Friday, May 09, 2014

How the Nazi Regime’s Gun Prohibition lead to the Holocaust

At the Mises Institute, associate professor of economics at the University of Louisville, Audrey D. Kline does a splendid book review of a book by Independent Institute’s Stephen P. Halbrook’s Gun Control in the Third Reich: Disarming the Jews and “Enemies of the State
 
Ms Kline summarizes Mr. Halbrook’s account of how Nazi Germany conducted a step by step approach—beginning with gun control laws then to emergency decrees (which suspended various civil liberties) to centralized control over police et.al. —in the imposition of repression and genocide against the Jews.

This signifies what Austrian economist Robert Higgs calls as the “ratchet effect”—seemingly irreversible expansion of government in times of crisis. The Nazi’s serial mission creep of restricting civil liberties particularly for the Jews lead to a disarmed and defenseless populace and eventually paved way for their extermination or the Holocaust.

Here is the intro… (bold mine)
There is no shortage of theories or writings related to the rise of the Third Reich and the subsequent Holocaust. Stephen Halbrook’s 2013 book, Gun Control in the Third Reich offers a compelling and important account of the role of gun prohibition in aiding Hitler’s goals of exterminating the Jews and other “enemies of the state.” While much of the early gun prohibition was created with supposedly good intent, Halbrook carefully and meticulously details how a change in political regime facilitated manipulating some well-intentioned gun registration laws and other gun prohibition to be used in inconceivable ways.

Students of history as well as Second Amendment enthusiasts will find this a fascinating book and will find parallels between gun prohibition in pre-Nazi and Nazi Germany, and attempts to prohibit types of gun ownership and implement other forms of gun prohibition in the United States today. The current climate in the United States surrounding gun prohibition combined with a president who uses his office to impose executive order in ways not historically common gives many citizens pause, especially when looking at the era of the Third Reich. While certain states have imposed gun registration laws recently, enforcement of the laws remains unclear.

While Halbrook is careful to point out that a combination of factors led to the events of the Holocaust, there is no denying that many of the pre-war activities contributed to Hitler’s ability to disarm targeted groups, particularly the Jews. The rapid pace with which Hitler disarmed the populace in Germany is startling. Halbrook’s account is gripping, thorough, and full of legal documentation, leading the reader through the sometimes-daily changes in gun prohibitions that furthered Hitler’s agenda. Ultimately, the prohibitions enacted by the Nazi regime led to monopoly control of firearms by the Nazis and eliminated the ability of many groups in society to defend themselves. A similar progression in contemporary society related to government control of firearms and the firearms industry is a concern of many gun owners in the United States today.
Read the rest here

The bottom line is that governments act to attain political goals hardly in a sweep but via a series of arbitrary edicts, legislations, decrees and etc. … or the ratchet effect. Gun controls or inflating bubbles serve as stepping stones for government repression.

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