Don’t Talk to the Media

Gun shop owners should really get out of the habit of talking to the media.  Especially in the Philadelphia area.  The media here are not our friends.  Apparently Mike Glessner, of Mike’s Sporting Goods, needs this bit of advice more than a lot of others:

Congratulations Mike, you just gave the anti-gunners in our area a lot more ammunition to call for more restrictions, because “See, even gun shop owners agree!”

UPDATE:  Guav says in the comments: “Is there some context in the article for that statement, or are you just judging by the caption? Because there is absolutely no way to know what he said that in regards to otherwise—it may have been absolutely nothing to do with thinking there should be more gun laws.” Guav is right.  It could have been taken out of context.  Nonetheless, the lesson stands.  Don’t talk to media.

Hey Philly Inquirer, Your Bias is Showing

This very biased piece is a smear of all gun owners.  The topic, as far as I can tell, is that underneath every law abiding gun owner, is a crack head just waiting to sell guns to criminals:

When Trenton crack dealer Sean Hagins spotted the Pennsylvania tags and NRA sticker on a customer’s pickup, he saw opportunity. Hagins had been dealing drugs for years, was an ex-felon with a history of psychiatric problems; he could not buy guns himself. The customer, David Downs, had a nasty crack habit and had been laid off from a Bensalem belt factory.

Yep, those shady NRA members and their criminal ways!  Not content to smear gun owners, they also smear honest dealers:

Guns & Things owner Mary Ann Dobdrenz winced when a reporter told her the DC-9 ended up in the hands of an accused killer.

In an interview at her shop, which she runs out of her home, Dobdrenz said it was often impossible to separate the straw buyers from the gun enthusiasts.

“You just can’t tell from looking at a person,” she said.

Downs, 47, has a solid middle-class background. He graduated from Delhaas High School in Bucks County and owned a three-bedroom house in nearby Levittown. He even had a permit to carry a concealed weapon.

Eventually, Dobdrenz said, she grew worried about Downs. She passed a list of his gun purchases to a local police officer, who promised to give it to the FBI. She never heard whether federal investigators saw her list.

Dobdrenz said she did ask Downs why he needed so many guns. She never got a good answer.

“He was a real talker,” Dobdrenz said. “There was always a different story.”

So here we have a gun shop that fully cooperated with authorities, went well above the legal requirement in trying to ascertain the nature of this guy’s interest in all the guns he was buying, and they still get their name published in the Inquirer in a piece that’s decidedly not painting them in a friendly light.  This hits close to home for me, since “Guns & Things” is within walking distance, about 1/2 a mile from my house.

But is this article really a case of the need for stricter gun laws?  Downs was caught, and confessed to authorities.  He’s going to jail where he belongs, along with all this other gun trafficking friends.  The law worked in this case, and you’ll get no argument from most gun owners that these men belong in prison.  But straw purchasing is a fundamental problem.  The only way to put any dent in it is to outlaw all gun sales, or close the majority of the state’s gun shops, which service the shooting community in the areas they are located.  This is not a solution that is acceptable to gun owners in Pennsylvania, which is why we will not agree to further restrictions on our right to bear arms.

What the article doesn’t tell you is, for the most part, there are no longer many legal avenues to purchase a firearms in New Jersey.  There are few gun shops left in existence, having been driven out of business by all the burdensome regulations on gun ownership there.  Guns in New Jersey may not be illegal, but it’s fast approaching the point where they might as well be.  Gun owners in Pennsylvania will not permit our rights to suffer the same fate.  We will not sacrifice the health of our sport and our ability to protect ourselves and our families on the false promises that gun control actually reduces violence.

Len Savage On Lou Dobbs

Len Savage appearing on CNN?  Who would have thought?  David has the story.  I’m not going to suggest the main stream media is going to be anywhere close to on our side any time soon, but we’ve seen some movement toward some semblance of fairness as of late it seems.

You Don’t Say

Guns are a hobby, like any other.  Combined with stories like this, of a Michigan reporter who learns how to shoot a gun, I’m beginning to wonder if the American media is not coming to terms with this nation’s shooting culture.  That would be a good thing for us, and a disaster for gun control advocates.

How Do You Say Bias in Hebrew?

A tale of two news stories.   First, from CNN:

A gunman broke into the Jewish seminary about 8:30 p.m., spraying automatic-weapons fire, authorities said. Most of the victims were students in their teens and 20s, medical officials said.

At least nine others were wounded before an off-duty Israel Defense Forces officer fatally shot the gunman, Jerusalem District Police commander Aharon Franko said.

Now From Haaretz:

A student at the Jerusalem yeshiva where eight people were killed in a terrorist attack Thursday evening shot the gunman who opened fire inside the religious school’s crowded library, neutralizing him before a soldier killed him with an automatic rifle.

Yitzhak Dadon said he climbed onto the roof of a nearby building, armed with a rifle, and waited for the gunman to emerge.

What CNN doesn’t tell you is that everyone is “off duty” IDF in Israel.  Can’t feed the idea that letting concealed carry license holders carry while attending university might actually help stop mass shooters now can we?  The Israelis don’t seem to have any illusion about how to make colleges and universities safer from mass shooters.  Why do we persist?

Great Article on Women Getting LTCs

From the Times Leader:

Many women won’t leave the house without a purse or lip gloss. But for others, like Barb Smith of Sugarloaf, the daily routine includes something more.

A handgun.

Smith carries the gun during her long commutes to a local hospital — for protection, she said. The side roads she takes to shorten her drive don’t give her a good feeling, but knowing she has her handgun makes her feel secure.

There are between 17,000 and 20,000 license-to-carry firearms permits in Luzerne County though Sheriff Michael Savokinas said he does not know how many have been issued to women. The county’s application for a permit to carry a gun asks for the applicant’s gender but Savokinas said there is no way to determine the number of women with permits because of a recent computer problem.

Some area gun shop owners have noticed an upward trend in the number of women who are buying guns and seeking permits to carry the weapons for self-defense.

Read the whole thing.  We’re doing pretty good if my only real complaint about the article is that they misspelled Beretta.  I’m almost ready to say I think the media is getting better about our issue lately.