First off this is not an all-inclusive summary of what I believe the right to mean, this is a single incident that has stuck with me to this day...
Hurricane Mitch occurred in 1998. I was one of a hand selected crew of military people who was sent to provide humanitarian support. I volunteered not knowing what the nightmare would be.
To keep what happened short I am skipping much (weeks) but let’s leave it at saying this before I get to the heart of the matter and how I think it applies to the Second Amendment. At that time (1998) we were told the country only had one main road into the capital of Tegucigalpa that ran through the mountains. The country is very mountainous and many honest and poor people lived on mountains and steep ridges in houses built of mud brick or stone and topped with various coverings including wood. The wood unfortunately came from trees that held much of the ground in place and when the rains came the houses collapsed down the hills and mountains and whole families died from crush injuries and drowning. One did not have to look hard to see many horrible sights. I have pictures of where towns once stood that were leveled flat to the point of not even remains of buildings were left. I listened to a crew chief who sobbed all night about a town they couldn’t rescue because the power lines prevented them from lowering the equipment to raise people... The following day when they returned the whole town was gone, every single person. So this is the overall feel and the desperation of the time...
My crew was producing water for the main hospital in Tegucigalpa. We were in in the open center of this more or less open square complex. One morning as I came on shift a woman was standing crying at the mortuary door roughly 50 yards off our work site... She beat and pounded on the door of the mortuary from morning and through the day all the way until the evening was coming on and time for our 12 hour shift change. Needless to say during the day I asked some of my soldiers who grew up speaking Spanish what she was saying and if they knew what had happened as her words were too rapid and distressed for me to make out very well... I really wanted to provide her with some sort of compassion or understanding as she stood there all day alone and obviously in need of human help.
What came out was her son her only son who was only either 6 or 7 (I no longer remember for sure) was hit by a car and no one; no one at all would help her. Apparently the police didn’t even bother to write it up, he was apparently run over just for being in the street. What factually happened I don’t know and I wasn’t there and I didn’t see but this was much of her motherly screams.
How this applies to the 2nd Amendment: We take for granted that no matter how corrupt our system of government that we can expect a certain level of crimes to get investigated no matter what... In our nation I think that’s generally true... The 2A is a right inherent in all people as a natural right. Who’s to say at some future point no matter how far in the future our nation could not suffer some problem that results in a basic break down of services or community... It remains a unlikely possibility... but possible...
If the woman had been armed who knows she may have been able to stop the car from running over her son or at least the local officials would have had to contemplate that her complaints weren’t ultimately powerless and maybe they would have done something about investigate this horrible incident.. As much as people like to complain about crimes where people use guns there are some places in time in life were I can see that the 2A stands as the last bastion against tyranny and just plain ultimate wrongs....
In the end I don’t know what finally happened to that poor woman all I know is to this day I wished I could have helped her. I wish I could have given her a voice to her community.
Ultimately the 2A means you have the right to make your ultimate protest and your ultimate defense... To lack arms very much can and does mean you are at the mercy of others who all too often have no mercy even for the most helpless. I am in no way promoting violence what I am promoting in times of desperation; to not have arms or the right to bear them or the financial ability to bear them means you have no voice... You cant just wait for an emergency and then run down to the gun store and expect to have whatever. Even the poorest among us citizens needs to understand the potental price of being unarmed.
Its not just that arms stops bad guys, it that arms say I will not be ignored and it demands that wrongs have a legal and just way that is followed to resolve terrible situations.
I hope I have explained myself well... I think this poor woman had no voice and the 2A is a voice, it requires responsibility and reasoning but it is a voice. It is the reason why the right must exist and what it means to you and me.
I think the right itself is a voice, a kind of freedom of speech in its own way... what do you thiink?
Hurricane Mitch occurred in 1998. I was one of a hand selected crew of military people who was sent to provide humanitarian support. I volunteered not knowing what the nightmare would be.
To keep what happened short I am skipping much (weeks) but let’s leave it at saying this before I get to the heart of the matter and how I think it applies to the Second Amendment. At that time (1998) we were told the country only had one main road into the capital of Tegucigalpa that ran through the mountains. The country is very mountainous and many honest and poor people lived on mountains and steep ridges in houses built of mud brick or stone and topped with various coverings including wood. The wood unfortunately came from trees that held much of the ground in place and when the rains came the houses collapsed down the hills and mountains and whole families died from crush injuries and drowning. One did not have to look hard to see many horrible sights. I have pictures of where towns once stood that were leveled flat to the point of not even remains of buildings were left. I listened to a crew chief who sobbed all night about a town they couldn’t rescue because the power lines prevented them from lowering the equipment to raise people... The following day when they returned the whole town was gone, every single person. So this is the overall feel and the desperation of the time...
My crew was producing water for the main hospital in Tegucigalpa. We were in in the open center of this more or less open square complex. One morning as I came on shift a woman was standing crying at the mortuary door roughly 50 yards off our work site... She beat and pounded on the door of the mortuary from morning and through the day all the way until the evening was coming on and time for our 12 hour shift change. Needless to say during the day I asked some of my soldiers who grew up speaking Spanish what she was saying and if they knew what had happened as her words were too rapid and distressed for me to make out very well... I really wanted to provide her with some sort of compassion or understanding as she stood there all day alone and obviously in need of human help.
What came out was her son her only son who was only either 6 or 7 (I no longer remember for sure) was hit by a car and no one; no one at all would help her. Apparently the police didn’t even bother to write it up, he was apparently run over just for being in the street. What factually happened I don’t know and I wasn’t there and I didn’t see but this was much of her motherly screams.
How this applies to the 2nd Amendment: We take for granted that no matter how corrupt our system of government that we can expect a certain level of crimes to get investigated no matter what... In our nation I think that’s generally true... The 2A is a right inherent in all people as a natural right. Who’s to say at some future point no matter how far in the future our nation could not suffer some problem that results in a basic break down of services or community... It remains a unlikely possibility... but possible...
If the woman had been armed who knows she may have been able to stop the car from running over her son or at least the local officials would have had to contemplate that her complaints weren’t ultimately powerless and maybe they would have done something about investigate this horrible incident.. As much as people like to complain about crimes where people use guns there are some places in time in life were I can see that the 2A stands as the last bastion against tyranny and just plain ultimate wrongs....
In the end I don’t know what finally happened to that poor woman all I know is to this day I wished I could have helped her. I wish I could have given her a voice to her community.
Ultimately the 2A means you have the right to make your ultimate protest and your ultimate defense... To lack arms very much can and does mean you are at the mercy of others who all too often have no mercy even for the most helpless. I am in no way promoting violence what I am promoting in times of desperation; to not have arms or the right to bear them or the financial ability to bear them means you have no voice... You cant just wait for an emergency and then run down to the gun store and expect to have whatever. Even the poorest among us citizens needs to understand the potental price of being unarmed.
Its not just that arms stops bad guys, it that arms say I will not be ignored and it demands that wrongs have a legal and just way that is followed to resolve terrible situations.
I hope I have explained myself well... I think this poor woman had no voice and the 2A is a voice, it requires responsibility and reasoning but it is a voice. It is the reason why the right must exist and what it means to you and me.
I think the right itself is a voice, a kind of freedom of speech in its own way... what do you thiink?
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