 It is now well known that the city of Chicago and Illinois overall have adopted stringent gun control laws over the years. Thus the Pro Gun Control Gifford Center gives the state of Illinois a lofty A- on its annual gun scorecard. Yet somehow, shootings are surging in the city this year. Hello, this is Ryan McMakin, and you're listening to Radio Rothbard. Although crime in Chicago, like in the nation overall, is lower today than it was during the 1980s and 1990s, murders have been a perennial problem in Chicago for years. As the Chicago Sun Times reported last week, quote, the 105 murders reported in July are a nearly 139% increase from the 44 reported in July 2019, according to police data released Saturday. The 406 shooting incidents last month were a 75% increase from the 232 reported in the same month-to-month comparison. Murders are up 51% from the same point last year, along with a 47% increase in shootings, police said. Unquote. So, how to explain the increase in homicides, especially in light of Chicago's stringent gun control? After all, the logic behind the arguments made by most gun control advocates is that areas with numerous government prohibitions on gun ownership will have less crime. Well, the mayor of Chicago, Lori Lightfoot, has a ready explanation. She claims people are bringing in guns from other parts of the country where it's much easier to buy guns. These guns are then supposedly taken to Chicago, where they are sold on the black market and used in shootings. Lightfoot claims, quote, we are being inundated with guns from states that have virtually no gun control, no background checks, no ban on assault weapons. That is hurting cities like Chicago, unquote. Lightfoot then takes her claims to the next logical step. As she states in a July 20 letter to Donald Trump, since Illinois and Chicago can't directly impose more gun control on neighboring states, she wants the national government to intervene and impose nationwide controls instead. This is a common tactic among those who aren't content with destroying basic freedoms in their own jurisdictions. When neighboring jurisdictions allow too much freedom, prohibitionists demand that the federal government step in to impose uniform prohibitions on everyone. The idea here is that open borders between states allow persons and weapons and drugs and other goods to freely cross from one state to another. This freedom of movement, it has claimed, means that gun control can only work if there is a single nationwide policy. But before we look at Lightfoot's latest call for national mandates, let's first back up a step and ask ourselves whether it's even plausible that Illinois' neighbors are the reason that homicides remain so high in Chicago. On the surface, we can see how Lightfoot might be able to get away with making such a claim. As the Gifford Center's ranking system shows, Illinois surrounded by states were it is far easier to buy a gun than in Illinois. Wisconsin, for example, receives a C minus in the Gifford's gun control rankings. Indiana does even, quote unquote, worse with a ranking of D minus. Some might see this and conclude that maybe Lightfoot is right and that maybe Chicago is a victim of its neighbors such as Wisconsin. But when we look more closely, we quickly find that the problem with Chicago clearly isn't guns. According to crime data from the FBI, Chicago in 2018 had a homicide rate of 20.7 homicides per 100,000 population. The state of Illinois overall has a homicide rate of 6.9 per 100,000. As you might guess, a sizable portion of the homicides that occur in Illinois happened within the city limits of Chicago. In fact, if we remove the city from Illinois, Illinois without Chicago has a homicide rate of only 3.2 per 100,000. The first question that presents itself is this. If Illinois has relatively uniform gun control laws throughout the state, why are there so many more homicides in Chicago per capita than in the rest of the state? Presumably gun owners can use those guns to carry out crimes anywhere in the state. Why are so many crimes concentrated just in Chicago? It's a question Lightfoot can't answer, so long as she insists that crime in Chicago is being driven by guns imported from somewhere else. But what about guns that are allegedly coming in from other states? If we look at nearby states with much more laissez-faire gun laws, then surely homicides will be more numerous, right? Wrong. In Indiana, Illinois' neighbor to the east, the statewide homicide rate is similar to that of Illinois, 6.5 per 100,000. Moreover, Indiana is similar to Illinois in that homicide cases are largely limited to only a handful of areas. Again, we find that although it is relatively easy to buy a gun in Indiana statewide, homicides are concentrated in only a few cities, specifically Indianapolis, Gary, and Fort Wayne. If we were to exclude Indianapolis, Gary, and Fort Wayne from Indiana's homicide total, we'd find that Indiana has a homicide rate of 3.5 per 100,000. Out of Indiana, 6.7 million residents, 5.5 million of them live in areas where homicide rates are a small fraction of Chicago's. Comparisons are even more stark when we look at Wisconsin, Illinois' neighbor to the north. In Wisconsin statewide, the homicide rate is only 3 per 100,000. In Kenosha, just north of the border with Illinois, the homicide rate is 4 per 100,000. But if Lightfoot is to believe, guns are being sold across state lines in places like Kenosha and then illegally exported to Chicago where the guns are then used in crimes. Again, we're left wondering why criminals refrain from using these easy to get guns in Kenosha. Why is Wisconsin where it's much easier to buy a gun than in Illinois experiencing homicide rate that's less than one-sixth of Chicago's? If the ease with which one can purchase a gun is what determines homicide rates, then we'd expect to see even higher rates in suburban Indiana and Wisconsin than in Chicago. This of course is not happening precisely because guns obviously don't cause homicides in Chicago. Chicagoans are responsible for these crimes, while residents of Wisconsin and Indiana who have much easier access to guns are somehow able to politely restrain themselves from shooting each other at similar rates. But once we embrace this false narrative of how other states are the cause of Chicago's crime, a natural solution presents itself. Have the federal government step in? The argument is basically this. Since people in guns can move freely across the Illinois state border and across Chicago city limits, it is the job of the federal government to solve the problem by imposing the sort of gun control lightfoot wants nationwide. Governments and politicians have tried these tactics for many years with guns, with alcohol, and with drugs. They just claim that neighboring states allow too much freedom and that therefore national prohibitions must be enforced. Yet, as we have seen, Chicago is the reason Chicago has homicide rates many times higher than most areas of neighboring states. Let the Chicagoans address the problems they've created. After all, the demand for national policy to address Chicago's problems only places on all Americans the burden of addressing a crisis that is specific to only a small minority of areas and regions in the U.S. The fact that Chicago is a basket case of a city is no reason for the rest of the country to adopt the sorts of policies Chicago politicians want, and which are likely the cause of their problems in the first place. If politicians in Chicago are so concerned about guns from out of state, and if they're so convinced gun control is the answer, it's up to them to stop the guns at the state border at city limits. Illinois and Chicago taxpayers should be the only ones paying for whatever ill-advised checkpoint searches and investigations Chicago politicians want to carry out in the name of ridding Chicago of guns. This will spare the taxpayers of the rest of the country from being forced to take on the expense of the immense and costly administrative state that is necessary to protect Chicago from Wisconsin. Moreover, nowadays it should be no problem for Illinois to come up with a legal basis for doing this. Chicago and Illinois can simply follow the lead of states like New York, which now has traveler checkpoints to monitor everyone entering the state in order to enforce COVID-19 quarantine rules. Chicago can declare guns a public health crisis and get to work monitoring every visitor for illegal guns. Would such a scheme be expensive and onerous? It certainly would be. Entrepreneurs, tourists, and other productive members of society would learn to avoid Illinois and Chicago and take their business elsewhere. To let that be Chicago's problem and no one else's. Thank you for listening to Radio Rothbard. Have a wonderful day. For more content like this, visit Mises.org.