Posts tagged as:

firearms

From National Review Online: Signs of Intelligence?

The logic behind this attitude baffles me, but I suspect it has to do with a basic difference in worldviews. Some people think that power should exist only at the top, and everybody else should rely on “the authorities” for protection.

Despite such attitudes, average Americans have always made up the front line against crime. Through programs like Neighborhood Watch and Amber Alert, we are stopping and catching criminals daily. Normal people tackled “shoe bomber” Richard Reid as he was trying to blow up an airliner. It was a truck driver who found the D.C. snipers. Statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that civilians use firearms to prevent at least a half million crimes annually.

When people capable of performing acts of heroism are discouraged or denied the opportunity, our society is all the poorer. And from the selfless examples of the passengers on Flight 93 on 9/11 to Virginia Tech professor Liviu Librescu, a Holocaust survivor who sacrificed himself to save his students earlier this week, we know what extraordinary acts of heroism ordinary citizens are capable of.

Many other universities have been swayed by an anti-gun, anti-self defense ideology. I respect their right to hold those views, but I challenge their decision to deny Americans the right to protect themselves on their campuses @mdash; and then proudly advertise that fact to any and all.

Whenever I’ve seen one of those “Gun-free Zone” signs, especially outside of a school filled with our youngest and most vulnerable citizens, I’ve always wondered exactly who these signs are directed at. Obviously, they don’t mean much to the sort of man who murdered 32 people just a few days ago.

Amen, Mr. Thompson. This is exactly the kind of leadership we need coming from the Oval Office.

{ 1 comment }

In case you missed the insert in your utility bill:

On April 14, 2003, the Plano City Council, recognizing the danger of displaying a facsimile firearm in public, approved Ordinance 2003-4-19, restricting how and where facsimile firearms can be displayed. Persons charged with an offense under the Ordinance face a Class C misdemeanor, subject to citation and/or arrest.

The Ordinance is not designed to target children who purchase toy guns for play in their backyard, rather it is aimed at those persons who carry a facsimile firearm in public, for visual impact. When brandished, facsimile firearms can cause fear and concern for the public, necessitate a response from armed officers, and could result in injury or death to the person possessing the facsimile firearm.

{ 0 comments }