Thursday, April 12, 2007

Ranges of Death

Even in a state known for some of the nation's toughest gun control laws, unlicensed shooters in Massachusetts have to do little more than swear they are not criminals, drunk or mentally unstable to fire their choice of pistols or rifles.
Horrors!

Next thing they'll tell us is that shooting range injuries and deaths are approaching the pandemic proportions of activities as insanely perilous as...high school cheerleading.

That certainly seems justification for new uniform laws to harass ranges into performing background checks, with maybe days to get approval if the system hiccups. Heck, BATFU could swell their ranks with enforcement agents to make sure all registries have been completely and accurately filled out, and shut down any rogue ranges that violate paperwork protocols!

And by taking away places to learn and practice safe gun handling and marksmanship, we can rely on our old friend the law of unintended consequences to make its presence known...

NUTTY GUN OWNER PSYCHOS KILLING SELVES IN RECORD NUMBERS!!!!!

Or some such.

I mean, heck, the Harvard School of Public Health wouldn't have an agenda, or anything, would it?
"Removing all firearms from one's home is one of the most effective and straightforward steps that household decision-makers can take to reduce the risk of suicide," Matthew Miller, assistant professor of health policy and management, said in a prepared statement.
Well, maybe it would.

Just one thing, though, Prof. Miller: What are you going to do about these guys?

The Firing Line

Rory Ahearn of VICE/VBS.tv informs me of "a show called Americana, where we go out and talk to the folks about their life and their ideas of what makes America tick."

They do a good job in this episode of letting their subjects tell the story without injecting observer bias or advocacy, and you can't really ask for more than that.

We need as much truthful media in this country as we can get. When I get some time, I'm going back to check out some of their other offerings.

He Didn't Really Say That, Did He?

Snoop's position is he wants to give children and teenagers an example to follow...
Good grief.

[Via Hairy Hobbit]

A Tarnished Image

I think this presupposes the image of Daley's Finest was shiny to begin with...

[Via Dan]

Does John W. Whitehead Have a Right to Be a Sterile Queen Bee?

While it must be conceded that the individual citizen could not hope to defend him or herself against local and federal law enforcement dressed in military gear, armed to the teeth with armored vehicles and weapons of mass destruction, shouldn’t Americans at least be able to protect themselves, their families and their homes against criminals?
Well, I guess the way you've set things up, John, there's no argument. Can we at least not march in straight lines on the plain of battle? I suppose asymmetrical tactics, including covert individual acts of resistance, or the fact that gun owners outnumber our keepers don't enter into the argument.

We see your theory playing out right now in the Middle East. Do you have an "exit strategy" for your army of domestic occupation, and how well do you think it will be received by the growing number of Americans who don't even want our military fighting overseas?

As George Mason declared, “To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them.” While Congress can, of course, reasonably regulate certain types of weapons such as assault rifles, banning law-abiding citizens from having handguns in their own homes for self-defense or owning hunting rifles goes far beyond anything the Framers contemplated.

"Of course"? Really? Why, John? Where do they get the authority? Just what do you Rutherford wonks think the Second Amendment is for if you say it's OK to withhold the single most common and necessary infantry battlefield implement from the Citizen Militia?

You started out real good there, John, had us all primed. And then you ended up so...so neocon. You got everybody following you and then led them to a conclusion of appeasement and defeat.

I see you established your organization to "defend people who were persecuted or oppressed without charging them for such services. The Rutherford Institute exists to ensure that people are treated fairly in the courts and are free to express themselves without fear."

Why not prove how wrong I am about you, John?

Why not defend Wayne Fincher and thereby defend the right to keep and bear militia-suitable arms for all of us, as well as our right to argue Constitutional matters before the courts in our own defense?

2A-Killer Mitt

As a Second Amendment supporter, I don’t care about Romney’s hunting history. I’ve never hunted, nor has Don Kates, who is one of the most influential pro-Second Amendment scholars ever. I know plenty of outstanding pro-rights legislators and activists who have never hunted, or who haven’t been hunting for many years.
I've said before that I can't think of any slogan less inspiring than "Vote Your Sport."

[Via Peter B]

This Day in History: April 12

North Carolina, on April 12, 1776, authorized her delegates to the Continental Congress to vote for independence. This was the first official action by a colony calling for independence. The 83 delegates present in Halifax at the Fourth Provincial Congress unanimously adopted the Halifax Resolves...

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Guest Editorial: God, Guns and Judas Goats

FOREWORD: Here's another profound missive from Mike Vanderboegh, one he says will be the last for a while "Unless something else gets me worked up."

