Mr. Completely has some advice for bowling pin shooters. I’ve never tried bowling pin shooting myself, but it sure sounds like a lot of fun.
From Across the Rubicon
SayUncle points out that Wyoming is telling the feds to go to hell in regards to a lot of their less-than-civil-rights-respecting laws. Montana did a similar action with federal gun laws. These are largely symbolic gestures, because despite all this, Montana and Wyoming are still committed to being a functioning part of the United States.
But what if they weren’t? What if the federal government crossed the Rubicon of gun control? We often like to think that the federal government will meet mass resistance should the “knock on the door” ever come, but they probably won’t. Lone individual action will not be how an onerous federal gun measure will be successfully resisted. No doubt some individuals will try, with the end result being those individuals end up dead, possibly along with their families. I don’t think the answer to the “Crossed Rubicon” problem lies in relying on that possibility. The knock won’t likely come from men in jack boots, disarming people to ship them off in cattle cars and toss them into ovens. It’ll come from a happy, smiling government that wants to take care of everybody, and surely you don’t need guns in such a happy utopia.
Most non-sociopathic human beings have powerful mental programming that prevents them from going against the tribe. It’s easy to say “I’ll shoot any son of a bitch that comes for my guns.” from the comfort of a lounge or living room. It’s quite another thing to actually do it; to put a fellow countryman in the cross hairs, one that’s likely to represent a government that looks more like Sweden than 1930s Germany, and actually pull the trigger. It is not something the vast majority of law abiding people are capable of doing. I have no doubt some will, but the numbers will be very small, too small to make any difference in the end. Such action will likely strengthen the resolve of those who want to bring us paradise.
Whether we realize it or not, Wyoming and Montana are showing us how it could be done, effectively done. They key to resisting an unconstitutional federal government is state action, but something more than mere symbolic action. What if, for instance, Montana declared that federal gun control was invalid and unconstitutional, and threatened to arrest any federal agent who entered Montana to enforce it? How far would the federal government be willing to press Montana? What are other Americans willing to sacrifice in order to impose gun control on states that don’t want it? In this hypothetical scenario, Montana would have to be deadly serious about enforcing their edicts. Attempts by the federal government to impose control over the situation would need to be met with quite real threats of secession, along with the attendant violence that could go along with such an audacious move. Montana would essentially be asking the nation a very serious question “Are you so intent on gun control that you’re willing to risk the cohesion and integrity of the United States, and to risk violence against the citizens of several of our states to enforce it?” Unless Americans change greatly, the answer to that is probably going to be no, and it would offer a peaceful way for the federal government to retreat back across the Rubicon.
This scenario offers three very important things — It offers people, who want to resist, the legitimacy of a functioning, lawful government to rally around, as an alternative to dying in a desperate, lone action. It offers a means of collective confrontation with the federal government that wouldn’t have to turn violent except as a final resort, and finally it offers an opportunity for the proponents of gun control to back down from the brink.
The question second amendment advocates need to be thinking about isn’t “Where’s the line in the sand where I start shooting.” but “Where’s my line in the sand where I start lobbying my state government to stand up to this crap?” We have to keep the spirit of defiance alive in our state cultures. Secession has a lot of negative connotations to many people, since the last time we did it, it was in defense of slavery, but its possibility a critical aspect in the balance of power between the federal and state governments. It is the ultimate trump card, one that must be played with utmost care, but it must be kept in play. That’s tough in an age where all the states suckle at the federal teat, but if we’re to remain under a federal government limited by the a constitution, more states have to start acting like Montana and Wyoming, and be willing to tell the federal government to go to hell, with all the terrible consequences that statement could have if they were to one day be serious about it.
Channeling Dr. King
As it is always with great men, there are many who want to imagine that they would have supported this or that, or surmise what they may have thought of our modern situation. The Brady Campaign are no exception on the anniversary of his assassination:
If Dr. King is looking down on us today, I can imagine him seeing 12,352 gun murders a year in the United States – nearly 34 every day – and telling us that “the old eye-for-an-eye philosophy leaves everyone blind.â€
Somebody’s got to “have some sense†in America.
