CNN Story on Campus Carry

CNN has a pretty balanced piece of campus concealed carry.  They get some of the legal subtleties wrong though.  For instance, you can carry on a college campus in Pennsylvania legally, it’s just that Colleges and Universities, including those in the state system, exclude firearms through policy (rather than law).  This is the case in Virginia as well.  The laws being proposed in different states are meant to have various effects.

Many states, including Texas and Tennessee, ban concealed carry on college campuses through law.  There are proposals to repeal this, but that would still allow college to ban them through policy.  You could be expelled from the school, but you won’t be facing charges for violating a gun free zone.  Virginia’s proposal would have prevented the state run school system from imposing restrictions on individuals who possessed a Concealed Handgun License.

While I have some issues with how CNN has chosen to cover this, the fact that this is becoming a serious debate at all is a sign on how far we’ve come here.  Even five years ago, it wouldn’t even be up for serious debate.

Be Afraid …

be very afraid:

“He walks into a room and you want to follow him somewhere, anywhere,” George Clooney told talk show host Charlie Rose.

“I’ll do whatever he says to do,” actress Halle Berry said to the Philadelphia Daily News. “I’ll collect paper cups off the ground to make his pathway clear.”

If it was just vapid Hollywood stars who liked this guy, I wouldn’t be that worried, but it’s enough people that I’m beginning to fear the prospect of an Obama presidency more than a Hillary presidency. Is this fervent and religious devotion to Obama among the young a product of schools long ago hijacked by the left?

I don’t like Hillary Clinton, and I despise her politics.  I was initially rather irrationally happy to see Americans thumb their noses at her.  But no one really likes Hillary Clinton all that much, even the people who vote for her.  Lacking any real mandate, she’d be limited to what she can accomplish as President.

If Obama sweeps into office on a wave of near religious devotion, at the risk of invoking Godwin, I can’t help but thinking about the other times this has happened.  I’m not at all making the comparison of Obama to Hitler, or suggesting he’s going to burn down Capitol Hill to create a pretext, but just the kind of blind devotion I’m seeing in Obama supporters leads to that kind of thing, and if this is the road our young people want to go down, they need to spent more time learning history, with a skeptical eye toward human nature.

Hat tip to War on Guns for the link.

Quote of the Day

From John Derbyshire of National Review:

Wherever there is a jackboot stomping on a human face there will be a well-heeled Western liberal to explain that the face does, after all, enjoy free health care and 100 percent literacy.

All to effectively explains the difference between people who want liberty, and people who want to be relieved of its burden.

Advance Sales of Ruger LCP Brisk

According to Michael Bane:

BTW, Ruger is reporting unprecedented advance sales of the LCP .380…shows what you can do with the right product and the power of the Internet!

I’m definitely interested in trying out an LCP as soon as I can.  I’m glad to hear Ruger is doing well with it.  Now, if Ruger can just make the Mk.IV a gun I would actually want to buy, we’ll really be getting somewhere.

Do We Encourage Tigers to Change Their Stripes?

War on Guns doesn’t seem too happy about PVF donating to the campaign of Tim Johnson.  Quite possibly, in consideration of the fact that he signed onto the Congressional amicus brief on the side of Heller, this donation could be seen as an encouragement for Johnson to be more pro-gun.  Given that it’s exceedingly difficult to oust an incumbent, I can’t say I have any problem with doing stuff like this.  Influence can be bought, as we saw yesterday.  Politics is not a clean or honorable game, and if $2500 bucks is enough to convince Johnson to go from a C+ record to a B record, I consider that money well spent.  Don’t be surprised if PVF also donates to his opponents campaign.  That’s common practice among PACs as well.

Secession!

Robb Allen has a bit of Montana’s brief in Heller:

A collective rights decision by the court would violate the contract by which Montana entered into statehood, called the Compact With the United States and archived at Article I of the Montana Constitution. When Montana and the United States entered into this bilateral contract in 1889, the U.S. approved the right to bear arms in the Montana Constitution, guaranteeing the right of “any person” to bear arms, clearly an individual right.

There was no assertion in 1889 that the Second Amendment was susceptible to a collective rights interpretation, and the parties to the contract understood the Second Amendment to be consistent with the declared Montana constitutional right of “any person” to bear arms.

As a bedrock principle of law, a contract must be honored so as to give effect to the intent of the contracting parties. A collective rights decision by the court in Heller would invoke an era of unilaterally revisable contracts by violating the statehood contract between the United States and Montana, and many other states.

That sounds like secessh talk to me.  This will mean that quite possibly Montana will be the haven of shooters when The Messiah sends his jackbooted angels to give us the knock on the door.

SayUncle details other instances when Montana has told the feds to go to hell.  If Montana secedes from the union to preserve gun rights, I’ll move there.

Assault Weapons Ban in Nebraska

From Joe’s Crabby Shack:

State Sen. Brad Ashford (Omaha) amended his proposed Gun Crime bill to remove everything, but to add the formation of a seven-member panel to meet every two years to decide what guns are inherently dangerous and should be prohibited from sale or ownership in Nebraska.

As is typical with these types of bills, the real risk comes in how they determine what is an assault weapon.

  • A semiautomatic center-fire rifle that has the capacity to accept a detachable magazine, with any one of the following: a pistol grip protruding conspicuously beneath the weapon’s action; a thumbhole stock; a folding or telescoping stock; a grenade launcher or flare launcher; a flash suppressor; or a forward pistol grip.
  • A semiautomatic center-fire rifle with a fixed magazine with capacity for more than 10 rounds.
  • A semiautomatic center-fire rifle that has an overall length of less than 30 inches.

The first clause is the usual list of cosmetic features, but the overall length and application to fixed magazine firearms is a new twist.  Needless to say, this has to be opposed most vigorously.