The Gun Blog Rifles

The site and name I have chosen for our league is up and running.  The summer match has been posted.  If you wish to participate, or have any comments, feel free to contact gunblogrifles at gmail dot com.  I will keep people abreast of some happenings here on Snowflakes in Hell, but consider our new web site to be the primary means we’ll coordinate these matches.  You can feel safe in adding it to your RSS feed, as it will not be posted on frequently, except for match and league related items and news.

One thing I’d love people to do is to submit pictures of themselves shooting their rifles.  I’d love to have a gallery so people who might happen to cross the site can see normal people enjoying the shooting sports.

Camp Perry Live

Looks like NRA is live blogging Camp Perry this year.  Gee, it looks like an awful lot of rifles that the anti-gun folks claim have no sporting use are being used for sporting purposes.  For those who aren’t familiar:

The National Matches, considered America’s “World Series of the Shooting Sports”, have been a tradition at Camp Perry, Ohio since 1907. Each summer, the nation’s finest civilian and military marksmen and women square off for five weeks of rifle and handgun competition in a variety of formats and events.

I also love their logo for this year.

Camp Perry 2008 Logo
Camp Perry 2008 Logo

Patrick Murphy’s Campaign Pays a Visit

I’m glad Bitter is was home to greet one of Congressman Pat Murphy’s perky volunteers.  Pat Murphy recently signed on as a cosponsor to Carolyn McCarthy’s HR1022, which bans many common semi-automatic rifles and pistols.  I am currently talking to someone at NRA about being Election Volunteer Coordinator for my district so I can help send Congressman Murphy, and other anti-gun politicians in this area packing, and replace them with pro-second amendment representatives.

9th Circuit Rejects Machine Gun Rights

Professor Volokh has a case in the 9th Circuit:

The Supreme Court’s recent decision in District of Columbia v. Heller, holding that the Second Amendment protects a limited individual right to possess a firearm — unconnected with service in a militia — does not alter our conclusion. Under Heller, individuals still do not have the right to possess machineguns or short-barreled rifles, as Gilbert did, and convicted felons, such as Gilbert, do not have the right to possess any firearms….

Sorry to disappoint those who were hoping for the federal courts to embrace the right to own a machine gun.

Quote of the Day

For all you ladies out there:

Dude, it is what it is. The only women I’ve ever met who were remotely interested in shooting guns for fun were trashy – and even then, they’d agree to go along, but it would never be their first choice of things to do (never mind making guns their passion).

White trash girls are probably the only ones who wouldn’t have seizure-style eye-rolling fits if they saw a guy with a holstered gun sitting in the food court at the mall.

I really need to stop linking to these folks. I really do. But its a great study in narrow mindedness, and people unwilling to look beyond their own prejudices and stereotypes.  This is the open minded and tolerant progressive left.  I don’t know how people can have such disdain for their fellow citizens, and turn around and believe they are enlightened.  Where I come from, it just makes you an asshole.

Police Protection in the UK

If you need the police in the United Kingdom, the police will get to you, maybe, in three hours if it’s really important, but three days if it’s not.  But not to fear, they say they won’t automatically prosecute people who defend themselves now.  It kind of makes you wonder if someone in Jolly England breaks into your home and attacks you, if it wouldn’t be better to just shoot the bastard, and bury him in the back yard.  I mean, it seems you’d have plenty of time before the police showed up.

DC Shenanigans

As was to be expected, the District of Columbia has passed a new set of gun laws which basically ignore the vast majority of the Heller decision, while throwing a minor bone to the courts.  Chris Cox, NRA-ILA’s Chief Lobbyist calls it “a joke.” The trigger lock provisions, which the Supreme Court explicitly threw out, are the most offensive.

But there is a bill in Congress to resolve this issue.  Eleanor Norton doesn’t think too highly of it:

However, Norton, who does not comment on District bills out of respect for Home Rule to set an example for other members of Congress, sharply criticized a pending congressional D.C. gun bill, H.R. 1399, Congressman Mark E. Souder (R-RI) introduced last week.

