Last night turned into an impromptu Round Table. Host Mark Walters was joined in studio by attorney John Monroe of Georgia Carry and on the phone by George Hill (The Mad Ogre), and producer Sean Young. I came in at 8:30 and stayed on for two-and-a-half more hours, and in that time we were joined by Larry Pratt of Gun Owners of America who had just gotten back from helping the shovel brigade in Tombstone.
I haven't had time to listen to the podcast but I have the nagging feeling that I slipped up when I meant to refer to Atticus Finch when talking about shooting a mad dog and may have called his last name Stevens. I don't know why I would have made that mistake, but I am getting old. Maybe I didn't. Who cares?
Listen at your leisure/play in the background while you surf and share with your friends:
Monday, June 11, 2012
CBS scoops contempt vote, claims credit for nationally breaking Fast and Furious
Regardless, here's the exhaustively-documented truth: This story, that now reaches into the highest levels of government, was exposed nationally for the first time by new media, not old. [More]Today's Gun Rights Examiner column notes acknowledgement involves a lot more more than simply proper attribution.
Registration-Bound
These are absolute, bald-faced lies. ATF has been copying FFL Bound Books for years – with or without FFL permission. During annual compliance inspections in other states, FFL dealers have reported that ATF industry operations investigators (IOI) brought in digital cameras and photographed the entire dealer “Bound Book” without permission of the FFL holder. Other dealers reported investigators brought in digital scanners and scanned portions of the Bound Book – line by line. Of course, the Bound Book contains the dealer’s full record of lawful firearm sales transaction records. [More]If it's not isolated and discontinued, as we've been led to believe, who can help amass documentation to see how widespread and long of a practice this has been/is?
Has a congressman just been lied to? Anyone willing to come forward and help prove it, or is the specter of retaliation enough to keep this discussion confined to "gun blogs," the only ones with the incentive to press forward on a story like this, that is, with principled interest?
Community Hero
Meet Alan Rosenfeld. [Read]
No wonder government and public sector unions want to raise taxes so you pay your "fair share." And if you don't like it, you're a teabagger, you teabagger.
No wonder government and public sector unions want to raise taxes so you pay your "fair share." And if you don't like it, you're a teabagger, you teabagger.
The Root of the Problem
Each year, across the country, about 7,000 African Americans are murdered, more than nine times out of 10 by other African Americans. [More]Dang.
You know what would fix that?
Marching on gun shops!
We're the Only Ones Who Know What's Good Enough
“(Russellville Police Chief Tom McMillen) stated that having one in your car’s probably good enough and you could get to it if you have to”... [More]Y'know, I can conjure up a thought experiment where ol' elitist Chiefie here can show us by example how that wold work. Without going into further detail, it includes force initiators screaming "IS THIS GOOD ENOUGH???"
Oh, look: His mission is all about "securing a feeling of security and safety." No wonder bleaters who make that their priority would trust it to this authoritarian meathead.
Two Approaches, One Solution
He taught them responsibility. [More]As opposed to the shrieking avoidance and blue-nosed, self-righteous prohibition, which is the purview of the antis.
Securing the Blessings of Liberty: Environmentalcase Bureaucrat-Style
Who Decides?
"The Latino community in Colorado can ultimately determine who ends up being the next president of the United States," he told KBNO's listeners. [More]And the usual suspects, Democrats, SEIU, et al, are exploiting that for all it's worth.
I don't suppose circulating these would be an option...?
Let me know if relying on Google Translate was a mistake--I can do a quick turnaround text change if need be.
This Day in History: June 11
The enemy, by attempting to hold conquests so remote, must dissipate their force, and of course afford opportunities of striking one or the other extremity. [More]