A Madison local is looking to provide firearms instruction classes to students who might not feel safe taking a normal firearms course. The classes are free to the students to make them as accessible as possible. If you can help out with operating expenses (classroom rent, study materials, etc.) you will help build proficiency and safety in a community traditionally under served in this area.

Thanks!

  • @Wahots
    link
    English
    129 months ago

    Also queer and a gun owner, but I feel like for many queer people who struggle with depression on top of intolerance and the normal life struggles of dating, paying bills, and all that, owing a firearm would be another unhealthy addition to their lives. Suicide risk goes up when you own guns.

    I don’t even keep mine in my house, they are stored offsite because I don’t have a ton of space, and it makes me feel safer that way. I’ve noticed that it also seems to make some of my friends more paranoid when they own them.

    • @Potatos_are_not_friends@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      59 months ago

      I agree with all of this.

      I would also still recommend the training. Helps dispel the mental unknowns with gun ownership. Helps familiarize with how it works and ways to make it safer. That paranoia your friends have? If it’s fear of accidentally misfiring, training can help with that.

      Even if you don’t ever plan on having it in the house… training and education is only a benefit.

      • @Wahots
        link
        English
        19 months ago

        Nah, my friend’s paranoia is getting M on M rape even though he’s 6’3 and big, and our city has fine crime numbers. Just irrational worries like getting his home broken into and raped, that sort of thing that wouldn’t even remotely cross my mind, lol. Lives in a nice neighborhood too. Runs in his family.