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"With America's epidemic of gun violence showing no sign of ebbing, it
likely that Whitney's book-length op-ed on gun control will remain
relevant for years. A career New York Times reporter and editor, now
retired, Whitney has previously written on such diverse subjects as pipe
organs (in 2004's All The Stops) and claims no special expertise in
constitutional law or firearms. Instead, he writes as a concerned
citizen. His primer on gun law history sometimes gets bogged down in
minutiae, but also produces fascinating tidbits like the decidedly
nonprogressive bent of some early gun control legislation, namely toward
African Americans. Less scholarly but still valuable are his memories
of when firearms did not divide right and left, and when the NRA was
mostly associated with safety training. The book's subtitle does its
argument a disservice by implying that Whitney's concern is with
defending the Second Amendment, when instead he is against liberals'
common resort to the "well-regulated militia" language to claim a
constitutional lack of protection for individual gun use. Opposed to
arbitrary restrictions, reckless loopholes, NRA fear-mongering, and
liberal intolerance of gun culture's law-abiding side, Whitney's
presentation of firearm ownership as a protected area of U.S. common, if
not Constitutional, law, strikes a conciliatory note that sadly stands
little chance of being heeded."
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