Archive for June, 2006

June 07, 2006

Coyote

Related to this post on coyotes, seems if a gun isn’t handy, you can use a flashlight!

And like that, it was gone

All the references to assault weapons involving the Indiana slayings seem to have stopped. No mention in this story, for example. I wonder why? Oh yeah. But I’ve seen no corrections.

June 06, 2006

Gun Poll

Holding a poll at the Gun Blogs on what the next focus of gun rights activists should be. Head on over to vote and link to the post if you like.

Gun sales

The CT Post:

Americans spent more than $2 billion on guns and ammunition in 2005, showing the nation’s fascination with firearms is not fading despite concerns raised by gun-control advocates.

The Newtown-based National Shooting Sports Foundation on Monday touted a U.S. Department of Treasury report that said sales of firearms and ammunition increased by 2.6 percent in 2005, while other federal agencies are finding fewer gun-related deaths and crimes. However, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Centers for Disease Control have not made statistics on gunshot deaths and firearms-related crimes available for 2005, so the NSSF had to rely on data from 2004 and earlier.

In 2005, Americans purchased 4.7 million new guns, the NSSF said, bringing the estimated total of citizen-owned guns to 290 million. These are legal sales; the number of guns sold illegally is not known.

The U.S. Census Bureau said Monday there are approximately 298 million Americans.

NSSF said handgun purchases showed the biggest gain, rising 3 percent in 2005. Connecticut firearms sales increased by 2.5 percent during the same period, according to State Trooper William Tate.

The NSSF also says:

Gun Sales Rise as Crime, Accident Rates Fall

Be certain to check out their handy chart of significant firearms stats, which notes new CCW states and that accidental firearm deaths are at an all-time low.

Sprawl v. Interaction

Insty points out that coyotes, bobcats and other critters that don’t ordinarily come around humans are now living near people. The WSJ says it’s due to sprawl. It is not due to sprawl. I live out in the country and coyotes have never been a problem except in the last six months. Now, we hear them at night and some neighbors say they’ve seen them. And we’re not exactly a sprawling metropolis. The reason they come around is because they are not chased off nor are they shot on sight.

My neighbors have said it frightens them and they fear for children or pets. I say to them shoot the damn things. Kill a couple and the rest will learn not to come around. I have heard them in the distance but never seen any. If I did, I’d shoot them. The reason I never see them near my land and the field behind my house is probably due to Politically Incorrect Dog. My neighbors with no dogs and small dogs don’t seem to be as lucky.

Kids keep getting older

Glen McAdoo:

Last September, a study by researchers at the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that more than 1.7 million children live in homes with loaded, unlocked guns. More than 500 children die annually from accidental gunshots. Some shoot themselves, while others kill friends or siblings, often after discovering a gun.

But KABA says:

Actually according to the CDC’s WISQARS website, in 2002 and 2003 there were less than 1/10th of that number of children (13 and under) accidentally killed by guns. To reach the over 500 annually number, you have to include ‘children’ up to 45 years old.

Try some research.

Mr. No Veto

AC:

I said to this guy, “You’re telling me that there is no one in the White House Press Office right now who can tell me whether or not the President has vetoed anything.”

His response, “That’s what I’m telling you.”

More Bloomberg

Bloomberg has launched a new anti-gun legislative initiative. One part of it bans something that sounds made up:

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, joined by City Council Speaker Christine Quinn and City Council Public Safety Chair Peter F. Vallone, Jr., today announced the introduction of four pieces of legislation intended to combat gun violence. The legislation includes: the Gun Offender Registration Act for individuals convicted of criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree; a one handgun every-three-month purchase limit; an Inventory bill, which would require city gun dealers to physically examine their inventories twice a year; and a ban on gun coloration kits used to disguise real guns in ‘toy-like’ colors.

They make those?

Denver is once again it’s own country

A while back, it was ruled that Denver could enact a politically incorrect dog ban despite state law to the contrary. Now, the same has happened with a ban on weapons that look like assault weapons:

A divided Colorado Supreme Court on Monday upheld Denver’s ban on assault weapons, despite arguments that state weapons laws should trump city ordinances.

