I don’t blame the guy. I wouldn’t want to be associated with that den of criminals and scoundrels either :)
Author: Sebastian
Upholding the Sullivan Law
Miguel takes a look at exactly what the Second Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld. Yes, judges Katzmann, Wesley, and Lynch (Clinton, Bush Jr., and Obama, respectively), this is the racist claptrap, that sacred “one-hundred-year-old law” that you tacitly endorsed when you declined to “call into question the state’s traditional authority to extensively regulate handgun possession in public.” You know, slavery and Jim Crow were a tradition in many parts of the country until relatively recently too. Time don’t make right.
Why Does This Say Anything?
The Mayors Against Illegal Guns survey of voters in Virginia, North Carolina and Colorado indicated 45 percent of voters trusted Obama on gun issues, while 40 percent trusted Romney, results released Thursday indicated.
Really? This is supposed to mean something? Do you have any idea how many staunch supporters of gun rights did not trust Romney on guns? I had more than a few people on here arguing with me that Obama was objectively better, because he at least signed two bills that contained two improvements to gun laws.
Obama won re-election by largely ignoring the gun issue. If NRA’s power really is waning, it’s because the gun voters are getting complacent and going back to sleep. Bloomberg’s theory is that the gun vote doesn’t really exist. If Bloomberg wants to team up with Obama, and wake the gun voter back up, I’m game.
Heaviest Thing Amazon Will Ship Free
Happens to be a gun safe. They take a loss on the safe, but make it up on smaller items. I’d note that when I was looking into a safe, I looked at mail order, like Amazon. The downside is they’ll deliver it to your property, but getting it in the house, and to the space you want to put it, is your problem. If you don’t have the equipment to move a 1500 pound safe, you’re screwed. I chose to go with Liberty Safes of New Jersey, who delivered to the room I wanted, and bolted it to the floor. It was well worth the extra cost to have them do it.
Interesting AR Accessory
This device for stabilizing an AR-15 pistol would seem to be for disabled shooters, but it’s interesting generally. I’d want a quick release strap for being able to put the pistol down, but this is about the closest I think you’ll get to being a cybernetic being with a pistol as an appendage. It would certainly make dual wielding more interesting.
Another Court Loss: Preliminary Injunction Denied
Yesterday an NRA backed case that challenged San Francisco’s safe storage and ammunition restrictions lost in District Court. Reading the opinion here, I find myself stunned by this:
Plaintiffs’ showing as to the severity of the burdens imposed by section 4512, “The Safe Storage Law,†is only marginally better. As noted above, section 4512 gives San Francisco residents the very set of rights the Heller plaintiff sought and obtained. San Franciscans may lawfully possess handguns in their own homes, may carry them in their own homes at any time, and may use them for self-defense without running afoul of any aspect of the ordinance. Plaintiffs have offered only the possibility that in a very narrow range of circumstances, the delay inherent in rendering a handgun operable or in retrieving it from a locked container theoretically could impair a person’s ability to employ it successfully in self-defense. Even assuming this rises to the level of a “substantial†burden, however, thereby triggering some heightened degree of scrutiny, plaintiffs have not shown the regulation to be overreaching or improper in any way, or that it fails to serve a legitimate governmental interest. Indeed, as noted in Heller itself, nothing in its analysis “suggest[s] the invalidity of laws regulating the storage of firearms to prevent accidents.â€
This is disingenuous, and the quote taken from the full context. The full quote from the Heller opinion, in full context, is this:
The other laws Justice BREYER cites are gunpowder-storage laws that he concedes did not clearly prohibit loaded weapons, but required only that excess gunpowder be kept in a special container or on the top floor of the home. Post, at 2849-2850. Nothing about those fire-safety laws undermines our analysis; they do not remotely burden the right of self-defense as much as an absolute ban on handguns. Nor, correspondingly, does our analysis suggest the invalidity of laws regulating the storage of firearms to prevent accidents.
The majority is refuting justice Steven’s dissenting argument about 18th century laws that mandated storage of excess gunpowder on the top floor of the home, and speaking of safe storage in a context which does not burden the right of self-defense to any real degree. Any honest reading of Heller has to come to terms with the fact that the invalidity of  storage requirements that interfere with self-defense is unambiguously part of Heller‘s holding:
We must also address the District’s requirement (as applied to respondent’s handgun) that firearms in the home be rendered and kept inoperable at all times. This makes it impossible for citizens to use them for the core lawful purpose of self-defense and is hence unconstitutional.
It is difficult to see how the San Francisco ordinance is materially different from that of the District of Columbia’s. I can accept that on the matter of ammunition restrictions, a judge has some room to suggest that case law is not that well established, and perhaps a preliminary injunction is not appropriate, but regardless of what is stated in Nordyke, which cannot control Heller, any requirement that a firearm be bound by a lock or stored in a way that makes it unavailable for self-defense is pretty unambiguously unconstitutional. The judge here pulls dicta out of context, in an attempt to ignore the core holding in Heller. It is worth noting that the judge in this case is an Obama appointee. Elections have consequences.
