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View Full Version : A Response to “Stupid, Immoral, Dangerous, Coward: My Month with a Gun”



SuperiorDG
07-25-2013, 14:23
Best reading I've done in a while. David give a wonderful insight into the non-gun owner's mind and thinking.

I don’t typically go head to head with people about guns. I don’t find any joy in arguing with friends and colleagues whose minds are made up. But some “arguments” require deeper analysis.
“‘Stupid,’ ‘Immoral,’ ‘Dangerous,’ ‘Coward’: My Month With a Gun,” (http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/07/22/stupid-immoral-dangerous-coward-my-month-with-a-gun.html)a Daily Beast article by Heidi Yewman, requires a response.
‘Stupid,’ ‘Immoral,’ ‘Dangerous,’ ‘Coward Heidi Yewman is a graduate of Columbine High School and was a witness to the terrible shooting that took place there. She is a board member of the Brady Campaign to Reduce Gun Violence. She’s active in efforts to eradicate gun violence, and author of Beyond the Bullet (http://www.beyondthebulletbook.com/), a book about the aftermath of gun violence. Her article has a simple premise:

I listened to the NRA’s Wayne LaPierre say, ‘The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.’ I decided to find out what it felt like to be that ‘good guy’ by carrying a gun everywhere I went for a month, doing the absolute minimum that’s legally required.
Over 30 days, I followed 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.
A necessary sidetrack Seventeen years ago, what started as a confidence scam ended with me driving around Atlanta in my ragged out minivan with gun to my head. If you are curios about the gritty details, you can read an account here (http://www.guns.com/2012/02/11/why-i-concealed-carry-today-because-of-james-brown/).
I did not have a gun, but I managed a climactic escape. That’s all that matters.
An I bought a gun, a Kel-Tec 9mm, (a gun that’s been in the press a lot lately (http://www.guns.com/2013/07/09/kel-tec-issues-facebook-statement-on-zimmerman-trial/)). I trained with the pistol. And I carried it. At night, when I left work, I walked through the mercury vapor glow of Atlanta’s urban darkness with a gun.
I can empathize with the nervousness that Yewman felt when carrying her gun (a Glock 9mm). I didn’t get the secure feeling I expected. I didn’t feel any more secure than I had when I walked the streets before I owned a gun. For two weeks, I couldn’t wait to take the gun off. I felt like everyone could tell that I had a gun and that I had no idea how to use it.
So I sold it. I wasn’t mentally ready to carry a concealed handgun. It would have been better to tuck myself up into a ball and drop to the ground.
Yet I understood these emotions and how to deal with them. I bought a Beretta 92FS. While I wasn’t going to carry it, I was going to master it. And I did. I put box after box of 9mm ball ammo through the Beretta. I took it apart every day for months.
It would be years before I was confident enough to carry a concealed handgun. And even longer before I carried with any kind of regularity.
Back to ‘Stupid,’ ‘Immoral,’ ‘Dangerous,’ ‘Coward’ http://www.guns.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/yewman.jpg (http://www.guns.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/yewman.jpg)Yewman reads form her book.

Yewman’s essay was to be published in regular installments for Ms. Magazine (http://www.msmagazine.com/). Yet negative reaction to the first installment was so heated that Ms. canceled the project. Thankfully it was picked up by The Daily Beast.
Why was the reaction so negative? It all has to do with rule number three: “only do what is minimally required for permits, licensing, purchasing, and carrying.”
“Responsible gun owners will seek out training,” Yewman writes. “But what worries me—and what should worry everyone—is the irresponsible owners possessing some of the more than 200 million guns in the U.S. today.”
So let’s be clear on this. Her essay has less to do with guns than it does responsibility. Forget for a moment that irresponsible people ride bikes and drive cars. Irresponsible people own oil rigs and cook school lunches. Irresponsible people preach to irresponsible congregations. And people die. But Yewman’s sermon is about guns.
One of the best questions asked by Yewman has to with the elimination of risk. She recognizes that having a gun won’t guarantee her safety. She would have to have access to the gun, and the training and willingness to use it.
Yet she takes little care with access. At one point she leaves the gun in her purse, on a kitchen counter, near enough to her 15-year-old son, while she went outside to “enjoy the warm weather.”
Funny, that. “I pondered how I’d just straddled the fine line between being a responsible gun owner and an irresponsible idiot whose 15-year-old just accidentally shot himself or someone else with my gun.”
At least she has the idiot part right. But don’t get me wrong, here. I’m not calling Yewman an idiot. The whole exercise is idiotic. And, as she proves with this episode, dangerous.
http://www.guns.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/IMG_4057.jpeg (http://www.guns.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/IMG_4057.jpeg)Yewman’s Glock. Hard to conceal.

