From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Gotta love it.    Mike P


http://www.denverpost.com/news/news1226g.htm
 

Virgin, Utah: Where every household must have a gun
By Susan Greene
Denver Post National Writer 
 
Dec. 26, 2000 - VIRGIN, Utah - Darcey Spendlove credits her peace of mind to 
the 13 guns she and her husband keep at their ranch home in this remote 
southwestern Utah hamlet.

That's why the 25-year-old councilwoman supported an ordinance in June 
requiring all townsfolk to own firearms so they, too, can enjoy that sense of 
safety.

"It's like a security blanket that I could whip out and use whenever I need 
to," Spendlove said of her favorite gun, the .243-caliber rifle her parents 
gave her on her 16th birthday. "Everyone should experience the freedom of 
knowing you can protect yourself. It's probably the greatest right we have as 
Americans."

The ordinance states, "In order to provide for and protect the safety, 
security and general welfare of the town and its inhabitants, every household 
residing in the Virgin Town limits is required to maintain a firearm, 
together with ammunition therefor." 

The measure has brought worldwide attention to this 318-resident community, 
which previously was known mainly for the locally made beef jerky sold along 
state Highway 9 - the road to Zion National Park.

Inspiration for the ordinance stemmed partly from the April 1999 shootings at 
Columbine High School, which triggered a national debate about firearm sales 
and moves in several states toward stricter background checks on gun buyers. 
Mayor Jay Lee, Spendlove's colleague on the town council, bristled at such 
gun-control efforts and decided, at least in Virgin, it was time to take 
action.

"I just couldn't sit back and watch the government and the United Nations 
take away our freedom to protect ourselves from One World Order," said Lee, a 
hardware store manager, scoutmaster and father of eight. "I bet if I were to 
go to each of those Columbine parents, they would say they wished a 
fast-acting teacher with a gun was there to protect their kids."

Lee modeled his bill after the only other measure of its kind in the nation - 
an 18-year-old ordinance in Kennesaw, Ga., where city officials boast that 
residential burglaries have dropped 89 percent.

Virgin's version exempts felons, residents bound by restraining orders, those 
with physical and mental disabilities and anyone who refuses to own a gun for 
religious and philosophical reasons. Residents who can't afford guns also are 
exempt.

In other words, the ordinance isn't really enforceable.

"I put in the word "required' because it wouldn't be an ordinance without 
it," Lee said. "But I guess we can't force people to comply. It's not like 
we're out penalizing people who don't own guns."

The Virgin native, who grew up shooting rabbits from the back of his dad's 
pickup truck, says guns are a part of the town's culture - a way of life 
threatened by gun control. Further, he notes that local anti-government 
sentiment has grown with recent federal requirements for desert tortoise 
conservation and with the abrupt ban on mining and grazing caused by 
President Clinton's 1996 designation of the nearby Grand Staircase-Escalante 
National Monument.

And so, Lee says, his ordinance is more a political statement than a call to 
arms.

"The day is coming when the government could come and take our firearms. This 
way, we can hold up our ordinance and say we're required by law to have guns 
and there's nothing the state or feds can do about it," the mayor said.

Lee's Second Amendment fervor persuaded Spendlove and two other council 
members to support his ordinance.

"I've never been a fanatic about guns, but Mayor Lee really got me thinking," 
Spendlove said.

Councilman Kenneth Cornelius cast the lone dissenting vote on grounds that 
the ordinance "has no teeth and is probably illegal." 

Cornelius worries the measure will lure "gun freaks" to Virgin. Since it took 
effect six months ago, he said the town clerk has "received e-mails and 
inquiries from people who want to move here for gun reasons."

"It's slightly embarrassing," he said of the ordinance. "I don't want to 
become a mecca, a haven for gun nuts. This town is really opening itself up 
for a lot of trouble by trying to do this. It scares me."

Cornelius, who works for a nearby building contractor, lambasted Lee for 
spreading paranoia throughout town.

"It's kind of scary (to have) a government entity worrying about a government 
entity coming to take you over," he said. "The mayor gets off on some things 
like that and sometimes go astray." 

Lee, for his part, dismissed his colleague's barbs as "nonsense." 

He noted that Cornelius was the subject of Virgin's last legal run-in - a 
domestic dispute for which the councilman pleaded guilty to destroying 
property.

"My wife and I were having problems," Cornelius acknowledged. "I guess in a 
small town like this, everybody knows everybody else's business." 
--
Well it made sense against crooks but as soon as they start going
on about the UN I have to wonder.

I always remember an interview with some Sheriff in Nevada who was
making out a good case why the Feds should not be allowed on
county land until he said: "The reason they've put these threads
in the new $20 bills is to do surveillance on us."

Er... okay.

Steve.


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