Responsibly Armed, By Finn Aagaard ..........
I carry my pistol always, whenever the law permits,
inside or outside the house; at night it goes
under my pillow, where I have slept with one on
and off for 45 years. Am I utterly paranoid, do
I feel that evil out to get me is lurking everywhere,
am I so ruled by fear that I must have my security
blanket at all times?
No. To think so would be to completely misunderstand
the role of the personal gun in my life. My pistol,
combined with some competence in its use, has
indeed been a wonderful comfort in a few potentially
unpleasant circumstances, and the knowledge I
can retain command of my immediate environment
does tend to encourage a calm self-confidence
in everyday life, while precluding panic in an
emergency.
The chief virtue of the pistol is that I wear
it; you do not have to go and fetch it when criminal
violence threatens with shocking suddenness out
of the blue, as can happen even in peaceful
Llano County, Texas, where I live. If you have
time to fetch a gun, you would do better to grab
a shotgun, probably. Wear your pistol, keep all
other firearms locked away. On you, it is safe
from kids and other unauthorized persons, you
do not have to remember where you stashed it or
fumble with the combination lock of a pistol safe.
It is there, instantly ready to protect you and
your family. On the street concealed carry is
usually required either by law or social usage
and has the advantage of protecting everyone,
even antigun liberals, because criminals cannot
tell which of their potential victims might be
armed.
Yet my pistol is more than just security. Like
an Orthodox Jews yarmulke or a Christian
cross, it is a symbol of who I am, what I believe
and the moral standards by which I live. It symbolizes
the Social Contract between myself and society
and declares that I am no mere subject but a free
and independent citizen of the Republic who holds
inalienable rights while honoring the responsibilities
that accompany those rights. My pistol states
that I will defend the common weal, that I will
uphold what is right and decent and that I am
willing and able to protect myself and mine. (The
police cannot and are not required to protect
the individual person or family. They are spread
too thin for that. When called they will do their
best, but all too often they can get there only
in time to clean up the aftermath. You are responsible
for your own safety.)
My pistol is my family's shield, my guarantee
that upon my life I will let no evil touch them.
When a malefactor demands, Your dignity and your
money, or your life!" my pistol introduces
a very sobering third alternative: No - if you
persist in this criminal endeavor, it is your
life that will be at hazard."
Many people will suggest that the contents of
your wallet are not worth jeopardizing your life
for, just hand it over to the thug and move on.
By doing so you are encouraging crime - success
ensures the robber will seek another victim. I
consider it to be a citizen's duty (a hard word
to the me generation) to resist attempted violent
crime by all means at his disposal, even at considerable
risk to himself. Remember, action is always faster
than reaction (unless your assailant has the reaction
time of a Bill Jordan). Dissemble, pretend to
go along. 'I don't w-w-want any trouble, you can
have my wallet, I'm getting it out of my hip pocket
now.' As your hand closes on your gun, yell: "Look
out, behind you!" Side-step as you present
the pistol , and when he turns back your front
sight rests squarely on his chest. With variations
to suit the particular circumstances, this sort
of ploy will work far more often than most victims
would believe. Statistics suggest that an intended
victim who resists with a firearm is by a good
margin less likely to be injured than one who
does not resist at all. On the other hand, the
surest way to survive a gunfight is not to get
into one. Stay alert and avoid potentially bad
situations if you possibly can.
Research by Professor John Lott, Gary Kleck and
others into the effects of concealed carry laws
prove beyond quibbling that they reduce violent
crime quite considerably. Since it began to license
responsible citizens to carry arms, Florida's
murder rate has sunk from 36 percent above the
national average to well below it, and overall
the decline in violent crime in states with concealed
carry laws (compared to the others) runs at east
15 percent for murder, II percent for robberies
and 9 percent for rape, according to Professor
Lott. Private citizens are said to use firearms
in self-defense as often as a million times a
year. In the vast majority of these incidents
no blood is shed; the thug flees or surrenders.
Nevertheless, it is claimed that private citizens
justifiably in twice as many criminals as the
entire law enforcement establishment in any given
year.
Obviously, an armed and responsible citizenry
is a very potent force in keeping crime in check.
In many nations where private citizens are denied
firearms - as most recently in Australia - violent
crime is on the upswing, whereas in the U.S. the
rate is declining.
However, the right to be armed does not depend
on these facts; it goes way back to our very beginnings.
Long before the Second Amendment and the rights
acknowledged by English Common Law traditions,
the right of a free man to bear arms was recognized
by almost every culture or civilization that comes
to mind. Until well into this sorry century, free
men were armed, and like the yeomen of England
and our own militia, they constituted the backbone
of their societies.
Every right includes commitments, not least the
right to bear arms. Anyone who carries a pistol
in public has an obligation to society to be reasonably
competent with it, able to hit his target - under
stress - rather than uninvolved bystanders; he
must know and abide by the laws limiting the use
of lethal force; he must avoid quarrels and altercations
and understand that he will be held to higher
standards of restraint and responsibility than
an unarmed person. The course of instruction that
is rightly required (in addition to background
checks) in order to earn a Texas Concealed Handgun
License teaches all this, and more, including
conflict resolution. Passing a shooting test is
mandatory, but the class does not include shooting
instruction; you are expected to have arranged
for adequate training beforehand. It is a fine
course; anybody who intends to go armed ought
to take a similar one.
My pistol has aided no evil, it has added not
a tittle of gratuitous violence to the world.
On the contrary, its presence on my hip or on
the Land Rover seat very definitely defused a
couple of dangerous situations in the old days
in Kenya. More recently, on a dark street, I am
convinced the mere suspicion of its presence,
engendered by my alert, confident demeanor, averted
what could otherwise have been a nasty incident.
Colt got it right; a pistol in the hands of a
decent, courageous citizen is a convincing peacemaker.
My pistol is a positive influence for stability,
for decency, for righteousness, for freedom from
fear and violence, for all that is right and proper.
(If anyone can present a rational argument that
factually disproves this statement, I will discard
the gun and never carry it again.)
One's self-image matters a great deal; it is
what charts one's course through life. If I refuse
to compromise my integrity, my self-respect and
what the Founding Fathers referred to as their
sacred honor, it is because ray image of myself
will not permit it. Self-images are complex, of
course. Basically I see myself as a sound and
responsible citizen, a scrupulously law-abiding,
friendly, reasonable, middle-class, normally intelligent
and fairly well educated paterfamilias with some
understanding of true values who has been blessed
beyond his deserts in this life and is truly grateful.
At the very root and foundation of my being,
though, I am a warrior - a very mild one, but
a warrior nevertheless - as any man must be to
some degree. My pistol symbolizes that as such
I will not be coerced by fear or by any political,
social or physical threats whatsoever into doing
anything I consider dishonorable or unworthy of
my self-respect. You can push me only so far,
but no farther. It symbolizes the positive side
of the warrior spirit, which is the one force
that can maintain respect for the law, stability,
freedom, peace and decency in this world. Without
it we are done.
Warriors and hunters tend to be fascinated by
fine personal arms and will often cherish one
above all others, far beyond its utility as a
tool. That is why embellished firearms are commonplace,
while engraved carpenter's hammers are not. I
dote on my Colt Officer's ACP carry gun, and delight
in its presence on my hip. Now do you begin to
understand what my pistol means to me?
Be that as it may, our body of armed citizens
has always been a potent force for law and order,
liberty and all that is good in the land. If we
allow the hoplophobic left to destroy it on an
emotional whim, to make themselves 'feel good,'
or in accordance with their unrealistic and failed
political philosophy, we will come to rue the
day.
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