God, Guns and Judas Goats
Mike Vanderboegh

"Gun-control laws do not control crime because crimes are not committed by guns; they are committed by criminals. Criminals will always have guns because they do not obey laws, including anti-gun laws. Those without guns are easy prey for criminals with guns. Gun control encourages crime. The right to bear arms was included in the Bill of Rights, not to deter crime, but to deter oppressive government. Just governments honor and protect the right to bear arms. Oppressive governments fear and prohibit the right to bear arms. Guns are dangerous. The only thing more dangerous is not having them." -- G. Edward Griffin

"To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them." -- George Mason
10 April 2007
TO: Errol Louis
Editorial Page, New York Daily News

Dear Errol,

I have titled my response to your recent editorial ("Time to put our faith in ending gun scourge", NY Daily News, 8 April 07) God, Guns and Judas Goats. As you hold degrees from Harvard, Yale and Brooklyn Law School, and thus are an educated man, I will assume your familiarity with the concepts of both God and firearms. But as a lifelong "New Yarker" you may not know what a Judas Goat is. Since I know that Wikipedia is one of your favorite on-line resources, I have chosen its definition:
"A Judas goat is a trained goat used at a slaughterhouse and in general animal herding. The Judas goat is trained to associate with sheep or cattle, leading them to a specific destination. In stockyards, a Judas goat will lead sheep to slaughter, while its own life is spared. Judas goats are also used to lead other animals to specific pens and on to trucks. The term is a reference to the biblical traitor Judas Iscariot. The phrase has also been used to describe a goat that is used to find feral goats that are targeted for eradication. In many ecosystems goats introduced there mostly by European colonists are a pest or can outcompete endemic endangered species. The Judas goat is outfitted with a transmitter, painted in red and then released. The goat then finds the remaining herds of feral goats, allowing hunters to exterminate them."
I was reminded of the Judas goat by your editorial which praised the new effort from the hoplophobic Brady Center called the "God Not Guns Coalition." As the website describes it:
"The God Not Guns Coalition seeks to raise awareness of gun violence as a spiritual and moral crisis. We call on every congregation, synagogue, mosque, and gathering of people of faith to work toward a peaceable society where all children have the opportunity to grow and prosper, and where everyone can live without fear of being cut down by firearm violence. We invite every faithful individual and faith-based group to join us as we work to prevent the tragic toll of gun violence."
To which you replied, "Amen to that." And on the face of it, who can be for "gun violence"? If you mean by that imprecise term violent criminals killing folks with handguns, then you bet, I'm agin' it as they say in Blount County, Alabama. Hey, that's why I own firearms-- to keep me, my family, my friends and even my anti-gun neighbors safe from both criminals and predatory governments. I'm a big opponent of "gun violence" IF that's what you mean. But of course that's not exactly what the Brady Center has in mind, and I suspect you know that too.

What the Brady Center is interested in and has been assiduously working toward for decades is the disarmament of the American citizenry. They believe that criminals will be cut off from the supply of firearms when the law-abiding are. Yeah, that's worked real well for the drug epidemic, I'm sure it will work in the kumbaya future envisioned by the Brady Bunch. (As a writer I'm sure you recognize both irony and sarcasm when you read it.)

Strict gun control laws have worked real well in NYC haven't they? You cite several recent incidents in Gotham in your editorial as reason to join the Brady bandwagon, but I can only assume that as the son of an NYPD policeman you HAVE heard of the Sullivan Act? So, because of the failure of you New Yorkers to control your own criminal element with strict gun laws, we should all give up our guns to see if that will work? Pardon me if I don't jump on that bandwagon just yet. But that's not really the main point of my critique. Judas goats are.

The Brady Bunch has been chafing at the bit now that the largely anti-firearm Democrat Party controls both houses of Congress. But because the presidency is up for grabs in a year and a half the marching orders have gone out: "no anti-gun legislation until we've got the whole enchilada." Of course some Dems aren't persuaded, hence you have embarrassing gun-grabbing bills introduced like H.B. 1022. But the Brady Bunch knows that they will be marking time legislatively until January, 2009, so they have to have something else to keep them busy, burnish their image among the weak-minded and, not coincidentally, help them raise funds for the gargantuan legislative gun-grabs to come.

