Ammo For Sale

October 27, 2006

Heavy handed

A police raid involves Dead Dog, $5K in Damage, Guns, and Grenades. All that for two joints.

Tulsa, call your mayor’s office

Cam Edwards notes that the Tulsa mayor Kathy Taylor is also a part of Mayors Against Guns. He asks:

I’m really surprised the Tulsa media hasn’t gone after Taylor on this.

Well, Knoxville’s press hasn’t covered the fact that Mayor Haslam has joined the group either. Speaking of Knoxville, Les says:

The ultimate goal of the group seems to be to end most private ownership of firearms. If that sounds like an exaggeration, consider that the group is in favor of the California microstamping law. That bill would have outlawed the sale of all semi-automatic hanguns unless they imprinted their make, model, and serial number on spent cartridges. No such gun exists, so the sale of all current semi-automatic handguns would have been outlawed in California had it passed.

If you’re in Tulsa, call your mayor. If you’re in Knoxville, call your mayor and the local press.

Only one

A new twist on the If you could only have one gun, what would it be post. My answers:

1. Rimfire Handgun – Walther P22*
2. Rimfire rifle – Ruger 10-22*
3. Centerfire hunting rifle – Savage 110
4. Centerfire carbine (either hunting or defensive) – AR-15*
5. Shotgun – Beretta Xtrema
6. Battle rifle – M1 Scout rifle
7. Milsurp rifle or handgun – Don’t really want one but, err, SKS
8. Pocket gun/Concealed carry handgun – Kel-Tec P3AT*
9. Open carry handgun/service pistol/general duty sidearm – Glock G30*

* – I already got one.

Those evil gun dealers

In the comments to this post, Triticale writes:

The dealer in Milwaukee who has had the most guns traced to them, some of which were used in crimes, has been alleging for years that they have had a hard time interesting the police in any suspected straw-buying. Refusing to sell a firearm to an individual who passes a background check because they look like someone who might be buying on behalf of a criminal is potentially a civil rights violation. When the large number of traqces first hit the news some years back, the dealer and we activists started raising questions. After a while the news story was revised and it was acknowledged that “some” had come to police attention without having been used in the commission of a crime, and 40 out of something like 1400 had been used in a murder.

Remember this when those folks that want to ban gun ownership rant about those evil gun dealers.

Evan Wolfson on the NJ Marriage Case

Evan Wolfson, former director of the Lambda Legal Defense Fund marriage project and current director of Freedom to Marry, wrote a leter to the NYTimes. This is the guy who has been at the forefront of this issue since before you knew it existed. He’s also trained a lot of the lawyers still working on it. When the good guys win, you’ll have him to thank. On the other hand, if you hate freedom, you know who to blame. Evan taught me a lot about this issue and how to think about it constructively.

To the Editor:

Re “New Jersey Court Backs Full Rights for Gay Couples” (front page, Oct. 26):

The unanimous New Jersey Supreme Court ruling opening the door to marriage equality for gay people is a resounding recognition of the equal needs and common humanity of committed same-sex couples and their children.

The court said these American families are entitled to equal rights and responsibilities under the law.

As the Legislature moves now to carry out the Constitution’s command of equality, we are confident that legislators will see that the right way to end discrimination in marriage is indeed to end discrimination in marriage, not repackage it.

The easiest next step is not to cobble together a separate new system with two lines at the clerk’s office, but rather to end the exclusion from marriage itself with two simple words, “I do.”

That the Zogby and Rutgers-Eagleton polls show a majority in New Jersey supporting gay couples’ freedom to marry should make it easier for legislators to do what’s right.

Evan Wolfson
New York, Oct. 26, 2006
The writer is executive director of Freedom to Marry.

Aug

Looks like someone will be fielding an American made Steyr Aug type rifle.

I wish I coud write like that

Tam on the middle class:

This is maybe the only nation on the planet where the guy in the $500,000 house with a new Benz in the driveway and the single mom making $8/hr at the Food Lion and living in a single wide will both sigh and turn up the volume to listen in when the TV announcer says “A new threat to the Middle Class!“, thinking he’s talking to them.

Read it all. Chick needs to write a book or something. I’d buy one.

Stay the course

In The War on Civil Liberties err Drugs.

October 26, 2006

Heh

Note the blog ad in this post.

What gun registry?

