The Right To Bear Kitchen Knives
We may have a Vermont daily newspaper that is NOT on an antigun/hunting 
crusade! 
Click here: the caledonian record northern vermont and new hampshire newspaper
Editorials
Mark M. Smith, Publisher 
Ellie Dixon, Managing Editor 
June 25, 2001     
The Right To Bear Kitchen Knives 
The news out of Japan can’t be good for gun ownership opponents. Beyond the 
obvious point that no one wants innocent people to be murdered, advocates for 
gun control must also face the reality that a killing spree can happen 
without the use of a gun. 
Earlier this month, a 37-year-old man dashed into an Osaka, Japan, suburb 
elementary school with a kitchen knife. With the 6-inch blade, the man killed 
eight children and wounded 15 other children and two teachers. 
With only a kitchen knife, the man murdered or injured more than half the 
number of people killed or injured by the two teen-age maniacs at Columbine 
High School in Colorado two years ago. In other words, a second man in the 
Japanese school equally bent on destruction would have brought about more 
carnage without guns than the two boys wielding automatic weapons did in 
Colorado. 
Of all the tragic examples gun control advocates use to argue for more laws 
affecting firearm ownership, the nightmare in Japan clearly shows that the 
weapon doesn’t kill; the person holding the weapon does. 
Despite a law against gun ownership in Japan, people are getting killed.
Clearly Japan’s approach to stamping out violence by eliminating gun 
ownership is not a model we should follow. Not only because such a measure 
would contradict our Constitution, but also because it doesn’t address the 
real reason why people are killed. 
People with a mind set for murder are to blame. Laws should not be created to 
treat the symptom, but rather the disease. Existing laws need to be enforced. 
Existing penalties must be imposed. Stiffer punishments must be carried out. 
The man who stabbed the Japanese children is a perfect example of how a 
liberal and lenient judicial system bears part of the blame. He should not 
have been free to carry out the massacre. While working as a janitor at an 
Osaka elementary school he was accused of drugging water used to make tea at 
the school. A judge found him mentally incompetent and he was admitted to a 
mental hospital. A few weeks later he was released. His second chance, 
unfortunately, meant eight innocent children had no chance. 

 
        