And so we have the God Not Guns Coalition (hereinafter referred to as the GNGC). I read through the list of religious organizations of various faiths that have signed onto this project, and was relieved when I didn't see a Baptist among 'em. I'm sure if the Bradys look hard enough they'll find one eventually, there are fools everywhere and I've met my share of them in the Baptist congregations I've belonged to over the years. Lots of the GNGC were organizations that I expected to see, as they have declared themselves before on the issue of the Second Amendment (they're agin' it). I even knew that the Presbyterians had gone all wobbly on the gun issue, no doubt making their ancestors of "The Black Regiment" -- the British term for Presbyterian ministers who preached revolution in the 1770s-- spin like tops in their New England graveyards.

I take note that several prominent Muslim organizations have signed onto the GNGC, and this is to be applauded I suppose, for the simple fact that so few of their co-religionists seem interested in gun control as it applies to global Jihad. This is a step in the right direction, thus proving that every cloud has a silver lining.

The AME Zion Church of Maryland surprised me though, for reasons that I will deal with further down the page. But the fact that the top leadership of Reform Judaism endorses citizen disarmament is certainly no surprise, and here is where we begin to deal with the subject of Judas goats.

You quote, with approval, Rabbi Eric Yoffie, president of the Union for Reform Judaism, who you say, "put his finger on the spiritual dimension of the crisis at an anti-gun rally in 2000."
"'The indiscriminate distribution of guns is an offense against God and humanity,' he said. 'Our gun-flooded society has turned weapons into idols, and the worship of idols must be recognized for what it is - blasphemy.'"
Well, now. Using the "B" word is tough stuff in any religion. I have my own opinions as to what constitutes blasphemy and idolatry in present day America, but as a confessed rabid Second Amendment advocate, guns don't meet the test with me. Firearms are tools, like any other. They are value neutral. If an evil man uses a gun to kill, the man is evil, not the gun. Likewise, if the firearm is used to defend against criminal attack or tyranny, the justified good intentions accrue to the man who wields it and not the object itself. There is, I'm sure Reb Yoffie would agree, an oft-quoted rabbinic legal dictum, "Im ba l'hargekha, hashkem l'hargo," "If someone comes to kill you, rise up and kill him (first)." Firearms faciliate the dispensing of that justice.

Now, as I said, I'm a Baptist and so it might seem that I'm out of my league in dispensing the following analysis. But hey, some of my best friends are observant Jews and we've had long conversations about the self-defense dictums of Judaism and how they were ignored during the Holocaust. The Talmudic discussion of the classic Jewish principle of self-defense cited above is plain. "If there is homicidal intent, self-defense is more than permitted; it is required. This is a common principle of all legal systems, America's included." ("If Someone Comes to Kill You, Rise Up and Kill Him First" by Noam E. Marans, Associate Director, Contemporary Jewish Life Department, American Jewish Committee, available on AJC's website www.ajc.org.)

My brother-in-arms Aaron Zelman of Jews for the Preservation of Firearms Ownership once told me: “If every Jewish and anti-nazi family in Germany had owned a Mauser rifle and twenty rounds of ammunition AND THE WILL TO USE IT, Adolf Hitler would be a little-known footnote to the history of the Weimar Republic.”

And this has always puzzled me. Why didn't the Jews resist the Holocaust more violently and directly, given "Im ba l'hargekha, hashkem l'hargo"? It wasn't like Hitler didn't tell them what was coming. Enter the Judas Goats.

"Listen and believe this, even though it happened here, even though it seems so odd, so distant, so strange." -- From the account of Josef Zelkowicz, September, 1942, Lodz Ghetto (Died, Auschwitz, 1944.)

They came in many colors, many forms, some unwitting, some coldly calculating. Some were mere "useful idiots", to use Lenin's term, who figuratively sold the Nazis the rope with which they themselves were hanged. In one place it was the Rabbi who, having read Mein Kampf, urged his faithful to patience, remembering all the other anti-semitic storms which his community had weathered for a thousand years. In another place it was the "assimilated" Jews who had played such a vital role in the Weimar Republic that preceded the "nightmare years" as William Shirer called them, who laid the bureaucratic basis for the Nazi terror with things like gun registration laws. (Proponents of the Patriot Act take note.) In yet another it was leaders of the Reichsbanner, a paramilitary corps for the defense of the Republic, Jewish and Gentile alike, who held back their followers who burned to confront the Nazis with guns, waiting for orders from the faltering republican government in Berlin. Waiting for orders that never came. Waiting, in fact, for the Gestapo raids that scooped them up individually and sent them to Dachau, when collectively they could have killed the Nazi experiment in its Devil's cradle.

