The
Reenactor.
Tells a brilliant
story.
Of
militiamen shoulder to shoulder on a battlefield.
Row after
row after row.
Preparing
to fire at enemy soldiers - shoulder to shoulder on a battlefield - row after
row after row.
IMAGINE.
Hundreds of militiamen gripping their muskets, anxiously awaiting their
commander's order: "Ready? Fire!"
You may
be thinking: "The correct phrase is, 'Ready, AIM, Fire!'"
Not in
this instance, Dear Reader.
Because
few militiamen ever aimed a musket.
Quicker
and less messy to load and reload than a rifle, a musket could be fired most
rapidly in battle, though its shot rarely hit a distant target. Indeed,
scarcely one of every ten soldiers shooting at the very same target would
actually wound or kill an enemy,
Consider
a British officer's words from 1814: ... as for firing at a man at 200 yards
with a common musket, you might just as well fire at the moon and have the same
hope of hitting your object. I do maintain and will prove, whenever called on,
that no man was ever killed at 200 yards by a common soldier's musket by the
person who aimed at him."
Ready? Fire!
"Why
not use a rifle?" The Reenactor is asked. He admits it is a much more
precise shot, but a rifle took longer to load, and after repeated combat
firings, the heavy fouling left by burnt gunpowder made the weapon difficult,
if not impossible, to reload.
His
story- history - carries on as The Reenactor tells tales of militiamen
shooting and reloading every fifteen seconds during battle. He speaks of
riflemen - protected behind stone fort walls - aiming, shooting, then pausing a
full minute to reload.
Pistols
way back then? One or two shot, not yet automatic.
Bayonets?
The most feared weapon of all. Enemy soldiers need only see the flash of
a bayonet's blade and they'd flee, avoiding any possibility of hand-to-hand
bludgeonry.
So
civilized, the battles of centuries ago. Drink and dine with your enemy, then
retreat to your fort and hope that days of lousy weather will delay the moment
you meet again to fight to the death on the battlefield. Wind, rain, snow, or
any kind of blustery day would postpone loss, victory, or bloodshed.
Gunpowder
is useless without a spark.
The
Reenactor recreates warfare in 1813 - more than two decades after the Second Amendment to the
United States Constitution was adopted as part of our Bill of Rights.
In 1791, American leaders feared the tyranny of kings and government, and made certain all citizens
had the right to keep and bear arms.
Nowadays,
American citizens fear the right of the people to keep and bear arms.
Because the arms
that we have the right to keep and bear have changed.
REWIND:
December 14, 2012. A 20-year-old shoots his way into an elementary school
with a Bushmaster rifle that is loaded with a 30-round capacity magazine. He also
carries a loaded 9mm handgun, three magazines for the rifle - each containing
30 rounds, and additional ammo for his two handguns and shotgun.
In less
than five minutes, the shooter moves from school entryway through two
classrooms, killing 20 children and six adults before unloading a single shot
from his handgun into his brain.
Police
find the shooter's rifle loaded with 14 bullets in its 30-round capacity
magazine, plus one round in a chamber. Ten 30-round capacity magazines are
discovered at the scene. Three of the magazines still contain 30 rounds. Three
are empty, while the others have 10, 11 or 13 live rounds in them. More
ammunition for handguns is also found.
154 spent
bullet casings are found in the school. In the five minute killing spree, a
bullet is shot every two seconds or less.
The Chief
Medical Examiner reports that the body of each dead child has three to eleven
bullet wounds. FACT: Assault type bullets don't travel in a straight line
through a victim. They open in the body and explode, causing maximum damage.
In the
parking lot the shooter’s car harbors a loaded 12-gauge shotgun. At his home, investigators
find six handguns and rifles, more than
1,600 rounds of unspent ammunition, a BB gun, a starter pistol, higher and
lower capacity magazines, three Samurai swords with blades 13 inches, 21 inches
and 28 inches long, a bayonet, and smaller knives in sheaths.
