Archive for September, 2006

September 19, 2006

Registries, not just for sex offenders anymore

Chicago:

Two powerful Chicago aldermen are proposing a gun offender registry that would allow the city’s police to track people convicted of weapons violations.

The ordinance proposed by Aldermen Ed Burke and Isaac Carothers would require offenders to check in with police every six months. Unlike sex offender registries, the information would be available only to police and not to the public.

Ayup

News Busters:

Media Can’t Find a Single Critic of Gun Buyback Program

Quote of the day

Bruce:

I beg to differ.

And, by “differ”, I mean, “kick McCain in the balls”.

Teehee. That was in response to this:

So, according to these insufferable little weasels masquerading as duly-elected representatives of The People, the First Amendment (and by extension, I assume, the entire Bill of Rights?) is now but a “loophole”.

More on Corker’s NRA rating

Miracle Man’s is none too happy:

I am not surprised that the NRA would endorse Bob Corker over Harold Ford, Jr. What surprises me is the “A” rating that they gave Corker. I would have thought that an unrated endorsement would have been just as effective without having to do the mental gymnastics required to give Corker an “A” rating.

Speaking of A ratings from the NRA, Blogger and TN Senate candidate Bob Krumm scored one too:

I am pleased to announce that the National Rifle Association’s Political Victory Fund has awarded me an “A” Rating for my ”positive responses” to their candidate questionnaire, and my “strong and vocal support of the Second Amendment.”

But the cure might kill ya

Time for us to go. Seven prominent conservatives say the GOP should go in 2006:

With Republicans controlling Congress and the White House, conservatives these days ought to be happy, but most aren’t. They see expanding government, runaway spending, Middle East entanglements, and government corruption, and they wonder why, exactly, the country should be grateful for Republican dominance.

The GOP in power has been a total and complete disappointment. The party in power is the party of big government.

Via Der Commissar.

The Greater Good

Jay Caruso (who I thought stopped blogging – what happened to Jane, anyway?) agrees with me:

A high profile prosecution such as this is something that could get such a stupid law changed, but in NYC, District Attorney’s are elected, not appointed. Therefore, there is no way a DA that is also a politician is going to allow this woman to be prosecuted. That’s good, but what’s bad is that chances are, she’ll never see this gun again and will have a hard time trying to get another one.

Assault on Waco

I started watching it but was interrupted. David Hardy notes that it is not accurate, in the same way that The Path To 9/11 is not accurate:

I watched Assault on Waco on the Discovery Channel last night, having sent the producers some footage and audiotapes…. I gave up after the first 20 minutes or so. There were too many areas where it was just plain invented.

Docudramas are often more drama than docu. I’ll probably still watch it.

September 18, 2006

Outage

Yeah, the site was down for a while. Everything seems back to normal now.

Did not know that

According to the folks at subguns (and the law), you cannot pledge NFA weapons as collateral on a loan. Apparently, that is considered a transfer even if they don’t take possession.

International gun rights

An interesting look at the NRA’s international record over at the NYT (yes, that NYT):

Around the world, the N.R.A. is finding that a rights-based approach translates into many languages. As the N.R.A.’s executive vice president, Wayne LaPierre, says: “They made the rights argument [in Brazil.] They made the argument that this was being taken away from the people.” He pauses. “It caught Iansa” — the International Action Network on Small Arms — “by surprise. They already had the Champagne on ice.” In the mid-1990’s, the N.R.A. became a nongovernmental observer at the United Nations and helped form a global coalition of pro-gun groups to match disarmament coalitions.

Gun control won’t protect us from the losers

Ayup.

Who watches the watchmen?

No one, apparently:

Public access to records used in police disciplinary proceedings will be cut off after a recent decision by the California Supreme Court.

The high court’s Aug. 31st ruling means that the County of San Diego Civil Service Commission does not have to give newspaper reporters tape recordings and documents related to the administrative hearing of a local police officer who had appealed a termination notice.

In the long term, the ruling will likely thwart the public’s ability to access administrative appeals by law enforcement officers who have been disciplined, including such basic information as the name of the officer involved.

In a 6-1 decision, the Supreme Court held that the records are exempt from disclosure under the California Public Records Act. The court, in an opinion written by Justice Ming Chen, seized on a statute that exempts from disclosure law enforcement personnel records held by the officer’s “employment agency.”

