The Gun is Civilization
by Major L. Caudill USMC
(Ret)
Human beings only have
two ways to deal with
one another: reason and
force.
If you want me to do
something for you, you
have a choice of either
convincing me via
argument, or force
me to do your bidding
under threat of force.
Every human interaction
falls into one of those
two categories, without
exception. Reason or
force,
that's it.
In a truly moral and
civilized society,
people exclusively
interact through
persuasion. Force has
no place as
a valid method of social
interaction, and the
only thing that
removes force
from the menu is the
personal firearm, as
paradoxical as
it may sound to some.
When I carry a gun, you
cannot deal
with me by
force. You have to use reason
and try to persuade me,
because I have a way to
negate your threat or employment
of force.
The gun is the only
personal weapon that
puts a 100-pound woman
on equal footing with a
220-pound mugger, a
75-year old retiree on
equal footing with a
19-year old gang banger,
and a single guy on
equal footing with a
carload of drunk guys
with baseball bats. The
gun removes the
disparity in physical
strength, size, or
numbers between a
potential attacker and
a defender.
There are plenty of
people who consider the
gun as the source of bad
force equations.
These are the people who
think that we'd be more
civilized if all guns
were removed from society,
because a firearm makes
it easier for a [armed]
mugger to do
his job. That, of
course, is only true if
the mugger's potential
victims are mostly
disarmed either by
choice or by legislative
fiat--it has no validity
when most of a mugger's
potential marks are
armed.
People who argue for the
banning of arms
ask for automatic rule
by the young, the
strong, and the many, and
that's the exact
opposite of a civilized
society. A
mugger, even an
armed one, can only make
a successful living in a society
where the state has
granted him a force
monopoly.
Then there's the
argument that the gun
makes confrontations
lethal that otherwise
would only result in
injury. This argument
is fallacious in several
ways. Without guns
involved, confrontations
are won by the
physically superior
party inflicting
overwhelming injury on
the loser.
People who think that
fists, bats, sticks, or
stones don't constitute
lethal force watch too
much TV, where people
take beatings and come
out of it with a bloody
lip at worst. The fact
that the gun makes
lethal force easier
works solely in favor of
the weaker defender, not
the stronger attacker.
If both are armed, the
field is level.
The gun is the only
weapon that's as lethal
in the hands of an
octogenarian
as it is in the hands of
a weight lifter. It
simply wouldn't work as
well as a
force equalizer if it
wasn't both lethal and
easily employable.
When I carry a gun, I
don't do so because I am
looking for a fight, but
because I'm looking to
be left alone. The gun
at my side means that I
cannot be forced, only
persuaded. I don't
carry it because I'm
afraid, but because it
enables me to be
unafraid. It doesn't
limit the actions of
those who would interact
with me through reason,
only the actions of
those who
would do so by force.
It removes force from
the equation... and
that's why carrying a
gun is a civilized act.
By Maj. L. Caudill
USMC
(Ret)
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