Archive for June, 2006

June 16, 2006

National Instant Check System Improvement Act of 2005

Publicola says it’s bad ju-ju:

I’ll get to the point; it’s bullshit. All this will do is open up more records for inclusion in the NICS system. In other words they’re hoping that more folks will be disqualified because of Lautenberg, mental health records or possibly because they’re being investigated for “terrorism”.

The last part may leave you in the cold. Here’s where I get that from:

“…and (3) the Secretary of Homeland Security to make available to the Attorney General records relevant to a determination that a person is disqualified from possessing or receiving a firearm and information about a change in such person’s status for removal from NICS, where appropriate.”

I can only assume that this is an effort to grease the wheels of that “terrorism watch list’ being made at least a temporary disqualification. Why else would the department of Homeland Security be involved?

He has more. Not sure about his assessment but it is possibly a particularly slippery slope.

The supreme court continues aiding the decline of civil liberties

I step away from the blog for a bit and the supreme court pounds away some more.

Bloomberg.com:

Prosecutors can use evidence seized by police during a home search even though officers violated the Constitution by failing to knock or announce their presence before entering, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled.

The justices, voting 5-4 in a Michigan case, today put new limits on the so-called exclusionary rule, which in some circumstances bars prosecutors from using the product of an illegal search. The majority said the exclusionary rule doesn’t apply to violations of the “knock and announce” requirement for home searches.

Basically, evidence can be used against you if the police screw up by not knocking. This goes against the exclusionary rule which stated that evidence obtained unconstitutionally was invalid and could not be used. In other words, no-knock warrants will soon be standard operating procedure.

We have police who cannot legally be held to account for violating the provisions of the constitution. And we now will no longer exclude evidence obtained via violation of the constitution. So, in such a case, your recourse is non-existent.

Fuckers.

As to the details:

In the Michigan case, prosecutors opted not to argue that the entry into Hudson’s home was constitutional, instead contending that the exclusionary rule shouldn’t apply to knock- and-announce violations. The state, backed by the Bush administration, argued that those types of police errors don’t enable officers to seize additional evidence.

Scalia agreed, saying the connection between the manner in which police enter a home and the evidence they discover is too weak to warrant application of the exclusionary rule. He said the knock-and-announce rule doesn’t protect “one’s interest in preventing the government from seeing or taking evidence described in a warrant.”

That’s not an error. It is intentional.

Clarification

In comments, Justin says:

I think you’re mistaken on that point, Mr. Uncle. A search at GunBroker just netted me 61 auctions selling armor piercing ammo in .223, .308, 30-06, 7.62×54R, and .50BMG.

AP ammo is only illegal for handgun ammunition.

I should have been more clear. Armor piercing ammo, as a legal construct, is different from what is actually armor piercing. Justin is correct that AP ammo for handguns is illegal but that means rounds designed to penetrate vests, whereas real AP ammo is designed to penetrate armor such as that on a vehicles. Most rifle rounds penetrate vests anyway since vests are designed to stop handgun ammo.

Sorry for the confusion.

June 15, 2006

So sad

On a page titled “Mass Destruction of Weapons “, images abound of Takarovs and Makrovs being destroyed. I wish I knew why.

Hooray for Yahoo!

I’ve noticed that Yahoo!’s search results often get me to what I’m looking for faster than Google’s. Moreover, while Google has forsaken Say Uncle, Yahoo!’s search engine has not.

Google’s days of search engine hegemony will soon be over.

Comic Blogging the Eminent Domain

The fifth panel of the first chapter of Shooting War has a good condemnation of Kelo v. New London. Good to see the issue raised, even if they cast it as a battle in the war against corporatism, rather than a fight over property rights.

The comic itself is a serialized graphic novel about a lefty video blogger covering the Iraq war in 2011 during the McCain administration. It’s well-drawn, cynical, and deft with the politics and culture. Worth a look.

Oh, and Uncle told me the way to keep you folks entertained is with explodey pictures, so don’t miss panel 7.

