[CTRL] A Million Armed Dads

2000-06-18 Thread Bill Richer

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

A Million Armed Dads

By Michael Quinn Sullivan

CNS Commentary
13 June, 2000

A gun?  For Father's Day?, my wife's friend asked in horror, as
the children played nearby.  You've got to be kidding!

"I'm not," was my wife's reply.  "It's what my husband wants as a
gift."

While it is true I have been hinting - rather strongly - that a
medium-caliber pistol would make a delightful gift for dear old
dad, I've not been holding my breath.  They are a little pricey.

As my beloved related the conversation, my amusement at the young
mother's horrified reaction to the use of the words "gun" and
"gift" in the same sentence, turned to bemusement at the success
of the left in distorting the issue of firearm ownership.

Otherwise reasonable, clear-thinking Americans have been turned
into lap dogs cowering with terror under the bed-sheets.  I
cannot blame them. After all, we are treated - thanks to the
manipulative media - to a daily barrage of horrifying tales of
children dying in the streets at a seemingly epidemic rate.

The prevailing wisdom in popular cultural - spoon-fed to us by
news anchors and prime-time entertainers - holds that a gun in
the house guarantees murder and mayhem.

If one is more interested in fact than babble, a report issued
last year by the Centers for Disease Control entitled "Deaths:
Final Data for 1997," makes for interesting reading.  It
demonstrates the disparity between stark reality and political
hyperbole.

According to that report, 980 children under the age of 15
accidentally drown, while another 684 died in accidental fires.
Meanwhile, 707 kids under 15 died of pneumonia and 2,681 died in
motor vehicle accidents.

In that same year, 142 children under 15 died from accidental
gunfire injuries, while another 348 died in murders involving a
firearm.

An American child is five times more likely to die of pneumonia
than from an accidental gunshot wound, five times more likely to
be burned to death, seven times more likely to drown, and 18
times more likely to die in a car accident.  Yet what garners
more attention?  Will we see a "million moms" rallied to stop
these tragedies?

Obviously not, for such activities are irrelevant to those
seeking to empower government and disenfranchise the individual.

The real issue for ardent gun-control advocates is not the safety
of children, but the dread of a very responsible use.  The
proponents of progressive government fear a populace that has the
ability to defend, with the ultimate action, the philosophy of
individual liberty.

"What country can preserve its liberties if its rulers are not
warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of
resistance? Let [the people] take arms." The architect of our
Independence, Thomas Jefferson, penned these words in 1787.

From time immemorial, elitists have sought to keep people
dependent upon them for protection, while unable to revolt.  To
that end, fear itself has become the weapon of choice; raw,
mindless fear, playing to the deepest concerns of every parent,
trumping rational thought and experience.

"Having guns is scary..." an otherwise reasonable friend tells me
repeatedly, justifying severe restrictions on firearm ownership -
he would never allow something so "scary" in his home.  Yet as
Mr. Jefferson suggests, the alternative is scarier.

Just ask the millions of Jews slaughtered in Nazi Germany, the
blacks in South Africa, the Christians in Sudan, the
anti-Communists in Russia, the dead in Cambodia's Killing Fields,
and on and on.  In the name of upholding the peace, totalitarians
always remove weapons from the hands of the people, before
initiating reigns of brutality.

But perhaps we should not consider such remote eventualities, and
worry only about the present, about our family and ourselves.  I
am happy to oblige.

Justice Department statistics reveal that 500,000 times each
year, individuals use firearms to ward off attackers.

[My comment...I bet the vast number of such defensive
manouvers are never reported to the authorities, and hence, do
not turn up in Justice Department statistics.]

A few more armed dads, it stands to reason, would make our homes
and streets a great deal safer.

A handgun as a Father's Day present may be unconventional, but my
first obligation as a father and husband is to protect my family
from the dangers of this world.  No one else has that obligation;
neither my father, my friend, my neighbor nor the police.  It
falls squarely on my shoulders, on the man my daughter calls
"daddy."

If a bear attempts to maul my precious child while we are
camping, my happy thoughts about a forest ranger somewhere on
patrol will not save her.  If a lunatic breaks into our home, I
cannot hope that dutifully dialing "9-1-1" is enough to protect
my wife.  My sense of obligation is too great; my conscience will
not allow it.

