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
1 comment:
Do you think they might take a survey of the people who were there that day and wished they had a gun?
Naaah.
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