Austin: Howard Nemerov
Charlotte: Paul Valone
Cleveland: Daniel White
DC: Mike Stollenwerk
Denver: Dan Bidstrup
Los Angeles: John Longenecker
Milwaukee: Candace Dainty
Minneapolis: John Pierce
National: David Codrea
St. Louis: Kurt Hofmann
Notes from the Resistance...
Austin: Howard Nemerov
Charlotte: Paul Valone
Cleveland: Daniel White
DC: Mike Stollenwerk
Denver: Dan Bidstrup
Los Angeles: John Longenecker
Milwaukee: Candace Dainty
Minneapolis: John Pierce
National: David Codrea
St. Louis: Kurt Hofmann
But it is the cold dead hands of all those college students that motivate the gun-control lobby.
Question Seven: This one was a surprise. "How would you protect the Second Amendment rights of gun owners?" McMurrey said, The Second Amendment is a fundamental part of the Bill of Rights. Noriega said he was a lifetime member of the Texas State Rifle Association. He is concerned about assault weapons, worried that police are outgunned by narcotraffickers.
Prosecutors say he killed, in part, because of the unwanted expense of a new baby.Good Lord.
Got that? US Foreign Aid will be spent not how Congress wants, but how the UN wants. Your future President...?And there's more:
"In addition to seeking to eradicate poverty, that declaration commits nations to banning 'small arms and light weapons' and ratifying a series of treaties, including the International Criminal Court Treaty, the Kyoto Protocol (global warming treaty), the Convention on Biological Diversity, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, and the Convention on the Rights of the Child."Cryptic Subterranean gives us a glimpse into what the Cult of Set intends to visit on the land.
The original ratio (Patrick Henry : Paris Hilton) was not quite 1:7 (1:6.84).Very much.
The new ratio is 1:24 (1:24.31).
And all in less than 3 years.
It is very much an indicator of where people are focused.
Now, we need to close the gun show loophole.Because, y'see, the shooter (who illegally killed people) bought his firearms through all the Brady-recommended channels, through a store, with a record and background check and an FOID card, in a state where concealed carry is illegal, on a campus that prohibits guns...
I was one of the first (then) Campus Public Safety officers sworn in as a police officer, in 1993. Prior to that, CPS was a security-only operation. Ohio laws changed in 92 (thanks in part to Chief Korn) to allow private colleges to establish police departments. Previously, if they wanted law-enforcement capability, they had to go through a court process to create constables.
In 93, when the police operation was created, the Board of Trustees would not allow us to carry firearms on duty at all. We had guns stored in a safe at our office, but in the time I was there, we never had occasion to carry them except for range time. As recently as two years ago, the CPS page at MC.edu had a FAQ about campus police officers and firearms; it basically said "they're allowed to carry, but they don't always carry." That question is now gone from the web page, and in light of VT, I suspect Howard convinced the BoT to let them carry all the time.
Howard Korn is a former Washington County deputy sheriff, and had been at MC since about 1988. He's done a lot for the CPS operation, but make no mistake: he's a stereotypical liberal, bureaucratic police chief. He's also worked with all of the people named in the stories. Winstanley was a Marietta cop for a while, and his cousin (I think) was one of my co-workers at MC (and that co-worker is now a lieutenant at MC Police. Minks was a deputy before he was Sheriff. At least 2 of the MC cops are ex-Marietta cops or Washington CO deputies.
As far as the CCW charge, that was SOP for the Highway Patrol if they ever found a gun during a traffic stop, instead of the more appropriate Improper Transport of a Firearm. I was never clear why they did it that way, but it was extremely common. ORC 2923 is the weapons section. I think I recall that the ITF charge may have gone away during the concealed carry reform.
And so, out of respect for the dead and injured, who were killed by a handgun and a shotgun, the Interior Department has —what? Changed its mind? Thought better of its plans? No. It has merely postponed its announcement until next week.
I repeat: How is mandating people be disarmed, what Machiavelli called "contemptible," respectful?
And note the assumption--if it's worse than usual, per The (dwindling) Times there will never be a good day.
Some of the comments are incredibly ignorant--all the more obnoxious because they are written with such unmerited certainty. If you have a moment, you may want to go over there and inject some sense into things.
UPDATE: Well, my comment, put in at the time of this post, still isn't there. No obscenities or personal attacks. Guess they don't want their worldview challenged too strongly.
I rec'd word this afternoon, that the McHenry County Board has pulled the 2A Res. from the agenda on Tues. out of respect for the mourning families.So how is not doing everything they can to ensure there won't be more mourning families "respectful"?
1776: Col. Lachlan McIntosh, commander of Amercan forces in Georgia, informs General Washington of of five British warships in Tybee Inlet. (Syren, Scarborough, Raven, Tamer, and Cherokee)