Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Worker Goes Postal Despite Signs

A female ex-postal worker opened fire at a mail processing plant, killing six people and critically wounding another before committing suicide, authorities said early Tuesday.
What the hell's the matter with some people? Can't they read?



[Thanks to HZ]

We're the Only Ones Registered Enough

The handgun used in a double-homicide and suicide was once owned by the police, but how it wound up in the hands of the man blamed for the shooting cannot be conclusively established, investigators say.
Yeah, a national gun registry--that'll solve everything...

Y'know, contrary to appearances, I never set out looking for "We're the only ones..." stories to post, and don't even use the word "police" as a news search term when seeking material to post and comment on.

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How Do You Say "We're the Only Ones" in Portuguese?

Within minutes five residents – among them three boys under the age of 15 – lay dead. The weathered cement walls outside the bar were pockmarked with gunshots and the pavement covered in a thick coat of blood.

"It was an execution," one man who was in the bar at the time but was too scared to be identified told Toward Freedom.
And the executioners?

Why, the only ones, of course.

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We're the Only Ones Sporting Enough...

Fairfax County's police chief said yesterday that one of his officers accidentally shot and killed an optometrist outside the unarmed man's townhouse Tuesday night as an undercover detective was about to arrest him on suspicion of gambling on sports...

"As they approached him . . . one officer's weapon, a handgun, was unintentionally discharged," said Fairfax Police Chief David M. Rohrer.
Well, it's not like he was a productive citizen or anything, and he was breaking the law...that gambling between consenting adults--now that's something I want government resources used to crush.

Here's something else I always look for in stories like this, and WaPo is true to form:
The officer, a 17-year veteran assigned to the police tactical unit, was not identified.
Why the hell not? If you or I killed an unarmed man, do you think our names would be shielded by the police and by the press? Do you think we'd be place on leave with pay, and described as "valued"?

Lt. Richard Perez, a police spokesman, said he could not say how or why the gun discharged.
Gee, Dick, let me take a wild guess. It couldn't have anything to do with Officer Secret Identity having his finger on the trigger, could it?

If he really is the trained veteran being described, the only doubt this casts is on the accidental nature of this obscenity.

[Thanks to straightarrow]

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We're the On...Yes, Again...

A case of theft hit close to home for Bloomington police after guns and other gear were stolen from a police officer's car.

Bloomington police are passing around copies of a photograph showing the kinds of equipment someone grabbed from an officer's car.

"Really, I think it should bother everybody. It gives someone a definite advantage with a gun, radio, handcuffs and a badge," said Gene Perkins, Bloomington resident...

"I think it's just dangerous for people to have guns like that in the possession of police on the street to start with," said Staci Leavitt, university student.
The funny thing is, Staci, I agree with that statement.

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We're the Only...Not AGAIN...

A Tampa police officer lost his 9 mm handgun, Taser, laptop computer and gun belt when someone stole his patrol car from his Manatee County house this weekend, officials said.

The Manatee County Sheriff's Office speculated Monday that whoever stole Tampa police Officer Roderick Glyder's car and gear also swiped a patrol car belonging to a Sarasota police officer, who lost an AR-15 rifle that was in the car. Manatee deputies recovered both cars, although not the equipment, within a few blocks of each other, Manatee sheriff's spokesman Dave Bristow said.
So it's happened TWICE now. Yeah, that's been a constant problem for me and every gun owner I know, too--always leaving our guns in our cars, because, face it, we're just not professional enough.

Maybe the Tampa and Sarasota PD's should hold a "buyback to get dangerous guns off the street."

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Safety First

Police said Shamia Johnson is facing several charges after she shot her grandfather, pointed a gun at a driver, and caused two hit-and-run accidents.

Despite the laws Johnson was breaking, at no time did police engage her in a chase...Deputy Chief Dave Stephens said the department's policy didn't allow for a chase in this case.

"Our policy regarding pursuits allows the pursuit only in a situation of a felony dangerous to life," he said...

"That policy has been enacted for the protection of public safety because the risk of pursuit far outweighs the benefit from arresting the person," said Stephens.
Yeah, that's why they waited around at Columbine, too. For our safety.

"Public safety" is the stated reason for every "gun control" edict on the books. Somehow, I don't feel safer.

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Monday, January 30, 2006

Is "The Time" Approaching?

Good opinion piece from Kathryn A. Graham.

With all due respect, I strongly disagree with this assertion:
The defender always has the tactical advantage.
Not always, Ms. Graham. Only when moves are telegraphed.

[Via Rational Review]

Police Chiefs Still Support Gun Registry

Of course they do.

And have no doubts they'll also support confiscating those registered guns when the orders come down.

Because they're the only ones professional enough...

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We're the Only...Hey, What the Hell You Lookin' At?

St. Paul police are rethinking their policies allowing undercover officers to drink on the job after a decorated officer was shot to death outside of a bar...When he was killed, Vick's blood-alcohol level was 0.20 percent -- twice the legal limit for driving at that time. Since the defense raised questions about Vick's partner carrying a firearm while consuming alcohol, Harrington said the department is examining that policy...Vick and his partner, Sgt. Joe Strong, were investigating prostitution when they confronted two men outside a bar on St. Paul's East Side. The argument escalated to a shooting in a nearby alley that killed Vick.

On Friday, Harry Evans was convicted of first-degree murder in Vick's death and sentenced to life in prison without possibility of parole.

Another drunken cop shooting story? Any bets on the outcome if Vick had shot first and Evans was the one killed?

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Happy Birthday to Me...


...or more accurately to The War on Guns: Notes from the Resistance, which made its debut one year ago today.

Sunday, January 29, 2006

Talk About Picking and Choosing...

Google, the giant internet search company, is to lead industry opposition to new proposals from the European Commission to regulate online content.

The company, which last week said it would self-censor its Chinese search engine to appease the country's government, objects to the commission's proposals to extend regulations in the Television Without Frontiers directive (TWFD) to cover video content shown on the internet.
I guess if everyone sees you back down from a tough bully, picking a fight with the pudgy kid is one way of trying to regain some playground status...

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And Now for Something Completely Different

What with all this talk about rainbow posters and all, it's time for a little healthy, politically incorrect irreverance, courtesy of one of the funniest damn sites I've found, Superdickery.

