Government regulation of airlines, intended to make life easier for passengers, has actually made things worse. Who could have predicted this?
Year: 2010
Some Good Things about Carly
Even Clayton Cramer, who used to work for HP, can find some good in the California Senate race. Carly Fiorina has come out against bans on scary looking semi-automatic rifles.
Psy Ops
Looks like the Cal Guns guys were engaging in some psychological warfare against the Legal Community Against Gun Violence. The CalGuns guys are a very motivated and sharp group of people. I noticed this when Hardy linked to it the other day, and thought some of their ideas were pretty good, but some of them were kind of nuts. Now that it’s revealed it was just psychological warfare, good show guys!
Making a Statement
McCarthy pretty much admits she’s just lashing out at the NRA:
“I am making a statement. I will never forget why I am here. This is a push back to the NRA.”
Her bill makes it a felony to fail to report a lost or stolen firearm with 24 hours of discovery. You could spend a year in jail and have to pay a 1/4 million dollar fine. Your life would essentially be over, and you would be a prohibited person… all for being the victim of a crime.
The Great Difficulty with Clubs
I just had to tell Fitzpatrick’s campaign, who is very likely to carry the NRA endorsement he won in the primary into the general election, he was not welcome at my 100% NRA club, despite the efforts of a volunteer who was also a member. What kind of message do you think that sends if Fitz wins and faces a tough vote on our issue. Do you think he’s going to go to bat for people that told him to get lost? Gun owners far too often think they are in a position to dictate. This is not true. Gun voters are a minority. We only have power through participation and engagement.
It’s important for gun owners who care about Second Amendment issues to be involved in their local clubs. The great problem activists face is that club culture should be a lot more about shooting than politics, so a balance needs to be kept in that regard. Â Second Amendment activists need to keep that in mind when approaching clubs and club members. Priority number one is to shoot, stay safe, and have a good time. Political engagement should be somewhere down the priority list, but it needs to be there in some way. The trick is to make politicians think they have something to gain (and therefore something to lose) through the engagement process. This doesn’t have to, and shouldn’t, pre-occupy a club, but it has a great benefit for supporting the other activities clubs would like to do.
Doing the Math
Chris Byrne has an excellent analysis of this years race in November. The Dems are going to take a beating. This is uncontested at this point. But it’s not going to be a panacea. This is one reason I think it’s important Reid keep his seat despite the fact that I hate him on other issues. I would hate Schumer or Durbin just as much or more on those same issues, and they’d also sabotage NRA every chance they could find. It’s not that I like Reid, it’s just that he’s the best choice there is for that seat given the possible choices.
Recording the Police
I have little sympathy for the animal rights whack jobs protesting the Philadelphia Gun Club, but I will defend them on this:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TmNU7Zmbe0s[/youtube]
They have every right to film the police, even if they have no right to trespass. Hat tip to Radley Balko on this one. Now that these people are bringing these issues to Bensalem, they need to train their police officers on the law. I can’t stand what these people are doing, but I admire this woman’s tenacity.
An Ode to the .32
The Skoien Opinion
Don’t expect SCOTUS to resolve this question. There is no way the Court grants cert on an issue as muddy as giving guns to people who commit domestic crimes. Additionally, there is no Circuit split here.
This challenge could arise in other misdemeanor contexts–mainly white collar crimes. Should someone who is found guilty of tax evasion or medicare fraud be disarmed forever? That, will likely be the next challenge.
I agree. I don’t see the Court wanting to go there right now. If the Heller majority wasn’t strong enough to say something about standards of review, but to merely hint, I’m worried about whether it would hold together under this kind of stress, despite the fact that there are more stories out there like this guy’s than there are cases of legitimate wife beaters.
I guess the question would hinge on whether the Court avoided setting a standard of review because the majority isn’t agreed on the strength of the standard, or because someone doesn’t like the idea of setting a standard this soon. To me the Court pretty strongly hinted that the standard of review ought to be quite strict. That doesn’t mean lower courts aren’t going to ignore it.
We may not find very favorable outcomes in the 7th Circuit. Recall the even two Republican appointees, Posner and Easterbrook, are both vociferously opposed preserving the Second Amendment and wish to destroy it as in individual right., and only one judge, nominated by G.W. Bush, was willing to dissent.
Wrong Argument
The New Republic’s Jonathan Chait has found another loophole, he calls The NRA Health Care Loophole, and notes:
A huge portion of the conservative backlash against health care reform was premised on the notion that reform would force people who choose to lead healthy, responsible lives to subsidize bad decisions by fat, lazy slobs.
Chait then goes on to point out the exemption in the Health Care bill that prohibits insurers from charging extra for gun ownership, and demands we be outraged. I hate to light fire to your straw man there Jon, but I don’t think that’s the argument we’ve made. I believe the argument we’ve made is that it gives government a very appealing reason to control the behavior of citizenry, either by hook or by crook, because of the costs imposed on public health. In other words, it opens up the door to Food Control, Gun Control, bans on risky lifestyle decisions — or at best a sort of quiet tyranny by manipulation of the system to coerce people to make better (by their definition) choices. In other words, we’re afraid of exactly what Jonathan Chait wants us to be outraged by.