The 3-3 vote, with one justice abstaining, ended a high-profile fight between Colorado’s largest city and state officials over two state laws enacted in 2003 that pre-empted local regulation of firearms in favor of uniform state regulation.

The city sued the state, claiming the laws violated its rights to regulate matters of local concern.

Denver District Judge Joseph Meyer III ruled in 2004 that the city had to conform to some parts of the state laws, but he said the city could bar the sale of assault weapons and so-called Saturday night specials despite state laws prohibiting local governments from banning weapons that are otherwise legal under state and federal law.

Both the city and the state appealed Meyer’s ruling.

The Supreme Court said that because of its tie vote, the lower court’s ruling stands. It gave no legal opinion or analysis of the issues.

Endorsements

Michael asks:

Does linking to something constitute an endorsement?

And he answers:

No. That’s about like saying if one links to a story on a murder then that’s an endorsement of the murder.

I disagree, generally. Sure, it may not always be the case but unless one disclaims that they’re not endorsing said view, I generally assume they are endorsing it.

Pro-gun progressive v. democrats.com

It’s hard row to hoe but PGP is taking the pro-gun truth to democrats.com.

Gun blogger does an op-ed

David Hardy wrote an op-ed. Read it here.

Quote of the day

Jeff:

Promises are like turds. You can make a bunch of them but that doesn’t mean you keep them.

They always shoot the dog

Another case of police committing puppycide.

We’ve been saying that for years

Gun laws do not always work:

When Edward Garland approached the town of Bozrah for a license to carry a handgun in 2001, there was little reason to refuse his request.

Garland added handguns to a growing cache of more than a dozen firearms he had amassed in his Bozrah home by the time he shot and killed his neighbor March 23, 2005, in a dispute about the care of his invalid mother.

Garland did not have a criminal background, was never officially committed to a facility because of his mental illness and had completed all the requirements under state law to possess and carry a handgun. He already owned pellet guns and long guns.

Garland’s story shows even in a state where gun laws are considered stringent, and if the process is followed correctly, it’s nearly impossible to prevent every would-be killer from buying guns. Reasons for that include no centralized permitting agency in the state — individual municipalities issue gun permits — and no consideration for mental health, except in the most severe cases.

An angel gets its wings

McAdamSandwich has a pic of his minty-fresh M-4.

June 05, 2006

Hillary Clinton’s Primary Challenge

Jonathan Tasini is mounting a primary challenge against Hillary Clinton, building his campaign primarily against her vote for the war on Iraq. His goal is to turn the primary into a referendum on that one vote and her consistent support for the war.

Obviously, this is something of a quixotic run for office, and it would be easy to dismiss Tasini as a kook who rides a bicycle to campaign rallies. Tasini, though, has won David and Goliath battles in the past and more to the point, he is generating some early party support.

Despite the strange obsession Conservatives have for her, Clinton is not much loved on the left. She’s a right-leaning centrist, much like her husband, willing to make almost any compromise to get a deal done. That probably makes her an effective legislator, but it doesn’t make her a candidate that leftists get excited about. Clinton has been moving to the center since taking office. She’s angered a lot of people who thought they were electing an activist progressive senator.

It will be interesting to see how far Tasini can ride the anti-Clinton left. Likewise, I’ll be watching as Ned Lamont challenges Joe Lieberman on much the same basis.

More shoestring silliness

A while back, I told you about the legally registered shoestring that was a machine gun. In case you wanted to know, the ATF has demilled registered shoe strings:

“It is unlawful for anyone to make, possess, or transfer a machinegun which is not registered in accordance with the provisions of the NFA. Since we are unable to establish that the submitted sample was manufactured and transferred in accordance with the provisions of the NFA and 922(o), we are unable to return it to you, as submitted. However, we can return your shoe string without the loops.

