Philadelphia Gun Show

Went to the gun show today at the Pennsylvania National Guard Armory.  Got there an hour before closing, and things were pretty well picked over.  Was looking for someone selling .308 ammunition, but there was none to be had.  The ammo dealers were picked to the bone.  Found one guy selling CCI .22LR Standard Velocity for $27 bucks a brick.  That’s 8 bucks cheaper than Midway right now, so I bought 1000 rounds.

Crowd was pretty good for getting close to closing on a Sunday.  Not much in the way of AR-15s that weren’t 1400 bucks and up.  Lots of Mosin-Nagants left over at the end of the show.  One thing is magazine prices don’t seem to be spiking too much in price.  I didn’t notice any shortage of those at the show, at least there were plenty of AK and AR magazines left toward the end.  Magazine prices never spiked very much during the assault weapons ban, because supplies were never really short, except for a few brands (15 round Glock 19 magazines being among them).

Frozen Pipes

A few years ago I redid my master bathroom.  Not two weeks after I had moved in, my pipes froze up on me.  Since I was redoing the bathroom, I figured I’d head into the floor and fix the problem.  The supply pipes coming up to the bathroom had been installed along the outside wall on the first floor.  Not code.  Nothing I could do about that for the time being, so I rerouted, insulated, and sealed what I could in the master bathroom.  I had known it was freezing there, because the shower and the toilet always worked.  It was only the sink, which ran closer to the outside wall, that was a problem.

Woke up this morning.  Go to brush my teeth.  Turn on the faucet.  Nothing.  Crap.  Had I not actually fixed the problem?  Opened up the sink faucets, opened up the shower, and heard gurgling.  My repair to the sink three years ago was working fine.  We had flow between all the water consuming appliances, so the blockage has to be in the supply coming up the outside wall on te first floor.  Got a spigot outside for a hose fed off the same line.  Put some heat into that with a torch turned way down.  That frees up the cold water line.  The hot water line is still frozen.  I need to keep the taps open to prevent more damage than may have already been done.

At some point I need to reroute 90% of the plumbing for this house to fix the problem for good.  Pretty clearly someone at the township wasn’t paying attention when they built the house.  This was an owner-built house, meaning the guy who built it lived in it.  He didn’t always (usually) know what he was doing.  He’s dead now, and if I knew where he was buried, I would go piss on his grave, except that it would freeze before it got anywhere.  Dang.

UPDATE: Several hours with Bitter’s hair dryer, and turning my heat up has freed the water from its ice prison.  The best part is, there is no torrent of water flowing down my outside wall.  I have several holes in my wall that weren’t there before, however.  I drilled into the drywall with a 1″ auger bit so I could a) locate the pipes, and b) put some direct heat on them with the hair dryer.  Annoying, for sure, but 1″ holes in drywall are a hell of a lot easer and cheaper to fix than burst pipes.  This cold spell lasts one more day.  I’m going to run the faucet on a slow drip all night.  Once the single digit temperatures recede, we should be good.  I will definitely need to reroute all the plumbing for that bathroom to remain inside.  Can’t have pipes freezing up in really cold weather.

Rifle Standoff in Philadelphia

Apparently the Philadelphia Police were in a standoff with an armed suspect earlier today:

So, how did you folks spend your day? We spent it trying to coax a gun-toting piece of garbage out of his car. You know, because we couldn’t have him off himself with his Chinese assault rifle, right? That would have made our lives much easier.

At least he didn’t start firing at anyone else, and surrendered peacefully.  Funny thing is, the Chinese variants of the AK have been banned for a number of years from further importation.  Since 1989, if I recall, yet you often hear about them showing up on the streets.  Which is odd, because they aren’t that common on the range.  I have to wonder if a large shipment of them got diverted to the black market some time ago, and they’ve been circulating on the streets since.

How Did I Miss This?

Khan is dead:

I’ve done far worse than kill you. I’ve hurt you. And I wish to go on… hurting you. I shall leave you as you left me, as you left her. Marooned for all eternity, in the center of a dead planet. Buried alive… buried alive.

Halbrook Testifies Against Holder

Steven Halbrook, one of the leading Second Amendment attorneys, has testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee against the nomination of Eric Holder.

