My 15 minutes of fame

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StonerStudent

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Powell - Muzzle flame rips through a gunsmoke fog as the shooters' arms rise and fall like exploding pendulums in a steady rhythm of fire. Brass casings, ejected from semiautomatic pistols, silently pinwheel through the air.

In this ear-protected world of the shooting range, the sounds are muffled, disembodied. A deep 9mm whump, a sharp .22-caliber snap, are felt more than heard, as hanging paper targets flutter in a breeze of bullets.


If those perforated papers were people - the sort who attack and sometimes kill homosexuals - they could be the four youths who threatened one regular range-shooter, a cop who was off duty at the time, in front of a gay club in Columbus. He pulled his gun, pointed it in the air and said, "You picked on the wrong fairy."

Standing among shooters at the range on this October night, J.T. Combs learns the fine art of firearms under the tutelage of his companion, Kirk Johns, a former Army armorer.

"Not only does he load the clips for me, but he cleans the guns after we shoot," Combs says. "Now, that's love."

Love is never having to say you missed.

But this latest of monthly target-practice sessions at the Powder Room gun shop and range, just north of Columbus, is more than just a multi-caliber version of queer eye on the bull's-eye .

These shooters are members of the Ohio chapter of the Pink Pistols, a national group dedicated to arming the gay community for its own protection.

Gay-bashing rose to national prominence on such cases as the 1998 murder of 21-year-old Matthew Shepard of Wyoming, who was beaten, tied to a fence and left to die.

FBI statistics show that sexual orientation was the motivation behind nearly 1,400 of the 9,726 hate crimes reported to police nationwide in 2000.

A 2002 study by the National Coalition for Anti-Violence Programs, based on complaints filed with its national network of groups serving the gay community, found 1,968 incidents (ranging from harassment to murder) - involving 2,257 lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgendered victims - were reported last year.

The NCAVP said that the number of incidents (23) in Cleveland rose 44 percent over 2001, and 25 percent in Columbus (with 211 incidents), where there was "an alarming escalation in the brutality of assaults." Assaults involving serious injury rose 21 percent in Columbus last year, as opposed to the national average increase of 6 percent.

Clarence Patton, NCAVP acting executive director, said the increased number of incidents in Ohio and elsewhere is probably due to a greater willingness of victims to report those crimes.

But he also noted that an increase in cases reported last year (up 1 percent over 2001) could be the beginning of an "up-trend" in anti-gay violence.

The just-past "very gay summer" of publicity about same-sex job benefits and marriage and media programs like "Queer Eye on the Straight Guy" may have led to greater mainstream empathy for gays, but it also may prompt anti-gays to redouble their efforts, Patton said.

Watching that trend through a gunsight are the Pink Pistols.

The group was created three years ago by Douglas Krick of Boston as more of a social club for fellow shooting enthusiasts. Pink Pistols still includes the social and recreational aspects of shooting in its mission.

But as word of the group and membership spread nationally, Krick said Pink Pistols (www.pinkpistols.org) became more self-defense oriented - with the slogan, "Armed gays don't get bashed" - and now also works on behalf of Second Amendment (right to bear arms) issues.

Jonathan Rauch of the Independent Gay Forum coined the term "Pink Pistols" in a column he wrote in 2000 for Salon magazine, urging the gay community to arm and organize gun-training programs for self-protection. "Homosexuals have been too vulnerable for too long. . . . Playing the victim card has won us sympathy, but at the cost of respect. So let's make gay-bashing dangerous," he wrote.

Krick says he deliberately chose Rauch's designation for the group to deflate the limp-wristed stereotype associated with gays and the color. A few thousand members have formed 38 Pink Pistols chapters in 28 states.

Kim Rife, 37, of Union County, northwest of Columbus, heard of the Ohio group earlier this year through a friend who isn't gay. Rife said she has twice fended off attempted assaults outside gay clubs in Columbus, and noted, "I've seen how quickly things can escalate in gay bashings.

"To me, relying on the police - who are few and far between, unfortunately - in some regards is unrealistic."

So Rife and a handful of acquaintances starting meeting this summer at the Powder Room gun shop in Powell for monthly target practice. The Central Ohio Pink Pistols (e-mail: [email protected]) now has about 35 members, Rife said.

Gay members of the group share a common concern, said Rife, who grew up around guns as the daughter of a State Highway Patrol trooper.

"The perception of a threat is out there and it's real," Rife said. "Everybody I know pretty much knows somebody who's been bashed or threatened in some way."

Pink Pistols member Kirk Johns, 42, of Dayton, a longtime gun collector, said that although he was initially surprised when he heard about the group - "I thought I was the only gay shooter on the whole planet" - he liked the concept, both from a self-defense and recreational shooting standpoint.

Though Johns said his imposing size, at 6 feet 4 and 220 pounds, is probably one reason why he has never been victimized by gay-bashers, he knows others who have been assaulted.

Johns and other group members strongly support efforts to establish a law allowing Ohio residents to carry concealed weapons (as exists to varying degrees in 44 other states).

But even without the law, they believe Pink Pistols can be effective in training and familiarizing gays with guns, and serve as a potential deterrent to gay bashers.

As the Ohio chapter formed, Rife was been surprised by sources of support and opposition. "I've gotten a more negative response from gay leadership for being pro-gun than I have from pro-gunners for being gay," she said.

Robin Richmond, president of the Cleveland chapter of Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays, said that if nothing else, Pink Pistols shows how the gay community can be as diverse as any other.

