Canton Ohio Council President …

… forgot the first rule of PR is that when you find yourself in a hole, to stop digging:

What your officer did was unconscionable. There’s absolutely no fucking excuses for that video I saw. This guy needs to be raked over the coals. You Sir, no matter what you say, are against the Second Amendment. This guy should not have a council meeting for the next several months that is not inundated with angry gun owners from Ohio. This guy has thrown down, and it’s time to act.

Fast and Furious Hearings

First from local Congressman, and former US Attorney Pat Meehan:

Meehan represents the Congressional district I grew up in. Also see this clip from Congressman Jason Chaffetz from Utah:

Dave Hardy is reporting the press is finally starting to really pay attention, and points to all the articles appearing about the scandal. I have to hand to Mike Vanderboegh and David Codrea, who stuck on this story when a lot of folks, including me, were skeptical, and were reporting on this long before the media had a peep to say about it. Despite whatever differences I may have with them, I feel they deserve some recognition for top notch citizen journalism.

Norway Killer Used Mini-14 and Glock 17

Apparently the Mini-14 was the “most military weapon allowed in Norway.” The pretext he used to get it was deer hunting. The irony is that a Mini-14 is not generally enough gun for hunting, though I don’t know, maybe deer are smaller in Norway.

In regards to the Glock 17:

Getting a permit for the pistol proved more difficult, as he had to demonstrate regular attendance at a sport shooting club.[21] He also bought 10 30-round magazines from a US supplier. In November, December and January he went through 15 training sessions at the Oslo Pistol Club, and by mid-January his application to purchase a Glockpistol was approved.

We’ve seen this before. Mass killers seem to be willing to jump through whatever hoops you put in front of them. He even went to Prague in an attempt to illegally obtain firearms, but was unsuccessful. Sounds like he wanted specifically an AK-47, and I guess didn’t realize the Czech equivalent is this rifle.

Fast and Furious Hearings

John Richardson is doing a pretty good job of covering the developments, including testimony of ATF attache to Mexico Darren Gil that they were in the dark in regards to this operation. If you want to watch live, follow this link.

That Didn’t Take Long

VPC has a new white paper out “The Glock: A Favorite of Mass Shooters.” It’s the favorite of police officers, peaceable Americans, and several European militaries too, but you won’t hear VPC mention that.

VPC is perhaps the most irrelevant organization out there today, given the realities of the post-Heller world. The Glock is, quite possibly, the ideal poster child for Heller’s “common use” test. One could argue it is quite possibly the most deserving arm of constitutional protection out there today.

Political Consequences of Norway Massacre

Already being felt in Scandinavia. Even though the Swedish media is suggesting their gun laws would have stopped the mass killer, Sweden is still looking at tightening it’s laws. Finland was already on its way to doing so, and is now following through, with handgun sales plummeting as the new law takes effect.

We watchful of the gun control proponents, who don’t want to ban guns, by the way, speaking enthusiastically about how much more common sense Europeans have for implementing common sense laws, while America continues to do nothing.

The Patent Cliff

That’s what it’s being called in the industry, and what Instapundit is reporting on currently. The good news is that drugs are indeed going to get much cheaper as patents on the hot drugs expire. The bad news is there isn’t much in the way of new drugs following up to take their place. The reasons for this are complicated, but part of the problem is how insane the FDA has gotten with their expectations on side affects and adverse reactions. If Obama takes credit for this, it will be kind of laughable. This kind of achievement isn’t something I’d like to preside over, because it essentially spells the death of innovation in this industry.

I’ve worked in pharmaceuticals pretty much my entire career, and in my current job search, I’m biased against taking jobs in that industry. Unfortunately, it has farther to fall before it hits bottom, and starts becoming receptive to new business models and new ideas. As much as I’d like to blame it all on the FDA, it is not the case. All the easy targets have been exploited, and the industry is not prepared to accept the kinds of innovations necessary to target the harder ones.

For me, in the IT part of the business, it’s not a huge deal; my skills are in demand in other industries. I feel for my former colleagues, who are going to have a much tougher time, because their skills are not transferrable.

Making our Arguments for Us

Thanks Dennis. We didn’t want to get out there and jump right in with the public policy implications, but we do appreciate you letting everyone know that Norway has strong gun laws, and that they have pretty clearly failed in this instance. I’m going to guess the vast majority of the American public has no idea that Norway has “strong gun laws” that “don’t work.” We do appreciate you helping get that message out there. Keep up the good work.

Ten Year Felony? Slap on the Wrist!

As Dave Hardy notes, the WaPo has finally gotten around to acknowledging Fast and Furious as an actual scandal, but naturally their star anti-gun reporter Sari Horwitz, can’t do it without a healthy dose of deception and apologism:

Agents along the border had long been frustrated by what one ATF supervisor later called “toothless” laws that made it difficult to attack gun-trafficking networks. Straw buyers — people with no criminal record who purchase guns for criminals or illegal immigrants who can’t legally buy them — are subject to little more than paperwork violations. Even people convicted of buying AK-47s meant for the cartels typically just get probation for lying on a federal form attesting that they were buying the guns for themselves. With such a light penalty, it is hard to persuade those caught to turn informant against their bosses. And federal prosecutors rarely want to bring such charges because they do not consider the effort worth their time, according to ATF supervisors.

In what world is a ten year mandatory prison sentence and a quarter of a million dollar fine “toothless?” That’s up there with armed robbery. It took me three minutes to look that up and double check my facts just to be sure. I’m not at all convinced it would be that hard for Ms. Horwitz. I can only assume the reason she’s reporting untruths is because the truth doesn’t fit the narrative, which is the need for more laws.

And this is unfortunate, because the rest of it this lengthy article otherwise pretty good.