Ammo For Sale

July 10, 2006

SayUncle at Harvard

Cool.

Yes, people from Massachusetts, this is what we in flyover country think.

Well, some of us.

Man with a plan

Michael Bane posts his Five Point Plan for a national political strategy on guns. I really like number 5:

Dismantle the onerous conditions of the 1968 Gun Control Act, the machinegun amendment of the 1986 FOPA, the 1990 Crime Control Act and the 1999 “Al Gore Stands Up!” trigger lock requirement.

Publicola has more and doesn’t think Michael’s plan is enough.

Gun control is a political loser

So says the US News and World Report:

The NRA is riding high; gun control is a political loser

[snip]

“When we as Democrats are trying to reach out and speak to voters in the center of the country, I don’t think that we can support gun control,” he explains. After seeing Democrats hammered at the polls for voting to regulate guns, many of his colleagues seem to agree. As a result, a number of pro-gun measures moving through Congress will most likely face little opposition, as advocates of gun control increasingly find themselves marginalized and ignored.

Not long ago, it was the gun lobby on the defensive from the passage of the Brady bill in 1993 and the 1994 ban on “assault” weapons. But some say support for gun control cost Democrats the House in 1994, and former President Clinton credited it with Al Gore’s 2000 presidential defeat. “It’s different than it was in the early ’90s. Those were, in retrospect, the glory years,” says Paul Helmke, former GOP mayor of Fort Wayne, Ind., who recently took the reins of the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence.

Meanwhile, with little fanfare, National Rifle Association backers in Congress allowed the assault weapons ban to expire in 2004 and last year shielded gun makers from being sued over crimes committed using their products. Since 1999, nine states have eased restrictions on concealed weapons, and NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre says the freedom of gun owners is in “the best shape it’s been in decades.”

Ayup.

FOP and Lautenberg

TriggerFinger notes the Fraternal Order of Police having issue with the Lautenberg amendment. Seems a restraining order during a divorce proceeding isn’t forgivable like felon in possession is. In comments here, he notes:

Oh, and the reason for the lawsuits is that the federal law about misdemeanor domestic violence convictions or restraining orders does NOT contain such an exception. So, a cop who has a boilerplate restraining order filed by his wife in the middle of a divorce can’t carry his gun and is thus out of a job; while a cop with a felony conviction for murder could remain armed so long as someone deemed it in the public interest. I’m not surprised the FOP doesn’t like that situation.

What’s wrong with this picture

Campground pet policy:

Ocean Lakes is happy to have your entire family, including your pets! Pets (excluding rottwielers, pitt bulls and exotic animals) are allowed at all campsites. They are not permitted in our rental sites – sorry!

And check out the picture of the dog in shades. Why, it looks like a . . .

Update: Everyone else seems to think it’s a boxer. Boxers have been classified as pit bulls as well. They share lineage.

July 09, 2006

Guns, guns, guns!

The Carnival of Cordite is up for your gun blogging pleasure.

I see dumb people

Christian Grantham shows video of a pit bull attack. Then s/he* endorses a ban and calls them a vicious and uncontrollable breed. Aunt B. calls him/her out on it, though I think B’s original sentiment, while lacking in the subtlety department, is likely the best way to deal with dog ignorance.

Dog attack by breed are generally tied to breed popularity. The big bad dog of 1970s was the German Shepherd; 1980s it was Dobermans; 1990s it was Rottweilers; now, it’s the pit bulls turn. Of course, there is no breed of dog known as the pit bull. It is a class of dog that includes American Pit Bull Terriers, Bull Terriers, Staffordshire Terriers and others. The crocodile hunter’s dog was a pit bull; so was Petey from The Little Rascals; pit bulls were on US propaganda posters in WW2; and the dog that recently won Westminster was a pit bull. But they’re evil killing machines, as far as the ignorant are concerned.

The dog that would become the pit bull was originally a cattle dog. It was then bred with Bull Terriers to create a dog fighting dog. It’s a shame, but their past is in dog fighting. As such, they are inherently dog aggressive but this can be socialized out of them. If you have other dogs, don’t get one. If you can’t properly socialize a dog, don’t get one. If you want a dog because you want a tough dog and think you’re going to train one to be mean, don’t get one.

However, they are not inherently people aggressive. In fact, people aggression was bred out of them because, in a dog fight, a handler had to be able to separate a dog without getting bitten. A people aggressive dog was disqualified from the fight. People aggression must be taught to the dog or is the result of poor socialization.

