MSNBC on Black Rifles

I saw the video tonight of MSNBC’s feature on Black Rifles that SayUncle mentioned earlier.  Overall, I think they did a pretty good job.  It would be nice if the other side of the story weren’t a load of crap.

The woman they featured reminded me of Sgt. Callahan from police academy, only with a heavy midwestern accent.  Still, it showed these rifles are mainstream among shooters, which can only help our cause.  If any of you remember the crap the media was peddling from 1989 to 1994 or so, this is a huge improvement.

Honesty in the Press

It seems the Hartford Courant is admitting that gun control hasn’t done anything to fight crime in New England.

In 2004, the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence gave Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island a B or better for their efforts to inhibit gun violence (Connecticut and Massachusetts got an A-), while Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont all received a D-.

Statistics from 2005, however, tell a much different story. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, the murder rates in Portland, Maine, and Manchester, N.H., were 4.7 and 3.6 respectively per 100,000 residents – low when compared to the murder rates in Bridgeport, Hartford, New Haven, Boston, Springfield and Providence, which were more than twice their northern neighbors’ and higher than the national average of 6.9 per 100,000 during the same time period.

Yep.  But it gets better:

What do these statistics tell us? Restrictive and needless legislation does nothing to prevent violence. Erecting unnecessary roadblocks (i.e. gun control) to legal gun ownership only hurts, and at times dissuades, the law-abiding citizen. More importantly such laws do nothing to impede the criminal, because criminals do not adhere to the law. This is why lawmakers would better serve and protect those of us in Connecticut if they sought to address and remedy the destructive culture in our cities and elsewhere. Destroy this mindset as opposed to devising harmful legislation that does nothing to solve the true ills that plague certain communities, which are the real reasons why violence is occurring in the first place.

I wish the Philadelphia press could be this honest.   Read the whole thing.

Pink Pistols Malaigned

Apparently killer lesbian gangs are Bozo O’Reilly’s latest bogeyman. What’s really disappointing is that at the end, he drags the Pink Pistols in with this imagery of roving gay gangs. And who is this expert:

According to Wheeler’s personal website, he is a member of Jericho City of Praise, a conservative Christian megachurch in Landover, Md., whose leadership publicly advocates against equal rights for gays and lesbians. The website details Wheeler’s 500-plus appearances on MSNBC, Court TV and Fox News Channel shows including “The O’Reilly Factor,” “On the Record With Greta Van Sustern,” and “Hannity & Colmes.”

Are you kidding me? Bill O’Reilly is a turd of the first order, and I’ll be the first to throw a party when I see him circling the bowl along with the rest of the television media when they get their well deserved flush into the dustbin of history.

Something’s Wrong With This Picture

From the Star Ledger:

A routine traffic stop for a noise violation led to the arrest of a sus pected drug dealer who had a loaded AK-47 assault rifle on the back seat of his car, Jersey City police said.

How could that be? They are illegal in New Jersey. Long ago, Jim Florio rid New Jersey of AK-47s once and for all. Of course, this isn’t news, except then they say this:

A search of the vehicle turned up the loaded assault rifle as well as 52 rounds of .22-caliber ammuni tion and a bag of cocaine, police reports said.

An AK-47 doesn’t take anything close to .22 caliber ammunition. Or wasn’t an assault rifle? Maybe it was a tube fed .22 that holds more than 15 rounds? Who knows. This is the media. The details don’t matter. Neither does getting the facts straight.

UPDATE: Here’s more details from The Jersey Journal:

Sternes was taken out of the car without incident, and then a search of the vehicle turned up the loaded assault rifle as well as 52 rounds of .22 caliber ammunition and a bag of cocaine, reports said.

Further investigation turned up a .22 caliber revolver stashed behind a garbage bin at the Holland Gardens public housing complex. Police believe it was a “community gun” used by Sternes and others to commit street crimes, and are trying to determine if the weapon is linked to criminal activity, reports said.

Sternes spent three years in prison after a 2002 conviction on drug charges, state Department of Corrections records show.

“This incident not only underscores the reality that routine police stops rarely are just routine any longer, but the availability of dangerous weapons has reached epidemic proportions,” Mayor Jerramiah Healy said in a statement. “I mean, an AK-47 on the streets, it’s ridiculous.”

Epidemic proportions?  But… but… but… they are illegal.  Either way, I doubt that it’s anything close to an epidemic.  If a routine seizure is enough to make the news, that would seem to indicate that finding assault weapons in a traffic stop is rare.  Had it been a pistol, no one would care.  That kind of thing happens all the time.

Foriegn Press Needs a Lesson on US Gun Laws

This article in The Guardian isn’t all that bad, but I feel the need to correct some errors they made.  The foreign press is generally much much worse than our own press at getting things right in terms of gun crime in the US:

Baltimore, Philadelphia and other cities in a bloodstained corridor along the East Coast are seeing a surge in killings, and one of the most provocative explanations offered by criminal-justice experts is this: not enough new immigrants. The theory holds that waves of hardworking, ambitious immigrants reinvigorate desperately poor black and Hispanic neighborhoods and help keep crime down.