What does she learn from this? Having a gun seems to open Yewman’s eyes. She senses how bad things are, or could be. But this awareness troubles Yewman. And she blames this new knowledge on the gun, as if it was the cause of all evil. “[The gun] leads to some questions that have no easy answers.”
She’s like a hobbit with a powerful ring. If she can just get the ring to Mordor and destroy it, the world will be free of evil.
Before she picked up her gun, Yewman was oblivious. Obliviousness, Yewman thinks, is good. After her gun experiment, she worries. ‘”Is someone breaking in? How fast can I get to the gun? Will they hear me? How much time do I have before they get to my bedroom? What if they go to my son’s room first? Will I shoot them in the face or heart or stomach?” And then I think: “How in the world would I live with myself knowing I took a life?”‘
I ask the same questions. I know the answers. I’ve practiced the scenarios. I’m not paranoid. I’m prepared.
What do her readers learn? Yewman wants her readers to believe that if you have a gun, you have to consider that the world is a dangerous place. And if you don’t have a gun, than you can sleep peacefully at night.
“Suspiciousness and fear of people,” she writes “is new to me, and I don’t like it.”
The most useful point she makes is this: “an untrained permit holder like me shouldn’t be allowed to carry a concealed gun in states that at least require training and safety classes.” I would take it farther and say it is a bad idea for anyone who owns a gun, or has access to one, to willingly remain ignorant on its use.
Carrying a gun requires training and practice. Neglecting that responsibility is negligent.
I thought the gun would make me feel more powerful, more confident, and less fearful. I was wrong. All I felt was fear. Physically taking the gun out of the safe and putting it in a holster on my hip literally reminded me that I was going out into a big bad scary unsafe world. There were days when I put the gun back in the safe and stayed home because it simply took too much energy to be scared.
In the end As an exercise in participant observation, Yewman’s experiment is a failure. Good anthropological fieldwork is more about culture and psychology than artifacts. Yewman never did take responsibility for her actions. Instead, she ends by demonizing objects.
To Yewman, I would offer this observation. You still don’t know what it is liked to own a gun. You only know what it feels like to be owned by a gun.
So where is Yewman’s Glock now? “There’s a sculptor who turns melted-down guns into public art,” she writes. “My gun is now a piece of art.”
And there are still those among us who consider a Glock to be a piece of art.

Ronin13
07-25-2013, 14:36
What a dumb bitch. I have friends who were at Columbine too, and they're not anti-freedom. Some people will never learn or change their minds... lost causes. Very sad.

SuperiorDG
07-25-2013, 14:41
What a dumb bitch. I have friends who were at Columbine too, and they're not anti-freedom. Some people will never learn or change their minds... lost causes. Very sad.

Sheep. I now understand a little better why it is so hard to reason with the other side. Ignoring the risks in life to live a peaceful existence will come back to bit you.

Jesus-With-A-.45
07-25-2013, 14:55
I'm sure that if she shuts her eyes & "wishes them away" that rapist, killer, child abductor, burglar......etc. will just disappear. It's funny, I carry a firearm everyday in the "big bad world" & I'm never afraid...........I guess that comfort comes from the knowledge that if anyone ever tries to hurt my family I'll blow their fucking head off.

Ronin13
07-25-2013, 15:38
I'm sure that if she shuts her eyes & "wishes them away" that rapist, killer, child abductor, burglar......etc. will just disappear. It's funny, I carry a firearm everyday in the "big bad world" & I'm never afraid...........I guess that comfort comes from the knowledge that if anyone ever tries to hurt my family I'll blow their fucking head off.
Well put, Jesus... subtle too. [LOL][Beer]

XC700116
07-25-2013, 15:39
She is living proof of the power to completely brainwash people, she's personally seen some of the worst that humanity has to offer yet she somehow refuses to aknowledge it's presense day to day, and somehow equates that danger to her own posession of a gun. Yet her own life experience should graphicly contradict that assumption. ie she had no gun when the shooting at Columbine happened, yet it still happened and now only selectively recognizes it's existance when she's got a gun???? Absolutely amazing! It's a complete and total brush off to the scientific process that she is trying to twist in favor of supporting her agenda (like most of the left's "science") with this little "expearament".

WETWRKS
07-25-2013, 16:19
She is a board member of the Brady Campaign to Reduce Gun Violence.

There was never an intent to learn anything or to change her attitude. This was all an attempt to look like she was openminded yet in the end try and rationalize her stance.

wctriumph
07-25-2013, 17:18
She is a blonde after all.
[Coffee]

Circuits
07-25-2013, 17:25
She was still in HS during the 1999 columbine shooting, apparently, 14 years ago last april, but has a 15yo son? Responsible teen mom?

Skully
07-25-2013, 17:35
She was still in HS during the 1999 columbine shooting, apparently, 14 years ago last april, but has a 15yo son? Responsible teen mom?


She wasnt actually in school at the time. According to her bio;


Heidi became involved in gun violence prevention in 1999 when her former basketball coach and teacher, Dave Sanders was killed in the Columbine High School massacre along with 12 students. Heidi was a graduate of Columbine.

BPTactical
07-25-2013, 17:40
She wasnt actually in school at the time. According to her bio;

Big freakin deal, my mom was very close friends with Dave(she worked there from when it opened to '93 IIRC, financial seceratary)
She never blamed the guns........

Skully
07-25-2013, 17:54
Big freakin deal, my mom was very close friends with Dave(she worked there from when it opened to '93 IIRC, financial seceratary)
She never blamed the guns........
I was just responding to Circuits question on her connection to Columbine, age, and her 15 year old son. I know a few people that had connections to Columbine shooting, other than one of them being messed up a little they didn't blame nothing else other than the two murderous twits.

This is typically the left pretending to sympathize and experiment to better relate/understand. I saw right through it when it first made news.

I thought the comment of her leaving her gun in her purse while her 15 year old was not too far away was silly. By 15 I was trusted in my skills and safety around firearms that my father or grandfather would let me gather, clear/check, carry, clean and set up for shooting. It is called teaching responsibility............................ something that is disappearing now a days.

BPTactical
07-25-2013, 17:57
I didn't mean that directed at your comment Matt, it was more of a BooFreakinHooHoo to her

Great-Kazoo
07-25-2013, 18:21
It is called teaching responsibility............................ something that is disappearing now a days.

Some folks teach / learn RESPONSIBILITY. Others are content with VICTIM

buffalobo
07-25-2013, 18:39
Some folks teach / learn RESPONSIBILITY. Others are content with VICTIM


+1, it is just so much easier to volunteer to be a victim and avoid all that responsibility stuff.


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