Update: While you’re looking at fictionalized accounts of the terror war, check this alternative history of the US/Afghan war. So scary it could be true!

Bloomberg is an idiot

Ayup. Also, ammo advertised as armor piercing is illegal.

Mmmmmmm

Barbeque

Blog Joke

How do you keep an idiot entertained for hours? Click here.

Blogging still light

Yeah, taking my few days off before the new gig to help a friend move. Blogging still light.

June 14, 2006

President Giuliani

Rudy Giuliani is the Joe Lieberman of the Republican party. He’s the guy who is both too moderate for his own party and too extreme for the opposition party. It’s too bad, really, because as much as I dislike the guy, at least he presents a different policy mix from the usual assortment of pandering stiffs.

Today, Giuliani was covered in the NYTimes talking about energy policy. He’s campaigning hard, pitching for his clients, and raising money. As expected, Rudy came out hard for expanding and diversifying domestic energy production by increasing our nuclear and natural gas power sources, opening more oil refineries and exploring alternative energy. None of that is controversial, not even the nod he gave to Iowa ethanol.

His one ernergy position that wasn’t RNC-approved relates to global warming. He doesn’t even try the Phillip Morris defense. He skips right to “everyone accepts the fact that it’s happening and it has an impact.” We’ll see how well that position plays on Super Tuesday.

This isn’t the only issue on which Rudy bucks the company line. To global warming, you can add abortion, gun-grabbing, and marriage equality. On paper, Rudy is slightly to the left of Hillary Clinton.

The smart money says Rudy is too moderate for primary victory. My guess is he decides to run but bows out early.

Suppressor bleg

I want to get a 9mm suppressor for use on my 9mm AR-15 and my SigArms P229. Apparently, the floating style barrel of the Sig usually warrants and adapter of some sort to ensure the weapon cycles. Anyone have any recommendations?

I may also use it on my 10/22 and my Walther P-22.

Baby Gap

We got this 7 pack of onesies from some one as a gift for the new kid. They’re labeled for each day of the week (we have one for Monday, Tuesday, etc.). These are useless in terms of getting a week’s wear out of them because babies go through about 4 outfits per day. My big money idea is to sell a 12 pack that starts with 1:00. 2:00, etc.

Junior has gone up until recently without ever having her bottom spanked. Well, that changed when she threw one of my big size 10 1/2 shoes and almost hit the new baby. This was after my verbal warnings to her to stop doing that near the baby. I picked her up and gave her a little pop on her butt. She laughed. I popped her butt just a bit harder. She laughed again. Third time, I connected and go her attention. Now, whenever I tell her no and get out of my seat, she puts her little hands over her butt and runs. She does this whether I plan on spanking her or not.

Now, back to your regularly scheduled light blogging.

Liberty1st needs you

Buck is looking for another co-blogger:

I would like to expand the Blogging pool here at Liberty1st so if you are a conservative / libertarian wanting to get a start in Blogging email me

Weekly Check

Jeff has the latest check on guns in the media. Lot’s of stuff about liberals and guns, only not the kind you think.

KdTeeVee

Kim du Toit is doing some videos on shooting.

SigArms and Cali

Sig isn’t happy with CA:

The California Highway Patrol restricted bids on a $5.3 million gun contract to a single Smith & Wesson pistol, even though a rival manufacturer offered almost identical weapons for $2.2 million less.

SigArms Inc. alleged in April 10 letters to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and CHP Commissioner Mike Brown that the state’s decision to favor Smith & Wesson was improper and contrary to state contract regulations, which require competitive bidding for big government purchases.

“Historically, when governments or companies have not used the competitive bidding process, waste and corruption have often been the result,” SigArms general counsel Eric Cook wrote.

Of course, I wish gun makers would follow Barrett’s lead and not sell to Cali.

Light blogging

Yeah, light blogging for the rest of the week. Any co-bloggers out there can kick it up a notch in my absence.

June 13, 2006

Score

Sorry for the light blogging but I was out getting a job. So, uh, go me.