As the darkness deepened, the Judas goats of deception and denial became those of collaboration. These opportunists like Mordechai Rumkowski, dubbed by the Nazis "the Eldest of Jews" of the Lodz Ghetto, sold themselves and their people, urging compliance, assisting in the death machine, sending their own to die (at least in Rumkowski's case) with eyes wide open. (See Lodz Ghetto by Alan Adelson and Robert Lapides.) As one survivor put it: "Without Jewish collaborators, the Nazis would not have succeeded!" (See "Kapo", Winner of the 2000 International EMMY Award for Best Documentary.)

But there were other Judas goats who had less excuse, because of their own margin of safety. These were American Jews, leaders of their communities, who didn't do enough to help their co-religionists under the Nazi boot, who didn't demand enough of the American government which could have done more, who fought amongst themselves for "leadership" and hampered efforts like those Peter Bergson to save as many as possible. (See While Six Million Died by Arthur D. Morse and especially Shake Heaven and Earth: Peter Bergson and the Struggle to Rescue the Jews of Europe by Louis Rapoport.)

In the politically correct, sanitized memory of the Holocaust today, the intellectual descendants of Reform Rabbi Stephen Wise (who hampered Bergson's efforts) remember and venerate the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, the escape from Sobibor and the Jewish partisans who wreaked vengeance on the Nazis. This is good. But they conveniently forget about the Judas goats whose complacency, complicity and pacifism enabled the Nazis to commit the horror. And they also have forgotten that most crucial element of resistance: guns. The survivors of the death camps learned this lesson, indelibly imprinted upon their souls. What was the difference between the herded victims at the Auschwitz gate, shuffling to their deaths, and the proud founding of the state of Israel? Guns, and the will to use them against deadly enemies.

How American Jews can miss this lesson is frankly baffling to me. As far as I can see, any American Jews like Rabbi Yoffie who urge citizen disarmament are merely the Judas goats of a future Holocaust. And if you think it can't happen here, Errol, you're whistling past the graveyard of history. As an African American, you should know this. It wasn't that long ago that the Deacons for Defense and Justice rose up in a perilous time and faced down their own would-be murderers with guns in their hands.

"Who or what could control the haters? The governor? The president? The spirit of Gandhi? Or the barrel of a gun!" (Civil Rights pioneer James Farmer, in his book Lay Bare the Heart)

This is why it surprises me that the AME Zion Church of Maryland signed onto the GNGC load of gun baloney. They should know better. I commend to their reading list, and yours, Deacons for Defense: Armed Resistance and the Civil Rights Movement by Lance Hill. Professor Hill tells the often ignored story of the Deacons for Defense and Justice. To quote again from your favorite source, Wikipedia:
"(The Deacons for Defense and Justice were) a group of African American men in Jonesboro, Louisiana led by Earnest 'Chilly Willy' Thomas and Frederick Douglas Kirkpatrick founded the group in November of 1964 to protect civil rights workers against the violence of the Ku Klux Klan. Most of them were war veterans with combat experience from the Korean War and World War II. The Jonesboro chapter later organized a Deacons chapter in Bogalusa, Louisiana led by Charles Sims, A.Z. Young and Robert Hicks. The Jonesboro chapter initiated a regional organizing campaign and eventually formed 21 chapters in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. The militant Deacons confrontation with the Klan in Bogalusa was instrumental in forcing the federal government to invervene on behalf of the black community and enforce the 1964 Civil Rights Act and neutralize the Klan."
James Farmer slept well when he visited Bogalusa, he later reported, because the house he slept in was guarded by Deacons carrying M-1 rifles, carbines and .45 automatic pistols. According to former Ohio secretary of State Ken Blackwell:
"As legendary civil rights leader Roy Innis recently said to me, the Deacons forced the Klan to re-evaluate their actions and often change their undergarments." (See "Second Amendment Freedoms Aided the Civil Rights Movement" at www.townhall.com/columnists/KenBlackwell)
If you require a thumbnail history of the Deacons on-line, Errol, you may go to Larry Pratt's article, "Deacons For Defense," dated August, 2004 at http://www.gunowners.org/op0438.htm. Larry also has another excellent essay on Christians and self defense at the same site. Interestingly, Condi Rice's father was said to be a Deacon in the Birmingham chapter.

Yet the Deacons merely formalized in an organization what had actually been happening for some time as the tide of Klan violence rose.

