This column by Fred Grimm in the April 19 Miami Herald elicited my first-ever letter to a fellow columnist.
Here it is:
Dear Mr. Grimm,
This is a first for me at age 48. As a columnist myself, I refrain from hassling my colleagues. But your column today was simply astonishing.
You make the point, not by reasoning but as a casual assumption, that the Virginia Tech massacre reflected badly on the guns-at-work bill. I may not be the sharpest knife in the drawer but even I can recognize when a conclusion is at exact odds with the evidence adduced.
A bunch of unarmed people are gunned down in their workplace by a madman and that is an argument against law-abiding people like college professors arming themselves at work? What am I missing here? Looks to me like a responsible legislature would immediately step in to make sure that armed citizens are in place to provide a bulwark against such atrocities.
I am not an NRA member but I respect them a great deal. They are a lobby of concerned citizens, essentially the same thing as a labor union, except they fight to keep people safe. I am 48, as I said, and I read the news with a fine-tooth comb ever since age 10. I do not recall a single instance where a major crime was committed by an NRA member. I do, however, recall many stories of rescues by NRA members.
This is a bad week for the NRA? Sad to say, crass as it sounds, nothing could be 'better' for the NRA.
Yours In Puzzlement,
Jay D. Homnick
Do you think they might take a survey of the people who were there that day and wished they had a gun?
ReplyDeleteNaaah.