Attacked by Russians!

All it takes is a few foreign policy gaffes and the Russians are attacking Bitter’s hosting site, and from there mounted attacks on the Blog Bash site, and our PA Gun Rights site.  Pretty clearly they have been emboldened by Obama’s overtures, and are attacking on all fronts.

Took an hour or so to track down how they got in, and remove all the offending code.  I can’t stress enough the importance of hardening your WordPress installation in order to frustrate hackers.  Many hosting providers’s default WordPress installations are awful from a security standpoint.

Best advice is to make as little as possible writable, and if possible, make all files owned by root.  There are only a few places WordPress really needs write access to.  Don’t make your themes writable by default.  If you need to change them, remove write access once you’re done.  When I say write access, I really mean it ought to be owned by someone other than the web server account, with the web server account having no write access.  Get rid of any plugins you’re not using, they are trouble.  Keep everything, WordPress, PHP, Apache, and all your plugins up to date.  If you do all those things, you should keep the Russkie hoards at bay.

What Fine Rhetoric

I like the idea that the big, bad, NRA is holding DC voting rights “hostage” by insisting that DC follow the constitution if it wasn’t to have representation in Congress.  Couldn’t the exact same charge be leveled at Nancy Pelosi?  Pelosi, Norton, and Hoyer are risking the timely passage of this bill to preserve draconian gun control, and to avoid forcing the President’s hand in signing pro-gun rights language.  NRA would be pleased to pass the Senate version of the bill quickly.  Who’s holding DC voting rights hostage again?

Keep The Pressure On

The Democrat leadership in the House is twisting arms.  We have to be sure to twist back.  Call your rep!   See this Washington Post article:

Supporters continued to be hard-pressed to predict when the voting rights bill, pulled from consideration Tuesday by House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer (D-Md.), would reemerge.

“This is hard, man,” said Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.), who met yesterday with House allies to go over the list of the conservative members they intend to target. “It’s close analytical work, a lot like playing chess.”

We have to make sure they don’t win this one.  There is hope:

House leaders have concluded that they have 190 solid votes in favor of blocking all amendments, 28 fewer than necessary for approval, sources with knowledge of strategy discussions said. To round up enough support, the voting rights supporters will target the group of more than 60 members from conservative areas.

Norton said she and her allies discussed a list of Democrats “to size up who was genuinely at risk [of repercussions from the NRA] and who was not. I can report to you going through the list that many are not at risk.”

Politicians who take political advice from Elanor Holmes Norton should have their heads examined.  Call your representatives.  If Holmes Norton is telling them they aren’t at risk, we have to tell them they are.

Credit Crunch

Not what I expected to get in my Inbox:

Because you are one of our loyal customers, we wanted to give your Citi® Card even more value. So reward yourself with the spending power and flexibility that comes with a higher line of credit.

You’ve earned it. Now enjoy it.

Isn’t this how you guys got us all into trouble in the first place?

More on CeaseFire NJ

Apparently, in 2000, Corzine donated $2500 to CeaseFire NJ, and then received and endorsement from them.  Bryan, I hate to break this to you, but it’s supposed to work the other way around.  You’re supposed to give money to Corzine’s campaign, and offer him an endorsement that helps him win, with the idea that such support will not be forthcoming in the future if he doesn’t vote your way.

But it’s interesting that in New Jersey politicians buy interest groups rather than the other way around.

The Barsch Case in California

I’ve seen a few bloggers link to this piece on a collector in California who had his guns seized from him and sold off by the police.  What raised my interest was this:

“The city is pleased that the Ninth Circuit affirmed the entry of summary judgment in favor of its police officers,” Hom said.

Emphasis mine.  Something seems wrong here.  If the U.S. District Court threw the case out on a summary judgment, something would have to be legally wrong with his case, right?  This would mean there are no issues of fact that need to be decided by trial.  Sure enough, if you pull the actual decision from the case at U.S. District Court from 2007:

On this record, the Court concludes that plaintiff has not raised a triable issue of fact to defeat summary judgment on his due process claim. Plaintiff has not submitted any evidence suggesting that he did not have notice or an opportunity to be heard on his claim that he was the rightful owner of the seized weapons prior to their sale/destruction. Cf. Jordan v. City of Lake Oswego, 734 F.2d 1374, 1376  (9th Cir. 1984) (“That he chose not to avail himself of this opportunity does not detract from our conclusion that the procedures utilized prior to his termination were sufficient to accord with the due process requirements of the federal Constitution.).

