Thursday, March 7, 2013

She said it!

My 14 year old  daughter, Daphne, and I went to a gun  rally at the NH Capitol in Concord on  Saturday, Jan 19, 2013.  I don't even  own a gun, but I'm a strong believer in the Constitution and the wisdom of our Founders especially when it  comes to government taking away our freedoms, and I don't like the direction Obama is taking the country on that issue.  You  know, America, land of  the free, and all the core strengths that made America great.  I made up a bunch  of signs and Daphne prepared a  letter before the rally, thinking she might  hand it out to anyone who was interested.
 While attending the rally, Daphne noticed that the speaker had stopped talking and that he was handing the bullhorn to anyone who wanted to speak.  She pointed that out to me, and soon  she went over to the Capitol steps, got in line, and waited for her turn.  After fighting her way to the  front of the line, she stood there, on the  steps of the NH State Capitol, and  read a shorter version of the letter below.  She brought the  house  down.  After the cheers had died down, dozens of people shook her hand and congratulated her.  A couple of reporters interviewed her briefly and other photographers took her picture.  Just before she left, a representative from the New Hampshire Assembly talked to her and asked if she could come and speak at a hearing on gun control on Tuesday, Jan 22, 2013.  Daphne  said, Sure. 
 On Tuesday, we  picked her up from school at 12:00 noon and  drove to Concord.  We found our way to the Legislative Assembly Hall, Room 204.  The room was packed and there was a line down the hall and around two corners.  Soon, they  moved the meeting to another room.  The second room also  proved too small.  Finally, they sent us across the street, up to the large chamber in the Capitol Building. 
 The room was near capacity.  About ninety-five percent of the people were pro 2nd Amendment  rights.  The Representatives and PACs got to speak first, then the common folk.  Daphne was in the first 10 folks to speak who were not representing a group.  She was  poised, though a little nervous, and spoke clearly to the  crowd. When she was done, she brought a copy of her speech to the front of the chamber where the  representatives were sitting, and they fought over who  would get to take it from her.  The moderator had previously  
silenced the hall from cheering or clapping, but people told her they would have cheered if they could, as they  shook her hand on the way out.  The whole  proceeding took more than 3 hours.
 
TRANSCRIPT:  
Delivered to the New Hampshire Legislative Assembly 
January 22, 2013 

Dear citizens of New Hampshire, 
Four days ago, I was across the street for a gun rally on the steps of the Capitol. 
I had never been to a gun rally before.  I expected it to be all about hunters and guns.  I was surprised:  People were not afraid of not being able to hunt.  They were not afraid of criminals at all.  Do you know who they were afraid of?  The Federal Government.  I was shocked.  They were afraid of the government taking away their freedoms. 
 The reason I went to the rally in the first place was that I heard children, like me, talking with President Obama about guns on the radio.  I think those kids were far too young to make policy, and got it all wrong.  Naturally, I don't want my mom or dad to die either, nor my friends or family.  But I learned in school that the First Amendment gives us our Basic Freedoms, like  Freedom of Speech, Freedom of Religion and Freedom to Assemble.  To protect our God-given rights, our Founders gave us the 2nd Amendment:  The  Right to Bear Arms. 
 My Civics teacher taught us that the reason our Founding Fathers gave us the right to bear arms is to protect ourselves from the government of man, because when man is given absolute power, he becomes absolutely corrupt.  In 1776, guns freed us from  the abuses of King George.  Today, guns keep us free from tyranny by government. 
 If President Obama wants to take our guns, isn't he taking away our means to protect our right to freedom?  Wasn't the 2nd Amendment given to us to protect our 1st Amendment rights?  It's not by chance that those are the first two amendments.  They were the two most important gifts our Founders gave the American  people.  I don't know.  I'm just a 14 year old girl, and that's what I thought I learned in school.  Did Mr. Obama  learn something different in school than that? 
I think it is terrible for someone to use a national tragedy for political gain, don't you?  So, when I heard Mr. Obama issued 23 gun control orders in the wake of the Newtown tragedy, I was upset.  In school I was taught executive means to  execute laws  -- not make them.  When did that change? 
 Didn't the  president swear an oath to uphold the U.S. Constitution?  Doesn't  the 2nd Amendment state:  "the right for people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed."   Tell me how 23 orders on gun control is not an infringement.  Can someone please tell me that?  Has King George returned?
 I hope New Hampshire members of congress remember their pledge and do not use this tragedy to create unjust laws.  So, I ask  myself, what gun would our Founders want their citizen militia to have today to protect us from a government greedy for power. 
 I think Thomas Jefferson would recommend a semi-automatic rifle with 50-round clips, and pistols that hold 20.  But, I'm sure George Washington would demand these arms.  Just so you know, I don't even own a gun, nor does my mom, or dad.  But when I'm old enough, I  want the right to buy a gun if I want to, so I can protect the America that I love.  I hope I never need one, but I  always say, "plan for the worst and hope for the best".  Unfortunately, that's  sort of why the government is taking away our guns:  they are planning for the  worst  Americans, and not  thinking of the best. 
 Maybe the question we should be asking is what caused the morality of the United States to decay?  Are parents no longer teaching their kids"thou shalt not kill?" 
I  want to live in an America with laws that protect the best people on Earth,  not the worst, don't you?  Wouldn't that be more free?  Wouldn't that  be more   American?  Isn't freedom what America is all about?  
The right to bear arms is  our best guarantee to live free. 
 Finally, at my track meet at UNH on Sunday, I read the banner on the wall. 
It said three  words:  Tradition.  Pride.  Excellence. 
 I hope and pray that New Hampshire will continue its tradition of  excellence and lead the way for the rest of the county, and never infringe on  my rights. 
 May the people of the great state of New  Hampshire carry on their long tradition of freedom, so we can proclaim with pride the words our forefathers gave us:
Live Free or Die!  
 This is our United  States.  This is our New Hampshire.  And that should never change.   Live Free or Die, New Hampshire! 
 Thank you,  
Daphne Jordan  
Nottingham, NH

No comments:

Post a Comment