Magpie
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Oct 27, 2007
- Messages
- 10,615
If asked, he may say that I don't really know his opinion of whether people should be armed. I seriously doubt he would write anyone about such an incident. And he respects the laws of wherever he is, just the way he is.
One night we were getting ready to leave a place. Dd and I went out to her car to get something. Dh and her bf were inside. There was a guy sitting on the sidewalk playing with a very large knife. He startled Dd and she ran back to me and I told her to go get her bf. He came out and sort of stood over the guy and just talked to him. I did notice he had his hand on his gun. The guy was harmless and he could tell that pretty quick. But it could have been very different. Danger doesn't just come from people armed with guns.
Quite true. I have a friend who needed to use a cane for a time, due to a medical condition. Being a young man, and artistically inclined, he went and carved himself a sturdy one out of a branch, because he thought it looked cool. He was stopped multiple times by very polite police officers who would inquire nicely about his need for the stick. They did not put their hands on their guns, because... well, that's just not how cops talk to you in my town. Even when they chased a drug dealer into my back yard in the middle of the night, and there were five cops on our front lawn, I didn't see anyone standing around with their hand on their gun. But they were certainly alert when they talked to my friend, and despite their compliments on his cane, there was no mistaking what they were about. They were checking him out and ensuring he wasn't about to use the thing on anyone, since young men in our town have been known to use canes as weapons against each other.
I don't generally spend any time thinking, "it could have been very different". Any interaction with another human being can always be different, for better or for worse. Fortunately the vast majority of humanity does not intend to do us any harm.
The people most likely to do violence to us are our own family, friends and close acquaintances. But, naturally, we don't look at them as threats. Instead, we direct our vigilance outward, at "strangers". I do exactly the same thing.

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