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Bang / Guns Title: How I Evolved on Guns During the Boston Manhunt How I Evolved on Guns During the Boston Manhunt By Paula Bolyard April 22, 2013 In the wee hours of Friday morning, April 19th, I evolved on guns. First, a confession: Ive never owned a gun. I never wanted one in my home and, like a lot of moms, I wanted to raise non-violent children and thought keeping guns out of our home was one way to do that. When my kids were young, I didnt want them to play with toy guns in fact, I was rather insistent about it. Eventually, I realized that little boys will make guns out of just about anything bananas, sticks, the dogs paw, their fingers nothing is safe from their imaginative minds. So I compromised and allowed squirt guns and non-gun-looking Nerf guns, but nothing that resembled a real gun. My sensible (ex-military) husband indulged me in this when they were toddlers, but as they grew, he convinced me that our boys needed to learn firearms safety. He took them to firing ranges where they learned to fire weapons and even to enjoy them. Our 21 year old couldnt wait to get his concealed-carry permit the minute he reached the legal age. I'm thankful now for my husband's insistence that our children not be raised to fear guns. But I never wanted a gun in my home. It probably goes back to my childhood. My dad always kept a shotgun in the bedroom closet, along with the ammo on the top shelf. He used it for his twice-a-year hunting trip with my moms brothers. As a bleeding-heart animal lover from a young age, it always pained me to see skinned bunnies and squirrels on the kitchen counter. So I have some "issues" when I saw the gun in my dads closet my mind went to dead bunnies. And somewhere along the way (I dont remember a specific conversation, but he had a way of doing this), my dad put the fear of God in me about touching that shotgun. The year my brother and I peeked at our Christmas gifts hidden behind the shotgun, I was terrified the thing would go off. I never, ever touched it. Not even once. I realize its a completely irrational fear and in some ways Ive always felt it was a betrayal of my strong support for the 2nd Amendment. Last year I dipped my toe in the water and experienced shooting for the first time. I enjoyed a trip to the Hillsdale College shooting range during Parents Weekend and it turns out I'm not a bad shot. Friends never understood why I didnt own a gun and some urged me to purchase one for my protection. But still I hesitated because of my discomfort at having one in my home. The other thing holding me back was my belief that if youre going to own a gun, you must be willing to shoot to kill. If confronted with an armed intruder or assailant, shooting to maim or firing a warning shot may not be an option, so a gun owner must wrestle with the moral implications of shooting someone to death. I searched my heart and realized that in the heat of the moment of an attack, I wasnt sure what I would do with a gun in my hand. I knew that could be more dangerous than being unarmed; it wasnt worth the risk. But all that changed early Friday morning. Along with 80,000 others around the world, I found myself glued to the live-action police drama being played out online. I first noticed the tweets with the hashtag #BostonPoliceScanner late Thursday evening and was soon engrossed in the manhunt, listening to the officers on the ground in Watertown and Cambridge and simultaneously following the tweets from the worldwide audience. Throughout the night, a community of sorts formed as I began to recognize Twitter handles and together we watched law enforcement officers create a perimeter and lay down a grid so they could search the neighborhoods of Watertown. We listened as they responded to calls from residents who heard something in their sheds or thought they saw a guy with a backpack walking down the street. This was repeated dozens of times throughout the night. When police broadcast their location, many listeners typed the address into Google Street View and so could see the streets and even houses they were responding to. It was both surreal and very real at the same time. It was a strange combination of social media and reality show with the knowledge that life and death were on the line. At one point, someone tweeted this: Im halfway across the country but if someone knocked on my door right now Id pee my pants. A moment of levity during a very serious, very scary night. It was the moment I evolved on guns the moment my support for the 2nd Amendment went from abstract to concrete. Boston-area residents were told to shelter-in-place. We're asking people to shelter in place. In other words, to stay indoors with their doors locked and not to open their door for anyone other than a properly identified law enforcement officer," said Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick in a press conference in Watertown. "Please understand we have an armed and dangerous person(s) still at large and police actively pursuing every lead in this active emergency