It bemuses and mystifies me that the conscience of other 

[CTRL] A Million Armed Dads

2000-06-16 Thread MICHAEL SPITZER

A Million Armed Dads

By Michael Quinn Sullivan

CNS Commentary
13 June, 2000

A gun?  For Father's Day?, my wife's friend asked in horror, as
the children played nearby.  You've got to be kidding!

"I'm not," was my wife's reply.  "It's what my husband wants as a
gift."

While it is true I have been hinting - rather strongly - that a
medium-caliber pistol would make a delightful gift for dear old
dad, I've not been holding my breath.  They are a little pricey.

As my beloved related the conversation, my amusement at the young
mother's horrified reaction to the use of the words "gun" and
"gift" in the same sentence, turned to bemusement at the success
of the left in distorting the issue of firearm ownership.

Otherwise reasonable, clear-thinking Americans have been turned
into lap dogs cowering with terror under the bed-sheets.  I
cannot blame them. After all, we are treated - thanks to the
manipulative media - to a daily barrage of horrifying tales of
children dying in the streets at a seemingly epidemic rate.

The prevailing wisdom in popular cultural - spoon-fed to us by
news anchors and prime-time entertainers - holds that a gun in
the house guarantees murder and mayhem.

If one is more interested in fact than babble, a report issued
last year by the Centers for Disease Control entitled "Deaths:
Final Data for 1997," makes for interesting reading.  It
demonstrates the disparity between stark reality and political
hyperbole.

According to that report, 980 children under the age of 15
accidentally drown, while another 684 died in accidental fires.
Meanwhile, 707 kids under 15 died of pneumonia and 2,681 died in
motor vehicle accidents.

In that same year, 142 children under 15 died from accidental
gunfire injuries, while another 348 died in murders involving a
firearm.

An American child is five times more likely to die of pneumonia
than from an accidental gunshot wound, five times more likely to
be burned to death, seven times more likely to drown, and 18
times more likely to die in a car accident.  Yet what garners
more attention?  Will we see a "million moms" rallied to stop
these tragedies?

Obviously not, for such activities are irrelevant to those
seeking to empower government and disenfranchise the individual.

The real issue for ardent gun-control advocates is not the safety
of children, but the dread of a very responsible use.  The
proponents of progressive government fear a populace that has the
ability to defend, with the ultimate action, the philosophy of
individual liberty.

"What country can preserve its liberties if its rulers are not
warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of
resistance? Let [the people] take arms." The architect of our
Independence, Thomas Jefferson, penned these words in 1787.

From time immemorial, elitists have sought to keep people
dependent upon them for protection, while unable to revolt.  To
that end, fear itself has become the weapon of choice; raw,
mindless fear, playing to the deepest concerns of every parent,
trumping rational thought and experience.

"Having guns is scary..." an otherwise reasonable friend tells me
repeatedly, justifying severe restrictions on firearm ownership -
he would never allow something so "scary" in his home.  Yet as
Mr. Jefferson suggests, the alternative is scarier.

Just ask the millions of Jews slaughtered in Nazi Germany, the
blacks in South Africa, the Christians in Sudan, the
anti-Communists in Russia, the dead in Cambodia's Killing Fields,
and on and on.  In the name of upholding the peace, totalitarians
always remove weapons from the hands of the people, before
initiating reigns of brutality.

But perhaps we should not consider such remote eventualities, and
worry only about the present, about our family and ourselves.  I
am happy to oblige.

Justice Department statistics reveal that 500,000 times each
year, individuals use firearms to ward off attackers.

[My comment...I bet the vast number of such defensive
manouvers are never reported to the authorities, and hence, do
not turn up in Justice Department statistics.]

A few more armed dads, it stands to reason, would make our homes
and streets a great deal safer.

A handgun as a Father's Day present may be unconventional, but my
first obligation as a father and husband is to protect my family
from the dangers of this world.  No one else has that obligation;
neither my father, my friend, my neighbor nor the police.  It
falls squarely on my shoulders, on the man my daughter calls
"daddy."

If a bear attempts to maul my precious child while we are
camping, my happy thoughts about a forest ranger somewhere on
patrol will not save her.  If a lunatic breaks into our home, I
cannot hope that dutifully dialing "9-1-1" is enough to protect
my wife.  My sense of obligation is too great; my conscience will
not allow it.

It bemuses and mystifies me that the conscience of other men,
somehow, does.  More amazing is that there are women and children
in their