Natural Assumptions

Security camera footage that detectives later studied...would show Hernandez being assaulted by at least five men and a woman. He had no teammates to back him, and his opponents hit him without the remotest sense of fair play. He ended up drawing his gun.
Michael Daly, who never saw a gun ban he didn't endorse, has nothing but wonderful things to say about the off-duty officer mistakenly shot by NY cops. And naturally, being a police worshipper, he has nothing but excuses for the cop doing the shooting:
Whatever happened next, nobody faults the responding officer who felt compelled to fire. Only when a paramedic discovered a shield in Hernandez's pocket did anyone realize he was an off-duty cop.
But while Mayor Mike Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly were staying mysteriously silent about how officers would be safe if we could just disarm those pesky citizens, another angle to this story has surfaced:
[S]ources said [he] was highly intoxicated and holding his gun on a young man...
Naturally, the establishment media was all over this when they had a chance to question Mike and Ray. I mean, you and I would be if we had a chance, right?
Bloomberg and Kelly were not asked about Hernandez's sobriety at the news conference.
Maybe it made the reporters uncomfortable. Besides, how drunk could Hernandez have been?
[A]source familiar with the investigation said the officer, who had worked the 4 p.m. to midnight shift Friday at the 52nd Precinct, had been drinking at one or two bars before arriving at the restaurant and that his blood-alcohol level was twice the legal limit of .08.
Well, still, even a drunk cop has a right to defend himself against a mob. I'll bet the "opponents" he held at gunpoint are all in jail now, right? I mean, how could people confronting a drunken armed New York cop (who even other cops didn't realize was one) be giving him "the remotest sense of fair play"?
A man, who would give only his first name, Brian, said he was the one being held at gunpoint and left the 46th Precinct at about 5 p.m. after hours of questioning. "I was a little twisted," he said, referring to his own condition at the time. "Some dude came up and pointed a gun at me and said he was going to shoot and pushed me onto the floor. He looked drunk." He quoted the man as saying, "I know you did it. Get on the floor."

Brian was one of eight people taken to the precinct for questioning, police said.

Brian and a friend, who gave only his first name, Miguel, said Brian had tried to help Hernandez off the floor after the officer was attacked.
All the assumptions!

Why was Hernandez attacked? Are we to assume having twice the "legal" blood alcohol level had nothing to do with his level of aggression?

Why the assumption that--because a badge was discovered in his pocket--Hernandez was in the right? Had a badge not been discovered, how do you think the media would be presenting this story?

Why is it when cops mistakenly shoot one of their own, we get excuses, but when citizens shoot home invaders they don't even know are cops, they get the death penalty?

Here's the main assumption on the part of New York cops:
We need to make it clear that if someone lifts even a finger against a police officer, their life could be on the line.
This is what traitors like Mike Bloomberg wish to impose on the rest of the Republic. This is what fawning media lickspittles like Mike Daly wish to help them accomplish.

We are ordered to disarm. We are ordered to obey "authoritah". Even if the cop is drunk. If we lift a finger to defend ourselves, we risk forfeiting our lives.

Because as we have proven time and again here at WarOnGuns, they're the only ones [insert appropriate adjective] enough...

How could anyone assume otherwise?

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Saturday, January 28, 2006

Open Letter to Google

I received a comment in my open letter to my new pal Zhou Wenzhong asking people to visit the "Open Letter to Google" blog and leave their own thoughts.

I did, and encourage you to do so as well.

At last count, there were 232 posted comments. Be nice to increase that a thousandfold and more...

Please spread the word and urge other blogs to inform their visitors.

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PROOF...

...that if Mayor Bloomberg's plot to disarm all of America except "the authorities" succeeds, shootings of NYC police officers will cease.

[Thanks to HZ]

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Guess What Day This Is?

First, it's oldest son Uday's 15th birthday. As youngest son Qusay said when he was but a jihoddler, "Yappy Birthday!"

Oh, and it's also Second Amendment Saturday.

An Enemy of the People: An Open Letter

Ambassador Zhou Wenzhong

Embassy of the People's Republic of China in the United States

Dear Ambassador Wenzhong,

May I call you "Zhou"?

I have come across an insidious attack against the People's Revolution that you must be made aware of! An American website, Blognomicon, has been posting subversive counterrevolutionary propaganda with intent to undermine the legitimate and beloved-by-the-people's government. This includes altered photographs doctored by enemies of the Class Struggle to mask the insidious attacks on the People's Revolutionary Army by the reactionary traitors of the Falun Gong cult.

Please notify Google-China that such breaches in the ability of the Party to protect the workers and peasants from Western cultural hegemony must cease immediately!

Oh, and by the way: Sorry about this. I was thinking improperly, but I have since been reeducated.

Yours in the glorious struggle...

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Crime and Punishment

A township officer who left his AR-15 rifle behind at a Butler County high school received a three-day unpaid suspension and will have to undergo more training before he will be allowed back on the SWAT team, his chief said Friday...A student who was on his way to basketball practice at the school found the gun and alerted the coach.
I'm sure if it was you or me who left that AR-15 on school grounds for students to find, the authorities would be equally tolerant and understanding, don't you think?

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Garbage In, Garbage Out

A gun crime review team used E-Trace, a computer database managed by the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, that can trace the serial number on a weapon to dealers, manufacturers and registered sellers, to shed light on the exchange of illegal guns in the Bull City...

While E-Trace can help investigators locate the gun's original dealer and, in some cases, records of sale, state laws do not require individuals to keep records of private gun sales, Mihaich said.

For that reason, he said, it's difficult to get a grasp on where the guns in Durham are truly coming from.

"We're trying to tighten up how we do that statistically. There's some [statistics] we just don't track because the information isn't there," Mihaich said.
Translation: Well, we have this fancy computer system and all these people working it, but it's really pretty much a make-work boondoggle unless we can use it as a foot in the door to stump for a full-blown gun registry. And then it still won't do anything but tell us who the people who obey us are...

Just what we need. More federal "gun control" harassment of We the People, courtesy of the NRA-backed Project Safe Neighborhoods...

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We're the Only Ones Non-Alcoholic Enough...

The results of a Washington, D.C.-based FBI probe came down Friday, clearing agents of any wrongdoing in the controversial Nov. 7 slugfest between two Bears players at the shooting range. Sources said alcohol had been served after the shooting practice.

The probe found no evidence that alcohol was mixed with guns. But FBI Special Agent in Charge Robert Grant announced he will still ban the use of alcohol by any future group using the FBI's North Chicago shooting facility.

"He was not suggesting any impropriety ... he just wants to make sure an incident like this will not happen again," FBI spokesman Ross Rice said.
Translation: After investigating ourselves, we didn't do anything wrong. And we're banning alcohol at the range even though we didn't do anything wrong, as a way of making sure that we don't not do anything wrong again, even though we didn't the first time. Do anything wrong, that is.

Got it?

Boy, am I glad their internal investigation proves they didn't do anything wrong. I guess I was kind of judgmental when I posted on this before, huh?

So kudos to the FBI for figuring out that guns and booze don't mix. Perhaps their example of innovative government safety leadership will spill over into the private sector some day...

