Over at Talking Points Memo, Josh Marshall
writes there are “gun people and non-gun people”. Marshall
identifies himself as a non-gun person.
Now Marshall doesn’t define the difference between a gun person
and a non-gun person other than to say that guns are “alien” to
him. Marshall says he has never owned nor shot a gun.
Well, Marshall and I have something in common. Guns are largely
alien to me as well. I, too, have never owned nor shot a gun. While
I reserve the right to reconsider, I do not plan to purchase one
for myself. I suppose that makes me a non-gun person. Yet somehow I
imagine he wouldn’t want me as a member.
Aside from police officers, the only time I’ve seen guns was
when I visited Israel almost 25 years ago. I was part of a Canadian
Jewish youth group that was visiting and several of the adults in
charge of us were armed. They had served in the IDF and served in
the reserves once a year. The sight of guns was certainly “alien”
to me at first but I soon discovered that men and women carrying
rifles in the streets on their shoulders was a common sight. I
overcame the culture shock and didn’t really think about it after
awhile.
Here is where I part company from Marshall. He argues that he
has his “own set of rights not to have gun culture run roughshod
over me.” Marshall believes that gun people are “invading my area,
my culture, my part of the country.” Well, last I checked, the
Upper West Side is covered by the Second Amendment. Besides, I
hardly think
a couple of guys legally carrying semi-automatic rifles around
Portland, Oregon (while disconcerting) constitutes an
invasion of gun people.
Indeed, if anyone is doing the invading it is non-gun people
whether by
printing the names of gun owners in newspapers, by the Danny
Glovers of the world who claim the Second Amendment was instituted
to protect slavery or when President Obama
shamefully surrounding
himself with children when he introduced his gun control
proposals a few days back.
Marshall argues that the studies that demonstrate that we would
all be safer if we were armed have been discredited. Well, he cites
neither the studies nor the people who have debunked them. Yet
consider his argument that follows:
But even if it was possible that we could be just as safe with
everyone armed as no one armed, I’d still want no one armed. Not at
my coffee shop or on the highway or wherever. Because I don’t want
to carry a gun. And I don’t want to be around armed people.
In other words, because Josh Marshall doesn’t want to own gun or
want to be around anyone who owns a gun, no one else should be
allowed to own one. So who exactly is invading whom?