OMG! OMG! It’s a Gun Store! In My Town! OMG!

According to philly.com columnist Kevin Riordan, DyAnn DiSalvo is an unobservant, self-absorbed children’s book author and illustrator living in Merchantville, New Jersey (“a quaint Camden County borough of about 3,800, Merchantville is best known for Victorian architecture”). Actually, Riordan doesn’t describe her as unobservant and self-absorbed. That’s just the obvious conclusion drawn from reading of her outrage at looking up one day recently and noticing that her small town just across the Delaware River from Philadelphia now sports a gun store. And that it’s been there for over a year. Which means that something must be done about this. Now.

“I was completely startled when I saw a sign saying ‘firearms and ammunition,’ ” says DiSalvo, who has lived in the borough for 10 years and is the mother of two grown children. “I thought, ‘Why is there a gun store here?’ “

Being a Brooklyn, New York native, DyAnn’s probably more accustomed to an idyllic, gun-free atmosphere where suddenly coming upon a gun store in your neighborhood would be about as likely (and as welcome) as finding a newly established combination methadone clinic/hazardous waste disposal center had opened down the street. As the title to the piece ominously indicates, the store’s mere existence…raises questions. And more sympathetic to DiSalvo’s concerns, columnist Riordan could not be.

Firearms pervade our culture; they make some people feel secure and others afraid. Many people have no interest in owning (much less firing) one. And we’d rather not live near a commercial establishment that supplies folks who do.

But DyAnn doesn’t like what the gun store, RayCo Armory, says about her little burgh to unsuspecting visitors.

“Here’s the ‘Welcome to Merchantville’ sign, there’s the elementary school, there’s the fried chicken, and there’s the gun shop,” says DiSalvo, who grew up in Brooklyn. “Welcome to Merchantville!”

So DiSalvo’s begun a letter-writing campaign to make sure her senses aren’t assaulted again in this manner.

“Business is business, but they need to be regulated into certain areas – business areas,” she says. “This is a residential area.

“Merchantville . . . needs to wake up. We need to change the zoning laws.”

DiSalvo obviously believes that certain types of undesirable retail enterprises need to be confined to ghettos so they don’t affront the sensibilities of decent people. The LEOs and hunters who frequent RayCo just aren’t the kind of patrons DyAnn thinks are suitable to be readily seen by polite society.

But rather than amending the town’s zoning laws and changing the way Merchantville licenses and locates lawful businesses, there may be another solution. Perhaps RayCo, local gun enthusiasts, second amendment advocates and other lovers of free enterprise could take up a collection and offer to move DyAnn out of Merchantville to another town where her delicate sensibilities won’t be assaulted on a regular basis by the presence of a gun store and its reprobate customers. If, that is, they can find another town that’s willing to have her.

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About Dan Zimmerman

Dan Zimmerman is the managing editor of The Truth About Guns.
This entry was posted in Gun Control, Gun Nation, News. Bookmark the permalink.

90 Responses to OMG! OMG! It’s a Gun Store! In My Town! OMG!

  1. avatar Gunny G says:

    Dear Dyann The Libtard,

    STAY OUT OF ALASKA YOU IDIOT!

  2. avatar Peet says:

    “Being a Brooklyn, New York native, DyAnn’s probably more accustomed to an idyllic, gun-free atmosphere …”

    Brooklyn? New York? Home of Henry Repeating arms up until a few years ago? That Brooklyn?

    Yes, she _is_ oblivious.

  3. avatar GREG CANTY says:

    ….I’m sure that her ‘children’s books’ promote and illustrate homosexuality, socialism, (and other things reprehensible to patriot, conservative Americans), as “normal healthy lifestyle choices”. Move her out of the small town?….How about out of the country! Even with her mouth shut, you can tell that it is big and obnoxious words and ideas spew from it like diarrhea!

  4. avatar justme says:

    Rayco, here’s wishing you the best of luck. I’m an Arizona native, an older woman, and a lifelong gunner. Your store looks great, and if I ever make my way ‘back east’, I’ll be sure to drop in and say hey.
    In the meantime, I hope you saw some great publicity out of this poor misguided womans freak out.
    Lady, you need to take the advice we all give children. Don’t assume you don’t like something if you’ve never tried it. I have yet to meet someone who tried shooting who didn’t walk away loving it.
    What I take exception to are cars. We all know how dangerous they are, and even those that are parked COULD start themselves and run people over.
    Put one in the hands of a child, and OMG. You’re guaranteed to end up with something not very nice. Did you see the story of the guy in Illinois who killed himself, two of his friends, and a total stranger with HIS car?? Actually taunted his friends, telling them to get ready to die, as he intentionally drove the wrong way on a highway. If you need a cause, there’s one worth your time.

  5. Pingback: OMG! OMG! It’s a Gun Store! In My Town! OMG! | The Truth About Guns « NJ Gun Rights Blog

  6. avatar Jason says:

    Without our right to bear arms we would be part of Russia or China or some other more oppressive government than our own. Do you think they don’t attack because of our military or because there are over a million snipers who have been shooting since they were 5 at squirrels, then deer ect.

  7. avatar steve says:

    She dosn’t like the gun store idea, because she came from NYC where criminals roam free and don’t need no stinkin gun store. she prefers victims and supports criminals I guess.

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