Quote of the Day

From the Mayor of San Francisco:

“[NRA is against] anything that restricts the opportunity for a guy who gets cut off in traffic from pulling out a hand gun and almost assassinating an entire family, as was the case a few days ago in San Francisco, where three people were gunned down. That somehow that is appropriate and wonderful and that person celebrated his freedom to carry a loaded pistol.”

It should be noted that the illegal immigrant who murdered the family had two prior felony convictions.  But according to Mayor Newsom, it’s NRA’s fault.  It’s not his fault, for running a city that’s incapable of controlling crime.  It’s not the State of California’s fault, for making sure everyone except felons is appropriate disarmed from protecting themselves.  It’s certainly not the federal government’s fault for a failed immigration policy.  Nope, it your fault.  It’s my fault.  It’s anyone’s fault except for the people who’s fault it actually is.  It’s like a two year old who blames his little brother for breaking the expensive china.

The Balance

Armed and Safe takes issue with Uncle’s old post about a certain demographic of people who, politically, it is unwise to frighten.  It is correct in one respect, that if we merely defer to people’s comfort level, we’ll end up like gun owners in the United Kingdom, who constantly did so, until that comfort level dropped to the point where sharp pointy things drive their political elite into hysterics.  We absolutely can’t defer to people’s discomfort when that discomfort is caused by ignorance and unfamiliarity, as is quite often the case with our cause.

The problem we ultimately face is, more than half our population fall into the category of being completely ignorant of firearms, and the broader culture that surrounds them.  In a representative form of government, this means we’re dependent on the acquiescence of this majority for the continued protection of that right.  If we lose that acquiescence, even the second amendment will not practically be a barrier to them.

I see no reason to increase the inevitability of that by essentially writing off the majority of the population as unpersuadable and uneducatable, by not thinking about how to tailor the pro-gun and pro-self-defense message so that a majority buy-in to our ideas. If changes in polling on support for gun control and gun rights are any indication, 9/11 and Katrina did quite a lot to convince Americans of the need for self-protection.  The gun rights side of the argument has been advancing, as people have seen Americans face situations where having a firearm might have been useful.

Uncle’s admonition shouldn’t be taken as a call to never push the boundaries, but it does suggest that attempting to crash through them can lead to disaster politically. The Civil Rights Movement committed to changing hearts and minds, and changing their political fortunes by working within the system.  It is a tragedy that the role armed self-defense played in the Civil Rights Movement has largely been lost to history.  We have to tell that part of the story.  But if the Black Panthers, who called for settling the issue through violence, had been the public face of the Civil Rights Movement, it would not have garnered the support it needed from mainstream Americans in order to get the landmark civil rights rulings, and subsequent civil rights acts.

In a functional and stable Republic, which largely respects the basic rights of its people, the population is going to abhor violence, or the threat of violence, as a means to solve political problems.  We’ve seen how well that type of system works in Iraq and Afghanistan.  There has to be a balance in the gun rights movement between our public rhetoric and our private beliefs.  If someone wants to polish their marksmanship, or learn about explosives, shaped charges, infantry tactics, and various other subjects, I think that’s their right as a free person.  But the moment the public believes we gun folks are learning these things to use violence as a political tool they are going to want to disarm us all in order to preserve the stability of The Republic.

Not Getting Machine Gun Rights Anytime Soon

Even in Alabama:

While Alabamians support gun ownership, they do think there should be some restrictions in certain cases. Sixty-seven percent of those surveyed said felons who have paid their debt to society should not have a right to own a gun while 77 percent said they favor prohibiting ownership of fully automatic weapons.

Speaking as someone who’d love to own a few title II firearms, if you can’t even get 30% of the public in Alabama to support legal machine gun ownership, you’ve got a long way to go on the issue.  Truth be told, I have my doubts it’s even achievable.  NRA has seemingly staked out a position that accepts the NFA and GCA restrictions on machine guns, while hinting at support for the status quo, and perhaps even a position against the 1986 Hughes Amendment.  Just getting the Hughes Amendment repealed would be a miracle.

What I Agree With Might Surprise You

I think this statement is mostly true:

I think that US gun ownership supporters are entirely too romantic about what widespread automatic weapons mean in societies where there is either no tradition that teaches about these kinds of weapons, or else in the course of war and disruption, such traditions have eroded.

It is not always the case, contra Heinlein, that an armed society is a polite society.  Sometimes it is simply a brutal and brutalizing society, and part of the enormous responsibility of gun owners is to teach and pass along a culture of responsible, individual gun use.  That is one reason why, paradoxically for the gun-controllers, a culture of responsible gun use requires that they be reasonably and openly widespread, widely and openly accepted but subject to social norms and cultural traditions of use.

Read the whole thing.  It’s well worth your time.  Too often in many of these civil conflicts, there aren’t really any “good guys” that are protecting themselves from “bad guys.”  You merely have two equally bad groups of people brutalizing each other, and the greater society.