The trouble with pit bulls is that they are currently popular. As such, people who should not own any breed of dog now get them as status symbols because they’re known as tough dogs. And drug dealers get them to guard drug stashes and dog fighting is making a comeback so others get them for that.

This year, it’s pit bulls. Next year, it will be whatever dog people decide is cool next. The Preso Canario, for example, had an uptick in popularity after it killed that lady in San Francisco. If you ban a dog based on dog attacks, another will just take its place. Pit bulls rank in temperament tests as well as retrievers and better than ShiTzu’s and Scotties (here’s the rankings from ATTS).

The solution is to hold folks criminally liable for dog attacks regardless of breed. But I suppose it’s just easier to ban things, like dogs, guns, bathtubs, cars and anything else. For the children.

Here’s a savage mauling I happened to witness with a camera ready:

smooch

* yes, I could probably peruse the site and determine gender but, honestly, I don’t give a squirt of shit.

KT Ordnance update

You may recall that KT Ordnance was raided for, err, well, no one really knows as it’s secret (See past coverage here and here). The latest at FMN:

A Montana gun-kit dealer’s home was raided by FBI, BATF, and Canadian law enforcement agents, after he gave “subversive” literature to his local Sheriff, according to a story posted on an online news site.

After distributing his handouts to the local Sheriff, Richard Celata reportedly got a phone call asking him to “come in” for a meeting, scheduled the day after the local elections. When Celata arrived at the office, he found the place half-full of BATF and FBI agents, who handed him a warrant to search his home. However, Celata noticed the warrant contained “no signed affidavit,” and was thus invalid. He was told the affidavit though it did exist, was “secret and sealed by the court.”

The raiders claimed five of the pistols found on the premises “were used to commit murders in Canada,” without further elaboration of details. In addition, Celata was reportedly questioned about his ownership of such dangerous materials as the Citizen’s Rulebook and speeches by George Washington. He was also questioned about “specific individuals in the freedom movement, including JPFO’s Aaron Zelman, author Devvy Kidd, and constitutional attorney Edward Vieira.” (The story notes that only by accessing his e-mail account, could the authorities have known of his interest in these individuals.) After a lengthy interrogation, Celata’s entire inventory of 80 percent finished gun frames was confiscated, and his computer’s hard drive copied (and crashed).

A few things:

Sooper seekrit warrants should be illegal

Why are Canadian law enforcement officers involved?

Speeches by George Washington are dangerous materials? Maybe if you’re Canadian.

Snooping emails for others who may be subversive?

Egad.

Update: More details here:

Celata said he knew he was in trouble as he was introduced to BATF and FBI agents and handed a search warrant and a promise that his premises were going to be raided.

“I read the search warrant and low and behold there’s no signed affidavit,” said Celata.

Celata told the Sheriff that the search warrant was therefore void to which the FBI and BATF responded that the affidavit was secret and sealed by the court.

“Now they can make up the affidavit to match what they found if they want to,” said Celata as he was told that the agents would carry out the search anyway.

Celata was then escorted by an estimated 40 FBI, ATF and Canadian law enforcement agents to his property. Salada asked if he could call his wife so as to enable her and their two small children to leave the property before the SWAT team arrived but was refused on the grounds that he was giving her a secret code to destroy evidence. However, the Sheriff allowed the call to be made and the family was able to leave. At no point was Celata shown any identification by any of the agents.

The cadre of agents, which now included Canadian AFT agents, then began the process of methodically cataloguing and seizing Salada’s possessions – bizarrely urinating on the exterior of the property ignoring the two bathrooms located inside the building.

Celata was told, without being shown any supporting evidence, that five of the pistols he had sold were used to commit murders in Canada.

“I said look, guns don’t kill people – people kill people,” said Celata.

So far, the only sources (other than one media mention I’ve found) are blogs, online boards, and such. So, take it for what it’s worth.

Digging for answers and fall in a hole

So, if I understand this correctly, it’s OK to wish harm on someone’s children because of chimpy mchitlerburton’s evil war for oil. Or something.

Via Pattycakes.

