Chicago's New Police Chief: "I think that we can protect the Second Amendment rights of people to bear firearms while preventing the illegal flow of firearms into our urban centers"
The Chicago Reader reports on a recent appearance by incoming Chicago Chief of Police Garry McCarthy before a group of aldermen, in McCarthy called Chicago gun-control advocates "abolitionists":
Jody Weis wasn't the only ex-city official that new police chief Garry McCarthy attempted to distance himself from on Monday. He also signaled a distaste for the gun control policies of former Mayor Richard M. Daley.
"My goal is to bring the gun debate back to the center," McCarthy told aldermen. "I think that we have abolitionists on one side and I think that we have NRA and those kind of folks on the other side, and frankly it's too polarizing a debate, and 95 percent of the country is somewhere in between."
That is not something that would have been uttered by a Chicago public official a month ago. Daley was a relentless advocate of tough gun control laws—one of the "abolitionists" McCarthy referred to—and he tolerated no open dissent in city government.
Nearly every year he was mayor, Daley responded to the annual warm-weather surge in violence by calling for tougher gun laws at the state level. When reporters questioned him about crime, he would go off on rants about guns, the NRA, access to guns, gun manufacturers, and Supreme Court justices who didn't see it his way. Daley and police officials, including Weis, boasted of how many guns they seized off the street—an average of nearly two dozen a day, at last count—but ducked and dodged (and sometimes did other strange things) when asked what that said about the effectiveness of local gun laws.
McCarthy also endorsed the hasty creation of a "gun offender registry," adding:
"I think that we can protect the Second Amendment rights of people to bear firearms while at the same time preventing the illegal flow of firearms into our urban centers and killing our children," he said. "That's a pretty wide gap, and there's someplace in between that we can come as a country."
This is a big shift, at least in tone, considering that Mayor Daley did not actually believe in the Second Amendment.
More Reason on the Chicago handgun ban.
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Satan must be bundling up in his hat and scarf
Why? Is Al Gore having a global warming symposium in hell?
Whooosh
make a mental note to email Mainer and explain all jokes beforehand
"That's a pretty wide gap, and there's someplace in between that we can come as a country."
Only if you're planning on exiling Ron Paul. And me.
There's definitely someplace inbetween that Chicago came come as a city, and that's the bare minimum to avoid being sued into bankruptcy and having SCOTUS smack it down. The country, I think, will stay a little closer to the NRA's side, unless the president wants to fuck his re-election chances up by doing something stupid.
Yes, there is a place. Right there in the U.S. Consitution.
"Gun offender registry"? Why not just deny, just speculating here, convicted felons who used a gun in commission. I'll bet the state of Illinois would share that information with Chicago. Not that I think felons who have completed their sentence should be denied, just spitballing. Unless they're going after people who bling out perfectly good guns. Now that's a gun crime.
I think that we have abolitionists on one side....
Wouldn't that be a popular side in a place like Chicago?
In unrelated news, cash-strapped Chicago is upping firearm license fees by 400%.
someplace in between that we can come as a country
Who the fuck is "we"?
Remember when Daley told the reporter in a press conference he was going to shove an assault rifle up his ass and pull the trigger?
Class act, all the way.
As a Chicagoan, this doesn't seem like a "shift" at all. OK, he mentioned the 2nd Amendment. So what?
The City of Chicago isn't going to move to a more libertarian position on this. Hell will freeze over first.
Baby steps, KM, baby steps.
Like the article said, Daley tolerated no dissent on this issue.
The fact that the police cheif is willing to admit that the 2nd amendment applies to citizens is quite noteworth.
Of course I want to see deeds, not just words.