I can see keeping some info (address, ss#, etc.) confidential but disciplinary action of those entrusted with public safety should not be secret.

Alternatives to the 5.56 NATO

Heartless Libertarian discusses them:

The thing that really got my attention in the article is something that I’ve been looking for for a while: hard comparison data for the various currently existing potential replacement, and for both 20″ and 14.5″ barrels. I have yet to see an article in a gun magazine comparing the 6.8 SPC to the 6.5 Grendel, for example. And I had never heard of the 6x45mm and 6.5x42mm rounds. The only round I’d be interested in knowing more about that isn’t on the table is the new 5.8x42mm Chinese round, which Mr. Crist states “by any objective standards, must be considered the best assault rifle cartridge currently in service.” He urges the Army to take “similarly bold action” to what China has done and “adopt a new, more capable rifle cartridge” to better equip our troops for the challenges of the COE.

I’ll take 50

Garm Howling tells about the $10 Glock over at The Gun Blogs.

Update: The post title was in jest, I don’t really plan on buying 50 tickets.

Ransom

Odd case in New Mexico:

Police warned Las Cruces residents that they’ve received two letters threatening random shootings if city leaders fail to hand over a “substantial” ransom.

Corker on Guns

Corker, who was endorsed by the NRA, doesn’t have a hunting license. I’m more concerned about whether he has a concealed carry permit or a wall full of AR-15s. I don’t have a hunting license and I’m as pro-gun as they get.

Sean Braisted says:

Here is my question; if a candidate in Tennessee really wants to get the support of Gun nuts (and I use that term with heartfelt affection), shouldn’t they forget about the hunting crap, and instead go for a carry permit? I’ve been in Tennessee for over 5 years now, and all the gun people I have run into care more about Tactical Shotguns, Glocks (or other handguns), and Assault Rifles…not some WalMart shotgun used to shoot birds. To them, the test of true gun nuttiness is not their ability to shoot clay pidgeons (sic), but their ability to hit a target at center mass while on the run.

Not bad for a liberal. He also has some advice:

Now, Corker being a Republican by default has the gun group endorsements in the bag, but if Ford wants to peel some of the gun voters off, here is my advice to him. Take a day out of your schedule and take a class for a carry permit. Brush up on your gun lingo, for instance make sure you know the difference between a Glock and a Kimber, and the positives and negatives of each.

Or Mr. Ford, you can go bust some caps with yours truly if you feel the need. One note though: The NRA endorsement does not, by default, go to Republicans in Tennessee. Ask this guy.

Of course, Ford has that whole introducing an anti-gun bill thing hanging over his head.

September 16, 2006

Land of the Rising Sun and the Forbidden Gun

Just got back from Japan, the archetypical country of low crime and no weapons.

Japan has the anti-2nd Amendment, a law that starts “No-one shall possess a fire-arm or fire-arms or a sword or swords”. The ban excludes only shotguns kept for sporting purposes. Shotguns require a whole bunch of hoops, including a mental screening.They must be kept locked separately from ammo, which must also be locked. Shotgun licenses are easily and arbitrarily lost. Handguns and rifles are completely banned.

On top of that, the police there are super nosy. Citizens have relatively few of the freedoms and protections from government intrusions we Americans enjoy. Search and seizure protections, for example, are scant and routinely ignored without penalty.

I normally carry a knife or two for utility purposes. I left them all at home because I couldn’t find any good information on what blades are legal in the various cities I visited in Japan. I walked around for a couple weeks, a disarmed man in a disarmed society.

The complete lack of crime there made it thoroughly enjoyable. I carried large amounts of cash late at night in industrial neighborhoods. I had no worries about my gf being of on her own in a strange country where she doesn’t speak the language. I never felt threatened. It’s easy to see how trading one’s rights and freedoms for that kind of daily comfort can be seductive.

In America, we are taught to love our freedom and individuality. It is a core value that is sometimes at odds with day-to-day safety and stability. Politicians are paid to keep things safe and stable, which is why they are forever trying to take our freedom and fight individual expression. It’s good to be home.

September 15, 2006

Little Help

Existing wants advice on which gun to buy.

