To Keep and Bear Arms
posted at 12:55 pm on March 3, 2010 by Doctor Zero
Twenty-five years ago, a little after sunrise on a Monday morning, the front door of my house was kicked in by a man who had blown his mind with crack cocaine. He marched my family upstairs at gunpoint. When I reached the top of the stairs and turned around, he put the gun in my forehead and pulled the trigger.
I’ve always heard it was good to begin a composition with an arresting opening paragraph. That’s the catchiest one I can offer from an otherwise modest biography. I hope the rest of this essay lives up to the opening. I’ll do my best.
I don’t mind admitting this incident gave me a lifelong aversion to guns. I don’t have any objection to other law-abiding citizens bearing arms – in fact, I’m strongly in favor of it. It’s just not a right I have chosen to exercise, although I’m working on getting over it. I’m fascinated by the beauty and science of firearms. I rarely pass a gun magazine on the stands without flipping it open, and I love attending gun shows. My first close encounter with a gun was rather… intense, so I’m understandably nervous around them. I recently discovered I’m a remarkably good shot with a target rifle, after some friends invited me to shoot with them. I’ve decided twenty-five years is long enough to be uncomfortable around the reality of something I’ve always supported in theory.
The Second Amendment is once again in the news, as the Supreme Court considers a case that would invoke the Fourteenth Amendment to apply it to the states, striking down restrictive state and local gun-control laws… oh, wait. You’re probably wondering why I’m still here, having been shot in the head and all. Well, I got lucky. I was able to knock the gun out of the way just in time, and the bullet wound up in the wall, instead of my brain. I had managed to make a hasty call to the police as the door was being kicked in, and they arrived to find the perp and I wrestling for control of the weapon at the bottom of the stairs. No one died in my house that day.
I wish the Supreme Court would do more than rule the Second Amendment applies to the states. It’s long past time the last, ridiculous cobwebs of ambiguity were cleared away from the right to keep and bear arms. Gun control has been simmering on low heat for a while, after boiling over in the Nineties. We should clear it off the Constitutional stove altogether. We have better things to do than slip into another bitter, tedious argument about whether the government can interfere with our right, and duty, to defend ourselves.
The notion that citizens have no good reason to be armed, because the State can protect them from violent crime, is one of the most dangerous lies Big Government has fed its subjects. The government reduces crime through the police and court systems, but no matter how tirelessly the police work, there is very little chance they can actively defend you from assault. There aren’t enough of them, and there never could be. The very areas of privacy that allow us to relax with our friends and families will always be soft targets for criminals… unless we fortify them ourselves. The police arrived at my house several minutes too late to play a role in my attempted execution. They made excellent time – there happened to be a unit in the area. If things had gone a little different, they might have arrived just in time to avenge me.
Citizen access to firearms has reduced crime rates time and again, but this is more than a matter of practicality. It’s a question of principle. The people of an orderly nation surrender the business of vengeance to the government, replacing it with the rule of law. They cannot be expected to surrender the right of defense. The right to protect yourself, and your family, from injury and death is an essential part of your dignity as a free man or woman. Without the First Amendment, you are a slave. Without the Second, you are a child.
The Western nations which have abandoned this essential understanding of an individual’s right to self-defense have become rotting orphanages filled with dependent children. They’re not dealing very well with the invasion of a determined ideology that has complete confidence in its own righteousness, and few reservations about using violence to assert itself. Losing the dignity of self-defense is part of the degeneration from master of the State to its client. As this dignity fades, the people and their government speak less of responsibilities, and more of entitlements.
The Second Amendment is a concrete expression of the American birthright of independence. With the right of self-defense bargained away, our rights to speak and vote give us modest influence in a collective. The Founders wanted more, and better, for us.
Sometimes liberals sneer at the idea we might keep arms against government tyranny, because a bunch of pistol-packing Tea Party types have no chance of repeating the success of the Revolution against a modern military force. This completely misses the point. A disarmed populace has little choice but to obey orders. If the population is armed, a tyrant’s forces have to do more than just brandish their weapons… they’d have to start pulling triggers. Victory for a righteous populace would come in the military’s refusal to pull those triggers. Tyranny should never be easy. Of course, it should never come to that again, in the United States. As long as the population is armed, this is an understanding, and a duty… not an assumption.
The right to keep and bear arms is a crucial intersection of liberty and obligation. A gun owner is entrusted with the solemn duty to tend his weapons carefully and securely. In accepting this duty, we remove the destiny of our loved ones from the hands of madmen, and it is no longer measured by the distance of a friendly police car from our homes. It would be a mark of our maturity as a nation if we stopped telling ourselves that freedom can exist in the absence of responsibility… or danger. The shards of those illusions carry sharp edges, when they shatter.
The New York Times article about the case before the Supreme Court ends this way:
The Supreme Court’s conservative majority has made clear that it is very concerned about the right to bear arms. There is another right, however, that should not get lost: the right of people, through their elected representatives, to adopt carefully drawn laws that protect them against other people’s guns.
