That Evil Gun Lobby Again

Apparently now we’re giving material support to narco-terrorists.  I shit you not, go read.

The web of interests concentrated in the National Rifle Association and which spends millions of dollars to lobby against gun control legislation in Congress may be inadvertently aiding in the reign of terror being waged by drug cartels in northern Mexico. Recent reports suggest as much as 90% of the weapons used by the cartels come from north of the border.

Here we go with the Mexico crap again.  This number has been bandied about for years now, but when you hear talk of guns in the hands of narco-terrorists, they are things like machine guns, rocket launchers, and other heavy weapons which are not available in the United States to civilians.

The gun lobby has consistently argued against any form of gun control, even against the logic of barring civilians from carrying concealed semi-automatic weapons. During his tenure as governor of Texas, George W. Bush signed legislation that allowed Texans to carry concealed weapons into churches, amusement parks and diners, among other public places.

Actually, churches and amusement parks are both places where carry is prohibited under Texas’ laws.  Some diners can be too if they derive more than 51% of their sales from alcohol.  But where is the blood on the streets that this was supposed to cause?  Forty states later, it’s failed ot materialize.

Now, the NRA is not likely to be engaged in such flagrant acts of illegality, but its attitude of moral indifference to the consequences of small arms proliferation throughout the US market clearly has made more weapons available for criminal entities to take advantage of.

So explain to me how we’re supposed to keep guns out of the hands of drug cartels who are already trafficking in a contraband product? Do you seriously think if we made guns illegal in the United States that drug cartels won’t be able to get guns?  They aren’t getting rocket launchers or machine guns from US sources.

The crux of the gun lobby problem is that its efforts have been aggressive and have arguably led to such a proliferation of small arms in US society that there is now a massive surplus, far beyond the real “need” experienced by the population at large

There’s that “need” word again. Who gets to define need?  It would seem based on sales of firearms lately that a lot of people seem to think they need one.

Let’s put the 2nd Amendment aside for a moment — reasonable law scholars disagree about whether or not the “right of the people to keep and bear Arms” was intended to be linked only to “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State”, or whether it was intended to grant all citizens the right to carry handguns and semi-automatic firearms.

This isn’t an academic debate anymore.  The Second Amendment is an individual right, and it extends to being able to keep firearms in the home.  Based on dicta in Heller, it probably also extends to some manner of carrying firearms as well.  That’s now the law of the land.

In fact, strict gun control would not require a ban on weapons licensed for hunting, sport shooting or personal safety. So, one could argue that, except for the desire to push the proliferation of small arms, for the profit of interests backing the intense lobbying of Congress, there is no serious threat to 2nd Amendment rights from gun control and no sound legal basis for the lobbying effort itself.

Yep, because it’s always lobbying on behalf of some evil moneyed interest with the left.  It’s never the fact that millions of Americans disagree with gun control and don’t want to see any more of it.  Who do they imagine the NRA’s four million members are then?  Or the approximately thirty million Americans who identify with the NRA but aren’t current members?  We are the NRA, not the gun industry (who has their own group).

But why bother seeking out an understanding on the issue when you can just build an elaborate fantasy in your head about a vast industrial conspiracy to encourage the proliferation of small arms?  It certainly feels a lot better than pondering the fact that millions of Americans simply don’t agree with you.

Stupid Weapons

As any good Irishman knows, a bottle can make a pretty good improvised weapon, when made out of glass and smashed against a bar.  It’s been enough of a problem in other parts of the British Isles that there’s been legislation considered.

I’m pretty sure these bottles, however, are no threat to anyone, except perhaps to the pocketbooks of those who want to pretend to take responsibility for their own security without actually doing so.

Take What You Can Get

It looks like Open Carry is off the agenda for this year in Texas.  Over time I have not become the biggest advocate of open carry as a form of activism, but I will always support it being legal, and for people being able to do it, if they so choose, without being harassed by the authorities.  I am also not a fan of all or nothing approaches when it comes to legislation:

State Rep. Debbie Riddle, whom the open carry folks tagged months ago as the bills presumptive sponsor, had the legislation drafted but never introduced it. Her chief of staff explained to open carry members in an email that such legislation was unlikely to pass and that talks of an open carry proposal have already caused difficulties for other Second Amendments bills.