Looking for more information on this case, I found this wasn’t the first case Mr. Barsch has been a party to.  In 1997, Barsch raised a Second Amendment claim in order to contest the seizure and destruction of a pistol in connection with a domestic violence issue, Ironically with the same defendant, Michael O’Toole.  In that case, the appeals court said:

With respect to Barsch’s contention that his Second Amendment right to bear arms was violated, the district court did not err by dismissing this claim for lack of standing. See Hickman v. Block, 81 F.3d 98, 101 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 117 S.Ct. 276 (1996) (“[T]he Second Amendment is a right held by the states, and does not protect the possession of a weapon by a private citizen.”).

The district court also did not err by dismissing Barsch’s due process claims alleging that he was improperly denied the return of the handgun. Barsch was provided the opportunity to appear in state court to argue against the confiscation of the handgun. See United States v. Yochum (In re Yochum), 89 F.3d 661, 672 (9th Cir.1996).

Today, Heller would negate that argument, but this was in 1997.  This is mere speculation on my part, but this whole thing screams “kook” to me.  We know in the first case from 1997 he represented himself, because it mentions “Edward A. Barsch appeals pro se.”  I’d bet money that he also represented himself pro se in this matter, made faulty and wrong legal arguments, and got a summary judgment against him.

If the authorities come into your house and take guns, the next call should be to a lawyer who’s experienced in practicing Second Amendment law if you ever want to see your guns again.  I am not a fan of the asset forfeiture laws in this country, and there are many examples of people being truly railroaded by the system, but I don’t think this guy is among them.  Some people are perfectly willing to give the authorities the rope with which they will hang them.

LCCC Course in Gun Handling

Lehigh Carbon County Community College runs a rather startling course for a community college:

Like Solt, Jackson, 46, plotted it out in the noncredit course, which provides access to a simulator that is used to train the Pennsylvania State Police. The course emphasizes the importance of using deadly force only when lives are in danger.

The simulator, called PRISim, can play out hundreds of situations that are taped using actors. Students can act them out using a flashlight, pepper spray and an AR-15 rifle, as well as the handgun. All of the weapons and the flashlight are modified to use with a laser.

I wish Bucks County Community College offered something like this.

Standing Case Heard at the Supreme Court

I wonder if this case might have some bearing on gun rights.  Dave Hardy is reporting on it:

Summers v. Earth Island Institute. A quick read suggests it’s no change in direction. (1) Plaintiff must challenge a specific decision, not a general policy or manner of decisionmaking; (2) Plaintiff (or its members) must show some risk of concrete risk of injury — “I visit Forests and this sometimes happens on Forests and so I might see it” is not enough.

It’s a 5-4, and a major factor in the split is that the dissent argues that a large organization should be able to argue that, given the size of its membership and the activities of its members, it’s likely in general that some of them will encounter results of the policy being litigated, even if the group’s attorneys cannot come up with specific member names and affidavits. (In this case, the challenge was to Forest Service sales of timber on small parcels, but thousands of them, and one of the plaintiff organizations had 700,000 members).

Isn’t this the basis of the Brady Campaign’s lawsuit against the Department of the Interior?   Can we get this dismissed on standing in light of this ruling?  How is what Dave Hardy described above with “I visit Forests and this sometimes happens on Forests and so I might see it” different than this:

Suzanne Verge, a member of the Brady Campaign […] regularly uses, visits, and enjoy national park areas, including Yosemite National Park […].  Defendants failure to comply with the Organic Act, NEPA and the APA directly harms Ms. Verge by reducing the safety and enjoyment of national park areas she visits and by increasing the risk of wildlife poaching.

Perhaps they get around this by singling out a specific member and claiming direct harm.  I’ll be honest, Sanding seems like more a hodgepodge for judges to get rid of unpleasant matters before them than a readily understandable and coherent doctrine limiting the judicial power.

Twittering the Porkulus

Senator McCain is twittering 10 pork project a day from the Democrat’s porkulus bill.  Some highlights:

#6. $632,000 for the Hungry Horse Project

#8. $143,000 for the Historic Jazz Foundation in Kansas City, MO

#10. $3,806,000 for a Sun Grant Initiative in SD

#4. All 13 earmarks for PMA group, which has been raided by the FBI for corruption, totaling over $10 million -THE BEST GOVERNMENT $ CAN BUY

I have to give McCain kudos for highlighting this garbage.  I’ll be honest, though, there’s a part of me that feels like the sooner Obama bankrupts the government, the sooner the political class that’s run this country into the ground will be thoroughly discredited.  The shame is that they will likely drag the rest of us down with them.