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NRA wants us to live in fear: demented,highly profitable,deeply cynical logic behind arming everyone
Salon ^ | November 1, 2015 | Firmin DeBrabander

Posted on 11/02/2015 2:14:20 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife

How we educate our youth plays a critical role in whether they are active, engaged and demanding citizens-such as democracy requires. The famed Brazilian education advocate Paulo Freire railed against the "banking concept" of education, where students are filled up with knowledge. Rather, he argued, the classroom must feature dialogue between students and teachers invested in a common task of inquiry. To put it otherwise, the classroom is a microcosm of a democratic society, where students instinctively learn to behave as democratic citizens.

The NRA wants us to live in fear: The demented, highly profitable and deeply cynical logic behind arming everyone

The shooting at Umpqua Community College may prompt schools to follow the example of the University of Maryland Eastern Shore, which purchased bulletproof whiteboards for its classrooms. Instead of gang-rushing would-be killers, as Ben Carson suggested, professors or students can instead rip these whiteboards off the wall mid-attack and deflect the barrage of bullets. Hardwire, LLC, a defense contractor based in Pocomoke City, Maryland, was happy to provide the whiteboards, and manufactures a variety of wares marketed to the education sector, including bulletproof clipboards for teachers and students, bulletproof shields and bulletproof inserts for backpacks.

In another line of its burgeoning business, Hardwire installed 52 pieces of armor in a Maryland stadium, "magnetically attached to beams and disguised as advertisements for local businesses." In the event of a shooting, the pieces of armor "would come right down off the beams to offer protection."

Naturally, this presents another opportunity to market to schools and colleges, each with their own stadium-some hosting major sporting events and thousands of people. Schools could simply start outfitting classrooms, hallways, gyms, auditoriums, cafeteria and the like with disguised armor, removable in the case of a mass shooting.

These products represent a new line of business for Hardwire, which had been busy providing armaments for the military. As the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq wound down, Hardwire's CEO George Tunis explained, his company decided to look for domestic opportunities, and after the Sandy Hook Elementary shooting, saw an opening in the mass shootings here at home. Regarding worries that armaments in stadiums or schools might 'spook' people, Tunis replied that we should think of them just like fire extinguishers. "We used to have a bad fire problem," he explained. "Now we have a bad gunfire problem. And that gunfire problem is a $33 billion industry. I don't think it's probably going away."

Hardwire's company website offers the following testimonial from a student: "The Sandy Hook shooting took place in a small town with a very low crime rate, much like our town...Now that we have [Hardwire's bulletproof] shields, we have a feeling of security... this peace of mind makes our day to day lives...less worrisome and ushers in the normality (sic) we felt before the incident."

To the contrary, bulletproof shields, whiteboards and backpacks indicate something quite other than a state of "normality." Why should it feel normal for us to inhabit a society that has all the trappings of a war zone? Does this mean we will have to contend with the various mental scars common in war zones-at least in some capacity?

As the president lamented after the Umpqua shooting, prospects for gun control are dim. Which is why the various armaments, such as Hardwire designs, are seen by some as the best option to protect against school shootings. This is the world the gun rights movement pushes on us, unwilling as it is to tolerate even the most modest gun control reforms.

To justify widespread guns, and loosened regulations, NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre declares that our society is rife with danger, nearly on the brink of disaster. In a letter to NRA members before last year's elections, LaPierre warned of a host of looming threats and catastrophes, including terrorists slipping across our porous southern border, convicts released from overcrowded prisons, and thousands of illegal immigrants with criminal backgrounds, whom our government has seen fit to release into the general public. The NRA sees reason to fear and suspect everyone and anyone. And our schools and colleges, if the gun rights movement has its way, will reflect and reinforce the all-encompassing suspicion and deep cynicism of the gun rights worldview.

How we educate our youth plays a critical role in whether they are active, engaged and demanding citizens-such as democracy requires. The famed Brazilian education advocate Paulo Freire railed against the "banking concept" of education, where students are filled up with knowledge. Rather, he argued, the classroom must feature dialogue between students and teachers invested in a common task of inquiry. To put it otherwise, the classroom is a microcosm of a democratic society, where students instinctively learn to behave as democratic citizens.

This is close to American philosopher John Dewey's idea that the main task of the classroom in a democratic society is socialization. Facts and skills can be learned in a variety of formats, Dewey maintained, but socialization can only be achieved in the classroom, among peers who are from different backgrounds and social classes. The crucial skill in a democracy is learning to work and communicate with diverse populations. Freire rightly intuited that such facility demands a fundamental openness on the part of students. Dialogue is the ideal for the classroom, and dialogue "requires an intense faith in man," Freire writes, "faith in his power to make and remake, to create and re-create...the 'dialogical' man believes in other men even before he meets them face to face."

Such openness and optimism is utterly alien to the gun rights outlook, and plan for our youth. The various ominous security measures with which it would outfit our schools send a chilling message to children about the outside world: it is a dangerous place-and, the NRA would like you to know, one should be armed to enter into it. The outside world is populated by deranged killers; everyone must be suspected. How is that message supposed to plant the seed for collaborative work and negotiation, commitment and hope to improve society, which our democracy requires?