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Friday, January 27, 2006

Safe Space for All?

Supervisor Christine Lim of the San Leandro Unified School District has ordered "Safe Space" banners posted in all classrooms.


I'm concerned about tolerance and acceptance, too. KABA's Inclusion Policy was derived from the one I originated at GunTruths.com, in an attempt to show everyone that--regardless of our differences--you have a right to self defense that all must respect.

The problem is, those who posture the loudest about diversity don't seem very tolerant of traditional values. Heck, the SF cops launched an investigation of me for asking the mayor if I could exercise my right to keep and bear arms in his city (and hypothetically describing what that might look like).

So it's not like the political left embraces diversity that doesn't advance their agenda. I wonder if children who wish to express and exemplify "traditional values" feel welcomed, or if prevailing attitudes intimidate them from proudly expressing who they are...?

Just to make sure all feel there is a "safe space" for them in San Leandro's public schools, I'm sending Ms. Lim a link to this post, and asking her to also make sure the following message gets posted in the classrooms, side-by-side with the other.



What a wonderful way to show tolerance and acceptance of all! Think there's a chance in hell she'll do it?

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What's the Word I'm Looking For to Describe Mike Bloomberg?

The mayor described new tactics including a gun offender registration system, similar to one required for sex criminals, in which gun offenders would have to register and update their addresses with law enforcement. Bloomberg also said he would lobby to make criminal possession of a loaded gun a felony with a minimum prison sentence of 3 years. Both proposals would have to be pushed through the state Legislature.
"Enemy."

Yeah, that's the word.

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We're the Only Ones Inquisitive Enough...

A police officer accused of pointing his gun at a suspect to force him to confess during voluntary questioning at a police box has been arrested, law enforcers said.
Ah, gun-free Japan, where only the Samurai class bear arms in the service of their feudal lords...

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"It Was an Accident!"

A lawmaker accidentally discharged a handgun in his General Assembly office in Richmond...Delegate John S. Reid...was ejecting the bullet cartridge when the gun went off, he said.
And I'm sure his finger was nowhere near the trigger.

I love the part where he said he usually keeps the "bullets separate in his pocket."

Remember who else did that?

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Do What We Say Or Else

A National Rifle Association-backed bill that would force businesses that sell hunting and fishing licenses to help register customers to vote cleared its first legislative hurdle Wednesday.
"Force"?

That doesn't seem very freedom-friendly...

[Via John Schaefer]


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Thursday, January 26, 2006

Buying a Gun For Your Son

My son, Johnnie, is only 12 years old but he has been pestering my husband and me for several years to buy him a gun. My husband had his fill of rifles in the army, and for a long time I told Johnnie that “I wouldn’t have a gun around the house. They are too dangerous."

Last summer Johnnie bought a pistol from one of his playmates at school and managed to find some bullets to shoot in it. The gun went off in his pocket, and badly burned the side of his leg but thank goodness didn’t actually hit his leg or his foot. Our physician made out a routine gun-shot wound report which was sent to the police station, and they sent a policeman around to check up on the “shooting.”
Stop right here a moment. You've seen these kinds of letters before, haven't you? You know where this is going, right?

Read on:
He is now a real friend to our family, because after seeing Johnny and talking with him, he bought us a copy of your magazine with a story on “When to Buy Your Son A Gun.”

I want to thank writer Harvey Brandt for that story. It has literally changed our whole lives and really opened my eyes to how harsh and unfeeling my attitude must have seemed to my son. He now has a gun, a proper .22 rifle and he is shooting on a boys team which is supervised by the Police Athletic League. He shoots well, and my husband has promised to take him hunting next year with a real rifle for big game. Things are going fine at home, and the rusty revolver he bought at school reposes in my desk drawer as a reminder—not a reminder to Johnny, but a reminder to me—of how serious our neglect of our son might have been, if the police officer and Harvey Brandt hadn’t knocked on our door.

Mrs. Jane P. Perkins
Los Angeles, Cal.
Yes, this is an actual letter. It appeared in the January 1956 issue of GUNS Magazine, now available for free download.

This is the world I grew up in (I was three going on four when this was published). These are the attitudes I remember.

Compare every event in this story, and the reactions of the people involved, to the likely outcome were this to take place today. I have never seen a more concise illustration of the gulf between the culture I was born in and the one I live in now. How many fundamental differences can you spot?

I’m delighted the publishers decided to continue posting old issues—I thought it was just going to be for the 1955 series commemorating the magazine’s 50th anniversary.

Be sure and read the other articles: Are Pistol Champs Alcoholics? Could Gunfighters Really Shoot? The Guns of Teddy Roosevelt...

Read the other letters. Look at the ads. That's a cool and informative article on the Luger! Did you know the Kentucky rifle owed its development to the German long Jaeger? So that’s the origin of the word “trigger”! And what’s this? Gun safety tips from Hollywood comedian/TV pioneer Sid Caesar?

Then go ahead and feel some rage at what’s been stolen from free Americans in less than a lifetime.

I also hope you give the current issue of the mag a try—and hope you like it well enough to subscribe, and maybe even tell the editor whether or not you think he ought to fire me and hire some real talent…

One more thing: I'm filing away the term "Jane P. Perkins Award" for future reference. It should be an honor bestowed upon mothers who love their children enough to see that they get the training needed to be free people. Compare her to the "modern" type, who would rush off to sue, and to found a local chapter of the Million Moms. God bless that noble lady, wherever she is.

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Wednesday, January 25, 2006

More Media-Generated Hysteria

Liberty 1st explores the careful selection of words designed to elicit the most fear and loathing.

This is actually scary, because it's a bellwether--the more comfortable so-called "mainstream news" outlets are to engage in outright propaganda, the more conditioned they must believe the masses have become. On the flip side, the elites running the editorial departments aren't businessmen, and a combination of leftist arrogance and competion from "new media" (i.e., you're here reading a blog instead of a newspaper) have contributed to decreases in readership and plunging profits for many of the majors.

Dumb Idea

Gun Legislation & Politics in New York warns us about an assembly bill to require "smart guns."

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A Prometheus Award Nomination For The Black Arrow

From "The Libertarian":
Vin Suprynowicz's The Black Arrow has been nominated for the Libertarian Futurist Society's 2006 Prometheus Award, honoring the best libertarian novel of 2005. The Black Arrow is one of nine books nominated for the award this year. (The deadline for nominations is February 15th.)

