How Is Grading the Vote Capitulating?

Apparently Red State did not get the memo that NRA is grading the vote on Sotomayor.  Nothing to refute here.  It’s just wrong.  But what does the correction look like:

I regret the error. I’ve found I cannot defend the claim and must retract it. My apologies. Notwithstanding that, the overall point remains — the NRA has capitulated on Sotomayor and has totally refused to put up a fight, just like with Eric Holder. If the NRA is not going to aggressively combat anti-2nd Amendment judges, why should we give them money?

Emphasis mine.  How is grading the vote capitulation?  What do you want them to do?  Kidnap Senators and hold them for ransom?  It’s hard to take Red State seriously with crap like this.

Hat Tip to Gunservatively

The PSH Is Thick: Call Your Senators

The Pant Shitting Hysterics is really overflowing on this National Reciprocity civil rights bill, so now is the time to call your Senator’s office and make sure our voice is heard on the Thune Amendment.  This is going to be a tough vote, as this can be considered a major piece of legislation.  Let’s take a look at some of the hysterics:

From the WaPo:

Critics, including police organizations, big-city mayors and gun-victims groups, decried the legislation as creating “a new national lowest common denominator” for ownership of firearms.

Ownership of firearms?  Fact checking, it’s what’s for dinner.

Roll Call:

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) said Monday that she would vote against the Thune amendment, noting that gun laws should remain a state issue. Liberal Senators hope McCaskill’s opposition is an indicator of how other independent-minded Members, such as Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.), might vote.

I guess ASHA doesn’t want their girl giving us self-defense whakos any goodies.

And, of course, Chuck Schumer:

“This amendment is a bridge too far, and could endanger the safety of millions of Americans. Each state has carefully crafted its concealed-carry laws in the way that makes the most sense to protect its citizens. Clearly, large, urban areas merit a different standard than rural areas. To gut the ability of local police and sheriffs to determine who should be able to carry a concealed weapon makes no sense. It could reverse the dramatic success we’vie had in reducing crime in most all parts of America. In the past, the gun lobby has had as its rallying cry, ‘Let each state decide.’ With this amendment, they are doing a 180-degree flip. Whether you are pro-gun or pro-gun control, this measure deserves to be defeated. We will do everything we can to stop this poisonous amendment from being enacted.”

Sorry Chucky, my rights don’t end just because I cross some arbitrary, artificial boundary known as “city limits.”  Do any other rights work this way?

We also have editorial PSH eminating from the New York Times, New York Newsday, Miami Herald, New York Daily News, and the Philadelphia Inquirer.  Notice a trend?  I wonder which city’s elites are pissing themselves the most over this.

More One Gun a Month Trouble in New Jersey

People are starting to figure out just how smelly of a turd this law is.  Corzine is promising his commission will do their best to polish it, though.  Fred Madden doesn’t seem that worried.  I still wonder what Corzine bought him off with.

I agree with Cemetery it’s rather surprising this wasn’t picked up by NRA or ANJRPC, but anyone who’s ever tried to decipher New Jersey’s gun laws knows how complicated and convoluted they are.  Evan Nappen is one of the few real experts out there on the subject.

What Were You Expecting?

Reports from around the gun blogosphere about the ATF’s response to the Tennessee Firearms Freedom Act have been filing in.  Now, as a symbolic middle finger to Congress, I support these kinds of bills.  But what were we expecting ATF to do?  Their response was entirely predictable, and is well within the legal framework that ATF operates in.  Like it or not, the current Commerce Clause jurisprudence allows the federal government to regulate the sale and transfer of firearms as part of a national regulatory scheme (see Gonzalez v. Raich).

There are many examples of ATF abuse of discretion out there, but this is not among them.  If we really want to limit federal power, we ought to concentrate more on Randy Barnett’s federalism amendment, and not merely just pass symbolic acts that have no real force of law behind them.

My Chicken Killer is Here!

I got a delivery from the Crosman Custom Shop today.  A .22 caliber air pistol, very similar to my 2300S.

Mata Gallina from the Crosman Custom Shop

I put my Millet SP-1 red dot scope on it already. I wish I had a black one, because it would look better, but it was originally on my Ruger Mk.III which is stainless.

Mata Gallina Closeup

And the other great part? Under 160 dollars for the gun. The cost of shooting a .22 is higher than a .177, but it’s still pretty cheap.

When You’re Not Holding Any Cards …

what do you have to lose by bluffing?  Larry Pratt talks a great game, but it’s mostly talk:

Pratt said the NRA may not want go all out against Sotomayor because her confirmation seems assured.