Of course, the gun rights movement also claims we must have guns in the classroom to protect against mass shootings. If teachers or staff are armed, so the thinking goes, they can shoot the assailant before he attacks, or at least limit the bloodshed. Many school districts have followed the NRA's recommendations. At the college level, nine states allow students and staff with appropriate permits to carry their weapons on campuses, and others are deliberating similar "Campus Carry" bills this year.

I am not optimistic about the message it sends to schoolchildren, that their teacher carries a gun, or stashes it in his desk. As a college professor, I find it quite chilling to think that any of my students might be armed. I realize I likely won't see the weapons-they will be concealed. But still, knowing the weapons may be out there will likely weigh on the conversation, and possibly even add an uncomfortable electric charge to the classroom. At the very least-and of this much I am certain-armed students and staff do nothing to promote the pedagogical and civic goals of the university; if anything, they risk hindering said goals.

At the college level in America, professors are encouraged to cultivate a "de-centered classroom," where students lead the discussion-and feel emboldened to do so. This is an effective way to help young adults develop critical thinking skills; they must engage ideas quite personally, and take intellectual, moral and political risks. In the humanities classroom, we deem it our responsibility to entertain controversial ideas, ideas that are sometimes even offensive. They must be defeated in argument. But this means that emotions will occasionally run high. Is it outrageous to think that a student might reach for a gun if offended-or insulted or disrespected in the classroom? Consider that arguments between students at universities in Arizona and Texas earlier this month-the week after the Umpqua shooting, when gun rights advocates were calling for expanded Campus Carry-erupted into gunfire, with individuals killed in each incident.

Guns in the classroom will likely have another effect. For fear that they might offend and upset people, students may be less inclined to engage with controversial ideas and entertain risky arguments. The prospect of guns in the classroom may make students reluctant to speak out, and fear sounding too critical, or bombastic-or offensive. And professors may be less inclined to stoke debate on sensitive topics, for fear of what might come of it.

Of course, what's worse is that none of the aforementioned "security measures" will provide much protection against committed and well-armed attackers. How is a teacher equipped with a bulletproof shield-or a gun-supposed to rebuff someone like James Holmes, the movie theater shooter in Aurora, Colorado, who killed 12 and injured 70? Holmes unleashed two tear gas canisters and carried three weapons with him, including a semi-automatic assault weapon with a 100-round drum magazine. Should we equip our teachers with assault weapons, too, in that case?

Of course, a shooter would first have to get past the armed guard that many schools have stationed in or near their entrances-or, in the case of my children's school, he would have to deal with our newly installed Sally Port, the kind of entrance system, parents were informed, that is typically used in prisons. But a determined killer could simply shoot open a classroom window, or barge in a side door. Should we get rid of school windows altogether, then? Or outfit them with bulletproof glass? I am sure Hardwire could oblige. To truly deal with someone like Holmes, we would need entire battalions of armed guards stationed on school grounds-and preferably announce their presence with an armored vehicle parked out front.

This all sounds laughable, but it is the path the gun rights movement has set us on. Private contractors-indeed, the whole defense industry in America-would happily pave the way, transforming schools and colleges into fortresses. In the process, however, we degrade the learning environment for our children and young adults, and undermine the lofty goals we have set for them-and for our society at large.

Firmin DeBrabander, an associate professor of philosophy at Maryland Institute College of Art, has written social and political commentary for numerous publications, including the Baltimore Sun, Common Dreams, Counterpunch, and the New York Times. He lives in Baltimore, MD.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2ndamendment; bang; education; guns; indoctrination; nra
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The Left spells it out: We need to "learn how to behave;" we need to be "socialized" like sheep.

Think Global Warming/Climate Change - and Michael Crichton's book "State of Fear" - it's what the Left counts on: keeping us in a state of fear.

The difference being that gun ownership allows the citizenry to resist, to remain free from the State.

1 posted on 11/02/2015 2:14:23 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

We see the idiots in Europe that are suddenly jealous of our gun laws because their own governments have turned on them.

But they’re the enlightened ones and us ‘muricans are inbred hicks.


2 posted on 11/02/2015 2:18:32 AM PST by Crazieman (Article V or National Divorce. The only solutions now.)
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To: Crazieman
That's what global governance wants.

The Wisconsin Idea - spread through the university system and filtered down to those who pass through their doors into the Media, Politics and Education.

3 posted on 11/02/2015 2:22:59 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Crazieman

You know I knew this tripe was written by Salon BEFORE I even looked down to see who the author was.


4 posted on 11/02/2015 2:27:15 AM PST by jsanders2001
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Leftists always learn the hard way about this aspect of totalitarianism. They never seem to see the light until the oven door closes on them.