Carefully drawn laws will not protect you from other people’s guns. Believe me. None of the people carefully drawing those laws will rely upon them for their protection.
Cross-posted at www.doczero.org.
This post was promoted from GreenRoom to HotAir.com.
To see the comments on the original post, look here.









Blowback
Note from Hot Air management: This section is for comments from Hot Air's community of registered readers. Please don't assume that Hot Air management agrees with or otherwise endorses any particular comment just because we let it stand. A reminder: Anyone who fails to comply with our terms of use may lose their posting privilege.
Trackbacks/Pings
Trackback URL
Comments
Comment pages: 1 2 Next »
Wow, Doc. That is one heck of a story. Thank you for sharing and Thank God you and your family came out safe and sound!
John the Libertarian on March 3, 2010 at 12:59 PM
Bravo Doc. Bravo.
russcote on March 3, 2010 at 1:00 PM
“The great object is that every man be armed. . . . Everyone who is able may have a gun. . . . Are we at last brought to such a humiliating and debasing degradation that we cannot be trusted with arms for our own defense?”
~ Patrick Henry
Bishop on March 3, 2010 at 1:02 PM
Wow. Your story is a compelling read. As a new father, I have debated internally many nights of whether to own a firearm or not. I am still on the fence, but freak stories like yours helps to persuade the argument for responsible, safety-conscious ownership of firearms. Thanks for sharing another great essay.
search4truth on March 3, 2010 at 1:03 PM
Just think Zero. If you had owned a gun your assailant would never have made it past the threshold. The cops would have arrived to clean up the mess and remove the carcass. Millions of dollars in taxpayer money would have been saved on defense, housing and special treatment for the would be killer. The word would have gone out on the street. Go to Zeros house as a criminal..leave in a box.
Guardian on March 3, 2010 at 1:03 PM
Wow! Just wow! What a story Dr. Z! I grew up in a hunting family and have been around guns all my life. My father taught all of us how to handle guns safely. A gun is just as safe/evil as the person using it.
Thank God you and family survived the attack.
d1carter on March 3, 2010 at 1:04 PM
Wow, Doc Zero, you are a strong person for taking such a principled stand on the Second Amendment after the dreadful incident that happened to you and your family.
We are all fortunate that you are still with us.
UltimateBob on March 3, 2010 at 1:04 PM
It’s an even bigger lie than that. Courts have held that the government has NO general obligation to provide you with safety.
GarandFan on March 3, 2010 at 1:04 PM
When seconds count the cops are only several minutes and a phone call away.
Guardian on March 3, 2010 at 1:04 PM
Doc Zero,
Just to back up your info on the police, they are not bound by the constitution to protect you. I remeber reading this a few years back, and this spells it all out for me. Completely blows away most gun ban arguements. If the police can’t protect you….
Phil-351 on March 3, 2010 at 1:05 PM
So what ended up happening to the guy who attacked you?
Mark1971 on March 3, 2010 at 1:05 PM
I know the cat is out of the bag on this, but I really hate incorporation. It allows the federal government more power than the founders intended.
- A town cannot have religious symbols during the holidays.
- Schools cannot have a moment for prayer.
- Abortion is legal in all 50 states.
- State drug laws must conform with the feds.
Every state constitution I have read provides its citizens the right to bear arms. Incorporation is not needed here.
WashJeff on March 3, 2010 at 1:05 PM
Whats amusing to me is that the BEST argument to overturn gun laws was not even argued before the Court…
The Court long ago decided that individual Rights can be limited in the Public interest… problem is that Gun Control laws have been prooven NOT to work.
The highest crime areas, and murder rates, are the ones with STRICT gun control laws…
Thus, they should have argued that the Right is being taken away, AND the remedy is NOT WORKING…
Romeo13 on March 3, 2010 at 1:06 PM
“To preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of the people always possess arms, and be taught alike, especially when young, how to use them.” (Richard Henry Lee, Virginia delegate to the Continental Congress, initiator of the Declaration of Independence, and member of the first Senate, which passed the Bill of Rights.)
“The great object is that every man be armed . . . Everyone who is able may have a gun.” (Patrick Henry, in the Virginia Convention on the ratification of the Constitution.)
“The advantage of being armed . . . the Americans possess over the people of all other nations . . . Notwithstanding the military establishments in the several Kingdoms of Europe, which are carried as far as the public resources will bear, the governments are afraid to trust the people with arms.” (James Madison, author of the Bill of Rights, in his Federalist Paper No. 46.)
“A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.” (Second Amendment to the Constitution.)
canopfor on March 3, 2010 at 1:06 PM
One point that is often lost on those who would regulate firearms, is that the Bill of Rights is NOT an enumeration of those rights granted to the citizens by the Constitution. No. It is an enumeration for the Government, ALL government, that these rights are inalienable, and exist for all citizens whether or not the Constitution, or any form of government exists at all.
