The NRA Strikes Back at Street

I’m pleased to see this up over at NRA News:

Philadelphia Mayor John Street talks tough when he pushes anti-gun laws, but when it comes to enforcing laws, he doesn’t put his money where his mouth is.

Philadelphia just set another record for the number of murders in 2006. Last year in the City of Brotherly Love, there were 406 murders, the most in almost a decade.

Yet instead of calling for increased enforcement and prosecution, Mayor Street is pushing a budget that’ll take a dozen prosecutors off the job!

Back in September, Mayor Street was more than happy to join New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg in demanding still more new gun bans for the state of Pennsylvania.

I will not go so far as to compare John Street to Wilson Goode, who is without a doubt the worst mayor that the City of Philadelphia has ever had, but the City has certainly not gotten better under Street’s watch. Cutting law enforcement and prosecution, appointing an incompetent Chief of Police, while at the same time as blaming law abiding LTC holders for the cities crime is just reprehensible. Does John Street really believe the gangs shooting it out over drug turf in North Philadelphia are bothering to apply for licenses to carry their guns with the Philadelphia Police? Does anyone really believe that?  Why does the Philadelphia press keep acting simply as mouthpieces for this nonsense rather than ask the hard questions?

Look What the Brown Truck of Happiness Has Brought!

Let me just say, it’s pretty cool having the UPS man bring a rifle right to your door, after you ordered it off the modern Internets. Today’s delivery was a Mosin-Nagant M91/30, which is a rifle you would have been well familiar with if you were a Soviet soldier in the Great Patriot War. Of course, you wouldn’t have been familiar with it for long, because your life expectancy as a soldier in the Red Army was probably measured in hours. What makes the Mosin-Nagant a great rifle isn’t that it’s a particularly great rifle, it’s that you can go look in your sofa to come up with the money to pay for one. It’ll also happily fire ammunition that’s been buried in a farmer’s field in the Ukraine since the First World War, which he’d probably be happy to trade for a liter of vodka.

Shipped from Century Arms, in from the Great State of Vermont, nicely packed in the box:

http://www.pagunblog.com/blogpics/m91/box.jpg

Wrapped in the local paper, the Milton Independent.

http://www.pagunblog.com/m91/newspaper.jpg

I love what makes the front page there. A quiet day on Lake Arrowhead!  I’m really glad they are getting that mold problem under control though. Must be from all the moldy Massholes moving in ;)

http://www.pagunblog.com/blogpics/m91/rifle.jpg

The whole deal showing right here. This rifle is arsenal refinished, so the furniture looks pretty good. A few dings and scrapes here and there, but nothing awful.

The image “http://snowflakeisnhell.com/blogpics/m91/receiver.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

The receiver markings show this comes from the Izhevsk arsenal in Russia, manufactured in 1944.  You can also see the hammer and sickle, certifying the rifle as 100% commie.  It’s a shame though, the Russian Imperial markings were much nicer and more ornate than the Soviet era ones.

Like every other rifle I’ve ever gotten from Eastern Europe, it’s packed in a good bit of cosmoline, which will have to be cleaned off before it gets shot. I have an idea of how this must go:

“Igor, you know the Americans, I have heard they love cosmoline.”
“It is true, they can never have enough! Pass me some more will you, Sascha.”

So once the cosmoline comes off, I will have to give a try.  I’ll post a range report when I get around to it.  Time to enter this one into the bound book and put it away for now.  Also on my list for C&R aquisition: Soviet Military Makarov, Nagant Revolver (the pistol that put the ‘Russian’ in Russian Roulette), an M1 Garand, M1 Carbine, a decent Mauser, and anything else interesting I run across.  I’m still going to be mostly an EBR shooter, but I figured I’d round out my collection with some historical pieces.  Might as well as long as I can get them delivered to my door.  I think they need to make the C&R license apply to everything though.  My checkbook, however, probably will disagree.

Federal Gun Rights Bill Even a Federalist Could Love?

Of Arms and the Law gives us the text of a new law that has been introduced in Congress by Rep. Roscoe Bartlett of Maryland.  This looks like a bill even federalists might be able to get behind, since it appears to be essentially restoring second amendment rights through the 14th amendment.  It doesn’t explicity cite the source of Congressional power, but I seem to recall that Congress does not specifically have to state the enumerated power under which it passes legislation, it just has to fit within the scope of it’s powers.  So if my non-lawyer eyes are reading this right, it would let someone denied the right to have a firearm in Washington D.C., Chicago, or New York to obtain a firearm for self-protection, state or local law to the contrary.

That means this bill will absolutely infuriate Mayor Bloomberg, and for that reason alone, I think it would be worth passing.  Sadly, as Dave mentioned, there’s a snowball’s chance in hell of that happening, which is a sad statement on what’s become of our Congress.

