-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

WJPBR Email News List [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Peace at any cost is a prelude to war!

Dear Brigade,

"It was in a Boy Scout manual, which I carry with me to this day," Ghalam
says.  "I remember the first time I read the Second Amendment.  I said there
is no way this can be true.  There is no such thing as a country that would
write into its constitution a law that would allow people to have weapons to
protect themselves against tyranny.  I said 'This is too good to be true.' I
made it my mission in life to someday live in the country that was so devoted
to freedom that it allowed its people the tools necessary to overthrow a
government...."

For the Cause, Linda

-------------------------

Boulder Weekly
One man packs, another attacks
A leading anti-gunner attacks Shariar Ghalam

by Wayne Laugesen ([EMAIL PROTECTED])

Shariar Ghalam, a gun-toting activist, fought a war and smuggled his family
from tyranny to freedom.  He's seen people hang for their beliefs. He thought
he'd seen it all, until last week.

Ghalam-locked and loaded with a Sig Sauer 9mm semi automatic-was
attacked by a peace protester while awaiting a Charlton Heston speech.

Get this: The aggressor was Robert Howell, vice president of the Boulder
Chapter of the Bell Campaign, which lobbies for gun laws and peace.

Perhaps Howell, 55, thought Ghalam was a Neanderthal loser, as the anti-
gunners like to view their opponents.  He's not.  Ghalam, 36, is successful
and smart.  He speaks five languages fluently-Persian, English, French,
Kurdish and Arabic.

At age 18, Ghalam flew F-5 fighter jets solo into combat, dropping a half
dozen 500-pound bombs a day on Iraqi targets and shooting down enemy
fighters.

He's competent, having started his own construction business in Boulder
from scratch.  His company, SMG Construction, was widely acclaimed for
renovating a church parsonage into a home for the Boulder County AIDS
Project in record time.

Ghalam fought hard to be here, smuggling his dad from an Iranian prison to
save him from execution by Hezboallah ("Party of God") guards who served
the Ayatollah Khomeini.  Ghalam is clearly above average, and was able to
rise above tyranny in a quest for freedom.  He represents everything this
country is about.

Yet today, he stands charged with brawling and has been deprived of his
right to legally conceal a gun.  That's because Ghalam was slugged, then
chased down by Howell.

It all began shortly after Ghalam and Howell showed up in front of Macky
Auditorium the early evening of March 21.  Heston, president of the National
Rifle Association, was to give a speech that night that Ghalam wanted to
hear.  Upon his arrival at Macky, one of several pro-gun protesters handed
him a sign and bullhorn.  Howell, along with at least 100 others, arrived
with
signs opposing guns.

 A "dirty Arab"

One peace protester told Ghalam he looked like "a dirty Arab." A small
group of peace protesters also antagonized Ghalam, saying he looked like a
Middle Eastern terrorist.  Ghalam, who is Kurdish, ignored them.

Ghalam had a bullhorn and was chanting pro-gun, pro-freedom slogans.
Howell says Ghalam came too close to him with the bullhorn, and refused
polite requests to move along.

"I gently pushed the horn sideways," Howell says.  "Then he steps back and
rams the bullhorn into the side of my head.  So I threw a punch and hit him
in the nose."

Apparently, nobody in the crowd-including Howell's friend and fellow
protester-
saw Ghalam hit Howell with a bullhorn.  They did see Howell slug Ghalam,
and dozens of cameras recorded the blood.

"My witness, Ann Coakley with the Bell Campaign, did not see him hit me,
which is a bit puzzling," Howell says.  "All I can say is she must have
looked
away.  I'm just hoping some of the kids who were there with other anti-gun
groups saw it."

Ghalam says nobody saw it, because it didn't happen.

"We're carrying our signs and this man comes up to me and says take your
bullhorn away," Ghalam says.  "He calls me something like a 'filthy Arab.' I
said I was doing what he was, and exercising my right to free speech and
peaceable assembly.  He got closer, and closer, and pushed the bullhorn
into my face.  I shoved him, and repeatedly said 'don't touch me please,' as
I
continuously backed away."

Whatever happened in the first few moments of the fight remains in dispute.
It's an established fact, however, that Ghalam walked away, trying to end the
dispute.  Channel 4 News has it on tape.  Witnesses, including police, saw
it.

"I'm walking away, and he's chasing me down hitting me as I try to get
away," Ghalam says.

Even Howell doesn't contest that.  "After I slugged him, I went after him,"
Howell told me.  "He was backing up, and I proceeded toward him. This went
on for about 10 feet."

It went on until University of Colorado police officer Paul Davis tackled
Howell
and held him to the ground.  "Officer Davis went after the man who he
thought was the aggressor," says Sgt.  Brett Brough, of the CU Police
Department.

The police report, written by CU Police Officer Michael Lowry, also reveals
which party was more aggressive after police intervened.