Wednesday Tab Clearing
Lots of stories built up in the tabs this week that don’t quite warrant their own posts, but are interesting, nonetheless:
The Crimes of Gun Grabbing Mayors from Emily Miller. We have Google Alerts looking for criminal mayors, and let me tell you, this is not a group of people who should be lecturing any gun owner about gun ownership leading to crime. What we don’t publish is all the non-MAIG mayors who end up in trouble with the law, and as you can imagine,it’s far more numerous. Guns don’t cause crime, but mayors sure seem to.
Learning from the Election. I agree with much of Victor Davis Hanson’s take on this election. I’m challenged my his section on the Latino Vote. Much of what I’ve seen in regards to the Hispanic vote suggests it wasn’t immigration that drove them, it was the fact that they support Obamacare and the Stimulus in large numbers. Hanson’s prescription is “the Italian strategy” — to close the border and allow upward mobility to work its magic. I generally favor liberal immigration policies, but if the people you’re letting in believe in big government and social democracy rather than limited government and American republicanism, to what degree are you just committing national suicide?
The GOP ignores low-information voters at their peril. Bitter once talked to the daughter of a Democratic strategist when she lived in DC, who shared a disdain of this voting group. Partisans on both sides generally are much more informed than the average voter. But the person she talked to admitted Democrats encourage this voting group because they tend to break for Democratic candidates. This article suggests Democrats are doing a much better job marketing to this group than the GOP.
Sending in the health teams. Apparently the New York City Department of health is busy making sure restaurant standards are busy being kept up in relief tents. The response to this storm in New York has been at least as bad, if not worse, than Katrina, but you don’t hear the same wailing and gnashing of teeth in the media. Instapundit‘s characterization of this as “Katrina on the Hudson” is apt.
Billionaire’s Gun License is Suspended Amid Inquiry. It’s funny how millionaires and billionaires always seem to have “good cause” to get a license in New York. This, the 2nd Circuit has ruled, is a completely objective, and constitutional standard. That panel of judges is a disgrace to the Constitution, and we’re only going to see more of it now that Obama has been re-elected and Harry Reid is preparing the nuclear option. This is what happens when you elect people who care more about their own power than the document which limits it.
A Blogger’s Worry: Media Getting Better on Guns?
As much as we beat up on the media for getting it wrong, or outright bias, there is a certain amount of buzz that’s necessary for a political gun writer to have something to talk about. Lately that buzz on gun news has been simple and positive. The media is writing stories left and right about the spike in guns sales, but there’s only so much to say about that, and the story formula is pretty much the same — reporter speaks generally of the election, of the FBI reporting the spike in gun sales, then goes an interviews a local gun shop which says something like, “Yep, seeing a lot of sales. Women especially.”
When I started this blog, I never would have believed this could even be a worry. Even though the election went badly for us, this is a positive development, because it’s getting an important meme out there: normal people buy guns. I’ve seen precious few stories that paint these buyers as paranoid militia nuts getting more guns to stow away in their bunkers, thought here have been a few of those, but it’s increasingly coming from outfits that matter little, in naturally hostile media markets. Most articles do speak of anxiety about what the President will do on guns, or speak of unease about the world situation, but it’s rarely painted as delusional paranoia in the majority of stories I’ve run across.
While the media environment is far from perfect, as I can still find the classic bias that’s long been there, it is vastly improved, and keeps improving. The media is starting to get it right on guns. We have been schooling them, and I think our letters, blog posts, and e-mails are making a difference in how journalists approach the issue. This is good, but it does make it more difficult to write on the subject, since the media has long been a foil for political gun bloggers.
I am probably not the only one who is quietly worried by the development. The NRA has long benefitted from a media environment hostile to gun ownership, and while the media is still quite hostile to the NRA, it’ll be interesting to see what happens in a media environment more fair to gun ownership but still hostile to the organization which defends it.
More Winning the Culture War
Lowering Expectations
I agree with Joe, that it seems the other side is not quite so ambitious on the magazine ban front as they once were, and not routinely tout 100 round magazines as being patently ridiculous more often than speaking of hard limits. Probably smart. Most Americans don’t own 100 round magazines (even I don’t have one), but many own 11-30 round magazines.
But it’s a sharp contrast from yesteryear. I seem to recall reading that the magazine limitations were originally an idea floated by Bill Ruger, who was interested in saving the Mini-14. Ruger’s proposal was to focus on the magazine size rather than the gun, and threw a 15 round limit out there for people to chew on. The gun control crowd loved the idea. Of all the states that passed assault weapons bans, only New Jersey adopted the 15 round limit. Every other adopted ten. I heard originally, anti-gun politicians floated a 5 round limit, and 10 was the compromise. Now they’d be happy to ban the drum magazines. Progress.
As for Bill Ruger, the Mini-14 may have been spared, but we got an assault weapons ban and a magazine ban. It took a while for the gun community to learn there’s nothing to be gained in preemptively surrendering ground. Compromise is something you do when circumstances leave you no good option, and your choice is between getting beaten and getting killed. Compromise is not a starting position in a political struggle.