In Search of the Second Amendment – A Review

So this afternoon, while I was waiting for the battery to my 18V cordless circular saw to charge, after it died on me in the middle of a cut, I decide to watch Dave Hardy’s documentary, In Search of the Second Amendment. My impression is that the documentary is well done and is interesting to watch even if you’re not a total gun nut. If you know anyone who is interested in history, or on the fence about gun control, I would recommend this video. You will certainly walk away with from it with a greater appreciation of the Second Amendment as one of the palladiums of our liberties than you might have had before.

One quote in the documentary, from Glenn Reynolds, stuck in my mind particularly:

One of the interesting things about the gun control debate, is that in a way it’s sort of a litmus test for what people think about their fellow citizens in general. My own sense is, that Americans tend to respond well to crisis, and generally can be trusted to try to do the right thing.

Which is exactly why I think this issue matters so much to me. What you think about the right to keep and bear arms says a lot about what you think in general. For instance, I think folks like Wayne Fincher, and the Arkansas Militia, are a little whacked.  But I completely trust them to have automatic weapons, and believe it is their right to have them.  And to peaceably assemble, and freely assocate with other folks of the same mind. I don’t think it any different than folks getting together over coffee and discussing the benefits and problems of markism. Both aren’t my kind of thing, but it’s their right as free Americans.

Glenn is absolutely right. To accept the right to bear arms is to accept an entire philosphy about one’s relationship to one’s government and fellow citizens, and I will always come down on the side of treating people like adults rather than children, even if that means getting it wrong with some people.

The other positive thing about Dave’s docuementary is that it gets well spoken, educated individuals in front of the camera talking about a subject that many people wronly associate with ignorant and unedcated whackjobs.  Don Kates is compelling discussing his civil rights background, and there is a lot of discussion about the unsung role that arms played in the civil rights movement.

So if you have anyone in your life who is on the fence about the second amendment, or the subject of gun control, I would order them a copy of the docuemtnary and watch it with them.  It’ll present the subject in a way they’ve probably never experienced, and might even get them to change their minds.

Great job Dave!

Harvard Continues Maligning Gun Ownership

Jeff Soyer has some good continuing discussion of the Harvard Study. One thing that strikes me is, if they are arguing that ease of obtaining guns because of their prevalence is a factor in homocides, wouldn’t the overall number of guns per capita be a more relevant number? For instance, Pennsylvania’s household owership rates is unremarkable, but we have one of the highest number of guns per capita of any state. Our murder rate, however, is about the same as New Jersey, despite the fact that we have Philadelphia, and New Jersey has no large cities, and very low rates of gun ownership and guns per capita.

The Courts Are Stacked Against Us

David Codrea has been tracking the unfortunate circumstance of Wayne Fincher, who was arrested for illegally manufacturing and possessing a machine gun, with the purposes of raising the constitutional question of whether there’s an individual right to keep and bear automatic weapons. Let me just say that I have a lot of respect for Mr. Fincher for caring enough about our rights to risk federal prosecution in order to try to win them back, but I have to question the wisdom using this method, because the courts, quite honestly are stacked against us, and going to court is a risky, risky proposition, even if you’re the perfect case with the perfect defendant. As much as I hope Mr. Fincher ends up winning his case, I suspect there’s going to be federal prison time in his future.

Unlike Mr. Fincher, judges these days are not brave people. They tend to be very reluctant to throw our laws that have been enacted by Congress. There’s a presumption of constitutionality the courts make, that any law Congress passes, and the president signs, must be constitutional, and therefore the burden is on the citizen to prove otherwise. But before you can even have standing to raise this issue, you have to be prosecuted. This is the path that Mr. Fincher has taken.

Mr. Fincher was prosecuted in Arkansas, which is in the 8th Federal Circuit, where the collective rights model is the controlling law. The judge in that case will not, and in Fischer’s case, has decided, not to allow him to raise 2nd amendment arguments during his trial. This is standard procedure in trials when the district justice is controlled by precedent from the higher circuit court. Fischer will be able to raise the issue on appeal, but the deck will be stacked against him. He’d have to convince the court to overturn one of their previous rulings. In all likelihood, the court will refuse to hear the appeal if it’s based on the second amendment. But what if they do?

The other big problem with using this case to get the courts to recognize the second amendment, is how big of a leap you’re asking the courts to take. The Supreme Court has never plainly stated the Second Amendment protects an individual right to bear arms. They have implied it in dicta, but there is no example of any federal law being invalided under second amendment grounds. We don’t really want the first case being taken before The Court to involve a machine gun in possession of someone the prosecution will have an easy time painting as a whacked out, subversive militia type (I’m not saying this is right or accurate, just that’s what the prosecution will do). We really don’t want this to happen in a circuit court that’s already hostile to the second amendment. A case like this would even be a leap in the 5th circuit, which so far is the only federal circuit that recognizes the second amendment as protecting an individual right. And remember that the 5th’s circuit’s ruling didn’t help out Dr. Emerson any, the Lautenberg restrictions on his right to bear arms were upheld as constitutional. Courts generally will not take major leaps of faith, and getting at least one of the circuit courts to even say that the second amendment protected an individual right was a major step in the right direction. But the next challenge has to be a baby step up from that. DC’s near total prohibition on firearms is probably a decent step, but even that might be asking for too much, and it’ll be easy for the courts to dodge the issue based on standing unless someone steps up and agrees to be prosecuted. Mr. Fincher has boldly settled the standing issue in his case, but I think it’s the wrong case in the wrong circuit for getting the second amendment recognized by the courts.

