Women With Guns Fight Back
By Wendy McElroy
Women need to defend themselves, especially single women or those with husbands
overseas. And the media has a responsibility to discuss honestly the issue of
gun ownership. The John Walsh Show
on NBC may have dealt a blow (4/29) to both goals by "ambushing"
three women who agreed to discuss their gun ownership and advocacy on air.
Their story is a fascinating glimpse into the
sensationalizing bias that surrounds the gun issue.
Maria Heil of Second
Amendment Sisters, Tiffany Hyatt Theroit of
Armed Females of America and Lisa Marquez had reason to trust John
Walsh. The show's Web site describes him as "a
tireless advocate for victims' rights and missing children." Moreover,
Walsh claims to support the Second Amendment.
Why, then, is Maria's commentary about the show entitled
"Liar, Liar"? Why does Tiffany
accuse the show's staff of "invading our lives and using the fact that
Lisa and I were victims to set us up." Why has Lisa released
a public statement to explain she was "lied to" and declare that she,
her friends and her family are "very disappointed" in Walsh?
Lisa had feared the show would be confrontational, making it
too painful to discuss the domestic violence that prompted her to buy a gun.
She tried to withdraw a few days prior to taping. But, as she explained, a
staff member called "and promised this was a show about empowering women and
not a debate." Tiffany had a similar experience and said, "we were told it
would not be a debate, just about our own individual stories."
Lisa finally agreed to appear for the same reason as Tiffany,
who had armed herself after being raped by an off-duty police officer. They
wanted other women to know their options in self-protection.
Instead, the show turned into a humiliating circus, which
seemed staged to discredit the pro-gun guests.
Maria explained what happened: "We were seated in order of our
segments — Tiffany, Lisa, myself, and then Sylvia." Sylvia, whom the show
described as "a
former female gang member who says that she is now opposed to people owning
guns for personal defense," was a surprise to the women.
(Strangely, the May issue of Marie Claire Magazine features
an article on women and guns in which the same Sylvia is quoted, "When I go
back to Compton, Calif., I stay strapped [armed with a concealed gun]
24/7." She also stated, "I spent three years in prison for attempted murder
..." There is a photo of Sylvia holding a gun, which is illegal for anyone with
her criminal background to possess. As Maria observed, "I wonder how John
Walsh, of America's Most Wanted fame, feels about showcasing a
possible felon.")
Maria continued, "When Tiffany was telling her story, Sylvia
started to say something a couple of times, but stopped herself ... Now it was
Lisa's turn. Lisa never got to tell her story because Sylvia constantly
interrupted."
During a commercial break, Tiffany complained to a producer
about Sylvia's hostile interruptions. He reportedly told her to get "more
aggressive," perhaps hoping for a "Jerry Springer" type brawl to erupt.
While Maria's segment was being taped, "they introduced a
woman from the so-called 'Million' Mom March ... During my answers to the
MMM'r, Sylvia felt compelled to interrupt me over and over. She even said that
I was a criminal because I owned a gun!"
In a CNSNews
article, Alexandra Jewett, executive producer of The John Walsh Show,
denied that the pro-gun women had been set up. At first, she claimed that the
MMM audience member just happened to be present and happened to belong to the
anti-gun organization. However, as CNSNews reported, "two minutes into the
broadcast," the woman had been "featured on camera, with her name and the
caption 'Works with teens to educate them about gun violence.'" Jewett
acknowledged that the MMM'r had been "placed in the audience by the show's
staff."
The John Walsh Show should realize that women who
pick up guns and learn how to defend themselves are not easily victimized.
Maria, Tiffany and Lisa are using the abusive incident to educate people about
media bias regarding gun ownership.
Meanwhile, Maria is busy correcting statements Walsh made on
the show. For example, he claimed "nine kids a day die in gun accidents in the
home." Maria observes that, according to the FBI's Uniform Crime Reports, the
9-a-day number includes "children" as old as 24 and more than 50 percent of
those young adults commit suicide. When you additionally factor out "children"
who are killed outside the home while involved in crime, the death rate falls
to the lowest in recorded history. In Maria's opinion, Walsh deliberately
overstated the number for sensationalism.
This is the state of the gun debate in North America. Maria's
two daughters — aged 10 and 12 — had to hear their mother called a
criminal for legally owning a gun by a woman who boasts of illegally owning
one. A battered woman and a rape victim were incessantly harangued while
Walsh's staff reportedly did nothing but suggest an escalation of the conflict.
Tiffany commented, "Whether women carry a firearm is their choice, but there is
nothing wrong with having ... an informed decision." The media should
facilitate this information flow, not halt it.
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