Women, Feminism and Guns
Irish International shooter, Fabian Connolly meets a feminist shooter with a sense of humour at Camp Perry, Ohio. "I miss my husband but my aim is improving" |
Brenda Brooks (left) enjoyed a successful international career in Silhouette competition and later as an organiser |
Is the feminist movement something the shooting community should be aware of in the context of Gun Control and Gun Bans? It's a tricky point. Yesterday we went to the range for our annual recreational blowout with a small group of old friends. Out of perhaps fifty shooters who used the various range facilities on the day, there were only two women; My wife, Audrey, and my friend Stephanie. Female interest in shooting is hardly intense. Audrey put a significant dent in our reserves of reloaded pistol ammunition and black powder and a significant part of my Monday was taken up with re-stuffing .45 Colt cases and scrubbing black powder out of several guns! I didn’t mind because Audrey cooked lunch – a politically incorrect division of labour that works for us and would probably cause doctrinaire feminists to become apoplectic! Audrey’s frequent observation that my shooting cronies are really well behaved is something I find endlessly amusing. They’re not – being a bunch of typical traditional, incorrigible and un-indoctrinated males they stop swearing, farting and belching when a lady is present! Someone should make feminists of them all and then presumably they will behave badly ALL the time!
Many American women are anti Gun Control while the iconography focuses on rape leading many feminists to complain that feminism is being used by the gun manufacturers to sell guns.
There
is a perception in shooting sports that feminists are anti gun and anti-shooting. Is this perception correct? That there is a
low level of interest in guns among women in general is self-evident but are
women in general and feminists in particular anti-gun? If we look to the USA, plagued as it is by
mass shootings, it would appear that the anti gun movement is led mainly but
not exclusively by women. Diane
Feinstein comes to mind. Feinstein was
the author of the 1994 Federal
Assault Weapons Ban
which expired in 2004. In 2013, she
introduced a new assault weapons bill, which failed to pass. Similarly in Europe Cecilia Malmström is no
fan of shooting sports and secured a political agreement between the European
Parliament, the Council and the Commission to implement Article 10 of the
United Nations' Firearms Protocol that combats the trafficking of civilian
firearms which, if used as Malmström intends, will block the export of civilian
firearms entirely. The ranks of the
animal rights and anti blood sports movements are well packed with vocal
females including Brigitte Bardot a seventies movie queen and Stella McCartney,
fashion guru and daughter of the famous Beatle – not the most in touch people
on the planet. As a college Tutor I
encountered many young females who were similarly opposed to shooting and
hunting. All were vague about the
distinctions between legal and illegal guns and shooting and between hunting
and target shooting. Ian Paisley's
"I don't know what it is but I'm agin It" rant comes to mind. I recall one Christmas after a particularly
tiring round of examinations being asked by a nineteen year old girl what I
intended doing over the holidays. I made
the mistake, in my frazzled state of answering truthfully; "I might go for
a shot". The question had obviously
been a trap one and the young woman came back with "and is that something
to be proud of?" I reminded myself
for the thousandth time ; never tell students, especially opinionated and naive
young female students anything about yourself.
Interestingly the male students’ attitude to guns was equally uninformed
as they tended to think of target shooting as an appendage to paramilitary
activity. A photograph of a victorious International
Irish shooting team in Camp Perry produced snide remarks about the “Boys” and
the “Ra”. Broadly speaking my students
tended to be abysmally uninformed on the subject of shooting with more
females than males opposed to it. In
twenty five years of further education I encountered no more than ten young
fellows with a genuine and informed interest in shooting sports and several of
those were Russian. I cannot recall a
single female with an interest in shooting.
The extreme feminist anti-gun lobby present liberal gun laws as a violent attack on feminism and women
Feminist
websites leave us in no doubt that American feminism has adopted a pro gun
control stance. The following is
typical:
"Gun
control and feminism are intrinsically linked for myriad reasons, particularly because
most mass shooters have a history of violence against women and because guns
are frequently a lethal tool of domestic violence — something which
disproportionately affects women. First,
as Quartz Media recently reported, a majority of mass shooters in modern
American history share common traits: they are male and they have a history of
misogynistic and/or abusive behaviour toward women. The Las Vegas shooter,
Stephen Paddock, fit this bill; he reportedly was known to publicly berate his
girlfriend."