July 08, 2006

Oh, there was a conference

Kopel:

As of 6 p.m. eastern time, the word from the United Nations small arms conference is that the conference is concluding with NO final document, and NO plans for any follow-up conference. It was the latter issue that prevented an agreement about a final document. The officials who had been charged by the conference chair with drafting the conference document presented a final take-it-or-leave it document a little while ago; that draft document eliminated various provisions that the U.S. delegation had found objectionable, but also declared that there would be at least two more conferences. The U.S. delegation refused to assent, and so the conference ended with no consensus agreement, and no plans for future conferences. The back-up plan of the international gun prohibition movement, and their many allies within the U.N. and national U.N. delegations, was to give up on significant progress in 2006, but to keep the game going with future conferences, when a more pliant U.S. administration might welcome an international gun control program.

Good. I think (and have said before) we are one administration away from having to fight the gun battle here in the US. That administration could be line-toeing democrats or maverick, big government republicans (think Giuliani or McCain). David also says:

If a few hundred votes had changed in Florida in 2000, or if 60,000 votes had changed in Ohio in 2004, the results of the 2001 and 2006 U.N. gun control conferences would have been entirely different. There would now be a legally binding international treaty creating an international legal norm against civilian gun ownership, a prohibition on the transfer of firearms to “non-state actors” (such as groups resisting tyrants), and a new newspeak international human rights standard requiring restrictive licensing of gun owners. With a Presidential signature on such a treaty (even if the treaty were never brought to the Senate floor for ratification), the principles of the anti-gun treaty would be eroding the Second Amendment, through Executive Orders, and through the inclination of some courts to use unratified treaties as guidance in interpretting the U.S. Constitution.

Dumb

No, not Biden. The reaction to it (well, ok, Biden is dumb too but that’s expected):

Facing criticism, potential 2008 presidential candidate Sen. Joe Biden has been forced to explain his recent remark that “you cannot go to a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin’ Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent.”

On a recent edition of the C-SPAN series “Road to the White House,” the Delaware Democrat is shown shaking hands with a man and boasting about his support among Indian-Americans.

“I’ve had a great relationship. In Delaware, the largest growth in population is Indian-Americans moving from India. You cannot go to a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin’ Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent. I’m not joking,” Biden said.

Seriously, this is why people are upset?

Quote of the day

Les Jones in comments at knoxviews on why uses the word “liberal” as if it were a perjorative (sic) or a curse word:

Because “liberal” has gotten to be a bad, dumb brand that’s all about flashing politically correct gang signs instead of thinking straight or getting anything done. Note that Eleanor A. had to defend “he” as a pronoun for politicians for fear of offending anyone’s delicate PC sensitivities.

Heh.

July 07, 2006

Felons with badges – again

Regarding my post on a cop with a felony conviction who is a criminal, PawPaw writes:

Third, here in Louisiana we recognize that people, good people, can make mistakes and our laws reflect that.

I’m not so sure. Felon in possession is a federal crime and the ATF does not fund the program to uninfringe their gun rights. Someone who is a felon with a gun is always a federal criminal.

That is, unless I’m missing something here. I suppose a full pardon may work.

To be clear, I’m all for giving people second chances but no special treatment for cops. And, to be clear, I’m all for felons owning guns. If a released felon can’t be trusted with a gun, they should still be in jail. Once you’ve paid your debt to society, pick up where you left off.

Propaganda

Cultural sensitivity training, circa 1942: How To Spot A Jap. Apparently, you can tell Japanese from Chinese because Japanese people shuffle instead of walk. And Japanese people have buck teeth. Why not just say they can be identified by their laziness and devious oriental minds?

Felons with guns; and badges

One of them is illegal and one is not:

Former Officer with Criminal Record Wants Second Chance

A former Clarksville police officer said he deserves a second chance. Rudy Castro recently lost his badge after a background check revealed he has a criminal record.

Castro wouldn’t say what he did, but he said he committed a felony at the age of 18.

I would daresay that this man carried a weapon in his capacity as a police officer. I’m sure the ATF will pursue the case since felons can’t have guns, right?

Get your video on

B-Ho notes that WKRN To Accept Bloggers’ Video Stories For Air. Cool.

Hats off to WKRN for being a very blog friendly station. I salute them.

Maybe I should try this video blogging thing since all the cool kids are doing it.

Gateway Drugs

I’ve always thought the gateway drug theory was a ludicrous argument against drugs. All that time, all those studies, all that handwringing, just to prove that kids who do drugs are more likely to do drugs than kids that don’t.

Drug War Rant’s take on the gateway issue is succinct and more to the point:

Here’s what we know for sure regarding the gateway theory:

  1. Over 99% of those who never try marijuana will not become addicted to heroin.
  2. Over 99% of those who do try marijuana will not become addicted to heroin.