Continuing to reveal Holder as a staunch opponent of the Second Amendment, Halbrook concludes, “Eric Holder has taken a constricted view of Second Amendment rights. Millions of law-abiding Americans exercise the right to keep and bear arms. Mr. Holder’s opinion is that the people have no such right unless they are commanded to exercise it in a formal militia, which renders the right meaningless… Many Americans have reason to be uneasy about Mr. Holder’s nomination for Attorney General. They deserve to have a person in this role who is committed to upholding all parts of the Constitution, including the Second Amendment. Unfortunately, Mr. Holder has proven himself not to be that person.”

Halbrook is a research fellow at the Independent Institute, and author of The Founder’s Second Amendment.

UPDATE: Halbrook is actually testifying now, on C-SPAN.  (Finished around noon)

Pro-Gun Progressive on NRA President Sigler

Looks like the other Sebastian had lunch with one of the “Lairds of Fairfax” as they are being called in some circles, and discovers he’s concerned about infighting:

He stressed that infighting between various RKBA groups was way more dangerous to the 2A than the Bradys could ever be; the Tripwire effect (pernicious infighting and putting self-aggrandizement in front of political success has the potential to be our achilles heel).

I think he’s right, but I’m not sure that problem can really be fixed.  There will be disagreements as to tactics, no matter what you do, and you can’t expect everyone to agree with you all the time.  There will be disagreement.  That much I can accept.  But the nature of the disagreements often goes beyond polite and civil differences of opinion and into a nasty disposition toward others on the same side that is appalling.

I’ve expressed in many posts my disagreement with NRA on their pushing the workplace parking lot carry bills in various states, argued it’s a contraction of freedom, and is diverting resources from other, more important matters.  What I won’t do, is repeatedly criticize NRA leadership and staffers because they have a different point of view than I do.  Since I’ve started blogging, and getting more involved, I’ve met a lot of people who work in Fairfax, and know a few board members, some of them fairly well.  I’ve had a few conversations with Chris Cox, and have talked briefly with Wayne LaPierre. I have never had any cause to question their dedication to preserving the Second Amendment.  Most of the staff are getting paid far less than they would in a for-profit operation for doing the same job, and for the board members, they don’t get paid anything for having to give up nearly a month out of the year to tend to NRA functions.

NRA is far from perfect, and there are many problems with the Association which I think hurt their effectiveness.  Like any organization, there are going to be some people who have issues, and who don’t always act in the best interests of the Association or the movement.  But you have two choices in dealing with that, you can either throw stones through the windows from the outside, or you can engage NRA like the civic organization it actually is, and try to fix the problems you see as an engaged member.  The former is easy, but the latter is difficult, and requires an understanding that you are one voice of many, and one point of view of many.  It also involves helping NRA carry out its mission, sometimes even on things you might not privately agree with.

No pro-gun organization or its leadership should be absolutely above criticism.  I’ve certainly had my share of criticism for GOA and Larry Pratt, especially when I see them publicly attacking other gun rights organizations, or people in the movement doing good work.  But I don’t doubt that Larry Pratt cares about the Second Amendment, and charts his course based on that conviction.  I agree with John Sigler that we ought not to form a circular firing squad.  You will not often see NRA criticizing other pro-gun groups publicly.  This is by design, and not by accident.  We can argue about tactics, strategy, and the merits and problems with this bill or that bill until we’re blue in the face, but we should have an awful prejudice against questioning other people’s integrity or motivations.  It’ll happen sometimes — we’re all human, and passionate about the issue — but that should be an exception, and not a rule.

SHOT Slow Down

There are now two reports out that the first day of SHOT seemed to be much slower than years past.  Interesting.

I’ll be curious to know what today is like.  Did folks just want to shave a day off of travel to save a few bucks?  Or, are they doing such brisk business at home that they are trying to minimize time away?  Or, is it because all the distributors and companies are so backordered with current products that they just don’t see much of a need to go play with the new?

There are so many possibilities.  If you know someone in the industry who isn’t going to SHOT this year, or has shortened their time at the event, what is their reason for cutting attendance this year?