So
The alleged misogynistic behaviour of a few sick individuals should be used to
justify the disarming of thousands, even millions of law abiding males and
American feminism has decided gun owners are as a class, misogynistic. This is lethally dangerous propaganda by any
standards and smells strongly of Fascism.
In
fairness a minority of feminists have opposed gun control. On Fri 18 May 2018 the Guardian whose
correspondent Arwa Mahdawi is a pro gun control feminist rather grudgingly reported; "....the last few months have seen a
spate of viral social posts by women brandishing guns, apparently in the name
of feminism. On Tuesday, a 22-year-old
Kent State University graduate, Kaitlin Marie, garnered headlines after posting
graduation photos in which she was holding a semi-automatic rifle. Marie wrote:
“As a woman, I refuse to be a victim & the second amendment ensures that I
don’t have to be.” The location at Kent
State University is particularly significant as the scene of the Kent State
shootings (also known as the May 4 massacre or the Kent State massacre on May
4, 1970. During a peaceful mass protest
against the bombing of Cambodia by United States military forces, twenty-eight
guardsmen fired approximately 67 rounds over a period of 13 seconds, killing
four students and wounding nine others, one of whom suffered permanent
paralysis.
Closer
to home, Aengus Ó Snodaigh the Sinn Féin TD has said publicly on the Sinn Féin
website; "The tightening up of gun licensing laws and the trafficking of
illegal guns into the country must be a priority for the Government if we are
to tackle this serious societal crisis."
Most gunowners would consider this a dangerous and hypocritical
deception because Ó Snodaigh links legally owned firearms with are NOT used in
crime with illegal firearms which ARE and as for tightening up gun laws – the Gardaí
in the Republic of Ireland have been enforcing a gun ban for fifty years. He goes on to state that 1,200 legally held
firearms had fallen into the hands of criminals in the previous five years and
that the way to combat this is to tighten the gun licensing laws. This is another breath-taking piece of
hypocrisy. Firstly the figure of 1,200
guns stolen is a barefaced lie and secondly the way to prevent crime is to go
after the criminals, not the victims whose property has been stolen. It is the equivalent of demanding a cut in
the number of cars as a means of preventing the use of cars in crime. Mr Ó Snodaigh has a history of very dubious
behaviour in public office and it hardly becomes him to point the finger at gun
owners whose behaviour, unlike his, has
been with very few exceptions, impeccably upright. I won’t list Mr O;Snodaigh’s transgressions
here – a simple web search will suffice if anyone is interested.
Both sides are capable of unassailable logic |
Women Against Gun Violence focuses on domestic violence, labels all gunowners as a threat to women and seems to favour blanket gun bans. |
Gerry
Adams was approached some years ago by several gun owners of my acquaintance
and asked about his position on firearms to which he replied that Sinn Féin was
opposed to all private ownership of guns.
This statement should be seen in the context of the huge number of
Protestants who, in the past, held firearm certificates in Northern Ireland and
the refusal to grant firearms permits to Catholics. Like labour in England who opposed hunting to
“get at” their Tory political enemies, Adams probably saw gun control as discommoding
mainly his Loyalist opponents. This
imbalance has since been redressed and Catholic applicants now receive more
equal treatment and Adams has been less vocal on the subject of gun ownership
since he was visited by a couple of constituents who explained to him that they
and many others were gun owners and wished to pursue their legal sport without
being used as a political manoeuvre. It
should also be noted that legal personal protection weapons (PPW’s) are carried
by many political figures in Northern Ireland and also by their minders
including some in Sinn Féin and the SDLP.
