Sorry of this disappoints you, but at least it’s safe for work.
Year: 2009
The Alabama Shooting
I haven’t really had much desire to talk about the mass shooting in Alabama. I don’t like to jump on tragic situations to make a political point, but nor do I really want to offer up platitudes either. Whether we like it or not, this has become part of the national media landscape, and is probably a media generated phenomena.
The Brady Campaign is making the most out of it, and our side has been pointing out that a worse shooting happened in Germany at the same time, which has strict gun laws. I’ve been watching what the Administration says, because I think it’s key. This is the first mass shooting that’s happened under the new presidency. So far, not a peep. That’s telling. Why? Because that means Obama isn’t willing to use the bully pulpit to push for more gun control, something that Bill Clinton never missed a chance to do. That’s not to say Obama has suddenly become our friend, but he’s not willing ot engage in this particular polarizing debate. That’s a tremedously good thing for gun owners, and we ought to hope it doesn’t change.
I have a feeling that if Obama remains silent on the issue, the folks at the Brady Campaign are going to start missing Bill Clinton a lot more than I’m sure they already do.
Take the Poll
CNN asks if you think the shooting rampages highlight the need for more gun control. Yes is currently winning. I think it’s time to change that.
UPDATE: Seems they took the poll down. Sorry folks.
The Public Comfort
Joe is a little insulted about the whole Scoutten-Boomershoot kerfuffle, and says:
In his followup comment he says he doesn’t want put anything “on TV that could alarm the anti-gunners”. I disagree. I am of the opinion that alarming them over Boomershoot then making fools of them is the more appropriate tactic (ask me sometime in private how we have baited them but they failed to take the bait). But if he doesn’t want to do that I don’t see a reason to attack him over that judgment call.
I think some would probably assume, based on my general support for not pushing beyond the general public’s comfort zone and understanding, that I believe it should never be done. That is not correct. I believe pushing too far is unwise, but you have to push some, otherwise you never move the ball forward.
Scoutten has some legitimate concerns about public perceptions, but I think his thinking is not necessarily clear about what perceptions we ought to be concerned about. The overwhelming message we want to get across is that the shooting sports are safe and fun, that gun ownership and interest in shooting is not abnormal or unhealthy, and that it’s perfectly natural for people to want to defend themselves, their families and their communities.
We must be concerned about public perception when trying to do this, but that perception needs to be tailored toward getting people to overcome their prejudices about gun owners and people who shoot. We properly eschew presenting people shooting in camo, shooting at an old, beat up school bus, or many of the other things Jim mentioned because they reinforce rather than break down prejudices and stereotypes. Without proper context, context which is not possible to present in a short TV segment, people do not understand what the are seeing and wonder what these people are preparing for.
When I look at an event like Boomershoot, I see something that attracts people from all walks of life. I see something that’s organized and put together by someone trained and licensed to handle explosives. I see an event that starts with education and safety, namely a precision rifle clinic. Most importantly, I see ordinary people enjoying themselves with firearms. All these things can be easily highlighted in a TV segment with proper storytelling and editing. Sure, there are some people that would be appaled by the idea of Boomershoot, or a machine gun shoot, but those are people who won’t be reached by any kind of positive coverage of any kind of shooting. I think we need to spend far less time worrying about which kinds of shooting activities do or don’t look favorable to the public, and worry more about telling the story of gun owners and shooting. Let the public get to know ordinary gun owners, who have families, work at ordinary jobs, go to ordinary churches, and lead ordinary lives. Do that, and it won’t matter whether they shoot a bolt action .22, an AR-15, a machine gun, or whether they get a thrill shooting at high explosives.
Shooters have a story to tell, and I’m grateful there are guys out there like Jim Scoutten and Michael Bane out there telling it in new, interesting, and entertaining ways, and presenting it to a mainstream audience. We need that. But I think we need to tell the whole story, and machine gun shoots and events like Boomershoot are part of that story.
