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is not the worst time for males, as some non-males have been pointing
out lately, through bared incisors. As Katha Pollitt moaned recently,
"911 and its sequelae have definitely rehabilitated such traditional
masculine values as physical courage, upper-body strength, toughness,
resolve." Firemen are adored, Hillary is booed. For those in
the man-hating community, the world's a bigger nightmare than ever.
Traditional
religion with its stone churches, massive pipe organs, and
a thundering Deity who tosses His enemies into a fiery lake the
size of Kansas is of far greater public interest than the
religion of the Brooklyn Museum of Art. Alcohol consumption of manly
proportions enjoys a new respect, as does the shameless consumption
of red meat, fried eggs, and perhaps a lager or two with those eggs.
The battleground sports, most notably football, boxing, and siege
heterosexuality, are ascendant. Even firearms are okay. Those million
moms are now marching to the gun stores and buying pistols, lest
Abdul come calling in the night. Those arms ain't for hugging no
more.
That this is
all well and good, and a welcome relief from the constant vilification
of the manly attributes that has marred our age. Indeed, men can
talk like men once more. When the president announced that he wanted
Bin Laden "dead or alive," the usual suspects shrieked
but this time no one listened. Most people were too busy
applauding the president. They want some special-forces guys to
corner Bin Laden in a cave and clean him out with a Bowie knife
and a Shop Vac.
But the fact
is, a fuller reassertion of these virtues couldn't hurt and
not only because it would further horrify testosterophobes. Our
national security requires it.
The fact is,
we are at war against very tough people. They can live on a diet
of dirt and rainwater. According to a Reuters dispatch from the
region, they are tough even when relaxing:
"When
they're in season, Ghulam Raza smokes scorpions. He says he dries
their stingers in the sun and grinds them, then lights the powdery
venom and sucks the smoke deep into his lungs. 'Oh yes,' he said
when asked if the scorpions make him high. 'When I smoke scorpion,
then the heroin is like nothing to me.'"
Another sign
of their toughness can be seen in the large-scale migration of jihadists
into Afghanistan just in time for the carpet-bombing. These are
serious people, and they have also bought the line that America
has gone soft, trading Patton for Oprah, Stonewall for Ru Paul.
They need to be convinced that we mean business. There are a couple
of ways of accomplishing this, one of which is a fuller exertion
of our Second Amendment rights.
As all good
Americans know, the Second Amendment grants individual Americans
the right to have and bear arms. That there is a new appreciation
for this right is not in question. As the Wall Street Journal
reported on its website the other day, "More Americans are
exercising their Second Amendment rights and arming themselves.
The Associated Press reports applications for concealed-weapons
permits are up by as much as 25% since Sept. 11. In the month after
the atrocity, the FBI conducted 937,042 background checks for people
seeking to buy guns or obtain concealed-weapons permits, up 21%
from the same period last year."
The problem
here, of course, is found in the word "concealed." In
this time of war, we must shift away from concealed weaponry toward
a very public show of armaments. Instead of hiding our pistols,
we should return to wearing the Big Iron on our hips. This is true
of everyone from airline pilots to mothers pushing perambulators
through city parks.
In fact, the
open display of personal weaponry should include shoulder-slung
rifles and shotguns, which convey a seriousness of purpose that
pistols cannot match. Let us be reminded of the fact that the sound
of a homeowner jacking buckshot into a 12-gauge shotgun is the most
terrifying sound in burglary. Accordingly, the sight of a perambulating
mother with a Remington Wingmaster on her back, and a bandoleer
of shells provocatively draping her breast, would convey a message
of fidelity to constitutional liberties that our enemies need to
seriously contemplate.
This show of
force is especially important for Bin Laden's sleeper agents in
this country, but another enemy criminals needs to
get the same message. Violent criminals, as is well known, tend
to be of limited intellectual ability but have fully operational
survival instincts. They avoid people they believe may be armed,
and for most, hearing the 12-gauge coming to life produces a Depends
moment. Yet as has been pointed out in several news stories, criminals
are increasingly active these days, apparently because they sense
the police are preoccupied with homeland security. It is time for
ordinary citizens to do some relief hitting.
There are other
ways to rattle our enemies, of course. If we really want to deplete
the Taliban forces, we should put Britney Spears or a similar pop
drone on the Pakistan border and let her grind away. The enemy would
desert in droves to get a look at a woman who's not covered in a
sack. Minefields be damned.
Or we could
parachute in Katha and let her nag them to death.
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