While I’m skeptical that any international arms control agreement that the UN proposes can change this fact, it’s hard to deny that the proliferation of small arms into Africa and other areas of conflict has had a stabilizing effect.

I think where “good guys” can be easily identified, responsible nations shouldn’t be prohibited from supplying arms by international treaty.  But it’s simplistic to assume that in many of these third world conflicts, there’s anything to be gained by arming one group or another.  Too many of these societies are simply broken, and while there are, no doubt, good people being brutalized, arming them isn’t going to have much of an impact on the greater conflict.

Hat Tip to Dave Hardy

UPDATE: In the comments over at Dave’s I remembered one important point I wanted to make:

In societies which are completely broken, the strong brutalize the weak, and brutalize each other. Putting a rifle in a man’s hands does nothing if he doesn’t have the skill or motivation to stand up for his own life and liberty. We have a tradition of liberty and individual rights in this country which makes having an armed society work. If your cultural tradition is subservience to the strong, then having a gun accomplishes nothing for you.

I think you see this on a small scale.  I have a friend that lives in high crime area I won’t go to without being armed, but I do not suggest it for her because I do not believe she is capable of taking another life to defend hers.  I don’t understand it, but it’s how she is.  A firearm is merely a tool… the true weapon is your mind.

Michigan Laws Improving

The Unforgiving Minute points out that Michigan has done away with its farcical “safety inspection” system, but did not go so far as it eliminate the requirements that handguns be registered.  Now you can carry out your unconstitutional indignities by mail instead of having to show up in person.  Not perfect, but an improvement, TD points out:

Historically-minded readers might be interested to know that this permit system was originally put in place by the KKK-backed “Public Acts of 1927″, a racist reaction to the case of Dr. Ossian Sweet, a black physician who dared to defend his home from a white mob in Detroit.

Not shocking.

Congratulations Mr. Heller

Dick Heller managed to register his revolver with the DC police.  This was only the first step in a very long battle to give the second amendment real meaning, and this is a moment which is a stunning defeat for the gun control movement, and Mayor Fenty.  It is a good day.

Be sure to tune into Cam’s show at NRANews.com to see their coverage of the event.

Hat tip to Of Arms and the Law

Why Is Anyone Surprised?

There have been several news articles mentioning the low turnout for registration of firearms in D.C.  Considering this is an amnesty, meaning you can bring guns that you might already have down to the police station, and the police will register them and make you legal, I’m not the least bit surprised by the low turnout.  Pretty much the only people in DC that have guns right now are police and criminals.  The criminals aren’t going to register their guns, and the police don’t have to.

In addition, semi-automatic pistols are a lot more common these days than revolvers, so I suspect the fact that DC is, in contra to the Supreme Court ruling, continuing to ban them also plays into this.  DC residents have no where to lawfully aquire a gun, even if they did want to register one.  I also suspect many people are figuring this whole game DC is playing with its residents’ second amendment rights might soon be coming to an end.  You can bet if I lived in DC, and stored my guns out of state, I would not be eagar to bring them into The District under the current unconstitutional framework set up by DC City Council.

Looking for Ideas for Grassroots Organization

Bitter is looking for ideas as we’re looking to get some organization together in southeastern, PA just in time for the elections.  The problem with southeastern PA is that no one is doing anything.  We have gun owners here, but unlike the guys out west, who have their s%$t together, we don’t have a game plan.  Head over to Bitter’s an offer some suggestions.

Bitter has been going through and looking to find all the gun clubs and shooting ranges in my county, and the number is astounding.  There’s just no way that a guy like Pat Murphy should be able to win here.  In fact, he did not win in Bucks County, he won by virtue of the fact that Pennsylvania’s 8th congressional district contains parts of Montgomery County and Philadelphia, which voted overwhelmingly for Murphy.

Patrick Murphy decided to sign on to a ban on many common semi-automatic firearms, and I have decided to organize the gun vote in Bucks county to defeat him.  I will not stop until every gun owner in this county knows what HR1022 would do, and that their congressman favors it.  In the intelligence community, this kind of reaction is known as blowback, but I think it works in politics too.

Clearing the Air on Heller

Alan Gura talks about the effect Heller is meant to have on DC’s registration system.

There are significant, practical limits on the number of arguments that can be put together in one lawsuit.  In our case, we chose to focus on the handgun and functional firearms bans – and that was plenty work for the courts to consider.   Litigants do not have unlimited space in the briefing, or unlimited time in argument, and there is a significant strategic advantage – as we have demonstrated – in keeping constitutional litigation focused and narrow.

I’m hoping he’s not, but suspect he is, getting grief from gun people about how Heller should have fixed this whole thing.  One thing Alan is going to learn about gun owners, if he hasn’t already, is that many of us are never happy, or grateful much.  Be sure to read his whole post.