praise the lord, and pass the ammunition
Feb. 1st, 2013 05:17 amOriginally published at Faith Seeking Understanding. You can comment here or there.
Apparently Walmart has announced a new policy, limiting customers to three boxes of ammunition per day. This isn’t a government thing or a political statement, but simply the free market at work. They couldn’t keep ammo in stock.
Think about that a minute. According to the Walmart.com website, gun ammo is usually sold in boxes of fifty shots. Some people thought that having the ability to shoot a gun 150 times wasn’t enough, that they needed more. And not just a few – enough people that they had to put together a policy.
I try to avoid swearing here, but on this topic I can’t quite help it. This is Absolutely. Bat-Shit. Insane.
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Date: 2013-02-01 02:34 pm (UTC)That said, my problem here isn't with target shooters, whether they're doing it for sport or just to improve their skill with a gun. The last thing I want to do is discourage target practice. I mean, if we're going to have people owning guns, by all means do what it takes to use the gun well. What really bothered me was some of the reactions I read that they needed lots of ammunition to fight off tyranny. I think there are a lot of people in America these days who are actually anticipating some epic struggle between the government and themselves. I find that line of thought disturbing because it seems so divorced from reality to me (whether that's just me having my head in the sand, I'm not sure). But I think it also gets in the way of having a mature discussion on how to reduce gun violence. It's also damaging in other ways. That's what I was trying to get at here.
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Date: 2013-02-02 01:43 pm (UTC)That was definitely the impression I got when I did my study abroad in the UK back in... 2002? 2003? Somewhere in there. I'm not sure whether I was impacted by those experiences or whether I so liked the UK because I had a bit of that outlook already. But it definitely is an approach to society and politics that I agree with, and one of the reasons I'd love to emigrate to the U.K. one of these days.
I think part of the problem is that America is so large, geographically, and we don't have the long history that gives people a shared cultural identity the way you do in Europe. Because of this, there is a sense that in a real sense, the national government doesn't represent you. For one thing, you don't necessarily have real experience of those other places. I live in the outer boroughs of NYC now and know that we have genuine neighborhoods and families and communities, but to family and people I knew back in North Carolina, I thinks at some level they have shows like Friends and Seinfeld in mind when they think about my life. That was my expectation, too, before I moved here. It really did seem like another country in a lot of ways.
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Date: 2013-02-05 05:28 pm (UTC)