At least three Senate Republicans have said they would vote for her: Sens. Dick Lugar (Ind.), Mel Martinez (Fla.) and Olympia Snowe (Maine). Democrats control 60 seats in the Senate and leading Republicans have promised not to filibuster Sotomayor’s nomination.

“I don’t think they want to be seen as having lost a battle,” Pratt said of the NRA.

“Their philosophy seems to be nothing ventured, nothing lost,” he said. “Normally, we can-do Americans say ‘nothing ventured, nothing gained.’

Remember a while back we examined the sources of NRA’s political power.  We also examined GOA’s fund raising.  Now can someone explain to me how an organization that has 20,000 to 40,000 members, and who’s PAC only spent $147,000 dollars in 2008, has anything at all they can use to threaten a Senator’s seat?

Once you start thinking about that, GOA can score the Sotomayor vote however they want because they have nothing they are putting at risk by doing so.  GOA only needs to be concerned about how they look to the people who send them money.  They have no concern about the relationships they have on Capitol Hill, because they don’t have much to be concerned about.

Is it really smart politics to tell a representative “You’ve been with us on most everything we’ve wanted for all these years you’ve been in the Senate.  And you’ve been with us on most of what we’re asking for this term, but if you vote to confirm Sotomayor, we’re going to flunk you.”  Because this is essentially what GOA is doing.  What incentive does the failing or low graded Senator have to care a whit about your agenda for the rest of his term?  And if you’re GOA, what grassroots army are you going to send to vote him out when he’s next up before the voters?  Where’s their electoral ground game?  Their network of volunteers?  Their well financed PAC?  These are important questions. Because if a Senator crosses you, and you can’t defeat him, you’re done.  He called your bluff.  Do that times twenty, and pretty soon, you’re up the creek without a paddle.  You will not have the votes to get the rest of your agenda, and you might end up weak enough for the opposition groups to run a bill against you.

The reason politicians pay attention to NRA is because they aren’t sure NRA can’t move enough votes and money to actually defeat them.  But that uncertainty cuts both ways.  Anyone who’s had any experience in working in or following electoral politics knows how many variables go into winning or losing an election.  It is the political equivalent of war.  Everything that happens between elections is diplomacy.  We engage in diplomacy because war is risky, and outcomes can be unpredictable.  It’s risky for both sides.  What GOA proposes is to declare war on the Democratic Congress.  A Democratic Congress that, so far, is willing to pass pro-gun measures, and is wary of running gun control.  This is foolish beyond belief.

NRA’s grading system is like an axe.  Every time you chop a piece of wood with it, it gets a little more dull.  So far, we’ve successfully split some pretty tough logs, but we’re only about halfway through this wood pile.  The only opportunity to sharpen the axe comes at election time, and we’re still more than a year away from that.  In the mean time, there are people demanding that we swing wildly at the marble pillars, in hopes that we’ll split them.  Well, maybe we will, and sometimes you do have to take a swing, and risk it all.  But you should understand what you’re risking.  We have to keep the axe sharp.  We still have ATF reform we’d like to move.  We have D.C. gun rights to restore.  We have National Reciprocity to try to pass.  There’s a lot on the agenda.  We may also face a situation where Obama replaces one of the Heller five, and in that instance, we will need to swing the axe at marble.  NRA would be irresponsible if they did not keep an eye on the overall agenda, and instead engaged in the kind of brash grandstanding that is a particular proclivity of Gun Owners of America.

Joe Sestak, Gun Hater Extraordinaire, Pokes Specter

Sestak, who is challenging Specter in the Dem primary, is calling on him to vote against National Concealed Carry Reciprocity:

“Pennsylvania has a right to determine who can carry a concealed weapon in the Commonwealth,” said Congressman Sestak. “We’ve dealt with tragedy after tragedy from gun violence, and while I support the right to bear arms, I also support sensible concealment regulations to protect our communities and law enforcement officers — and I support the right of Pennsylvania to make those decisions. I call on Arlen Specter to vote against the Thune Amendment and to take the lead in opposing the Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act.”

The 600,000+ Pennsylvanians who have a License to Carry will benefit from this law far more than other states will.  Pennsylvania’s requirements for getting a concealed carry permit are among the least burdensome in the nation.  We don’t require training, and the fee is 26 dollars.  If Joe Sestak is thinking he’s going to hurt Specter on guns, in Pennsylvania, he’s probably doing the opposite.  We tend to like our Dems pro-gun, thank you very much.

Radio Hysterics

1010AM in New York is reporting that New York City will be put in danger by Wyoming’s weak gun laws if Congress passes national reciprocity.  Considering New York City has a violent crime rate roughly three times that of Cheyenne, I don’t think New Yorkers get to lecture Wyomians on what constitutes sound public safety measures.