Friends,

Wonder why you don't hear more stories like these. Oh,
I forgot. They do not meet the Politically Correct agenda.

Jim Hardin

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Alabama Committee To Get Us Out of the UN
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From: The Republican <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Just Another Statistic?

Friday, March 16, 2001
Detroit News

http://www.detnews.com/EDITPAGE/0103/16/no/no.htm

No: Guns often help ordinary citizens from winding up as crime statistics
By Robert A. Waters

Despite the shootings in a San Diego suburban school, legally obtained guns
provide a vital first line of defense for many U.S. citizens. Here are a
few recent cases from my files of more than 6,000 such incidents.

On Nov. 18, 2000, Colorado Springs resident Jean Zamarippa shot a serial
rapist. At about midnight, Anthony Peralez ripped her back door from its
hinges. As he entered the house, Zamarippa fired four shots, striking the
intruder three times. DNA tests later revealed that Peralez had raped three
other elderly women in the same neighborhood. Zamarippa, in a recent
interview, insisted that she's not a heroine. "I'm just a little
grandmother," she said, "and I mind my own business. What would I have done
if I hadn't had my gun? I would have been just another statistic."

On Feb. 3, Cherese Belin returned to her Charleston, S.C., apartment to
find jewelry and money missing. She called police, who searched the
apartment but failed to find an intruder. After investigators left, Belin
asked her neighbor, Shermaine D. Whitley, to search the house a second time.

Arming himself with a handgun, Whitley peered beneath the homeowner's bed
and found the burglar hiding there. He ordered the man to come out.
Instead, the thief fired two shots at Whitley, striking him in the leg. The
armed neighbor then returned fire, killing the burglar. Whitley was not
charged.

Lisa Liev, owner of Johnny's Cut Rate Liquor in Dallas, was working the
afternoon shift on Feb. 9 of this year when a man entered the store, pulled
a gun and demanded money. Liev dove to the floor and grabbed her own pistol
from beneath the cash register. As the man jumped the counter, she shot and
killed him. Still wearing a bandage on her head from a previous robbery
attempt, Liev said, "I'm lucky to be alive. This is the second time they
try and rob and hit me." Police ruled the shooting justifiable homicide.

On Dec. 11, 2000, in San Antonio, Tony Ayala, a world champion-class boxer,
was shot by 18-year-old Nancy Gomez. At 3:45 a.m., Ayala, who had twice
been convicted of rape and had served 16 years in prison, entered the
woman's home through an unlocked door. Gomez confronted the boxer and shot
him when he attempted to take the gun from her. Ayala was charged with
burglary with intent to commit assault. A police spokesman said Gomez was
"right and justified in what she did."

On Feb. 14, 2001, three members of a Suffolk, N.Y., rock band fought back
when when two armed invaders kicked in the front door of their home and
attempted to rob them. Two of the band members grabbed shotguns. The first
intruder had enough sense to flee when he saw the armed homeowners. Wesley
Jones did not - he was killed by a shotgun blast as he held a gun to the
head of the third resident. Investigators stated the shooting appeared to
be justified.

About 2 a.m., Feb. 18, 2001, Jose Antonio Herrera and Rodrigo Castaneda
burst through the door of an apartment near Three Points in Tucson, Ariz.
The assailants used duct tape and "tie wraps" to bind the two female
occupants. As the intruders looted the house, 18-year-old Amelia Gamboa
broke free and retrieved a pistol from beneath her mattress. When Castaneda
pointed a rifle at her, she shot and killed him. Herrera was arrested at
the scene. Gamboa was not charged.

In Detroit, on April 27, 1999, a man and woman posing as magazine
solicitors knocked on the door of Richard Harris' northeast home. When he
declined to open it, the two attempted to break down the door. Harris
retrieved a shotgun and fired, striking David Epps. The homeowner wasn't
charged. A Detroit police investigator said, "This was just another scam
criminals use to invade homes."

Unlike the San Diego school shootings, none of these cases made national
headlines. But had they not owned guns, each of these victims may have been
murdered. There are at least two sides to every issue, and in thousands of
instances each year, guns save lives.

Robert A. Waters of Ocala, Fla. is author of "The Best Defense: True
Stories of Intended Victims Who Defended Themselves with a Firearm,"
Cumberland House Publishing.






[Forwarded For Information Purposes Only - Not
Necessarily Endorsed By The Sender - A.K. Pritchard]

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A.K. Pritchard
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"[A]ll political religion....... is also a religion of hate. In authentic
religions, God judges, God redeems and God forgives. In authentic
religions, we understand ourselves as sinners. No one mistakes himself or
herself as a redeemer. In political religions, human beings act as God,
judging and condemning, and there is no redemption. This is the bloody
history of the left - the saga of the guillotine and the gulag - which
continues now into the new millenium."

V-Day
The Feminist War Against Love
By David Horowitz
FrontPageMagazine.com | February 9, 2001
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