

Fairfax, VA -(AmmoLand.com)-Â Recently, we reported on Hillary Clintonâs praise for local firearm âbuybackâ events and her view that forcing Americans to participate in them on a national level â ala Australia and Great Britain â is âworth considering.â
Voluntary gun buybacks are a classic case of gun control symbolism. Their advocates claim they are âtaking guns off our streets,â although in many cases the guns collected are so ancient or decrepit as to be completely nonfunctional or nearly so. In other cases, the guns are not coming off âthe streetâ but from law-abiding owners where such firearms pose no risk to public safety whatsoever.
Even an advisor to the Obama administration at the National Institute of Justice said such efforts âcannot be effectiveâ unless âmassiveâ in scope âand coupled with a banâ on the same sort of arms as are being collected. Voluntary buybacks, the advisor counseled, âare too small to have an impactâ and involve guns that âare at a low risk of ever being used in a crime,â while replacements for the turned-in guns âare easily acquired.â
Voluntary turn-in events also usually require some incentive to stimulate participation. This typically takes the form of cash or gift cards, which of course can then immediately be used to finance the purchase of new guns.
Given all this, it was particularly ambitious for the Greensboro, NC, Police Department (GPD) to urge residents to turn in guns, while also signing a âpledge of non-violenceâ at an event the department conducted last Saturday. According to the Facebook post advertising the event, âPolice employees will be accepting handguns, rifles, shotguns, and ammunition at the event. This is not a buy-back program. No cash will be given in exchange for weapons voluntarily surrendered to police.â
It was meant to be an event, âin which law enforcement and community members work together to solve problems.â The GPD noted that âthere is no limitâ to how many firearms would be accepted and that they would ânot be returned.â The department also offered to pick up firearms from ownersâ homes.
Police-community partnerships are a positive measure to increase public safety, but good intentions arenât the same thing as a good (or effective) plan. A report by Time-Warner Cable News tried to put a positive spin on things by noting that âalmost 1,000 peopleâ responded to take the pledge, leading one to believe that 1,000 firearms had been turned in, but this was hardly the case. As evidenced by the footage accompanying the story, the gun turn-in apparently resulted in a single BB pistol and a single sheathed hunting knife being âtaken off the streets.”
Crimes involving firearms in Greensboro have increased 68% from last year, according to the report. Fortunately, asking citizens to promise to be on good behavior and accepting the communityâs surplus sporting goods are not the totality of the GPDâs stepped-up efforts to counter this alarming trend. The departmentâs Facebook page also cites the âcreation of a Street Crimes Unit, and enhanced dispatch protocols to calls for service likely to escalate to violence.â
The signed pledges collected at the event will be displayed at GPD headquarters. That may be good PR for the department, but their effectiveness will be measured in the coming days and years by how many criminals are paraded before them on their way to facing justice.
About the NRA-ILA:
Established in 1975, the Institute for Legislative Action (ILA) is the âlobbyingâ arm of the National Rifle Association of America. ILA is responsible for preserving the right of all law-abiding individuals in the legislative, political, and legal arenas, to purchase, possess and use firearms for legitimate purposes as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
For more information, please visit: www.nra.org. Be sure to follow the NRA on Facebook at NRA on Facebook and Twitter @NRA.

Yep, Freewill, not anything to be gained by anyone with a program like this.
why would anybody turn in their self defene items?..they turned them in in Nazi Germany, history tells us how successful that was…it was so effective that not one prisoner in the concentration camps ever shot another..