But he did not believe the risk of gay-bashing justified an armed response. "The concerns are real, but statistically, the individual risk isn't that high," he said.

"There are people who are concerned about being ostracized or getting grief [for being gay], but their concern about violence is not at a level where it would make sense to start carrying a gun," he added.

Clarence Patton of the NCAVP said that "as an antiviolence organization, we would never endorse people actually picking up arms under the notion of defense.' "

He believed a more probable outcome of arming gays would be an increase in accidental injury or death from firearms.

Patton noted, "One thing that makes gun possession ineffective is that hate violence is often committed with more offenders than victims, so it's a real opportunity to get guns into the hands of the very people who commit violence."

Tim Marshall, spokesman for the Lesbian-Gay Community Center of Cleveland, described the Pink Pistols' stance as a reactive response to gay-bashing, rather than the proactive remedy needed to prevent it from happening in the first place.

"Knowing that gay people have guns isn't going to make the hate go away," he said. "Our weapon of choice is education, because we don't want to encourage violence of any kind - against us or anyone else."

Yet in some respects, Pink Pistols isn't dealing with an all-gay issue.

Kimberly Potts, 38, of Columbus is an Ohio Pink Pistols member whose partner of 17 years recently died. "I'm not really interested in it [the group] because I'm gay, but because now I'm a woman alone, and I wanted to go out shooting with people I have things in common with," she said.

Potts is no particular fan of the National Rifle Association and hasn't felt threatened for being gay - at least not since leaving Texas seven years ago. She said she got a handgun primarily for home defense.

"If anybody ever comes into my house, they're leaving toes up, in a bag," she said.

Several members of the Central Ohio Pink Pistols are not gay, including John, married with two young children, who prefers that his last name not be used out of fear of harassment directed at his family.

The Columbus resident, a longtime gun owner, said he joined the group because he has a second cousin who's gay, has worked with gays, and wanted to lend his expertise and support to gay gun owners.

"I believe in the fundamental right of all human beings to defend themselves against unlawful violence," he added, "and I prefer to use effective tools."

Tools as in pistols . . . pink or otherwise.
 
I am not sure who you are in this article, Stoner, but applause to the movement. Just as this quote
Pink Pistols shows how the gay community can be as diverse as any other.
talks about diversity in the gay community, I am glad to have groups that show the diveristy in the GUN community.

This quote, however, is typical of the hand-wringing unthinking anti-gun crowd that just gets my hackles up;
Patton noted, "One thing that makes gun possession ineffective is that hate violence is often committed with more offenders than victims, so it's a real opportunity to get guns into the hands of the very people who commit violence."
It's one of those things that is so far off base I don't even know where to start taking it apart.
 
To Mssr. Patton,

Congratulations, Clarence; you managed to pack enough catchphrase-and-buzzword-laden newspeak into your message to garble it almost beyond comprehension. :rolleyes:
 
The gun owners in this piece are calm and rational, while Clarence is quoted enough to show himself to be a loon. I agree with Jonathan Rauch in the article; let's all make gay-bashing (not to dilute his point, but I'd add "and other violent crimes") dangerous.

Well done.
 
Muzzle flame rips through a gunsmoke fog as the shooters' arms rise and fall like exploding pendulums
I have never seen an "exploding pendulum".

I imagine one would be a good addition to an IDPA match!

The article makes a good point about the right of self defense, but I'd like to see the gun rag style of writing stay in the gun rags.

Weima-"The 1911 spoke with authority"-dog
 
Sorry I would be Kirk Johns........who's boyfriend called a magazine ....a clip. I have correct this and take full responsablity for his up bringing.:rolleyes:
 
Kirk - Glad you've handled the clip/magazine error. You know, if you guys go out and shoot Garands, he can say "clip" all he wants. :D If you can get him to help with cleaning the guns too, you've got it made. :cool:
 
If you can get him to help with cleaning the guns too, you've got it made.

See, here I was thinking "gosh, what object lesson could our man Kirk use to make sure J.T. never uses 'clip' instead of 'magazine' again. Hmmm... About those gun cleaning chores..." ;) :D
 
Patton noted, "One thing that makes gun possession ineffective is that hate violence is often committed with more offenders than victims, so it's a real opportunity to get guns into the hands of the very people who commit violence."

Which is why Patton (and others like him) support the AWB which makes a single person defending themselves against multiple attackers less effective with only 10 rounds in their gun. :banghead:
 
Great job, Kirk! BTW, let me get this straight: the author of the article interviewed you and published it in a newspaper/magazine, and thus your fifteen minutes of fame? That's really cool.

If those perforated papers were people - the sort who attack and sometimes kill homosexuals - they could be the four youths who threatened one regular range-shooter, a cop who was off duty at the time, in front of a gay club in Columbus. He pulled his gun, pointed it in the air and said, "You picked on the wrong fairy."

That was you? Classic! (I mean, I know you were in danger and all, but thats pretty funny).
 
Nope that was a cop.......I was just the 6'4" 220 pound queen who was looking at a SPAS-12 at the range, trying to talk his boyfriend into getting it for me for Christmas :D . Thank god I didn't have one of my AR's with me that day
 
Stoner, was this at The Powder Room by any chance?

I know Bill told me they had a Pink Pistols meet and shoot up there, said it went really well.

Glad to see it! :D
 
Had a post import SPAS-12 [fixed stock] I know it's a boat anchor,but it's still cool looking. I have a Benelli super 90 Tactical and a Rem 870 HD for real world use.
 
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