It's the same lesson we should have learned long ago: in practical terms, you cannot really delegate your right of self-defense. Whoever your agent is, he, she, or it cannot guarantee to be with you every moment. If you are threatened by someone, there is only one other person who is sure to be there: you. So you ultimately are responsible for your own self-defense. Gun-free zones are free-crime zones.
See Alexander Cockburn's "Bring Back the Posse."
What most gun control advocates fail to understand is that most dangerous incidents are over in seconds. Unless you have a police officer or armed security guard right next to you, they more than likely won't be able to do you any good.
ReplyDeleteFrom the Wall Street Journal.
ReplyDeleteBedlam Revisited
Why the Virginia Tech shooter was not committed.
Takes a shot at Thomas Szasz.
I saw it. Typical. First, he doesn't even try to rebut Szasz's case. Second, he assumes Szasz and a few others had the power and influence to abolish commitment. Where does he get that idea? Szasz was never accepted into the mainstream.
ReplyDeleteBTW, why must evil be reduced to disease? Can't we accept that there are bad people in the world?
ReplyDeleteI find it amazing that the author dismisses Szasz because he is on a commission backed by Scientologist. It's like, oh he must be a complete nut job because he is on this commission.
ReplyDeleteEven schizophrenics know the difference between right and wrong. Their may have damaged nerve endings, but they know that murder is wrong.
I agree, evil is evil. I read some place and I am having trouble finding it, maybe you wrote it. But no one is to blame, but Cho himself. It was not the gun, it was not those who he "believed" harmed him, it was the action of the individual. I wish I could find it because that individual said it much better than I have.
See Szasz's take at the FEE website today: http://www.fee.org/in_brief/default.asp?id=1257
ReplyDelete