The Bill of Rights is a warning to the federal government that they shall NOT infringe upon these enumerated rights (and other, non-enumerated rights) and that the Government should steer well-clear of anything remotely to be seen encroaching upon them.
As such, the 2nd Amendment, although listed as such in the Constitution, applies equally to ALL of the states, and indeed, every other level of government, as it enumerates a sovereign right of the citizen. No government may legally infringe upon the citizen’s right to keep and bear arms. The government can, and should, prosecute those who use arms in the commission of a crime, but they cannot, and must not, infringe or impede upon a citizen’s right to purchase, maintain and carry arms.
respects,
AW1 Tim on March 3, 2010 at 1:06 PM
To each his own though I’m a firm believer in the “better to have it and not need it” mantra.
But right-on with beauty of firearms; there is an appreciative quality having to do with manufacturer that people who say “why do you need that?” will never understand about guns.
Bishop on March 3, 2010 at 1:09 PM
The Supreme Court ruled in Warren v DC that police have no duty to protect individual citizens. Logically, they can’t be everywhere at once, so the court said they can’t be held liable.
The police are not, and cannot protect you.
Moreso, the “authorities” in nations across the globe, are the intended targets of 2A. Sometimes even in the US. Consider The Battle of Athens.
CPL 310 on March 3, 2010 at 1:10 PM
This will definitely increase my inclination to learn how to use a gun.
Thanks, Doc.
Scott H on March 3, 2010 at 1:10 PM
(-) Victim
(-) Gun Owner
Choose One.
—
Criminals don’t care about gun laws. People who are going to murder you will murder you, regardless of some restriction on gun ownership. They don’t care about the law.
Who does? Law-abiding citizens who wouldn’t murder you in the first place. They’ll have to hand over their guns to comply with the law.
So we’re left with criminals having guns and law-abiding citizens defenseless. What an improvement.
amerpundit on March 3, 2010 at 1:10 PM
As impressive as that story is, it pales in comparison to the force of the argument you make here.
Count to 10 on March 3, 2010 at 1:13 PM
*are not obligated to, and cannot protect you.
D’oh!
—
And, Dr Hupp to congress:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FvTO-y-B2YM
Funny to watch Shumer sneer and act like the little dictator he is.
CPL 310 on March 3, 2010 at 1:13 PM
Gun control simply means only criminals will have guns. The same goes for mentally incompetent and disturbed people. These people don’t give a rat’s ass about your laws. Wake up! Look what happened in England and Australia. How many people are killed by vehicles every year? They’re not banned. How about knives? Cut your steak with a spoon? Any inmate can make a shiv out of a spoon. Do they have a Second Amendment in Red China, North Korea, Cuba, Venezuela, Viet Nam, or Russia?
LarryG on March 3, 2010 at 1:13 PM
For those opposed to firearms, on the fence or unaccustomed to firearms, I highly suggest consulting this site:
http://www.a-human-right.com/
CPL 310 on March 3, 2010 at 1:14 PM
I think this is the whole point. The Constitution is a hindrance. A menace to those who would like nothing more than to abolish it, and start over. They know, if they have the power to take our weapons, and our speech, they have achieved what they have longed to achieve. Tyranny!
capejasmine on March 3, 2010 at 1:15 PM
.
Wow, scary stuff, Doc. My Dad used to own a store, one night he got robbed by two guys, one had a sawed off shotgun. My Dad was face down on the floor with a shotgun to the back of his head, the guy NOT holding the gun told the one with it “Waste him.” God and His Angels were there to protect him though ’cause when the guy pulled the trigger … CLICK … nothing. Of course the cowards ran like hell.
Tony737 on March 3, 2010 at 1:15 PM
Those laws are already in place. How are they working?
InterestedObserver on March 3, 2010 at 1:16 PM
The relevant case before the court came as the result of a 70 year old man in Chicago who did not feel safe in his own home, but ‘the local government’ has held that he cannot own a firearm. Chicago, yeah, it’s real well known for citizen safety.
Reminds me of the case in Britain where a farmer used a shotgun to shoot a thief who broke in his front door in the dead of night. The farmer was sent to prison for unlawful use of and illegal possession of a weapon. The prosecutor, with a straight face, said the farmer could have called for help from “neighbors”. Conveniently overlooking that the nearest neighbor was over 5 miles away.
GarandFan on March 3, 2010 at 1:16 PM
AMEN
badpenny on March 3, 2010 at 1:16 PM
I was for gun control until the Rodney King Riots. I saw how a whole police force could just refuse to uphold the law; and I saw how a few folks with guns kept the peace.
Chris_Balsz on March 3, 2010 at 1:16 PM
as usual a great piece …
As a gun rights activist since 1989, and a supporter of 2nd Amendment rights since I saw pictures of NAZI death camps at age 4, I think that we need to carefully understand that there are multiple roots to the “gun control” mentality.