event. Please be patient and use common sense until this person(s) are apprehended. I realized at that moment that the police cannot protect me from the Dzhokhar Tsarnaevs of the world. The best they can do is tell me to lock myself in my home while they search for the bad guy. Though the residents of Watertown (and the surrounding greater-Boston area) were held in a state of near-martial law, the best most of them could do was huddle in their homes, hoping the police would take their 3 a.m. call and come running to rescue them before the terrorist killed them. Chris Wallace interviewed Dianne Feinstein on Fox News Sunday about the Boston lockdown and asked her if the million people locked in their homes in Boston might have felt safer with guns. "Some may have [wanted guns], yes," Feinstein said. "But if where you're going is 'do they need an assault weapon?' I don't think so." Wallace pressed Feinstien on whether citizens should be able to decide the best way to protect themselves in their homes: "How about a machine gun then?" Feinstein asked. "We did away with machine guns because of how they're used. I think we should do away with assault weapons because of how they're used...you can use a 12-gauge shotgun and have a good defensive effect and there's the element of surprise." "Now you've got police all over the place in Watertown, so I don't really think this is applicable. I think there are people who want to make this argument," she added. As I listened to the police scanner during the Boston manhunt, I wasn't thinking about "police all over the place" in the "personal security guard" sense that Feinstein seemed to be implying. Instead, I imagined a mother huddled in the nursery with her baby. Her husband is out of town and she is also listening to the police scanner, praying the terrorist doesn't burst through her back door. I imagined an 85-year-old World War II veteran living alone. He fought the Nazis on foot across Europe and his government just instructed him to "shelter-in-place." He turns out the lights in his home and hunches over his radio waiting for updates though the long night. I wondered if they could protect themselves if the worst happened. In the middle of that night listening to the Boston police scanner, I evolved. I realized right then that if I were holed up in my house while a cold-blooded terrorist roamed my neighborhood, I wouldnt want to be a sitting duck with only a deadbolt lock between me and an armed intruder. There are not enough police and they cannot come to my rescue quickly enough. They carry guns to protect themselves, not me. I knew at that instant if Dzhokhar Tsarnaev showed up at my door while I was sheltered-in-place and aimed a gun at my head and only one of us would live, I could pull the trigger. Im shopping for guns this week. Ive been told a 12-gauge shotgun is a good choice for home protection, but Im open to suggestions. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 4.
#1. To: Don (#0)
Get a dog. Mutts are the best of them.
Get a dog. Mutts are the best of them. They make a good early warning device,and then a distraction. You can shoot the bad guy while the bad guy is shooting your dog. MY advise to the woman is a double barrel 20 gauge shotgun with20 inch barrels and a 38 or 44 Special revolver as backup. Both are simple "point and click" devices easy to use under pressure,and pretty much fool proof. You do have a thumb safety to push off before you can fire,but it it right up at the top where your thumb can push it off/forward easily. None of that operating a slide or bolt nonsense,and none of that trying to remember to push a safety by the trigger to the right or the left and having to take your finger off the trigger while you do it. As for revolvers,they are the original "point and click" devices. Finally,I recommend she and her child pick a bedroom to defend,and stay in it with the shotgun pointed at the door while using a cell phone to call 9-11. DO NOT go wandering around the house looking for the intruder. Let him or them come to you.
A 12gauge is probably too much for most women for the simple fact they aren't strong enough to deal with the kick. And when they shoot it once or twice they are scared of it and won't train with it like they should...
Truth to tell,a 20 gauge is just as efficient as a 12 gauge at living room distances,and it doesn't make a nickels worth of difference what size shot you use because it won't have left the shot cup anyhow by the time it hits the home invader or the wall. It is,in effect,a plastic-coated slug. And if you don't think a slug that big and heavy won't take anybody down,you really don't know much about load effectiveness. All you can kill anybody is dead,and a 20 gauge plastic-coated slug will kill just as effectively at living room distances as a 12 gauge or 10 gauge slug,plus has the added advantage of less recoil,a lighter gun easier to handle,and unlike an actual 12 or 10 gauge slug,probably won't completely penetrate the invader AND the inner walls of the house.
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