Drugs vs. Iraq

Tax cuts, terror wars, drug wars: choose two.

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld wants to end U.S. Army helicopter support for a joint U.S.-Bahamas drug-interdiction program that over the past two decades has resulted in hundreds of arrests and the seizure of tons of cocaine and marijuana. […]

But in a May 15 letter to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, Rumsfeld said it was time after more than 20 years to shift the equipment elsewhere. The military is being stretched thin by the fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan and other commitments around the globe.

The Bahamas anti-drug program, Rumsfeld wrote, “now competes with resources necessary for the war on terrorism and other activities in support of our nation’s defense, with potential adverse effects on the military preparedness of the United States.”

Via the ever-excellent Drug War Rant.

Light blogging

Maybe later. Stuff to do. Meanwhile, for your reading pleasure:

RAGING AGAINST SELF DEFENSE: A PSYCHIATRIST EXAMINES THE ANTI-GUN MENTALITY

eNeighborhood watch

ACLU trying to stop spying

Paramilitary drug raids on crack

June 12, 2006

San Fran Ban a no-no

The AP:

A state trial judge on Monday overturned a voter-approved city ordinance that banned handgun possession and firearm sales in San Francisco, siding with gun owners who said the city did not have the authority to prohibit the weapons.

Good. As to why:

In siding with the gun owners, San Francisco County Superior Court Judge James Warren said a local government cannot ban weapons because the California Legislature allows their sale and possession.

I told you so.

Gyrating graves

I’ve been watching this show on Discovery Channel called Revolution. It’s a thirteen part documentary on the American Revolution. While watching it, I’m amazed at all the action that occurs. And that it occurs in Massachusetts. At one time, people in Massachusetts were willing to take up arms against a governing force over pretty small tax increases. Now, the government there arrests people on charges of animal cruelty for killing a seagull in self-defense.

Live free or there.

More on Knoxville’s Charter

Barry has on Knox County’s invalid charter and how your vote there never really mattered. Just go here and scroll.

Brady Bunch Presser Lies

The Brady Crew is pushing the idea that Florida’s castle doctrine law is killing people:

A leading Florida newspaper yesterday published an analysis of incidents of violence in Central Florida that have occurred since January 1 where the state’s new deadly force law was invoked.

The Orlando Sentinel reported that in five counties in Central Florida 13 people killed six men and wounded four others, and that all but one of those shot were unarmed. The dead include a man who shook his fist at another man in a neighborhood dispute, and the wounded include a 15-year old would be car thief shot in the back of the leg while running away.

The story can be found at http://www.orlandosentinel.com/orl- deadlyforce1106jun11,0,2402838.story .

“The net effect of the new ‘Shoot First’ law in Florida is, unfortunately, precisely what we feared,” said Sarah Brady, honorary chair of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. “People are dying who did not deserve to die. Meanwhile the legitimate cases of self-defense would have been viewed as legitimate self-defense without this law.

“Florida’s legislature should repeal this law. And other states thinking of passing this law should stop and look at the results in Florida,” Brady said.

One of the interesting things about the press release is that the link (which appears as is, I copied and pasted) doesn’t go any where. Yet, if you go to the actual article, it says:

It is too early to tell whether the law makes Floridians safer or puts them at greater risk. There are no statistics on the number of self-defense claims statewide before or after the law took effect Oct. 1.

But an Orlando Sentinel review of five months of court records in Orange, Osceola, Lake, Polk, Seminole and Volusia counties shows widespread differences in the way claims are investigated and prosecuted.

So, according to the article, there are no real statistics prior to when the law took effect. What is reported is the manner in which self-defense claims are prosecuted. The Brady Bunch, however, states that this piece shows that people are dying and initimates an increase in deaths. From the article, I see nothing indicating that.

They have to lie to win.

Via Chuck.

Wave to the NSA

If you’ve ever thought the government would protect you from its own abuses, the recent domestic spying revelations have surely made the point that the only protection you’ll get is what you provide for yourself.