"More typically, efforts to provide physical protection for movement leaders and activists were discreet and unaccompanied by ideological claims. Devotees of nonviolence in CORE and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee–and indeed Martin Luther King Jr. himself–were all aware that many of the local activists with whom they worked carried guns, and they often quietly accepted the protection these guns afforded." (See Mike Marqusee, http://www.mikemarqusee.com)

Which brings me back to the hypocrisy of you and the Brady Bunch using that quote from Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., "who warned in 1963 that 'by our readiness to allow arms to be purchased at will and fired at whim; by allowing our movies and television screens to teach our children that the hero is one who masters the art of shooting and the technique of killing ... we have created an atmosphere in which violence and hatred have become popular pastimes.'" Considering that MLK was himself guarded by men with guns, it seems in retrospect to be a little, well, hypocritical, don't you think?

And speaking of hypocrisy, let's conclude by talking about the current Judas goat under examination, one Errol Louis. What do you suppose the Deacons would say to you for casting your lot with the citizen disarmament crowd? They fought and bled to secure your right to equal treatment under law and to keep and bear arms against tyrannical government. Do you believe that the current way of things will always be? What is to prevent some American Hitler in the future from deciding on a "Final Solution to the Negro Problem"?

I'll tell you who will prevent it. Me and my friends will-- white and black, Christian and Jewish, all the colors and creeds of the American rainbow. The gunnies will. The despised "gun nuts" whom the Brady Bunch seeks to disarm. We will. No thanks to Judas goats like you, the calculating Brady Bunch and the well-intentioned but foolish clerics of the God Not Guns Coalition who, purposefully or not, are enabling future tyrants and smoothing the path for the next Holocaust.

Mike Vanderboegh
PO Box 926
Pinson, AL 35126
GeorgeMason1776ATaol.com

Previous guest editorials at WarOnGuns by Mike Vanderboegh:

We're the Only Ones in the News Enough

Here are some more "Only Ones" headline challenges for me to devise from WarOnGuns correspondent Vinnie:

We're the Only Ones Paid for Drinking and Driving Enough
A township police officer may remain on paid suspension until after he faces drunk driving charges in court.
We're the Only Ones Mouthing Off to Boys Enough
A police officer was charged Monday with three counts of oral copulation involving minor boys, according to Alameda County Assistant District Attorney Richard Klemmer.
We're the Only Ones "Good" Enough
A rookie police officer accused of using excessive force during a confrontation with a teenager began law enforcement training this week, months after a video showed him pointing his gun at the student in a crowded school hall...

"I'm really looking forward to this hearing so Mr. Wiggins can put this behind him and get on with being a good police officer, which is what he is," Creel said. "We need good officers out there. He's a good officer. I hate that people make these kinds of accusations, but it's just a prime example of how bad things happen to good people."
We're the Only Ones Speedy Enough
A police officer has been charged with vehicular homicide for allegedly driving nearly 40 miles an hour over the speed limit when his cruiser struck a pedestrian.

Since I obviously don't have anywhere near the self control, judgment and moral development of these fine professionals, I guess it's a good thing the law says they can be armed and I can't.

Lies, Damned Lies and Joyce Foundation Statistics

“When asked directly whether ‘gun control laws should be stricter, making it harder for people to purchase firearms’ as a result of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, 76.5 percent backed this idea and only 16 percent endorsed less strict gun controls,” said Smith. The findings are in “Public Attitudes Toward the Regulation of Firearms,” a study funded by Chicago’s Joyce Foundation as part of the 2006 GSS survey.
The Joyce Foundation said it, I believe it, that settles it.

Ri-ight.

This truly needs a John Lott type to give it the debunking it deserves, but I will say it's evident the survey group didn't have a clue as to what they profess beliefs in, which always allows for the results one wishes to produce. It's also clear what they thought they knew was merely regurguitated sound bites from mainstream propaganda conditioning.

I know it's wrong to judge books by their covers, but I can't help but look at Tom W. Smith and wonder what the hell good he'd be if someone decided to commit savage violence in front of him.

What I see is another advocate of disarming you and me who doesn't have the guts to try it himself, another "anti-gun male."

Another "Judas goat."

[Via Vinnie]

rf396

Big words from someone who HAS NO idea what goes on there. NO IDEA AT ALL. I would take the opportunity to enlighten you a bit, but you've already made up your mind, what little of it you possess. Do you have ANY idea how ASSNINE you sound wishing for me to LOSE MY JOB? I don't make policy there you moron, nor did I have any choice as to where I was assigned, you DUMMY. But this job that you hope I lose, feeds MY family, pays MY mortgage, MY taxes, and MY bills. Can YOU say the same? Or would it be better if I was POS illegal alien CREATING the crime instead of helping to curb it. You anarchist types kill me. I wasn't rah rahing for anybody. I was simply giving ANOTHER PERSPECTIVE as someone who sees it on a day to day basis. But again, that all appears to be lost on you, chump. So instead of maybe talking to me like a man/woman/other, and maybe getting some background, you decided to take a cheap shot. WOW, did that make you feel superior? ....wants me to lose my job.....what a LOSER!
A BATFU contract network engineer gets all defensive in a Red's thread over at Liberty Post.