Of pro-gunner Ghalam, Lowry wrote: "He was cooperative, and said he did
not wish to fight."

Of peace protester Howell, Lowry wrote: "I turned towards Officer Davis, and
saw he was on the ground with his subject, later identified as Robert Howell.

Officer Davis was telling the subject to calm down."

But Howell did not obey, the report states, and continued to struggle with
Officer Davis.

"I released Shariar Ghalam and went to assist Officer Davis," Lowry wrote.
"Officer Davis eventually talked Mr.  Howell into calming down."

Which fortifies a sociological theory: An armed society is a polite society.

During the altercation, Howell was hostile; Ghalam was polite. And Ghalam-
the polite one-was very much armed.

Locked and loaded

"The gun was loaded, with a round in the chamber," Officer Lowry wrote in
his report.

 Which doesn't seem to alarm CU police.  Right away, after police
 intervened, Ghalam told them he had a concealed weapon and a permit to
 carry it.  Police thanked him for his professional demeanor. Boulder
 County Sheriff George Epp has suspended the permit until the case is
 resolved. Although police clearly viewed Howell as the aggressor, both men
 were ticketed for brawling-a standard procedure when police break up
 fights.

Ghalam's actions teach us that concealed weapons permits are a sound
form of gun control.  Here's a man so responsible that he wouldn't think of
breaking a gun law, so he went through a rigorous process to obtain special
permission from the sheriff to carry his weapon responsibly. Ghalam is so
oriented toward peace that he chooses not to defend himself, and not to
fight, unless it's a matter of life or death.

The peace protester, by contrast, bloodied another man, chased him down,
and later struggled with police.

Ghalam, like most of the pro-gun protesters last week, believes private gun
ownership is essential to peace.  In Iran, under the tyrant Shah, citizens
were allowed no guns.  When the oppression became too much, citizens
stormed military arsenals, armed themselves, and overthrew the Shah.

"The revolution began with fists in the air," Ghalam says.  "It ended with
citizens taking up arms to overthrow the government."

At first, new leader Ayatollah Khomeini asked nicely that all the guns be
turned in.  The revolution is over, Khomeini argued, and I'm a nice man-a God-
fearing, responsible leader who wants nothing but freedom and peace.

"The next step from Khomeini was to tell people if they wanted peace they
needed to turn in any of their neighbors who still had weapons," Ghalam
says.  Next, guns were taken forcefully, at gun point, by Khomeini's
soldiers.

"I remember an entire family being machine gunned down because one of
Khomeini's good citizens reported them for having military weapons,"
Ghalam says.  "It was a lot like Waco (Texas), only the government didn't
bother with spin."

Once the guns were gone, oppression and enslavement ensued.  The nice
man with the white beard became a tyrant, and made it illegal to belong to
any party other than Hezboallah.

Public hangings

"People were killed for their beliefs," Ghalam says.  "The government would
tie four or five people by their necks to an I-beam, then hang them from a
crane.  If you went to the supermarket, it was common to see people
hanging in the parking lot.  And the people had no weapons to overthrow this
government."

Ghalam's father, a former general suspected of plotting a coup, was captured
for execution.  Ghalam, fighting in the Iran/Iraq war, paid an insider and
professional smuggler to help his dad escape. Ultimately, Ghalam, his three
brothers, his mother and father ended up in France.

Ghalam came to the United States in 1989, because as a teenager he had
read and memorized our Constitution-a violation of law for which he could
have been imprisoned.

"It was in a Boy Scout manual, which I carry with me to this day," Ghalam
says.  "I remember the first time I read the Second Amendment.  I said there
is no way this can be true.  There is no such thing as a country that would
write into its constitution a law that would allow people to have weapons to
protect themselves against tyranny.  I said 'This is too good to be true.' I
made it my mission in life to someday live in the country that was so devoted
to freedom that it allowed its people the tools necessary to overthrow a
government."

Howell doesn't get it.  He sees no reason for people to have guns, other than
to hunt.

"It's very unlikely what happened in Iran will ever happen here," says
Howell.
"This country is very different from Iran.  We have a tremendous government,
a constitution and a Bill of Rights."

Exactly.  And the second "right" is the freedom to own a gun. Why?  To limit
government power, just like everything else in the document. Guns are why
America seems different.  Guns are why suburban housewives shop at
Safeway without seeing bloody corpses hanging from cranes.  Guns, which
killed federal agents at Waco, are why the government has taken time off
from attacking religious groups.  Guns are why people can confront each
other with signs and bullhorns in public.  Shariar Ghalam is living proof.

Wayne Laugesen can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or 303-499-
4187.  Send letters to the editor to: Boulder Weekly Letters, 690 S.  Lashley
Lane, Boulder, CO 80303; e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]; fax 303-494-
2585.

C&R FFL LIST:   http://www.shelfspace.com/~c-r-ffl/

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