CAJUNLAWYER
Member
I've got the gun that killed Lincoln-doesn't bother me at all.
Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus y'all
Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus y'all
In 73 recently out of the navy I bought a place in Oklahoma. The realtor
said the law required him to tell me about the last owner killing himself
as he was talking on the phone. Bullet hole still in the wall by the phone
cable, seems the bullet had gone through his head into the wall.
I told him dead people did not bother me, it was the live ones that would
cause a person trouble.
All the blood splatter had been cleaned up. I never filled the bullet hole
and sold the place a few years later. Same realtor, I don't know if he
told the buyer or not.
I have read disclosure is required when selling a house if someone has been murdered in. Yes, nobody seems to bothered when buying milsurps used against us-war trophies, anyone?
I've got the gun that killed Lincoln-doesn't bother me at all.
Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus y'all
About seven years ago the Remington 700 chambered in 6mm Remington that Charles Whitman used to shoot innocent people from the University of Texas tower was auctioned off. Bidding began at $25K and pretty sure I remember it going for considerably more than that.
It's one thing to own a gun with "history" but rather another to wantonly collect firearm memorabilia because it was used to murder people. I found it strange that anyone would really find owning Whitman's rifle desirable to the extent they would actively bid on it and pay a small fortune. The winning bidder remained anonymous. To each their own.
It's that the gun can be a reminder of a specific horrific incident. Many times involving the person that doesn't want the gun around anymore.
Everyone is effected in different ways by reminders of trauma.
If it helps to get past it by clearing some things away in your life or avoiding going back to certain places,,then that's what those people do to help themselves.
Not everyone's a tough guy or afraid to admit it.