The most frightening one is the “guild mentality” of the bureaucrats. “Don’t try this at home”, only unionized bureaucrats should have guns.
The wacko elitists and effete intellectuals are nothing compared to the army of government employees who want to insert their control into every facet of our lives.
Police are indifferent performers at best. The courts are usually a bad joke. Legislation is created and passed to get face time in the media.
The U.K., with it’s CCTV’s, DNA databases, proficiency tests for dog ownership, and coddling of criminals is our future if we don’t start eliminating government jobs by the bushel.
CrazyGene on March 3, 2010 at 1:17 PM
Speaks volumes, that.
AW1 Tim on March 3, 2010 at 1:20 PM
Yes. Our rights do not come from the State or from the Constitution. They are natural rights, and are endowed by our Creator (however you conceive Him to be, even if it’s just mother nature).
Contrast that with Dear Liar’s belief in “positive” rights, which are not really rights, but government obligations (such as housing, a job, health care) which in turn makes citizens obligated to support the government, effectively turning people into serfs tied to the land, if not outright slaves.
Self defense is a natural right.
rbj on March 3, 2010 at 1:22 PM
Bravo!
The Race Card on March 3, 2010 at 1:25 PM
Meathead: “Every year hundreds of people are killed by guns!”
Archie Bunker: “Would ya raddah dey was trown outta windahs?”
Tony737 on March 3, 2010 at 1:25 PM
The JPFO did a great documentary video called “Innocents Betrayed” about this.
Innocents Betrayed youtube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cwdO2FLg1Rs
CPL 310 on March 3, 2010 at 1:25 PM
Remember…when seconds count, the police are just minutes away
Bevan on March 3, 2010 at 1:26 PM
Dammit, man up Doc and get you a gun.
Defend your family. No more excuses.
pseudonominus on March 3, 2010 at 1:27 PM
Zero,
You missed the most important factor of all in your good piece. Our judicial system is structured to deter crime by capturing and incarcerating the perps — AFTER the fact. Our system is not built to prevent crime. Otherwise the phrase ‘innocent till proven guilty’ has no meaning.
But that means if you are not prepared to defend NOW, your relatives will be testifying on your behalf later. That is the reality of our police system.
Dr. Dog on March 3, 2010 at 1:27 PM
It isn’t just a matter of self defense in the sense that Doc Zero experienced. It’s a matter of self defense against government. With no 2nd Amendment, we will not be children- with respect to Doc-, we will be slaves also. The Founders intended the 2nd Amendment as a bulwark against government tyranny. Its excellence for personal self defense against scum is a nice ancillary benefit. Nothing so levels the physical playing field like a modern firearm. No need to be young and NFL linebacker material. A minimum of training and experience with firearms is enough to dissuade or dispatch the savages. A gun is a civilizing tool for society.
JimP on March 3, 2010 at 1:29 PM
Doc – you are a clear thinker and an outstanding writer. I’m glad you are on HotAir.
Thanks for surviving, you are needed today.
matthew26 on March 3, 2010 at 1:33 PM
Just remember how the Statists view guns:
Colbyjack on March 3, 2010 at 1:34 PM
An armed public may not stop a determined tyrant. The value of being armed is to make your enemy know that the price of their winning will be high. They better pack a lunch.
RBMN on March 3, 2010 at 1:36 PM
Doc, your personal story strikes close to home. Years ago my then girlfriend was as anti-gun as one can get, despite my efforts to disuade her from that unfortunate position. One night an armed intruder broke into her townhouse and before she could even get to the phone he pulled the gun and froze her. He then tied her up and raped her repeatedly over the next 6 hours. He then stole all her money, jewelry, and credit cards and left, fortunately deciding not to kill her.
He was a serial rapist, and was later caught and sent to prison.
As to the lady, today you would not want to break into her house or accost her in any way. She now has her concealed carry license and is more than well armed… and thoroughly proficient — with her Walther or Glock, she can shoot a silver dollar size pattern wherever she chooses… at 30 feet.
There’s no reason for anyone to go untrained or unarmed.
TXUS on March 3, 2010 at 1:39 PM
“A man with a rifle is a citizen.
A man without a rifle is a subject.”
Henry Clay
That qoute is almost disturbing considering it came from one of the original progressives in this country. Let’s try one from Jefferson
“Those who hammer their guns into plows will plow for those who do not.”
historian on March 3, 2010 at 1:39 PM
Years ago when Virginia was considering its concelaed carry law, the liberal anti-gun crowd predicted a Dodge City atmosphere with citizens slain in the streets on a regular basis by other citizens. It was really amusing to listen to them foam at the mouth and to read their letters to the editor calling for repeal of the 2nd Amendment. Of course, nothing of the sort happened after the law passed. Violent crime rates actually declined. Would be criminals in Virginia know the next citizen they decide to assault may very well be packing. Now that’s a deterrent.
sdd on March 3, 2010 at 1:39 PM
**click** ???
E L Frederick (Sniper One) on March 3, 2010 at 1:41 PM
Best wishes in your intention to overcome your aversion to guns.
