Letters to the Editor Karen Webb
They are discussing gun control and Arizona, and someone says if someone
had a pistol that day, the guy in Arizona would have been dead.
Letters to the Editor Keith Kelley
Webb claims to leave “any and every establishment when I see a person with a gun who is not wearing a law enforcement uniform.” Since Oklahoma law states your gun must be concealed, how are you seeing all these people with guns? I know of no one advocating everyone and their old maid aunt pack heat, except you.
Letters to the Editor None
In reference to “Citty under siege,” I have to respond to the comment by
Councilman Sam Bowman. In reference to the AR-15 rifle he said, “This
is a very, very different piece of weaponry out there that is military
in nature and just separate from all.”
Letters to the Editor Mack Paul
Grant “Jake” Goss (Letters, “Councilman misfires with gun comment,” Feb. 16, Gazette) makes
an excellent point in his defense of gun ownership when he compares the
efforts at gun control with efforts to criminalize drugs.
Letters to the Editor Karen Webb
Obviously, Keith Kelley (Letters, “‘Gunhating zealots’ are perpetuating backward thought,” Feb. 9, Oklahoma Gazette) and Bryan Scott (“Who’s paranoid?,” Feb. 2) think it is illegal for Oklahomans to leave the state, and they are oblivious to the fact that Oklahoma law does not cover the entire United States.
Letters to the Editor Brandon Wertz
“Locked, loaded and legal” (News, Peter Wright, May 9, Oklahoma Gazette) sounds
like a gun guy’s wet dream, but it may present more problems than
solutions. Concealed carry offers no indication to criminals that they
are in for a fight, and thus the public presumption is that open carry
is a deterrent. But there is a caveat.
Western Rod Lott
Is there a title more intriguing yet baffling than the punctuation-heavy Django, Kill! (If You Live Shoot!)?
Don't answer that. The important thing is just that the 1967 Italian
cult favorite now has been unleashed uncensored on Blu-ray from Blue
Underground.
Oh, it’s ‘Something,’ all right: in questionable taste.
Comedy Rod Lott
When I think of Dean Martin, I think of cocktails, not cowboys. Making a long-overdue DVD bow, 1971's Something Big outfits the Rat Pack veep in Western wear for a comedic go-round as one Joe Baker.