About that Football Game…

I think the best commentary was this:

You know who won the Super Bowl? Arianna Huffington.

AOL bought HuffPo for $315 million last night. Based on the claims in their press release, they have about 25 million unique visitors a month. Let’s consider just how much that really is. Scaling down based on traffic, AOL could pay well over $600K for this blog. When I did the math and shared that news with Sebastian, he said he would sell. For anything over half a million, I guess we could be blog neighbors with Paul Helmke.

Grassroots Are a Blunt Instrument

I mentioned in the previous post that I would speak a little more about why NAGR does not have a workable strategy for the movement, even if “NAGR had the resources of the NRA (literally hundreds of millions of dollars).” To understand why, you have to think a bit about human nature, and go back to the root definition of politics, which my dictionary says is:

The activities associated with the governance of a country or other area, especially the debate or conflict among individuals or parties having or hoping to achieve power.

Power for what? To make policy. Politics, at least in a republic such as ours, acts as an alternative to achieving power by waging war and violence against those you resist your policies. Our alternative is our ability to elect those who make policy on our behalf, and to force them, from time to time, to stand in judgement of the people through regular elections.

So what are grassroots? They are groups of voters who act either independently, or through some sort of organization, either formal (NRA, AFP, ACU, etc) or spontaneous (Tea Party), to channel their votes toward making certain policy in an area of concern. Because we are not a direct democracy, grassroots only have an opportunity to exercise their power every few years.

During the periods between elections, policy is made without the chance for voters to stand in judgement of the people who make it. In that period, you need negotiators, called lobbyists in our system. What gives a negotiator the power to negotiate is what resources that person can bring to bear. In violent politics, it would be the ability to wage war. In republican politics, it’s the number of votes that can be marshaled either for, or against a policy maker, or proxies for votes such as money.

Grassroots are a blunt instrument of power. They are a club a lobbyist wields when in negotiation with policy makers, threatening to either to protect that policy maker, or knock him off his seat. When a grassroots organization asks you to call contact a policy maker, what they are essentially doing is helping negotiators (i.e. lobbyists) raise the club, to show the policy maker how large it is, and how well the negotiator’s organization wields it. The message intended to be delivered is “You really don’t want us to hit you over the head with this, do you? Now, let’s talk about what you are going to do for us (not going to do against us) shall we?”

The problem is, a policy maker sees a lot of clubs, and survives quite a lot of clubbing each election. He may not be very scared of yours. He may negotiate with other people who have bigger clubs, and want him to do something else. He might think you make your club seem much bigger than it really is, and doubts you can actually wield it that effectively in combat. “Sure,” he might say, “that thing looks like it would hurt, but I’ve survived worse. I’ve even survived being hit by your club before many years ago. Take your best shot.” In this context, you are going to do a lot of posturing, and let’s be honest, bluffing. The policymaker might want to do X, which you oppose. He offers to do Y, which isn’t as bad, but you still oppose. He does not understand why. The negotiator explains, and holds up the club again. “OK, so lets talk about Z then, and you’re going to want to take Z, because I can tell that club is heavy, and you’re getting tired of wielding it over my head,” says the policymaker, “I continue to have my doubts you’ll be able to knock me off my seat.”

The club is heavy, and obviously the bigger it is, the harder it is to wield.  Every time and organization threatens it, it doesn’t look quite as frightening as it did the first time. Groups like NAGR and GOA seem to want to wave it around based on half baked rumors. NAGR seems to even doubt the benefit of having a lobbyist, which means even if you could muster your grassroots to oppose X, when the politician moves on Y, you’re probably going to get that shoved down your throat, due to policymakers not understanding your issue, and not being able to react fast enough. These things happen too quickly to be able to get the right amount of information to large number of people, in the hopes they can and will coherently communicate the problem to lawmakers.

A pure grassroots strategy could work, but only if your grassroots is large and motivated enough to be able to knock policymakers out of their offices in election, after election, after election, in a majority of districts around the country, and in a super majority of states. In order to accomplish that, we’d need every gun owner being a single issue voter, not just a motivated minority of a few million people. A pure grassroots strategy is fantasy land in our current situation. When your core base is composed of only a few million people, you have to negotiate, you have to posture, you have to bluff, and yes, sometimes you have to cut deals and compromise when the choice is between bad and worse.

