Friday, January 26, 2024

Baldwin Indictment is Karma for Gun Prohibitionist Who Made a Point of Being Obnoxious About It

If Alec Baldwin had spent more time listening to gun owners than attacking them, he wouldn’t be in this mess. (Santa Fe County Sheriff’s office)

“A grand jury has indicted Alec Baldwin on an involuntary manslaughter charge in the deadly shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the New Mexico set of ‘Rust,’” ABC News reported Friday. “The indictment charges Baldwin, 65, with involuntary manslaughter (negligent use of a firearm) or, in the alternative, involuntary manslaughter (without due caution or circumspection), both fourth-degree felonies.”

X reactions were unsurprisingly celebratory, with an assortment of sentiments expressed from “Karma,” to “It couldn’t happen to a nicer guy,” to what’s become something of a meme:

“I stand behind Alec Baldwin because I wouldn’t want to stand in front of him.”

While irreverence and dark humor is not unexpected for anyone charged with negligently taking a life, there’s a heightened sense of schadenfreude when the target of scorn is a Hollywood celebrity in general and Alec Baldwin in particular, especially among gun owners. And that’s no doubt because of the prevalent entitlement and hypocrisy of an industry that makes billions glorifying phony “action heroes” saving the damsel, the day or the world with guns that then turns around and uses its massive privilege and platform to propagandize for citizen disarmament and promote gun-grabbing Democrat politicians.

Baldwin, through word and deed, has made himself the poster boy for “the enginer Hoist with his own petard,” which as fittingly noted in the quote, “‘tis sport.” He’s earned the ridicule and contempt being sent his way through years of acting like an obnoxious hothead and being a doctrinaire Democrat stooge. Some examples, in no particular order, include:

He compared Joe Biden to “the Democratic Ronald Reagan” (which, in fairness, wasn’t totally off base).

“One storm after another,” he declared, joining other Hollywood elites to demand citizen disarmament in the post-Newtown celebrity blood dance. “#GunControlNow.”

He joined “A coalition of celebrities, activists and policy experts,” including  surprisingly famous unfunny comedienne Amy Schumer “to launch NoRA, an initiative hoping to curb the NRA’s influence.”

Noting his hostility to the means of self-defense, he threatened to assault a reporter (understandable enough) using “homophobic” slurs that would get a “conservative” actor canceled for life:

“[I’d] put my foot up your f—ing ass, George Stark, but I’m sure you’d dig it too much,” the actor tweeted shortly after the Daily Mail’s article was published. “I’m gonna find you George Stark, you toxic little queen, and I’m gonna f–k you … up.”

If a prominent Second Amendment advocate had tweeted that, he’d have been booted off the platform and reported to law enforcement.  As an aside, it’s interesting how people who seemingly can’t – or won’t – control themselves are so insistent on controlling everyone else.

He campaigned for anti-gun Democrats in Virginia.

He shared a post calling for UK-style gun bans.

“The Second Amendment is not a moral credit card that buys you all the guns you want,” he tweeted in 2018. “That law needs to be rethought.”

With a history of personal nastiness combined with repeated demands to lay claim to the rights of his countrymen, it’s natural that the targets of Baldwin’s obsession would see the humor in his becoming victim of his own hubris. The only ones who don’t appreciate the irony are his fellow gun-grabbers. That was best illustrated by the perennially subversive Los Angeles Times in a 2021 hissy fit by resident snark dispenser Robin Abcarian, who advised anyone witless enough to turn to her for opinions, “Don’t expect the gun-drunk conservatives mocking Alec Baldwin to feel shame. They have none.”

That’s “progressive” entitlement. They can call names and fixate on gun owner endowments, but the minute people they want to disarm (who know better than to point a gun at someone and pull the trigger) beat them at their own ridicule game, they howl with affected indignation and call it “slimy and predictable.”

People who don’t trust others with their rights always did project.


About David Codrea:

David Codrea is the winner of multiple journalist awards for investigating/defending the RKBA and a long-time gun owner rights advocate who defiantly challenges the folly of citizen disarmament. He blogs at “The War on Guns: Notes from the Resistance,” is a regularly featured contributor to Firearms News, and posts on Twitter: @dcodrea and Facebook.

David Codrea



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