Illinois Gun Owner Lobby Day (IGOLD) 2009
Last year the over 2000 showed up in Springfield, and got almost no coverage from the media. This year they seem to be getting at least some. Chiefly from the St. Louis Post Dispatch, and CBS2 Chicago. But the downer event this year is a House committee approving anti-gun bills including gun rationing and an assault weapons ban, and the Illinois Senate rejecting the concealed carry bill.
I guess that’s way to at least get the Chicago Tribune to at least mention the rally: passing an anti-gun bill while it’s happening. Unbelievable. Keep your spirits up Illinoisans, the Land of Lincoln will be free again. True, this is a slap in the face to every Illinois gun owner to do this while you’re there lobbying, but now you know what to do come election time.
NPS Bans Lead Ammo in National Parks
NSSF Press release about it here. The rule doesn’t go into effect until 2010. The NPS press release is here:
The new lead reduction efforts also include changes in NPS activities, such as culling operations or the dispatching of wounded or sick animals. Rangers and resource managers will use non-lead ammunition to prevent environmental contamination as well as lead poisoning of scavenger species who may eventually feed upon the carcass. Non-toxic substitutes for lead made in the United States are now widely available including tungsten, copper, and steel.
Bzzt… sorry NPS… that makes your ammunition armor piercing, and makes it questionably legal, and requires a special license to manufacture. There are all copper alternatives, but they are expensive. My carry load happens to be lead free, but most people’s isn’t.
What I can’t tell, though, is whether this is an agency initiative, or whether it applies to visitors in parks, particularly people carrying with licenses. I haven’t seen the actual rule.
More on Boomershoot/Shooting USA
Caleb takes a different point of view on the matter discussed earlier, and gives us some more information about Jim Scoutten’s views about what shouldn’t be on TV in regards to the shooting sports. I don’t really disagree with Jim on his points. I suspect where Boomershoot would fit would be his fifth point:
5) Any event that requires an extraordinary expense by a viewer to become involved. (Full auto events are, at best, an expensive curiosity, and can not extend our invitation to “get involvedâ€)
Though I’ve heard of clubs that do shoots with tannerite, it’s true that it’s not accessible to most people. I’ll give ShootingUSA their editorial prerogative on this one, but is this about it not being appropriate for ShootingUSA or exposure to television at all? I don’t think there’s been any damage to the shooting sports by coverage such at this.  Quite to the contrary, I think it presents Joe’s event as a lot of fun.
So I guess the question is, is Jim Scoutten saying that Boomershoot isn’t appropriate for ShootingUSA, because it’s beyond the perspective of the show, or that Boomershoot isn’t appropriate for any mainstream audience? If it’s the latter, I disagree. I can understand why you wouldn’t want to show people at Knob Creek machine gunning a junkyard school bus. I can see why you wouldn’t want to cover a gaggle of mall ninjas dressed in black or camo. There’s a lot of context missing there for the uninitiated. But I don’t put Boomershoot into that category. I think most people who aren’t reflexively afraid of guns would understand it as fun.
Kel-Tec RFB Rifle Cutaway
This interesting video shows, with time lapse photography, how the forward eject system works on the Kel-Tec RFB:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DLO7rHjHerk[/youtube]
This solves one of the problems with bullpup rifles, which is brass ejecting too close to your body.
I Guess She No Longer Wants My Pie
Michelle Obama told us, in the days before her husband’s campaign took her out of the spotlight, that she wanted a piece of our pie. Well, it seems we no longer have to worry. Seems the biggest problem we face with people who frequent soup kitchens these days is that they aren’t eating enough healthy organic fruit.
What Lengths They Will Go To
It’s amazing what lengths the elite in Philadelphia will go through in order to justify turning the city into a low level prison for everyone, rather than identifying and locking up the people causing the trouble. Hell, not even identifying. We know who they are. It’s just a matter of having the will to put them in prison and keep them there.
Banning certain types of alcohol sales has been a pet project of a lot of politicians in the City of Philadelphia for a while now. In fact, back when I first got started, I pissed of City Councilmember Jim Kenney by accusing him of soft racism in trying to ban malt liquor ads from SEPTA buses. Now I guess they will have an academic paper to back up the assertion that certain types of people just can’t handle alcohol, and have to have it taken away from them.