Maybe this should be our next poll.

What would you rather do:
Boot the BATFE
or
Make sure rf396 can pay his bills?

Take all the time you need to think this through, now...

Camille Paglia on 2A

But as a libertarian, I read the Second Amendment of the Bill of Rights as granting to private citizens the right to bear arms against the potential abuses of a government turned tyrannous. Furthermore, should police authority evaporate after a cataclysm of storm, flood, earthquake or terrorism, citizens have a right to defend their families and property against criminals and looters. If food and water are in short supply over a protracted period, expect predators and violence.
You almost get it. Not quite, but almost.

Perhaps "intellectuals" are teachable.

Why the Instant Background Check is a Bad Idea

Congress has legislation before it to expand the Instant Background Check, aka the Brady Law.

Rather than expand the program, it should be abolished.
I agree, Mr. Pratt.

Now what is your plan for making that happen?

"Majority rule democracy"? Lobbying? Writing more essays?

Do you think it is more likely that rollbacks will happen all at once or in steps? You guys at GOA dismiss BIDS and I understand your reasons completely, and cannot argue with the purity of your position. But what I'm not seeing is an alternative.

I'm not trying to be a pain with this, I'm serious and sincere. You're the national gun rights leaders. Lead me.

Not Gun-Related, But...

Do you think Al Sharpton will demand that Halle Berry gets fired?

50-50

Brown County Sheriff Dennis Kocken didn't have to write himself a ticket. But he says it was the right thing to do.

"As sheriff, I'm held to the highest standard in law enforcement. How can I hold officers accountable if I don't hold myself accountable?" he said. "I'm satisfied I'm doing the right thing."
So far so good. He's not an "Only One."

Or is he?
Brown County Sheriff Dennis Kocken said he is not opposed to the concept of citizen conceal carry, but said there are problems with the bill as written.

"Most of the sheriffs in Wisconsin are against the law as it's currently proposed," Kocken said. "The main reason is the legislators drafting the thing have refused to talk to any of the sheriffs or chiefs and get their opinion as to what they think.

"I'm not opposed to it, but let's do it right," Kocken said. "As it's proposed, we haven't gotten it right."

Kocken pointed to access to information about who has a permit — beyond owners of vehicles — and how that information is disseminated. Kocken said he is not a fan of keeping permit holders' names secret.

"Why can't it be a public record?" Kocken said.
Sorry, Sheriff. The scales just don't balance out.

[Via Jeff]

Wayne Fincher Update: April 11

Per Wayne Fincher's daughter:
They have set dad's sentencing date for June 22, 2007 at 10:00. That's all I know at this time.

This Day in History: April 11

A letter from General Putnam, at New York, of the 7, with sundry papers enclosed,also a letter from Captain Barry was presented to Congress, and read.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Guest Editorial--Hoplophobia: "Crazy Is As Crazy Does."

FOREWORD: The response to Mike Vanderboegh's last guest piece was remarkable. The guy can really write. At the risk of putting myself out of business by showcasing more of his work, he's generously allowing me to post this new essay, and tells me another is on the way!

Hoplophobia: "Crazy Is As Crazy Does."
Mike Vanderboegh

I have long believed that the country I grew up in has in fact become two countries. These two countries, both of whom claim to be the United States of America, are divided along the fault lines of respect for life (abortion), liberty (taxes and guns), morality (Hollywood ethics and gay marriage) and even truth (”the meaning of is”). Reflecting this dichotomy is the language that each side uses to describe the other. Liberals are especially adept at using terminology to demonize their opponents: "religious fanatics" and "gun nuts" to name just two. I have been called both of these pejoratives countless times over the years, and yet I always resisted calling gun control advocates anything other than foolish or misdirected. I really do despise ad hominem attacks, having been on the receiving end of quite a few. So I never questioned a gun grabber's mental state with name-calling until recently, when I realized that nothing else quite described their behavior like "hoplophobe."

