Serious Reaching

The Democrats in New Jersey are desperate to hang the albatross of being a “right wing extremist” around the neck of Chris Christie.  One of the chief ways this is often accomplished in New Jersey is by trying to tie a candidate to the NRA.  In the Garden State, there’s no greater example of right wing-nuttery than the National Rifle Association, or so the Democrats think.

A few days ago I noticed in the New York Times, an article attempting to paint Christie with that moniker.  You see, NRA donates money to the Republican Governors Association, some $90,000 since December.  The Republican Governors Association has donated $3 million dollars to a one Christopher J. Christie.  So clearly Chris Christie is in the pocket of the NRA!   I would have been willing to ignore this as blatant and obvious crap, except the same meme appeared today in the Philadelphia Inquirer, in an article about Corzine’s signing of the one-gun-a-month fiasco in New Jersey.

NRA hasn’t donated money to Chris Christie’s campaign because Christie is not really aligned with us on a lot of key issues.  Sure, he’s better than Corzine.  By a mile.  But that’s not saying a whole lot.  The goal in November for New Jersey gun owners is getting a governor who will stop treating gun owners as punching bags.  Once you can breathe a little, it might give some time to work on legislators, like getting rid of Fred “One-Gun-a-Month” Madden.

Keep Digging Joe. Keep Digging.

Joe Sestak apparently doesn’t want to face the fact that Pennsylvania tends to like its Democrats pro-gun, except in the City if Philadelphia and the townships and boroughs that immediately ring the city limits.  Otherwise Joe Sestak wouldn’t be publically calling for an Assault Weapons Ban renewal:

“This recent incident recommits us to reinstitute the assault weapons ban originally instituted in 1994. I have continuously pushed for this ban to be reinstituted since I came to Congress in 2007, including just last year when I cosponsored The Assault Weapons Ban and Law Enforcement Act.

Part of me almost wants Sestak to win his primary, so we can finally be rid of Arlen.  I also think that Sestak is easier to beat in a statewide race.  But then again, we tried that strategy with Obama, and it didn’t turn out so well.  Either way, however, I think Sestak is making a mistake running on this issue in Pennsylvania.  Even Fast Eddie played down his anti-gun bona fides big time when he ran for Governor.  Sestak is digging his own political grave if he runs with this issue out on his sleeve.  It might win him some votes in Philadelphia, but it hurts him in most of the rest of the state.

Mexico to Push for US Gun Control

Plans for the North American Leaders summit:

Mexico also wants more gun control in the U.S., particularly when it comes to assault weapons.

“I would like to see the assault weapons ban reinstated – it’s not philosophical, it’s because of what we have seen on the ground…There is a direct correlation between the assault ban and expiring in 2004 and the numbers – simply the sheer numbers – of assault weapons that we seize in Mexico…We are both cognizant of what can and cannot be done right now – we will softly, diplomatically…continue to say that this is an important issue for us but I think the real perspectives of this moving on Capitol Hill these days are slim to say the least,” the official said.

““The Mexican government is not about challenging the Second Amendment.  That’s a sovereign decision of the United States.  It’s a sovereign decision of the U.S. Congress.  That’s up to you guys. But the Second Amendment wasn’t adopted by the Founding Fathers to allow transnational organized crime to illicitly buy weapons in the Unites States and be illicitly cross them over international borders into countries where those calibers and types of weapons are prohibited,” the official said.

So they expect me to believe that because in 1994 we banned flash hiders and bayonet lugs, that Mexican drug cartels just couldn’t abide by dealing with post-ban features, and went without.  You know, if the people pushing these issues weren’t so dishonest, our jobs would be a lot harder.  Trust me, the last thing Mexican officials want is for us to actually listen to them.  As long as they can blame the United States for their inability to control their own border, and control their own crime and corruption, they don’t need to answer for their own failing.  They blame our gun laws for the same reason New Jersey and New York blame the gun laws in the rest of the country; to pass the buck.  The alternative is admitting to your own people that your policies are a failure, and no politician will ever do that.

HSUS Carefully Chooses Words in Animal Cruelty Case

I just got around to reading this HuffPo piece by HSUS on the forthcoming animal cruelty case, U.S. v. Stevens.  HSUS has made its fortune casually leaving vital details in its arguments.  Like the fact that even though the raise money talking about local animal shelters, but they don’t actually care for abandoned animals or run your local humane societies.  Or, in this case, that there are legitimate hunting interests that will be banned if their get their way in this court case.

Michael Markarian argues that NRA, along with Safari Club, POMA, and OWAA, are on the side of child pornographers.  Oh yeah, and so is Eugene Volokh, apparently.  These parties have intervened in the Stevens case because of legitimate First Amendment concerns regarding the depiction of hunting and fishing.  See, the government and HSUS are claiming that the federal law being challenged only bans commercial videos and photos of clear animal cruelty.  Markarian tries to claim that it’s really focused on “‘animal crush’ videos, where scantily clad women, often in high-heeled shoes, impale and crush to death puppies, kittens and other small animals, catering to those with a sexual fetish for this aberrant behavior” and dog fighting videos.  Of course, that’s when he pulls out the argument that NRA leadership are out of touch with sportsmen.

