-Caveat Lector-

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-000057676jul14.story?coll=la%2Dheadlines%2Dpe%2Dcalifornia

Gay Firearms Group Takes Aim at Stereotypes

* Pink Pistols members train in the proper use of weapons. They say they
want to challenge the assumption that gays and lesbians are anti-gun.

MICHAEL P. LUCAS
TIMES STAFF WRITER

July 14 2001

Tall, sandy-haired Brian Cooper of West Hollywood took a Glock semiautomatic handgun 
one recent Sunday and blasted away at
a torso-shaped target and an array of vivid human stereotypes. Cooper was at the 
shooting range with the Pink Pistols--a
gay-lesbian group that offers its members firearms training and its foes a target for 
vituperative political fire.

After sending a clip of 9-millimeter bullets through targets and into spindly yellow 
scrub at the Americana 1800 Adventure Club
north of Santa Clarita, Cooper pulled off a pair of sound-muffling ear protectors and 
ambled under a breezeway to relax with his
significant other, Richard Best, amid the racked rifles and stacked ammo boxes.

"When I was younger, I shot a .22 [caliber] rifle, but the Glock has quite a different 
kick. I have to get used to it," the 36-year-old
Cooper said, flexing his shooting hand as his colleagues in the group paused to 
reload. Barely a month old and with only 12
members, the Los Angeles chapter of the Pink Pistols is but a speck on the 
recreational-political landscape, but it stands to
challenge assumptions that the gay community is marching in lock-step toward more 
restrictive gun control.

The Pink Pistols started last year in Boston, where founder Doug Krick, a 30-year-old 
computer engineer, said he and a circle of
friends were stirred to action by an article by Jonathan Rauch, a National Journal 
senior writer and commentator who often
addresses issues of interest to the gay community.

In a piece posted March 13, 2000, on http://www.salon.com, Rauch expressed alarm over 
rising anti-gay hate crimes and called on
gays to arm themselves in self-defense. He even suggested the new group's name, which 
Krick and his friends readily adopted.
"We started out with a bunch of friends who wanted to go out and go shooting," Krick 
said. "Then it was, what else can we do?
Let's rate some political candidates."

Shooting Group Gets Political

The Pink Pistols soon tussled with Massachusetts legislators over gun control bills, 
drawing publicity that touched a nerve among
pro-gun activists elsewhere, and soon more Pink Pistols chapters sprang up. In 
California, the group has opposed legislation
requiring the licensing of handgun buyers.

Krick said there are now about 300 members in Indiana, Texas and Arizona. Not all the 
members are gay, such as a leader of an
Arizona chapter, Krick said, who calls himself "painfully vanilla and hetero."

"We're here for the purpose of breaking some stereotypes, [two being] the gay 
community as anti-gun and the gun community as
anti-gay," Krick said.

There's Assemblyman Paul Koretz (D-West Hollywood), for one, long a fervent gun 
control advocate, who scoffed at the group.
"It's a lot of hype and scam," Koretz said. "I would be shocked if any member of our 
community is a member of that group. It
sounds like a front for the NRA."

But openly gay state Sen. Sheila Kuehl (D-Santa Monica) tempered any criticism, 
pointing out that gay-lesbian groups are a
cross-section of America, after all.

"If they're simply about affinity--we're interested in our own self-defense and target 
practice and so on--that's fine, but I hope
they're not going to try to convince the community that carrying a gun makes you safe, 
because it doesn't."

Libertarian Party spokesman George Getz said his party promotes the gay pro-gun group 
in its publications.

"We're proud of the Pink Pistols," Getz said. "Crooks and murderers don't agree with 
gun control, which is why people need to
have guns to defend themselves."

Back at the rural shooting range north of Santa Clarita, where the buzz of cicadas 
rises as soon as the thunder of gunfire echoes
off into the distance, Los Angeles Pink Pistols organizer Tony Assenza was getting 
ready to signal for another round of live-fire
training.

Assenza, a 48-year-old advertising copywriter and competition pistol shooter, is 
straight, but he helped launch the group because
his gay and lesbian friends are interested in shooting. He lets the Pink Pistols shoot 
as his guests at the private Americana range,
where he is a member, and he offers the use of his collection of firearms and supplies 
ammunition.

Best watched Cooper pick up a .45-caliber pistol, after telling Assenza that the 
9-millimeter felt too light in his large hands.

"For me, it's a personal safety issue," Best said. "I think I'd be safer with a weapon 
in the house."

Sue Peabody, a printing sales representative from Valley Village, slipped a magazine 
into a purse-sized .25-caliber semiautomatic
that she bought several years ago, fearing what she called an aggressive prowler. Now 
she enjoys an outing to the range as "a
recreational, stress-relieving thing."

Not that she's gung-ho gun-obsessed, she hastened to add.

"I just don't understand why the gun lobby doesn't like background checks," she said. 
"I don't see what the big deal is to wait two
weeks to get your gun."

Her partner, Lisa Costanza, a Valley Village real estate agent, said she enjoys the 
mental exercise of shooting her .357 magnum
revolver.

"It's a discipline the way you have to time everything and the way you anticipate a 
shot, control your breathing and everything,"
Costanza said. "Some people think it's a big macho thing, but it's not."

Costanza said people react with more curiosity than condemnation when they learn of 
her hobby.

"I've never had anybody say, 'Oh my God, that's terrible, you shouldn't own a 
handgun,' " Costanza said. "Usually people say, 'I
can't own one, I have kids in the house.' "

Assenza, who spread out a smorgasbord of firepower--9-millimeter semiautomatics, .38 
specials, .45s--said he was pleased with
the way novice shooters Best and Cooper were taking to their lessons. But then, he 
said, he has found that most people will enjoy
a day on the firing line if they give it a try.

"A lot of people are against guns because of a lack of information, lack of training," 
Assenza said. "When people come out and see
what this is all about, my experience is that knowledge at least takes away the 
extreme end of the negative perception pattern."

As for Costanza, she was thrilled she could try out so many different guns.

"You don't see a variety like this too often," she said. "It's better than a wine 
tasting."

Copyright 2001, Los Angeles Times

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