The Black Arrow, Vin's first novel, peers 30 years ahead into our future to predict the havoc and hazards caused by government run amok -- when people who've grown fed up with brutality and tyranny are finally willing to fight to take back their freedom. Themes in The Black Arrow are often eerily and sometimes tragically reminiscent of recent headlines. Vin's long and energetic career as a noted (or notorious?) libertarian journalist has stocked his impressive literary arsenal with an endless supply of factual outrages to draw from. Characters and scenes in The Black Arrow ring true, especially to readers of Vin's previous books, Send In the Waco Killers and The Ballad of Carl Drega.

I really enjoyed this book and believe you will, too.

If Only California Had a Waiting Period...

Police say the 41-year-old Singler then ran outside the store and shot himself. Investigators say Singler apparently brought ammunition for the weapon with him.
The planets must be going through a phase or something--first the judge, then Uncle Hiccup and now this...

You Couldn't Just Try Breathing Into a Paper Bag?

A Colombian man who tried to startle his nephew from a bout of the hiccups by pointing a gun at him, accidentally pulled the trigger and killed him.
Sounds like we need to disarm you and me to keep tragedies like this from ever happening again.

You Could'a Been a Contender...

"You could be a leader in the community," Greenspan said. "All those guns that's why Desmond is gone now, because of all those guns."
Good Lord.

It had nothing to do with character or intent or action, did it, judge?

Idiot.

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Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Questions Alito SHOULD Have Been Asked

Howard Phillips distills things down to the essentials...

Which means these are precisely the questions the parasites in power dare not publicly ask. Better to distract with bangs and clangs and smoke and mirrors than get down to the core fundamentals of why their positions were created in the first place...

[Thanks to Skip]

If You Can't Beat 'em, Lie

A bill (HB1) expanding the circumstances in which deadly force may be used in self-defense is pending in the Alabama Legislature...One opponent is Arthur Hayhoe, executive director of the Florida Coalition to Stop Gun Violence. He told the Times the Alabama bill could cause trouble if passed "I call it the 'right-to-commit-murder' bill."
And I call that a damned lie, Arthur.

How does the gene pool produce these wretched creatures?

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Gun Club Attacked By Parasites

Directors of the Twin City Rod & Gun Club were shocked in December when notified their nonprofit organization had to pay a state sales tax on memberships and fees.
The bureaucrats [Sean--note the spelling :)] just keep sticking us, don't they? That's because they believe they won't have to endure any personal consequences.

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Gun Grabber Martin Gets His Butt Handed To Him

CANADIAN voters have rebuked Prime Minister Paul Martin and his centre-left Liberal Party, tossing them out after 13 years in power.

The new leader, Stephen Harper, the head of the Conservative Party, will be one of Canada's youngest prime ministers when he is sworn in later this week. He is 46.

Harper is marginally better, in that he's not calling for a handgun ban and wants to shut down Canada's absurd gun registry boondoggle, but he still endorses mandatory sentences for illegal possession and employs the gun law enforcement rhetoric of...umm...these guys.

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Cert Denied in Seegars

See bottom of pg. 7:
05-365 SEEGARS, SANDRA, ET AL. V. GONZALES, ATT'Y GEN., ET AL. The petition for a writ of certiorari is denied. The Chief Justice took no part in the consideration or decision of this petition.

[Via Triggerfinger]

Monday, January 23, 2006

We're the Only Ones Forceful Enough...

Between 1998 and 2002, when he was fired, Brown committed oral copulation, sodomy and other lewd acts on the boys, using force on more than 30 occasions...
Officer Friendly, I presume...?

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Us vs Them

Kirk has some thoughts on the gulf between government and the governed.

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Barrett to Arnold: I'll Be Back!

Jed tells us how Barrett's Model 99 rifle is an "in your face!" to those who banned the .50 BMG.

So look for outrage and calls for a necked down ban to put these upstarts in their place.

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One Last Thing

Finally, as a lifelong National Rifle Association member, I can assure you the organization is scrupulous in explaining and encouraging strict compliance with our myriad gun laws...
Yeah.

We know.

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The Irresponsible Second Amendment

Military-style assault weapons of the kind wielded by Henry have been showing up in increasing numbers since Congress and President Bush allowed federal ban on the guns to expire in late 2004. They did the bidding of the National Rifle Association, and it's all but certain that innocent blood will be spilled because of the blind irresponsibility of the NRA and its agents in Washington.
This is why the Brady Campaign doesn't need to have that many members--the media does its job for them.

UPDATE: Tell me great minds don't think alike...

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We're the Only Ones Holy Enough...

The Vatican representative called upon the United Nations to consider the possibility of negotiating a legally binding instrument on the international arms trade, based on the principles of international law, and in particular on the question of human rights and humanitarian law.
I don't suppose the Vatican representative would like to make sure his own house is in order first?

I don't see Pope Benedict ordering his Swiss Guards to disarm...

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A Novel Legal Theory

The suit alleged that Youth's death stemmed from slipshod training and a dangerous "always armed/always on duty" policy.
Yes. We all know it's much safer to be defenseless.

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Sunday, January 22, 2006

On a Personal Note...


Just in case anyone besides me is interested in...umm...me, I decided to put a face to a name, and also tell you how to pronounce that name. I know I get preconceptions about people based on what I imagine they must be like, so I hope the grim reality doesn't alienate anyone.

First, my name is pronounced Ko'dree-yuh, with a long "o" and the accent on the first syllable. Kinda like "Gloria" ...

This picture is me and youngest son Qusay, taken around 5 years ago. I don't have a lot of pictures of me, because I'm always taking pictures of the monster and brother Uday, instead. I think I'm imitating Yul Brynner singing "Shall We Dance" from The King and I here, and the poor kid is too young to be embarrassed.

And finally, just in case anyone cares what I sound like, you can click here for my first (and last) attempt at audioblogging. When I hear myself, I can't believe that's what I really sound like, and vow to never speak again.

Anyway, this is me. I hope no one is overly disappointed.

What Have You Got to Hide?

I don't care personally if some governmental agency listens to our family's phone calls 24 hours a day, seven days a week. We have nothing to hide. The surveillors may expire from boredom, but that would be their problem.--Pat Boone

The only individuals whose privacy would have been infringed by the bill would have been the privacy of people with something to hide from the police - people who arm themselves and then become a threat to public safety.--Brady Campaign
That's quite a difference in philosophy between "conservative" and "liberal," wouldn't you say?

Seminar Decries Rising Philly "Gun Violence"

Elected officials and community members gathered in Center City to try and stop the escalation of violent gun use in Philadelphia. It is an effort many are hoping will save hundred of lives.
This was definitely not supposed to happen.

Six years ago, NRA management promised:
"If you and your prosecutors stick to the simple, proven model of Richmond, the murder rate in Philadelphia will decline and your citizens will be safer."

What? "Project Exile" didn't make Richmond any safer, either?