"Hoplophobia" comes from from the Greek hoplon, or weapon, and is a term coined by the great Colonel Jeff Cooper in 1962. As described in Wikipedia:
"(Cooper's) intent was to satirically use a clinical term to bring public recognition of the irrational fear of firearms and other forms of weaponry such as knives or explosives. He stated that 'the most common manifestation of hoplophobia is the idea that instruments possess a will of their own, apart from that of their user'. Hoplophobia is deemed to be a cultural side effect of those who engage in the primordial human belief systems that anthropologists refer to as 'animism', or the belief that inanimate objects can hold spirits that can affect human actions."
How else, other than hoplophobia, can you explain this recent Washington Times story by Valerie Richardson out of Littleton, Colorado with the headline "Community at odds over fallen hero's statue"?
"A planned statue depicting a local hero, a Navy SEAL killed in Afghanistan, has drawn opposition from some parents, who say the image and location are inappropriate for children. A bronze sculpture of Petty Officer 2nd Class Danny Dietz Jr. showing him cradling his rifle across his chest is scheduled to be unveiled July 4 at Berry Park here, where he grew up and attended school. The statue was modeled after a photo of the young serviceman.. . .Petty Officer Dietz, 25, was awarded the Navy Cross, the service's second-highest award for valor after the Medal of Honor, for fighting off an ambush by insurgents in Afghanistan despite being mortally wounded. His actions were credited with helping a fellow Navy SEAL escape."
Seems straightforward, right? A hometown hero has a statue erected in his memory so that his sacrifice will not be forgotten by those he made it for. Ah, but enter the hoplophobes:
"But a group of parents wants the city to recast the statue or place it elsewhere, arguing that the site, near three elementary schools and two parks, is a hub for young children who could find the weapon disturbing."
Disturbing? DISTURBING?
"'While our hearts go out to the family of this brave young man, we have serious concerns regarding the graphic and violent detail the statue portrays,' stated a flier distributed recently in a nearby neighborhood. 'As a community, we cannot allow the many young children in this area to be exposed to a larger than life-size grenade-launching machine gun,' the flier stated."
Of course, the story continues,
"members of Petty Officer Dietz's family and others have defended the memorial, saying there's a clear distinction between a rifle used in combat to defend the United States and a firearm used in other contexts. But critics have said the image of an automatic rifle is particularly inappropriate given the memorial's proximity to Columbine High School. The high school, located a few miles from the park, was the site of the 1999 massacre in which two suicidal teenage gunmen killed 12 students and a teacher. 'In light of our community's experience with the Columbine tragedy, and the clear message of nonviolence that we teach in Littleton schools, what is our city thinking?' the flier stated."
The real question is "What are these morons smoking"? But of course it is not marijuana, it is merely the latest manifestation of hoplophobia. If I may paraphrase that famous Alabama philosopher, Mrs. Gump: "Crazy is as crazy does." What shall we do now, sanitize all the statues to our war dead? Shall we redo the Minuteman statue, replacing his musket with a pitchfork? Are you sure that's not too violent a substitute? I mean, pitchforks can kill folks too. How about an Iwo Jima memorial without M1 rifles? You know, sort of like the amiable Marines just hopped a tourist liner to visit Japanese territory and then decided to raise an American flag while the hospitable Imperial Army looked on in smiling approval. While were at it, we can reshape their helmets into construction site hardhats so as to make the whole thing less militaristic. And why don't we spruce up all those Civil War memorials by removing their muskets and replacing them with bouquets of daisies?

To my mind, objecting to a sculpture of a hero which includes the weapon he used in defense of his country just because two pimple-faced neoNazi wannabes who couldn't get dates used weapons (albeit entirely different in type and capability) to carry out a massacre in the "no guns allowed" criminal free fire zone of the local high school makes about as much sense as a militant lesbian objecting to the Oscar Mayer Wienermobile driving through a local grocery store's parking lot because it reminds her of a phallus. I mean, are we talking two different countries here, or entire alternate universes?

It's like the friend of mine who lived in California and got tired of all the "War Is NOT the Answer" peacenik bumper stickers he saw on his daily commute. He came up with an alternative sticker of his own which read: "If you think war is not the answer, it's because you don't understand the frigging question."