When you become comfortable with firearms I’ll feel better knowing another rational fellow has joined the phalanx.
Stephen M on March 3, 2010 at 1:41 PM
Just got back from lunch where I was discussing a proposed “restaraunt carry” law here in VA. Under current law in VA, it is legal to “open carry” into an alcohol serving establishment if the owner allows it, but illegal to concealed carry in any case.
The new law, waiting for Bob McDonnell’s signature, would allow concealed carry in alcohol establishments if you don’t drink. Silly in all regards. Bad guys will always ignore carry laws, and if a good guy conceals well, who is to know?
The reasoning behind this law is that you should be able to defend yourself at all times. Under the existing law, you were forced to decide whether to leave your gun at home, leave it in your vehicle where it could be stolen, open carry if the establishment allowed it, or breaking the law.
Folks wanted to be able to have a gun on the walk back to their car from the restaraunt, without being in violation.
Or as R. H. Heinlein wrote “An armed society is a polite society.”
riverrat10k on March 3, 2010 at 1:42 PM
An armed subject becomes and armed citizen very quickly.
Speakup on March 3, 2010 at 1:42 PM
I’ve always thought that those home alarm system commercials, where the door gets kicked in, and the alarm scares away the perp, should be parodied in a commercial by the NRA (or anyone else with the wherewithal to put together an ad). Same setup, folks innocently at home when the door comes crashing in, except instead of the alarm going off, the homeowner reaches into a drawer/pocket/purse, pulls out a gun, points it at the cretin, and shouts, “Get on the floor!” Final scene with the cops handcuffing the thug, rather than taking down a report that will never be acted on. As Guardian said above, when seconds count, the police can be there in minutes.
And Doc, get yourself either a pump shotgun, or a good .45 ACP pistol (I’m a 1911-style fan, myself). Either one would never need to be fired, just seeing it leveled at them would have the miscreants soiling themselves and complying with orders. Don’t mess with those little 9mm toys. Pump gun is a good choice owing to the distinctive noise it makes when you cycle a round into the chamber. You would likely never have to see the animal, they’d be gone very quickly.
iurockhead on March 3, 2010 at 1:42 PM
I see millions in bumper sticker and T-shirt revenues in your future Doc…
Excellent post, as always!
Seven Percent Solution on March 3, 2010 at 1:43 PM
conflating “carefully drawn” gun laws that regulate what kinds of firearms can be purchased by private citizens, or require proof that you’re capable of handling a gun responsibly, with denying the right of self-defense is a classic straw man argument. otherwise, an admirable piece of sophistry as always.
sesquipedalian on March 3, 2010 at 1:44 PM
Beautifully written and felt. Thank you.
Mommynator on March 3, 2010 at 1:44 PM
Anyone who cares might like to respond to the “Op-Ed” piece on the link below.
Protect our “right” to regulate guns
The rules are here San Francisco Chronicle Submission Rules
Ms. Leftwich is a functionary of the LCVA, a group of San Francisco Lawyers, who create “blueprints” for state and local governments to outlaw firearms. The organization was formed after a massacre shooting of lawyers in San Francisco. With the typical mindset of the legal profession they seem to have concluded that it is easier to make the country conform to them than to take reasonable precautions themselves.
If you Google her name, you’ll note that she is a prolific writer. Her organization is funded by the same liberal trusts that funded Obama and other Anti-American efforts.
Trampling on our rights is a good business, too bad we can’t fix that.
CrazyGene on March 3, 2010 at 1:44 PM
How many times did a criminal do this to Zero? I’m counting once. How many people did Zero have to kill to make it so? None.
And, in owning a gun, there’s always the possibility that you will accidentally shoot a member of your family, sending them out the door in a box.
To prevent the above, the gun should have been in a locker, sealed away from the children, right? But if a guy is kicking in the door, do you really have the time to run to the gun safe, key the combo, and then remove and load the weapon?
Zero’s scenario beats yours. Nobody died.
unclesmrgol on March 3, 2010 at 1:44 PM
Laura Taft had a cafrefully draw up letter from a judge, aka restraining order, against Craig Alan Wall. How well did that work out? They buried her on Feb. 23, 2010. And Wall didn’t use a gun to kill her, he stabbed her. All a gun control law does is restrict what one can use in defense of life.
raz0r on March 3, 2010 at 1:47 PM
The far-left national socialist fringe element of the donk party would rather that we were all disarmed – and not just so the disadvantaged can properly redistribute your wealth, but as Dr. Zero says, so that we would have no choice but to comply with their orders.
Colbyjack on March 3, 2010 at 1:47 PM
AW1 Tim you started making my point before I got a chance. I know there is a lot of history behind this Supreme Court case but… The 2nd amendment applies directly to the people. Just read it. Anyone with a rudimentary understanding of English can understand that the Feds, the states, the cities, et.al. are not authorized to infringe on this “right of the people”.
