I've been a bad student and have been reading Unintended-Consequences instead of my International Dynamics text book.

I read a passage that jumped out at me:
Henry," Irwin said finally, "I hope that you never lose interest in your shooting skills. If we had had a fewless doctors and musicians in 1940, and a few more boys like you, perhaps what you see in these photosmight not have been possible." Irwin Mann took a deep breath. "But Hitler and his brownshirts did notallow Jews like me to have guns."
"It's kind of the same way around here, but with Negroes," Henry replied, remembering what Al Goodmanhad told him. page 150
I arrived in Germany in December of '89 two weeks after the wall fell. During my tour there we visited Dachau, one of the first concentration camps in Germany, saw the very groud thousands of Jews, political prisoners and other enemies of the state lost their lives. At 19 I understood the evil men are capable of, but it took me well into my 30's before I realized that the Second Amendment was our insurance against the government abuses like those I saw in the museum at Dachau. I will be sharing this with my family over the next few months (four women versus one man makes it an uphill battle when it comes to things they would rather not think about) and will make it a point to "remind" them as my kids enter adult life.
Great book to kick off the DRTV book club. What's next?
