Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition

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chieftain

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It is about time some main stream columnist said what needed to be said.

Good for him.

Fred

TownHall.com:

Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition

By Cal Thomas
Thursday, December 13, 2007

I have been waiting for this to happen. For years we have witnessed the carnage when innocents were mowed down at schools, colleges, shopping malls and post offices. The unarmed (disarmed?) were easy targets for crazed gunmen armed with grievances, weapons and ammunition.

Now someone has shot back, probably saving many lives. All of the gun-control laws that have been passed and are still being contemplated could not have had the affect of one armed, trained and law-abiding citizen on the scene like 42-year-old Jeanne Assam, a volunteer security guard at the New Life Church in Colorado Springs. The gunman, 24-year-old Mathew Murray, had been expelled from the Youth With a Mission (YWAM) organization for health reasons, according to officials. Authorities say Murray vowed revenge in several Web postings, which copied abundantly from the manifesto written by Columbine High School killer Eric Harris before the 1999 school massacre.

In rants laced with profanity, Murray lashed out against Christians he said had “brought this on yourselves.” He wrote that Christians “are to blame for most of the problems in the world.” Does that qualify as a “hate crime”? Probably not as such designations are usually given only to “oppressed minorities.”

It is Assam and not the shooter who received — and deserves — most of the media attention and praise. Calm and collected at a news conference, Assam detailed her movements and decision-making after hearing shots in the parking lot outside the church. She was especially attentive to possible danger after learning of the earlier shooting during which two people were killed at the YWAM facility several miles away. After hearing shots in the church parking lot, Assam said she walked about 100 yards through a hallway, hid herself and when Murray walked in, emerged from hiding and confronted him. “I was just asking God, bottom line, this is all you,” she said. “It was so loud. … It was scary. But God was with me. I asked him to be with me. And he never left my side.”

Assam is a former Minneapolis police officer who is licensed to carry a concealed weapon. She said she had been praying about what to do with her life and had volunteered to help with security at the 10,000-member church. She said, “I wasn’t going to wait for him to do other damage. I knew what I had to do.”

The El Paso County Coroner’s Office has since determined that Murray died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. But it doesn’t matter. With at least five guns, all that ammunition and more weapons in the car, according to police, Assam’s presence stopped Murray from killing and wounding more people inside the church, which appeared to be his intent.

Church Pastor Brady Boyd said he has a 15- to 20-member security staff because “that’s the reality of our world. I don’t think any of us grew up in churches where that was a reality, but today it is.”

Killers — ones with mental disorders, or terrorists — look for places with large gatherings to amplify their acts. That’s why in recent years they have selected targets ranging from the World Trade Center, to Columbine High School, to shopping malls and now a megachurch. On the rare occasions when an armed person has been on the scene before police arrive, such acts have been stopped before further damage could be done. When no armed person has been present, by the time the police show up the killing is usually over and the gunman has shot himself.

The point is that gun laws will not deter criminals with evil intent and police can’t be everywhere they’re needed. But killers can be stopped by law-abiding citizens with guns. As the Supreme Court considers its ruling on whether the strict gun laws in the District of Columbia are constitutional, it might remember Jeanne Assam and her courageous, proper and for now legal response to a lawless act. Though four were killed at the two locations and several others wounded, many more owe their lives to Assam, who should be the new poster woman for those who wish to preserve the right to keep and bear arms.

Cal Thomas is co-author (with Bob Beckel) of the forthcoming book, "Common Ground: How to Stop the Partisan War That is Destroying America"

Copyright © 2006 Salem Web Network. All Rights Reserved.
 
Amen +1

You can't put any more truth into this writing. I am a whole hearted supporter of Mrs' Assam & her quick actions. if she is not a member of this board, I hope one day that she will be able to see all the praise & support she gets from us here.
 
Well said, Cal. I reeeally hope this perspective gains traction in the mainstream media. Unhappily, I'm reminded of a t-shirt I saw a kid wearing at a mall recently. It said, "You can teach, but I'm not listening."
 
Local paper, similar editorial.

I almost passed out at lunch last night. Munching on my lunch and puffing a smoke, I read an editorial by a local writer in the Cleveland, Ohio Plain Dealer (a wildly leftist paper) to the same effect. Maybe it's finally starting to make sense to those willing to think for themselves.
 