I always feel like somebody’s watching me

Here’s a flash presentation on the many, many, many ways the .gov tracks info about you.

Via Ben.

Blogs v. Research

Last night, the Mrs. was researching some products online. She said she couldn’t find any satisfactory reviews or info. She said something to the effect of:

It’s hard to find reviews of products online because when you Google a product, the results are always somebody’s blog. Blogs make it hard to find real information. Err, no offense.

What do you think? Are blogs causing traffic jams on the information superhighway?

Update: BTW, I went and looked at her search results and what was popping up were a few spam blogs. I explained to her what splogs were.

More on the Tennessee senate race (the no guns edition)

I’ve been trying, in vain, to summarize my thoughts about Tennessee’s senate race. I couldn’t quite put my finger on it and put it into words. But #9 did just that in the comments here:

I see this as more than a race between two candidates. As much as I like what Harold Ford says I see the faint image of Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid standing directly behind him. I don’t see anything when I look at Corker, not even Corker himself. His image is gossamer thin.

I listen to every ad from Harold Ford. I mute every ad from Bob Corker. I thought this was a Hobson’s choice but after seeing Pelosi and Reid during the 9/11 ceremonies it is clear to me that you just hold your nose and do what you have to do.

He finishes with:

I may throw up a little but I will vote for Corker.

I think so. See, here’s the deal: I don’t fear or dread Harold Ford as a Senator. I fear the majority of Congress having Ds after their names. In the same comment thread, Rich says:

One the one hand we have Bob Corker, a candidate without a platform, and on the other we have Harold Ford, who evidently will say anything in order to get elected.

I think so. Bob Corker’s platform seems to be Harold Ford Sucks. But Ford’s ads, mannerisms, balls out media appearances, lack of fear, and conservative/populist message appeals to folks.

Rich took my bet. He also says:

I’ll go on record right now and say that Dems will win control of the House, Senate, and White House in 2008.

Could be.

I’ll take Waste of Money for $1,000

D&C:

Federal and local law enforcement authorities will unveil a new anti-gun-violence billboard and telephone hotline at a news conference in Rochester today.

The billboard and number will encourage people to report illegal gun activity, said District Attorney Michael C. Green. The campaign is part of Project Exile, a state and local program to curb gun violence in Rochester.

I imagine it won’t have much success. And people could call the police.

Sounds like a worthy cause to me

A new ad over there on the right says:

Congress is debating altering mortgage interest deductions, putting your homeownership at risk. Under U.S. tax code, mortgage interest on your home is currently deductible. If Congress changes or removes mortgage interest deductions you could be paying many thousands of dollars more each year.

Update: In comments, sailorcourt is unimpressed.

Montreal shooting weapon

The murderer in Canada apparently used a Beretta CX Storm (said rifle wasn’t banned under the now expired Assault Weapons Ban). The weapon is a pistol caliber (40S&W, 9MM or 45ACP) semi-automatic carbine that accepts the appropriate handgun magazines from Beretta handguns. Bruce notes that the Storm has, overnight, become:

a “huge”, “automatic”, “rapid-fire”, “sniper’s”, “assault weapon”.

The Canadian government’s Canada Firearms Center issued an alert about them two months ago:

* Some Beretta CX4 Storm rifles are being manufactured with prohibited magazines.

* The classification of a firearm magazine depends on the type of firearm the magazine was designed to be used in, not the type of firearm it is actually used in.

* The new 10-cartridge magazine designed for the Beretta CX4 Storm rifle is prohibited unless it has been permanently altered so that it cannot hold more than five cartridges .

* The 10-cartridge pistol magazine used on many Beretta CX4 Storm rifles is still legal, regardless of the type of firearm it is attached to.

Even though the magazines are the same. Guess it depended on which gun you put it in. Actually, it doesn’t. It depends on which gun the magazine was made for. If a magazine was made for a handgun, it’s OK. If it was made for a rifle, it is not. Of course, the magazines are the same. And I thought US gun laws were arbitrary.

The Beretta is also the gun used on the new Battlestar Galactica.

Those other candidates

R. Neal (can you I call you Randy or SKB because R. Neal is a pain in the ass to type?) takes a look at third party candidates in the Governor and Senate races here in Tennessee. I like Bo because, err, well, just because. But his picture scares me.

