Monday, July 21, 2008

Meanwhile, Across the Pond in Sarah Brady Paradise

POLICE chiefs in South Yorkshire are to use airport-style metal
detectors in areas where they suspect people to be carrying guns and knives.
Can on-demand strip searches be far behind?

They've done all the "reasonable compromises," haven't they, enacted every single "common sense gun law" demanded of them?

Where will it end?

Where does tyranny always end?

And what do you call someone who wants to subject you to it, except "enemy"?

[Via Zachary G]

6 comments:

David Goodyear said...

Wow! Right out of Vin Suprynowicz's Black Arrow. Streetside checkpoints...

Sheeeeeshhh....

8)

Kent McManigal said...

Tyranny always ends with massive death. On both sides. I see the end in sight.

Anonymous said...

Since 1790, Britain has more or less been the good guys, except for colonizing places where other people already live, such as India...
Anyway, they've thrown it all away. We want all our WWI and II restored to us, alive and whole, you freaking Nazi emulators. We sacrificed them under false pretenses.
Time to visit the police chiefs, in large groups, at home or in the office. No appointment is necessary...
Everyone should be absolutely sure that should this crap ever come here, that's what we will do. They can search your home, they can search your car, they can search your person. That's total domination. We were well warned by New Orleans. Apparently some people in Cedar Rapids didn't get the message. I think most of us did. Our reply is prepared.

Anonymous said...

Left out the word "dead," "World War I and II dead."

Anyone who hasn't seen battlefield photos should search them out. All for nothing. The agony, the terror, the lost loves, the potential children who never got to be... the children of our Greatest Generation might have been the new Greatest Generation. The tragedy compounds itself.

Anonymous said...

Kent, beat me to it.

Anonymous said...

I would add, after the massive death on both sides the tyrants are hanged, shot, or commit suicide.

Which, while not just, is as close as we can usually get to justice.