I am personally not a believer in the 14th amendment approach. I am a believer in the 2nd amendment approach. Of course, that is why I’m not a lawyer.
FoByFo on March 3, 2010 at 1:49 PM
wondering:
How many hotairheads have been assaulted with a knife or gun?
When I was a kid, I used to wear my near-fatal gun encounters as some twisted badge of honor. Now that I have kids and am a responsible enough to own weapons I feel a lot differently.
I am blessed to live in a country wherein I may own the means of my family’s defense. I pray, literally pray, that I never need to defend my family from grave danger. After I pray, I sleep well knowing that my freedom, my family and our security is in our hands.
Most liberals will never get that, ever.
I can tell you one thing about every situation which I have been involved in or witness to involving a gun. If the police were involved at all, it was after the fact, to file a report or confiscate a weapon as evidence.
If the people may not defend themselves what use are the rights defending those people?
The Race Card on March 3, 2010 at 1:50 PM
Doc, your story is a compelling argument as to why law abiding citizens should be armed. It is my stated opinion as a rural dweller one can either respond in 3 seconds or wait for the state appointed protecters to respond in 30 minutes. This axiom applies equally well to city folks. 3 seconds or 3 minutes, you decide. A lot of bad things can happen to a family in 3 minutes. All of my family is weapons trained and not afraid to use them. We leave protection in virtually every room in the house, except the children’s bedrooms. The kids understand weapons are an extremely dangerous tool not to be trifled, but necessary for our well-being.
I am happy you were so fortunate when faced with a deadly foe and hope it never happens again. Fate may not be so kind the next time. Be safe but be prepared.
usarmyretired on March 3, 2010 at 1:50 PM
I own a handgun and a shotgun. I live in the country, where houses are a fair distance from each other and my husband travels a good deal. I also own two dogs and a cell phone.
Early warning system,(dogs) communication with the police, even if someone cuts my phone line,(cell phone)and defensive weapons, which I have never had to use. I hope I never have reason to use them, but if I do at least my chances of survival are fairly good.
hachiban on March 3, 2010 at 1:54 PM
Your point about “pistol-packing” people standing up to the modern military is a pretty major buried lede.
The Founders did not impose the NFA. American citizens and militiamen had access to (and Constitutional RIGHTS to) the same weaponry as the regular army.
I’m not saying that I as an individual citizen should be able to purchase a Stinger missile. But I *should* be able to own a fully-automatic, silenced, short-barreled rifle just as much as fresh recruit in our armed services.
You can’t truly arm yourself against tyranny when you take a slingshot up against an M-16. I believe that large portions of the NFA are un-Constitutional. Another fine example of Americans trading their freedom for the illusion of safety.
Beo on March 3, 2010 at 1:55 PM
Those who say there is not a need for people to have guns because they are protected by police miss the point. It is not only criminals who concern me. If there are those who think that we can never in our future be threatened again by tyranny from within – they are naive. Given the right set of circumstamces, a gun can be necessary for other than protection from criminals. I hold my right to have a gun as sacred. There will always be abuses of our freedoms but that is not a reason to give them away.
AusTex girl on March 3, 2010 at 1:56 PM
Pump action shotgun is the best home-defense weapon. Don’t even have to shoot the guy just rack the slide and he will leave a yellow trail out your door.
Holger on March 3, 2010 at 1:58 PM
False. Zero’s scenario leaves a violent offender alive, who not only knows where Zero lives, but now has a bit of a grudge against him.
If somebody breaks into your house and means you or your loved ones harm, SHOOT THEM DEAD, or you may be facing them again (much more prepared this time) when they get a light sentence, or none at all, and come back with their buddies to settle the score. Leave no violent criminal in your own home alive.
Beo on March 3, 2010 at 2:00 PM
The deaths of certain individuals is not a bad thing, but actually a blessing to society.
http://www2.timesdispatch.com/rtd/news/local/crime/article/BRILCOPY30_20090530-003204/270873/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_Richmond_spree_murders
riverrat10k on March 3, 2010 at 2:03 PM
Excellent points TRC, we all pray that we never have to use a gun to defend ourselves or our families, but we would rather have them than depend on the government to protect us.
Because without our right to self defense, how would we defend ourselves FROM the government?
Chip on March 3, 2010 at 2:06 PM
True. Rifles, though, are another story. The employment of drones and the highest-tech weaponry available has not made Afghanistan a cakewalk. Unless a tyrannical government is willing to
burnnuke Atlanta to impose its will on an uncooperative populace, then the technical advantage enjoyed by the side possessing superior weaponry is not as great as you might suppose.Helicopters are fearsome, true, but look at Mogadishu. It all comes down to small arms unless someone orders HE fire or airstrikes at buildings that may or may not house innocent noncombattants – and that order is obeyed. And I suggest that the use of force on that scale might – just might – encourage more resistance than it suppressed. A Waco or two every day might not be good PR.
