Prevailing Winds "For the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is there is freedom . . ." 2 Cor. 3:17, TNIV

February 2, 2011

Utah, In A Stunning Show Of Civic Pride, Picks A State Gun

Filed under: Uncategorized — keelyem @ 12:50 am

I consider that my blog ought to be full of things I write myself, and so I rarely print excerpts from other sources, and I don’t think I’ve ever reprinted a whole article. But this is so shameful an act of Official Government Business that I can’t resist — and can’t resist, in my next post, reprinting a comment my dear friend Rosemary Huskey of Moscow made on the community’s Vision 2020 forum. I will, of course, follow up with much more on this and other things, but Rosemary nails it with her take on those hearty “patriots” who embrace guns, gun culture, and their perceived right to own pretty much whatever dispatches ordnance and powder.

First, the story, from NPR:

A Browning M1911 semiautomatic pistol may soon join the sego lily, Rocky
Mountain elk and sugar beet as official symbols of the state of Utah.

The State Senate is considering a measure passed by the House of
Representatives on Wednesday that would declare the .45-caliber handgun
the official state firearm — the first in the country.

“This firearm was created by John Moses Browning, who was a son of Utah
pioneers,” said Republican Rep. Carl Wimmer of Herriman, Utah, during
debate on the House floor. “This firearm really has defended liberty and
freedom around the country and around the world. And I think this is a
very appropriate designation to capture a portion of the state history.”

The M1911 is one of several notable Browning firearms and has been used by
the military and law enforcement since World War I.

Wimmer characterized the notion of an official state firearm as benign,
similar to naming the Dutch oven the official state cooking pot. But
Democrat Carol Spackman Moss of Holladay opposed the move.

“It seems insensitive to me at this time when many people are mourning the
deaths of six people in Tucson and the serious wounding of Gabrielle
Giffords, a friend of mine,” Moss told the Utah House. “Many people have a
negative experience with guns because guns do kill people [when they’re]
in the hands of those who use them wrongly.”

Moss also described shootings that took the lives of two cousins: a
soldier two weeks away from discharge at Fort Hood, Texas; and a teenager
gazing at the stars with a friend when a thrill-seeker shot them both.

But guns and the right to own them are big deals in Utah. Hunting and
sport shooting are common, and the state has some of the most permissive
gun ownership laws in the country.

The rest of the country has noticed. Last year, Utah issued more than
67,000 concealed-weapons permits, with more than 51,000 going to people
who don’t even live in the state, according to the Utah Bureau of Criminal
Identification.

Advocates of the right to bear arms are a powerful political force in the
state, as Moss noted when she spoke on the Utah House floor Wednesday.

“When I was first elected to this office someone gave me this advice:
Don’t ever speak against guns,” Moss recalled, as her colleagues laughed.
“And now I’m going to break this advice.”

Moss said she had a difficult time imagining schoolchildren drawing and
coloring the Utah state symbols — the delicate sego lily, the majestic
Rocky Mountain elk and the tasty sugar beet — and then turning to a lethal
.45-caliber handgun.

“Guns have their place, but their place is not among the things we
designate,” Moss said.

Republican Stephen Sandstrom of Orem, Utah, rose to defend the weapon and
its official recognition.

“There’s never been a case where a handgun has jumped off a floor and
started shooting people. There’s somebody behind that trigger,” Sandstrom
said. “And I believe it’s safe to say that John Browning has … done more
to preserve the lives of American soldiers on the battlefield than any
other person in the history of this country.”

But state symbols are supposed to unify, insisted Brian King, a Salt Lake
City Democrat, who added, “I think it’s a very poor idea as a matter of
public policy that we choose, as a symbol of the state of Utah, something
that is as polarizing as a handgun.”

Wimmer had the last word.

“There is a huge difference between the actions of a madman using a
firearm … [and] patriots using a firearm to defend our country,” he said,
as he urged his colleagues to vote in favor of the measure.

They did overwhelmingly, 51 to 19.

Approval is expected in the state Senate given Utah’s gun and political
cultures. A vote there has yet to be scheduled.

The National Conference of State Legislatures tracks state statutes and a
spokeswoman says the group can find no record of an official state firearm
anywhere. That means Utah is poised to become the first state in the
nation to choose a handgun as an enduring official symbol.

Courtesy of NPR at:

http://www.npr.org/2011/01/27/133280682/Plans-For-Utah-State-Gun-Spark-Outrage

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