It seems I've heard something about this before.

But where?

Ah well, what do the concerns of a lone blogger matter? It's not like anybody else ever warned against federalizing gun prosecutions...

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The Best Laid Plans

Hargreaves admits to being "devastated by the news" that the gun had been involved in a homicide and almost as devastated by the fact there is now a warrant out for his arrest for unsafe storage of those weapons -- despite the fact they were stored in a 771-kilo concrete-and-steel safe and that it took the industrious thieves two days using blowtorches and sledge hammers to gain access to it...

On July 23 of that year, one month after the on-duty murder of 25-year-old Const. Todd Baylis, Ontario became the toughest place in North America to buy ammunition as Bill 181 went into effect, requiring all ammunition retailers to keep records of all transactions -- the name and age of the purchaser, his or her address, the date and time, the type of identification used, plus any serial number and the type and quantity of ammunition purchased...

"They can be photocopied by a clerk running with a bad crowd. They can be sold for a price. Those books, quite often, are simply left on the counter," he says.
Another example of "gun control" giving criminals the advantage.

This is one hell of an article. It should be read far and wide. Kudos to Mark Bonokoski.

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"Capital Gun Crime" Up 50%--In a Fashion

Record levels of gun crime are being blamed on the fact that more people than ever are carrying firearms as fashion accessories.
Bloody 'ell! You mean "gun control" doesn't work?

Blimey! First we're told it's the gun's fault, then "rap music" is the culprit, and now we're to believe it's fashion's fault...

Just don't suggest that subject disarmament and criminalizing victims who defend themselves might have anything to do with the sorry state of affairs...

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Eso No Computa

Mexicans are being invited to exchange their weapons for computers under a quirky new idea to curb rampant crime in Mexico City.

Authorities in one of the city's 16 districts are offering a new computer, out of 150 donated by a charitable foundation, for each gun handed in.
Well, this'll have absolutely no effect on violent crime, but it does sound like a great incentive for "authorities" to trade in confiscated weapons...

[Thanks to John Schaefer]

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Saturday, January 21, 2006

2A Saturday

...a weekly feature over at The Transcending Sovereignty...

Don't Think of It as a Bribe...

State troopers who fix tickets as favors — even for someone who gives them gifts — are not breaking the law, the Knox County prosecutor has determined for Gov. Phil Bredesen.
That Lord Acton--him plenty smart fella.

[Thanks to Skip]


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In Jail With Pay

At most jobs, on-the-job conduct that gets an employee arrested will usually stop the paycheck, at least for the duration of the incarceration. However, if that individual is a Washington State Patrol employee sworn to uphold the law, the paycheck is delivered to the jail, it seems.

Michael Idland
was on administrative reassignment and drew his full Washington State Patrol (WSP) salary during the 17 months he spent in the King County Jail for molesting women during routine traffic stops. Why did the agency that is supposed to enforce our state laws reward an officer for breaking those laws?
Why? Because no one is accountable. Because there are no consequences. Because it's not their money and what happens doesn't affect them. Because they can.

[Thanks to Skip]


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We're the Only Ones Safe Enough...

Another dark cloud hangs over the Easton Police Department tonight, as a new report finds city cops regularly break the rules when it comes to the safety of their guns.

The findings come just 10 months after an officer was shot and killed inside the department's headquarters.
Yeah, common sense gun handling is kinda like quantum physics in its incredible complexity. No wonder only a highly-educated and select few are trustworthy enough to be armed.

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Raking In the Haul

Ottawa city's gun amnesty hasn't even started but police have already raked in dozens of firearms, including at least one that's about 200 years old.
"Dozens" is "raking in"?

So far police have collected 43 guns...Police showed off part of their haul to media Friday morning.

"43" is a "haul"?
One-third of the guns collected were missing essential working parts, and most were several decades old, such as the only semi-automatic pistol in the haul, an 80-year-old German Walther .380, a rusty antique breechloader from the 19th century, and two old-style revolvers of the 'Saturday night special' design.

Police also raked in a number of shotguns, hunting rifles and BB guns.
Rest easy, Ottawa. The orcs have been defanged. Your salvation from "gun violence" is at hand.

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I Choose "Other"

From Dan Gifford:

A legislative update from my California Assemblyman, Paul Koretz, just arrived and it contains the following survey question that should concern all California firearm owners:
"State law authorizes law enforcement to keep a record of every handgun sold or transferred in the state, but the state does not keep any records on the sale of rifles or shotguns. Handgun sale records are maintained by state law enforcement for use in gun tracing and related criminal investigations, and to make sure they are not possessed by individuals who are not legally allowed to have them. Which of the following most closely represents your opinion?

a. California should retain records on the purchase of rifles and shotguns because that would help law enforcement solve crimes related to the criminal use of on these weapons -- it does not make sense to exempt rifles and shotguns from record keeping if law enforcement is already keeping records on handgun purchases.

b. I am not in favor of law enforcement having records on persons who own rifles and shotguns.

c. We should make sure our existing firearms laws are working before we consider more gun legislation.

d. Other, please comment _____________________ "
This is a probe. And it got sent to a trendy LA constituency, so it's also designed to be a self-fulfilling prophecy and pretext. The bastard just won't stop attacking.

I choose "other." And I don't think Assemblyman Koretz would want to hear my comments. Unmoderated, they'd get me arrested.

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Friday, January 20, 2006

Firearms and the Supreme Court

Triggerfinger enters the discussion on a future SCOTUS 2A ruling.

He does a thoughtful job of it, as usual.

The Magic Kingdom Scofflaw

[My post about the toy gun ban in NY made me recall this article, which I wrote 5 years ago. Chances are, most WarOnGuns visitors haven't seen it.]

It doesn't seem out of line to ask what the hell Disney CEO Michael Eisner is doing selling toy guns in the first place. After all, in his role as advisory panelist for the anti-self-defense organization CeaseFire (a group with the stated goal of promoting "handgun-free homes and families" through TV commercials and print ads with the message that lawful gun ownership poses a threat to society), you'd think he'd do everything in his power to teach children that guns are not playthings. Assuming, of course, that he places principle ahead of profits.

It also seems fitting to ask why, given his affinity for promoting hysterical and liberty-destroying gun control laws that the rest of us must abide by, Mr. Eisner's flagship theme park is flouting California law and selling ILLEGAL toy guns. And why the authorities tasked with enforcing such things are doing nothing about it.

Welcome to the Magic Kingdom! As we pass through the gates of Frontier Land, we see one of the more popular attractions, as evidenced by another interminable Disneyland queue, the Shootin' Exposition.

"There's nothing like a little target practice 'on the range' to make you feel like a real Old West sharpshooter," advises the promotional literature.

