are not likely in the United States, and neither is voluntary
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compliance with gun control.
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In many American cities where it is nearly impossible to
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legally carry a gun for self-defense, many people do so anyway.
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Many more own illegal weapons at home for self-defense. Thus,
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American gun banners correctly insist that strict gun controls be
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accompanied by mandatory jail terms. The gun banners recognize
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that without mandatory sentences, judges and juries would rarely
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send their fellow citizens to jail for an illegal self-defense
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gun. Without the certainty of jail, strict controls are often
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ignored.
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But in Japan, the citizens voluntarily comply with the gun
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law; accordingly, there is no mandatory minimum penalty for
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unlicensed firearm possession.
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If gun ban is readily obeyed in Japan, but is massively
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resisted wherever it appears in America, isn't that an indication
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a gun ban might be acceptable in Japan, but wrong in America?
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Should America Import Gun Laws Made in Japan?
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In the 1910 debate preceding the New York's Sullivan Law
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(the first major American gun control law affecting citizens
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entitled to full civil rights) one writer recommended that New
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York copy Japan, "where intending purchasers of revolvers must
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first obtain police permits, and sales must be reported to the
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police." In 1987, a letter to the editor of The New Republic
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announced that Japan has so little crime because "citizens
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forsake their right to own guns in return for safety," and that
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America must do the same.
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Yet these gun controllers who want America to imitate Japan
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fail to understand that one culture cannot simply adopt another's
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laws. Post-war Japan was told to follow American criminal
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procedure and anti-trust rules, but soon stopped. The rules did
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not work in a culture used to unlimited police power, and
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enamored of giant conglomerates.
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The Japanese Constitution, written by the American
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conquerors, has "rights" language far more sweeping than the
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American constitution. But because Japan lacks a tradition of
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individual rights or of judicial activism, the Japanese Supreme
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Court has been passive, unwilling to enforce the rights
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provisions of the Constitution. For example, the Japanese
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constitution, unlike the American one, has strong language
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guaranteeing equal political, economic, and social rights for
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women. Yet in practice, American women are far freer than
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Japanese women, and are given far more legal protection by their
|
||
own constitution. America made Japan adopt a powerful liberal
|
||
Constitution, but it could not make Japanese courts think about
|
||
individual rights the way American courts do.
|
||
Gun banners who rejoice that Japan functions without a right
|
||
to bear arms should note that Japan functions without other
|
||
rights as well. Not only the laws regarding protection of
|
||
criminal suspects, but freedom of speech, of intimate conduct,
|
||
and of religion are far narrower than in the U.S. Japan even has
|
||
an official religion, Shinto. The Japanese military recently
|
||
consecrated a deceased military hero as a Shinto god, although
|
||
the man was a Christian, and his widow objected vehemently.
|
||
The contrast between the individualist American and the
|
||
communal Japanese ethos is manifested in everything from behavior
|
||
at sporting events to industrial labor organization. As a
|
||
result, pressure to conform, and internalized willingness to do
|
||
so are much stronger in Japan than in America. This spirit of
|
||
conformity provides the best explanation for Japan's low crime
|
||
rate. It also explains why the Japanese people accept gun
|
||
control.
|
||
Theoretically, America could adopt a gun ban like Japan's.
|
||
But that ban would be completely alien to our society, which for
|
||
over 300 years has had the world's freest, most uncontrolled gun
|
||
culture. Japan's gun laws are part of an authoritarian
|
||
philosophy of government that is fundamentally at odds with
|
||
America's traditions of liberty. Such laws have no place in our
|
||
country.
|
||
|