No one wearing that shirt in public is really interested in the 2A.
You sound like you had one, very wise grandfather!I'm a guy who hopes he never has to even come close to pointing a weapon at another human being, evil or otherwise. I will if I have to, though. But displaying such a flippant attitude about a human life, on a T-shirt no less is, frankly, rather disgusting.
When my grandfather taught me to shoot with a BB gun, he put up a picture of Nikita Kruschev from a Time magazine cover as a target. We both took a couple of shots at it, and then he stopped and said, "This is wrong. We don't shoot at people. I'm sorry we did that ... we won't ever do it again." And I haven't. Not at Osama bin Laden targets at the range, not even at zombies. I don't love zombies, I just like bullseye targets better.
I wouldn't wear that shirt. And I don't think it does much to represent a High Road attitude. To answer the question directly, it certainly hurts the pro-gun cause.
YMMV, of course.
The Tea party is Pro constitution I dont see how being part of that does any harm to the 2A.
I'm probably at one extreme, but I never wear anything with slogans, advertising, or anything that would be considered a freebie or swag item.
not
I'm ^ with stupid>>--->
I'm probably at one extreme, but I never wear anything with slogans, advertising, or anything that would be considered a freebie or swag item. Heck, I even took the badges off my SUV along with the dealership garbage. I like a low-profile-below-the-radar life.
That shirt is a good way to alienate anyone who might otherwise be supporting of the 2nd amendment.If a citizen was on the fence about gun rights, and saw someone in that shirt, it could very well be enough to push them to the other side.