BadIdeaGuy is a new father. Stop by and congratulate him. His son’s name is Owen. No word yet on whether he’ll have a cousin Patty.
Bonus points to anyone who gets that reference.
The right of the citizens to bear arms in defense of themselves and the State …
BadIdeaGuy is a new father. Stop by and congratulate him. His son’s name is Owen. No word yet on whether he’ll have a cousin Patty.
Bonus points to anyone who gets that reference.
It’s important to remember what they mean when it comes to reasonable regulation.
“It is eminently reasonable to permit private ownership of other types of weapons, including shotguns and rifles, but ban the easily concealed and uniquely dangerous modern handgun,”
– DC v. Heller Writ of Certiorari
Ryan talks about the many changes to 4473. Sometimes I feel like I’ve never filled out the same 4473 twice.  This really caught my eye:
All this is to protect us, the irony is that I still have our hotel register from 1936 which served as our Acquisition/ Disposition book and was filled with notes from Mothers or Fathers letting us know that there child had permission to purchase a rifle.
Times have changed, that’s for sure.
What is the purpose of grading a candidate based on his support or lack of support for your issue? Well, primarily to give voters a guide as to whether someone is worthy of casting a vote for, in terms of that issue. But anyone who doesn’t think politics plays a role in the grading system is naive. NRA’s grading system is most definitely a political animal, in addition to being a way to communicates about candidates to membership.
We’re all aware of apparent mistakes in the grading system, like Santa Barbara Sheriff Bill Brown earning an A rating when it would seem that it is undeserved, but it’s important to remember that all grades are not equal. An A in California, Massachusetts in New Jersey is not necessarily an A, or even a C in states like New Hampshire, Tennessee, Texas or Pennsylvania. For an example, take a look at what earns you an A plus an endorsement in Massachusetts.
Those grades reflect the political realities in those states, where most politicians are openly hostile to gun rights. How do you get a politician to care about your issue, and to take your side? Well, electing someone who fundamentally agrees with you is one way. We’re lucky in Pennsylvania to have state politicians like Daryl Metcalfe and Sam Rohrer, who have a genuine belief in the right to keep and bear arms themselves, and who we can genuinely call friends. It’s not like that everywhere. New Jersey politicians try to actively out gun-control their opponents, and it works like that in Massachusetts, parts of New York, and parts of California too. The other way to convince a politician to support you is showing him that your support helps him get elected, and your continued support helps him keep his seat (the converse of that being if you withdrew support, you could threaten his seat). If you can’t help or hurt a politicians chances for re-election, and he has no personal inclination to support your cause, he will ignore your interests.
The rating system also plays in this area as well. When you have no one on your side, you don’t really have much of a choice except to win converts. In the Massachusetts example I showed above, you have a legislator who has shown in the past some willingness to support some of your issues. He may not support all of them, but in cases like this, even know the legislator may not be perfect, it makes sense to offer an endorsement, and maybe a good grade, to try to bring him on board a bit more. If a politician can see that you can bring votes to the table at election time, he will listen to you. You can bet that if NRA/GOAL work to get Jamie Eldridge elected, he’s going to pay attention to their issues in Congress, and having Congressional Representation in Congress from Massachusetts that’s even moderately pro-gun would be good for all of us. Having left-wing groups in Massachusetts getting upset because the NRA is endorsing left-wing progressives is definitely good for us, especially that doesn’t translate into electoral problems.
Sure, a lot of folks who read that article I linked are going to be upset because of all the gun control that Eldridge says he does support, but remember, this is Massachusetts. In Pennsylvania, he’d get a D or an F for those views, but in Pennsylvania, you have other people to choose from, and you can bet that someone in that lot will be pretty pro-gun. When you don’t have much to work with, this is how you build political support for your interests.
As I’ve said before, politics is a dirty game, and to win in politics, you almost have to pretend you don’t have any principles. Politics isn’t a game of principles, it’s a game of interests. We need our principles to guide us over the long term, but in the short term you have to look at interests.
Another Kydex holster bites the dust. They just don’t seem to last longer than a year or two for me. I noticed a crack in my Sidearmor holster’s belt loop.  Fortunately, they are six bucks to replace! I may, however, get a Comp-tac Infidel instead though, because I miss a belt clip that can be easily slipped off. I have some ideas on how I might use the Sidearmor holster in the car.
Looks like he was guilty of tax evasion and mail fraud.
Why, Pennsylvania of course.
Hat tip to Gun Law News.
So I think Skype is going to work for the Gun Blogger Rendezvous. I’ll post times on the blog here when people can Skype in and say hi to everyone. If anyone wants to give it a try now, my user name on Skype is SnowflakesInHell. Feel free to call and say hi.
UPDATE: Tested so far with Thirdpower, Squeaky Wheel, and Ishida. If anyone else wants to get on my list to call in during the Gun Blogger Rendezvous, I’ll be on until about 12:30AM EDT, and on every night this week if you want to give it a try.
DC has filed the petition for cert. with the Supreme Court for DC v. Heller (formerly Parker v. DC). Dave Hardy has the petition.
“Iowa, for good reason, for constitutional reasons, for reasons related to the Lord, should be the first caucus and primary,” Richardson, New Mexico’s governor, said at the Northwest Iowa Labor Council Picnic. “And I want you to know who was the first candidate to sign a pledge not to campaign anywhere if they got ahead of Iowa. It was Bill Richardson.”
We call that a very awkward appeal to religious voters that Richardson should be wary of trying in the future. Either that, or Bill Richardson is insane.