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Black Crawling Systems Archive Release 1.0 (L0pht Heavy Industries, Inc.)(1997).ISO
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Armed_and_Female.txt
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1996-07-08
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From the Radio Free Michigan archives
ftp://141.209.3.26/pub/patriot
If you have any other files you'd like to contribute, e-mail them to
bj496@Cleveland.Freenet.Edu.
------------------------------------------------
The following appeared in the 2 April 1991, Rochester Democrat:
'ARMED AND FEMALE' by JIM CASTOR
Tom Brokaw introduced millions of listeners to his featured guest on the
''NBC Nightly News'' recently by firing off this salute: ''Twelve million
women are gun owners, and they're finding a guru named Paxton Quigley. Her
message is being heard.''
An expert in personal protection and author of the book ''Armed and
Female'' (St. Martin's Press), she says she is fighting back against the fear
of crime with a crusade to help the millions of women who ''have a great,
great concern about their safety and their vulnerability.''
Statistics show that by age 30, a U.S. woman has a 50-50 chance of being
criminally attacked. Six of 10 women are afraid to walk at night in their
neighborhood.
Quigley's message: ''Most women should own handguns and know how to shoot
to stop an attacker in their home.'' That's handgun. Not hand combat. Not
martial arts. Not Mace. Not stun guns. Not bobby pins, hatpins, nailfiles or
even passive non-resistance.
But Smith and Wesson ... Beretta ... Sig Sauer ... Heckler and Koch. She
readily admits that anyone who is not willing to take on the responsibility
of being responsible with a gun - learning how to use it and store it safely -
should not own one.
But there are an estimated 70 million gun owners of some 200 million
firearms in the United States. One of every two households has at least one
gun. Quigley says using one for deadly force in self defense is embarking on
delicate legal ground, and she doesn't condone illegal possession.
Yet she knows hundreds of women who are willing to take the risks. As she
writes in her book, published in hardcover in 1989 and re-issued last month
in paperback, ''I have always recognized in me a deep, almost animal-like
rage capable of causing me to do anything ... even kill, to protect my
children. ''If you recognize this kind of instinct in yourself ... you should
learn self-defense with a gun and be willing to shoot to stop an
attacker.''
She says she has not had to use such force (''thank God''), but keeps a
gun at home and shoots on the range at least once a month to be ready. ''The
only deterrent that is universally respected by every aggressor,'' she says,
''is the gun.''
As her good friend and business acquaintance, Martha Braunig, says,
Quigley is ''enormously determined'' to spread the word. After years as a
political activist and adamant anti-gun proponent with the National Committee
for Handgun Control, fear of crime changed Quigley's mind. ''I had a total
reversal several years ago,'' Quigley says, ''and it really came as a
surprise to me.'' She was with a friend who had stopped at a gun shop in
Hailey, Idaho. As an offhand remark, she asked the owner if he had a handgun
that might be good for self defense.
Suddenly she paused. ''What am I saying?'' she recalls. ''Was I mad? It
was the first time I had confronted a fear I had. Like a light being switched
on. ''I felt so strongly about it, I decided it was time in my life, and
perhaps in society, for me and other women to learn to shoot a gun.''
''Once she makes up her mind to do something, she knows no fear. Right
from the git-go she began planning to write the book, and how to promote it.
She's enormously attractive, very bright and energetic, says Braunig.
...
After Robert Kennedy's assassination in 1968, Quigley was convinced
handgun control was the answer to crime. ''I was always politically active,
but brought up as a non-violent person.'' She worked diligently for anti-gun
legislation. ''But crime kept increasing,'' she says. ''Cities with the most
stringent anti-gun laws also had the highest violent crime rates. It wasn't
the answer.''
...
''I was seduced by the weather to move to California,'' she said. Calling
herself unmarried instead of divorced, 39, and with two teen-age sons (''they
have no interest in guns''), she says she's having ''the most wonderful time
of my life teaching women how to protect themselves.''
------------------------------------------------
(This file was found elsewhere on the Internet and uploaded to the
Radio Free Michigan archives by the archive maintainer.
All files are ZIP archives for fast download.
E-mail bj496@Cleveland.Freenet.Edu)