But to return to feminism and guns;
Adams and Ó Snodaigh are male and not properly relevant to this article
so where does the darling of Irish Feminism, Mary Lou McDonald, the new leader
of Sinn Féin and the woman who is being mentioned as Ireland’s first female
Taoiseach stand on gun bans? To her
credit There is no record that I can find of her linking legal gun ownership to
crime or misogyny. Her response to the
current Dublin crime wave was to call for increased resources for the
Gardai. To what extent she agrees with
or can be held responsible for the hypocritical blustering by Ó Snodaigh is
impossible to determine. Her party has a
record of not supporting gun-owner’s rights and she is the party leader so in
theory she is responsible for what the party does and says. She is still a relative newcomer but the
impression she gives in interviews is that she is a person who doesn’t tolerate
nonsense. Time will tell. My worry that Sinn Féin will turn on shooting
if their market researchers decide there are votes to be garnered.
On
Sunday 5 August 2018 Cormac McQuinn of the Independent reported: Children
Minister Katherine Zappone has said gay people feel “under attack” in the wake
of the horror massacre of fifty people in Orlando. “I think President Obama has
had to address the American people at least 22 times in relation to gun
control. It must be true to say that he
has not managed to get that under control and hopefully once again this will be
an occasion where once and for all we can challenge the gun lobby in the United
States of America.” Minister Zappone has
nailed her colours to the mast as a pro gun controller and goes a step further
than Ó Snodaigh by suggesting gay people in Ireland should live in fear because
of events in the USA. This is the most
insidious hypocrisy of all and an outright LIE – gay people in Ireland are NOT
under attack by deranged gunmen and Zappone should be ashamed of herself for
implying this and suggesting by her use of the royal “We” that the gun control
controversy in the USA should be imported as a relevant issue in Irish politics. Ireland is sufficiently well provided with
social inequalities to occupy all of minister Zappone’s reforming
energies without turning on legitimate sport.
There
is no need to quote Fianna Fáil statements on gun control – their actions speak
loudly enough for them. They have introduced
all of the anti-gun ownership legislation in the Republic of Ireland since the
Temporary Firearm Custodial Order of 1972.
Fianna Fáil, desperate as they are to rehabilitate themselves with the
electorate after the economic treason they committed against the Irish Republic
in 2008, are anti gun ownership especially if they think there are a few votes
to be gleaned from it.. The names of
Dessie o’Malley and Dermot Ahern, both former FF ministers for justice (?) will
be long remembered for their infamous criminalisation of law abiding Irish gun
owners. O’Malley has gone to his eternal
reward and On 30 November 2010, Ahern announced his retirement as he has rheumatoid
arthritis, a "painful medical condition necessitating heavy
medication". He retires to a
combined annual ministerial and TD's pension of €128,300. Treachery pays.
The
late Brian Lenihan senior was once asked by the writer Tim Pat Coogan, as
reported in his history of Fianna Fáil, why FF had abandoned Irish Fishermen
and traded fishing rights in exchange for EEC concessions to farmers resulting
in the Spaniards wiping out Irish Atlantic fish stocks. His answer was a masterpiece of political
treachery. He said there weren’t enough
fishermen in the country to elect a single FF candidate on the first count and
that settled the matter. In other words
if you won’t or can’t produce an electorally significant block of votes for the
Soldiers of Destiny your rights will be suspended in favour of other
groups. Shooters are in an even more
invidious position than commercial fishermen, being fewer in number, and of
these many are already FF voters and unprepared to change their votes even when
FF suspends their rights. Turkeys who
vote for Christmas cannot expect reprieve.
Fine
Gael are no friends of the shooting community either. When the Green Party called for the heads of
the Ward Union Hunt they sacrificed them in exchange for a few votes. The lesson is a sinister one – when political
coalitions are being negotiated and minority pressure parties hold the balance
of Dáil votes then the major parties will sell down the river any small group
that their vote counters decide are expendable.
Since shooters are not prepared to unite and vote in a block to
protect their sport then their eventual betrayal by cynical politicians is
inevitable.