5 posted on 11/02/2015 2:29:31 AM PST by Caipirabob (Communists... Socialists... Democrats...Traitors... Who can tell the difference?)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Dewey was a Godless neo-pagan who was elated by the fallacious claim of evolutionary materialists and their pantheist counterparts (i.e. Fabian socialists) that man is an emergent soulless product of nature qualitatively no different than slugs and slime-mold. Like all such thinkers (including the author of the article) Dewey hated the idea that man is fallen, thus the possibility of evil exists within all men and women. Because such people desperately want to believe in the goodness and perfection of men they recoil in horror from the realistic thinking of gun and self-defense rights advocates because if man needs to protect himself from other men then obviously the “man is good” fantasy is just that—a fantasy in the minds of men who hate reality, especially the reality of their own propensity toward evil.


6 posted on 11/02/2015 2:33:09 AM PST by spirited irish
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
> The NRA wants us to live in fear: The demented, highly profitable and deeply cynical logic behind arming everyone

funny we didn't have a gun problem before the Marxist gun stripping Commie president stepped into office. One with a puppetmaster who wants a one world government with open borders and no guns for the citizens to be able to protect themselves with so he and his kind (tyrants) can subjugate the masses and profit handsomely off it. Funny coincidence isn't it?

7 posted on 11/02/2015 2:33:58 AM PST by jsanders2001
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

If anything, Government is in the business of fear. Creating it, instilling it and perpetuating it. Some of what this professor wrote about the NRA could also be said about AARP, NAACP, and dozens of other PC groups.

The right to bear arms affirmed in our Constitution is the one thing that instills fear in government, and that is the key here.

It reminds me of the old joke where a policeman stops a driver for a broken tail light. During the stop he asks about “carrying any weapons, etc.” and the driver responds yes - all legal. Ankle revolver, shoulder holster, side holster, gun in the glove box and console and a shotgun and AR-15 in the trunk he adds.

“That’s a lot of guns. Just what are you afraid of Mr.?”

“Not a damn thing, officer.”


8 posted on 11/02/2015 2:34:06 AM PST by Gaffer
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To: Crazieman

The famed Brazilian education advocate Paulo Freire railed............
Only famed because he speaks thier agenda. Not one of us know who this cretan is aside from the label “advocate” which in our book means “agitator” you either think like me or I will force you to think like me


9 posted on 11/02/2015 2:35:31 AM PST by ronnie raygun (better to have a gun and not need it than to need a gun and not have it.)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
This all sounds laughable

Ya think?

10 posted on 11/02/2015 2:38:19 AM PST by ClearCase_guy (Speak TRUZ to power / Tell the TRUZ / No more lies; we want the TRUZ.)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Waiting to see videos of salons security.. The security they surround themselves with... Gated homes and top security.


11 posted on 11/02/2015 2:40:03 AM PST by momincombatboots (Back to West by G-d Virginia.)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

What are they saying?

The “Gun Free Zone” signs they advocate aren’t working?

Can anyone think of any Liberal concept that works?

I can’t either...


12 posted on 11/02/2015 2:40:20 AM PST by Paisan
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Uh, Bloomberg wants us to live in fear. Fear of mass shootings of our children, and want to take guns away from law abiding citizens in order to alleviate that fear.


13 posted on 11/02/2015 2:41:37 AM PST by Yo-Yo
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To: Paisan
Can anyone think of any Liberal concept that works?

Sadly, yes, "public education."

14 posted on 11/02/2015 2:45:10 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Don't doctors use fear to promote vaccination, car makers use fear to tout seat belts and air bags, and insurers use accidents and property loss to sell insurance?

More important, just about anywhere one lives, there are going to be burglars, robbers, rapists, and killers on the loose nearby ready and eager to take you or people you care about as their prey. One need not live in fear though, so long as you take reasonable precautions, which may well include being armed and ready to defend oneself and others.

15 posted on 11/02/2015 2:49:19 AM PST by Rockingham
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Sigh.

Yet another bloated liberal in love with the sound of his own beating gums and yammering on and on with the sort of blather that simply doesn’t parse in the real world.


16 posted on 11/02/2015 2:49:37 AM PST by Jack Hammer
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To: Rockingham

Ban fire extinguishers. They’re weapons. We can always call the Fire Department.


17 posted on 11/02/2015 2:54:12 AM PST by Crazieman (Article V or National Divorce. The only solutions now.)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
[Article]
Consider that arguments between students at universities in Arizona and Texas earlier this month-the week after the Umpqua shooting, when gun rights advocates were calling for expanded Campus Carry-erupted into gunfire, with individuals killed in each incident.

And those spontaneous shootings .... among students .... were all of the participants students?

And were those outbursts prompted by arguments over the cosmological constant, or by disagreements about how much bud is contained in a kilo?

18 posted on 11/02/2015 2:56:32 AM PST by lentulusgracchus ("If America was a house , the Left would root for the termites." - Greg Gutierrez)
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To: Rockingham
Don't doctors use fear to promote vaccination, car makers use fear to tout seat belts and air bags, and insurers use accidents and property loss to sell insurance?....

And to fear aging, food, parenting, marriage, religion, conservatism, American exceptionalism, etc.....

19 posted on 11/02/2015 2:58:30 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

If Firmin DeBrabander says it, that’s good enough for me!


20 posted on 11/02/2015 3:01:25 AM PST by Ken H
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