Monday, June 22, 2009

The Belgian Corporal

The late, great Neal Knox.

My thanks to Paul Valone of the Charlotte Gun Rights Examiner column for this reminder of one of the great Neal Knox's finest short essays on the dangers of gun registration. Read it remembering that we already have defacto registration in this country and that the next steps are already prepped for the first would-be tyrant who feels froggy. The only thing that stands between us and dead innocents executed in the street is us, the Three Percent.

Mike
III

THE BELGIAN CORPORAL

By Neal Knox

In the summer of 1955, I was a young Texas National Guard sergeant on active duty at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. A corporal in my squad was a Belgian-American named Charles DeNaer. An old man as far as most of us were concerned, being well over thirty, Charley commanded a certain amount of our respect, for not only was he older than the rest of us, he had lived in Belgium when the Germans rolled across the low countries by-passing the Maginot Line on their way into France. He had seen war.

One soft Oklahoma afternoon, sitting on a bunk in the half-light of an old wooden barracks, he told me his story.

In Charley's little town in Belgium, there lived an old man, a gunsmith. The old man was friendly with the kids and welcomed them to his shop. He had once been an armorer to the king of Belgium, according to Charley. He told us of the wonderful guns the old man had crafted, using only hand tools. There were double shotguns and fine rifles with beautiful hardwood stocks and gorgeous engraving and inlay work. Charley liked the old man and enjoyed looking at the guns. He often did chores around the shop.

One day the gunsmith sent for Charley. Arriving at the shop, Charley found the old man carefully oiling and wrapping guns in oilcloth and paper. Charley asked what he was doing. The old smith gestured to a piece of paper on the workbench and said that an order had come to him to register all of his guns. He was to list every gun with a description on a piece of paper and then to send the paper to the government. The old man had no intention of complying with the registration law and had summoned Charley to help him bury the guns at a railroad crossing. Charley asked why he didn't simply comply with the order and keep the guns. The old man, with tears in his eyes, replied to the boy, "If I register them, they will be taken away. "

A year or two later, the blitzkrieg rolled across the Low Countries. One day not long after, the war arrived in Charley's town. A squad of German SS troops banged on the door of a house that Charley knew well. The family had twin sons about Charley's age. The twins were his best friends. The officer displayed a paper describing a Luger pistol, a relic of the Great War, and ordered the father to produce it. That old gun had been lost, stolen, or misplaced sometime after it had been registered, the father explained. He did not know where it was.

The officer told the father that he had exactly fifteen minutes to produce the weapon. The family turned their home upside down. No pistol. They returned to the SS officer empty-handed.

The officer gave an order and soldiers herded the family outside while other troops called the entire town out into the square. There on the town square the SS machine-gunned the entire family -- father, mother, Charley's two friends, their older brother and a baby sister.

I will never forget the moment. We were sitting on the bunk on a Saturday afternoon and Charley was crying, huge tears rolling down his cheeks, making silver dollar size splotches on the dusty barracks floor. That was my conversion from a casual gun owner to one who was determined to prevent such a thing from ever happening in America.

Later that summer, when I had returned home I went to the president of the West Texas Sportsman's Club in Abilene and told him I wanted to be on the legislative committee. He replied that we didn't have a legislative committee, but that I was now the chairman.

I, who had never given a thought to gun laws, have been eyeball deep in the "gun control" fight ever since.

As the newly-minted Legislative Committee Chairman of the West Texas Sportsman's club, I set myself to some research. I had never before read the Second Amendment, but now noticed that The American Rifleman published it in its masthead. I was delighted to learn that the Constitution prohibited laws like Belgium's. There was no battle to fight, I thought. We were covered. I have since learned that the words about a militia and the right of the people to keep and bear, while important, mean as much to a determined enemy as the Maginot line did to Hitler.

Rather than depend on the Second Amendment to protect our gun rights, I've learned that we must protect the Second Amendment and the precious rights it recognizes.
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Permission to reprint or post this article in its entirety is hereby granted provided this credit is included. Text is available at www.FirearmsCoalition.org. To receive The Firearms Coalition's bi-monthly newsletter, The Knox Hard Corps Report, write to PO Box 3313, Manassas, VA 20108.

5 comments:

Brock Townsend said...

Excellent, and hope you're better. Maybe a little bourbon and branch water will suffice!

Anonymous said...

Too bad that the Knox progeny and other fudds/prags don't know the story. Wonder if they would understand if they did.

Anonymous said...

QUOTE The officer gave an order and soldiers herded the family outside while other troops called the entire town out into the square. There on the town square the SS machine-gunned the entire family -- father, mother, Charley's two friends, their older brother and a baby sister. QUOTE

(Shuddering and seething) If I could only have lived at that time...If I could only have disarmed an SS scumbag officer. I would not even use a gun to kill the Nazi bastard. Just bare fists, and smash his face repeatedly until not even a computer would have been able to identify the remains.

I was watching a documentary yesterday on Nazi mass-executions using phenol injections. I swear, by the time I had finished watching, I would have given anything to have lived during that time period, if only just to take a shovel right to an SS scumbag's head over and over again until there is a brain fragment on the ground for every innocent life that these inhuman bastards have taken.

I couldn't help but weep, openly, after I had read this entire post.

Dutchman6 said...

Gently, Anonymous, gently. The Knoxes are coming along in their awareness of certain Three Percent truths and we shouldn't disparage them just because they're not 100% yet. They are, in their own way, fighters, if on a different stage. They are in no way NRA suckoffs like Sno-balls. Events will continue to push folks our way. Let us not shut the door to latecomers. -- Mike III

Anonymous said...

Mike, I thought I was exceedingly gentle. I certainly welcome latecomers to the party, but have no reason to trust the latecomers that were late due to taking the time to insert many knives in my back. Hoping that they may understand what has happened I welcome the support, but......does the Quisling ever become trusted??