Then
of course there is the anti-gun stance taken by women who fall into the
category we have come to know as "Toxic Feminists". For them, all
male physical activities are tainted by what they term “toxic masculinity”- if
it is male they are "agin it". They even raised objections to the
widespread praise bestowed on the male divers who rescued the Thai cave
children. Apparently there were no
female cave divers available but that didn't prevent them ranting on social
media about the aforementioned toxic masculinity cult among male cave
divers. There is no recourse with these
people who have abandoned all logic and common sense or even a sense of the
ridiculous. Their feminist impulses have
taken them across the dividing line that separates ideology from fascism and
totalitarianism. They are toxic feminists and impervious to logic or reason and
blind to standards of fairness. Even
more insidious than a handful of misguided feminists are a delusional few who
have propounded the notion of the moral superiority of women. Liberal feminism has taken fondly to the
insidious notion that women are inherently morally superior to men. At the
Women’s March in Washington DC, many women parroted the slogan “Free Melania,”
implying that all the evil actions the First Lady has been complicit in were
not actions undertaken through her own agency, but rather actions she was
forced into by Evil Bad Man Donald Trump. This is a disturbing facet of liberal
feminist ideology as it seeks to absolve women of the capacity to be and do
immoral or amoral things, and as it creates the framework for a moral means
testing of feminist victories. To put it
brutally this is master race ideology in disguise and can lead in only one
direction. These people aren't just
crackpots; they are dangerous. As a
veteran of the Civil Rights movement I consider myself a feminist and a proponent
of equal rights for all but I am genuinely concerned that a few have, like the
pigs in Orwell's Animal Farm concocted an ideology that proposes "all
animals are equal but some are more equal than others". And of course Orwell leaves us in NO doubt
that this new ideology in question is Fascism.
Today I passed a young mother in the street wearing a “Women are the
future” T-Shirt. “Silly Girl” I thought
– women have ALWAYS been the future. “Out
of the mouths of babes and innocents hast thou ordained strength” (Psalms 8:2).
More
important than the minority of rabid antis are the ordinary feminist women who
want no more than a fair crack of the whip. How do they feel about shooting? All hunters agree that their female family
members, friends and acquaintances tend to feel sorry for the quarry. We've all heard; "why do you want to
kill the poor deer? What did it do to you". The assumption that the Hunter
kills the quarry because of some vague undefined grudge is perplexing. The answer; "I kill him because I want to
eat him" is usually countered with; "you're cruel". Explaining that an animal felled by a single
well-placed shot feels no pain is essentially a waste of breath. I have been berated by a woman for skinning a
deer on the grounds that to do so was cruel to the animal. My exasperated answer; "he can't feel
anything- he's f***ing DEAD!" only elicited an even louder tirade of
hysterical abuse. Women don't like
hunting and I'll risk beheading by saying it jars or used to jar with their
gentler nature. It wasn't always so and
if one reads the famous zoologist Desmond Morris he explains at considerable
length that the hairy Neolithic Hunter who brought home the bacon used always
get the prettiest cave girl. He makes much
of the point that the Hunter has swapped his bow and spear for a suit, an
executive office and a Mercedes and that female mating preferences have evolved
accordingly. Hairy club-wielding Palaeolithic
hunters are out and modern hunters, now called “yuppies” are in. Sorry lads.
Target
shooting and female objections to it are more difficult to understand. Shooting is seen by some women as male
empowerment and as such is suspect. Interestingly female empowerment is ok and
highly desirable. It’s one of those
little hypocrisies that have crept in unnoticed. Like cruelty to a dead deer carcass this
position cannot be assailed with logic. It is an essentially emotional, partisan and
usually not carefully considered response.
I sometimes think it is like watching a loyalist band marching down a
street. They might be doing no harm; having fun and playing nice music but half
the onlookers are nationalists and are just not comfortable with it culturally,
historically or politically. Guys shooting
pistols sometimes unnerve women. Some of
them unnerve me too but that's for another article. Nothing is simple.
Perhaps
It comes down to the widespread perception that men are more violent than women
and that a man with a gun is to be particularly feared. This is blinkered
thinking; women are equally capable of violence (Thatcher had no difficulty
with it) but their violence is more likely to be psychological than outrightly
physical. Most ordinary people are non-violent and target shooting is
positively pacifist compared to the violent shenanigans one routinely sees on
football pitches. As for the likes of
Conor McGregor and the sport of Mixed Martial Arts, the less said the better. If a target shooter exhibited the kind of
behaviour we associate with this sport the police would revoke his gun permit
and search his gun room for "materials likely to be of use to a
terrorist". Yet again we are talking about perceptions and emotional
responses derived from biased media reporting of shooting and logic and reason
are useless as a defence. Why do the feminists
not shred McGregor for his violent behaviour? The short answer is that the rules are
different for celebrities and whether we approve or not, McGregor is a sex icon
and poor old middle-aged potbellied Wully or Paddy down at the range shooting
his black powder musket is manifestly not.
