Who Needs A Gun?
BY Herschel Smith10 years, 12 months ago
NYT:
A gun is a tool, and we choose tools based on their function. The primary function of a gun is to kill or injure people or animals. In the case of people, the only reason I might have to shoot them — or threaten to do so — is that they are immediately threatening serious harm. So a first question about owning a gun is whether I’m likely to be in a position to need one to protect human life. A closely related question is whether, if I were in such a position, the gun would be available and I would be able to use it effectively.
Unless you live in (or frequent) dangerous neighborhoods or have family or friends likely to threaten you, it’s very unlikely that you’ll need a gun for self-defense. Further, counterbalancing any such need is the fact that guns are dangerous. If I have one loaded and readily accessible in an emergency (and what good is it if I don’t?), then there’s a non-negligible chance that it will lead to great harm. A gun at hand can easily push a family quarrel, a wave of depression or a child’s curiosity in a fatal direction.
Even when a gun makes sense in principle as a means of self-defense, it may do more harm than good if I’m not trained to use it well. I may panic and shoot a family member coming home late, fumble around and allow an unarmed burglar to take my gun, have a cleaning or loading accident. The N.R.A. rightly sets high standards for gun safety. If those unable or unwilling to meet these standards gave up their guns, there might well be a lot fewer gun owners.
Guns do have uses other than defense against attackers. There may, for example, still be a few people who actually need to hunt to feed their families. But most hunting now is recreational and does not require keeping weapons at home. Hunters and their families would be much safer if the guns and ammunition were securely stored away from their homes and available only to those with licenses during the appropriate season. Target shooting, likewise, does not require keeping guns at home.
Finally, there’s the idea that citizens need guns so they can, if need be, oppose the force of a repressive government. Those who think there are current (or likely future) government actions in this country that would require armed resistance are living a paranoid fantasy. The idea that armed American citizens could stand up to our military is beyond fantasy.
These objections are a red herring. Guns can be owned and handled safely and the shooters can learn to shoot and observe the rules of gun safety. It’s done every day all over the world by millions of safe gun owners. This is written by someone who has never owned a gun – which speaks poorly of the NYT that they would approve opinion pieces on issues of which the author has no knowledge whatsoever.
But notice how quickly he turns the conversation on the notion that we need to check our firearms in to a state-approved armory, even as Mr. Gutting drives his automobile down the road and risks far greater and more frequent injury to innocent people than me with my guns. This is called hypocrisy.
Finally, take note of his position on the idea that we need to own firearms in order to ameliorate tyranny. Without so much as blinking, he assumes like the good collectivist that he is that the armed forces would put down citizens in armed revolt over gun confiscation orders. Posse Comitatus being the law of the land means absolutely nothing to Mr. Gutting.
Furthermore, Mr. Gutting is apparently not the scholar he is made out to be, and knows nothing of the history of insurgencies. Easy, it will be for the army – or so he thinks. Oh, they may be outnumbered a thousand to one with every insurgent melting away into the woods after shooting. But surely the army would “win,” whatever win means.
In spite of the difficulty of Iraq and impossibility of Afghanistan, Mr. Gutting is sure of the simplistic, bloodless nature of an American insurgency. But he feels that he will never be in a position to need a weapon for self defense (perhaps he would stand around and watch if his wife was being raped by gangsters?). It is Mr. Gutting who is firmly ensconced in fantasy land.
On December 11, 2013 at 9:34 am, Paul B said:
Intelligence or knowledge have never been job requirements for any opinion page writer. Only the ability to generate conflict, which is how they used to sell papers, is justification for the job.
Just the act of being a reporter is justification for an expert opinion on all things. And editors are writers that grew tired of writing.
No, the only things a news paper is good for is fire starter and tp paper.
On December 11, 2013 at 11:05 am, MamaLiberty said:
Now Paul, you do not want any of that soy based ink smeared on your rear end! :) Fire starter, ok… if your neighbors give it to you, but otherwise worthless. The sooner all the MSM dies, the better.
On December 11, 2013 at 11:18 am, Robert Fowler said:
” I may panic and shoot a family member coming home late”.
Really? My oldest grandson works a late shift and comes in at all hours. I have yet to shoot him. There must be something wrong with me.
” fumble around and allow an unarmed burglar to take my gun”
So you are a idiot? Why are you getting that close? Why haven’y you ordered the goblin face down in the floor or shot him for not complying?
“have a cleaning or loading accident.”
Oh, you are a idiot. The first rule taught when I was a instructor in the Marines, clear all weapons. That and following the 4 rules will keep most people out of trouble. Unless you write for the NYT. While owning a gun is a right, there are some people out there that are truly too stupid to own one without hurting themselves.
On December 11, 2013 at 10:42 pm, Rob Crawford said:
The hilarious thing is that the people declaring the military would crush a revolt are the same ones who scream “it’ll be another Vietnam”.
Which just shows that they know neither consistency nor history.
On December 13, 2013 at 1:16 pm, bubba said:
Most of those who claim the Armed Forces would be ordered by them to quell any revolt have never served nor do they understand the people who do serve. They would sorely feel their ignorance if the worst case scenario occurred.
On December 13, 2013 at 2:32 pm, DDS said:
Mr. Gutting makes some assumptions, or perhaps wishes, about how some future insurgency in North America would unfold:
1. The government would remain united and act as a monolithic entity.
2. The armed forces would remain an effective and cohesive fighting force directed against the insurgents.
Current events in Africa, the Middle East and the Orient should show that these assumptions bear their own tinge of fantasy. But he should at least consider what happened in North America in the period of 1775 – 1783 and again in 1860 -1865. To wit: in neither time period did assumption #1 or #2 above apply.
On December 14, 2013 at 12:56 pm, Texas Jack 1940 said:
“-our own military-” This fool does not know who he is talking about. WE are “our own military”. Most of the members of the military have mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers, husbands or wives, children, good friends out there among the American Citizens this idiot expects them to kill. Will the fighter pilot whose parents live in Houston fly protection for the bombers from Kansas about to destroy them? Will the armor from Hood not fire on the artillery from Bliss or the infantry from Bragg as they attack Tulsa? These men and women are not countryless mercinaries. The vast majority will NOT attack their homes, their families, and the few who would be willing would be stopped by the many.