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Thread: Un-seen self defense stories

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    Default Un-seen self defense stories

    http://gunowners.org/sk0205.htm

    Unseen Self-Defense Stories

    By
    Robert Waters


    On September 11, 2001, after two jets crashed into the Twin Towers in New York, the major television networks were faced with a crucial decision. Should they show the frightful scenes of victims jumping to their deaths from upwards of eighty stories?
    NBC, CNN, ABC, and CBS chose not to. Whether or not you agree with the networks, there is little doubt that their refusal to show all the news affected our attitudes about the attacks. Had those scenes been shown, American resolve to crush the terrorists might have dug even deeper.
    The major networks affect opinion by what they don't show as much as by what does appear on our television screens. Nothing illustrates this more clearly than the unseen side of the gun issue.
    For instance, when was the last time the networks interviewed someone who used a gun in self-defense? Since these cases are almost never shown in the national media, millions of viewers assume that they never happen.
    School shootings, stories of employees going postal and gunning down co-workers, and even gang-related shootings are regular fare on television news. But because stories of armed self-defense are unseen, the implication is that guns are only used for harmful or criminal purposes.
    Here are a few examples of stories you never saw.
    On March 14, in a case that seemed a natural for national news, a football star was gunned down while trying to hold up a liquor store. Derrick Breedlove, a talented tight end, had recently signed a scholarship to play for Hampton University in Virginia. Scouts were already touting him for an NFL career. But when he entered the liquor store wearing a ski-mask and brandishing a sawed-off shotgun, Breedlove was shot and killed by a clerk.
    On April 2, Virginia "Sue" Devoe was attacked in her Clintonville, Ohio home. Her former boyfriend, James Ryan McVey, kicked in the front door, dragged her through the house by her hair, and repeatedly kicked her. Then he attempted to kidnap her. That's when Devoe's 91-year-old neighbor came to her aid.
    Shirley Becraft drew his handgun and shot the intruder. McVey's death ended years of violent assaults on Devoe. A local investigator praised Becraft, saying, "It's hard to know where she would be now if he hadn't [shot McVey]."
    On March 18, in Orange City, Florida, Robert Shockey waited inside Blockbuster Video for his son, who worked there, to close the store. The store had been the scene of a violent armed robbery a month before. Shockey, who has a permit to carry a concealed weapon, saw two ski-masked robbers burst through the doors. One carried a hunting rifle and threatened an employee.
    Shockey pulled his handgun and shot the gun-wielding assailant. When the second robber reached for the rifle that his accomplice had dropped, Shockey shot him.
    Police not only ruled the shooting self-defense, they stated that they planned to give Shockey a "good citizenship award."
    And so it goes.
    On March 5, Bethan Scutchfield, a 71-year-old invalid from Colville, Washington fatally wounded a stranger who broke into her house and knocked her to the floor.
    On March 6, an 83-year-old San Antonio woman shot a teenager as he tried to break into her home.
    On March 3, in Pembroke Pines, Florida, two robbers pointed semiautomatic weapons at businessman Corey Dacres but the victim pulled his own gun and shot both of them. Dacres, who has a permit to carry a concealed weapon, was not injured.
    Cases of armed self-defense occur thousands of times each year. What is the price we pay for the black-out of such stories by the networks? Like a shadow war, viewers who aren't shown both sides of the issue remain uninformed.


    The media made a conscious decision not to show Americans many images relating to the September 11 attacks. Likewise, author Robert Waters points out that when it comes to self-defense shootings, the media's refusal to report on such stories negatively affects people's attitudes regarding guns.

    Robert Waters is the author of The Best Defense: True Stories of Intended Victims Who Defended Themselves with a Firearm.

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    Super Moderator Malsua's Avatar
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    Default Re: Un-seen self defense stories

    I enjoy these stories.

    If you get "American Rifleman" they usually have a section in there called "The Armed Citizen" that has these stories.

    There is the Armed Citizen Blog which I visit on occasion http://thearmedcitizen.com/wp/category/armed

    Then there is the American Rifleman armed citizen http://www.americanrifleman.org/Blog...id=2096&cid=25

    Both are good for those stories.

    The issue is of course that the media has a very selective filter. Three armed black guys holding up a liquor store isn't a story, it's too common. Liquor store owner shooting back is only a story if the shooter is white and the "victim" is a member of a protected class.

    The Channon Christian and Christopher Newsom murders weren't newsworthy because it goes against the narrative. Flip the races in that case and there would have been riots in the streets. Had that couple been armed and popped those savages, it probably would have made the national news...protected class victims, non protected class shooter...big news. Sadly for them they are all gone and taxes will pay to support the savages till they die in a cage.
    "Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat."
    -- Theodore Roosevelt


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