Be Not Afraid: Fear, Guns, and Gun Policy

AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell

There's something about fear that makes people do very different things, even if their fear is over the same source. It's why some people stick their heads in the sand while others prepare for disasters. It's why some people try to change the world and others just dig in and try to survive in it.

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And let's be real here, the subject of fear is a big part of the gun debate, whether we like it or not.

That's especially true when people let their fears dictate what policies they back, especially when they're trying to decide what anyone is allowed to do.

This came up because of an op-ed at an independent student publication at Auburn University. I don't particularly like picking on college students, but sometimes, they offer up tidbits of what others are thinking, and their arguments need to be addressed. This particular op-ed seems to talk a lot about gun control, of course, but there's a reason I'm talking about fear.

It's because the author started it.

The heavy emotions I felt receiving my high school diploma this past May came in distinctly differing ways.   

I felt a deep sense of accomplishment for myself and my closest friends. I felt as though a suffocating weight was lifted off of my chest, opening a portal for unlimited success. I felt as though I would never return to Huntsville and live the same simple and carefree life. I would never roam the halls of the high school or put my keeper gloves on for soccer practice.   

It was this breakneck speed of time passing that pried my fingers from holding on. An era of childhood was closing in front of my eyes, and I didn’t know how to react to it. As I took in the occasion, feeling gracious for the memories and sentimental for the time I would never get back, for a brief moment, I thought to myself, “I survived.” I survived a part of life that many children and young adults don’t each year.

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Now, let's understand that school shootings are rare. While the current hotness for anti-gunners is that firearms are the leading cause of death in children, it still should be noted that child deaths aren't super common, either.

In other words, if you're born in this country, you've got a really, really great chance of reaching adulthood. So long as you stay in school, you'll graduate. There's really no reason to fear that you won't survive beyond the media hype trying to convince people that they won't.

Yet, what I find funny is that this person, who claims they were so relieved to survive to graduate, then had the gall to write this:

What are pro-gun activists so scared about as they leave their house that forces them to conceal carry a life-ending weapon? What does it say about our nation that people feel such a strong need to always protect themselves? Why are people so willing to look past all of this tragedy for their own convenience of owning a gun? Why are we time and time again allowing unstable citizens and children access to buy these guns or access them without stricter security measures?  

American gun violence in schools blows every other first-world nation out of the water in terms of how often they occur and the amount of deaths that result.  

American non-gun violence blows every other first-world nation out of the water in terms of how often it occurs, especially when compared to those nations' total rates.

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And the vast majority of that violence is carried out by people who cannot lawfully access guns, but do so anyway.

I find it funny, though, that the author has decided to question our courage by opting to carry a gun when he was relieved just to survive high school, when there wasn't really a great chance he wouldn't.

The truth is that most of us aren't really afraid. We have concerns that bad things can happen, but we believe that it's better to be prepared for the unlikely than to simply trust probability to protect us.

Look, I've had people in my sights twice. Once because I was afraid for my own life, and once for the life of another. I'm glad I didn't have to pull the trigger either time. I'm already outside of the probability range for most people, so you'll excuse me if I go about my day with a gun on me out of concern that the laws of probability aren't finished screwing with me. I'm not afraid most of the time. The gun is for when there's a reason to be afraid.

Yet let's understand that while the author makes a thing about asking what we're afraid of, his entire approach to the issue of guns is governed my his own fears. He cites fatal shooting statistics around college campuses after lamenting K-12 school shootings, and I get the concern. Colleges are prime targets for bad people, but not because there aren't enough gun laws. It's because college campuses are gun-free zones.

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Fear governed the creation of gun-free zones. Fear expanded them onto college campuses. Fear governs the calls for gun control throughout the nation, all while anti-gunners ask us what we're afraid of.

When I'm carrying, the answer is, "Nothing."

It's a lot easier to be not afraid when you have the means to meet the threat. It's a lot easier to have no fear when you're prepared for whatever dangers you might encounter.

Sure, fear will pop up then, but that's a different matter. Everyone else is just as afraid. I'm just in a position to do something about it.

I'm not counting on a law that will be ignored to protect me.

Editor's Note: The mainstream media has created a nation of people who revel in fear, all as they continue to lie about gun owners and the Second Amendment in order to do so.

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