Mythsmasher at the Movies "Pirates of the Prairie"
Recently, I saw on the cable TV network Turner Classic Movies, the 1942 film "Pirates of the Prairie." It starred Tim Holt who appeared in many B grade Westerns.
As a US marshal, he acts undercover as a store owner in a town dominated by a Vigilance committee that deprives people of their firearms and with a more extreme renegade faction of the Vigilance committee forcing people off their land to seize their property. A quick paced introduction to the Second Amendment and the Bill of Rights.
This was interesting for me as a supporter of gun ownership and property rights. Given the year that it was released, I presume that it was also meant as an allusion to the Nazis and fascists. For anyone opposed to gun control or eminent domain it will be instructive entertainment.
Not exactly a Merian Cooper-John Ford production, but pretty good from a Libertarian point of view. Well worth watching.
As a US marshal, he acts undercover as a store owner in a town dominated by a Vigilance committee that deprives people of their firearms and with a more extreme renegade faction of the Vigilance committee forcing people off their land to seize their property. A quick paced introduction to the Second Amendment and the Bill of Rights.
This was interesting for me as a supporter of gun ownership and property rights. Given the year that it was released, I presume that it was also meant as an allusion to the Nazis and fascists. For anyone opposed to gun control or eminent domain it will be instructive entertainment.
Not exactly a Merian Cooper-John Ford production, but pretty good from a Libertarian point of view. Well worth watching.
Labels: Bill of Rights, eminent domain abuse, gun rights, John Ford, Merian Cooper, property rights, Second Amendment, Tim Holt, wartime propaganda, Western movies