Challenge to Campaign Finance Reform

Dave Hardy offers some detail on a challenge to the McCain-Feingold Campaign Finance Act that’s heading before the Supreme Court.   Given that O’Conner was the swing vote the last time this came up, maybe the Supreme Court will be in the mood to overturn, or at least vastly weaken this law that never should have happened.  Both NRA and the ACLU have submitted briefs in favor of the plaintiff (and against the Government’s position in favor of the campaign finance reform law).  CNN also has some further analysis that quotes from NRA’s brief:

“Overturning these well-established laws would turn our elections into free-for-alls with massive corporate and union spending,” said David Arkush of Public Citizen, “and would make officeholders beholden to the deep pockets that promote them.”

On the other side are groups like the ACLU and the National Rifle Association, now best buddies in their call for nonprofit corporations to speak out.

“For like-minded individuals lacking great wealth, pooling their donations to fund a political message is, in a real sense, the only way for them to find meaningful voice in the marketplace of ideas,” the NRA said in a brief to the high court. “There is nothing pernicious, problematic or distorting about individuals banding together in this fashion to express shared political values and make themselves heard.”

Unfortunately George Soros and Michael Bloomberg are also joining NRA’s position, but ultimately I think this law is an unconstitutional restriction on free speech, so Soros and Bloomberg just happen to be on the right side of this debate.  I’ll gladly join them on this one.  If you want to read the actual briefs, I’ll steal the link from Hardy for here.

UPDATE: Given that this case was heard back in March arguing on narrow grounds, and that the Supreme Court has asked that it be re-briefed and reheard on broader grounds, we may soon see the Supreme Court overturn its own precedent, and nullify a large part of the McCain-Feingold Act.   This would certainly be welcome.

Dove Murderer!

SayUncle keeps the right wing propaganda machine going by suggesting that he’s going to eat the doves he so wantonly slaughtered.  Wayne Pacelle will tell you that’s a lie, and that no one eats dove.  Plus, it’s the bird of peace.  Why would you want to kill the poor little bird of peace?  Murderer!  It’s because of SayUncle there is crime and war.

UPDATE: More hunter death cult propaganda about dove hunting.

On the Straw Purchase Problem

We thank MikeB for answering in the comments, on my challenge to show me how to solve the straw purchase problem without making guns illegal:

I’d say better record keeping which is not limited to the individual FFL guys, and a system of licensing gun owners and registering guns. As was pointed out on my blog by yourself, these things are not objectionable because of the inconvenience. You’ve helped me to understand my position better. Your objections are two things really, government involvement, the libertarian objection for lack of a better term, and the possibility that such initiatives will eventually lead to gun confiscation. I say if we want to do something about the gun flow into the criminal world, gun owners would have to accept both of those.

Understanding that if police recover a gun from a crime scene, we already have enough registration to trace the gun to the last legal purchaser within a matter of hours, typically.  The Pennsylvania State Police have made a computerized database of all the gun purchases conducted in the state going back to the mid 1990s.  They can look up in a second to see all the pistols I own.   And yet, I’m told we have a huge straw purchasing problem in Pennsylvania, such that I have to acquiesce to rationing and reporting requirements to fix the problem.  Pennsylvania passed handgun restrictions, including a waiting period, in the 1930s.  That didn’t fix the problem.  In the 90s, we computerized the system, and overhauled the prohibited person statutes, and gave law enforcement additional tools.  That didn’t fix the problem.  The the state police created a database of all gun purchases.  We took them to court because that was supposed to be illegal in Pennsylvania, and we lost.  And that didn’t fix the problem.

California has a registration requirement, and California is still, overwhelmingly, the largest source of traced guns recovered in California.Illinois has a licensing requirement, and Chicago a registration requirement, with handguns just being plain illegal, and Illinois still is the largest source, over 50% of its own traced guns.

So no, we don’t have to accept both of these, because they don’t work.  If they did, California wouldn’t be clamoring to enact ever greater restrictions in a futile attempt to fix the problem, and Chicago wouldn’t be desperately and bitterly clinging to their unworkable gun ban.   Marko even had a great post this week about why even prohibition won’t really work.  So you don’t really get to tell us we have to accept certain things when you can’t offer evidence that they work, and we can offer plenty of evidence that they do not.

The Commie Has Resigned

Van Jones has resigned from the Obama Administration.  You know, if the guy had been a communist in the 50s or 60s, I might have been able to look past it.  People can grow, and accept different ideas.  But he was an avowed communist in the 1990s.  The 1990s!  After everyone knew it was a failure.  Murderous failure.

No, you sir have no place in the Government of the United States, and I’m glad you realized it, albeit belatedly.  The Obama Administration should be ashamed it to even allow him in his cabinet.

