Our Founding Fathers on the Right to Keep and Bear Arms

Philip Mulivor e-mailed to discuss his new book, Proclaiming Liberty: What Patriots and Heroes Really Said About the Right to Keep and Bear Arms. The author notes:

The premise of Proclaiming Liberty is simple — the Web is littered with false or inaccurate quotations about the right to arms, and I felt the time had come to take out the trash. I vetted more than 130 key quotes—including nearly all the famous firearms-related remarks attributed to our Founders—by checking them word-for-word against original books and documents. Many of those books and manuscripts predate the Declaration of Independence.

The book debunks several phony quotes and sets the record straight on dozens of others. I included reproductions of title pages from centuries-old books used in my research. To many readers, though, the real value of the book is contained in the detailed citations for each quote (all are in MLA format for the benefit of students).

This sounds pretty interesting to me, since we’ve all seen a lot of quotes out there falsely attributed to certain Founders. It’s great, I think, to have an authoritative source. This is definitely a must have if you’re going to participate in Internet gun discussions. If there’s one thing we all hate, it’s when someone is wrong on the Internets.

National Reciprocity in the Senate

I’m becoming less optimistic about the prospects for National Concealed Carry, mostly because the GOP seems more interested in election year posturing than actually passing anything. In order to actually pass something, it requires cooperation from the Democrats. It must be a bipartisan bill to achieve success.

We had a bill introduced, S. 2188, which started off the gate with bipartisan support, being sponsored by Mark Begich (D-Alaska), Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) and Joe Manchin (D-West Virginia). Then Senator Vitter and Thune introduced their bill, S. 2213. The Thune bill is identical to the one that failed last time in the Senate, which including a measure to deal with Vermont, allowing Vermonters to carry without a permit in any state. I’d be happy to have this measure, but I think it has a few political problems:

  • It’s not in the House version, so it’ll complicate things in conference.
  • Schumer had a several of votes in his pocket against the identical bill last time. Schumer played a very clever game: he lined up all his no votes, then once it became clear he could defeat the bill, he allowed some of his vulnerable no votes to switch to yes. One of those was our Senator Robert P. Casey Jr. Remember that when he tells you he’s pro-gun this election.

Senator Crapo has pulled his co-sponsorship of S. 2188 and given it to S. 2213. S. 2188 added Senator Tester (D-MT) and Senator Baucus (D-MT). S. 2213 has 29 co-sponsors, but they are all Republicans. Not a single Democrat has signed on to S. 2213. While it’s quite good to have both parties competing for our votes, the end result of this partisan divide is going to be that we don’t get a bill passed. Without cooperation from the Democrats who control the Senate, it’s just not going to happen.

The Republicans are essentially treating gun owners as a hobby horse, to be trotted out and ridden at election time. We had an opportunity for a bipartisan bill, but that’s not the direction the GOP wants to go. Strategically, I think this is a mistake. It would far better benefit the GOP to put a bill on Obama’s desk than it would trying to snipe at a handful of Democrats who the GOP thinks are vulnerable. Perhaps the GOP is worried if they did that, Obama just might be tempted to sign it? I don’t think he can politically, especially not with this Florida thing blowing up on him.

My bet is we get no National Reciprocity bill this Congress.

Some Excellent Wisdom About Self-Defense

Tam reproduces (with permission) a forum post that I think everyone should read, related to the Treyvon Martin shooting. I would also add this case is a great example of why I’m such a big advocate of carrying a defensive spray in addition to a gun. If Zimmerman had been able to spray Martin, he might have either stopped the attack or put Martin in enough pain in order to gain the upper hand and make an escape. As it is, Zimmerman only had one option, and that was deadly force. If Zimmerman had something else, we would have been talking about something else this week, because Martin would still be alive, and Zimmerman wouldn’t be in any real trouble. The advantage of sprays is that they can be used much earlier in a confrontation than a firearm, and at a considerably reduced legal standard. In most states the standard is being in reasonable fear unlawful force is about to be used against you. Unlawful force can be as much as a shove, grab, or even a verbal threat. It could even be someone approaching you that won’t respond to verbal commands. In most cases, if you shot someone in that situation, you’d be guilty of manslaughter at best, and murder at worst. Even if you ultimately end up wrong in a “bad spray,” it’s generally going to be misdemeanor assault, rather than felony manslaughter.

This is the Old Media I Remember

With the exception of one panel in this series of cartoons, you can see the media bringing forth the same bigoted stereotypes of gun owners, along with a complete lack of willingness to seriously discuss a complex topic. This is what we have come to love the media for. As a blogger, this makes me happy, since it just drives more people to alternative and new media.

Insulting the Kazakh Shooting Team

Maria Dmitrienko from Kazakhstan deserves a gold medal in restraint and grace in addition to her gold medal in shooting.

Kazakhstan’s shooting team has been left stunned after a comedy national anthem from the film Borat was played at a medal ceremony at championships in Kuwait instead of the real one. …

The song was produced by UK comedian Sacha Baron Cohen for the film, which shows Kazakhs as backward and bigoted.

The gold medalist is clearly not happy while the song plays, but she puts on a smile as soon as the insulting song is over and poses with her fellow competitors. To add to the injury, they zoomed in on Maria’s face while the lyrics talked about having the cleanest prostitutes in the region.

According to the article, the coach reported that the organizers in Kuwait also got Serbia’s anthem wrong during the medal ceremonies.

The Gun Boom Continues

The media seems almost surprised that the Martin shooting hasn’t done anything to cool sales. If anything, the media and gun control groups exploitation of this tragedy are going to add fuel to the gun boom, making Americans fearful that more restrictions are coming.

Floridian Gun Owners Need to be Heard

Governor appoints a task force to review the state’s self-defense laws. The Florida media is really piling on about the laws. Our friends at Media Matters are also going after Marion Hammer full bore. Marion Hammer is one of those folks I’m glad to have on my side, because I’d be afraid if she were on the other. She is a tough, pit bull of a lobbyist, and not someone lightly trifled with. I’m here to tell David Brock he should be paranoid. That Glock might not be enough.

I kid, I kid. But as good a lobbyist as Marion Hammer might be, she needs gun owners backing her up and calling their reps. This actually shouldn’t be limited to Florida gun owners. This attack is across the board in all 50 states, and we even need to be on the look out in states that have had no duty to retreat forever, and those are numerous.

UPDATE: In that vein, Arizona papers are starting to question their law. Arizona is one of those states where “because he needed killing” has traditionally been an effective defense, and still largely is. But that’s not stopping the paper from blaming the NRA for Arizona’s law.

Something Else to Talk About?

It’s been all Zimmerman all week, and it’s getting kind of tiring. But open up the Google Alerts and my other sources today, and that’s all that’s in there. But if anything, the case has been good for traffic. We’re up about 50% over previous weeks. That usually happens when gun owners are scared and looking for news. Gun owners should be scared, because the media is now full bore in blaming gun laws and self-defense laws for the shooting. I literally have pages and pages of media stories along these lines.

While this continues to be a gift for our opponents, one things that has traditionally worked in our favor is that gun owners are quite powerfully motivated by fear. Fear stirs the sleeping giant. So I am fairly confident that if we line the ducks up on our side, we can prevent the gun control folks from encroaching on any of our gains. But we have to be heard. We can’t let one mall ninja ruin things for the rest of us.