David Codrea reminds me of this classic from Jewish World Review:
He often accuses men with guns of “compensating for something.” The truth is quite the reverse. After all, how is he supposed to feel knowing there are men out there who aren’t intimidated by the big bad inanimate villain? How is he to feel in the face of adolescent boys who have used the family gun effectively in defending the family from an armed intruder? So if he can’t touch a gun, he doesn’t want other men to be able to either. And to achieve his ends, he’ll use the only weapon he knows how to manipulate: the law.
Sad little things that they are, they certainly haven’t changed – or grown any less ubiquitous – since this piece was written. Not that I’d wish it, but I do confess there are days when I think we need a die-off.
















































