War on Guns Has Some Good Stuff Today

Talking about a gun shop owner who needs to stop talking to the press before he does more damage.  Gun shop owners should be very wary of talking to the press, and if they do, they need to be careful of what comes out of their pie hole.  Don’t try to make yourself look good at the expense of other gun owners.  Educate, don’t feed the public’s irrational fears.

Asks whether deadly force against the Colorado man was warranted considering he motioned toward his revolver but did not draw it.   I think it probably is justified.  He had the means, the motive, and opportunity, and if he wasn’t complying with orders, then yes, it would have been a justifiable use of deadly force.  If he had his hands in the air and/or was in the process of surrendering, then no.   If someone approaches you on the street, stops you, and demands your wallet while flashing a revolver stuffed in his waistband, would you give him the time or opportunity to draw?  I wouldn’t.

I agree with David that this isn’t the right thing to do.   Point out the hypocracy, point out that it’s illegal, but don’t go for the poetic justice of pushing to jail them for a law most of us think shouldn’t exist.

Selfish Unconcern

My last “I’m not a gun owner… but” post got me thinking that it’s probably not astroturfing by anti-gun groups.   There are a lot of gun owners in this country, and most of them aren’t activists, nor are they informed.

Most people are rather selfishly unconcerned with other people’s liberty.  If they were, you wouldn’t see the proliferation of smoking bans.  People support smoking bans because they don’t like smoking, and don’t like the smell.  So they want it banned.  They don’t do it, don’t like it, so no one should do it.   Note you don’t see people pushing for farting bans in public, even though public farting is most decidedly unpleasant.   This is because everyone farts.  People understand they could run a risk of getting fined for letting one loose in a public area, not realizing they were dropping a real stink bomb.  People concern themselves with their own liberty, when it comes to the liberty of others, their own preferences will usually win out.

So you have someone with a Remington 700 up in his closet that he used to hunt deer years ago, doesn’t like these fancy, scary looking newfangled guns, that he is mistaken to think that only criminals, nut cases, and gang bangers have any use for, and is ignorant that his 700 is a military sniper rifle by another name.  If he knew they’d be coming for that eventually, he might be more concerned, and more careful about what he says.  But his ignorance and selfishness allow him to bitch about Glocks, and other scary looking guns he doesn’t approve of, because in his mind, it doesn’t affect his own liberty.

Liberty exists as a state where the rights of the individual are protected from transgressions by others, and by society collectively.  It cannot be regarded selfishly.  To be truly committed to liberty, one can’t merely support liberty for himself, without supporting it for others as well.  This means a certain amount of tolerance behaviors and things that you find personally distasteful.

I don’t particularly like smoking myself, and I tend to think other drivers on the road are boneheads.  There are people out there who can barely drive, let alone talk on a cell phone while doing it.  But I reject smoking bans, because business owners should have to right to decide what is allowed on their own property (and don’t give me crap about second hand smoke.  A night on the town exposed to second hand smoke isn’t going to hurt anyone at all, considering you’re probably drinking livery poison while you complain about other people’s unhealthy smoke).  I oppose banning cell phones for drivers (as a primary offense, secondary offenses I have no problem with), because it makes no distinction between people making a quick call, or who know when to tell the other person to shut up and pay attention to the road, and folks gabbing on and on paying little attention.  I don’t go for “punish everyone for the few” solutions to solving problems.

Liberty means having to accept some risk and tolerance of distasteful activities so we can all continue to live in a free society.  The fact that most people don’t think that way should probably not be a surprise, but every time I read one of these “I’m not a gun owner… but” editorials, I find it hard to believe there are people out there that selfishly unconcerned with anyone other than their own freedoms.

Taxes for Me, Not for Thee

Rendell is currently taking his budget signing on tour to several Pennsylvania towns, talking about great the extra transportation spending is, and how taxes didn’t have to be raised.

That is, unless you commute on the PA turnpike or I-80.  I pay $600 a year to the PA turnpike commission.  After this I’ll pay $750, and then 3% annually after that.  If this was going to pay for repairs strictly on the turnpike, I might not complain so much, but it’s going to pay for roads that other people drive on, and for mass transit that other people use.

