MANDATORY GUN INSURANCE COMING?
Thursday, November 2nd, 2017
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
So have you purchased your gun insurance
yet? In case you shoot someone, there
are insurance policies available to cover any liabilities you might face, pay
for your bail if you are accused of a crime, cover your attorney fees, and even
pay for any psychological therapy you might need. So if you are going to fire away, nice to
know that you are financially covered, right?
Legislation has been introduced in six states that
would make gun insurance mandatory for all gun owners. New York, Hawaii, Washington, North Carolina,
New Hampshire, and Massachusetts would require government-mandated firearms
insurance, and several insurance companies are considering offering such a
product.
In fact, the National Rifle Association offers
scaled down coverage called Carry Guard right now in all 50 states. The organization’s website states rather
dramatically that: “There is a whole
team of lawyers attached to every bullet that leaves the barrel of your weapon.
If the suspect goes down, even if you’re justified in shooting, we guarantee
you the world is going to come crashing down on you.”
Should every gun owner be required to buy
liability insurance? After all, if you drive a car, you are required by
every state in the U.S. to have liability insurance. So, if drivers have
to have auto insurance, why shouldn’t gun owners have to have gun owner’s
insurance?
First of all, courts nationwide have determined that driving is a
privilege. And not a (second amendment) right as defended by
gun owners. A driver is generally on a public highway, built with
taxpayer funds, and the “rules of the road” require liability insurance.
It should be pointed out that a driver is not required to have either a
driver’s license or insurance if the vehicle is driven on private
property. I taught my kids and assorted nieces and nephews to drive at
our family camp in rural Louisiana, where they could practice on dirt
roads. No license or insurance necessary.
Based on my experience as a former Louisiana
insurance commissioner, I can also tell readers that the cost of such proposed
gun liability insurance would not come cheap. New York is presently
considering in their legislature a proposal to require every gun owner to have
a minimum of $1 million in liability coverage.
I have not sat down with insurance actuaries to
figure out specifically what the premium would be, but I would estimate that a
gun owner is looking at a minimum of $2,000 a year to pay for such
insurance. The insurance premium could be significantly more for someone
living in the inner city. Such a cost would price the ownership of a gun
outside the reach of the average citizen.
Unless the activity to be insured is considered
a privilege, there is no requirement or a “right” to insure any object or
undertaking. I do not have to insure my house, but it just makes good
financial sense to do so. There is no requirement that an individual have
life insurance. One makes such a choice to protect their loved ones when they
die. Many people have general liability insurance coverage on any
activity that might subject them to a lawsuit. That would include
protection against a lawsuit involving a gun accident. But purchasing such
insurance is not mandatory. It’s a choice.
With so much
interest in gun safety, numerous ideas will be floated in an effort to regulate
gun ownership. Certainly there are some people who should not be in the
possession of a gun. To many gun owners, the issue is about restrictions
on hunting. But to others living in crime-infested areas, and in the face of
violent criminal threats, your weapon and your wits may be all you have to
protect yourself.
There are no easy
answers here. But it’s unrealistic to
think that gun fatalities will decline simply by making gun insurance
mandatory.
********
“Democracy is two wolfs and a lamb voting on what to
have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote.”
Benjamin Franklin, 1759
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim Brown’s syndicated column appears each week
in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites worldwide.
You can read all his past columns and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also
hear Jim’s nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9:00 am
till 11:00 am Central Time on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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