Upcoming Action Day for Gun Control

Most folks have heard that President Obama’s Organizing for Action group has declared August 21 to be their gun control day. But have most of you actually looked at the schedule around you to see who they are targeting?

Here in suburban Philly, we have some highlights. They start tonight with a phone bank in Solebury and tomorrow night in Bethlehem targeting the entire area of Southeast PA.

They really want to cause problems for Rep. Jim Gerlach judging by the Trappeand Exton rallies planned. Most gun owners probably assume that Rep. Joe Pitts has no major election concerns, but they are targeting his district with two rallies and a phone bank effort. Even Rep. Charlie Dent who managed to defeat a MAIG mayor in a recent election will be facing pressure.

If Republicans who signed on to co-sponsor a few bills thought that would make the left go away, they were sorely mistaken. Rep. Patrick Meehan will be subject to two rallies attempting to keep gun control the issue alive in his district. Rep. Mike Fitzpatrick is also slated for a rally to keep the divisive issue on the front pages.

Gun owners need to make sure that gun control voices aren’t the only ones that these lawmakers hear from next week. Even if some have already signed on to bills we don’t like, don’t give up. If they hear silence from our people, they’ll think it’s okay to sign on to even more extreme gun control.

California Approaches the End Game

The anti-gun bill package advances in the California Assembly. The bill package would:

  • Ban all semi-automatic rifles that accept any detachable magazine.
  • Ban possession of any magazine holding more than ten rounds. No grandfathering.
  • Create ammunition registration, and require background checks for ammunition purchases.
  • Create a roster of approved long guns in addition to handguns.

I expect this to pass. In truth, I’d feel a lot better going into court arguing against such a broad semi-auto rifle ban than I would even challenging the SAFE act. That’s no reason not to prevent this from passing, because I don’t have high expectations for what federal judges are willing to do, but I’m just saying.

Having lost on the handgun issue in court, those who disapprove of civilian gun possession now are trying to achieve their end game on the only thing they think they can; long guns. We really need the courts to rule you can’t ban semi-automatic rifles in common use any more than you can ban handguns in common use.

And does anyone argue this isn’t part and parcel of their plans for every other state, or federally, if we let them get away with it? I happen to believe Pennsylvania could topple sooner than many in the state today think.

Guns on a Plane

Interesting article in Global Travel Industry News, where they ask people about whether they’d carry a firearm on an aircraft if such a thing were allowed. A surprising number of people responded yes. I would be among the “yes” respondents if asked, and much for the same reason as this person:

For Hawaii-resident Jeff Sumitani, he would carry his gun on a flight not for the reason that one would think. He said: “As with anything, if it’s rare or expensive, I would rather have it with me. [The] same thing with a gun. I [would] rather take care of it on the plane instead of letting the airline handle it without my supervision.”

When I’ve flown with firearms in checked baggage, I’ve always spent more energy worrying about whether the gun was going to get to the destination along with me, than about terrorists on the plane or anything else. Making it legal to carry guns on planes isn’t honestly on my radar, I think we have bigger fish to fry, but the responses were interesting.

Pressuring Gerlach to Sign on to King-Thompson

King-Thompson is the House version of the Manchin-Toomey compromise. Of the area GOP reps, Rep. Mike Fitzpatrick (PA-08) and Rep. Pat Meehan (PA-07) have already caved to pressure from Bloomberg and CeaseFirePA and signed on as co-sponsors.  Rep. Jim Gerlach (PA-06), so far, is holding out. Bloomberg is now trying to change that, by using some anti-gun state reps in a “Women’s Roundtable” to discuss gun violence.

It’s worth noting that despite attempts, our ground effort in Fitzpatrick and Meehan’s district is not as strong as it should be for the number of gun owners. It’s much stronger in Gerlach’s district. Politicians respond to incentives, and it’s a lot easier to bring politicians along when “gun rights” is something they see regularly in their districts.

Fire This School Board Next Election

Hard to believe school officials thought this was a good idea in Arizona:

A school district in a generally rural section of northwest Tucson, Arizona is asking the parents of high school students and junior high school students to pledge never to use guns or violence to resolve problems.

Well, if that problem is someone breaking down my door at 3AM, pardon me if I don’t think that might be a problem that needs to be solved with guns. From the pledge:

“I will teach, including by personal example, my teenager about the dangers and consequences of the misuse of guns and weapons, and I will keep any guns I own under lock, away from school grounds and away from my children.”

And yeah, back to the example, that might be a problem if I’m getting my door kicked in at 3AM. I’m guessing this is probably a school district with some problems, but parents who live in neighborhoods with problems have rights too.

An Obsolete Right?

A well thought out and written article on the Second Amendment, but it comes to a common and what I think is wrong conclusion:

This may have been fine when the Amendment was first conceived, but considering the changing context of culture and its artifacts, might it be time to amend it? When it was adopted in 1751, the defensive-power afforded to the citizenry by owning guns was roughly on par with the defensive-power available to government. In 1751 the most popular weapon was the musket, which was limited to 4 shots per minute, and had to be re-loaded manually. The state-of-the-art for “arms” in 1791 was roughly equal for both citizenry and military. This was before automatic weapons – never mind tanks, GPS, unmanned drones, and the like. In 1791, the only thing that distinguished the defensive or offensive capability of military from citizenry was quantity. Now it’s quality.

