5-90
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Hammerspace
The problem is simple - there is exactly one weapon available to anyone, and that's the one between your ears. Anything else is an extension of your capabilities - either expanding your effective range, increasing your strength, or increasing the depth of trauma you are able to inflict.
"Your rifle is only a tool. It is a hard heart that kills."
Therefore, I teach people that firearms, knives, sharp sticks, rocks, and what-have-you are not weapons - they're merely tools. They can be used to preserve life or to take it.
This is the distinction that is not being made. I have carried a pocketknife nearly constantly for the last 30 years, and it's just a tool. I've used it to defend myself, I've used it to feed myself, and I've used it to finish jobs that I couldn't do barehanded.
I carried it all through school, and no-one seemed to care. Figure that about two-thirds of the teachers in school also carried some sort of small personal blade, and I either had to get mine out to handle lunch, or to loan to one of the teachers who didn't carry a personal blade. For me, it's just a part of getting dressed in the morning - if I've got my pants on, I've got my blade, so you don't need to ask.
What are commonly called "weapons" are simply extensions of the user's will - and if that will is corrupt, that is the problem. It's not the fault of the inanimate object, it is the fault of the person holding that object. This is why some of us (and we're dating ourselves in recounting this!) were able to take .22 rifles to school and hunt small game on the way home - and the closest thing we had to "gun control" was giving the teacher the box of ammo (and, sometimes, presenting the rifle to verify - visually - that it was unloaded) and collecting the ammo at the end of the day. The admonishment given was "Don't load it until you get off school grounds."
You knew to not shoot anyone, because that would get you shot - and you didn't want that. Same reason knives weren't a problem - if you unshipped your blade against another person without a damn good reason, you'd get your arse whipped when you got home, and then get handed to the cops. I don't know how many fistfights I've been in where we both had blades in our pockets, and they stayed there.
I, too, blame parents - but I also blame the liberal "touchy-feely" lunatic fringe that sez that spanking your children is bad. Corporal punishment has its place - properly applied, it's a great motivator. Pain is an evolutionary mechanism that can be used to teach a lesson FAR faster than it would otherwise be learned.
I sometimes think we should bring back public floggings for minor offenses, rather than incarceration - which obviously isn't working...
5-90
"Your rifle is only a tool. It is a hard heart that kills."
Therefore, I teach people that firearms, knives, sharp sticks, rocks, and what-have-you are not weapons - they're merely tools. They can be used to preserve life or to take it.
This is the distinction that is not being made. I have carried a pocketknife nearly constantly for the last 30 years, and it's just a tool. I've used it to defend myself, I've used it to feed myself, and I've used it to finish jobs that I couldn't do barehanded.
I carried it all through school, and no-one seemed to care. Figure that about two-thirds of the teachers in school also carried some sort of small personal blade, and I either had to get mine out to handle lunch, or to loan to one of the teachers who didn't carry a personal blade. For me, it's just a part of getting dressed in the morning - if I've got my pants on, I've got my blade, so you don't need to ask.
What are commonly called "weapons" are simply extensions of the user's will - and if that will is corrupt, that is the problem. It's not the fault of the inanimate object, it is the fault of the person holding that object. This is why some of us (and we're dating ourselves in recounting this!) were able to take .22 rifles to school and hunt small game on the way home - and the closest thing we had to "gun control" was giving the teacher the box of ammo (and, sometimes, presenting the rifle to verify - visually - that it was unloaded) and collecting the ammo at the end of the day. The admonishment given was "Don't load it until you get off school grounds."
You knew to not shoot anyone, because that would get you shot - and you didn't want that. Same reason knives weren't a problem - if you unshipped your blade against another person without a damn good reason, you'd get your arse whipped when you got home, and then get handed to the cops. I don't know how many fistfights I've been in where we both had blades in our pockets, and they stayed there.
I, too, blame parents - but I also blame the liberal "touchy-feely" lunatic fringe that sez that spanking your children is bad. Corporal punishment has its place - properly applied, it's a great motivator. Pain is an evolutionary mechanism that can be used to teach a lesson FAR faster than it would otherwise be learned.
I sometimes think we should bring back public floggings for minor offenses, rather than incarceration - which obviously isn't working...
5-90