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Tag: South Dakota

Student Advocates for Gun Rights Amidst Campus Carry Controversy

In a true act of bravery, South Dakota State University student Keegan Reeves put himself in the public square as he laid out a firm stance criticizing the University’s anti-firearms policies, which he claims make the school a prime target for those with criminal intent. According to the student-run paper the Collegiate, Reeves went to speak on behalf of multiple pro-firearms student groups at a meeting of the university’s Student Association, stating here was there to represent the many “students who feel the gun rights issues weren’t given a chance to be fully represented by both sides,” and that We feel we were truly ignored.” Currently, students and faculty may conceal carry firearms on campus but must go through a process of notifying campus police and store their firearms at the campus police department overnight. Criticisms over campus carry laws over the last decade have escalated due to the increase in school shootings, but the spotlight fell on SDSU when a student discharged his weapon in his dorm room, causing only increased animosity from certain students and faculty wishing to change the current policy, which the Student Association intended to vote on last week. In the South Dakota state legislature, a bill was pushed to ban gun-free zones on public university campuses. According to a statement provided to the Argus Leader by one of the bill’s sponsors, “The South Dakota Constitution guarantees citizens’ the right to bear arms” and that “gun-free zones do not work.” The bill also covered issues ranging from student classroom safety to “potential complications to Title IX sexual assault, stalking and harassment cases on campuses.” Time after time, each travesty shows that gun free zones are hotbeds for criminal activity. Gun rights activist Antonia Okafor stated in a fact-based op-ed at the Hill that “In the United States, guns are used as many as 2.5 million times a year in self-defense, according to some estimates, preventing countless tragedies from ever becoming a news story.” Currently, students can conceal carry firearms at public universities in Arkansas, Georgia, Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Minnesota, Oregon, Texas, Tennessee, Utah, and Wisconsin. It is the libertarian position that all gun regulations are an infringement upon individual rights and that no man or woman should be deprived of a way of properly and effectively defending their life, liberty, and property.

Study: States with Economic Liberty Benefit; States Without Economic Liberty Suffer

(From the Intellectual Ammunition section in Volume 19, No. 23 of the Liberator Online. Subscribe here!) A just-released study shows that U.S. states with economic liberty benefit greatly from it, while residents of states with less economic freedom suffer badly from the lack of it. Economic Freedom of North America 2014 is an annual report by Canada’s Fraser Institute that measures levels of economic freedom, and thus economic opportunity, in the 50 states (as well as Canada and Mexico). Economic Freedom of North America 2014The report defines “economic freedom” as “the ability of individuals to act in the economic sphere free of undue restrictions.” Elaborating on that: “The freest economies operate with minimal government interference, relying upon personal choice and markets to answer basic economic questions such as what is to be produced, how it is to be produced, how much is produced, and for whom production is intended. As government imposes restrictions on these choices, there is less economic freedom.” The report shows that economic liberty has clear, measurable, dollars-and-cents benefits, writes study co-author Dean Stansel in the Washington Examiner: “States that have low taxation, limited government and flexible labor markets enjoy greater economic growth, while states with lower levels of economic freedom suffer from reduced living standards for families and less economic opportunity. “In the three most-free states (Texas, South Dakota, and North Dakota) average personal income is about 20 percent higher than in the three least-free states (Maine, Vermont, and Mississippi) — approximately $48,000 versus $40,000. And the unemployment rate is more than seven percent in Rhode Island (45th) versus about four percent in nearby New Hampshire (5th). “Furthermore, cities in low-freedom states like California (43rd), Michigan (37th), and Rhode Island have made headlines in recent years for declaring bankruptcy, whereas cities in high-freedom states like Nebraska (5th), Texas, and the Dakotas, have seen incomes and their tax bases expand. “In the top ten states, total employment grew by roughly 3.5 percent, while it has barely budged in the bottom 10. Over that same period, the economy grew more than eight percent in the top 10, but only by about two percent in the bottom 10.” Concludes Stansel: “The research is clear: Where economic freedom is high and rising, the number of jobs is expanding and the economy is vibrant and growing. Where it’s low and declining, the economy is stagnant, limiting opportunity and quality of life for residents of those states. “Big, costly government at the expense of the people doesn’t work. It leads to economic decline. In contrast, expanding economic freedom increases economic opportunity and provides the path to economic prosperity.” The report ranks economic freedom along a scale of 1 (lowest) to 10 (full economic liberty). This brings a warning: “Historically, economic freedom has been declining in all three countries. Since 2000, the average score for Canadian provinces on the all-governments index has fallen from 7.8 to 7.6; the number for U.S. states was 8.2 to 7.5.” The Economic Freedom of North America study is an offshoot of the Fraser Institute’s acclaimed Economic Freedom of the World index, the result of a quarter century of work by more than 60 scholars including three Nobel laureates.