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Hundreds Put Down Bucks, Fire Machine Guns
CTNOW (Website of Hartford Courant) ^
| 11/4/01
| ERIC RICH
Posted on 11/05/2001 4:43:42 AM PST by Fixit
|
Once Halloween's over, there's never a good time to be a pumpkin. But that was particularly true Saturday in Simsbury, where the orange gourds found themselves on the losing end of four hours of unrelenting machine-gun fire.
At a firing range hard against Talcott Mountain, the gun-loving women's group Second Amendment Sisters offered enthusiasts and a few first-timers alike a chance to mow down pumpkins by the dozens.
Most any gun you've seen in a movie, you probably could have seen and heard - even fired - to help raise money to start local chapters at various state schools.
At 25 cents a round, belt-fed machine guns spitting out spent cartridges sounded like so many slot machines hitting three-of-a-kind all at once.
The group got $35 from Art Brickley, an insurance company account manager who wanted to know what it was like to shoot an AK-47 - the Russian-made weapon that is said to be the choice of the Taliban.
"You see 10-year-old kids holding them, and you want to know what it's all about," the West Hartford man said. "I wanted to see what our guys were up against."
Second Amendment Sisters was founded in January 2000 by women who felt that they were not being spoken for by the widely publicized Million Mom March, a gun-control demonstration that drew far fewer supporters than its name would suggest.
But not everyone on hand Saturday was a gun enthusiast.
Carol Franek of Wolcott came only at the urging of her sister and other family members. Franek conceded that she was more nervous than her 14-year-old son and his girlfriend - both of whom took turns.
She later said she would "probably not" be joining the Second Amendment Sisters.
But many others may. Lisa Akers, state coordinator for the gun group, said she's seen more interest in guns since Sept. 11.
In an odd way, that also helped bolster the numbers at the Second Amendment Sisters chapter at Mount Holyoke College, the only such chapter in the country.
Student Simone Irizarry said she felt compelled to display a flag when others at Mount Holyoke began protesting the war.
"There was a lot of anti-American crap going on at my school," she said.
That flag, it turned out, was the calling card that connected her to the college's chapter of the Second Amendment Sisters.
She and two other members of the chapter came to Connecticut Saturday for the fund-raising event that might one day lead to similar chapters at the University of Connecticut and Western Connecticut State University.
Akers said little effort has been made to organize the chapters. But she said that if students were receptive at Holyoke, a school not known for conservative politics, then they will likely be receptive anywhere.
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felt that they were not being spoken for by the widely publicized Million Mom March, a gun-control demonstration that drew far fewer supporters than its name would suggest.The truth is out there
1
posted on
11/05/2001 4:43:42 AM PST
by
Fixit
To: Fixit
GREAT FIND, FIXIT!
To: Fixit
Big Bump for Second Amendment Sisters!
3
posted on
11/05/2001 4:52:10 AM PST
by
basil
To: tubebender; *bang_list
Thanks.
bump for indexing.
4
posted on
11/05/2001 4:53:12 AM PST
by
Fixit
To: Fixit
Sounds like an excellent fund raising opportunity for the Second Amendment Sisters. The publicity alone will be priceless!
To: RaceBannon
FYI bump. Too bad the article wasn't written by our friend Michele Jacklin, but that would be asking too much.
To: calvin sun
Way to go LADIES.
7
posted on
11/05/2001 5:06:15 AM PST
by
GailA
To: GailA
This is the shirt.
8
posted on
11/05/2001 5:37:25 AM PST
by
abner
To: abner
As usual, Abner, we can always count on you to do a great job!
9
posted on
11/05/2001 6:24:20 AM PST
by
basil
To: basil
Thanks.
Thanks for getting me the job! It's been good to me.
The pumpkin shirt is awesome! I made myself a special sweatshirt of just pumpkins for Halloween.
10
posted on
11/05/2001 6:30:27 AM PST
by
abner
To: basil
bump and kaboom!!
To: abner; technochick99
Nice work ab. :o)
TC: Come see! When are we goin' to one of these?
To: PistolPaknMama
BTTT
13
posted on
11/05/2001 6:58:10 AM PST
by
missanne
To: abner
This job came to you from our hard working coord in CT--
14
posted on
11/05/2001 7:34:47 AM PST
by
basil
To: Lazamataz
LOL...
To: Fixit
Bump for the Bill of Rights Broads; older cousins of the SASsies.
To: Fixit
good post bump for SAS
Ashland, Missouri
17
posted on
11/05/2001 9:13:58 AM PST
by
rface
To: packrat01
Can you tell us a bit about the "Bill of Rights Broads"?
18
posted on
11/05/2001 10:07:04 AM PST
by
basil
To: basil
They were my grandma's generation. Unorganized, their numbers crossed cultural and economic barriers. They simply
were a part of American culture. They weren't discussed, or articles written about them.
Why would someone talk about Grandma hunting? Doesn't everyone's grandma?
To: packrat01
Thanks for the explanation--I thought you were talking about an organized group.
20
posted on
11/05/2001 11:35:26 AM PST
by
basil
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