Another Take on Guns
By Brian Fleming
Note: This article first ran as a letter to the editor of The Warwick Advertiser.
I went to a Christmas party in Warwick and like many other Americans I spent most of the time discussing gun control in America with friends. The evil incident in Connecticut has sparked a debate that will not die. My entire adult life I have been a registered Republican and I have almost always argued from the right. However, when it comes to the subject of handguns possessed and carried by non-law enforcement civilians I just cannot agree with my friends on the right.
I feel that I am as qualified to speak on the subject as anyone else; after all I have legally owned and carried handguns in New York State for 26 years. I grew up in New York City, I joined the NYPD at the age of 20 and I have stared down the barrel of a gun several times. I have been shot at and I have also fired my gun in self-defense, but in the line of duty. I now carry an Orange County Carry Pistol Permit as a retired law enforcement officer. I know what it’s like to carry a gun and not to carry a gun. I have heard arguments and stories of legal gun owners successfully defending their property and their lives, but I have also heard of more tragic stories.
Adam Lanza was able to access his mother’s legally owned guns and commit this heinous act. That is the bottom line. Every legally possessed gun in America cannot be properly secured. There will be guns accessed by children.
I feel that we have to take an honest look at the laws in this country for the sake of our children. Many people want to own and carry guns because it gives them a feeling of power. Most will not admit this, but it’s true. When someone is carrying a gun, they act differently. They face a situation, sometimes escalating it, instead of avoiding it. When I fired my gun in 1992 in self defense, I was off duty. It was after I ran down two thugs who had just robbed a store in Queens. They turned and tried to shoot me. If I did not have my gun that day, I would have never run after them and they would have gotten away. No one would have fired any guns that day. On February 26, 2012 Trayvon Martin was shot and killed by George Zimmerman in Sanford, Fla. No matter what you believe happened that night, if Zimmerman did not have a gun, Trayvon Martin would be alive today.
As a Father, who was heartbroken after hearing about the Connecticut killing of those innocent children, I feel I have to be honest about how I feel, even if it means disagreeing with friends.
Tags: By Brian Fleming, gun control
December 27th, 2012 at 11:55 am
I appreciate your comments very much. It is reassuring to hear a conservative who is rational about this – I hope your words bring more who are on the right out in the open to speak about what is rational and needs to be said by all.
December 27th, 2012 at 12:25 pm
Thanks for the clear and honest piece about guns. Such a sane and rational outlook is greatly appreciated.
As for too many guns on the streets, I was amazed to learn that the Los Angeles gun buyback garnered over 1,600 guns the other day. Not that people have given up all their guns, but certainly this number is substantial for these days.
December 27th, 2012 at 12:34 pm
Thank you, Brian. I concur and echo Valerie’s comment. Isn’t time for to join together and demand that common sense prevail.