Friday, July 10, 2015
Can You Say Ironic?
The Washington Post ran a story yesterday regarding Hillary Clinton's new push for gun control. They note that this marks a shift in presidential politics and is an effort on her part to out-lefty Bernie Sanders who has actually been not (too) bad on gun issues.
Hillary thinks it is good politics to run on restricting gun rights. What struck me about the story is this photo by Jim Young of Reuters that is used to illustrate the story.
Hillary is standing in front of the Iowa state flag which contains the motto, "Our liberties we prize and our rights we will maintain." If that isn't irony, I don't know what is!
I don't know if the photographer is a gun guy but he, either consciously or unconsciously, just illustrated the conflict between supporting Clinton and supporting Constitutional rights. The two just don't go together.
Labels:
gun control,
Hillary Clinton,
irony,
politics
Wednesday, July 8, 2015
A Must Read
Sebastian at Shall Not Be Questioned has a blog post up analyzing the finances of the gun prohibitionists. The Form 990s have been posted and he has dug into them. They definitely had an influx of cash post-Newtown.
However, he ends with this:
We are doing a lot better than the media would credit us with but we can still do better. This is a fight where we can't slack off because our opponents and their media lapdogs certainly won't.Because in 2012, NRA’s revenues went from 219MM to 256MM, and in 2013 they went to $348MM. Get that? Between 2011 and 2013, NRA’s revenue increased by 129MM. That’smore than 3x the amount of every other gun control group’s revenue increase from 2011 to 2013 combined. And that’s just NRA proper. The NRA Foundation went from 29MM to 43MM from 2011 to 2012, then dropping slightly to 41MM in 2013, I suspect because people wanted to donate to the political arm since that’s where the threats were coming from.The President’s and Bloomberg ginning up of gun control post-Sandy Hook has made NRA much stronger proportionally than the gun control movement. That’s because of people out there like you.
Labels:
finances,
Form 990,
gun control groups,
Sebastian
As Maine Goes...
There is an old saying that says, "As Maine Goes, So Goes the Nation." One could only help that they continue being a bellweather state when it comes to gun rights.
Pleased to sign into law today LD652 to authorize the carrying of concealed handguns without a permit. #mepolitics pic.twitter.com/k66dK4Ewml
— Paul R. LePage (@Governor_LePage) July 8, 2015
Today, Gov. Paul LePage (R-ME) signed LD 652 which makes Maine the latest constitutional carry state. While constitutional carry went into effect on July 1st in Kansas, New Hampshire Gov. Maggie Hassan (D-NH) vetoed a similar constitutional carry bill on Monday. She had promised the Demanding Mommies she'd veto the law when it crossed her desk.
The text of the bill can be found here. It will go into effect 90 days after the legislature adjourns for the session.
The NRA-ILA just released a couple of news items on the bill's signing. They can be found here and here.
Labels:
constitutional carry,
Gov. Maggie Hassan,
Kansas,
Maine,
New Hampshire
Monday, July 6, 2015
Would You Be Interested In A Class With Grant And Paul? In The Piedmont?
Doc Wesson of The Gun Nation podcast and I are trying to arrange a two-day training class in the Greensboro area with Grant Cunningham and Paul Carlson.
Grant is the author of The Gun Digest Book of the Revolver, The Gun Digest Shooter's Guide to Handguns, Defensive Revolver Fundamentals, and Defensive Pistol Fundamentals. He is a well-known revolversmith, a trainer, and heads the Personal Security Institute. He would be teaching his Threat Centered Revolver course. Grant is also a regular on The Gun Nation Podcast.
Paul Carlson of Safety Solutions Academy is a well-known trainer located in Chagrin Falls, Ohio. He would be teaching his Critical Defense Handgun course. Like Grant, Paul is a regular on The Gun Nation Podcast.
Both Grant and Paul are excellent teachers. I've been wanting to get them to North Carolina for some time now as the Cleveland area is a long drive and Oregon is an even longer drive. We will need a minimum of 12 students not counting Doc and myself to make this a go.
