Michigan’s C.O. Brown Stadium was one of the safest places to be in America on Friday night.

Second Amendment Well Armed WomanThe ballpark, home of the Battle Creek Bombers, hosted “Second Amendment Education Night,” WZZM reports.

Organizers say the point was not only to get fans to bring their guns to the game, but to also show attendees “people carry guns responsibly and safely.”

“We’ve just had this stigma for so long that guns are evil, guns are bad and guns are only meant for killing and no it’s not that” Tom Lambert, president of Michigan Open Carry, tells Fox 17.

“Guns have so many other uses, they’re a tool. It’s all about the person. Good people have guns too and tonight, boy does that prove it.”

This is the second year the baseball club has held the event.

“These are the folks you go to church with, these are the folks you’d like to go to dinner with and these are the kind of folks you’d like to go to a baseball game with, right?” says Joel Fulton, who is co-owner of Freedom Firearms and helped organize the event.

“They are very friendly, very affable. Nobody is upset or angry and nobody that is carrying firearms is drinking alcohol and getting stupid. Everybody is conducting themselves exactly the way they’re supposed to because we’re responsible, law-abiding American citizens.”

The night also afforded many pro-Second Amendment groups the chance to get in front of baseball fans.

“I think this is fantastic,” Carmen Bartholomew, chapter leader for the South Central Chapter of The Well-Armed Woman, tells Fox 17.

“I think there is a lot of misconception and I think they need to remember where we started and why we have Second Amendment rights.”

But, of course, the anti-gun zealots weren’t happy.

Michigan Coalition to Prevent Gun Violence Executive Director Linda Brundage had no interest in tolerance and demanded the event be canceled.

“I was appalled to learn of it initially and even further appalled that they would be going forward glorifying guns following the tragedy in Orlando,” Brundage tells the Battle Creek Enquirer.

“The Orlando massacre was something like 20 percent of the gun violence that occurred in our nation that Sunday. So, I think something that’s supposed to be family-friendly like a baseball game, part of the American tradition, should not be glorifying guns.”

There were no incidents during the event.

“We’re not the criminals,” Joel Fulton tells Fox 17. “This is not what you have to worry about. This is the positive everyday aspect of firearms life in America.”