Venusian Visitor on March 3, 2010 at 2:09 PM
While this is not necessarily a funny situation – I saw a very amusing bumper sticker on this very issue of whether guns kill people or people kill people, the sticker put it this way …
If guns kill people, then spoons make Rosie O’Donnell fat
Govgirl on March 3, 2010 at 2:14 PM
What was the county in the State of Georgia that passed a law that you must have a gun in your house and backed it up by the sheriff asking to see it and gave a notice to get one if there wasn’t one. Shooting classes were available without cost. Crime took a nose dive after that was passed.
mixplix on March 3, 2010 at 2:15 PM
Nice work John.
I myself was recently converted. Not from a “Gun Control” to a “Semi-Gun Control” belief ….. but rather, from a “Semi-Gun Control” to a “Zero (no pun) Gun Control” position.
I had felt that, like operating a motor vehicle, operating a weapon was a potentially dangerous venture so certification and registration was acceptable to prevent needless injury or death. Additionally, there should be some limits on the types of weapons “civilians” should be legally able to operate.
Judge Napalitano kind of opened my eyes to the fallacy of both those beliefs.
Restrictions on the law abiding, in whatever form and from whatever ideology have one and only one affect – restricting the law abiding. They accomplish absolutely nothing else other than making the very people who deserve it the least, vulnerable.
The obvious questions that arise are:
1) What happens when there are zero restrictions on who may purchase a weapon?, &
2) What happens when there are zero restrictions on the type of weapon which may be legally owned/operated?
I contend that the answer to #1 is – nothing different than now – other than eliminating the arbitrary and subjective designation of legality associated with the methodology employed when the weapon was acquired.
Deriving an answer to #2 is far more interesting.
I suspect that less lives will be lost if all citizens were allowed to acquire whatever weaponry fancies their imagination – then are presently lost by forcing law abiding citizens into becoming targets to, and victims of those who thrive on ignoring the laws.
oldfiveanddimer on March 3, 2010 at 2:16 PM
mixplix on March 3, 2010 at 2:15 PM
Kennesaw, GA
riverrat10k on March 3, 2010 at 2:17 PM
Great story, Doc.
Congrats on the quick life-saving reaction to imminent death.
I spend a lot of time in one of the most violent cities in the country and I carry every place I can legally do so.
Some punk with a hoodie tried to carjack one of our (very much armed) employees a couple of months ago and almost wound up aerated as a result of his poor judgment in victim selection.
She exercised remarkable restraint and the perp was very lucky.
I am extremely safe with firearms and I follow all gun laws.
But there is nothing like a gun to level the playing field with a person who threatens you or your family.
molonlabe28 on March 3, 2010 at 2:18 PM
My Beretta had been unloaded because I had taken it with me on my airline trip to CPAC. After reading the preamble, I paused to reload the magazines.
Thanks, Doc, for the reminder(s) of why we all should keep and bear.
baldilocks on March 3, 2010 at 2:23 PM
Remember, all we have had are oral arguments. Nothing is certain till the opinion in June…It is still very possible the court will decide not to read that dusty old Constitution after all…Remember Kelo and Campaign Finance law…
JIMV on March 3, 2010 at 2:24 PM
Since criminals will not follow “reasonable restrictions” on gun ownership, or use, why should law-abiding citizens be castrated – and the Second Amendment gutted- to placate these pseudo-legalistic illusions?
“…the right of the People to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed” is clear.
Self-defense, which may require a firearm at times, is a necessity for preserving “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness”
(Even a non-firing replica gun -waved at a creep trying to threaten you will- give their dim brains pause, Doc, if you don’t like the real thing being around the house.)
The First Amendment is the Mouth.
The Second Amendment is the TEETH.
profitsbeard on March 3, 2010 at 2:25 PM
No citizen should ever fear that the Federal government has the ability to use the U.S. military against him. Forget the legalities of the matter; it’s that we, the military, won’t do it. Aside from the occasional politically ambitious jackass (e.g. Wesley “Arkansas Amigo” Clark), we are, when politically-minded at all, overwhelmingly conservative.
And I say this as an NCO, and, as a more than paid-in-full NRA Life Member
Doorgunner on March 3, 2010 at 2:29 PM
We use an alarm company to monitor our plant as a back-up to our computerized call-out system – a signal from our facility’s SCADA system acts much the same as opening a door or window. We had a rash of city wide power losses recently during a storm that resulted in multiple call out requests to the alarm company. I spoke with the manager about our place in the “call-out” queue and he got to laughing about those commercials where:
1) The alarm company calls within seconds (actual industry average is more like 10 to 15 minutes)
2) The “victim” has the where-with-all in the middle of that type of situation to answer what might be, for all they know, a telemarketer.
