Who knew...Harry Potter supports guns and Libertarianism...

2aguy

Diamond Member
Jul 19, 2014
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This is a great little article.......

However, given the often ethereal and intangible nature of these themes, combined with the overutilization of Harry Potter fans to cite these novels for political points, the real tangible lessons of the literary series are too often overlooked: the right to keep and bear arms, as well as maintaining a small-L libertarian perspective towards government.

One doesn’t need to dig deep into the lore of Harry Potter to know that these two concepts are not only prevalent throughout the book series, but also are easily transferred to a real-world context. For the uninitiated, Harry Potter is set in a universe wherein everyone and their mums are packing heat in the form of a magic wand. These magical apparatuses serve as a locus to channel a witch or wizard’s magical powers, which allow the user to do everything from simple tasks to straight up murdering people with a whisper of a few words and a flick of their wrist.

Given the obvious dangers present within the Wizarding World, children the age of an elementary school student are not only given these incredibly powerful tools as a matter of course, but are also taught from the get-go to use them against those who would seek to do them harm (the so-called “Defense Against the Dark Arts”).
If one doesn’t see an obvious parallel (and potential policy prescriptions) to our robust Second Amendment culture, then may I make the recommendation that a stop at the optometrist may be in order.
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In a similar vein, the Harry Potter universe is replete with example after example of abject governmental failures. At the local level, the administrative body running Hogwarts (the school where our protagonists find their instruction) constantly and consistently fail not only to protect their pupils for existential threats, but actually encourage their underaged students to seek out threats that place these pupils is situations where significant bodily harm or death is expected.

In parallel fashion, the government responsible for the entire wizarding community is stocked with career bureaucrats who fill needless roles and accomplish little. The whole fifth novel in the series punches this point home by developing a narrative that demonstrates that even a trusted government is prone to use propaganda, stifle free speech and even put a teenage boy on trial for his “lies” so long as they never have to address a real and persistent threat to their constituents. Familiarities abound.
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Without a doubt, Harry Potter stands as one of the most pro-gun pieces of fiction written in the last half a century.

That it took over 20 years for someone to point out is the real surprise. Similarly, the series demonstrates to the reader that a healthy skepticism of those in power is not only a nicety, but a necessity.



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So the wand is the metaphor for the gun?

But even there, some restrictions and sets of rules exist. Like, some curses are forbidden


And that Malfoy guy and the Death Eaters obeyed those rules?
 
Malfoy wasn’t.

And Malfoy jr. became a respectable dad.

So maybe Rowling explored the theme of redemption in her stories.


Yeah.....and?

The bad guys were still defeated using weapons.......

Freedom is protected by armed citizens.......and Harry Potter is just another story showing this.
 
Freedom is protected by armed citizens.......and Harry Potter is just another story showing this.

That’s okay. I see that now.

Tolkien brought it home quite vividly. “The weakness of men”.


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