I've created the map below showing a 300 mile driving radius around Greensboro. Within this radius, you have all the Carolinas, Virginia, most of Maryland and West Virginia, and parts of East Tennessee, Georgia, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Delaware. Interstates 40 and 85 intersect in Greensboro making it a hub. If you prefer to fly, Piedmont Triad International is served by many airlines.
I don't know the costs for the class yet but will post that as soon as I know.
If you are interested, please contact me at jpr9954@gmail.com or Doc at doc@gunnation.us. The sooner we can gauge interest in the class, the sooner we can nail down the dates.
And let's face it - we could all benefit from some more really good training.
Labels:
Doc Wesson,
Grant Cunningham,
Paul Carlson,
training
Sunday, July 5, 2015
Life Imitating Art
I am in the process of rereading that classic of the gun culture, John Ross' Unintended Consequences. I stumbled across this passage on page 155. It is part of the discussion that Henry Bowman, his father Walter, and the owner of Goodman's for Guns, Al Goodman, are having concerning the requirement to get a pistol purchase permit in 1963 Missouri.
"What Mr. Goodman was telling us is that before I can buy this revolver for you, I have to go get two business owners to sign letters recommending me. Then I take them down to the sheriff and hope he says okay. Mr. Goodman says there won't be any problem, and he's probably right, but the whole point is that the sheriff can do whatever he wants. Just like the story about voting. Henry, we still have laws written so that the police can deny negroes, or anyone else, their ability to protect themselves, and arrest them if they carry personal protection. Or arrest me, for that matter. It depends on if they like you or not."After a bit of discussion about the black lady that helps Henry's mother with housekeeping and about why handguns are good for self-defense, his father continues:
Now Walter broke in. "That's why bigoted people passed laws about voting and guns, Henry. These bigots don't want negroes being able to protect themselves. They didn't want them voting for legislators that had their interests in mind, and they didn't want them having guns in their pockets when the lynch mob was coming." He thought a moment. "The law Al just described also gives police an excuse to stop negroes on the street and check them for guns. Actually, it gives them the excuse to do that to anyone, but they don't do it to white, as a rule." Yet Walter Bowman added silently to himself.These passages made me reflect back to the debate on North Carolina's HB 562, the pistol purchase permit system, and how only a neutered bill made it out of the House. Even though we in North Carolina will not be required to get two character references from upstanding citizens, we still have the pistol purchase permit system which was used exactly as Walter Bowman describes to prevent blacks, union organizers, and others from getting the means to protect themselves.
Today's North Carolina sheriffs will have a harder time denying purchase permits but they will still be able to do it as the good character requirement remains. That it was the Republicans who kow-towed to the NC Sheriffs' Association on permit system makes it even worse as the system was set up by white supremacist Democrats. They should have known better but law and order Republicans wilt like a cut flower on a hot day when police or sheriffs say boo.
Friday, July 3, 2015
I Wouldn't Be Bragging About This
I got an email a day or so ago from the people that run Guns & Ammo magazine and their website. They seem to be thrilled that their website gets a cameo in the movie Terminator Genisys.
At about the 0:25 mark, Arnold Schwarzenegger as the Terminator says he read about a weapon at gunsandammo.com.
While he was governor of California, Mr. Schwarzenegger signed the unworkable micro-stamping bill into law as well as supported other gun control. Even Guns & Ammo themselves back in 2012 called Arnold one of Hollywood's surprising anti-gun celebrities.
It is like the people at G&A have no memory about Schwarzenegger's positions or even what they themselves said about him.
I don't know if Elmer Keith or Jeff Cooper are rolling in their graves but I wouldn't be surprised if they were.
Labels:
Arnold Schwarzenegger,
Guns and Ammo,
movies
Happy Independence Eve
It's July 3rd, Independence Day Eve. It's time to resurrect the Newcastle Brown Ale ad campaign from last year called #IfWeWon.
Just think, if the Brits had won our tabloids would be full of gossip about the Royal Family and wondering if Kate was pregnant. Oh, wait - they are full of that nonsense.
Well, at least we don't have the National Health Service. We just have that "tax" called ObamaCare.