This is a pretty common argument. I’ll grant him, for the sake of argument, that the Second Amendment is primary founded on resistance to tyranny, even though our Courts seem to be more focused on the self-defense aspects of the right.

The chief mistake people make in this line of thought is to assume war is killing. That is not really the case. War is the use of force in an attempt to impose your political will onto others. Killing is just a means to accomplish that. If it were just about killing, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan could have been settled in about thirty seconds, but they weren’t. Our goals in both cases was to impose a less outwardly militant democratic system of government on a population that had no tradition of it. When it comes to defeating an opposing army, all the things that make governments so remarkably powerful matter quite a lot. When it comes time to actually impose your political will, those things matter a lot less. A man in a tank can’t impose his will on me, he can only kill me. To impose his will he has to get out of the tank, plane, or ship, and essentially go from being a soldier to being a policeman, and at that point, we become a lot more equal. If our government ever wants to kill us, lots of us, we’re screwed. We have a much better chance resisting the imposition of someone else’s political will. It can be argued that firearms aren’t as important in that equation as other things, and I might agree with that, but such resistance is not beyond the reach of motivated individuals. The philosophies and attitudes that the right to keep and bear arms engenders in a population is likely just as important, if not more important, as the instruments of exercising that right.

A Right Unused …

Tell me if you’ve heard this one before?

Much like a muscle that atrophies with disuse, any right that goes unexercised for many years devolves into a privilege, and eventually can even be redefined as a crime.

Is this really true? I haven’t exercised my Third Amendment rights ever in my lifetime. I don’t know too many other folks who have either. Yet the Third Amendment is doing so well, the government hardly ever violates it. Additionally, despite a dearth of case law, those which have come up ruled pretty decisively in favor of the right of the citizen. Further, no one seriously argues that the Third Amendment is wrong and ought to be repealed. The Third Amendment is doing pretty well despite falling into disuse!

Now, let’s take a look from the other side. People exercise the right of home ownership pretty regularly, and we trek about with our persons, papers and personal effects on a regular basis. Yet it takes the barest of any pretext for the police to search the ever loving crap out of your personage and vicinity, because most searches have been deemed “reasonable” by the courts. If the Second Amendment ends up being in as poor a shape as the 4th Amendment, by the time all this is said and done, I’ll cry.

I think this is a eloquent way to simply a complex issue to the point where it’s a pleasing thing to think, but doesn’t reflect reality. The answer is the loss of rights is a lot more complex than whether you use it or not, and our community shouldn’t delude itself into thinking otherwise.

Colorado Recall Elections Get Complicated & Weird

The recall elections targeting anti-gun state senators in Colorado just got a little more interesting for the major parties because the courts are forcing a change to allow Libertarians on the ballots. A judge ruled that the timelines the government set for gathering signatures violated the state’s constitutional provisions.

On one hand, this makes it more likely that elections will be held in person and that’s bad for the Democratic incumbents. On the other hand, with at least one of those seats being held by a guy who won because of a split vote, it could make it tougher to actually unseat them with one candidate. To make the election nice and messy, hundreds of ballots have already been mailed that are now likely incorrect.

For the weird factor, a former candidate in the recall races is demanding $54 million from various Republican officials and committees in Colorado and a gun shop owner because she seems to claim that breaking the news that she writes dirty books was slander – even though she admits writing the books. Her rambling accusations against party members also say they are capable of hurting her pets and committing terrorism, which is almost weirder than the claim that they owe her tens of millions of dollars. The claim also appears to accuse these folks of election fraud for the acts of trying to influence opinions of who might make a better candidate.

Monday News

This person thinks gun owners who rush and panic to buy “assault weapons” ahead of a government gun control law in Maryland are acting like children. Must be hard to look down on your fellow citizens to such a strong degree.

Fudging the numbers for murder.

Clayton notes that heart surgery is best avoided. We’re glad to see he’s on the mend. My grandfather had his valve replaced in his mid-60s and while his recovery was much longer, afterwards he felt better than he had in years.

More talk about the army switching side arms.

Interesting Massachusetts gun rights case.

Stop and frisk ruled unconstitutional by a US District Judge, because the targets are disproportionally minorities.

ALEC fights back against Dick Durbin.

California politicians are looking to savage your rights anew.

The New Hampshire Supreme court rules that for a gun to be considered loaded, it actually has to be loaded.

Moms pushing for gun control in Morristown.

Can I get an amen?

Inside NRA University.

Detroit man says Stand Your Ground kept him out of prison.

Berks County First in State in Gun Sales

The Reading Eagle notices that Berks County leads the state in gun sales. I believe that can be explained in one word: Cabela’s. The Sheriff has also reported that concealed carry licenses are up, like pretty much everywhere else. My father is now among that statistic, because I had him go get a license so he can safely transport the .22 pistol I lent him for target practice. Absent an License to Carry, Pennsylvania’s laws on transporting a handgun in a vehicle are technically as draconian as New Jersey’s. If you’re going to be transporting handguns in Pennsylvania, it’s just a good idea to have an LTC. Berks County issues on the spot as soon as you clear the PICS check.