Sean Braisted:

According to Melhman, some states keep records on who purches (sic) guns, and the RNC then purhcases (sic) the data to target potential voters. Why is this hypocritical? Because the Republicans, via John Ashcroft, refused to allow the FBI to cross check potential terrorists against the list of names given for criminal background checks used to purchase guns. Ashcroft even wanted to destroy records of background checks, rather than have them be used to fight terrorism

Recall that:

Federal law prohibits ATF from establishing “any system of registration of firearms, firearms owners, or firearms transactions and dispositions.” Instead, ATF relies upon federal firearms licensee (FFL) records to trace firearms recovered in crimes through its National Tracing Center. Inaccurate or incomplete record keeping makes the tracing of firearms involved in violent crimes virtually impossible.

Sean is comparing apples to oranges (feds v. state). I guess the state can do it but I know the Feds cannot (even though they do any way just in a roundabout way).

Still: States are selling info on your gun purchases to political parties. Be afraid.

Tennessee Senate Race – Thoughts on the end

Before I stated I’d bet one beer that Corker will win. I still think so.

Ford supporters know they’re in trouble because the Democrats are now breaking out the Corker is a racist stuff. Heck, now he’s KKKorker and there are photoshops of Klansmen with Corker signs (Godwin, call your office). And some of the accusations seem silly (I’ve not heard the ad but on the surface, that sounds like quite a stretch).

And Ford hates the gay cooties too. But not enough for some people.

Glad I bought that extra fridge for all the cold beer I’ll be getting.

Update: Good for Late for Dinner for asking people to tone down the KKK stuff. It doesn’t help.

Update 2: I’ve now listened to the drum ad but, on the laptop, can’t even hear the drums.

Truth in Googling

A while back, I found it amusing that The Brady Campaign To Prevent Gun Ownership was showing up in my Google ads. I noticed their ad text said Sensible Gun Laws. So, I Googled up sensible gun laws and the first hit was for the pro-gun Doctors For Sensible Gun Laws. Number 2 is The Brady Campaign To Prevent Gun Ownership. Seems The Brady Campaign To Prevent Gun Ownership maybe trying to get their misleading Google on.

I generally don’t like Google Bombs but ask that my fellow gunbloggers post the following links on their page:

sensible gun laws

sensible gun laws

And, while we’re at it, let’s add:

ban all guns

ban gun ownership

After all, that is their goal. Don’t be fooled.

Be pussies instead

You may recall:

Youngsters in a suburban Fort Worth school district are being taught not to sit there like good boys and girls with their hands folded if a gunman invades the classroom, but to rush him and hit him with everything they got – books, pencils, legs and arms.

“Getting under desks and praying for rescue from professionals is not a recipe for success,” said Robin Browne, a major in the British Army reserve and an instructor for Response Options, the company providing the training to the Burleson schools.

Not anymore:

The Burleson school district has “reassigned” Greg Crane, the teacher who was behind the training that taught students to fight back against an armed attacker. Mr. Crane was formerly a police officer and developed the idea when he asked his wife, a teacher, what she would do if her classroom were to be attacked and she didn’t have an answer.

Via Bitter

Gotta get them early

Get your indoctrination on:

As the first bell rang, students bounded into hallways wearing twig- and branch-imprinted jackets or sporting fatigues stamped U.S. Army.

Principal Christine Moschetti said the school asked the students to don the martial clothing to show support for “the fight against drugs.” She wore a leafy, oversized camouflage T-shirt that she had bought at Wal-Mart for $5.

Camouflage Day at Marshall was tied to a national anti-drug campaign called Red Ribbon Week that began Monday. The week commemorates a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent who was slain on duty in Mexico in 1985. Organizers with National Family Partnership, a Florida-based group, said thousands of schools nationwide are participating through such activities as encouraging students to sign drug-free pledges or sponsoring spirit weeks. Events at some schools are similar to those found in a high school homecoming week, with students asked to wear different outfits each day to promote different themes.

Well, we gotta get our kids acclimated to the ninjafication of police.

Shaq Was There

You may recall that it was alleged Shaquille O’Neal may have been involved when the police raided the wrong house. It’s confirmed.

What Mayor Bill Haslam Will Be Up To

Mayors against guns will have a meeting:

A coalition of mayors meets Thursday in Chicago to exchange strategies for fighting illegal guns and for winning tougher state and federal gun laws.