They’ll string you up from both sides of the political spectrum for suggesting something like that in the US papers.  From the right, for suggesting that immigration can be good.   From the left, for suggesting that without “moderating” effects from new immigrants, black neighborhoods turn into war zones.   But let’s continue:

It is only a partial explanation for the bloodshed over the past few years in a corridor that also includes Newark, N.J., and Boston, but not New York City.

I should point out that Boston, New York City, and Newark, New Jersey, are cities with very strict gun laws.  New York Cities gun laws would be familiar to someone from Britain: that is a roughly de-facto ban on them.  But that doesn’t stop the Guardian from saying:

Some cities “never bothered to institute the reforms, policies and programs that impacted violent crime because they felt immune from what they saw as big-city issues,” said Jack Levin, director of the Brudnick Center on Violence at Northeastern University in Boston. “Now they’re paying the price.”

These efforts include limiting gun purchases, suing rogue dealers and deploying officers more strategically, based on crime data analysis.

Gun purchases in Boston are quite limited.  It’s very difficult for someone to obtain a firearm in that city.  And what exactly is a “rouge” dealer?  We have laws to deal with dealers who sell guns to criminals already.

The vast majority of U.S. homicides – nearly 90 percent in Newark last year – involve guns. And they are more powerful than ever. The weapons of choice are semiautomatics that can spray dozens of bullets within seconds.

Good to see New Jersey’s strict gun laws, which require police licensing before purchasing or possessing anything, are working effectively to quell crime in Newark.   Oh, and Guardian reporters might want to learn the difference between automatic and semi-automatic before spouting off.  Semi-automatic firearms don’t “spray bullets” you twits.

“If there were more immigrants in the city of Philadelphia, there would be less violence? I’m not making the connection here. I’m not getting it,” she said.

In New York, city leaders have pushed through strict gun-control laws while attacking social ills such as littering and loitering. New York’s homicide toll has plummeted to one-fourth its 1990 high of 2,245. The count could slip below 500 this year.

New York City leaders didn’t change the cities gun laws at all.   New York City has had a defacto ban on guns for most of this century, and it’s seen it’s crime rates go up and down over that time.   It changed its crime rates almost exclusively through better police methods, and getting criminals off the streets.

I say this isn’t a bad article, because it does touch on some of the causes of crime in American cities, but of all the cities talked about here, only Philadelphia has relatively liberal gun laws, and it’s lumped in with cities along the east coast, who also have a similar problem with increasing crime.  Guns are not the variable here.

Associated Press writers Ben Nuckols in Baltimore, David Porter in Trenton, Erin Conroy in Boston and Michael Rubinkam in Philadelphia contributed to this report.

I’m sure they did.   Remember foreign press, our media culture knows about as much about guns and gun laws as my cat does.  They are not experts.  Not even close.  You’d be wise to ignore anything they tell you, and talk to some real experts on American gun laws.

Quote of the Year

Via Glenn, on the subject of why terrorist atrocities don’t get any attention:

Yon’s story doesn’t get attention because it is humiliating.

It is humiliating because it is obvious that we media – and our allies in the state department, the legal trade, the NGOs, the Democratic Party, the UN, etc., – can’t do squat about such determined use of force.

Our words, images, arguments and skills can’t stop the killing. Only the rough soldiers and their guns can solve the problem, and we won’t admit that fact because the admission would weaken our influence and our claim to social status.

So we pretend Yon’s massacre – and the North Korean killing fields, the Arab treatment of women, the Arab hatred of Israel, etc. – doesn’t exist, and instead focus our emotions and attention on the somewhat-bad domestic things that we can ‘fix’ with our DC-based allies. Things such as Abu Ghraib, wiretapping, etc. When we ‘fix’ them, then we get status, applause, power, new jobs, ego, etc.

Please don’t be surprised. We media are an interest group not much different from the automakers, the unions, and the farmers.

What a stunning admission about the psychology of the media.

More on Criminal Profiler Pat Brown

We screwed up. It seems that not only is Pat Brown not anti-gun, but she’s actually pretty pro-gun. In the interest of not eating our own, I’m hoping everyone gets the word out that we misunderstood what she was saying.

It’s difficult, when you don’t know someone from jack, and hear a statement on the air that can be taken a certain way, to decide how to take it. Given CNN’s reputation on our issue, it’s easy to misunderstand something, or take it the wrong way, as I did with this statement. The great thing about the blogosphere, is it offers a forum where people can defend themselves when they feel they are being unfairly maligned, as Ms. Brown has chosen to do in this case. Unlike a newspaper, we don’t put the correction on page E9.

So I admit that I was in error as to her orientation towards our issue. I’m hoping everyone that linked to the CNN video will update the post with a link to her comment.