Me too – old school Springfield.
oldfiveanddimer on March 3, 2010 at 2:32 PM
My friend, I’d love to believe that’s true, and it probably is, but that’s NOW. What about in 20 years? It HAS happened before (1860). In just the right (read: wrong) political climate, you never know who will do what. That’s why the Constitution was enacted – to keep certain things on the table that would ensure such things don’t happen. But SCOTUS has been trying to pluck those things off the table for a century now.
Beo on March 3, 2010 at 2:34 PM
Doc, they need to move you from the Green Room to the MAIN ROOM! Fantastic read as usual! Keep it up and thank you.
jwp1964 on March 3, 2010 at 2:34 PM
And lets not forget that gun control is rooted in RACISM.
Early Jim Crow laws were meant to disenfranchise blacks in many ways, including disarmament. More recent gun control laws became more common after a group of Black Panthers went armed to a public meeing in California, circa 1968.
So my opinion is that gun control laws are racist and meant to disarm blacks. Also, IMO, gun control is knowing when not to shoot, and hitting your target when you do have to.
riverrat10k on March 3, 2010 at 2:37 PM
Amen brother. My oath is to the constitution and as long as the Second Amendment is there I know what my duty is and where my loyalty lies!
jwp1964 on March 3, 2010 at 2:38 PM
Oh and before I forget, nice column again Doc.
riverrat10k on March 3, 2010 at 2:38 PM
America has lasted 200+ years without the 2nd Amendment applying to the states. Why change it now?
Even more importantly, why is it a good idea to allow the Supreme Court the authority to amend the Constitution? Am I the only one bothered by that?
Is federalism no longer a good idea either?
JohnJ on March 3, 2010 at 2:44 PM
You may want to talk to the libs about the court amending the constitution. The second amendment says no law and like the 1st amendment is in the individual bill of rights. Crawl back in you hole troll.
jwp1964 on March 3, 2010 at 2:48 PM
A friend who lives in DC suggested that I visit the Holocaust Museum since I had never been there before. After doing so–and shaking the hand of the security guard outside the door–I came back to the friend’s house and exclaimed that the only thing which would keep something like that from happening here is the 2nd Amendment.
baldilocks on March 3, 2010 at 2:48 PM
Bod Bless you and the family Doc.I have changed my position considerable on the interpretation of the Second Amendment since I hit the far side of 30 and had kids to protect..
ginaswo on March 3, 2010 at 2:56 PM
/God!
ginaswo on March 3, 2010 at 2:56 PM
Make a choice. First saw this posted here I think…
daesleeper on March 3, 2010 at 2:56 PM
And those laws would be???? Really I can’t conceive of any laws that would even attempt to do that which is in my opinion an impossibility without taking guns from the hands of people that would like to protect themselves ‘against other people’s guns’.
docdave on March 3, 2010 at 3:00 PM
And yet, you would have it so that no one has to present any ID whatsoever in order to vote.
It stinks in here. Smells of hipocrisy.
Dominion on March 3, 2010 at 3:00 PM
I just love the sign about guns. My all time favorite along the same line showing the idiocy of guns being the cause of crime is; let’s register mattresses and cut down on rape and stop arson – ban concealed matches. The list is obvious – car keys cause drunk driving – back seats cause abortions – banks cause robberies – money causes embezzlement etc. It’s liberal think.
Don L on March 3, 2010 at 3:01 PM
They can’t make up their minds. Abortion has to remain legal, or women will resort to coat hangers and back alleys. However, since most criminals obviously do all their shopping at the local gun shop, strong gun control laws truly make everyone safe. /s
T.D.D. on March 3, 2010 at 3:06 PM
Thank Providence when good overcomes evil.
Our right to free speech is already under attack by many federal agencies, DHS, Czars, Congressional leaders and the President. Our right to self defense is being weighed by the Supreme Court.
Revisionism dismantles and dissolves the conscious awareness of the authentic definition’s power through meaning.
If the Supreme Court revises the original Constitutional Bill of Rights that STIPULATED our right to keep and bear arms, we witness the ultimate judicial activism. That negates the Constitution which is supreme and protects civilized justice in America. The point the brought about our Bill of Rights was to clarify exactly what all of our founders agreed were and are and will be inherent rights of American citizens.
maverick muse on March 3, 2010 at 3:08 PM
Glad you came out of things okay, Doc! Not sure if it’s been mentioned above, haven’t read the comments. In the 80s, there was a case where the police didn’t come in time, and the resident sued the city for not protecting them. Long story short, the Supreme Court ruled that cities have no requirement to protect individual citizens. That issue alone makes it reasonable to have means to defend oneself and one’s family.
bikermailman on March 3, 2010 at 3:08 PM
If it ever gomes to it, we’re hoping guys like you will shoot guys like Clark….
pseudonominus on March 3, 2010 at 3:09 PM
Guess I should’ve read through the comments first…lol
bikermailman on March 3, 2010 at 3:10 PM
Comment pages: 1 2 Next »