When it came time to cover a Second Amendment story,
this reporter decided it was time to face her fear of guns
I had a good time
learning about guns and I had an even better time using them, but I knew
I hadn't yet conquered all my fears. ...It may take me years to
understand that fear, but I know now that I am not afraid of guns. -
Anne Adoryan, Real Law Radio
By Chad D. Baus
All too often, it is apparent in news articles involving the Second
Amendment, guns, concealed carry, hunting and shooting rights, gun
control, etc. that the writer is completely unfamiliar with the subject.
When an Ohio radio show producer began working on a story about the
U.S. Supreme Court case McDonald v. City of Chicago, she
decided that she would not only use the suit as an opportunity to learn
more about Ohio's firearm laws, but also as an opportunity to overcome
her fear of guns.
From the Willoughby, OH News-Herald:
Anne Adoryan wants to help people think before they fear.
But, before she can do that, she first must face her fears.
Adoryan is a producer for a law radio show. She is researching the
Supreme Court case McDonald v. Chicago, which could address if Second
Amendment rights extend beyond federal to local and state laws. In
short, the Second Amendment establishes the right to bear arms. Otis
McDonald has sued the city of Chicago for an ordinance banning handguns
and automatic weapons within its borders.
The Supreme Court has listened to oral agreements and will probably
not make a judgment for several months.
The court already has struck down a similar law in Washington, D.C.,
on the grounds that it is a federal enclave but has not ruled on any
place that is also subject to city and state laws.
Adoryan is using the suit as an opportunity to learn more about
Ohio's firearm laws. The only problem — she's afraid of guns.
"I don't have a direct relationship with guns, and I think that's one
of the reasons I'm afraid of them. And it's one of the reasons I want
to learn more about it," she said.
This is the kind of wisdom and self-awareness that grassroots gun
owners look for in a journalist, but rarely ever see.
Adoryan's experience with firearms is limited to one time
she went rifle shooting with a former boyfriend. She said she's not
necessarily scared of using guns, just scared of the power they have and
how she would react to them.
Even after she had a few days to prepare herself, she was still
nervous when she met Wednesday with two people from Sherwin Shooting
Sports in Eastlake.
"I'm not shaking as much as I was earlier this week," Adoryan said.
"I've calmed down because I thought about it more, rationalized it more,
but I'm still apprehensive."
Leah Madachik, a firearms trainer at Sherwin, is not so different
from Adoryan. She grew up in a household without guns, partly because
her grandfather shot himself.
"I was terrified of guns before I got involved with them," Madachik
said.
Madachik first worked with Sherwin as a model. Then, some of the guys
who worked there took her to the shooting range so she could better
understand what she was modeling. Now, she's comfortable with guns. She
teaches the class needed to carry a concealed weapon and carries a
handgun herself.
Madachik assured Adoryan that the best way to beat fear was with
knowledge.
"It's very easy to overcome that fear, though," she told Adoryan.
"The more you know about it, the less afraid somebody is going to be of
it."
Adoryan talked to Madachik and Blake Frederick, the owner of Sherwin.
She asked questions about the McDonald suit, Ohio firearm and CCW laws,
and guns, in general.
After detailing their discussion, the story goes on to sat that
Madachik took time to show Adoryan different handguns and explained the
differences between semi-automatic handguns and revolvers as well as
double and single actions. Then, she took Adoryan to the range.
Adoryan fired three different handguns. She hesitated
less each time she pulled the trigger.
"You're a deadshot," Madachik exhorted after Adoryan nailed one
bull's-eye.
Adoryan admitted that she still had some trepidation after her
interview and experience on the shooting range.
"Even after the first round or first few, it was still a shock every
time, especially when I switched guns," she said.
"The more I learn about guns, the more I learn there is to learn
about guns; and the thing that scares me the most is people don't know
all of this. Even the people who own guns may not, apparently, know all
there is to know about guns.
"So while I feel very comfortable with the people who are here on the
range working with me, it seems like a much different thing to go into
the real world and function in the same plane as other people who are
carrying handguns around."
Anne Adoryan deserves a great deal of credit for doing her homework
on an issue she knew little about, and yet was tasked with covering as a
news item. We can only hope other self-respecting journalists will
follow her lead.
For more on Adoryan's learning experience, click
here.
and here is the original link.