Lead Bullets in National Parks

Les Jones reports on lead concerns in regards to allowing carry in National Parks.  The bullets in my carry load contain no lead, but that’s another matter.  If National Parks are really as safe as all the critics say they are, this is not really an issue.  The number of discharges for self-defense should yearly, amount to less than a dozen.  I’m sure there’s more lead in the paint on the walls of some buildings in National Parks than we’re talking about here.  We’re talking about concealed carry here, not opening the parks up to random gunfire, though you’d imagine that’s what some think.

Restaurant Carry in Virginia Update

Virginia Shooting Sports Assocation is reporting:

SB 1035 – Repeal of the Restaurant Ban for concealed carry. Reported with amendment (removed the requirement to notify a member of the restaurant staff that you are carrying concealed) 17-Y 5-N

That was silly to begin with, and I’m glad someone in the Virginia Senate realized it.  You should never tell someone you’re carrying who’s not a law enforcement officer approaching you in an official capacity.  Definitely not the host or hostess of a restaurant.  People carrying a pistol with a license still are not permitted to drink alcohol under this rule, and no doubt critics will point out that this relies on the honor system.  All concealed carry relies on the honor system, since the gun is, you know, concealed.

More Media Coverage of Gillibrand’s Rifles

I like this article by Fred Lebrun on Gillibrand’s supposed gaffe telling most of Long Island about how she defends her home:

Then again, this little flap has nothing to do with home protection and everything to do with perception politics, tarnishing the rash upstater. Gillibrand has been targeted by a number of individuals and institutions offended she got the job, and determined to take it away from her. Gillibrand has to bob and weave if she hopes to keep it, and not set herself up as a sitting duck.

For contrast, here’s Newsday’s latest jab at her.  I really think the opposition to her boils down to not wanting to have some upstate rube representing urbane and sophisticated downstaters.  That is certainly the image media outlets like Newsday are promoting.

How Philadelphia’s Media Treats Guns

In a stark contrast to the last post from Central Pennsylvania, we have this bit of pant shitting hysterics from our local media market here in Philly:

It’s an unrelenting plague, and its agent of death is – guns.

And the horrifying fact is that more guns than ever are being purchased in this country as uneasy people arm themselves in fear: Fear of a reversal of gun rights under President Obama. Fear for their safety in an economy that drives people to desperation.

Sure, I know: many are legal guns, bought by responsible gun owners who don’t kill people, blah blah blah.

But my math is simple: The more guns in circulation, the more that find their way to the dregs of society who casually assassinate cops.

And there are more guns in circulation than ever.

I challenge Ms. Porter to look at the cop killer’s criminal record, and tell me the problem is with guns.  This guy committed dozens of violations of this commonwealth’s gun laws, and didn’t receive so much as a slap on the wrist for it.  You want to do an article that will make a difference, Ms. Porter?  Talk about this.  The problem is not guns, it’s a disastrously broken criminal justice system in Philadelphia.  Jill Porter is doing the citizens of Philadelphia a disservice by focusing the blame on inaminate objects rather than the violent thugs that are being allowed to roam the streets with impunity.

Teen Shooting

I’ve always been happy the media in other parts of Pennsylvania are willing to cover the shooting sports in a positive light, like this article about a kid who is quickly becoming an accomplished sporting clay shooter:

A ninth-grader at Hershey High School, he’s ranked 25th in the nation in the sub-junior category of the National Sporting Clays Association (NSCA). Sub-junior encompasses shooters ages 16 and under. Kisthardt added to his list of accomplishments by recently making the NSCA All-American team.

I’m going to go out on a limb here and suggest this kid won’t be shooting up his high school anytime soon, like the media around here would probably be concerned about.

Yet Another Blue Trail Range Safety Study

I think by the time Blue Trail Shooting Range puts this nightmare behind them, it might well be one of the most studied range in the country.  The town of Durham is now harassing them funding a new safety study of the range.

Blue Trail is the only public outdoor shooting range left in all of New England.  It would be a shame for it to close.

Completed Pin Collection

I have finally completed my pin collection for Thursday night indoor metallic silhouette with rifle.  I have gotten pigs and rams and chickens a few times over, come close to turkeys a few times, but last week finally got 10 of them:

animals

I am starting my collection for pistol now, since I got ten chickens with the Ruger Mk.III Hunter 22/45 with a red dot sight on it.  I’ve been pleased I’ve been able to improve this year on pistol, but my rifle game is kind of going nowhere.  I attribute this to lack of practice.  Last year when I started indoor silhouette, I managed to improve shooting rifle offhand with some extra practice.  This year I just don’t have as much time, and I’m not really improving over the course of the season.

What helped improve the pistol shooting was two things, really.   One is when we learned a few things with Todd Jarrett this summer, he offered several suggestions for improving grip, and suggested gripping tighter.  It wasn’t a complex suggestion, but it improved my pistol shooting dramatically.  The grip advice transferred nicely from action shooting to silhouette shooting.  The second is working on trigger control.  This is the skill I find I lose the fastest if I don’t practice, or if I swich guns.  Starting out tonight on pistol, I was jerking the trigger too much.  I also really need to work on follow through. Air gun shooting is really useful for working on follow through, since it seems to be particularly important for air gun.

They Won’t Stop: Gun Rationing in New Jersey

As if their whacky permit-to-purchase scheme doesn’t ration enough, one-gun-a-month is back on the table in New Jersey, and it scheduled for a vote on Monday.  Call your state senator now.  Last time this came to a floor vote, action from gun owners in New Jersey managed to get it pulled from the agenda at the last minute.  They did not have a majority to pass this.

It’s time to repeat what we did before.

Chimp Attack

Pretty horrifying 911 call of a woman who had her pet chimp kill a friend.  David points out:

But let’s forget the pundits and persuaders for a moment and just ask ourselves two basic questions:

Or would I rather be useless, and stand shrieking and blubbering helplessly into a telephone while some government worker on the other end of the line tells me to calm down?

If that were my loved one being mauled, having her face ripped off, being rended limb-from-limb, would I want to have the most effective means at my disposal to immediately save her?

I would imagine their solution would be to ban chimps.

That Must Be Some Hair Weave

Apparently a hair weave managed to save a woman from potential injury by gunfire.  It’s actually not too surprising.  The tensile strength of human hair is not that much different than structural steel of the same thickness.  It’s not out of the question that a tight enough weave would actually be pretty effective at stopping a small caliber bullet.  It’s just a matter of it being tight enough that the strands can’t easily move out of the way, and this will absorb a lot of the bullet’s energy breaking strands.