Incidentally the same goes for my favourite songwriter, Leonard Cohen
who fornicated his way around the world for years and treated women abominably
and nary a feminist voice raised in objection.
Old Lenny was sexy too!
It
is very interesting that feminists have invested a lot of energy in penetrating
previously male dominated sports like golf, boxing and football but not
shooting. The small number of women in shooting sports tend to be very
successful and involve themselves in organisational activities, committees and
so on and the sport benefits disproportionately from their efforts. If women are not excluded from shooting sports
then the dearth of women in our ranks must be the result of simple lack of
interest and if women are not interested in shooting they are unlikely to
support our right to own guns. Interestingly
countries with partial gun bans often allow a privileged few to compete in
Olympic shooting events - it projects a desirable but false national image of a
people and government in harmony.
Then
there are those appalling school shootings. So far the perpetrators have been
all male and the resulting surge of anti-gun sentiment has been led mostly by young women. These are deep
waters indeed and have led some people into even deeper and more dangerous
waters. Apparently school bullying can result in mass murder. Girls seem to
deal with it differently from boys. Bullying
by teenage females is as vicious as that of teenage boys but so far the victims
who acquired guns and lashed out at their tormentors, real or imaginary, have all been boys. The social Psychologists haven't dissected
this phenomenon fully yet and I suspect the answer will constitute
uncomfortable comment on the nature of western society. Desmond Morris, I believe, is right. We have created a human zoo where our
technological development has outstripped our stress-coping mechanisms. We are naked apes with nukes and we are
steaming at full throttle towards a cliff edge.
I
have a friend; a woman of much wisdom who says the wonder is that women and men
get along as well as they do, considering how so completely different they
are. She has no particular resentment
against men as a group - quite the opposite - and marvels at the intensity of
the male-female bond. She is not anti-gun
or anti-shooting although she is concerned for the future of wildlife as we all
are. In a sense she represents the
feminist middle ground - sort of "don't know what men see in shooting and
guns but if it makes them happy, let them at It". It's a reasonable position that accords male
and female obsessions equal status. Men
for their part put up resignedly with female obsessions with fashion, personal
hygiene, soap operas and social status. The
problem is that it's a sort of floating vote that could change in response to
events and it's the middle ground not the norm.
There is no doubt that women and men are different and anyone who argues
otherwise is an idiot. Men are on
average bigger and stronger than women and this discrepancy is what the
equality laws are designed to address.
None of this is a problem until rabid feminists abrogate unto themselves the
right to decide which male activities they will tolerate and which they will
not. The corollary of this is that if
enough women get together they can use the democratic system to revoke the
civil rights of men. There is, of course
no question of regulating female behaviour which is above criticism. The people
who have weaponised women’s rights have succeeded in creating a state of gender
near-civil war in homes, places of employment, the arts, law and sport. In many instances gender hostility is
replacing racism as a popular blood feud.
This is terribly sad and has, if anything, polarised some sports more
than previously. I sometimes worry in my
less sane moments whether shooting sports could become a sort of male
wilderness where the boys are boys and swear, fart, belch and shoot unmolested
across a cultural landscape few woman have any interest in. This scenario would be a tragedy. The admittedly small group of women who
frequent the same shooting ranges as myself are all good or great shots and
enjoy their sport as much as I do and pull their weight and more.
I
believe we have a difficulty with women and feminism as women are more likely
to mistrust shooters and shooting sports.
We have a further difficulty with toxic feminism that sees all male
activities as legitimate enemy targets. We
have not made shooting sports as attractive to women and families as some
countries have done. This is not
entirely our fault; our planning authorities and police are not exactly
shooting-friendly. On the other hand
there are shooting ranges that don't even have ladies' toilets. Killing, even when done humanely, is
distasteful to women although they seem to be unaware that chicken curry was
once alive and flapping. Men
behaving confidently and empowered by firearms are absolutely not to be
tolerated but there are lots of females who are very comfortable with the
concept of a personal protection weapon in a handbag and women empowered by
firearms and behaving confidently. Guns
in male hands are getting a lot of very bad press; (knife crime is getting an
easy ride). Here too there is naiveté as
no-one seems to acknowledge that the worst genocide in recent history (Rwanda) was
perpetrated by people with machetes, not guns.
