warning: long post from linked article
[quote]My hands are shaking; my adrenaline is surging.
No, it’s not from the latte I just inhaled or because this is the first time in two years I’ve been in a Starbucks since declaring a boycott on its open-carry gun policy.
What’s got me jittery this morning is the 9mm Glock that’s holstered on my hip. Me, lead gun policy protester at the 2010 Starbuck’s shareholder meeting. Me, a board member of the Brady Campaign. Me, the author of a book about the impact of gun violence, Beyond the Bullet.
Yes, I bought a handgun and will carry it everywhere I go over the next 30 days. I have four rules: Carry it with me at all times, follow the laws of my state, only do what is minimally required for permits, licensing, purchasing and carrying, and finally be prepared to use it for protecting myself at home or in public.
Why? Following the Newtown massacre in December, the NRA’s Wayne LaPierre, told the country, “The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.” I wondered what would it be like to be that good guy with a gun? What would it be like to get that gun, live with that gun, be out and about with that gun. Finally, what happens when you don’t want that gun any more?
I decided to find out.
Getting the permit to carry a concealed weapon was simple. I filled out a form, had my fingerprints taken for a background check and paid $56.50. No training required. It took far longer to get my dog a license.
I started my 30-day gun trial with a little window-shopping. I visited a gun show and two gun dealers. I ended up buying a Glock 9mm handgun from Tony, a gun dealer four miles from my house. I settled on this model because it was a smallish gun and because Tony recommended it for my stated purposes of protecting myself and my home.
It was obvious from the way I handled the gun that I knew nothing about firearms. Tony sold it to me anyway. The whole thing took 7 minutes. As a gratified consumer, I thought, “Well, that was easy.” Then the terrifying reality hit me, “Holy hell, that was EASY.” Too easy. I still knew nothing about firearms.
Tony told me a Glock doesn’t have an external safety feature, so when I got home and opened the box and saw the magazine in the gun I freaked. I was too scared to try and eject it as thoughts flooded my mind of me accidentally shooting the gun and a bullet hitting my son in the house or rupturing the gas tank of my car, followed by an earth-shaking explosion. This was the first time my hands shook from the adrenaline surge and the first time I questioned the wisdom of this 30-day experiment.
I needed help. I drove to where a police officer had pulled over another driver. Now, writing this, I realize that rolling up on an on-duty cop with a handgun in tow might not have been fully thought through.
I told him I just bought a gun, had no clue how to use it. I asked him to make sure there were no bullets in the magazine or chamber. He took the magazine out and cleared the chamber. He assured me it was empty and showed me how to look. Then he told me how great the gun was and how he had one just like it.
The cop thought I was an idiot and suggested I take a class. But up to that point I’d done nothing wrong, nothing illegal.
So here I sit at Starbucks, and the irony couldn’t be thicker. On March 12, 2010, I was surrounded by big hairy men with guns on their hips, yelling at me as I led a protest against Starbuck’s gun policy. Today, I’m surrounded by five-year-old boys sitting with their moms at the next table. Now I’m the one with a gun on her hip. The gun makes me more fearful than I could have imagined.
In some way, I feel a certain vindication. I was right to protest Starbucks policy. Today, they have a woman with absolutely no firearms training and a Glock on her hip sitting within arm’s reach of small children, her hands shaking and adrenaline surging.[/quote]what do you think about this article?
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People like this annoy me. They get freaked out by stuff they see on TV and the news, and protest things they have no experience with. The author then bought a gun, and didn't bother to do any research about it, which is why she freaked herself out. I have a firearm at my feet as I post this, and no one has died, nothing has blown up, it's like it's not even there because I know what I'm doing with it. Should it be that easy to get a handgun? Probably not, unless you are already a responsible gun owner, and know what you're doing.
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Wait. She is a open guns protester that doesn't know how to use a gun? That's like a Science major teaching Music Class.
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Worthless article, just reeling of mindless bias against concealed carry. Absolutely uneducated, and she's anti-gun. No wonder why all of the anti-gun fools look like such fools. She fears an inanimate object, albeit without a safety. With proper training and care, the safety switch is almost null,
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[quote]rupturing the gas tank of my car, followed by an earth-shaking explosion.[/quote]That's not how it works...
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Wait what? She should really fracking learn to use that thing.
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Well in her defense they have a lot of hot coffee to throw on the protestors.
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Edited by Emacs: 6/25/2013 2:23:58 AMRemember children, rights are exclusive claims. You don't get to claim a right to forcing other people to not do something because you don't like it.
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I fail to see how a gun without external safety can be considered "good".
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Why was he right to boycott the policy? I applaud Starbucks for not having irrational paranoid fears like this naive prick.
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I was overly excited when I got my first gun. And learning the basics about guns and safety is shit I knew since I was like 9.. Mind boggles me people can't understand simple equipment..
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She has scared her self into an irrational fear, and because of that she actually does pose more of a danger than a beacon of safety. This is the WRONG kind of message to be sending, and I think that is the intention. She said it herself in the article, "On March 12, 2010, I was surrounded by big hairy men with guns on their hips, yelling at me as I led a protest against Starbuck’s gun policy." She went into it knowing she was against it, and because of that, she has created even more danger. That gun store owner really should have stopped and thought about it. This woman was obviously confused and nervous. He should have taken the time to show her how to operate her new Glock, and then recommended a range to get some practice in at. Gun ownership is an easy thing, carrying is a completely different beast. She is obviously not fit to carry.
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the woman is an idiot.
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[quote]I told him I just bought a gun, had no clue how to use it. [/quote] Well, that's encouraging...
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She wanted to be afraid, I was not this jumpy when I got my first gun. I can argue for gun control but this article reeks of bias.