The truth is there is nothing in the Depictions of Animal Cruelty Act that could possibly affect lawful sport hunting. Indeed the statute only criminalizes depictions of animal cruelty that are illegal, and it doesn’t cover lawful practices such as hunting. The law specifically exempts any material that has political, social, or artistic value — say, an outdoor column or hunting website — and only affects videos that are sold in interstate commerce for commercial gain. This is essentially the same test for stopping the production and sale of certain forms of human obscenity. No one is going to try to take away someone’s snapshots or home movies of their latest hunting excursion.

Of course the law doesn’t outlaw hunting itself.  It just outlaws depicting hunting for any commercial purpose.  An outdoor column probably qualifies for a press exemption, but a website may not if a blogger decides to run ads or actually try making money talking about and displaying photos of their hunts.  More importantly, those popular hunting shows?  Probably in violation.

As Eugene points out in his brief, the law says that if state laws are violated, the material becomes illegal under federal law.

Consider, for example, a photograph of a deer being shot by a hunter in Montana that is later sold in New York.  Assume that New York limits deer hunting to specified days of the year and to persons who qualify for and actually possess a valid hunting license. If the deer was shot by a hunter who not only possesses a valid Montana license but could lawfully obtain a license in New York, and was shot on a day that is in-season in both Montana and New York, then—and only then—is the depiction immune from prosecution under Section 48. That same depiction, however, is subject to prosecution under Section 48 if the deer was shot by a hunter who was not licensed in Montana, was shot by someone who is licensed in Montana but would not qualify for a license in New York, or was shot on a day that although in-season in Montana is out-of-season in New York.

The fact that the depiction could be prosecuted under any of these scenarios shows that Section 48 is not “limited to depictions of illegal acts of extreme cruelty.  Gov’t Br. 8. Whether the depiction is criminalized by Section 48 does not depend on whether the deer was subjected to extreme cruelty; the deer was treated identically in each instance. Nor does the criminalization of the depiction depend on the illegality of the conduct where it occurred; by its plain terms, Section 48 criminalizes depictions of acts that were legal in the State where they occurred if those same acts are illegal in another State where the depictions are sold. Thus, contrary to the government’s assertion, Section 48 reaches depictions of conduct that is neither extremely cruel nor illegal in “[a]ll 50 States and the District of Columbia.” Gov’t Br. 25.”

But Markarian says that making such arguments in the case is akin to allowing people t0 “sell videos of people actually abusing children or raping women, and the same legal principles are at hand with malicious acts of cruelty.”  Really?  Showing a video of a hunter shooting a deer according to the laws of Montana is like a video of criminals raping a woman?  Is that the kind of rhetoric that HSUS has been reduced to in trying to put a stop to hunting culture?  It would appear so.  I would say that it is HSUS that is out-of-touch with traditional values.

Even More Crazy

Tam covers a one Nancy Genovese, who was caught scouting out a FEMA camp with some guns in her trunk.  She covers the “wookie-suiter” far better than I would, so go read.  There seems to be a lot more of this lately, and I’m wondering why.  Perhaps it’s settling in just how long 3 1/4 more years really are going to be.  Or maybe it’s the Glenn Beck mind control dirigibles that have been circling around the skies, hidden by cloaking technology developed in Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity’s secret technology lab.

Time to Short Whole Foods

The CEO of Whole Foods is apparently operating under the delusion that his company’s business model involved making people healthy.  In that vein, he says his company sells “a bunch of junk.” and is vowing to help his customers eat healthier.

He went on to say that Whole Foods was going to launch a healthy eating education initiative to encourage customers and employees to reduce obesity.

But Mackey told the Wall Street Journal: “Basically, we used to think it was enough just to sell healthy food, but we know it is not enough. We sell all kinds of candy. We sell a bunch of junk.”

Mackey, dude.  I don’t know if anyone’s told you this, but at the end of the day, you sell food.  That’s your business.  If you’re encouraging people to eat less of it, unless you can turn up the margins, something that’s going to be tough in this economy, you’re screwing your shareholders.  Whole Foods has a simple business model: selling overpriced food to people who care about Mother Gaia, and who think an overworked Filipino adolescent driving a pair of oxen around a rice patty are all the farming technology the world needs.

Whole Foods provides somewhere to go to buy food so they can feel good about themselves.   That’s what you’re selling, Mack.  You’re selling a dream to hippies, and at a much higher profit margin than your typical supermarket.  If those folks come to Whole Foods, and feel good about themselves when they buy a box of organic, fair trade ho-hos, that’s a win win situation.  You win, because you just sold an overpriced box of ho-hos, and the consumer wins, because they can feel good knowing they are buying the best product subsistence farming has to offer.  It’s what capitalism is all about!

Whole Foods needs to ditch the true believer, and hire someone who’s more interested in making money for their shareholders.  I have no CEO experience, but I understand what Whole Foods sells, so I offer my services.  I would never shop at a Whole Foods store myself, but I know plenty of folks who do, and they have money to burn.  I’ll keep selling them the dream, and promise to cry for Mother Gaia all the way to the bank, and print your dividend checks on 100% recycled, organic bleach free paper.  Wouldn’t want any of our shareholders feeling bad about themselves, now would I?