One thing worse than supporting bad policy is knowingly supporting bad policy.
Worse still is knowingly supporting bad policy and shielding yourself from its destructive effects — while visiting that policy on children.
There has been much debate recently surrounding so-called āgun-free zones,ā places such as schools, where law-abiding people wonāt carry guns. But really, there should be no debate. This is because itās plain that even the zonesā defenders ā liberals ā donāt really believe theyāre a good idea.
For evidence, consider a largely forgotten video made in 2013 by Project Veritas (PJ) after the Journal News in Westchester, N.Y., printed the names and addresses of registered handgun owners in its coverage area. Posing as “Citizens Against Senseless Violence,” PJ operatives visited the homes of Eric Holder and various liberal journalists to ask them if theyād āsupport the causeā and post on their lawns a sign stating “THIS HOME IS PROUDLY GUN FREE.”
Not one accepted.
At the home of the Journal Newsā Greg Shillinglaw they were told, āIn this neighborhood that nobody puts out stuff like thatā (except maybe at the schools?). The person at the Shillinglaw home concluded with, āI do believe in it, but I think Iāll pass on it.ā
Translation: he believes in it for others.
Next was the Journalās Mike Meaney. A woman answered the door and tersely said āIām sorry, I canāt help, but good luckā¦ I have other reasons [for refusal] I canāt get into right now.ā But, hey, they just needed to speak to olā Mike personally — Iām sure heād snatch one of those signs up quicker than Hillary Clinton changes personalities.
The next one, the Star Ledgerās Bob Braun, offered tremendous support. Without missing a beat he said, āI agree with you and I am on your side on this, but Iām just wondering if thatās not an invitation to somebody with a gun!ā as he emitted a chuckle. His wife chimed in, āI agree with you, but Iām not sure about the sign.ā Braun then said moments later, āThe problem in this town is, you know, somebody driving around here might think itās a — seriously — might think itās an invitation to come barging in.ā But Braun did offer this consolation: āWell, if the sign said āCitizens Against Senseless Violenceā without āTHIS HOME IS PROUDLY GUN FREE,ā I would put the sign up.ā
Because a Gun-free-zone is a bad idea.
Except at schools.
Because the people who might drive around and barge into Braunās house in Elizabeth, N.J., could never drive around and barge into schools in Elizabeth, N.J.
Or maybe itās that children in Elizabeth, N.J., are bulletproof?
Now, it apparently took Braun — smart liberal that he is — all of two and a half seconds to figure out that putting a gun-free-zone sign on his lawn is a bad idea. Logically translated, it amounts to advertising, āWeāre defenseless.ā Yet he presumably supports them āin principleā; after all, he didnāt say, āLook, I support gun control, but not these zones.ā So whatās the story here? Was this the first time he pondered the matter for two and a half seconds? When advocating policy, did he only consider it for 4/10ths of a second?
Clearly, these liberals either never thought their policies through or just couldnāt care less as long as their laws only hurt others. So take your pick: gross negligence or callous disregard.
Delving a bit deeper, weāre witnessing a typical leftist phenomenon: style over substance, image over reality. These liberals want to be seen as āgoodā people in their milieu; they want to appear enlightened in their echo chamber of effeteness. And achieving this has nothing to do with action. All their fellow travelers, that caponhood of hypocrisy, are as two-faced as they are. Itās all about what you say — all about posturing.
Itās reminiscent of some NYC liberals — in a gentrifying Brooklyn neighborhood fittingly called āDumboā — up in arms because ādiversityā has come home: theyāve learned that their kids may be forced to attend school with poor minorities. One Dumbo parent actually said, āItās more complicated when itās about your own children.ā Yes.
And itās more complicated when itās about your own lawn.
Except that it really isnāt. It just seems so when itās the first time in your life the realities of your ideology are brought home to you — much like the youngster I once heard wonder why problems of poverty couldnāt be solved by just making more money. Things can seem very simple to a child. They can also seem simple to a childish person, someone content to operate on emotion like a child or too self-centered — like a very young child — to consider how his actions, attitudes and advocacy affect others. This is the way of the overgrown juvenile masquerading as an adult that we euphemistically call a liberal.
But hereās the reality. Saying the politically correct thing — such as supporting gun-free-zone policies for schools — when you wouldnāt apply the same to your own home because you realize itās a dangerous idea, doesnāt at all make you a good person. It makes you scum.
Youāre willing to imperil American children nationwide just so you can strut around, puff up your chicken-chest and say āLook at me! I have the correct ideology!ā
Donāt misunderstand me. Eliminating gun-free zones is no panacea. No doubt, maniacal mass murderers who target schools are to a degree motivated by the copycat factor and the maximized media attention attacking schools brings. Yet schoolsā being gun-free zones does make them more attractive targets. And, no, itās not necessarily because the perpetrators donāt have to fear harm, especially since these individuals often accept that their crime will be a suicide mission. But think about it: if your goal is to massacre a large number of people and go out in a blaze of notoriety, you want to ensure you wonāt be stopped before your deed is done. Gun-free zones virtually guarantee this.
As for the āgun-free-zone for thee but not for meā liberals, Iām firmly convinced that some (not all, of course), on some level, arenāt all that troubled by school shootings. After all, it provides a great opportunity to beat the gun-control drum for people to whom āthe causeā is everything. I mean, if you want to make an omelet, you have to break a few eggs. And what does it matter as long as the egg isnāt the egghead in the mirror, right?
Of course, thereās generally no such thing as being truly insulated from the consequences of your bad decisions. You know those gun-free-zone signs you think are such a bad idea that you wouldnāt put them in front of the home in which your child lives?
They could be in front of the school in which your child studies.
Not that this will change many liberalās hearts (forget the minds). The chances of a given liberalās only child being killed in a school massacre are extremely slim. But the chances of getting that proud, self-satisfied, warm and fuzzy feeling from mouthing the right position and being accepted by the right people are 100 percent.
But if it does happen, perhaps you can console yourself with the knowledge that you took one for the cause, can rage in the media and maybe even appear in front of Congress. I just wonder, will you think it was all worth it?
As for legislation creating gun-free zones, Iām game. Really. But with one condition written in: any politician voting for the bill must put a āGun Free Zoneā zone sign in front of his home. After all, Mr. Compassionate Liberal, if itās good enough for Americaās children, itās good enough for you.