I Will Be There – At GBR IV

Kind of a last minute thing, but I will be attending the Gun Blogger Rendezvous IV next week out in Reno, Nevada.  So last minute I’m worried my registration won’t make its way through the postal system to Mr. C before he actually heads out there.  My job situation has been less than secure (who’s isn’t these days?), so I’m reluctant to make big commitments of money far in advance.  But it looks good for now, so I can go.

BTW, the raffle for the Para GI Expert ends today, so if you want a chance to win the gun, you have to buy a ticket before midnight.  You don’t have to be going to GBR to win. Proceeds benefit Soldiers’ Angels.

Nebraska Reciprocity

Looks like today is link to Clayton day.  Or it’s just that it was a busy week, and am now just getting caught up with my RSS feed to find out what I missed.   Apparently one of the things I missed was Nebraska releasing a list of reciprocal states.  Florida is on the list, and they recognize non-resident licenses, so I can carry there now.  That’s good news considering I recently lost the ability to carry in Nevada.

California Still Has Good Self-Defense Laws

Clayton also points out that the finger eating Obama supporter, who is charged with mayhem, could have been legally killed by the man he was attacking.  Seems California allows people to use deadly force to stop felonies, even arrest felons.  They have crappy gun laws, but their self-defense law is still Western in its roots.

I know that a lot of liberals have some trouble controlling their emotions–that’s part of why liberals are generally supportive of restrictive gun control. They are convinced that everyone is as out of control as they are, prone to fly off the handle and kill someone for no particularly good reason. If you can’t control yourself enough to notbite someone’s finger off, then you should stay away from political demonstrations.

Sounds familiar.  Much like what I was arguing in the post below about violent criminals not being ordinary people who just snap.   But I think perhaps we can come together with the Brady Campaign and agree that there ought to be no baring of teeth at political demonstrations.  Lest someone be too intimidated to speak out.

Know What Might Help?

I agree with Clayton Cramer that the spread of HIV within the gay and bisexual communities is a serious problem, and is related to frequent changing of sexual partners.  Know what might help change gay culture to a safer, more monogamous one? Gay marriage. Just sayin’.

UPDATE: I should probably clarify I’m not all that serious about this line of argument.  It was more meant to be a lighthearted jab at Clayton.  I do support legislatively enacted same-sex marriages, but I don’t think there’s any right to one.  The state has the power to define marriage within the limits of the 14th Amendment, which has always allowed the law to treat sexes differently in some instances.

A Serious Argument out of the Brady Campaign

In contrast to a conversation that goes nowhere, last week, Doug Pennington of the Brady Campaign threw down on Megan McArdle.  Obviously they took Megan’s comments seriously enough to respond to them.  But Doug, in his response, ditches much of the usual Brady nonsense and actually talks about some real issues:

Contrary to McArdle’s framework, the issue here isn’t whether firearms have a magical, mesmerizing power to make good people do bad things.  The issue is whether fallible human beings carrying the best tool for killing people to a heated protest increases the possibility of a lethally violent outcome – something of particular concern at a Presidential venue.  Other issues include whether adding guns to Presidential events – outside of trained law enforcement – makes the Secret Service’s job unnecessarily harder, and whether being confronted with a gun-carrying protester can be intimidating and stifle debate.

I’m with Megan that I’ll defer to the Secret Service on how best to protect the President, but I actually share Doug’s concern that the open display of guns could be seen by others as threatening, and may discourage people from speaking out, but I’m also concerned that people are assaulting those who disagree with them, even going so far as biting fingers off their opponents.  Yes, it is emotionally charged.  Which is why ordinary, well adjusted individuals might not be unreasonable in wanting tools to protect themselves in such situations.

I’ve always gotten the impression that Brady folks believe that violent criminals are just ordinary people who just snap.  But murders, particularly assassins, tend to be more than just your average “fallible human beings”.  Most scientific research into the minds of violent criminals shows them to be quite different from ordinary people.  But Doug continues:

The problem with McArdle’s view, and the gun libertarian position generally, is the assumption of a damaged analogy between unregulated speech and unregulated gun carrying.  The assumption is that since prior restraint against speech is bad by definition, prior restraint against unrestricted gun carrying must be equally bad, or at least deeply suspect.  Except that it’s not, because they are radically different things when put into practice in the world real human beings live in.

Whoa!  Real philosophical arguments coming out of the Brady Campaign rather than emotionally charged nonsense and drivel?   Let’s hope this isn’t a trend.  We might actually have to start making arguments back instead of just mockery.  I don’t think our argument has ever been that the right to keep and bear arms has to be absolutely identical to the right to free speech, or freedom of religion.  Whether or not prior restraint when it comes to guns should be treated the same way as for free speech is a matter of debate.  But what we do demand is that the right to keep and bear arms be taken seriously, as we do with other constitutional rights.  And that means you don’t get to pass laws and enact policy based on the justification that some behavior makes you uncomfortable.