Groups like NAGR and GOA sell us on a world where if we’re pure enough, we’ll never lose, or will at least lose being able to revel in our own purity, knowing we did not “sell out.” This is not the real world. It’s an emotionally appealing delusion that comforts people with notions that there is an easy, satisfying way out. Winning takes hard work and dedication, and a willingness to set aside your own wants and desires for the greater progress of the movement; something our founding fathers would have called civic virtue.

More on Earlier Rumors

So it’s the end of the week, and the rumor that was spreading about an amendment being attached to the FAA Authorization Bill now being debated in the Senate has yet to materialize. Gun Owners of America is has now issued an alert on this rumor, but says “GOA’s sources inside the Senate indicate that gun amendments to the FAA bill are unlikely at this point.”

The problem goading people to act on rumors is that you can create a “the boy who cried wolf” problem among our base. Most gun owners do not have a remarkably high sense of dedication to the cause. If you can get them to contact a lawmaker once a year, that would be their contribution. Even that small contribution is more than 90% of gun owners are willing to do. It’s with an activist base of a few million people that we drive this movement, and that activist base can get worn out. The question is, do you wear them out on real threats, or do you wear them out on rumor and innuendo? When I say groups like NAGR and GOA hurt the movement when they do this, this is why.

Now, in addition to that, there have been a lot of accusations flying around the blogosphere I’d also like to address. Howard Nemerov has clearly has enough of groups who build themselves up by tearing other groups on the same side of the issue down. He mentions NAGR has no PAC to speak of. Up to the 2010 cycle, this would appear to have been true, however if you check the FEC themselves, they do have a very small PAC, which donated $1000 each to Sharron Angle, Paul Broun, Ken Buck, Cory Gardner, and Rand Paul. Their PAC has yet to show up on Center for Responsive Politics radar, which is why it doesn’t show up on OpenSecrets.org.

Truth About Guns seems to have had some correspondence with NAGR, where Dudley Brown told him that Durbin was the source of the threat to add anti-gun amendments to the FAA bill. As TTAG noted, “Huh. Yesterday, Brown told us Senator Reid was the man behind the plan.” So the story keeps changing. Naturally since nothing has yet happened, NAGR is suggesting that is because “Whenever you shine lights on rats, they scurry away…”

You see, this is a no lose situation for them. If an amendment indeed happens, they can take credit for alerting people before anyone else. If it doesn’t happen, they can take credit for that too, because their alerts made the rats scurry away. There’s nothing to lose from their point of view, but from our point of view, the razors edge of our grassroots political power gets just a little more dull.

But apparently Brown doesn’t like being called into question, and followed up to TTAG with a ranting e-mail, saying, among other things, they’d never employ a “Gucci-loafered K Street lobbyist,” which makes you wonder how they’d expect to know what’s going on in the respective legislative bodies without having people on the ground, actively talking to staffers and lawmakers. I know NAGR’s strategy focuses heavily on grassroots, at least I think, their statement of strategy is an article written by Michael Rothfeld, which contains a lot of truth, but it’s an article, not a strategy. I’ll write later about why NAGR’s approach to this issue is fundamentally flawed.

Obama Throws the Brady Campaign a Bone

I guess the White House could only hold out against the onslaught of grassroots action from the gun control crowds for so long.

President Obama delivered a 10-minute-long inaudible and untelevised speech on gun control Thursday, addressing the politically volatile topic from behind the closed doors of the Oval Office, where nobody could see or hear him. “The Second Amendment doesn’t…” said Obama, who trailed off and gently whispered a number of strong, definitive statements that were muffled by the hand in front of his face.

Go read the whole thing for more details on this major policy speech.

Consider the Source, Part II

I’m shocked, shocked, I tell you, that Al Jazeera is willing to print libelous drivel about gun rights, and generally seems unsupportive of the RKBA. The notion that NRA protects its pocketbook is also a common theme you’ll hear from gun rights groups that don’t know who the real enemy is.