Maybe he would, and maybe he wouldn’t. One thing we do know is that the 14th Amendment of the US constitution was passed partly to prevent southern states from passing and enforcing laws to disarm blacks, so that the Klan wouldn’t risk armed resistance when they terrorized them.
Let’s not also forget the Deacons for Defense:
In some cases, the Deacons had a relationship with other civil rights groups that advocated and practiced non-violence: the willingness of the Deacons to provide low-key armed guards facilitated the ability of groups such as the NAACP and CORE to stay, at least formally, within their own parameters of non-violence.[2] Nonetheless, their willingness to respond to violence with violence, led to tension between the Deacons and the nonviolent civil rights workers whom they sought to protect.
Roy Innis has said of the Deacons that they “forced the Klan to re-evaluate their actions and often change their undergarments”, according to Ken Blackwell.[3]
Let’s not forget Condi Rice’s support of the second amendment. She has been quoted:
During the bombings of the summer of 1963, her father and other neighborhood men guarded the streets at night to keep white vigilantes at bay. Rice said her staunch defense of gun rights comes from those days. She has argued that if the guns her father and neighbors carried had been registered, they could have been confiscated by the authorities, leaving the black community defenseless.
Finally, it’s known that Dr. King also owned firearms, and even applied (and was denied) a gun permit in the days before his movement determined that a non-violence posture was the best tactic for the civil rights movement.
The untold story of the civil rights movement is that it involved a lot of blacks and civil rights workers protecting themselves with firearms. The untold story of the gun control movement was that it originally started in order to disarm blacks.
The Brady Campaign does the civil rights movement injustice by wanting to imagine acceptance of their agenda in a speech where Dr. King was calling on followers not to seek violent retribution for wrongs done to them, not speaking against people defending themselves. Dr. King understood, correctly, that America could be persuaded to change by letting the segregationists be the provocateurs, the arsonists, the terrorists, and the assassins. It was the smart tactic. It was the correct tactic.
What Dr. King would think of gun control today, I don’t know, and neither does the Brady Campaign, but ignoring the racist and xenophobic history of gun control does society no service. I do not believe the Brady Campaign pushes gun control because of any racist agenda; that motivation to pass gun laws is something that fortunately is now only in our past, but it ought not be ignored in the ongoing debate over our nation’s relationship with firearms.
Philly Delaying Vote on Gun Bills
Reader ErnieD e-mails this article talking about the vote:
A package of gun control bills submitted by City Councilman Darrell Clarke will apparently not come up for a vote tomorrow during Council’s weekly session. Clarke last week said that the city Law Department was reviewing the proposed legislation, which was approved by Council’s Committee on Public Safety. The legislation, which could have come up for a final vote by Council tomorrow, is being amended today and then held.
The legislation would limit handgun purchases to one a month, require owners to report lost or stolen guns to police, allow police to confiscate guns from people considered a risk to themselves or others, require a license from police to bring a gun into the city, ban semiautomatic weapons with clips that hold more than 10 rounds and establish a registry for ammunition sales.
It should take them about 3 minutes to review this legislation. It’s illegal under state law and the state constitution. It’s not that complicated. I’m wondering if the city is worried about the lawsuits that are sure to come about if they cross this Rubicon.
Busy Time
IHMSA match is this Sunday. Got my red dot pistol scope in the mail, mounted it on the Mk.III and got it zeroed. I shot a 24 with it, which is the best I’ve ever done on pistol. Now this is indoors, where we scale the animals down for 25 yards to approximate shooting them at the outdoor distances. I probably won’t be able to do quite as well outside, but I’m hoping. Twenty four isn’t getting anywhere close to our top shooters, but it’s beyond the realm of embarassment, when you consider I’m shooting a factory Ruger Mk.III Hunter, and not a fancy Thompson Contender, or Anschutz Exemplar.
I will be shooting both Field Pistol, with the S&W 629, Production, and Smallbore, Unlimited Any Sights. I may do Big Bore with a 629, Unlimited Standing, for kicks too, depending on how I’m shooting. This means I will be furiously reloading .44 Magnum and .44 Special for the next two days to get ready.