"Davy Crockett would be proud," it continues. How Mr. Eisner's citizen disarmament colleagues over at CeaseFire would feel about it remains unsaid.

"*Additional charge," the fine print reminds Mr. Eisner's "guests."

And when you're done plinking targets, you can saunter on over to the Pioneer Mercantile, "a gold mine for young pioneers, this shop is filled with goodies inspired by American folk heroes."

Like guns. Toy guns. Illegal toy guns.

Racks of 'em, and nicely crafted pieces of work they are, too, with real wood stocks and polished metal barrels. There are flintlock-style pistols and frontier rifles, some with Indian feathers, and even one model that looks suspiciously like a sawed-off double-barrel shotgun.

It's a shame the aesthetics of these fine faux firearms are spoiled by the ugly orange plastic caps that terminate each muzzle, but then, how would it look if Little Johnny got blown away by some well meaning peace officer who mistook him for a midget crack dealer in a "Mouseketeer" cap?

But there's the rub. Because nowadays, thanks to the idiots in the California Legislature and their supporters like Michael Eisner, orange caps are not enough. Effective January 1 of this year, in order for such toys to be compliant with state law, "the coloration of the entire exterior surface of the device [must be] bright orange or bright green, either singly or in combination."

Accordingly, "Section 417.2 of the Penal Code is amended to read: 417.2. (a) Any person who, for commercial purposes, purchases, sells, manufactures, ships, transports distributes, or receives, by mail order or in any other manner, an imitation firearm except as permitted by this section shall be liable for a civil fine in an action brought by the city attorney of the city or the district attorney of the county of not more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each violation."

Each violation.

So do the math. Disneyland appears to have been in violation of the amended Penal Code for in excess of two weeks. And finding out how many violations have occurred shouldn't be difficult at all; I imagine a simple subpoena for sales receipts involving affected stock numbers would do the trick nicely.

That is, providing anyone from the DA or City Attorney's office has the stones to go up against the jewel in Anaheim's economic crown, and the considerable political leverage the Disney organization wields at the local, state and national level.

Still, as risky as it seems, some smart prosecutor may figure out that this is a slam-dunk case, one that can build name recognition and boost a career to prominence. After all, it's not like Disney can claim ignorance of the law, especially with their army of in-house and retained lawyers and lobbyists. Besides which, their hometown paper, the Orange County Register ran a feature on the new regulations just a week after they went into effect.

While it may be conceivable that a mom and pop toy store in Little Saigon might not be clued into these new arcane requirements, it is hardly believable that Disney senior executives and legal counsel are in the dark. And it's not like they can claim their imitation guns aren't "realistic" enough to be included; the muzzle caps clearly demonstrate a legal awareness that these toys fall within the jurisdiction of such laws.

Nope, all it would really take is for some ambitious prosecutor to take a few hours, drive over to the Magic Kingdom and stroll over to Pioneer Mercantile in Frontierland. One quick look at the on-floor inventory should give him all the authority he needs to seal the place and obtain a subpoena.

And then, just for good measure, maybe he'd like to take a brief detour over to Adventure Land, and visit the Indiana Jones Adventure Outlet, where he can "unearth some true finds, like Indy hats, leather jackets and T-shirts, Egyptian artifacts, jewelry, and more."

More illegal toy guns.

Courtesy of the Magic Kingdom Scofflaw, who belies the very laws he endorses, and demonstrates for all to see that when toy guns are outlawed, only outlaws will have toy guns.

[Within weeks after this article appeared on KeepAndBearArms.com, the guns were pulled from the shelves at Disneyland--I'm not claiming this is why, but it is a definite coincidence.]

"It Just Didn't Look Right"

Yeah, what are a couple of Hispanics doing driving a Navigator? Sounds like a perfect reason to perform a warrantless search to me.

Pesky Fourteenth and Fourth Amendments.

Note the charge: keeping and bearing has been transformed into "unlawful use."

Pesky Second Amendment.

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Former Gun Maker Pays Ransom

Parents leave a loaded gun laying around for their untrained children to find. The ignorant babysitter shoots one of the kids while trying to unload it, that is, not knowing what he was doing, and instead of just carefully putting it out of reach until the parents returned, HE PULLED THE TRIGGER.

The solution?

Steal the gun maker's property.

I guess he figured paying a ransom was the cheapest way to replace it.

If there is one urgent message that needs to get out to our countrymen, the majority of whom prove time and again to be libertards, it is that juries have a right to judge not just the facts, but also the law. And if they do it discreetly, there's not a damned thing the state can do about it.

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Thursday, January 19, 2006

MSN: Partnering With Authority

This came out over the weekend when traffic was slow. I'm linking to it here on a higher traffic day because it looks like a lot of site visitors missed it.

Evil, Violent Gun Attacks Boy!!!

Police tell us when Rollman went to put the gun away after investigating the noise, it went off and the bullet hit his son in the hip.
Dang--another one of those self-animating guns. I'm sure Mr. Rollman's finger was nowhere near the trigger, or the reporter would have surely written the account that way.

But this has even more terrifying implications: At the beginning of the story, did you catch the bit about "High winds [being] partly to blame..."?

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If You Build It, They Will Come

"We don't know if the gun range has caused the drop in attendance (at the park)," Bartsch said.

He said the decrease in visitors occurred at the park, golf course, nature center and farm center.
Uhhh...maybe they're all at the gun range.

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Gun Grabber Hypocrisy

Jon Dougherty weighs in on the story of the battered San Francisco woman who was caught with an unsanctioned pistol, and skewers the reporter, Joan Ryan, for hypocrisy.

Incidentally, Ms. Ryan never did respond to my questions.

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The Better to Eat You With, My Dear

Gun lobbyists are fuming because the state police have been slow at processing FOID applications. State law requires that be accomplished in 30 days. But callers to the state police bureau that handles FOID cards get a recording that says it may take eight weeks. A gun owner is in technical violation of the law if his card expires before a new one arrives in the mail...

Gun owners want better service? Hike the FOID card fee.
Translation: We force you to comply with a process we can't perform, so it must be your fault.

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Gun Czar Adds to Load

Deputy Commissioner Richard Ross is now head of internal affairs, and will retain his title as the city's gun czar.
I repeat a question I've asked before: Why "czar"?

Why don't they ever call these guys "fuhrer"?

And as for Commissioner Ross adding to his load, well, I'd really rather not go there.

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We're the Only Ones Guarded Enough...

A jail security officer was placed on administrative leave after a woman visitor got past an X-ray machine carrying a gun, leading to the closure of two Clayton County courts on Wednesday...."She got as far as the lobby and was called back because she didn't fit the dress code. Her arms were exposed or something," the sheriff said.
No, her arms weren't exposed. Hence the lockdown.

