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A Lot of Work to Do

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The Knox Update

From the Firearms Coalition

A Lot of Work to Do

By Jeff Knox

(Manassas, VA, January 14, 2010) I recently wrote about the need for preaching to the choir – too many of our own friends, family members, and fellow shooters are woefully uninformed about the fight for liberty.  A chance conversation in a hardware store this week really brought home just how much work there is to do beyond the choir room doors.  At the hardware store I got into a conversation with a fellow shopper.  As conversations with me tend to do, it wasn’t long before we were talking about guns and gun laws.  The fellow’s wife had joined the conversation by this time and while his reaction was troubling, her reaction was down right scary.

This was a nice couple in their 50’s, fairly conservative, into classic cars, and in the market for a .38 for home protection.  They were not loony-tune lefties by any means.  They also mentioned a good friend who owns many guns and reloads.  The conversation rolled along smoothly until the topic of “Uzi’s and machineguns” came up.  As you can imagine, it wasn’t me talking about “Uzi’s and machineguns.”

I explained that there is little difference between an Uzi and any 9mm handgun or carbine and that legal machineguns are virtually never used in crime.  That so called “assault weapons” are also rarely used In crime and that millions and millions of them are owned and used every day without hurting anyone.  That the Second Amendment isn’t about duck or deer hunting, it is about being able to defend yourself, your family, your community, your state, and your country.

That is when the woman said something really chilling.  She said that those crazy people who want all of those military weapons and think they have a right to that kind of capability just infuriate her and scare her to death and even though she doesn’t think people should have machineguns, those crazy people make her wish she had a machinegun to just shoot them all.

What on earth do you do with something like that?

I explained that those “crazy people” weren’t radical nut-jobs hoping for an opportunity to shoot a terrorist.  They are ordinary people – her neighbors – who believe they have a right and an obligation to be prepared to defend our way of life.  I told her that those guys aren’t “those guys,” they are me.  I tried to get her to understand that these gun owners are asking nothing more than to be left alone, and that trying to disarm them for no reason would result in tragedy.  Nothing I said could penetrate her resolve or her husband’s support for her position.  She was absolutely convinced that no one should “be allowed” to own more than a couple of guns or more than a little ammunition and that anyone who refused to conform to such restrictions deserved whatever they got in the way of government agents forcing compliance.

The whole encounter shocked me.  I have had arguments with anti-gun zealots over the years and their ability to ignore facts and embrace irrational fear has always amazed me, but these folks didn’t fit the mold.  These folks were asking my advice about gun stores and training, but they were ready to employ the Marines to forcefully disarm – or kill – people like me.

I’ve talked with conservatives who just didn’t get the whole “gun thing” and I’ve talked to gun owners who didn’t see why anyone should have an “assault weapon” or a .50 BMG or a little-bitty handgun, and I’ve almost always been stunned by their myopia.  But this is the first time I have ever met a reasonable, thoughtful, intelligent person who was ready to declare war on her countrymen simply because they wanted to have the means to effectively defend themselves from just such an assault.

I have resolved that I am going to find a way to reach this woman and others like her.  I am going to formulate arguments that will breach her hoplophobia and help her understand my position – and her own.  At this point I’m not sure what those arguments will be, but I do know that it won’t be easy.

I’m afraid that there are a lot more folks like this couple out there.  Folks who are afraid of me because I believe in the right to arms.  I don’t know yet how I’m going to allay those fears, if I can allay them, but I do know that we need answers for these folks and we have a whole lot of work to do.

 

Permission to reprint or post this article in its entirety is hereby granted provided this credit is included.    Text is available at www.FirearmsCoalition.org.    To receive The Firearms Coalition’s bi-monthly newsletter, The Knox Hard Corps Report, write to PO Box 3313, Manassas, VA 20108.

©Copyright 2009 Neal Knox Associates – The most trusted name in the rights movement.

 

 

Comments  

 
0 #8 2010-03-20 11:28
I sure am glad that we have Jeff Knox on our side. If he can't win you over, then nobody can.
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0 #7 2010-03-09 22:06
Here's the only thing that seems to work: Don't try to force the issue. Just offer to take them out shooting and gradually ramp up the guns you offer them to shoot. Pretty soon, if it's possible for them to see the light, they will see it on their own.
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0 #6 Stan Modjesky 2010-03-05 12:42
Just the other day, in what was meant to be a lighthearted discussion on Facebook, someone pointedly told me that he thinks it's acceptable for people to own guns, but nevertheless he "supports gun control."

Like you, I am at a loss how to turn an assertion like that into anything productive. People who make this broad sort of statement are ready to assume that we think "everybody ought to own a gun," or that we gun owners think "it's OK for criminals to own guns." They do not understand enough of what so-called gun control laws do, how they affect law-abiding owners but not criminals, or the ultimate agenda so clearly stated by Pelosi, Eric Holder, Obama, Rebecca Peters, et. al. And they flatly refuse to believe that there are hidden money-men (Soros, Bloomberg, et. al.) behind all this.

So I am also eager to find ways to convince people that I am not an extremist, simply because their understanding of the politics of gun control is so poor.
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0 #5 pat kelley 2010-03-01 19:16
I would like to know what you come up with for this argument. I run up against this often among people who should know better.

I do my best to explain the law and the reason for private ownership of NFA items, but seem to get a blank stare most of the time.
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0 #4 2010-02-27 16:58
I will hazard a solution. Implicit in these "decent "peoples' minds is that violent anarchy is philosophically a martial cornerstone.
"If you prepare to kill effectively with weapons you are a savage".
To avoid the obvious hypocrasy, these self-defined civilized folks resgn themselves to the idea that the deaths of inferior barbarians are unavoidable to preserve the enlightened futures of civilized folk. Presented with such anti-social thinking, YOU as a sobe god-fearingr shopowner should be shocked. Futher, you should explain to them why you are so , and that is why you could not sell any firearms, or related products to anyone holding such ideas. And not sell to them.
It must be done sincerely, without vindictiveness
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0 #3 2010-02-26 13:31
Jeff, it took me two years to get through the fog of ignorance and misunderstandin g with a sister-in-law; there are no silver bullets.
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0 #2 2010-02-26 11:15
I have encountered similar attitudes, and it is shocking at times - how an otherwise rational person can totally flee all logic & coherent thought and take such a viewpoint.

I dated a nice conservative girl the other week - everything went well until the subject guns came up. She explained that she grew up around guns as her dad was a hunter. She then 'went off on' the idea of 'those crazies' who have 'assault weapons' and why they shouldn't be allowed. I kindly & logically explained what they were, how rarely they were used in crime, what the 2nd Amendment was for, and how many reasonable people own them (including myself).

At that point, a really nice date went south in just seconds - she made her excuses and left and refused to have any contact afterwards. I was shocked that a 'conservative' would have such a hang up, but they are out there.
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0 #1 2010-02-25 21:11
I know what you mean Jeff. A few years ago I did an informal survay of people that I knew owned guns. All kinds of questions were asked about types of guns and gun control. I found out that white males were the most pro gun. Women and minorities were much more willing to favor some type of gun control.
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