Baloney Maloney

Representative Caroline Maloney is pretty clearly interested in carrying the water for this administration, no matter how vile the behavior:

Rep. Maloney said, “No, I do not. Operation Fast and Furious is under investigation and we’ve had one hearing on it. We intend to have more and more investigations, more interviews and we will go where it takes us.”

“Right now, we heard about these loopholes in the law – law enforcement asked for greater tools so that they could get convictions and try to stop the flow of illegal guns and that’s where we are now,” she said.  “So we will continue our investigation.”

I almost feel like these players had this all scripted, and faced with mistakes and blunders early on in the filming, and trying to proceed with the agreed upon script as best as they can. They just don’t know what else to do, so what do they do? Keep rolling. Keep talking about loopholes. The only loophole here is that people are going to be allowed to get away with this without going to jail.

Why Notification Laws are Nonsense

I can’t think of a better example, coming out of Ohio, as to why we need to get notification laws repealed, than this:

All I have to say is I’m glad they are sticking cameras in patrol cars these days, so the people can see what their employees are doing. I don’t think what we’re witnessing is professional behavior, and that’s being charitable. Given multiple threats of violence, and threats of retaliation, this officer needs to lose his badge. He does not deserve the trust the public has placed in him, and every day he continues to patrol the streets is an outrage.

That said, I do wonder this guy was doing in a seedy section of town with an apparent prostitute, and what would appear to be her pimp, in the back seat. But either way, that’s not really my concern, and it’s likely not illegal to do so.

I ran into a duty to inform law in Texas, when I was stopped, under questionably legal circumstances… apparently for parking suspiciously in a small town. The officer approached, and began to ask a series of questions, which I answered, and before I could get out that I had a gun on me, he asked if I had any weapons, and then I truthfully answered. We went through all the motions, and everything checked out. He only warned me that I was supposed to inform, and was otherwise pleasant and professional. But the fact is, I didn’t really have a chance to inform, at least without going against instinct in that kind of confrontation. I can completely understand why someone would believe following instructions answering questions is the more prudent path. Ohio desperately needs to change its law, and if not to eliminate duty to inform entirely, at least make it only a ticketable offense.

Final lesson in all of this is that when a cop puts you into a situation where it’s becoming apparent there’s suspicion of a crime, exercise your fifth amendment rights. You are under no obligation to talk to the police, and don’t really do yourself any favors by doing so. Let them arrest you, call your attorney, and speak to the police under the advice of counsel. If the police beat or threaten you for not cooperating, fine. You now have the basis for a civil rights lawsuit, and whatever they got out of you is inadmissible. Once it’s apparent you’re not in a typical traffic stop, that’s when you’re in lawyer country. It sucks, but remember that we have a legal system, not a justice system.

UPDATE: Canton police chief has apparently relieved the officer in question pending an investigation. They deserve credit for acting on this.

Free Ice Cream Machine

Running a little thin today, I know. Today was the day for more than a few job leads to come in. Some of them I would consider taking, some of them, eh, maybe if I get desperate. Chief on my mind now is whether my sanity can survive a daily commute into Manhattan every day, as I have a few potential prospects there. On the bright side, 3 hours a day on a train provides a lot of blogging time if I get the right equipment. On the down side, 3 hours a day on a train.

The one lead I mentioned previously has progressed on an on-site interview. I should be coming with references from several of the researchers I’ve worked with over the years and a recommendation from the CEO. I am optimistic. In the mean time, I’m still developing possibilities.

Green Corporate Welfare

The Morning Call is reporting about Air Product Corporation’s new green solar farm, that was apparently subsidized with taxpayer money to make the economics work. I agree with Paul Carpenter of the Morning Call that this is lamentable, and shame on the Corbett Administration for wasting money like this, and bragging about it:

That is similar to what I once said about wind turbine and solar panel projects and the hucksters who peddle them. I said such schemes would never work on their own merit without the huge subsidies provided by politicians, who often receive “campaign contributions” from the hucksters.

I am most hostile to the windmills, which would denude hundreds of square miles of scenic and ecologically precious mountaintops to produce the same amount of energy generated by a single nuclear power plant on land the size of a small farm.

For solar panels, my math revealed in 2008 that investing in them would gain a family thousands of dollars less than putting that money in certificates of deposit, although CD rates have since fallen.

