Should my Jewish and Tesla owner friends start carrying a gun?

Should my Jewish and Tesla owner friends start carrying a gun?

Author: Stan Hustad April 2, 2025 Duration: 14:40

Well I hope not but that might be a wise thing to consider. And I am sure that many others are doing just that. This is April 1 and I'm not fooling around about anything. I am discovering that we are going to be in for some real turbulence in life and business and perhaps we need to know how to handle things and take advantage of other things in this time of turbulence, transitions, and possible transformations,

So please give me just 15 minutes to challenge your thinking and perhaps see if I can help you do some things that will make things better for you...

Because I think I can.

Now let me introduce you to what Stosh the radio robot had to say aout the program ... He is pretty smart so take some time to listen and to read....

Should my Jewish and Tesla-Driving Friends Start Carrying a Gun?

By Stan the Radio Man

This isn't a question I ever thought I'd ask out loud. But here we are.

April Fool's Day isn't hitting the same this year. Maybe because the joke's on all of us. Or maybe because things have gotten so absurd, so twisted, that even asking "should my Jewish and Tesla-owning friends start carrying a gun?" doesn't feel like satire anymore.

I'm not trying to be sensational. I'm trying to sort things out—just like I asked God in a recent prayer. Help me sort things out… and then sort me in. Show me where I belong in all this. Where we all belong.

Because 2025 isn't just a year on the calendar—it's a turning point. A time of turbulence, yes. But also a time of transition, and if we're wise and brave, maybe even transformation. That's the tension we're living in. That's what today's "Interesting Ideas" is all about.

The Underlying Fear

Across campuses like Harvard and Columbia, reports are rolling in that Jewish students don't feel safe. We're seeing a rise in antisemitism, not whispered but shouted in the open. Vandalism of Tesla cars—just because they represent a certain class, or carry perceived political weight. And in the middle of it all are real people—your neighbors, your friends, your family—wondering, Am I next?

It makes you wonder: what would you do to protect yourself, your family, your peace?

One friend of mine—Jewish, peace-loving, and proud—told me recently, "I carry." In Arizona, that's legal. Open carry, just like the Old West. He's got an ankle holster, ready if things go sideways. Not because he wants to use it. But because he doesn't want to be caught unprepared.

The painful part is—this isn't just paranoia. It's remembering history.

Echoes from Amsterdam

Years ago, when I lived in Amsterdam, I often took visitors to the Anne Frank House. There was a quiet protest once by a Jewish group—not anti-Anne Frank, not anti-anything really. Just a plea: Let's not let it happen again.

They pointed out something I'd never fully grasped: What if someone had been ready when the Gestapo came? What if resistance started sooner? Would it have changed anything?

Some argue yes. The Warsaw Ghetto uprising, for instance, proved that resistance can exact a cost—even when ultimately crushed. It was a declaration: We will not go quietly.

But is that where we are now? Back at the edge of the abyss?

Tesla, Symbols, and Targets

Teslas have become more than just electric cars. For some, they symbolize progress. For others, elitism. Either way, they've become targets—scratched, keyed, smashed. A strange sort of backlash. When objects become symbols, and people get targeted for owning them, we're in dangerous territory.

When identities—Jewish, tech-forward, urban, progressive, whatever—are turned into excuses for violence, we all lose.

So the question I asked—about Jews and Tesla drivers carrying weapons—isn't just about guns. It's about fear. And choice. And where we go from here.

The Drip Effect

I've got a little background behind me when I broadcast, a reminder of what I call the "drip effect." Sometimes it's the little things, drop by drop, that wear us down. But it can also be the small efforts, one at a time, that make things better.

It's not all doom and gloom. I believe in the drip of kindness, of community, of resilience. That's the part we can't lose.

Takeaways to Consider

  • Fear is real. Dismissing it doesn't help. Neither does giving in to it.
  • History teaches—but we must listen. "Never again" means vigilance, not silence.
  • Symbols matter. Cars, identities, beliefs—these can inspire or inflame. Be mindful.
  • Protection is personal. The right to defend oneself is real, but so is the cost of living on edge.
  • Connection is key. Talk to your neighbors. Know their stories. Build the kind of world where guns aren't necessary.

Moving Forward, Together

These are turbulent times. Like that bumpy flight from Minneapolis to Phoenix—seatbelts fastened the whole way—we're riding through unknown skies. But turbulence doesn't mean the plane will crash. It just means we need to hold on, be aware, and trust each other a little more.

So here's the encouragement I leave you with: Choose to be one of the good drips. Be the one who checks on a friend. Who speaks up when something's not right. Who listens deeply to the fear and the frustration—and then does something helpful, not harmful, in response.

We don't all need to carry weapons. But we do need to carry each other.

Reach out to me. Share your story. Tell me what you're seeing, what you're feeling, what ideas you have for helping people through this. I'm at stan@witradio.net, and I mean it when I say—I want to hear from you.

Till next time,
I'm Stan the Radio Man
Still believing in Interesting Ideas
Still believing in you


 

 


Stan Hustad believes that building a meaningful enterprise and cultivating a resilient spirit are not separate journeys, but deeply connected parts of a single, ambitious life. In his podcast, Interesting ideas with Stan Hustad, he explores this intersection with a refreshing blend of practical wisdom and philosophical depth. Each conversation moves beyond surface-level tactics to examine the foundational beliefs and inner disciplines that sustain long-term success. You’ll hear discussions on entrepreneurial strategy and business growth, but always framed within a broader context of purpose and personal integrity drawn from Christian thought and spiritual practice. This isn’t about quick fixes; it’s about developing the character required to lead, create, and endure through challenges. The dialogue often circles back to how core values shape decision-making, team building, and innovative problem-solving. Tune in for a thoughtful exploration of what it means to build something that lasts, both in the marketplace and within yourself. This podcast offers a space for those who suspect that true strength in business might just begin with understanding what you’re building for, and who you’re becoming along the way.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

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