Burnination

So how was your July 4th? Mine pretty much looked like this:

More pics posted here.

The grand plans for a women’s shooting class got squelched when the teacher punked out on us. She promises to come in the fall. The encouraging part was that several women complained bitterly that the class was cancelled.

B-Ho V. H-Fo

Mr. Ford, were you lying then or are you lying now?

Update: Perhaps in WATE’s interview, they can ask him to clarify.

Scum

So, someone is making threats to a blogger’s kids. Another case for anonymity on Al Gore’s Tubes of Internets.

I don’t have a problem. I can stop whenever I want

I appreciate the sentiment but Google did not delist me due to any bias on their part. It’s because I sold subdomains to someone who set up a link farm. Should end soon unless they re-up their commitment.

Life without Google would be hard. It’s the top search engine and gmail is the best email package I’ve ever seen.

Letter from Joan Berry

Seen at Les Jones’ place:

I wanted to give everyone an update on Johnia’s case.

I’ve spoken to the TBI and they are more than willing to step in and offer their assistance in the investigation – all they need is to be asked by the DA’s office. Mike and I met with Attorney General Randy Nichols on June 1st and spoke to him about this very issue. He got back to us 28 days later and told us that he would not ask the TBI for their help.

Now, 19 months after Johnia’s death, we are still no closer to solving her murder. So, in an attempt to keep my daughter’s case alive, I am planning a walk in Knoxville on Friday, July 14 to publicly ask Mr. Nichols to bring the TBI in to help with the case.

If you have time to offer your support, please join me from 5pm – 6:30pm in front of the Knoxville City County Building at 460 West Hill Avenue. I would greatly appreciate your help. (If you need directions, you’ll find them here.)

Thank you,
Joan Berry

Snark of the day

Heh:

A gun stolen from a DC officer has been linked to two gang shootings and a robbery.

Perhaps this time D.C. will sue itself?

Guns for life

In Indiana, CCW permits are now for life:

Indiana is the first state in the nation to offer residents lifetime handgun permits under a new law that went into effect this month — a move hailed by Second Amendment supporters and blasted by gun-control advocates.

The law, which also increases the cost of obtaining or renewing a four-year license, went on the books Saturday. The change is expected to bring in more money to the state and the Indiana State Police.

State Police Superintendent Paul Whitesell announced details of House Enrolled Act 1176 at a news conference Wednesday, saying the law will streamline the process to get a permit for law-abiding gun owners. His agency oversees the issuance of permits.

Residents do not need a permit to buy handguns or other firearms but must have one to carry or transport a pistol. State Police officials said Indiana has about 288,000 active handgun permits. Permits are good for four years, but now gun owners have the option of obtaining a lifetime permit instead.

Gun Economics

Heh. People are also surpised when you want buy their used gun at the new price.

Blogger confronts a stalker

The stalker lives.

That’s a crime?

It’s a horrific incident but I had no idea this was a crime:

McElderry is charged with four counts each of statutory rape and criminal exposure to HIV..

You’d think rape would be enough.

Bob keeps laying it out

This time, it’s Taxes and Spending.

July 06, 2006

South Park Emmy

Industry experts were stunned today when the South Park episode “Trapped in the Closet”, which satirized the Church of Scientology and its celebrity followers, was nominated for an Emmy. Most felt the Emmy nod would go to the episode “The Return of Chef” which was the follow up to “Trapped in the Closet”.

Some felt the nod should have gone to the episode “Two Days Before the Day After Tomorrow”, which mocks the connections between recent hurricanes and global warming. And some felt that the touching “Manbearpig” which mocks Al Gore and his outspokenness about the danger of global warming was due consideration.

Setback in NY

New York’s court of last resort has decided that marriage discrimination does not violate the state constitution. This is a shame, but not unexpected, and it leaves the issue in the hands of the elected officials.

Specifically, it will leave the issue in the hands of Elliot Spitzer, the favored candidate in the race for the governorship. He’s a solid Democrat and has said he will push for an end to marriage discrimination if he wins. As Attorney General, his record on the issue consists of just one decision: he stopped some New York mayors from following Gavin Newsom’s lead and handing out marriage licenses to gay couples.

Spitzer’s Republican opponent supports marriage discrimination, so this promises to become a campaign issue. Should be interesting.

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

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