The big problem with solar energy is that it takes a lot of energy to manufacture the cells. This energy is generally coming from the electric grid, which is largely powered by coal. A solar cell will spend the first 4 years of its life recovering the energy that went into making it, and that’s assuming pretty generous sun amounts. Pennsylvania is not a good place for deploying solar power, so I’m not surprised it doesn’t work without taxpayer funded subsidies.

Colin Goddard on the Radio

Follow to Left Jab Radio to view segments here and here. It is good strategy to be up on what the opposition is saying, and how they are framing the issue. I am relatively happy Colin brings with himself all the baggage of the Brady Campaign’s past issues, because his rhetoric on the private sale issue is pretty much spot on, in my opinion. If I were arguing that position, he’s making all the same points and concessions I would be making. He gets considerably weaker when he has to pick up the Brady baggage and try to carry it.

I am also amused that even on a lefty radio show, you get a pro-gun caller when they start taking calls. The pro-gun caller was making the point that he shouldn’t have to go through a background check to get his own gun back when he turns it over to an FFL pawnbroker as collateral on a loan, mentioning that he was in favor of the background check system when it passed, marketed to the public as a way to screen felons, but that they were never honest with him, that it would make him have to undergo a background check to get back his own gun.

Our opponents like to tell us that gun owners support their agenda. I can promise you they don’t once they start to understand the details, and this is a prime example. Denying terrorists from getting guns sounds great, until they find out a buddy can no longer buy guns because his name is identical to that of someone on the list. Universal background checks sound great, until he realizes it will turn him into a felon by selling a gun to a long time friend without paying 30-50 bucks to do it through a dealer. The devil is in the details, as they say, and quite a number of gun owners are ignorant of the details, until they are forced to live with them. Why do our opponents think they have had no traction since the 90s? This is why.

Short Bus to Prison

This guy isn’t the sharpest tack in the box:

“He is alleged to have said during one encounter with a confidential informant,” Hogsett said, “that he did not believe in paperwork – federally required reporting – he did not believe in paperwork because that would be, quote, ‘telling the government where you got your gun.’”

A charging affidavit also alleges Mullendore sold seven guns to federal informants, including one unregistered Cobray nine-millimeter machine gun.

I just kind of wonder, if you’re going to peddle guns on the black market, ignore the paperwork requirements, and fail to do the background checks, why bother with the FFL? It’s kind of like, if you were a gang of armed robbers, walking into the police station and asking for all the proper business permits for your hideout.

Becoming Mainstream

USA Today has an article on gay candidates winning mainstream acceptance among the voting public, including an Arizona Democratic State Senator considering running for Congress:

And the fact that she’s openly bisexual?

“Arizona doesn’t really care,” the 35-year-old lawyer says, dismissing the issue as irrelevant. “They just want to have low property taxes and no gun control.”

Low taxes and no gun control pretty much accurately describes me, so more power to her. She’s good looking too. If we have bisexual Arizona State Senators running on a guns and money platform, gays aren’t the only political constituency becoming mainstream. This is a victory for our issue too.

UPDATE: I’m told she’s actually a raging lefty, and anti-gun, by people in Arizona who would know better. It’s a shame, but if she wants to convert and bat for the other team, I’d love to have her on our side. As far as your sexual preference, you can be a switch hitter all you want as far as I’m concerned, but on gun rights, we tend to like our politicians to bat from the right side of the plate only.

Political Systems

Joe had a bit more to say yesterday about my post regarding the land of the used to be free:

The bigger problem, as Sebastian pointed out, is the erosion without consequences. In general the only way this problem can be fixed is for there to be consequences other than voter wrath. There needs to be fines and/or jail time for those that violate our rights and some body, such as the courts but perhaps not, that is specifically tasked with doing nothing but striking down laws that exceed the constitutional authority given to the legislature and/or executive branch.

I’ve heard it proposed that we should pass a constitutional amendment that creates a House of Repeal. Essentially a body who’s only job is to repeal bad laws. I’m intrigued by this idea because it provides the right kind of incentive. The great thing about our political system, in historical context, is that we are a nation of laws, rather than of men. The great problem that creates, perhaps not fully envisioned by the founders, is the same as when the only tool available to a carpenter is a hammer; suddenly everything starts looking like a nail. In an ideal world, a House of Repeal would be unnecessary if the Courts were willing to do their jobs. Having sacrificed that responsibility on the altar of the presumption of constitutionality a number of years ago, I’m not sure the Courts are any longer enough.

