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FEATURE ARTICLE |
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You Know Somethin’s Happenin’ Here But …
Claire Wolfe Date: 0000-00-00 Subject: Communities As depressing as these last few months have been for gun rights and
freedom, there’s a hopeful “something” in the air. It doesn’t always
feel like it, but there’s a subtle freedomista breeze wafting. Those of us who’ve been around a while might be tempted to feel we’re
reliving the terrible years of 1993-4. Those were the dark years when
the Brady law and the ugly-gun ban clobbered us with a one-two punch and
left us thinking we might never get to our feet again. But Joe Biden is right. Oh, don’t worry, he’s right about only one thing, and actually only half of that. But the political climate around gun rights has changed. He’s just wrong about the nature of that change " which, given that he’s a politician, I believe and hope he utterly misreads. He and his ilk think this is the moment when they’ll finally “win” on
gun control and destroy the culture of independence that firearms
represent. My prediction is that, whether they “win” in laws and regulation,
this time they lose. And they don’t just loose seats in legislatures as
they did last time. They lose their country. One sign of that shines from Ronnie Barrett’s open letter joining the boycott of those who assault liberty. Barrett is hardly a typical gun maker. Years before the present boycott, he his company refused to sell to or service the weapons of gun-banning governments. In a way, he inspired LaRue, York, Olympic,
and all the others to take the tall stand they’re taking now. He just
says it well. And what he says " and what he and others are doing " wouldn’t have
been said or done ca. 1993. Back then, gun makers were only too happy to
sell out. Heck, Bill Ruger is infamously the father of the
standard-capacity magazine ban. And most other gun makers spent time
angling for ways to make the various anti-gun (anti-freedom) laws hurt
the competition more than themselves. But yes, Joe Biden, things have changed. In 1993, do you think the biggest sports show in the U.S. would have
been shut down by vendors " not producers of ugly black guns, but makers
of boats, duck blinds, spices, and clothing " standing up, saying “the
Second Amendment is for ALL or it’s for none,” and walking out? In 1993,
do you think the NRA and the big gun makers would have followed the
lead of those little guys? How many gun or firearms equipment makers back then would have even
thought about refusing to sell to police? It would have been
unthinkable. Sure, there are still plenty of compromisers. Like Armalite, that wants to have its boycott cake and eat it, too.
Or the never-met-a-compromise-he-didn’t-like Alan Gottleib of the
Second Amendment Foundation/CCRKBA who seriously expects Washington
state gun owners to believe that having one vast gunowner database foisted upon them will be better than having one minor database that a lot of them didn’t even know about. But condemnation of their tactics is swift, fierce, and increasingly unanimous. I don’t know how any of this is going to come out. I’m not seeing
rainbows and unicorns in our future. Whether the gun-banners “win” or
get beaten back on a new ugly-gun ban or a private-sale ban, I expect
chaos. But this time around, there seems to be a lot more understanding
that the battle is about freedom. For all of us. And that it’s not just the possessions and privileges of one group or another that are at stake. I also think that those powerful grassroots gun-rights groups that
organized and triumphed in state after state in the last 20 years will
have a lot to say about the long-term outcome. Back in ’93-4, powerless nobodies took to the woods and played
militia while leaders in the gun industry and the NRA sold them out. I’m
not knocking the militia movement; it seemed like a good idea at the
time and may have been the best thing for people who had damn few
alternatives. But … things are so much bigger now. It’s no longer just us “lone
nuts with guns,” grumbling angrily in meeting rooms or cabins. It’s a
whole culture whose members understand that everything they value,
everything they are, is under attack. |