An Opinion on Gun Control by Larry Correia

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He wrote this after Sandy Hook and has reposted it because the original post has over 2,000 comments and may not load correctly.

AN OPINION ON GUN CONTROL, REPOST

Everything I need to say about mass shootings has already been said in this post from December 2012. I wrote it in response to Sandy Hook. It went viral and was read by over a million people. I also did a segment on FOX News about it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jzyuvl5Ry4g I am reposting it here now because the original link has 2,600 comments, so the page often doesn’t load correctly.

I didn’t want to post about this, because frankly, it is exhausting. I’ve been having this exact same argument for my entire adult life. It is not an exaggeration when I say that I know pretty much exactly every single thing an anti-gun person can say. I’ve heard it over and over, the same old tired stuff, trotted out every single time there is a tragedy on the news that can be milked. Yet, I got sucked in, and I’ve spent the last few days arguing with people who either mean well but are uninformed about gun laws and how guns actually work (who I don’t mind at all), or the willfully ignorant (who I do mind), or the obnoxiously stupid who are completely incapable of any critical thinking deeper than a Facebook meme (them, I can’t stand).

(snip)
  • Armed Teachers
So now that there is a new tragedy the president wants to have a “national conversation on guns”. Here’s the thing. Until this national conversation is willing to entertain allowing teachers to carry concealed weapons, then it isn’t a conversation at all, it is a lecture.

Now when I say teachers carrying concealed weapons on Facebook I immediately get a bunch of emotional freak out responses. You can’t mandate teachers be armed! Guns in every classroom! Emotional response! Blood in the streets!
No. Hear me out. The single best way to respond to a mass shooter is with an immediate, violent response. The vast majority of the time, as soon as a mass shooter meets serious resistance, it bursts their fantasy world bubble. Then they kill themselves or surrender. This has happened over and over again.
(snip)

Don’t make it mandatory. In my experience, the only people who are worth a darn with a gun are the ones who wish to take responsibility and carry a gun. Make it voluntary. It is rather simple. Just make it so that your state’s concealed weapons laws trump the Federal Gun Free School Zones act. All that means is that teachers who voluntarily decide to get a concealed weapons permit are capable of carrying their guns at work. Easy. Simple. Cheap. Available now.
(snip)
  • Gun Free Zones
Gun Free Zones are hunting preserves for innocent people. Period.
(snip)
  • The Media
Every time there is a mass shooting event, the vultures launch. I find it absolutely fascinating. A bunch of people get murdered, and the same usual suspects show up with the same tired proposals that we’ve either tried before or logic tells us simply will not work. They strike while the iron is hot, trying to push through legislation before there can be coherent thought. We’ve seen this over and over and over again. We saw it succeed in England. We saw it succeed in Australia. We’ve seen it succeed here before.

Yet when anyone from my side responds, then we are shouted at that we are blood thirsty and how dare we speak in this moment of tragedy, and we should just shut our stupid mouths out of respect for the dead, while they are free to promote policies which will simply lead to more dead… If the NRA says something they are bloodthirsty monsters, and if they don’t say something then their silence is damning guilt. It is hypocritical in the extreme, and when I speak out against this I am called every name in the book, I want dead children, I’m a cold hearted monster (the death threats are actually hilarious). If I become angry because they are promoting policies which are tactically flawed and which will do the exact opposite of the stated goals, then I am a horrible person for being angry. Perhaps I shouldn’t be allowed to own guns at all.
(snip)
  • Mental Health Issues
And right here I’m going to show why I’m different than the people I’ve been arguing with the last few days. I am not an expert on mental health issues or psychiatry or psychology. My knowledge of criminal psychology is limited to understanding the methods of killers enough to know how to fight them better.

So since I don’t have enough first-hand knowledge about this topic to comment intelligently, then I’m not going to comment… Oh please, if only some of the people I’ve been arguing with who barely understand that the bullets come out the pointy end of the gun would just do the same.
(snip)
  • Gun Control Laws
As soon as there is a tragedy there comes the calls for “We have to do something!” Sure, the something may not actually accomplish anything as far as solving whatever the tragedy was or preventing the next one, but that’s the narrative. Something evil happened, so we have to do something, and preferably we have to do it right now before we think about it too hard.