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The Registry That Never Happened

Technical problems have once again delayed the national firearms register, nine years after it was first proposed..."‘If the Home Office really is incapable, over a period of eight years, of computerising something as straightforward as a few hundred thousand firearms records, then it does suggest that they do not have a hope of making a success of the introduction of the national identity card scheme,"’ he said.
Eight years?

For "a few hundred thousand" records?

How much information do they need to record?

Why do I suspect that this could have all been entered into an Access database by a few dozen clerks in a matter of weeks?

How much have they forked over to this Anite outfit to develop the software? And how are we doing on projected costs?

Maybe we've been approaching this all wrong. Maybe the safest place we could put our gun ownership information--to ensure it will never be discoverable or retrievable--is with the government.

Still, bummer this hampering their "national identity card scheme."

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Wednesday, January 18, 2006

I'm With Fitty

Hip-hop star 50 CENT has dismissed accusations his movie GET RICH OR DIE TRYIN' glorifies violence and gun crime, insisting the film is being unfairly singled out for criticism.
It is unfair. Where's the "community" outrage over this?


Although personally, I'd rather watch Kate Beckinsale...

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Never Give Up Your Guns

The Liberty Belles' Jennifer Freeman weighs in on some recent gun control proposals, and shows how they give the advantage to the most violent among us.

What kind of politician would do that?

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Somebody's Been Watching Too Much TV

Even if the gun was real, the officer could have shot Penley in a non-fatal area.
Poor Heather Forgione. She had my attention up until that point, what with her talking about "simple communication and common sense," and all.

But forgive her ignorance. Not only is she a freshman, she's a journalism major.

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"If You Value Your Life, DON'T Carry a Weapon"

Nicki figured out why this article disappeared. Seems the weapon-advocating Brit is a fabrication.

A statement from New Scotland Yard said: "Mr Eastman is extremely upset about the article.

"He does not recognise the quotes attributed to him and does not condone anyone carrying a knife or a weapon of any kind."
The idiot evidently prefers people being stabbed to death by those who do not share his share his sheeplike bent.

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Police Didn't Know Gun Not a Firearm

Over the weekend, an attorney for the family said Penley's father told him that he contacted law enforcement before the boy was shot to tell them that his son did not have a gun and that he only had a pellet gun, Local 6 News reported.

However, phone records obtained by the FDLE showed authorities did not make contact with the dead boy's father until about 45 minutes after the boy had been shot, according to a report released Tuesday.
If that's the case, then the outcome can't be judged unreasonable. When I posted this, press accounts were very different, citing the boys father, a brother and a classmate all corroborating police and school authorities being told.

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Tuesday, January 17, 2006

Guess Who's Teaming Up With The Million Moms?

Brooks, too, is not new to controversy. He’s been widely known as one of the city’s most flamboyant activists for over a decade and is a convicted sex offender.
I guess if I was a predatory pervert, I'd want to make sure my victims--and those able to avenge them--were disarmed, too.

It also adds a new twist when they say "it's for the children."

[Via SayUncle]

AJC Says Flight, Not Fight

Since passing its "shoot first, ask questions later" law last year, the state of Florida has been derided by the international press, become the subject of an ad campaign that warns visitors not to "shout or make threatening gestures" at the natives, and provided fodder for amused bloggers, pundits and late-night comics. (What's the Sunshine State's new motto? "Florida: Don't make us come up there.'')
Translation: British and French journalists' opinions should be a deciding factor in which rights the government allows you to enjoy. A handful of mentally ill loons passing out propaganda leaflets at Orlando airport should be a deciding factor in which rights the government allows you to enjoy. And Hollywood and other media elites making snotty comments to the amusement of their worshippers should be a deciding factor in which rights the government allows you to enjoy.

Sounds reasonable.

If it's good enough for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, it's good enough for me! I mean, we all know the media only wants what's best for us. Right?

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Canadian Blood Dance a Hit in DC

Jane Creba, 15, was browsing the Boxing Day sales with her older sister when she started crossing the street to look for sneakers. She stepped into a spray of gunfire between rival teenage gangs in the middle of the busy downtown shopping district.
A Google news search yields no fewer than 31 pages of hits for the term "Jane Creba."

You don't think the media's trying to tell us something, do you? I mean, it's not like The Washington Post and its ilk have a vested interest in outcomes, is it?

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A Nicki Twofer

Nicki has more to say about that absurd Washington Post editorial calling for a national handgun ban.

She also tackles the latest proposed ban by the Brits: this time, it's samurai swords they're after. My email comments to her on that:
Just Samurai? Isn't that racist?
Substitute "brick" for "sword" and "bashed" for "stabbed."
UPDATE:It might help if I gave you the link to her comments on the WaPo gun ban proposal.

Duh.

Sorry, Nicki.
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Individual Rights Vs. "Reasonable Restrictions"

Denise at the ten ring adds her thoughts to my prediction about SCOTUS and the Second Amendment.

I notice their was also a discussion at SayUncle, with some dissent. Two comments on that:

I didn't specifically address complete gun bans, like in Washington, and that's my fault--especially since I think that's where a favorable ruling is likely to come---if the original Cato-backed case isn't derailed by legislation or a competing lawsuit. I just think that when such a ruling or legislation does come about, the restrictions and limitations will further codify the power of government to permit when, where and how, as opposed to ceding they properly should have no say in the matter.

My second point--don't take soothsaying too seriously--from me or from anyone else. It's just speculation out loud. If I could foretell the future with any degree of reliability, I'd be at the track placing bets.

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Monday, January 16, 2006

We're the Only Ones Bordering On Trustworthy Enough...

A U.S. border patrol agent is scheduled to be arraigned Thursday in Del Rio, Texas, on federal charges that he illegally purchased a pistol for a Mexican national who intended to smuggle the weapon into Mexico, according to U.S. investigators.
What did Plato ask?

"Who shall guard the guardians?"

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We're the Only Ones Enterprising Enough...

Superintendent Wayne Minnaar said the 25-year-old police officer allegedly hired out his service pistol for R150 to three hijackers.
And remember, South African citizens, the police say you must register your guns to keep things like this from happening.

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WaPo Advocates Starting Civil War in America

Lawmakers know all this and know as well that handguns -- however exalted they seem to be in America -- should not be in general circulation. Political long shot that it may be, a national ban on the general manufacture, sale and ownership of handguns ought be enacted. It would not pacify kids or adults with violent tendencies, and it might not curb general criminal activity markedly. But it might well save thousands of lives. Handgun exceptions could be made for federal, state and local law enforcement and military agencies; collectors of antique firearms; federally licensed handgun sporting clubs with certain safety procedures; security guard services; and licensed dealers, importers or manufacturers that are determined to be meeting those needs.
Like the man said: Molon Labe!