Arizonans Support Stricter Gun Laws?

Much is being made of this poll, showing 55% of Arizonans want gun laws to be more strict. Any time you see someone touting a poll, you have to look at specifics, because in most cases someone is trying to pull a fast one. The question in question is the following:

In general do you think Arizona should have stricter laws concerning who can buy guns or not?

That’s pretty non-specific, so the polling results aren’t something I’d worry about regardless. It’s not a loaded question, like the one’s MAIG asks, but it’s pretty non-specific. Crosstabs also show that 81% of Democrats answering in the affirmative is what drove the majority results. Republicans flipped, with 55% opposing, and support among independents did not top 50%.

Also, I note the poll would seem to have oversampled women. Women were 55% of this survey, whereas census shows that Arizona is a hair under 50% on women. Women may be overrepresented on voter roles, however. But in the crosstabs, women were more likely to support gun control than men by a fairly wide margin. Support among men was only 43% with 50% opposing, whereas 65% of women support and 28% do not.

But the point is, look carefully at poll results. I would also note the margin of error here is +/- 4%.

Terror Watch Lists and Due Process

Les Jones reports on a story out of the UK where an estranged husband, who happened to work as an immigration officer, put his wife on the no fly list while she was in Pakistan, which prevented her from flying back to the UK.

And to think, we have fascists people in this country who think the use of no-fly lists is acceptable grounds for denying citizens fundamental constitutional rights.

Beware of Fake Experts

Probably because the reporter himself doesn’t know much, he recalls the advice of someone who had no business instructing people in guns:

Unlike many entrepreneurs teaching “concealed carry” classes from sea to shining sea, he urged students to leave their guns at home. […] Anybody pulling a gun must shoot to kill without hesitation. The soldier reasoned that most Rice students simply weren’t prepared to do that.

Leaving the gun at home. That sounds like a winning strategy, doesn’t it? Most real instructors have more respect for their students than this.

Our instructor further advised that shotguns are the weapon of choice for home defense. Unlike a heavy-caliber handgun, a shotgun will put an intruder out of business without a bullet passing through a wall and killing a sleeping child.

Any shotgun load worth a damn will shoot through walls. Any instructor who says something like this is cluelessly endangering his students, and is going to get someone killed by accident.

Meanwhile, NRA fundamentalists pretend that America will be a freer, safer place if more poorly trained, inexperienced, unfit, would-be Bruce Willis heroes were waddling around shopping malls carrying pistols.

Well, at least now we know what you think about us. You might, however, want to look in a mirror in regards to “poorly trained, inexperienced, and unfit,” if you believe shotguns can’t shoot through walls, and are more suitable for home defense for everyone in all situations. For some people, a pistol makes more sense than a shotgun for home defense.

UPDATE: More fake experts, via SayUncle. This one lives in a world where it’s wise and appropriate to carry a .44 magnum revolver for defense against Alaska bears, but a 7.62x39mm Krink is just going to piss the bear off and “embed in the bear’s fat.”

UPDATE: The report would be the kind of guy I’d prefer didn’t own a gun. Sean has managed to find this previous article by the same journalist:

This time last year I was plotting to kill a man. I was going to walk up to him, reintroduce myself and then blow his balls off. I was going to watch him writhe like a poisoned cockroach for a few seconds, then kick him onto his stomach and put three bullets in the back of his head. This time last year I had a gun, and a silencer, and a plan.

No wonder he wants to ban guns. He doesn’t trust himself with them. And for good reason!

Snubbed Again

The White House, I think, is really wanting this issue to go away:

Asked Monday if Obama intends to address gun reform following the New York City investigation, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs dodged the question.

“We believe that there are reasons that federal laws are on the books,” Gibbs said, “and the need … to strongly adhere to and follow existing law is important not just in the purchase of weapons, but throughout our civil life.”

Gibbs walked off the podium as the reporter was asking a follow-up.

Needless to say, this is driving our opponents stark raving CAPS LOCK mad.