We can also take steps to make it harder for dangerous people to get guns as a general matter – for example, criminal background checks for all gun sales (a policy McArdle agrees with), limiting bulk purchases of firearms to cut the illegal gun market; and restricting access to military-style assault weapons.

OK, now we’re back to ten Hail Marys and ten Our Fathers.  The Brady penitence for our wicked ways.  I’ve said before, I’m willing to sit down and talk about background checks on private transfers, but certain things have to be taken off the table first, like being forced to go through an FFL, and you have to be willing to talk about how NICS works too, and address some of our concerns with it.

At the end of the day, reducing gun violence isn’t about any one law, but is about a collection of policies that work together as a safety net to prevent as many needless gun deaths and injuries as we can in this country.  We can do these things while respecting the Second Amendment, and the First.

I don’t think anyone ever believed it was just about one law, and now that the Supreme Court has taken prohibition largely off the table, it can’t be about one law.  But what’s the Brady Campaign’s philosophy about respecting the Second Amendment?  It can’t just be anything short of prohibition is lawful.  That’s not a treating the right seriously.  A collection of laws who’s intention is to frustrate and discourage gun ownership, much like DC’s new almost prohibition, or even New Jersey’s laws, is absolutely off the table.  If that’s respecting the Second Amendment, we have nothing much to discuss.  Any law that proposes to limit gun ownership on the part of criminals by limiting gun ownership on the part of everyone is an automatic non-starter with us.  I wish there was some way to keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people, without interfering with ordinary people’s right to keep and bear them, but there isn’t.  At least not without bringing about this kind of world.  If the Bradys want to start having a serious philosophical discussion about the Second Amendment, I’d be game for it.  It would certainly be better than the usual BS rhetoric, but I’d suspect they’d have to admit they really don’t respect the Second Amendment, and would have to admit their goal is to limit the impact of Heller to the greatest extent possible.  Perhaps the reason there’s little or no common ground between the two sides is because we each understand the other’s true end goal.

Some Serious Questions for Our Token Anti

I’ve been following MikeB’s blog now for several weeks, and one of the disappointments has been that the conversation just doesn’t seem to go in any real direction.  There will have to be a lot of agreeing to disagree when two people are coming from the opposite side of the spectrum on an issue, but usually when talking with someone who is intellectually serious about a topic, the conversation at least tends to take on some structure, as areas of agreement and disagreement tend to be worked out.   Typically in this kind of situation you’ll find serious questions, that don’t have easy answers, get asked by each side.  People tend to move past the bullshit, and the easy stuff, and get to real areas of philosophical disagreement.  So here’s a few questions for MikeB, based on some of his recent posts.

Straw purchasers arrested trafficking guns from Colorado to California:

No one denies that, but the dispute comes in when trying to accomplish it inconveniences gun owners. They immediately start talking about “infringement” and “gun bans,” when actually we’re not talking about those things at all.

So here’s your fundamental problem.  It’s legal for a citizen with a clean criminal history to purchase a gun in the United States.  To get around the problem of not having a clean criminal history, criminals put up straw men, who do have clean records, to purchase guns on their behalf.  Girlfriends of criminals are your typical straw purchaser.  How do you fix the straw man problem without banning guns?   Keep in mind it’s already a felony to buy a firearm under false and misleading pretenses.  As long as it’s lawful for a citizen with a clean record to purchase firearms, criminals are going to use straw men to get guns.  How do you fix that problem without a ban, or something that’s awfully close to a ban?

MikeB takes on the Queen of Snark over the Wintenmute gun show study:

Why do pro-gun folks resist these intelligent and highly educated men so aggressively? Why is it necessary to attack them on their expertise as well as their veracity? What’s wrong with simply discussing the issues? I’ll tell you what I think.

I think what explains the incredibly nasty attitude on the part of so many pro-gun writers is that they realize they’re wrong. They realize that anyone who refuses to join in a common effort to find a way to diminish gun violence is in the wrong. Well, why would they do it then? Out of fear. Out of fear and insecurity.

Joe Huffman, in the comments, basically cuts to the heart of the matter: “how do you determine truth from falsity.”  I don’t particularly resist intelligent, highly educated people.  In fact, I spend most of my time working with intelligent, highly educated people, and they are prone to the same kind of biases, assumptions, and have agendas just like everyone else.  I’ve seen some remarkably good science happen in my career, and some remarkably bad science.  Just having credentials doesn’t mean you’re automatically putting out quality research and quality science.  It doesn’t mean you don’t have an agenda or bias.  Joe’s question was good.  How do you sort true from false?  I can go into detail about why I think Wintenmute’s studies are relatively useless, but can MikeB tell me why they are good?  Can we have a real conversation about it?