| Happiness, Well-Being And Psychological Adjustment Is A Warm Gun |
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| Written by Mitch Berg |
| Tuesday, 22 April 2008 13:06 |
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One of the anti-gun left’s favorite conceits is that owning a guns is a sign of anger, paranoia, “compensation” - really, everything that Obama’s “Crackerquiddick” jape was a milder version of. Hollywood has reinforced this idea for decades - at least as far as law-abiding civilians are concerned (gang-bangers, Jodie Foster, action-adventure heroes and rogue-cops-who-push-the-envelope while being dogged by the ineluctible forces of corruption and institutional apathy get a pass, of course). Of course, anecdodatally it’s nonsense. I cheerfully proclaim my biases - and have many friends and relatives who are as anti-gun as the most wretched Code Pink refuse, our differences in attitudes notwithstanding - but gun owners have always seemed to be generally happier, more secure, more…normal to me. And yes, I’m leaving out the odd “gun nuts” that you most assuredly do meet at gun shows and gun shops - but I don’t hang out with them, they don’t figure into any anecdotes and (this is important) they’re vanishingly rare. Fifteen years ago, Jeffrey Snyder wrote the article “A Nation of Cowards“, in Public Interest magazine. Along with Sanford Levinson’s “The Embarassing Second Amendment“, it’s one of the bedrock articles of the concealed carry movement. In it, Snyder laid down the historical and moral imperative for civilized people to take responsibility for their own personal safety, including the use of and training at firearms for individual personal defense. One of the biggest takeaways for me from Snyder’s piece over the last 15 years was his citation of a study by civil rights lawyer Donald Kates and former gun-control majordomo Patricia Harris. In it, Snyder noted, gun owners were found to be less-tolerant of police brutality, more conscientious about protecting the civil liberties of others, and - this is important - generally better-educated, farther advanced in their careers, and happier than non-gun owners. Years of searching for an online version of this study (or, just in case, any refutations, or claims that Snyder made the whole thing up) have been fruitless. And, with any luck, irrelevant. Arthur Brooks in the Wall Street Journal updates the whole question:
I think it’s more significant that liberals say the most outrageous things in what they think is friendly company - but it doesn’t really matter at the moment.
Koff koff.
That last bit fascinates me. Growing up on the Plains, guns were as normal a part of most families’ lives as power drills and ovens. But to friends of mine from New York, San Franscico, even Kenwood and Highland, guns are as foreign as shrunken heads. And it’s a pretty normal human reaction to transpose “foreign” into “fearful”, which as we all know is a step shy of “bigoted”. Which, when it comes to perceptions of your fellow human that impact politics and civil liberties, is just not OK. Especially when it’s wrong:
If you’re a shooter - especially one involved in politics - you know that Second Amendment support isn’t entirely a GOP thing:
While gun ownership it no indicator of being lower-class, miserable or bigoted, I think it’s fair to say that being an anti-gunner is associated with the perception that one is on a higher mental, social and political plane (hence Obama’s audience for Crackerquiddick), though. Which is an irony I’ve always treasured - that while the left has nattered on about class conflict for generations, this issue is the one where the liberal leadership is quite clearly the patricians, arrayed against the shooters, who are - whatever their income, education and mental state, are seen as the plebeians.
I’ll vouch for this much; being able to address, capably and seriously, the issue of random violent crime, takes a lot of stress out of life. Not that it’s a lightly-taken responsibility; merely that addressing it soberly and rationally takes one ugly variable out of your life, one most of us are better off without.
LEFTYBLOGGER: “Oooh! Gun owners are selfish!“ Nope!
One might be tempted to say “shooters are, in every possible way, better citizens, better providers, better neighbors…better people than grabbers”. But I’ll resist the temptation.
A warm gun and a trunk full of targets with the “10″ ring blown to hell. A day at the range is the (second) best stress relief there is. That alone is worth something. Cross-posted at Shot in the Dark. Comments welcome. |