I don’t want to be misunderstood, I think the second amendment protects Mr. Fincher’s right to possess a machine gun, and I would refuse to convict if I were on the jury, but we have to be very careful about using the courts, because we can damage our cause in a serious way if we’re not prudent. I really do hope Wayne Fincher doesn’t end up in a federal prison, but I suspect he will. We do need to people like him that are willing to put so much on the line, but we have to be careful, and we have to understand how the courts work and how judges think, and take that into account when working toward our goals.

UPDATE: Wayne Fincher was found guilty of the charges against him after a very brief deliberation by the jury. I should also say that pissing off the presiding judge also is not a very good strategy to use in court. Check out this post over at Smallest Minority, which has a lot more really good information and commentary on the case. Looks like we’ll be adding Smallest Minority to the blogroll.

I Think I’m in Love

With the rifle. Not the dude holding it. I caught a glimpse of this post from Ordnance-Corner. He posts a picture of a new .308 bullpup Kel-Tec is coming out with and exhibiting at SHOT 2007:

http://www.pagunblog.com/blogpics/kel-tec-308bp.jpg

Click on the pic to get a close up view.  There’s more good stuff in the post.  Read the whole thing.

Hobo Deer

My friend Andrew brings me this sad but vaguely amusing story from his home town of Helena, MT.

A young mulie buck survived a jump from the I-15 overpass above Helena’s Sixth Ward train depot onto a boxcar last week, but had to be destroyed after being further injured by a leap from the boxcar to the ground.

This is where it gets amusing:

“We decided that the only way to get him off of it was for it to jump on its own,” he noted. “We wanted to give it a chance.”

Loewen climbed atop the boxcar and the deer took a flying leap.

“He landed on all four feet,” Arnold said. “But then we could see that he also had a broken back leg, too.”

They decided that the buck stopped here, and shot it. The wardens transported the carcass to the wildlife center, where it was fed to the few bears that hadn’t yet gone into hibernation.

Gotta love Montana.

My Letter to State Representative Chris King

Chris King (D-142), my newly elected state rep who defeated incumbent Matt Wright, is so green he doesn’t even have an e-mail address yet. But when he does, I plan to forward this along to him in regards to the subject of the legislation that Dwight Evans has introduced into the PA house.

Hon. Christopher King
Room 101A East Wing
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2142

Dear Representative King,

First, I would like to congratulate you on winning the seat to be representative of Pennsylvania’s 142nd Legislative District. Winning a seat held by such a long time incumbent is quite an achievement, and I look forward to having you represent us.

I’m writing you today about an article, appearing in the Philadelphia Inquirer on January 11th, revealing Representative Dwight Evans’ intention to reintroduce measures to revise the Commonwealth’s gun laws, considered and defeated in last September’s Committee of the Whole session of the General Assembly. I attended this meeting and had a productive conversation with Representative Wright on the issue, but since Representative Evans has announced his intentions to reintroduce these bills, I wanted to take time to discuss my views on this with you.

As I’m sure you are aware, the Pennsylvania Constitution, which you no doubt have recently taken an oath to uphold, recognizes an individual right to keep and bear arms in defense of one’s self and the state. While I share everyone’s concerns about the violence in the City of Philadelphia, as a gun collector and sport shooter, I urge you to oppose any of Representative Evans’ bills which place further burdens on our rights as Pennsylvanians.

While some of the proposals may seem reasonable, such as “one gun per month”, these types of laws do affect collectors, and will do very little or nothing to address the violence we’re seeing in Philadelphia. The City of Reading, which shares the same gun laws that the City of Philadelphia claims to be woefully inadequate, has experienced a sharp drop in violent crime this year after having a record year previously. The City of Pittsburgh, I understand, has also experienced falling crime rates. Philadelphia’s claims that our gun laws are inadequate would not seem to stand up to evidence, and I think The City would be better served focusing on effective solutions, such as putting more police officers on the streets, locking up violent criminals, and aggressively targeting gangs, rather than focusing on symbolic measures which won’t really address the problem.

Thank you for your consideration in this matter. I am happy to see that you were rated A- by the NRA in the last elections. Reading over your campaign materials, it seems we agree on many issues, so I hope your legislative record will give me cause to support you in future elections.

Sincerely,

Sebastian
Langhorne, PA

I’m sickeningly nice when I want to influence them. I don’t even mind stroking their ego a little. What I won’t mention now, but might, if he starts buying into Evans’ and Rendell’s crap, is that I’ll do everything I can to make sure he’s a one termer if he pisses me off.