Part of me wants to scream and run away, far away from having a gun control discussion on the Internet. Another part of me has something to say and it looks as if that part is winning, cuz here I am, writing about gun control on the Internet.
So here goes: For the record, I own guns. They are all locked up and stored at some distance from the ammo. The keys to their locks are hidden. There are several reasons why I bought them, mostly having to do with being in a very bad state several years ago. Selling them is on my to-do list.
I sometimes wonder if there's a relationship between PTSD and the some members of the pro-gun lobby in the US. (I'm not talking about
@Whispering_Truth here or anyone else capable of a healthy exchange of opinions.) There is certainly the hypervigilance; any mention of a new law, be it background check or otherwise, gets an over-the-top reaction from
some. And if you stand back and look at it, it sure looks like a whole bunch of people just got triggered (no pun intended).
I had some contact with a prominent member of what I guess you might call the survivalist community. I'm all for being prepared for the next disaster, whatever it may be. I live in earthquake / fire country and after seeing what happened with Hurricane Katrina, I understand the need to stock up and be able to take care of oneself. On the other hand, there are
some that have really gone off the deep end with it. You see them stocking up on weapons and ammunition, more and more, need the latest model, need better sights, bipod mount, better sling, night vision, more, higher capacity magazine, tactical vest, folding stock, body armor, gas mask.... You get the picture. More hypervigilance with a heaping spoonful of OCD.
More and more, and none of it addresses the fear. In other words, I look at
some survivalists and
some gun enthusiasts and see frightened boys (they are about 90% men) that, maybe, got hurt at a young age and never dealt with the fear, never dealt with the demon. They think that more weapons and more ammo will make them safe, and new laws will make them vulnerable, and 99.9% of it is about something else that guns and ammo can't deal with.
I recognize that, because I'm not so very different. Change a couple of variables about my life and I'd be right there, building a bunker in the woods, stocking up, waiting for the zombie apocalypse. But I also know that no matter how high my walls or how prepared I might be, it wouldn't solve that which hurt me.
So I get the arguments about being able to defend one's home. And I even see the original 2nd amendment argument about an armed populace being a counterbalance to government tyranny. Yet, there's something else going on here, something that guns can't solve.