If it’s any consolation, Riddle, R-Houston, did file legislation earlier this week that would allow a disabled person with a concealed carry license to openly carry a firearm if their disability prevents them from otherwise concealing it.

“That’s not exactly what we were going for,” McCarthy said.

The situation is that you have a friendly legislator on the matter, who was willing to draft legislation, and who says the votes aren’t there, and offers a compromise that will pass.  She offered to make a bill that would cover disabled people who can’t easily conceal.  Why not run with that, if the votes aren’t there for full open carry?  I don’t see much of a reason to hold off.  It’s not what you really want, but it helps get you somewhere.  Is it that Texas open carry advocates still want to be able to use that issue?  Well, once they offer to deal with that for you, it’s not really a bargaining chip anymore.  If your legislator is offering to run that bill for you, for God’s sake, take it!

The article goes on to describe how the TSRA and NRA did not get behind the legislation.  This will further fuel the rumor tha NRA is against open carry, but this is not really true.  It is true that it’s not been a high priority for them, but I believe they will support a bill when the right political opportunity presents itself.

Saul Cornell Responds to Hardy

As Dave Hardy mentioned over on his blog, Saul Cornell published a law review in response to Dave’s earlier review article on the lecture notes of St. George Tucker.  I’m not sure what’s more amusing, the degree Cornell is willing to go to ignore or downplay Tucker’s blatant reference to self-defense in regard to the Second Amendment, or the fact that we now have liberal scholars lecturing conservatives on not being good originalists!

Air Gun Silhouette Tomorrow

Outdoor air rifle and air pistol silhouette begins tomorrow.  Got in a bit of practice today.  It’s good be shooting outside again.  Speaking of shooting outside, the gun blogger winter match for our rifle league ends next weekend.  In addition to that, Mr. Completely has started up the next season of E-Postal matches.  There’s something for everyone, whether you’re a rifle or pistol shooter.

UPDATE: 20 and 24, which is a AA and AAA score respectively.  Would have been nice to have two AAA scores, but the temperature dropped from when I sighted in yesterday, so I bombed the first bank of chickens.  CO2 guns are, unfortunately, rather sensitive to temperature.

Busy Beavers

It’s always amazed me that somewhere locked up in the Beaver’s little rodent brain is all the information necessary to engineer dams.  Blackfork managed to get some shots of beaver dam building here, here and here.

Fascinating creatures.  It’s a shame they make such good coats and hats.

DoD Destroying Brass

This isn’t good news for reloaders.  Check out this article from Maine Hunting Today.

Recently it has been determined that fired munitions of all calibers, shapes and sizes have been designated to be Demil code B. As a result and in conjunction with DLA’s current Demil code B policy, this notice will serve as official notification which requires Scrap Venture (SV) to implement mutilation as a condition of sale for all sales of fired munitions effective immediately. This notice also requires SV to immediately cease delivery of any fired munitions that have been recently sold or on active term contracts, unless the material has been mutilated prior to sale or SV personnel can attest to the mutilation after delivery. A certificate of destruction is required in either case.

It’s bad enough Clinton screwed us out of surplus ammo.  Now it appears Obama will screw us out of even the components.  Brass is already scarce enough without this.  See the whole thing.

How You Know We’re Winning?

The New York Times does a positive story on the increasing popularity of biathlon, even though they get something wrong:

The biggest challenge of the sport is the abrupt switch between disciplines: going all out on skis, and then stopping, catching one’s breath and calming one’s nerves for the precision of using a rifle for target shooting. It’s believed to have its origins in hunting, which, in snowy Northern European climes, required just that switch from fast skiing to steady shooting.

They are right about the challenge, but biathlon has nothing to do with hunting.  It’s actually, at root, a practical shooting discipline that has its origins with the Norwegian military.  The rifles have evolved well beyond that, but being able to go from skiing to shooting is a soldier’s game, not a hunter’s.