Bullets
are stored in a Planters nut canister and plastic baggies, in a bedroom gun
safe, on closet shelves, in a shoe box, a duffel bag, and a filing cabinet
drawer.
IMAGINE: The shooter had the right to own all of that
stuff. And more. Even as he amassed weapons of warfare, he planned and prepared
for battle, compiling a 7-foot-long, 4-foot-wide spreadsheet with details of
other massacres. He learned classic police training from video games like Call of Duty,
and once inside his former
elementary school, he moved quickly from classroom to classroom reloading
before he was out of ammunition. Better to waste a few rounds than stop
killing.
In this
particular case, no background check or mental health report would have stopped the shooter's murderous spree. Even his mother - who shared his home and purchased his
guns - failed to see how profoundly disturbed he was.
Which
brings us back to the weapons.
IMAGINE: Five
minutes.
The time it takes a rifleman on a battlefield in 1813 to shoot and reload a rifle, firing five times.
The time
it takes a militiaman on a battlefield in 1813 to shoot and reload a musket,
firing 20 times - with little hope that any
of his shots will make contact with an enemy.
The time it takes a citizen
in an elementary school in 2012 to shoot and reload a Bushmaster rifle, firing
154 bullets, and murdering twenty-six people.
Elementary
School. Movie Theatre. Grocery Store. Bus Stop. Heavily armed men in recent months
have turned these everyday places of learning, amusement, and business into killing fields where innocents are gunned
down with powerful weapons meant for warfare.
And while
polls show that 60% of Americans surveyed desire stricter laws governing
the sale of firearms, and 87% of respondents - Democrats, independents and
Republicans - support expanded background checks, the
NRA, fearing that "What we face right now is the most dire threat to the
association and to our freedom," calls instead for training and
arming adults in schools to reduce the response time in the event of an attack.
Will we ever
collectively speak - and listen to - the Language of Reason?
FACT: The
Second Amendment was ratified in 1791 when bayonets were a feared weapon of warfare, and soldiers armed with muskets, rifles, and gunpowder wouldn't
bother to battle on windy, rainy, or snowy days.
Centuries later, America's elected
officials won't bother to include a ban on certain styles of semiautomatic
weapons and large capacity magazines in their soon-to-be-voted-on gun law package.
Five
senators have signed a pledge to filibuster “any additional gun
restrictions".
But as we consider
the victims, their families and friends, the first responders, teachers,
children, moviegoers, students, and all other citizens traumatized by
the random mass killings in towns like Newtown, Aurora, and Tucson, we must recognize
how all have been deprived either of life
or personal liberties: the right and freedom to go to school, to the movies, to
a pharmacy or grocery store without the real - or feared - threat of gun
violence or death.
And even
as we argue against surrendering our right to keep and bear arms that
include assault weapons and large capacity magazines unimaginable to soldiers (or
legislators) in 1791, so too must we consider the heroes who were willing to surrender
their lives to protect loved
ones - or students - from death by blazing bullets.
Dear
Reader, 'tis time we become Reactors.
Responsible
Gun Owners, Gun Control Advocates, and Citizens committed to protecting the rights,
lives, and simple freedoms of fellow citizens must stand shoulder to
shoulder.
State
after state after state.
We must
demand that our elected officials legislate to protect our children, our
families, our friends and neighbors from the destruction and death too easily
facilitated by citizens armed with semiautomatic weapons and large capacity
magazines meant for warfare.
Well,
then, "Ready, Aim, Fire!"
Call or
email your elected officials (contact info at www.usa.gov), and relay this simple
message:
"Ready, Congressperson?
My Aim is simple.
Vote for reasonable and responsible gun laws or you
will be Fired!"
Brilliant.
QUING HEREBY DECREES: "Fear" is not a word in the Language of Reason. "Sensible" combined with "Action" replaced it.
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