From GOD

Everything happens for a reason..... She was in the right place at the right time and GOD was with her....GOD Bless Her
 
Note the "small imperfection" he references

The Cleveland Plain Dealer editorial:

It's nice to see a gun even things up a bit -- Kevin O'Brien
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Kevin O'Brien
Plain Dealer Columnist
When the U.S. Supreme Court gets around to deciding what the Second Amendment means to Justice Anthony Kennedy - who, we are constantly reminded, is the guy who really matters - I hope it won't forget what happened on Sunday in Colorado Springs.
What started out as a perfect example of the dangers of allowing Americans to keep and bear arms - the fatal shooting of two teenage girls and the wounding of their father in a church parking lot - ended instead as a nearly perfect example of the wisdom of allowing Americans to keep and bear arms.
It's only nearly perfect, because the resolution involved a church security guard who had once been a police officer, not just some member of the congregation who happened to be armed that afternoon.

Error! Unknown switch argument.
That small imperfection, unfortunately, leaves an argument for the people whose irrational fear of guns overpowers their rational fear of criminals: "This was a former cop," they'll say. "Cops undergo extensive firearms training, etc., etc., etc."
Fine. But just for the record, if I ever need someone to save my life by firing a gun, I'll take the gun enthusiast who's at the range twice a week over the well-trained cop who happens to be an indifferent marksman.
I've got a perfect example of something else, though. It's what happens in a place full of innocent, unsuspecting people where no one is armed except the guy who decides to go on a rampage. That one played out at a shopping mall in Omaha last Wednesday.
No law-abiding person had a gun to stop the homicidal maniac who used his stepfather's semiautomatic rifle to blow away the mall's no-guns-allowed policy, then killed eight people.
Before he started shooting, his odd behavior had drawn the attention of the mall's unarmed security guards. But since they had nothing to draw, they weren't a factor. In the end, the shooter killed himself. (I'm not naming him, so as to do my own small part to frustrate one of his intentions - "now I'll be famous," a note he left said, in part. In this column, he's not famous. He's just dead and unlamented.)
Four days later and 600 miles away, another guy with criminal intent walked into the foyer of the New Life Church in Colorado Springs with three guns, more than 1,000 rounds of ammunition and 7,000 human targets from whom to choose. He already had killed Stephanie and Rachael Works in the parking lot, and had killed Tiffany Johnson, 26, and Philip Crouse, 24, at a Christian youth center hours earlier.
He put smoke canisters at all of the church entrances but the one he wanted to use, to add to the panic and discourage potential victims from escaping before he was done with them. But there was one thing he apparently hadn't thought through. And in a land that fears guns more than it fears criminals, why would he even consider it?
He wasn't expecting armed resistance.
I'd be willing to bet that at the moment when church security guard Jeanne Assam pointed her pistol at him, his mind registered exactly the same thought he'd been planting in others' minds that day: Wow. A gun. And in church, no less! Who would have thought?
Assam, with admirable humility and without a flicker of emotion, told the crux of the story at a Monday meeting with reporters: "I saw him coming through the doors. . . . I took cover and I waited for him to get closer, and I came out of cover and identified myself and engaged him and took him down."


The reporters applauded, as should we all, including the U.S. Supreme Court.
It would be wonderful if the court issued a ruling that said, "Of course law-abiding Americans are allowed to own guns. Come on, ask us a harder one." Instead, we'll probably get the court's usual hair, carefully chosen and carefully split.
Either way, I hope that when Anthony Kennedy sits down to decide which way his vote will swing, he'll consider that when the shooting starts, an armed church is a safer place than a "gun-free" mall.
O'Brien is The Plain Dealer's deputy editorial page director.
To reach Kevin O'Brien
[email protected], 216-999-4146
 
In the end, the shooter killed himself. (I'm not naming him, so as to do my own small part to frustrate one of his intentions - "now I'll be famous," a note he left said, in part. In this column, he's not famous. He's just dead and unlamented.)

BRAVO!

I caught the into to an interview with the scum's mother on TV last night. Something like: "For the first time, ____ _____ 's mother speaks out. Also, new insight into the life of ______ ______ and what went wrong. Stay tuned." I got the impression that ________ ________ was some type of beloved celebrity. The intro almost fawned over his name. It made me sick.
 
This whole incident kinda explains why church members at my last church always seemed more comfortable when I went along on church outings................they knew I was always carrying. :)
 
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