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In this episode, we travel to Danao in the Philippines, where an illegal but highly skilled gunsmithing trade has sustained families for generations. Born out of wartime necessity and economic neglect, backyard workshops produce cheap, reliable firearms in a town with few legal jobs and little state presence. For craftsmen like I. Launa, gun-making is not ideology but inheritance—a way to feed children and preserve a hard-won skill. Yet these weapons fuel crime, insurgency, and extrajudicial killings, leaving authorities torn between enforcement and reality. Is legalization a path to control—or would it legitimize a trade the state can’t afford to ignore?
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/07/world/asia/philippines-illegal-guns.html
By HSIn this episode, we travel to Danao in the Philippines, where an illegal but highly skilled gunsmithing trade has sustained families for generations. Born out of wartime necessity and economic neglect, backyard workshops produce cheap, reliable firearms in a town with few legal jobs and little state presence. For craftsmen like I. Launa, gun-making is not ideology but inheritance—a way to feed children and preserve a hard-won skill. Yet these weapons fuel crime, insurgency, and extrajudicial killings, leaving authorities torn between enforcement and reality. Is legalization a path to control—or would it legitimize a trade the state can’t afford to ignore?
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/07/world/asia/philippines-illegal-guns.html