When you send email, it hops from computer to computer across the net in a form that can be read by anybody who cares to do so. Imagine every email is a postcard. It gets delvered by people passing it from hand to hand until it reaches its destination. Anybody handing it off can copy it, read it, or change it. People write all kinds of sensitive things in these postcards. They probably shouldn’t.

If you want more privacy than a postcard can offer, get yourself an envelope. I suggest you choose one that is tamper-resistant and very hard to open. In the world of email, that envelope is encryption.

The strongest encryption we know of is available to anybody who wants it at zero cost. It’s called GPG and works with many different email clients on Linux, Macs or even Windows. It takes some effort to set it up, but once you do, you can communicate privately with anybody.

How secure is GPG? Very. The amount of computing power it would take to break this encryption in a reasonable timeframe is more than we know exists on the Earth. Nothing is perfect, and this is as good as it gets.

Start using encryption. Encourage your friends and family to adopt it, and use it for everything from mundane chitchat to protecting sensitive business. There have been numeous attempts to outlaw encryption (from both major parties), and if it’s not in widespread use fairly soon, the current terror scaremongering might make it illegal to communicate in a way the government cannot understand.

Nobody can protect your privacy but you.

Media Watch, only you can’t, you know, watch it

Terry Frank notes some inconsistency in how the local NBC affiliate decides what you should have access to:

OK. Let’s get this straight. A show that depicts Christianity in a bad light is a viewer decision. An ad that questions a union boss is censored.

You can make your own decisions about a show but not an ad.

Rage against the machine

Seems that in England, folks don’t like traffic cameras. So much so, that they’re destroying them. Here’s some pics of the mangled cameras.

New Volunteer State?

Looks like Utah:

Utah residents volunteer more often and give more of their time than people in any other state, according to a national report released Monday.

Ok, Tennessee, get cracking.

Crime up; guns blamed

The AP:

Murders, robberies and aggravated assaults in the United States increased last year, spurring an overall rise in violent crime for the first time since 2001, according to
FBI data.

Murders rose 4.8 percent, meaning there were more than 16,900 victims in 2005. That would be the most since 1998 and the largest percentage increase in 15 years.

Murders jumped from 272 to 334 in Houston, a 23 percent spike; from 330 to 377 in Philadelphia, a 14 percent rise; and from 131 to 144 in Las Vegas, a 10 percent increase.

Despite the national numbers, Detroit, Los Angeles and New York were among several large cities that saw the number of murders drop.

The overall increase in violent crime was modest, 2.5 percent, which equates to more than 1.4 million crimes. Nevertheless, that was the largest percentage increase since 1991.

As to why, the experts seem to think it’s because cuts in free government money and the NRA:

Criminal justice experts said the statistics reflect the nation’s complacency in fighting crime, a product of dramatic declines in the 1990s and the abandonment of effective programs that emphasized prevention, putting more police officers on the street and controlling the spread of guns.

“We see that budgets for policing are being slashed and the federal government has gotten out of that business,” said James Alan Fox, a criminal justice professor at Northeastern University in Boston. “Funding for prevention at the federal level and many localities are down and the (National Rifle Association) has renewed strength.”

Is this person really intimating that the NRA’s activity has increased gun crime? I’ve seen no evidence that the NRA has done anything pro-criminal nor has it done anything to loosen restrictions on the availability of guns. The Centers for Disease Control and the Department of Justice have found that gun laws have no effect on crime.

I’m sure this is the impetus to blame the expiration of the assault weapons ban.

Update: AC encourages you to contact Mr. Fox. Mr. Fox has a whole heaping list of anti-gun credentials.

Update 2: David Hardy:

Hmm… NRA was pretty strong in 2004, too, when homicide rates fell by 2.4%.

And, strangely, in 2005, the FBI report notes, homicide rates fell by 3.9% in nonmetropolitan areas where gun ownership is highest.

And the lowest 2005 homicide increase came in the West, where gun ownship is also highest… 3.2% there, compared to 5.2% in the Northeast.

Remember, I do this to entertain me, not you.

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