“Under assault, I didn’t dream of harming my teenage assailant, let alone
taking his life.”
What a money quote!
As you must know – you’re obviously a thoughtful and intelligent man,
though I fear many things you think true are simply, tragically, wrong -- herein
lies the difference between you and a responsible citizen.
When that young man robbed you, with a gun, threatening, whether you
acknowledge it or not, your life, you were legally and morally entitled to take
his. In any society worth living in, indeed in any society that hopes for long
term survival, such must be the rule. Note that this does not equal "I wish
that mugger were dead." I don't know, and neither do you, whether he went on
with his career in armed robbery, or perhaps graduated to murder, so I can't
opine on the harm your not having stopped him on that occasion caused. I
wonder, if you knew he had subsequently murdered someone, perhaps a child, would
you feel any guilt for your passivity?
I've never shot anyone and I don't wish to. I don’t live in a gated
community, but my subdivision does employ an active security patrol which
aggressively protects the lives and property of residents. Until burglary,
robbery, rape, kidnapping, assault and murder drop to zero in my neighborhood,
I'll cheerfully pay my share of the cost.
Since you shared a personal anecdote, I will too. About three years ago,
the wife of my best friend, mother of three children under 7, was walking
through our neighborhood at about 7 a.m. She was snatched off the street and
placed in the trunk of a car. Luckily, the kidnappers were using a rented
vehicle equipped with a safety release inside the trunk. My friend freed
herself and escaped into the home of a neighbor. Subsequent investigation
revealed that two masterminds cooked up a plan, to kidnap women from a rich
neighborhood for ransom, while sharing a jail cell following another violent
crime. Had my friend been armed, should she not have been able to shoot her
kidnappers before they stowed her in the trunk?
Particularly given your association with Demos, I suspect the views you
express go hand in hand with the tiresome narratives of the modern American
Left: Marxist tropes about the unfairness of capitalism and private property;
dissatisfaction with equality under the law leading to demands for equality of
outcomes; more and more wealth redistribution (Query why those with contempt for
wealth want to grab it for themselves and others); contempt for any
non-governmental solution.
Your piece drips with contempt for those you deem provincial. Consider
that the Left -- in academia, in journalism, in think tanks -- is more
provincial than a backwoods moonshiner.
Joe McDermott
Houston, Texas
I'll post any reply I get.
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