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Mental problems of anti-gun people
By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, June 14, 2005

As I mentioned earlier today JPFO has a booklet--Do Gun  Prohibitionists
Have a Mental Problem?  Here are some of the mental  problems mentioned in
the booklet:

Projection--A person cannot accept their own feelings because they are  bad,
wrong, or forbidden so they project them onto others.  A typical  anti-gun
person that uses this mechanism might have feelings of  unconscious rage
toward gun owners, project them onto the gun owners,  then have a conscious
fear of gun owners.

Denial--A person refuses to accept reality because that reality is too
emotionally painful.  A typical anti-gun person that uses this  mechanism
might believe that the police are all anyone really needs to  protect them
from attack by criminals or that a tyrannical government  could never happen
here.

Reaction formation--A person turns an unacceptable feeling or desire  into
its complete opposite.  A typical anti-gun person that uses this  mechanism
might have a murderous rage toward his fellow humans and  then claim to be a
pacifist and believe they are "superior" to "less  civilized" people who
engage in "violent behavior" such as hunting or  target shooting.

The booklet goes on say that pointing out the mental problems to the
anti-gun person isn't going to be very productive.  What you need to  do is:


Make the person feel safe, then provide experiences and information to  help
him understand the positive aspects of gun ownership.
Be gentle.  Defense mechanism protect people from feelings they cannot
handle.  If you take that protection away, you can cause serious
psychological harm.  And because defense mechanisms operate  unconsciously,
it won't do any good to point out to the anti-gun  person that he or she is
using a defense mechanism.

Use the mirror technique.  Feed back what the anti-gun person is  telling
you, in a neutral inquisitive way.  If someone says that  people shouldn't
own guns because they don't want to be killed if  their neighbor had a bad
day, you might respond, "So you fear if your  neighbors had guns, they would
use them to murder you.  What makes you  think that?"  It's important to ask
"open-ended" questions that  require an answer other than "yes" or "no".
Such questions require he  anti-gun person to actually think about what he
is saying.

Don't try to "win" the argument.  If you are arrogant, hurtful or rude  to
the anti-gun person, you will only convince him that gun owners are
arrogant, hurtful and rude people--who shouldn't be trusted with guns.
Respond sympathetically to the plight of the anti-gun person.  If they
believe they are surrounded by people that want to kill them and their
family if only those people had a gun and they could do nothing but  wait
for the inevitable they lead a terrified life.  Invoke your own  compassion
for their situation.

Provide corrective experiences.  Corrective experiences are  experiences
that allow a person to learn that his ideas about gun  owners and guns are
incorrect in a safe and non-threatening way.

There is a lot more material in booklet.  Many of the JPFO "Gran'pa  Jack"
booklets are for giving to anti-gun people.  This one has  probably is
better utilized by distributing it to pro-gun people.   Although I haven't
done that with this one I have purchased a few  hundred of their booklets
and let the local sporting goods store give  them away.  I've also given
them away at Boomershoot events and local  IPSC matches.

-- 
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