And all the while violent martial sports and the effect they have on
impressionable youth are ignored. There
is also, I believe, an invidious fallacy at the heart of all anti-gun movements,
feminist and otherwise; that banning guns will achieve something that has
eluded mankind and his primitive antecedents since they first evolved – the
removal of war and armed conflict from our society. We have joyfully slaughtered each other with
sticks, stones and edged weapons for millions of years and anti-gun laws will
not change our essentially violent nature.
This debate would be amusing if there weren’t a quite strong possibility
that one day women will use their votes to disarm all shooters which is what
seems to be happening in the USA.
I’ve
already been accused of anti-feminist bias for the observations I have made on
the subject of feminism and the anti-gun movement. Sadly, as a retired male of the baby-boomer
generation I have reverted to type and become again the rebel I was when I was
sixteen with the difference that, being no longer employed or employable and
completely free of the stultifying effects of the “system”, I really don’t care
what anyone thinks, be they teachers, parents, clergymen, celebrities,
politicians or political correctness gurus and of late, Feminists. My position is simple: I believe the feminists are good at giving
stick but they aren’t quite as good at taking it. Apart from that observation, I am myself a
committed feminist. Fair play is good
sport but many men are beginning to realise that civil rights have been
replaced by women’s rights in the minds of some, particularly female,
politicians. During the early Civil
Rights protests in Northern Ireland a Loyalist farmer was asked what he thought
about the situation. He replied; “I
don’t understand what they want civil rights for – haven’t they got the brew
(northern slang for “dole”). Men and in
particular middle-aged men are starting to feel they are in a similar position
– that it is acceptable for the larger, more vocal group to have more rights
than the smaller group which has been deemed less deserving for whatever
reason. There are more of us than you so
we’ll make the rules and you’ll do what you are told. It’s the weakness in democracy.
Now let me ask an important and controversial question
for which I happily expect to be shredded.
Should a male voter consider NOT voting for female candidates in light
of their bias in favour of the rights of their own gender? Then there is the dangerous shift towards quotas of female candidates which would ensure the election of women regardless of ability or track record. If this situation should ever become reality
then it would not be unreasonable to say the politics of tribalism and racism
has been replaced by the politics of gender.
Or to put it another way: Is genderism the new racism? If this is the case we really ARE in trouble.
I
will quote, at this point, my good friend Roger, a fellow babyboomer rebel with
whom I disagree on many things but whose bottle I admire and who recently
posted as follows:
“I am a fiscal and
moral conservative, which by today's standards, makes me a fascist.
I am heterosexual,
which now makes me a homophobe.
I am mostly
non-union, which makes me a traitor to the working class and an ally of big
business.
I was christened by
my parents (who were married in a church), which now labels me as an infidel.
I think and I reason,
therefore I doubt much that the main stream media
tells me, which must
make me a reactionary.
I am proud of my
heritage which makes me a xenophobe.
I value my safety and
that of my family and I appreciate the police and the legal system, which makes
me a right-wing extremist.
I believe in hard
work, fair play, and fair compensation according to each individual's merits,
which today makes me an anti-socialist.
I (and most of the
folks I know), acquired a fair education without student loan debts and little
or no debt at graduation, which makes me some kind of an odd underachiever.
I believe in the
defence and protection of the country for and by all citizens and I honour
those who served in the Armed Forces, which now
makes me a right
wing-militant.
Please help me come
to terms with the new me because I'm just not sure who the hell I am anymore! I
would like to thank all my friends for sticking with me through these seemingly
abrupt, new found changes in my life and my thinking! I just can't imagine or
understand what's happened to me so quickly!
Funny it’s all just
taken place over the last 7 or 8 years!
As if all this
nonsense wasn’t enough to deal with I’m not sure which toilet to go into!”
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