You can thank me, and every other turnpike commuter, for eating Rendell’s tax toll increase, so you don’t have to.   So let me run down the list of things Ed Rendell has done for me:

  1. Raise my taxes
  2. Raise my taxes again
  3. Uh… I’ll get back to you on the rest

Careful Calling that Plumber

Plumber in an apartment sees guns, calls cops, cops raid.  Ooops… guns are legal in Texas!  Who knew!   Of course, the guns were legal, the child pornography wasn’t.

See news story video here.

I’m guessing the police considered the grenades their probable cause to get the warrant.  Certainly they will argue that when Mr. Kiddy Porn’s attorney argues that the search was unlawful, and the evidence should be suppressed.

More “Long time gun owner… but”

A letter to the editor, in response to a letter to the editor.  I could swear I’ve linked to this paper before for the same thing.

As a longtime gun owner, world traveler and, I like to think, common-sense advocate, I need to make the following notes regarding his “fear” of losing his “rights.”

Anyone who believes that there has been a single bill designed to eliminate hunting rifles and shotguns needs to really read the proposals. No one wants to inhibit hunting, sporting clays, target shooting, or sport of any kind. AK-47’s, Glocks and Uzi’s are not sporting guns.

A quick googling would indicate the Bob Zembower is from Bedford, PA, sells Vulcanized Fiber in Wilmington, DE, and is religious.  In other words: a real person.  We see so many of these letters following the same pattern, but maybe it’s not astroturfing.

Gun Stealing Losers Fight Law, Law Wins

Looks like the authorities here busted up a fairly significant burglary and gun trafficking ring that extended into Chester, Montgomery and Berks Counties.  Kudos to Montgomery County DA Bruce Castor and the Pennsylvania State Police Troop K for helping make my collection just a little safer from these losers.

I’m a Lucky Bastard

We had some storms roll through.   At work they seemed to be pretty mild, but when I got home, it looked as if someone dropped a bomb on my neighborhood.  I had to dodge a few down trees.  My blog was down earlier, and this is why.  Our power went out briefly.  It looks like I have a limb down on the house:

 http://www.pagunblog.com/blogpics/treebranch1.jpg

One of those lines holding up part of the branch is my FiOS cable which supplies internet for the blog.  Hopefully the rest of the branch will not come down in the mean time, or I’ll be seeing ya all for a bit.

 http://www.pagunblog.com/blogpics/treebranch2.jpg

Considering my neighbor’s house looks like it had a tree struck by lightning, and the people up the street had a tree come down on the power lines, snapping the pole, cutting out power for that part of the neighborhood, and closing the street.  I’m pretty lucky to have gotten away with a minor branch down on the roof that almost, but not quite took out power, internet, or cable.

I suspect power or internet could be going out any minute, really.  If it’s looking like a prolonged outage, I’ll move the blog to Jason’s server for the time being.

Interesting New Hampshire Case

A court challenge to New Hampshire’s concealed carry laws fails:

The case arose from an incident at Dover City Hall on March 16, 2006, during which Bleiler, a resident of Isaac Lucas Circle, displayed a handgun in the office of City Attorney Allan Krans. The gun was used as a prop to tell a story, and though Krans said in court that he did not feel threatened, he did call Fenniman immediately afterward to report the incident.

If the firearm was at any point drawn from the holster, even if it wasn’t brandished, it’s definitely stupid. You don’t use a loaded firearm as a “prop”. Period.

…He also argued that state law allowing municipalities to revoke concealed weapons permits for “just cause” is too vague and allows for arbitrary enforcement.

The Supreme Court ruled state law does in fact give someone of “ordinary intelligence” notice of what conduct could lead to a revocation.

According to state law, no permit is required to own a firearm but one is required if the firearm is going to be concealed…

There’s a good rule of thumb if you’re going to litigate on constitutional rights like this: take a case before the court that’s actually an example of abuse of discretion! This case would not appear to be it. Most people, including myself (though I am opposed to discretionary clauses like this), think that if you believe using a loaded weapon as a prop in a conversation is smart behavior, you should probably rethink carrying a firearm in public.

UPDATE: Another case along a similar vein from New Hampshire.