Gun Control Manure?

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Well, imag­ine for a moment that what you see on TV is a care­ful­ly orches­trat­ed, Chaos, that is designed to make you think one way or the oth­er, here is a sto­ry that is very inter­est­ing not because it is a hor­ri­ble news sto­ry, (sor­ry with today’s media its all about the bad news) check this out.

The fol­low­ing arti­cle appeared in the Jan­u­ary 1, 1992 Los Ange­les Times.
This is the sto­ry you saw on the evening news:

At lunch hour on Wednes­day, Oct. 16, George Jo Hen­nard of Bel­ton, Tex. smashed his Ford pick­up through the plate glass doors of Luby’s cafe­te­ria in Killeen, injur­ing some patrons imme­di­ate­ly. While oth­er patrons rushed toward the truck believ­ing the dri­ver was a heart-attack vic­tim, Hen­nard calm­ly climbed out of his pick­up, took out two 9‑millimeter semi-auto­mat­ic pis­tols, and start­ed shoot­ing peo­ple in the cafe­te­ri­a’s serv­ing line.

Hen­nard con­tin­ued shoot­ing for 10 min­utes, reload­ing five times. One of his pis­tols jammed repeat­ed­ly, caus­ing him to dis­card it. There would have been plen­ty of oppor­tu­ni­ty for any of the cafe­te­ri­a’s cus­tomers or employ­ees to return fire. None did because none of them were armed. Texas law for­bids pri­vate cit­i­zens from car­ry­ing firearms out of their home or busi­ness. Luby’s employ­ee’s man­u­al for­bids employ­ees from car­ry­ing firearms.

Police offi­cers were inside Luby’s with­in min­utes. But before they were able to cor­ner Hen­nard in the cafe­te­ri­a’s restroom, where he turned his gun fatal­ly on him­self, Hen­nard had killed 15 women and 8 men, wound­ed 19 and caused at least five more to be injured attempt­ing to flee.

The Killeen mas­sacre was ready-made excite­ment for the media: a mad­man with a gun, lots of grue­some pic­tures. CBS News devot­ed an entire “48 Hours” Dan Rather report to it. Sarah Brady of Hand­gun Con­trol Inc. cap­i­tal­ized on it in a nation­al­ly pub­lished col­umn to call Con­gress cow­ard­ly for vot­ing down more strin­gent gun laws the next day.

Now here’s a sto­ry you prob­a­bly did­n’t see:

Late at night on Tues­day, Decem­ber 17, two men armed with recent­ly-stolen pis­tols herd­ed 20 cus­tomers and employ­ees of a Shon­ey’s restau­rant in Annis­ton, Ala., into the walk-in refrig­er­a­tor, and locked it. Con­tin­u­ing to hold the man­ag­er at gun­point, the men began rob­bing the restau­rant.

Then one of the rob­bers found a cus­tomer who had hid­den under a table and pulled a gun on him. The cus­tomer, Thomas Glenn Ter­ry, legal­ly armed with a .45 semi-auto­mat­ic pis­tol, fired five shots into that rob­ber’s chest and abdomen, killing him instant­ly.
The oth­er rob­ber, who was hold­ing the man­ag­er at gun­point, opened fire on Ter­ry and grazed him. Ter­ry returned fire, hit­ting the sec­ond rob­ber sev­er­al times and wound­ing him crit­i­cal­ly.

The rob­bery attempt was over. The Shon­ey’s cus­tomers and employ­ees were freed. No one else was hurt.
Because Ter­ry was armed, and used his gun to stop two armed rob­bers who had tak­en a restau­rant full of peo­ple hostage, there was no drawn-out cri­sis, no mas­sacre, no vic­tims’ fam­i­lies for Dan Rather to inter­view. Con­se­quent­ly, the sto­ry has­n’t received much cov­er­age.

Among those who rely on nation­al news media for their view of the coun­try, the bloody image of Luby’s Cafe­te­ria is avail­able to lend the unchal­lenged impres­sion that guns in pri­vate hands serve only to kill inno­cent peo­ple. The pic­ture of 20 hostages walk­ing out of Shon­ey’s refrig­er­a­tor unharmed, because a pri­vate cit­i­zen was armed that night, is not.

