monk222: (Bonobo Thinking)
Thirty gun-toting activists protested a public library’s concealed carry policy this week, startling the patrons inside by taking the demonstration — and guns — indoors. The protesters had taken offense to a single sentence explaining the rule: “Carrying concealed weapons is prohibited, except as permitted by law.”

Philip Van Cleave, the organizer of the protest and President of Virginia Citizens Defense League, compared the library’s gun “discrimination” to racially discriminating against African-Americans:

“What if they had said “We don’t allow African-Americans, except if allowed by law. Would that be okay? I don’t think so… [The rule] implies that no one is allowed to protect themselves on the property.”


-- News-LJ

There really isn't a lot of mystery why America is such a violent country. We still fancy the wild west days. We would like to walk around with cowboy gun holsters around our waists, and be able to settle a fight by stepping outside and drawing, and go around shooting down Indians and other darkies.
monk222: (Bonobo Thinking)
Thirty gun-toting activists protested a public library’s concealed carry policy this week, startling the patrons inside by taking the demonstration — and guns — indoors. The protesters had taken offense to a single sentence explaining the rule: “Carrying concealed weapons is prohibited, except as permitted by law.”

Philip Van Cleave, the organizer of the protest and President of Virginia Citizens Defense League, compared the library’s gun “discrimination” to racially discriminating against African-Americans:

“What if they had said “We don’t allow African-Americans, except if allowed by law. Would that be okay? I don’t think so… [The rule] implies that no one is allowed to protect themselves on the property.”


-- News-LJ

There really isn't a lot of mystery why America is such a violent country. We still fancy the wild west days. We would like to walk around with cowboy gun holsters around our waists, and be able to settle a fight by stepping outside and drawing, and go around shooting down Indians and other darkies.
monk222: (Flight)

“You’re not going to be the victims of chaos,” Mr. Pruett had earlier promised the class of 50 — a cross-section of Texas society who gathered over coffee, doughnuts and the filled Czech pastries called kolaches not long after sunup on a Sunday in a makeshift classroom in a strip mall near his gun shop in the northwest Houston suburbs. “You’re going to be the solution to chaos.”

-- Ralph Blumenthal, "Bull's Eyes of Texas: Getting a Gun License" in The NY Times

Mr. Blumenthal goes through Texas's course for getting a license to carry a concealed gun, and he gives us an inside look. He is happy to report that, in spite of the heady quote above, the instructors stress the importance of not shooting and cooling any gunslinging fever. But Monk comically imagines one asking with a look of confusion and worry, "Uh, is there an advanced course where we can get a license to kill?"

The class laughs, and the instructor chuckles and says, "Yeah, as a matter of fact there is. It's called the army. And it so happens they are looking for some good men about now. They are even offering immediate overseas travel as we speak."

In real life, the instructor has an equally bracing way of making applicants mindful of the risks and costs of using their weapon:

“Shooting is always the last resort,” the younger Mr. Pruett cautioned, and quoted a famous maxim of Clint Smith of the gun-training mecca Thunder Ranch in Lakeview, Ore.: “Every bullet has a lawyer attached to it.” Figure on paying $25,000 to $150,000 in legal fees for even a defensible shooting, he said.

article )

xXx
monk222: (Flight)

“You’re not going to be the victims of chaos,” Mr. Pruett had earlier promised the class of 50 — a cross-section of Texas society who gathered over coffee, doughnuts and the filled Czech pastries called kolaches not long after sunup on a Sunday in a makeshift classroom in a strip mall near his gun shop in the northwest Houston suburbs. “You’re going to be the solution to chaos.”

-- Ralph Blumenthal, "Bull's Eyes of Texas: Getting a Gun License" in The NY Times

Mr. Blumenthal goes through Texas's course for getting a license to carry a concealed gun, and he gives us an inside look. He is happy to report that, in spite of the heady quote above, the instructors stress the importance of not shooting and cooling any gunslinging fever. But Monk comically imagines one asking with a look of confusion and worry, "Uh, is there an advanced course where we can get a license to kill?"

The class laughs, and the instructor chuckles and says, "Yeah, as a matter of fact there is. It's called the army. And it so happens they are looking for some good men about now. They are even offering immediate overseas travel as we speak."

In real life, the instructor has an equally bracing way of making applicants mindful of the risks and costs of using their weapon:

“Shooting is always the last resort,” the younger Mr. Pruett cautioned, and quoted a famous maxim of Clint Smith of the gun-training mecca Thunder Ranch in Lakeview, Ore.: “Every bullet has a lawyer attached to it.” Figure on paying $25,000 to $150,000 in legal fees for even a defensible shooting, he said.

article )

xXx

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