http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,477686,00.html
Fucking Charlton Heston. His old ass (not ageist) can call for looser gun controls and he isn't the one being gun downed.
If he would have had a gun at Virginia Tech, he still would have crapped in his Depends if he saw that gunman.
The stuff in that article is right from the bottom of the much barrel.
Let's do a thought experiment here:
Let's say a police officer had happened to be there, and had stopped the guy with four well-placed rounds. We'd be cheering him as a hero.
Let's say it was an off-duty policeman -- we'd still be cheering him as a hero.
Make it a retired policeman -- still, I think, a hero.
Make it a professor --
He'd be a half-hero: hero for stopping the slimeball, but probably arrested for illegal possession of a firearm.
But in all of those cases, the parents and friends of those victims would be thankful and grateful that it was stopped.
And the instrument which would have made that gratitude possible, which would have stopped that violence, would have been a handgun. In other words, it would have been a very good thing that someone had been there with a handgun.
So the solution to the problem is simple: make sure that there are people around with handguns. Make sure that future wacko murderers are faced with that blessed deterrent wherever they go. Because it doesn't make one tiny bit of difference what hand holds the gun: the bullets still remove the threat.
And that's what handguns are for -- they make the playing field level. Handguns make it possible for a little lady in a wheelchair to stop three larger guys who have tipped her over and are kicking her and screaming "Die!", for a 14-y.o. to see policemen pinned down by someone in a house across the street to come to the aid of the cops, for a leader of a youth group to drive off a knife-wielding pervert who masses three times his own, for a father of four to stop the intruder who has announced he is coming upstairs to kill the family....
More handguns in the hands of citizens does not increase violence -- that's been proven over and again in state after state. What it does is drastically reduce the rate of crimes against people -- and while the crime against property (when no one is around) tends to rise, I'll take that over crimes against people any moment of any day.
Using this tragedy to call for more restrictions on what could have saved many if not most of those lives is hypocrisy at its lowest. We all know that if there had been someone there with a firearm, who knew how to use it, the death toll would have been lower -- policeman, Marine, private detective... or professor, or student. Let's ditch the ventures into la-la land.