… and Jon Corzine thinks it would be best for the politicians to focus on strengthning the state’s already draconian gun laws. Way to take the spotlight off the real issues Jon!
Year: 2009
The Left Alone Problem
Problem is probably not the right word, but I mean to talk about what makes organizing gun owners a lot like herding cats, and makes a lot of the traditional types of activism the left uses ineffective when applied to gun owners.
In my experience, the overwhelming sentiment among gun people is this: “Leave me alone!” I don’t care how you cut your activism, for most people, that pretty much what it boils down to. Many of us would pay little attention to politics if it wasn’t for the understanding that there are a lot of politicians out there who would take every last gun and cartridge out of our closet if given half the chance.
For a bunch of cantankerous individualists, we’ve actually done pretty well. I would argue far better than most left wing groups have been able to do. The left are out to make their mark on the world — to mold it, to perfect it, and to eliminate its sins. Purging perceived evils from the world is far more emotionally satisfying than “leave me alone,” and the types of people who are out to change the world are more likely to be emotionally rewarded through collective action. For us, the “leave me alone” strain is as likely to make our rank and file get as annoyed with activists as they do with politicians. Most would rather hit the woods, raise families, shoot matches, ply their trades, tinker, read a book, or do any number of things rather than spend a nice spring day in some (often far away) city known as D.C. (which they’ve heard really sucks anyway).
But even if our folks could be convinced to join protests, is it really effective? For all the hewing and hawing about the Iraq war, it seems we’re going wrap that job up rather than leaving the embassy on the last helicopter out. For all the near riots that surround any meeting of the IMF, World Bank, or WTO, those institutions don’t appear poised to disappear or recede quietly into the sunset. Did protests end the Vietnam war? Or was it bringing the war into people’s living rooms every night?
Gun owners could do better, but I don’t think we’ll do better by adopting the most ineffective tactics of the left, and methods where we start out at a disadvantage due to the psychological makeup of most of our people. Let the left stick to trying to change the world. We need to stick to methods that will work for organizing cantankerous individualists. I’m not convinced that’s protests.
Bad News
Justice Ginsburg apparently has pancreatic cancer. Five year survival rate for this is very low. She’s undergone surgery, most likely a whipple procedure, which is a major surgery with a high likelihood of complications. On a personal note, we hope Justice Ginsburg recovers from her surgery and her cancer. It was caught early, so her odds are better than most.
But from a political point of view, this means that Obama likely gets a Supreme Court pick for the 111th Congress. If we’re going to have a knock-down drag-out confirmation fight, her replacement is the place to do it. Can we make a Second Amendment litmus test?
Jobs are a Problem
SayUncle asks what could go wrong with a million gun owner march rally. The main that will likely go wrong is you get, if you’re really lucky, a thousand or so to show up. Even in this lousy economy, most gun owners have a job, and have families, which means they have better things to do than to attend protests.
PA gun rights groups organize a rally every spring in Harrisburg, and if it get enough people to fill the Capitol Rotunda, it’s a good turn out. Now the rally would really be more aptly called a lobby day, where people come and lobby legislators in groups of concerned citizens. So we’re talking something more than a protest really.
I am not very sanguine about the prospects of protests being an effective tool of pro-gun activism. To be honest, I don’t even think it’s a remarkably effective tool for the left, even though they tend to generate better turnout and media attention since their causes tend to energize young people who have more free time and are willing to take greater risks. But it’s because protests tend to bring out the worst in people, and the media pays the most attention to the worst protests have to offer, that I don’t think they are an effective tool for promoting gun rights, or really any cause.
Far better activism would include writing Members of Congress, meeting with your Congressman, writing letters to the editor of the local paper when they run anti-gun editorials or articles, volunteering for pro-gun politicians, and building relationships with local cubs, ranges and gun owners. Now, if we could get a million people involved in doing that, we’d really have something.
Delaware Needs Stronger Gun Laws
The Brady campaign says Delaware needs to do more when it comes to gun laws.
[…]
California scored the highest with 79 points showing, according to the Brady Campaign, the entire nation has a way to go on gun control.
Brady is no doubt hoping to exploit the election of Jack Markell, a staunch gun hating Democrat, to push Delaware into the anti-gun category. Ruth Ann Minner, Delaware’s last Governor, was not hostile to gun rights. But before Delawareans allow themselves to be shamed into being more like Californians, they should look closely at the numbers the Brady’s wont tell them.
- Delaware has a murder rate of 4.2 per 100,000
- California has a murder rate of 6.2 per 100,000
Maybe California should think about adopting Delaware’s gun laws. Both states have a higher overall violent crime rate than Pennsylvania, which ranks lower on the Brady scale than Delaware or California, because it has the audacity to allow citizens to carry concealed firearms for self-defense pretty much everywhere they go with an easy to obtain license.
UPDATE: Looks like PA is 10 this year, and DE is 11. Kind of odd. Look at the details for both states. Can you tell me which laws Pennsylvania has that drive its points higher than Delaware? Do they give that many points for universal regulation of handgun transfers?
Preemption Victory
West Mifflin Township has decided to give up its plans to install metal detectors at the entrance to council chambers. I actually don’t think this needs to be a violation of preemption per-se, as long as you wave people past who are carrying firearms legally. But presumably that was not the intent here.
AR-15 Accessory Fail
One thing that’s always bugged me (at least since the assault weapons ban expired in 1994) is that the bayonet lug of a 16″ AR-15 carbine is about as useful as tits on a bull. Even on a 20″ AR with full length hand guards, civilians never have much reason to fix bayonets short of saying “Well, look at that. It fits.”
But on the carbine, since the standard bayonet handle isn’t long enough to make it to the flash hider ring, I decided I would prefer to mount a flashlight on the lug. Turns out they do make an accessory that lets you do that, but this particular rail mount isn’t quite what the doctor ordered. I looked on the manufacturers web site, and it says it’s made to fit Colt lugs, and apparently not all AR-15 bayonet lugs are created equal.
I tried to fit it on by hand, and it wouldn’t go. Some tapping with a rubber mallet got it a little further, but still no good. I’m not going to pound the hell out of my AR. Drat. I guess I’ll have to figure out another way to mount the flashlight. I prefer standard A3 handguards, and need to be able to take acessories I keep for home defense off when I shoot matches. This would have been a good solution if it worked.
Spending Pittman-Robertson Money Against Us
Gun Show Bill in Virginia is a No Go
Word is that the bill to regulate all sales at gun shows in Virginia has been defeated for a second time in the Virginia Senate. This is useful for everyone, because passage of this bill in Virginia might have given legs to a national effort to do the same.
UPDATE: It occurs to me that I should say “further regulate” because it’s not like there’s any such thing as an unregulated gun sale these days.
Other Sovereignty Bills
There are other states that have been considering telling the feds to back off, much like New Hampshire, which we talked about a few days ago.
There may be others out there too. I think these are healthy for federalism, but for now they are mostly gestures. The problem with doing this for real would be the fact that many states suckle at the federal teat. As long as that’s the case, I don’t see any states actually giving the feds the middle finger.