The left side of the political spectrum loves it some gun control. Gun control is historically extremely unpopular in red state and purple state America, and thus very hard to pass bit stuff, but there’s a century’s accumulation of lots and lots of small ones. There have been a handful of major federal laws passed in the United States relating to guns, but the majority of really strict gun control has primarily been enacted in liberal dominated urban areas. There are over 20,000 gun laws on the books, and I have no idea how many pages of regulations from the BATF related to the production and selling of them. I’ve found that the average American is extremely uneducated about what gun laws already exist, what they actually do, and even fundamental terminology, so I’m going to go through many of the things I’ve seen argued about over the last few days and elaborate on them one by one.
(snip)
Yes it's long, but read the whole thing.
 
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When our country was attacked with jumbo jets, nobody wanted to ban jumbo jets.
When they can figure out how to stop a person from using an IED in an open market or place of worship to murder men, women and kids in the middle east, they should let us know the answer.
 
As soon as there is a tragedy there comes the calls for “We have to do something!” Sure, the something may not actually accomplish anything as far as solving whatever the tragedy was or preventing the next one, but that’s the narrative. Something evil happened, so we have to do something, and preferably we have to do it right now before we think about it too hard.

So, in my (much) younger days I worked as a carpenter's apprentice under an old school master carpenter named Wallace Woods. He is long gone now, but he left some memorable quotes. One day some of the guys are lollygagging around and not getting much done. Wallace looks up at the top of the hill and see's the builder's car where he is parked and watching to see who gets to keep his job. Wallace yells out "Boss man's watching! You better be doing something, even if its wrong!".

That is our so called "representatives" in Washington. We have a manufactured crisis, and in their calculations it is better to do the wrong thing than to be seen as doing nothing. Never mind that they have no idea what the right thing is start with. It's all manipulation through emotion and fear. This is when our rights are most in danger, and the wanna be totalitarians on the left understand this as well as anyone, maybe better. I truly admire Larry Correia and anyone else who can stand to argue with and try to make sense with the loony left. They have been on full emotional meltdown for the last 2 years and I don't think there is any getting through to them. (Damn! I just realized I should have bought stock in whoever manufactures Prozac!) Unfortunately we cannot abandon the battlefield at times like this and leave the few undecideds left in the middle to hear only one side of the argument.

In this case it is evident that there was plenty of opportunity for someone in LE to have been alerted and done something about this guy. In fact, they were alerted, multiple times, but no one did anything. We already have all the laws (OK, more laws) than we need. The problem is our so called mental health system. One of my wife's friends has worked in the mental health field most of her life. She took one look at the Florida shooter and instantly recognized the symptoms of fetal alcohol syndrome. She also thinks we are just seeing the tip of the iceberg. In the next few years she expects to see a flood of similar cases, not just from alcoholics but crack and meth babies whose brains never fully develop.

This is the argument we need to get through to the few left in the middle. There really is a mental health crisis in this country and if we don't deal with reality and do something about it there is a real danger that we do lose the 2nd amendment, if not all at once a little at a time.
 
There will never be a serious discussion about mental health, period, end. It's too embarrassing for the parents involved with the mentally disturbed children of this country. It's the parents that have allowed their children to sink into this bottomless pit but they don't want to take responsibility. Lack of parenting and over medicating/needless medicating of the off spring was the easiest thing to do and now we reap the benefits of their screw ups. So, what's to discuss????
 
Heard on the local liars station today that 2 S.C. Senators are pushing to make legal in S.C. for CWP holders and teachers with CWPs to be able to carry on school grounds. Who'd a thunk it? At least 2 of our "representatives" have some brains. Look for the Black Caucus to go CRAZY!!!!!
 
One of the reasons I first picked up and read a book by Larry Correia was because of this original post after Sandyhook.

I can tell you that what I discovered was a man that writes books far better than he wrote this article. I have read every series he has written by now and have to keep waiting for new releases to those series. Monster Hunter International is arguably the best series he has written. And I can tell, from reading, that he is someone who has competed in shooting sports to some degree in his life.

Check him out if you have the time. A guy with an opinion worth supporting with your money.
 
From a former shipmate, who became a police officer in Virginia Beach after he retired in the 90s:

"My thoughts on the recent tragedy in Florida. We have a constitution. We have laws. There are folks who want change. There are others who oppose change. I believe that we need to follow our laws. And, we need to follow our constitution. If you don’t want to follow them; Leave. Or, follow our laws to create change. Until then, whining won’t help. Blaming anyone but the shooter is, in my opinion, ridiculous. Put the blame firmly on the shooter. Disagree. Or agree. You have that right. Based on our laws. Our constitution. I believe the shooter should be tried. When convicted, executed."
 
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