But, remember, Mr. Haslam just wants to deal with illegal guns. Apparently, the wants to do that by making more guns illegal:

Mayors say they struggle to stem the flow of guns from states with lax gun laws.

Mr. Haslam, that’d be Tennessee they’re talking about there. More:

The city officials meeting today will discuss strategies to get guns off the street:

•In Milwaukee, Barrett met in May with a local gun dealer whose shop sold more guns used in crimes than any other dealer in the USA, according to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF). The dealer, Badger Outdoors in West Milwaukee, agreed to install security cameras and ban the use of cellphones (so that “straw buyers,” purchasing guns for people who can’t pass background checks, can’t communicate with those they are buying for.)

•In Trenton, police set up checkpoints to search cars for illegal guns. Of 375 guns confiscated last year, Palmer says, half came from Pennsylvania, where laws are less restrictive than in New Jersey.

•New York City sued 15 gun dealers in Georgia, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and Virginia in May for allowing straw purchases. Private investigators hired by the city posed as gun buyers and wore hidden cameras.

And recall that Bloomberg’s sting:

•His agents likely broke the law by lying on ATF Form 4473

•Jeopardized existing investigations

•And the ATF is investigating the sting

Are these the kinds of things you want in Knoxville, Mr. Mayor? Random roadblocks looking for illegal guns and suing dealers?

The NRA: “You can have press conferences all day,” says Wayne LaPierre, NRA executive vice president. “Until you provide 100% enforcement of the existing laws, (criminals are) going to laugh at you, and … go about their business.”

Update: More from the NYT:

What Mayor Bloomberg consistently wants to do is impose New York City-style gun laws on the rest of America.

Stupid real estate law

Closed on the old house today. By my calculation, me wife and I had to sign our names to roughly 157 forms. Each form needed a copy with original signature for sellers, buyers, buyer’s agent, seller’s agent, title agency and some random dude just outside the window. So, I figured we signed our names roughly 8,763 times. My math may be off.

Why can’t some real estate person get a clue and create one good form with everything on it that everyone signs once?

Stop the Ragsdale Investigation?

Today’s Metro Pulse has an editorial titled “Sleuth Not,
County Commission should stick to its legislative role, leave law enforcement to the ‘laws’”.

Really? So when the Knox County District Attorney Randy Nichols refuses to enforce the law Knox County Commission should look the other way? I find that incomprehensible. The Metro Pulse editorial closes with, “The commissioners should get back to their duties as legislators and stop wasting their and the public’s time. They were elected to serve on a legislative body, not as a board of gumshoes.”

If you listen to this radio interview with Chad Tindell, what do you think should be done? Tindell says that Knox County Mayor Mike Ragsdale’s Chief of Staff Mike Arms pressured Tindell to not press charges against Tyler Harber or Arms would give the emails stolen from Tindell to the Knoxville News Sentinel. There is a legal term for what Arms did. It is an actionable crime with harsh penalty.

In Frank Cagle’s column in this weeks Metro Pulse Cagle writes that Mike Arms has called Tindell’s statement Monday the 23rd on AM 1180 a “complete fabrication.” Cagle writes, “OK. But Arms is known for his temper. I also have a list of about a dozen people who have had their jobs, careers, businesses or reputations threatened by Team Ragsdale. You have seen the memo forbidding county functions at a Mike Chase restaurant because he had the temerity to oppose Ragsdale in the recent election.”

How clear does it have to be? We have a problem in Knox County that the two Mikes that occupy the sixth floor are above the law. What makes them so special?

October 25, 2006

NJ Opts For Schmarriage

New Jersey has just become the latest state to move toward civil unions. The NJ Supreme Court just handed down an opinion saying

the Legislature must either amend the marriage statutes to include same-sex couples or create a parallel statutory structure, which will provide for, on equal terms, the rights and benefits enjoyed and burdens and obligations borne by married couples. We will not presume that a separate statutory scheme, which uses a title other than marriage, contravenes equal protection principles…. The name to be given to the statutory scheme… is a matter left to the democratic process.

All the rights and none of the dignity is not an acceptable result. I would like to see the legislature do the right thing and end civil marriage discrimination. I doubt they’ll do it, but that is the hope.