But would a House of Repeal really help? I’ve also wondered, rather than a House of Repeal, if it would be better to have two Supreme Courts: one Supreme Judicial Court, and one Supreme Constitutional Court, with the Supreme Constitutional Court having jurisdiction only over constitutional matters. In a departure from traditional common law, the SCC would have the ability to review legislation without the need for citizens to bring suit, or to have standing to sue. In essence, all three branches of government would have to agree on the constitutionality of a law for it to be in full effect.

As for consequences for bad behavior, I agree with Joe on that as well. I’ve pondered the utility of a provision that states if an Act of Congress is found to be unconstitutional, anyone sitting in the Congress, having voted in the affirmative for said Act, is permanently ineligible from sitting in Congress for another term. How’s that for term limits? The threat of jail time doesn’t seem to put many elected officials off from current examples of malfeasance, but every office holder out there is scared to death of losing their seat, ending up out of power and irrelevant. This kind of consequence would both provide punishment, and remove the possibility of further damage.

Another possible path to get out of the mess we are in is for the Federal government to go bankrupt and collapse sort of like the USSR did and we end up with only state governments. Many of those state governments would provide a much more free environment than that currently imposed by the Feds.

For a lot of reasons, I think this would be disastrous, chief among the reasons being that we’re sitting on some highly valuable real-estate that other powers would very much like to have. We’re a lot weaker divided. New York City wouldn’t stay free for long without southern country boys willing to defend it with their lives, and southern country boys would find it difficult to maintain 21st Century standards of living without the financial services provided by New Yorkers. Both would starve to death without midwestern farmers, and the midwest is awfully cold in the winter without coal from the West, and oil from Alaska and Texas. That’s not even mentioning monetary issues, like who can issue currency, who is responsible for the debt of the Untied States, etc. Businesses would be petrified while the political system worked out the separation of states. This would mean economic ruin, or economic ruin would already have needed to happen. It would be less of a disaster, in this case, to have another constitutional convention, and amend the constitution to place more firm and unambiguous limitations on federal power.

Joe also suggests that maybe we just need to go elsewhere. There are theories out there that postulate that the option of exit is one major factor that kept our early governments relatively small. Given that we’ve hit ocean, it’s no longer an option. Perhaps people need that option in order not to have their productivity preyed on by others. I don’t have any solutions for that problem.

I don’t think our founders got everything right. Their system was a wonderful example of how to control a government that presided over a largely agrarian society, and with assertive and diverse state governments. That does not accurately describe our society today. I don’t think we should rule out the possibility of making amendments to the Constitution. The progressives did it when they ushered in their era in the early part of the 20th Century, which later laid the foundation for the New Deal. Those of us who wish to see a better federal system, with a more passive and less assertive central government, should not shy away from such ideas.

Philly Cracking Down on Non-Crimes

The currently leadership of Philadelphia apparently has all their priorities straight. About as straight as a drunk trying to stay in the middle lane with .25 coursing through his veins. Apparently the scourge of the city these days is people walking around texting. Never mind armed robbers, flash mobs, and murderers. And definitely never mind there’s no such crime as texting while walking in Pennsylvania.

The only sad part about news like this is, if my current job prospects continue developing, I will soon be forking over an extra 3.5% of my income to the asylum wardens at Market and Broad. For the privilege, I don’t even get to vote against them.

Our Voices & Votes Don’t Count

At least, that’s what the Pennsylvania Farm Bureau seems to be arguing.

Okay, I get that not everyone is on board with Sunday hunting, particularly religious farmers. I don’t agree with them, and I’m going to do what I can to open up hunting. But I’m not going to say that they are any less a part of the discussion or shouldn’t be considered in the debate. However, that’s what their spokesman is saying about those of us who support it. See, we’re just a bunch of “interests outside Pennsylvania.” To back it up, he cites NRA which has about 400,000 members who live here – many of whom do support allowing us the option to hunt on Sunday. Another evil outside group? NSSF with more than 500 Pennsylvania business owners here who serve hundreds of thousands of hunters & gun owners.

Honestly, shame on the Pennsylvania Farm Bureau for reducing themselves to this level of “us vs. them” attacks. We are Pennsylvania citizens. We have a voice and a vote, too. We pay the taxes that fund the subsidies many of your members benefit from – hello Farm Bill. Just because we don’t agree doesn’t mean that we’re somehow “less Pennsylvanian” than farmers.