The answer is "No." End of debate. Back off. NOW!

Or bring it on.

Pull out this editorial the next time someone accuses you of being paranoid for suspecting the true aim of the gun banners is...uhhh...a gun ban.

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Olympic Shooters Plead for Special Treatment

British lawmakers are being urged to ease a ban on handguns so Britain`s champion shooters can train for the Olympics.
I guess they can do it there if they want--they have "nobility" and commoners.

Yo, Fuddites--as the line goes in Blade Runner: "Wake up. Time to die!"

Or it will be if you fools don't wake up.

The "sporting purposes clause" is a dividing tactic. You think if they go after the other guy, they'll leave you alone.

Guess what--it doesn't work that way.

The Cyclops may promise to eat you last, but once he eliminates the warriors, he will eat you all the same.

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"If You Value Your Life Carry a Weapon"

"If police catch you carrying a weapon you could be arrested and prosecuted. But isn't that better than being unable to protect yourself and losing your life? The police can't be everywhere and the sentences handed down by the courts are often far too lenient."
Yep--as the truism goes, better to be tried by twelve than carried by six...

[Via Dan Gifford]

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Sunday, January 15, 2006

Ghetto Uprising

The Boston Globe writes:
Harold M. Clemens of Roxbury writes on his Ghetto Uprising that, as well-intentioned as the state's tough gun-ownership laws are, it might be time to relax them so residents of violence-prone neighborhoods can protect themselves.
Relax 'em? Hell, it's past time to repeal 'em. But this is, as our opponents are wont to say, "a good first step."

Go on over to Mr. Clemens' blog and offer some encouragement.

[Via Alphecca]

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Police Told Gun Was Toy

The family of a 13-year-old Florida boy shot by police say officers were told the gun he held was not real.

Ralph Penley said when he arrived at the Millwee Middle School in suburban Orlando on Friday morning, he told Seminole County Sheriff`s deputies his son Christopher only had a replica pistol, CNN said. The boy`s younger brother says he told school officials the same thing.
Why should authorities have taken their word for it? They're only "civilians." And you know how they lie.

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SCOTUS Will Hear THIS...

...but they wouldn't hear this.

Prediction: A Second Amendment case will be heard by the Supreme Court in the next few years, and it will confirm an individual right. However, the ruling will be so narrow that it will not override state interest claims. It will not require a strict scrutiny standard, but rather an intermediate one. And it will certainly not overturn "assault weapon" bans, open the door for viable challenges to permitting schemes, or declare registration mandates, background checks, and similar prior restraints unconstitutional infringements.

In short, we will achieve a "status quo," where the vast majority of "existing gun laws" are deemed enforceable and prosecutable, rather than repealable.

By dancing in the middle, the court will scuff over and camouflage the Constitutional bright line of "shall not be infringed." If you think about it, it's what anyone who wishes to maintain their position of advantage would do: If they say it's not an individual right, they'll have a rebellion on their hands. If they say it's unalienable, well, there goes the government's monopoly of power.

The brutal lesson of history: power is never ceded unless there is a fear of an "or else." Without that fear, we can play around with incrementalism on both sides, and congratulate each other on the fabulous progress we've made. We can maintain the illusion that the system can work, and there are those who won't mind that one bit.

Until "the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed" is demanded, with real and unpleasant consequences for anyone using coercion to impose otherwise, it's all posturing and bluff. Until then, no real victory for freedom can occur.

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We're the Only Ones Secure Enough...

Greenwood police are investigating the disappearance of several firearms from the department's inventory...The guns were stored in a vault or locker in the department's main headquarters building and were discovered missing Jan. 6, Harris said...He said the weapons were securely stored and access was controlled.
Right. That's why they're MISSING!

You know, we need laws to keep you and me from endangering the public this way...

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We're the Only Ones...Oh, So THAT'S What That Lever Does...

The Remington 12-gauge shotgun had been issued to Lemay by the Sheriff's Office, Buchanan said. It's Lemay's responsibility to keep the gun locked up, and Buchanan said he considered it to be secure because it was inside the trunk.

But all the thief needed to do to get the shotgun was to slip his hand inside the car and lift a lever to pop open the trunk.
At least his "710" cap isn't missing...

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We're the Only Ones In Control of Our Emotions Enough...

A township police officer is facing more than 11 years in prison...a Morris County Grand Jury handed up the indictment against Kevin J. Lassiter, 43. He was indicted for possessing a weapon for an unlawful purpose on Sept. 5 and aggravated assault for allegedly holding a gun to the head of his wife'’s cousin when she tried to intervene in the dispute between Lassiter and his wife at Lassiter'’s home.

Lassiter was charged with assaulting his wife by pushing, punching and grabbing her by the throat...
See, you and I can't be trusted with guns because we might go off the deep end...

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Saturday, January 14, 2006

MSN's Authority Showcase

Microsoft's MSN division, the same folks who, for a buck, partner with Chicom tyrants to censor free speech, are showcasing blogs that demonstrate their affinity for domestic authority worship.

Among the police-themed MSN Spaces sites featured this week, we find "The Hub," at the center of which is a self-described "problem solver" who includes among his "favorite things":
There is nothing quite like punching someone in the head and having it sound like a ripe melon.
His "favorite quote"? Boy, you could see this one coming a mile away:
What is best in life? To crush your enemies, see them driven before you and hear the lamentations of their women. - Conan the Barbarian
In a post titled "More Holiday Cheer," he describes a recent arrest that elicits a chorus of admiring comments, including:
Hey Man - Happy New Year! Congrats on catching that bastard. Put a pink tutu on him and throw in the cell with the friendly chaps.
What's even more disgusting, the prison rape advocate isn't even a cop. But he expresses a sentiment promoted by no less an "authority" than California Attorney General Bill Lockyer, who had this to say about a man who hadn't (at the time) even been charged with a crime, let alone convicted:
I would love to personally escort [Enron CEO Ken Lay] to an 8-by-10 cell that he could share with a tattooed dude who says, 'Hi, my name is Spike, honey.'
Lockyer, of course, says you have no right to own a gun, and if his cop minions catch you with one he doesn't approve of, they'll do their best to throw you into a population of "Spikes".

That is, assuming you survive the dynamic entry, and your skull withstands the "ripe melon" treatment.

How telling. Microsoft/MSN closes down websites that challenge authority, and publicizes those that promote it. That makes them, and there's no getting around this, a fascist organization, one that suppresses the cause of liberty and advances that of the global police state--as long as it serves their bottom line.

I trust no one is surprised?

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