We'd have better beer if the Brits won. Maybe not given the number of microbreweries we have around here in Asheville making really good beer and ales.
I know the gun prohibitionists would be cheering now if the Brits won given their gun control laws. As for me, men with guns are citizens and not subjects.
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
What I Missed Last Week
Last week in St. Louis was spent at the hospital with my mother-in-law. As a result, I didn't get to comment on some of the issues that came up last week. It is too late to comment on everything that happened but I'd like to mention a couple of things in the "Never Let A Tragedy Go To Waste" category.
First up is the abuse of the funeral of Rev. Clementa Pinckney by President Obama for political purposes. To me a eulogy should be a discussion of the deceased's life. It should be used to let others know how much the deceased loved his or her family. It should be used to point out the deceased's accomplishments in life. It should be used to discuss the goodness of the deceased.
By all accounts, Clementa Pinckney was a good and pious man who loved his family and his church community. He was also an accomplished man in that he was elected to the South Carolina State Senate at the young age of 23. While he might have been a politician, he didn't deserve having the President of the United States turn his funeral into a political attack on guns and the Confederate flag.
For too long, we’ve been blind to the unique mayhem that gun violence inflicts upon this nation. (Applause.) Sporadically, our eyes are open: When eight of our brothers and sisters are cut down in a church basement, 12 in a movie theater, 26 in an elementary school. But I hope we also see the 30 precious lives cut short by gun violence in this country every single day; the countless more whose lives are forever changed -- the survivors crippled, the children traumatized and fearful every day as they walk to school, the husband who will never feel his wife’s warm touch, the entire communities whose grief overflows every time they have to watch what happened to them happen to some other place.The second broader issue is the Confederate flag or, more correctly, the battle flag of the Army of Northern Virginia. To some it is a symbol of slavery and racism. To others it is a symbol of their Southern heritage for which their forefathers fought and died.
The vast majority of Americans -- the majority of gun owners -- want to do something about this. We see that now. (Applause.) And I'm convinced that by acknowledging the pain and loss of others, even as we respect the traditions and ways of life that make up this beloved country -- by making the moral choice to change, we express God’s grace. (Applause.)
My great-great-grandfather Alexander Clay "Sandy" Morgan was a private in Co. K, 34th North Carolina Infantry along with his brothers Anderson and Eli. They both grew up in the northern part of Montgomery County, North Carolina and had enlisted (or more likely were drafted) in March 1863. Their regiment was part of the second wave of troops involved in the ill-fate Pickett's Charge at the Battle of Gettysburg. Sandy and Anderson survived the war while their brother Eli is reported to have died as a prisoner of war at Point Lookout, Maryland.
My Grandfather Richardson's biological father, William Thomas Brewer, reportedly served in the Confederate Navy according to my cousin and family historian Rev. Van Thomas. I am sure there are more relatives that served the Confederacy if I dig deeper.
I have never owned a Confederate flag of any sort. I just haven't. My mom was a New Yorker whose ancestors didn't even arrive to this country until after the Civil War (or War of Northern Aggression). As my influence on these things came from my mother, familial ties to the Confederacy were just not emphasized.
Just as important, even though I had ancestors who served in the Confederate Army, the section of North Carolina from which they came was highly anti-slavery and anti-secessionist. This section of the Piedmont is referred to as the Quaker Belt by historians and tended to have many Southern Unionists. My grandfather was a staunch Republican and I surmise his political beliefs were tied to this anti-slavery, Southern Unionist core of thought in southern Randolph and northern Montgomery Counties.
Should the Confederate flag fly over a statehouse? No, that should be the US flag and the state flag. However, should a Confederate flag fly over a Confederate war memorial or over a historic site? Absolutely, positively yes. It is a reminder of our history both good and bad. As the philosopher George Santayana wrote, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it."
I am sick to death of political correctness, talk of micro-aggressions, and other such nonsense. I am at the point where I'd fly the Confederate flag just out of spite even though I've never even owned one in the past.
Perhaps it was just as well that my focus last week was on my mother-in-law and not this stuff.
Labels:
Barack Obama,
Confederate Flag,
gun control
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