Never Drank it Anyway
I will join Bruce in never buying Absolut. Real Americans drink whiskey anyway :)
Terminated for Carrying
Eugene Volokh talks about a challenge to the Employment at Will doctrine that revolves around an employee being fired for carrying a licensed concealed firearm at work. Interesting debate in the commentary. I particularly like his brother Sasha’s comment here:
The right to self-defense is a sacred right.
Therefore, like all sacred rights, it should be waivable. Because a right that’s non-waivable barely deserves to be called a right at all — it’s more like a duty. You are required to retain your right to self-defense, whether you want to or not! The right to life should imply the right to suicide; the right to liberty should imply the right to contract away your liberty; the right to property should imply the right to alienate your property.
So the right to carry a gun should imply the right to agree not to carry a gun. You could agree to that by making a contract with a specific anti-gun clause; you could agree to that by making a contract incorporating a policy handbook with a prohibition on guns; or you could agree to that by making a contract of the form “you can fire me whenever you want for whatever reason you like,” which is the basic rule of at-will employment.
This is particularly notable given the NRA’s strategy of altering the Employment at Will doctrine in several states to make it illegal to fire employees who keep a firearm in their car while at work, which I have long disagreed with. I may believe that an employer is being silly for believing that banning firearms on company property will do anything to stop a determined workplace shooter, but employers and employees should have a right to agree or disagree with such things.
Obama on Concealed Carry
No one ever accused Obama of being a smart politican. A talented orator yes, but he makes amaturish mistakes. This is one of them:
“I am not in favor of concealed weapons,” Obama said. “I think that creates a potential atmosphere where more innocent people could (get shot during) altercations.”
It should be noted this is a state that issues more than 600,000 concealed carry permits, with Allegheny County, which contains Pittsburgh, issuing more licenses than any other issuing authority anywhere in the country. This area is also pretty heavily Democratic, but this is the part of the state that elects pro-gun Democrats. Hillary didn’t fare much better:
“I … think we should reinstate the assault weapons ban (that expired in 2004) in order to give our police officers a fighting chance against the criminals on the street with these military-style assault weapons,” Clinton said Tuesday.
The assault weapons issue hasn’t come up in our state since the early 90s, and we defeated it. Even the anti-gun people here in Pennsylvania consider it politically unachievable. The candidates saving grace will be that they both suck pretty equally on gun rights, which I can only hope will make many of the pro-gun Democrats that reside in Pennsylvania cross the aisle and vote for John McCain.
UPDATE: Gun Law News has more.
Problems in Tennessee
Put a hypocritical anti-gun politician in a prominent position in the legislature, and they can cause all kinds of problems. We’re fortunate in Pennsylvania that our house speaker is pro-gun, voted against the “Lost and Stolen” bill, which is something to be appreciated when his district is Philadelphia. But our speaker is a brokered deal between Republicans and Democrats. If the Dems make more significant inroads in the PA General Assembly, we could soon be in the same position as Tennessee.
New England Journal of Medicine Attacks Gun Ownership
Both Ahab and Jeff Soyer have coverage of this. Rather interesting that this comes out in such a prestigious medical journal just in time for Heller eh? You’d almost think the NEJM had made a conscious decision to shill for the anti-gun forces. You’ll notice some familiar names, such as Garen Wintemute, who conducted a bogus study of gun shows a few months back.
The real difficulty in our issue is the people who oppose us are almost universally well connected political elites, and opinion leaders for the people within our country who influence the political process. We are very much a movement of ordinary-type people who work for a living, and many of whom wouldn’t bother with these types of matters if our betters weren’t so intent on dictating to us a better way to live. We’ve been very effective, but it’s tough to fight against. One disavantage to using the federal courts as a means to secure second amendment rights is we’ll be fighting on ground that’s very much dominated by the exact type of elite who is typically against us. This is going to be hard, we’ll have to fight hard, but fight we must, because we’ll see more and more of this as the anti-gun groups attempt to limit the damage that is likely to be done by Heller.
UPDATE: More from Thirdpower and SayUncle.