No Self Defense Allowed, -- -- M.M.M. Critique

ernest2

New member
May 11, 2000

No self-defense allowed!
by Kenneth D. Smith


If organizers of the Million Mom March had their way, the wife of an Atlanta police officer might easily be dead now, the victim of a harrowing assault.

She's still alive, fortunately, thanks to a
gun.

That's something for anti-firearms
marchers and lawmakers to consider as they weigh proposals that would effectively restrict the access of women and others to a means of self-defense.

According to terse press accounts out
of Atlanta, the officer and his wife
married earlier this year, and he got her a
gun for protection at the couple's
midtown apartment.

In the early morning hours of March 30, an intruder armed with a knife broke into the apartment.

In an ensuing struggle on the floor, he cut
the woman's face with the knife, and
might have done worse but for the fact
that she got her gun and shot him four
times.

The suspect, who police say had a "lengthy" criminal record, died at the scene, and she went to the hospital to be treated for her injuries.

Long after those injuries heal, the emotional scars and the horror of that night will certainly continue to haunt her.

(The officer did not return calls requesting an interview, and it's not difficult to imagine why.)

It's hard to believe that even the most vehement gun-control advocate would wish, in retrospect, that she had not had a weapon to defend herself.

But there seems to be no room for self-defense in the agenda of march organizers.

"While we acknowledge," they write on their Web site, "that guns may be necessary for hunting, law enforcement, and national
security, the proliferation of firearms
intended for one purpose only — killing
another human being — has become
untenable."

Atlanta police did not charge the officer's wife in connection with the killing there. Would the marchers?

Led by Clinton ally Donna Dees-Thomases, the marchers also call for what they say are "sensible 'cooling off' periods and background checks."

The implication is that obtaining a gun is an
inherently rash, impulsive act on the part
of someone bent on violence.

From the perspective of the officer, it might have been rash and impulsive not to enable his wife to protect herself. Moreover, if the
intruder had arrived in the middle of the
"cooling off" period, her life might have
ended before this "sensible" waiting
period did.


The marchers say they want child-proof
guns with gun-safety locks on them. That
seems perfectly reasonable, even desirable. Outside of Maryland Gov. Parris Glendening, who struggled haplessly in front of TV cameras to remove from a firearm one of the gun locks he was showcasing, probably any
adult could do it.

But say that one had to face a danger more serious than TV cameras.
Say that the problem was being in the grasp of a hardened criminal armed with a knife. How difficult would it be to remove the gun lock then?
Mr. Glendening, who can count on round-the-clock security, need never
ponder that question.

But ordinary Americans — wives of police officers — do.

Interestingly, major media don't seem much interested in the question either.

While network newscasts and print media dwell endlessly on the horrors of school shootings or, alternatively, the heartwarming motives of those who propose to do something about them by walking around in the nation's capital and
other major cities, they rarely if ever
devote much time to reporting on cases in
which persons use firearms to defend
themselves or others.

Not one in 1,000 of the marchers probably knows, for example, that at least two school
shootings ended when the perpetrators
found themselves staring at the business
end of firearms in the hands of private
citizens.

Another ended when a student, an avid hunter, recognized from experience the moment that the shooter had stopped to reload and that the time had arrived to charge and tackle him. He did. End of shooting.

Last year, a 27-year-old Arizona man saw three drug suspects ambush and kill a
Phoenix police officer. Coming to the
officer's assistance, Rory Vertigan shot
one of the perpetrators and tackled
another.
Police officials called Mr. Vertigan "one of the true heroes of our times."
In an emotional ceremony, police gave him a $500 reward and a certificate for a gun to replace the weapon used in defending the officer. (Oh yes, he was sporting a National Rifle Association [NRA] decal on his front windshield at the time.)

That Americans don't know more about these stories is not entirely the fault of the press. Far from being publicity-seeking gun "nuts," many of those using guns to defend themselves are anguished about what they've done.

A Charlotte, N.C., woman who shot and
killed a crowbar-wielding man who
attacked her as she walked into her
company in January was distraught, her
husband explained, "because that man was somebody's child."

People like that don't
send out press releases or even return
press phone calls, unlike, say, organizers
of the Million Mom March, whose entire
focus is to generate enough coverage to
change minds and laws on Capitol Hill.

Some of the skewed coverage doubtless results from anti-gun ideology.

One reporter, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told University of Michigan researcher Brian Patrick, "I've been a reporter for 25 years, and I'm familiar
with the opinions of other people in the
field.

Elite reporters sympathize with gun-control positions, not the NRA."

But it's important to understand that one-sided gun-control coverage results not just from how the press reports a story but from the stories it chooses not to cover.

The result
is that the public may be more inclined to
let politicians make decisions about gun
locks, waiting periods and more that might properly be the province of individual women, moms and parents.

"Mommy," Ms. Dees-Thomases said her 4-year-old son asked her, "suppose
there are still guns after the march?"

For the sake of a terrified woman faced with
knife-wielding intruder, in Atlanta or
anywhere else, marching moms better hope there are.