Dr. Sarah Thompson, in her 2000 article "Raging Against Self Defense: A Psychiatrist Examines The Anti-Gun Mentality", disagrees with Cooper's blanket terminology. Describing an acquaintance who is afraid of his neighbors owning guns because he is afraid they will shoot him, the scrupulously scientific Thompson posits:
"This is an example of what mental health professionals call projection – unconsciously projecting one's own unacceptable feelings onto other people, so that one doesn't have to own them. In some cases, the intolerable feelings are projected not onto a person, but onto an inanimate object, such as a gun, so that the projector believes the gun itself will murder him. Projection is a defense mechanism. Defense mechanisms are unconscious psychological mechanisms that protect us from feelings that we cannot consciously accept. They operate without our awareness, so that we don't have to deal consciously with 'forbidden' feelings and impulses. Thus, if you asked my e-mail correspondent if he really wanted to murder his neighbors, he would vehemently deny it, and insist that other people want to kill him. . . "

"Defense mechanisms are also frequently combined, so that an anti-gun person may use several defense mechanisms simultaneously. For example, my unfortunate correspondent uses projection to create a world in which all his neighbors want to murder him. As a result, he becomes more angry and fearful, and needs to employ even more defense mechanisms to cope. So he uses projection to attribute his own rage to others, he uses denial that there is any danger to protect himself from a world where he believes he is helpless and everyone wants to murder him, and he uses reaction formation to try to control everyone else's life because his own is so horribly out of control."

"Also, it's important to remember that not all anti-gun beliefs are the result of defense mechanisms. Some people suffer from gun phobia, an excessive and completely irrational fear of firearms, usually caused by the anti-gun conditioning they've been subjected to by the media, politicians, so-called 'educators,' and others. In some cases, gun phobia is caused by an authentic bad experience associated with a firearm. But with all due respect to Col. Jeff Cooper, who coined the term 'hoplophobia' to describe anti-gun people, most anti-gun people do not have true phobias. Interestingly, a person with a true phobia of guns realizes his fear is excessive or unreasonable, something most anti-gun folks will never admit."
(Dr. Thompson's article can be found in its entirety at: http://www.jpfo.org/ragingagainstselfdefense.htm).

So who's right-- the great Jeff Cooper, Dr. Thompson or both? Even after reading Dr. Thompson's article, I'm not entirely certain. But I do know this for sure: this country and all her people, including the hoplophobic nitwit housewives of Littleton, Colorado, owe their freedom from before the Founding up through today to brave men with scary guns like Petty Officer 2nd Class Danny Dietz Jr.

And I'll tell you something else I know for sure. In the practical, common sense corner of the universe that I inhabit, and in my own modest opinion, regardless of where such loonies get their fear of firearms and whether it's treatable or not, I know this with absolute certainty: THESE PEOPLE ARE NUTS!

Mike Vanderboegh
PO Box 926
Pinson, AL 35126
GeorgeMason1776ATaol.com

We're the Only Ones...ENOUGH Already...

WarOnGuns correspondent Vinnie puts the "cop" into "cornucopia" with a virtual glut of "Only Ones" vignettes. Now we get to see if I can spontaneously come up with suitably corny headlines for this unanticipated barrage:

We're the Only Ones Appraising Enough
A Prince George's County police officer is charged with assault after police say he pulled a gun on a real estate appraiser who came to the officer's house by mistake.
We're the Only Ones "America's Bloodiest Home Videos" Enough
"The one cop came punched me in my mouth then they threw me on the floor. After they were done smashing the camera then they hit me with the night stick," Rodriguez said.
We're the Only Ones Putting Out the Hits Enough
A Suffolk county jury has convicted a 22-year-old New York police academy recruit of conspiracy to commit murder for trying to hire a hit man to kill his girlfriend.
We're the Only Ones Anxious to Get on With Our Lives and Work Enough
A municipal court judge charged with pointing a pistol at two others has been sentenced to probation after pleading guilty to a lesser charge.
We're the Only Ones Dealing Enough
A Wallace police officer was jailed on drug charges after an investigation that began last summer, authorities said.
We're the Only Ones Who Keep Going and Going Enough
A Chicago police officer has been charged with domestic battery and stripped of her police powers, officials said.
We're the Only Ones Discharging Enough
She is charged with one count of discharging a firearm in an occupied building, a four-year felony, one count of felonious assault, a four-year felony, and felony firearms, a two-year felony.
We're the Only Ones Dipping Into the Spa Enough
Another New Orleans police officer charged in a robbery at the Bangkok Spa has pleaded guilty.
We're the Only Ones Walking the Walk Enough
35-year-old Paul Cetinski told a judge he was tasered repeatedly, without warning, after allegedly jay-walking in the downtown area.
We're the Only Ones Overlapping Enough
A Cuyahoga County grand jury today indicted a Cleveland police officer on a charge of theft in office based on allegations he collected on-duty pay while working off-duty as a security guard.
I'm sure glad these people were all considered more trustworthy to bear arms than I am.

I need a drink. And it's not even 6:00 AM. And I don't really drink all that much.