Chris Knox treatise on 'Second Amendment fundamentalism'

Status
Not open for further replies.

damien

Member
Joined
Mar 5, 2007
Messages
1,212
Location
Northern IL, USA
I like this article so much, I feel I have to repost it.

http://www.ohioccw.org/content/view/4083/67/

(October 14, 2008) Most of us are familiar with the “salami” illustration – the analogy of Concealed Carry: Stack the Salami

Written by Chris Knox
Tuesday, 14 October 2008

Most of us are familiar with the “salami” illustration – the analogy of gun owners losing our freedoms one tiny piece at a time like a salami being sliced extra thin. With each oh-so-reasonable “first step” our rights are gradually diminished. What enables that “salami” strategy is that the other side is smarter than we are – they are willing to take what they can get, and when that doesn’t “work” they use it as evidence that more is needed. Meanwhile many in our movement look for a total repeal of existing gun laws and consider acceptance of anything less to be the rankest compromise of principle.

This finally came home for me personally just recently. I long resisted the idea of getting Concealed Carry of Weapons (CCW) permit. My Second Amendment fundamentalism just balked against the idea of being fingerprinted and investigated to prove that I’m an upstanding citizen. My spirit railed against taking a class to learn which end of the gun the bullet comes out of, and most of all, against paying a fee to put my name on a list just to be given a state-issued slip of paper.

Open carry in my state of Arizona has long been the law of the land and I have routinely taken advantage of it. Working a day job in a corporate environment I don’t carry everywhere I go, but some occasions that I have carried, I have pushed the envelope. That weapon in my briefcase? Well, officer, it’s not in my “immediate control,” as stated in Arizona Revised Statutes Title 13 Section 3102, not to mention if you know it’s there, it must not be concealed. Fortunately I’ve never had the issue come down to a real test and for that I’m thankful.

But in recent years I’ve come to rethink my doctrinaire views. The light dawned as I became exasperated listening to a fellow Second Amendment purist fulminate that Congress should immediately introduce legislation to repeal at least the 1968 Gun Control Act, the 1986 machine gun ban, and the 1934 National Firearms Act, and that furthermore any legislator who wouldn’t agree to immediately introduce such legislation was obviously and enemy of freedom who should be impeached. I may be exaggerating, but not by much.

It has finally occurred to me that my fundamentalism is playing into the hands of the anti-gun movement. I’ve been demanding that my team throw a Hail Mary pass on every play while the other side is pushing us back a yard at a time. It’s time – past time – that we fundamentalists (carefully) join those who have stolen a page from the other side’s playbook.

I’ve decided to start stacking the salami up and my first step is to grit my teeth and get my CCW permit. I no longer see obtaining the permit as just complying with an onerous law – which I still believe it is. Instead, I view getting the permit like showing up at a gun rights rally. It’s a way to stand and be counted. Anonymously packing has its merits, but there’s not much to build a political movement there.

My fundamentalist view of the Second Amendment hasn’t changed – I still consider the CCW permit an infringement on my Second Amendment rights. In an ideal world, I would tuck my .45 into a holster, not worrying if my jacket covered it or not, and go about my business. I would go to work, to the bank, the post office, to school, or to the airport to catch a plane to New York City, all without worrying about some misguided busybody’s unreasonable fear of weapons and armed people. Yes, I’m a Second Amendment utopian. But that’s not the world I live in. And wishing won’t make it so.

Exercising the right to carry, even within the confines of a permit system, expands our Second Amendment rights. Note that I don’t consider a permit law “Right to Carry” legislation and I cringe when I hear friends call it that. However the permit is a tacit admission by the State that such a right does exist. It remains to us, the law-abiding gun owners, to work to further that right.

Gun prohibitionists would really like to ban all guns, but they’ll take some restrictions as a “good first step.” I’ll appropriate their line. I’d like to see the privilege of carrying expand to a full-fledged right. But for now, lawfully carrying under the permit system is a good first step. The key is in the follow-up. As we establish that law-abiding citizens don’t become gunslingers when they put a holster under their jacket, it becomes easier to further loosen the restrictions – the infringements. And, like our mentors the gun prohibitionists, we can call each ratcheting back of infringements on the right to keep and bear arms just another “good first step.”
 
Great article, it brings the creeping incrimentalism to our side. Maybe the next step would for the average gun owner(who has recieved a CCW) would to purchase a class three weapon. The more people use them and pay the required tax, the more normal it would seem to the less educated.
 
Good article, I like it. I fight my purist tendencies in a lot of areas, and there are definitely some things I won't compromise on, but it does seem like the incremental approach is more effective. Of course, when someone's trying to infringe on your rights they're often helped along by some event that can be used to emotionally manipulate people. Not sure I'd want to emulate that approach, but it does work.

Maybe the next step would for the average gun owner(who has recieved a CCW) would to purchase a class three weapon.
That's a pretty expensive next step, isn't it? For the time being I'd be happy if most people actually understood the difference between semi-automatic and automatic (especially the media).

I think CCW on campus and open carry are good "short term" goals, personally. They've both got some momentum and are getting more press lately, particularly the campus carry movement. And of course changing "may issue" states to "shall issue," and working on the "no issue" states if they're not completely hopeless.
 
and working on the "no issue" states if they're not completely hopeless.

The only two "no issue" states are Illinois and Wisconsin and I wouldn't characterize them as completely hopeless, although I see Wisconsin going first. If we can get another Republican governor in Illinois that isn't a RINO, I think we have a shot here also. And of course, we do have a shot in the courts at some point after the Supreme Court or the federal appelate courts start to add more details to the caselaw surrounding the Second Amendment. I would love to see a court challange to the criminalization of OC (for the jurisdictions where it occurs) over the whole country. What does "bear" mean if you cannot OC?
 
There is an old saying: "Life is hard by the yard, but a cinch by the inch."

Same applies to the anti-guns left wingers. Many years ago, they determined that in the U.S., they could not ban and confiscate all the legally owned firearms at once. So....

Inch by inch by inch by inch became their strategy, and it has brought us to where we are today.


These Constitution and individual Rights hating people never, ever, disengage!

No matter what happens, they just keep coming.

L.W.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top