Article on Dan Cooper in Missoulian

This article in the Missoulian quotes me:

“I don’t think Dan’s ousting is fair or right, it just is. I didn’t ask for people to call for his ousting. I did tell people to write Cooper Firearms and express displeasure, and encouraged them to not purchase the company’s products. It was Cooper Firearms and the Board that ousted Dan in response, because they felt that was the best thing to do for their business. Both sides in this case were acting separately in their own self-interest.”

Read the whole thing.  Bob Ricker is still saying the NRA boogeyman is behind this.  Having once worked for NRA, you would think Bob would know that NRA has difficulty moving at Internet speed, except that he has a vested interest in painting this picture.

One interesting thing is it looks like Cabelas and Sportsmen’s Warehouse cancelled orders with Cooper Firearms.  They said that was a business decision though, because the rifles weren’t selling.  I’m wondering, at this point, if perhaps we just gave the Board of Directors of Cooper Firearms the excuse they needed to get some better business management at this company.   Read the whole thing.

Ammunition Prices

The Firearm Blog links to this great piece on ammunition prices over the past two years, and speculates that the price of ammunition is going to drop sometime in 2009.  I would tend to agree that the ever upward pressure on prices has to break at some point.  If we don’t see an Obama/UN arms treaty, it might be possible at some point for the Iraqi government to sell all that fine ammunition back to us as surplus.

Lessons from Toppling Tinpot Dictators

Wretchard of The Belmont Club has an interesting lesson I think Second Amendment Activists could take to heart.  In the comments:

One thing I learned from hard experience is you always start from where people are. Not from where you want them to start. You have to take people step by step, on the basis of their own experience, getting them to reflect on it to their own conclusions. Just because you “know” doesn’t mean you can force what you “know” down people’s throats. They have to figure things out for themselves. It’s not a function of being unsure of your beliefs. Just an acceptance of the fact that people have to travel their own road to the same spot you may be standing on.

There are no shortcuts. Fourteen years it took us to knock down a tinpot dictator. And we did largely by letting him expose himself. The key was to set up what I would call the reflectional infrastructure. You got people together. And they figured things out. But that required energy to overcome entropy. Just no way around it. I don’t think it necessary to create one big conservative opposition to socialism. You can create people who are opposed to socialism out of greed; some out of philosophy; others out of a desire for liberty. Still others for reasons they can’t articulate. It dudn’t matter. Also organizations have the disquieting tendency to fall apart after they’ve formed. Coalitions are always splitting up or coming together. It’s like trying to build a sandcastle. Still if you keep at, as the Temptations used to say, ‘Our Day Will Come’.

And when the Day comes it won’t solve all the problems of the world. It will just keep the night back for one more day. Our job isn’t to fix things for all time, but to keep this old world running for the time we’re on it. Like Gandalf said, “all we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us.”

Wretchard is speaking from experience organizing against Ferdinand Marcos.  We don’t have tinpot dictators to topple, just minds to change, and allies to make.  What opportunities the Obama administration will give us we don’t know yet, but we should be prepared for strange bedfellows.  As I’ve said before, I don’t need someone to have 100% buy in to our cause to find them useful.  John McCain certainly isn’t a high philosopher of Second Amendment rights, but on the really important stuff, he got it.  I am more interested in advancing my cause than in finding philisophical fellow travelers.

This past Tuesday, manning the phones to turn out the vote for our NRA endorsed tickets, I was working along side two orthodox Jews; a father and son team.  I did not know for what reasons they thought it important to show up to make phone calls.  I know little of their overall political philosophy.  I’m sure much of it would be alien to me.  But for 12 hours in the call center, none of that mattered.  For different reasons we were working toward the same thing.  Too often gun owners take a black or white path toward building allies; anyone who deosn’t buy in completely is a pariah.  To be effective, you have to be willing to work with what fortune gives you someitmes.

Waxman Replaces Dingell?

Countertop reports that John Dingell, who is a pro-gun Democrat, might be done for.  Obama has named Henry Waxman’s former Chief of Staff as his Congressional Relations Director:

This was an easy decision for Pelosi who has long clashed with Dingell and ran Lynn Rivers against him in a primary attempt to defeat him.

The Lynne Rivers campaign was all about gun control. For it to rear its head in this fashion, so soon after the election, doesn’t bode well for anyone.

Hang on folks, this is going to be a bumpy ride.  Dingell chairs the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.  Here’s what Countertop says the consequences of Waxman will be.

If Waxman wins, expect serious heavy handed climate change legislation. If Waxman wins, expect the Consumer Products Safety Commission to have jurisdiction over firearms. If Waxman wins, expect a gun show ban. If Waxman wins, expect a gun control orgy.

This is what happens when we don’t vote Freedom First.  Anyone still want to argue there was no difference between Obama and McCain?

Price Signals

I wonder if this was the kind of “price signal” Obama was talking about.  I would like to get a few AR lowers, but I doubt I’ll be able to find any.  For the most part, I have what I want.  I’d like something in .308 at some point.  I suppose I should start thinking about that very soon.  For now, I’m going to wait out the panic buying.  I doubt we’ll see a new AWB at the top of The Lightworker’s agenda.  Pretty clearly we’re on the list of right-wing loons to be gored, but I think economic issues will dominate his first 100 days.