E-mail: smithk@twtmail.com

Kenneth Smith is deputy editor of The
Washington Times editorial page.His
column appears on Thursdays.
 
What these Million Moron Marchers fail to recognize is that:
1. Guns save far more lives than they take.
2. Their gun control proposals do nothing more than increase the harassment of law abiding gun owners and do nothing to avert crime.
3. Far more children are lost to auto accidents, swimming pool drownings, and medical malpractice, than are lost to gun violence.
4. It seems that most of the gun violence of late is caused 'by the children'. Who is going to protect us from them?

[This message has been edited by bullseye (edited May 11, 2000).]
 
What these Million Moms need is a straight dose of reality. I hope when they go to the ever peaceful D.C. they all get mugged.
 
May 10, 2000

Calling shots for the March

By Jaime Sneider

This upcoming Mother's Day the Million Mom March will be re-educating the populace at-large of the need for "sensible gun laws for safe kids."
The effort is spearheaded by none other than Donna Dees-Thomases, from the same family well-known for its pro-Clinton spin operatives.

In espousing their agenda, the Million Mom March web site cites the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Center for Health Statistics on gun deaths from children 0-19.

Although they correctly observe that "4,223 young people ages 0-19 were killed by gunfire"in 1997, they fail to also divulge that 70 percent of these deaths occur among
"children" between the ages of 17-19,
most of who die as a result of gang violence.

While these deaths are certainly tragic nonetheless, they will not be prevented by many of the "common-sense" measures proposed by the organizers of the Million Mom March, which include mandatory trigger locks and other safety regulations targeted at preventing accidental deaths, their primary policy goal.

In fact, it seems rather counterintuitive
to focus one's efforts on raising awareness
of the danger posed by guns, given that
they constitute very little danger in
comparison to many other sources of
lethal accidents.

While 110 children ages 1-14 died from gun accidents in 1998,
200 suffocated from ingested objects,
570 died from burns,
850 drowned, and
2,600 died in car accidents.

In proportion to their danger, guns already receive enormous attention from the media.

Additionally, according to the National
Safety Council, firearm accidents are at
the lowest ever recorded, totaling 900 —
down from 2,513 in 1974 and the 981
figure from 1997, the Million Mom March cites.

Much of the past reduction has occurred in the absence of regulation and is instead the result of the gunindustry's economic interest in making their product more appealing to potential customers.

Other information cited by the organizers of the Million Mom March likewise appears more the product of
voodoo computations than hard data.

For instance, they claim "American children
under 15 are 12 times more likely to die from gunfire than children in 25 other
industrialized countries combined."

Yale University researcher John R. Lott Jr. has pointed out that this statistic is misleading
because while Hong Kong and Kuwait are
counted as industrial nations, much larger
countries such as Russia and Brazil are
not. Their absence is suspect because they
have among the toughest gun bans in the
world and still have murder rates 4 times
higher than those in the United States.

Organizers of the march also mistakenly praise the Brady Bill, claiming that "Since passing the Brady Law in 1994, over 400,000 convicted felons have been prevented from purchasing firearms because of the mandatory background checks."

The Justice Department data according to Mr. Lott is overestimated by about thirty fold.

Even if the individuals supporting the
Million Mom March still give credence to
the Brady Bill, one would expect they
believe the regulations should be enforced.
But instead of condemning Mr.Clinton and the Justice Department for only prosecuting about 1 in every 1,000
alleged violators, the Million Mom March
issues press releases titled, "Mothers
Applaud the President . . . for Stance on
Common-Sense Gun Legislation."

In any event, enforcing the law has hardly
produced startling numbers — in 1997,
only 36 persons were convicted of
violating the Brady Bill.

The Million Mom March also wants to "stop the marketing of guns to children"
by encouraging the federal government to
implement policy that would restrict the
advertising of gun manufacturers.

In other words,
they support abridging our
constitutional right to freedom of speech.

Especially hypocritical of this particular
claim is the Million Mom March's own
advertising and marketing strategy,

which includes withholding relevant information about their statistics.

Their mission statement says the "Million Mom March Mothers' Day 2000 is dedicated to . . . educating our children and our country
about the life-threatening danger of guns."

So while they don't value the freedom
of gun manufacturers to advertise freely,
they themselves are empowered to market
an agenda to children.

Such behavior includes posters on many college campuses that read,

"Should buying a gun
be easier than registering for class?"

Even more objectionable is their logo: a flower stemming from the barrel of a gun, which is reference to '60s insurgents like Mr. Clinton who dodged the draft while other
Americans fought against communism in
Vietnam.

The logo is drawn in crayon to
mimic the artwork of a child.

But the most perverse travesty committed by the march's organizers is their title itself.
Even though the march is not limited to mothers — remember, it
takes a village to raise a child — the
organizers' original permit indicates they
were only expecting 10,000 people.


It seems the silent majority they purport to
speak for is the greatest illusion of all.
 
Back
Top