Date: Sat, 11 Jan 1997 15:23:09 -0700
From: Sarah Thompson <[g--m--l] at [therighter.com]
Subject: Story about Women Against Gun Control

FRONT PAGE STORY in today's Salt Lake City Deseret News

Subject: Story about Women Against Gun Control

http://www.desnews.com/cit/wag.htm

[Deseret News Web Edition]

Utah mother leads fight to bear arms

Women's group has grown from 6 to 600, plans to play big role in
states' debates.
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By Chip Parkinson
Deseret News staff writer

[Image]

Janalee Tobias hasn't checked her e-mail for a week. She cringes at
what waits -- an avalanche of messages that will take her hours to
read, let alone answer.

There will be invitations to speak, pleas to continue her good
work, stories that make her cry, and universally one question:
''How do I get involved?''

To her pen pals, Tobias is a model gun activist -- a mother who
speaks up fearlessly for the right to bear arms, the informed
leader of a burgeoning grass-roots movement known as Women Against
Gun Control.

There are other female-oriented gun groups, but Tobias and her
organization are the first in Utah to tap the promising vein of
non-corporate citizen activism.

These are doctors, housewives, secretaries, lawyers and
grandmothers who say they've realized on their own the folly of gun
control. They aren't a group of women hand-picked by the National
Rifle Association. They don't have much clout with lawmakers yet,
and they certainly aren't backed by big money.

Yet more join their regular ranks monthly, via the Internet, via
word of mouth, via gun shows. They share the power of common
thought that may be as much about what it means to be female in
urban America as it is about the barrel of a gun.

The South Jordan woman didn't start with such raw energy behind her
or even with the values she and more than 600 women from Boston to
Albuquerque say they hold inviolate.

''My husband owned guns, and I couldn't understand his infatuation
with them. I mean I bought into the idea that guns cause crime and
we ought to get rid of them,'' she said.

Tobias wondered, too, about the safety of her three children. She
was scared that her babies would be seriously injured by a loaded
weapon no matter how well-secured it was.

Change came in the form of a challenge to Tobias' well-grounded
sense of independence.

It began in late 1993 when Salt Lake Mayor Deedee Corradini
proposed an ordinance requiring a seven-day wait for anyone under
25 who wanted to buy a gun. Two weeks later, she announced a gun
buy-back program. On the heels of that came news that Hillary
Rodham Clinton would ban handguns outright if she had her way.

''I started asking myself, 'Hey, do I really want to see more
restrictions from the government?' So I began doing some research
on my own,'' Tobias said.

She admits she consulted mostly pro-gun sources such as licensed
dealers and statistics provided by the NRA, but she qualifies her
lack of broad-based study with the idea that she already understood
arguments supporting more restrictions.

Her study led her to a conclusion oft-repeated by gun supporters
everywhere: Guns don't cause violence, people do. It's as true as
it is simple, Tobias insists.

''If we could hermetically seal a city and rid it of all guns, do
you really think there wouldn't be violence?''

Her conclusions firmly entrenched, Tobias organized a courthouse
protest against Corradini's proposal. More than 50 people showed up
-- many of whom would later make up the founding mothers of Women
Against Gun Control.

''I remember at the time that all the biggest gun grabbers were
women. I thought it was a terrible precedent to have women in
positions of power trying to take away guns,'' Tobias said.

More now than ever, women should fight for the right to arm
themselves if they choose, she reasons.

That philosophy is the defining difference between her organization
and any other pro-gun group. It is, Tobias acknowledges, the
group's femininity that attracts the kind of attention it receives.

''Women are supposed to hate guns and be scared of them. They are
so visible nationally and locally as being anti-gun.'' Her group
has begun to send a message to Utah and the nation that not all
women are for gun control, Tobias said.

Since its birth two years ago, the organization has grown from six
to nearly 600. It recently opened a chapter in New Mexico; a woman
in Vermont wants to open one in her hometown, and Tobias gets
inquiries regularly about organizing chapters elsewhere.

The group's monthly newsletter, titled ''The BULLETin,'' and logoed
T-shirts are hot items at gun shows around the West. Tobias,
herself, is the target of pro-gun advocacy organizations seeking a
female perspective.

In fact, it is only the busy schedules of the WAGC women that have
prevented more explosive growth, Tobias believes.

''It's really frustrating being a citizen activist. We take time
off work, hold organizing meetings early in the morning and late at
night, pay for long distance phone calls, pay for baby sitters and
stamps,'' she said. ''It's hard work.''

So why continue?

''To me, it's simple,'' said Sarah Thompson, a founding member of
Women Against Gun Control and a physician who earned her stripes in
the emergency rooms of Los Angeles County. ''We live in a violent
society, and the police have no legal obligation to protect any
individual, therefore we have an obligation to protect ourselves
and our loved ones. Women have to know that and learn how to
practice it.''

The group found instant credibility and clout in a female physician
convinced that gun-control doesn't work.

''Yes, I've seen the violence a gun can do. But I understand that
banning them isn't the answer,'' Thompson tells anyone who will
listen.

The solution is better -- even mandated -- education at the
elementary school level, both Thompson and Tobias agree.

Tobias acknowledges Women Against Gun Control is still in its
philosophical infancy and will have to mature into a more defined
platform to gain credibility.

Meantime, Tobias and others, including members of the New Mexico
chapter, figure to play a big role in gun-related debates during
their state legislative sessions.

[Image]

Published 11 January, =A9 1997 Deseret News Publishing Co.
Sarah Thompson, M.D.
PO Box 271231
Salt Lake City, UT 84127-1231
801-966-7278 (voice mail and fax)
http://www.therighter.com

"The irresistable is often only that which is not resisted."
Justice Louis Brandeis

GO JAZZ!!!!!!


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