Souder’s bill is, “proof that some members either don’t have enough to do or know no bounds to their capacity for disrespect for democracy in the nation’s capital,” Norton said. She continued, “Republicans tried to overturn the city’s gun bans on four different occasions and failed, even when they were in the majority.  It’s not surprising that Congressman Souder, who was a frequent sponsor of anti-Home Rule bills, would continue to try to overturn the city’s gun laws.

Well, for one, Mark Souder represents Indiana, not Rhode Island.  Norton and her staff are so incompetent, they don’t even know the states her colleagues are from apparently.  Secondly, Congress has plenary authority over the District of Colombia.  It’s in the constitution, you can look it up.  There is no appeal to Home Rule for DC.  The DC City Council serves at the pleasure of Congress.  End of story.

For those who have time, here’s the resolution introduced in Congress which would set and then preempt the firearms laws for D.C.  It essentially imposes federal gun laws, and not much more.  No registraton, no bans of semi-automatic firearms, no lawsuit provisions, and no trigger lock provisions, and no ammunition restrictions, other than those imposed by existing federal laws.  The only differences is that firearms covered by the NFA will still be prohibited in The Distrct, and it does not address the issue of carrying firearms outside the home.  This is a good start, however, and we can fix the carry issue later.  If D.C. City Council shows itself to be petulant on this important constitutional matter, I think it’s entirely appropriate for Congress to exercise its authority over The District, and preempt them from regulating firearms.  Be sure to contact your Congress Critter, and tell them to vote for this important piece of legislation.

Another E-Postal Revision

It looks like Firehand’s results got lost in transmission, so I had to do another revision of the June E-Postal results.  I promise I’ll have my shit together for the Gun Blog Rifle League.  For that, and for any future e-postal matches I might host, I think I might set up a separate e-mail to keep it separate from my normal blog traffic.  Makes it less likely I’ll miss someone’s score.

Michael Bane on Competition

I think Michael’s correct here that competition a useful training tool.  Though, it looks like he’s speaking mostly of IPSC and IDPA, which I’ve had no experience with.  Silhouette shooting is not really an adrenaline pumping game.  Mostly taking slow, deliberately and carefully aimed shots.  Nonetheless, I’ve had more than a few cases where I can knock animals down like there’s no tomorrow in practice, only to perform poorly once I get on the line.  Knowing “this one is for the marbles” tweaks you up a bit, and you can’t hold as steady.

I do wish I could do IPSC competition, but the rules at my club make it impossible, and I don’t know any of the other clubs in the area that do it.  I don’t really have time to drive out to rural Pennsylvania on a regular basis to compete.  There is a local indoor range that does non-sanctioned IDPA matches, and it happens to be my favorite indoor range.  Maybe I’ll have to give that a whirl at some point.

I think there’s a lot of clubs that are stuck in old ways.  Practical shooting looks like it’s fun, exciting, and there’s a lot of folks who seem to really enjoy doing it.  When I have watched the IDPA matches at the indoor range, I see a lot of young people getting into it.  That tends to make me think this is a growing sport, whereas the traditional types of sports done at my club are mostly older guys.  At 34, I’m pretty young compared to a lot of them.  But I think to traditionalists, IDPA and IPSC shooting seem unsafe, and most of the clubs I’ve looked into have rules that prevent that kind of match from ever taking place.  I tend to think clubs will need to adapt in this regard or face dwindling participation in organized events.  I know one disappointment of my club is that, although we have 1100 members, hardly anyone participates in organized matches, except for trap events.  Most people are just thinking of it as a place to plink every now and then.  I suppose that’s fine, but I think different types of shooting sports might get more people involved, and help build a sense of community that I think is important in a shooting club.  That requires gun owners to think different, and adopt new ideas, which I think we’re extraordinarily bad at.  I think it’s more than just the industry that’s resistant to change.  It’s a strong cultural inclination within the entire shooting community.