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Oh, there was a conference

Kopel:

As of 6 p.m. eastern time, the word from the United Nations small arms conference is that the conference is concluding with NO final document, and NO plans for any follow-up conference. It was the latter issue that prevented an agreement about a final document. The officials who had been charged by the conference chair with drafting the conference document presented a final take-it-or-leave it document a little while ago; that draft document eliminated various provisions that the U.S. delegation had found objectionable, but also declared that there would be at least two more conferences. The U.S. delegation refused to assent, and so the conference ended with no consensus agreement, and no plans for future conferences. The back-up plan of the international gun prohibition movement, and their many allies within the U.N. and national U.N. delegations, was to give up on significant progress in 2006, but to keep the game going with future conferences, when a more pliant U.S. administration might welcome an international gun control program.

Good. I think (and have said before) we are one administration away from having to fight the gun battle here in the US. That administration could be line-toeing democrats or maverick, big government republicans (think Giuliani or McCain). David also says:

If a few hundred votes had changed in Florida in 2000, or if 60,000 votes had changed in Ohio in 2004, the results of the 2001 and 2006 U.N. gun control conferences would have been entirely different. There would now be a legally binding international treaty creating an international legal norm against civilian gun ownership, a prohibition on the transfer of firearms to “non-state actors” (such as groups resisting tyrants), and a new newspeak international human rights standard requiring restrictive licensing of gun owners. With a Presidential signature on such a treaty (even if the treaty were never brought to the Senate floor for ratification), the principles of the anti-gun treaty would be eroding the Second Amendment, through Executive Orders, and through the inclination of some courts to use unratified treaties as guidance in interpretting the U.S. Constitution.

One Response to “Oh, there was a conference”

  1. John Anderson Says:

    If Gore or Kerry was President, he might sign the proposals – but that would not make it legally binding until Congress ratified it – which I doubt any Congress would do. Didn’t Gore, as veep, sign Kyoto, knowing full that Congress would not go for it, to the pont that he and Bill didn’t even submit it?

Remember, I do this to entertain me, not you.

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