Gun laws and little ladies in wheelchairs

When did 56 years-old mean granny?

John Lott on the wheelchair-bound lady who shot a would be robber in New York City:

But this attack ended differently than most crimes in New York City. As her attacker grabbed her “violently” and “choked” her, Johnson pulled out a handgun and shot once, hitting the criminal in the elbow. Johnson was fortunate that she was able to defend herself.

The city obviously wasn’t there to protect Johnson. A police officer could have handled it, but cops can’t be everywhere, and they virtually always arrive after a crime has occurred.

Nor does it appear that the city was doing a particularly good job of keeping the criminal off the street to begin with. Johnson’s attacker had been previously arrested nine times, primarily for the violent crime of robbery, and he had served time in prison for selling illegal substances. One can only wonder how many times he was never caught.

Even worse, if Mayor Bloomberg would have enforced New York City’s gun-control laws, it’s Johnson who would be in jail. Her license only allows her to carry a handgun that is unloaded and in a locked container to and from a firearms range. With an attacker choking her, there is no way she could have unlocked and loaded her gun.

Denise says:

. . . her permit doesn’t allow her to carry a loaded gun. Instead, the gun must be empty, locked up, and the ammo must be separate. Obviously she didn’t have time to unlock a case, load her gun, and take a bead on her attacker. Besides she had her little dog with her and who takes a dog to a gun range (well, it is New York after all, so who knows).

New York PD obviously knows the value of public relations. Prosecuting this woman would make no sense. I applaud them for their rare show of common sense.

See, I don’t applaud them for it. The law applies to everyone. And prosecuting this lady would show just how dumb some of these laws are. That is not to say that I hope they do prosecute her (I don’t think that at all) but that I don’t applaud them for it. And the only reason they’ll not prosecute her is due to bad publicity.

Showing just how silly some gun laws are is necessary.

Preaching to the converted

Yeah, I ain’t goin’ out like that either:

Whether it’s some Columbine wannabe who’s heard the backward-masked messages on his Marilyn Manson discs, distressed daytrader off his Prozac, homegrown Hadji sympathetic with his oppressed brothers in Baghdad, or a bugnuts whackjob picking up Robert Frost quotes transmitted from Langley on the fillings in his molars, I am going to do my level best to smoke that goblin before my carcass goes on the pile. I am not going to go out curled into a fetal ball and praying for help that won’t arrive in time.

September 14, 2006

We have our first taker?

I said before:

If you read the Internets and the blogs, you’d think this race was going to be a close race between Bryant and Ford. But you’d be wrong. It’s going to be Corker with Ford jumping up and down in the background saying pick me, pick me like the slow kid who always gets picked last when choosing dodge ball teams in the fifth grade. I say that based on the backing of the local political machine and who business is backing. I’ll bet a beer on it.

I have a history of betting beers on political contests. And I’ve never lost on political outcome bets (though I did lose once on a beer bet over American Idol, but that doesn’t count). But Rich says Corker Will Lose. I don’t think Rich drinks beer but I’ll buy him a Coke or something.

Pop Quiz

David Kopel:

Advanced Topics in Human Rights Law. Exam, Spring 2010. Question 4: One day, a woman goes to a gun store in Florida. She provides picture identification to the store owner, who then, pursuant to the National Instant Check System, uses his telephone to contact law enforcement, and ensure that the woman has no criminal record. The woman then purchases an expensive double-barreled shotgun, manufactured in the United Kingdom. She plans to use the gun for all lawful purposes, but primarily for sporting clays. In accordance with Florida law, she did not need to obtain a government license to possess the gun.

Two years later, a man breaks into her home at night. The woman reasonably (and correctly) believes that the man intends to rape and torture her. She also, correctly, believes that there is absolutely no possibility that the man will kill her. She shoots the man and kills him.

Summarize the human rights violations

The answer is frightening.

Bad news

Colt CCO reports:

Colonel Cooper – Major Heart Attack

I had been worried before, and according to Pat Rogers, The Colonel has had a massive heart attack and has signed a DNR order. He is apparently not long for this world.

Best wishes and prayers to the Colonel.

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

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