As we cel­e­brate the bicen­ten­ni­al of the Bill of Rights, it’s worth not­ing that the Framers wrote the Sec­ond Amend­ment so the peo­ple’s defense would be in our own hands, and we would­n’t have to rely on a “stand­ing army” or “select mili­tia” for our secu­ri­ty. Though no police depart­ments exist­ed in Amer­i­ca then, there’s no his­tor­i­cal doubt that the Framers had con­sid­ered cen­tral­ized pub­lic defense, and con­sid­ered it not mere­ly inef­fec­tive, but itself dan­ger­ous to pub­lic safe­ty. Recent vig­i­lante-type police attacks, such as the beat­ing of Rod­ney King, lend cre­dence.

Yet, it’s fash­ion­able to rel­e­gate con­sti­tu­tion­al pro­tec­tions to the dust­bin of his­to­ry. Judges sworn to defend the Con­sti­tu­tion ignore its clear pro­vi­sions, as do leg­is­la­tors. Vir­tu­al­ly every major organ of soci­ety — both polit­i­cal par­ties, the media, the Amer­i­can Bar Assn., the ACLU — urges them to do so.

Today’s “con­sen­sus real­i­ty” asserts that pri­vate firearms play no effec­tive role in the civic defense, and that firearms must be restrict­ed to reduce crime. The media repeat these asser­tions as a cat­e­chism, and treat those who chal­lenge them as heretics.
Yet, we have before us an exper­i­ment show­ing us alter­na­tive out­comes. In one case, we have a restau­rant full of unarmed peo­ple who rely on the police to save them. The result is 23 inno­cent lives lost, and an equiv­a­lent num­ber wound­ed. In the sec­ond case, we have one armed cit­i­zen on the scene and not one inno­cent life lost.
How can the choice our soci­ety needs to make be any clear­er?

It’s time to rid our­selves of the mis­be­got­ten idea that pub­lic safe­ty can be achieved by uni­lat­er­al dis­ar­ma­ment of the hon­est cit­i­zen, and real­ize that the price of pub­lic safe­ty is, like lib­er­ty, eter­nal vig­i­lance. We can tire our­selves in futile debates on how to keep guns out of the wrong hands. Or we can decide that inno­cent lives deserve bet­ter than to be cut short, if only we, as a soci­ety, will take upon our­selves the civic respon­si­bil­i­ty of defend­ing our fel­low cit­i­zens, as Thomas Glenn Ter­ry did in Alaba­ma.

My account of Thomas Glenn Ter­ry’s actions in this arti­cle was based on an Alaba­ma news­pa­per account. I lat­er inter­viewed Ter­ry for a week­ly radio pro­gram I was host­ing and dis­cov­ered that the account was mis­tak­en on sev­er­al points.

Postal clerk Ter­ry was fin­ish­ing a late-night din­ner with his wife when the rob­bers came in and took over the restau­rant. Ter­ry hid his .45 Colt Gov­ern­ment Mod­el under his sweater, not see­ing any imme­di­ate oppor­tu­ni­ty to use it. Ter­ry’s wife was cap­tured with the oth­er cus­tomers and herd­ed off to the cool­er, where one of the rob­bers pro­ceed­ed to col­lect wal­lets and jew­el­ry.

Ter­ry did not hide under a table; he had sep­a­rat­ed him­self from the oth­er cus­tomers and man­aged to get to a back door in the Shon­ey’s to see if it was open so he could escape and call the police. The door was chained shut. At that point one of the rob­bers dis­cov­ered him and when the rob­ber drew on him, Ter­ry pulled his own hand­gun from under his sweater and returned fire, inca­pac­i­tat­ing this rob­ber, who ulti­mate­ly sur­vived. The sec­ond rob­ber heard the exchange of gun­fire and also drew on Ter­ry; it was the gun fight between Ter­ry and this sec­ond rob­ber which result­ed in the rob­ber run­ning out to the park­ing lot, where he died from his wounds. It was at this point that Ter­ry told the store man­ag­er to phone the police, inform­ing them that an armed cus­tomer was present; Ter­ry then pro­ceed­ed to the cool­er and released his wife and the oth­er cus­tomers.

Both rob­bers whom Ter­ry shot had pre­vi­ous armed rob­beries on their record, and one had mur­dered a motel clerk just a few days ear­li­er. A third rob­ber escaped as soon as Ter­ry exchanged gun­fire with the first rob­ber.

The only nation­al media out­let to cov­er this inci­dent as news, just two months after the Killeen restau­rant mas­sacre, was the Chris­t­ian Sci­ence Mon­i­tor. ‑JNS