SayUncle Exclusive: Must Credit SayUncle

The latest Republican National Committee ad (scheduled to air tonight during The World Series on Fox) will assert that:

Harold Ford, Jr. can’t say the word Ask
He has a big schlong
He doesn’t, err, eat at the Y (if you know what I mean)
He may have once talked loudly during a movie

As for Bob Corker, well, he can’t dance.

What? It could happen.

Trollphylactic: I preemptively call myself a racist.

Update: Ford also doesn’t tip very well.

And can get uppity.

Psst

Look behind you.

Southpaw 1911s

Over at Ben’s here and here.

Gunnie Goodness

Over at Arfcom it’s post pictures of your most expensive gun day.

Quote of the day

Speaking of Poppa and Honey, my dad on my mom’s pending 60th birthday:

I can’t believe I’ll be sleeping with a sixty year-old woman . . . again.

Poppa and Honey

Picking what to call grandparents can be trying but, ultimately, the kids decide. My dad wanted to be called Poppa. And that worked because it was easy for a young child to pronounce. My mom, on the other hand, wanted to be called Grandmother. Not sure why, because that’s hard for kids to pronounce. I think it’s because my mom’s side of the family is a bit, err, country. And everyone called my grandparents on her side mamaw and papaw (it’s a Southern thing).

Needless to say, Junior never could not pronounce Grandmother. But she’d say Poppa all the time. Poppa this, poppa that:

The Wife: Say poppa!

Junior: Poppa!

The Wife: Say grandmother!

Junior: *blink*

And on it went. One day, we’re over at Poppa and Grandmother’s. And Poppa, wanting grandmother for something, yells Hey Honey. Ever since then, Junior calls Grandmother Honey. So, that’s why my little girl calls her grandparents Poppa and Honey. Honey doesn’t seem to mind.

What media bias?

Chris asks Which is it:

Weird ellipses in a quote of Ford from this Tennessean article:

“I was there,” the Memphis Democrat said. “I like football, and I like girls. I don’t have … no apologies for that.”

WMCTV quotes him as:

“I was there,” he said. “I like football, and I like girls. I have no apologies for that.”

So which is it? Bad grammar or good grammar?

6,720 words

At the Gun Blogger Rendezvous, I poked fun at Kevin for his longish posts. Let’s face it, most blog readers do so from the office and can’t devote several minutes reading long posts. Anyhoo, his latest is here. And I’ll have to read it later.

Meanwhile, here at SayUncle, we cater to your short attention span. Look! A monkey.

Democrats and guns

In PA, it’s win-win:

No matter who wins Pennsylvania’s U.S. Senate race, the National Rifle Association probably won’t be complaining.

On gun issues, Republican Sen. Rick Santorum and Democrat Bob Casey Jr. could be twins.

Santorum earned an A-plus and an endorsement from the NRA – whose leaders campaigned with him yesterday. Casey got an A, the highest mark for a nonincumbent.

Good.

Gun ban banned

In Harris Co. Texas, they can’t ban gun carry in parks.

October 24, 2006

Talking to the press

Lately (and entirely due to this blog), I’ve been getting a few requests from reporters to talk to them (I’ve had them in the past but they seem more frequent now). For example, one lady from the Wall Street Journal wanted to talk to me about the poker bill. I told her I blogged about it but was probably not the best and referred her to some poker players I know. Now, I have one from a New York paper that wants to talk about the Mayors Alliance Against Guns. My inclination generally is to decline for the following reasons:

  • I like to maintain my anonymity (even at the cost of maybe scoring a Wall Street Journal-lanche) and the press folks generally want your name, which I am not willing to give.
  • What I view as the important points of my interview won’t be mentioned in the story (for example, I would state in the Bloomberg interview that his private investigators appear to have broken federal law by lying on ATF Form 4473. The press won’t print that – no one in the mainstream press has yet, that I know of).
  • They’ll likely find the one slip of the tongue or out of context remark and print that, thereby making me look like I’m crazy, stupid, or generally weird.
  • Dealing with the press involves a great deal of babysitting, I’m told. And I lack the patience to handhold them through things.
  • I don’t trust them to fully represent the real reasons they’re interested in hearing from me (ask Ronnie Barrett)
  • The press is, generally, anti-gun rights.
  • So, it is with reservation that I even consider talking to the press. Am I paranoid? A bit. The downside, of course, is that I am missing the opportunity to speak truth to power. So, what are your thoughts?

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

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