The shoe string which you submitted (less the loops) is being returned under separate cover.”

heh.

Why didn’t they do this before?

The AP:

NYC gun court gets tough on offenders

The court case listed as the People vs. Godfrey Hayle looked like an unremarkable one: Police claimed the 44-year-old suspect tried to ditch a 9 mm handgun last year during a drug bust.

But when Hayle walked into a downtown Brooklyn courtroom last week, state Supreme Court Justice Robert Holdman was unusually attentive — and blunt. For starters, he shot down a defense attorney’s bid for a plea deal with no jail time.

“That’s not going to happen in this case,” Holdman said. “The offer from the district attorney’s office is one year. I’m comfortable with that.”

It was a message that Holdman — a 42-year-old former prosecutor with a crewcut — sent several times that morning: Don’t expect much leniency in one of the nation’s busiest gun courts.

Cracking down on gun crime instead of guns is a novel approach. More:

More:

While the strategy of making certain cases a priority by funneling them to the same judge in a specialized court isn’t unique, gun courts have become a cornerstone of Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s highly publicized crusade to discourage criminals from selling, buying and using illegal firearms in the five boroughs.

Bloomberg and judicial officials announced the opening of gun courts in Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens about three years ago. Since then, the percentage of gun-possession defendants receiving one-year jail terms or longer has roughly doubled, city officials said.

The Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office alone has handled roughly 1,100 cases in gun court since 2003, with about a 90 percent conviction rate. More than half the defendants are between the ages of 16 to 21 years old. Most were caught carrying semiautomatic handguns.

Prosecutors in Brooklyn demand a minimum one-year sentence, even for first-time offenders who technically could receive probation. If defendants don’t agree to do the time, they’re forced to go to trial, often within six months — lightning speed for the courts. If convicted, they could go away for two years or longer.

More on closing public hunting land

Bob Krumm again talks about political favoritism and its impact on hunting land:

The Tennessee Wildlife Resources Commission recently closed the Lock Five wildlife management area to public hunting. Apparently, at least one neighboring landowner had complained about trespassers on his land. That landowner, who bought his property knowing there was public hunting next door, is a powerful lobbyist. He in turn contacted another very powerful lobbyist who happens to also be the Chairman of the TWRC.

So, this is what you pick?

Apparently, of the issues facing this country (such as, say, a war not going as planned, the fact congress thinks it’s above the law, etc., etc.), the President and Congress have decided to make the issue of the day about gay marriage. So, everything happening out there, and you pick gay cooties?

This is shameless political pandering. It’s an election year and this will get them support, they think. And, sadly, it will. It will get them support from folks with Ds and Rs after their names. So, watch the smoke and the mirrors and don’t worry about unimportant things while we set the stage to address dudes kissing.

Thankfully, there aren’t enough votes to pass the amendment.

Home invasion thwarted

A home invasion by a black bear, that is:

A black bear with a rowdy record was shot dead early Friday after he broke into an Anchorage home, smashed some dishes, ate some chocolates and scared the dickens out of the sleeping homeowners.

The male bear apparently entered the two-story Stuckagain Heights home through a back door that had a broken latch, said state wildlife biologist Rick Sinnott.

I don’t think his handgun was an effective bear load, though:

Brian Knowlton grabbed a .40-caliber Glock automatic from another room and ventured out into the main part of the house.

Just then, the bear came running up the stairs. Brian Knowlton fired, emptying his gun. Sinnott said Knowlton thought he fired nine or 10 shots. Wounded, the bear retreated downstairs.

The bear was found dead. So, what would be a good load against a 275lb black bear?

More on Bloomberg

Seems he’s enlisted other mayors in the fight on illegal guns:

Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Boston Mayor Thomas Menino said Sunday that 37 more mayors have signed on to fight illegal guns, joining the 15 who convened in New York in April for the first Mayors Summit on Illegal Guns.

At the April 25 summit, the mayors signed a six-point resolution to combat gun violence and said they hoped to put pressure on the federal government and state legislatures to strengthen anti-gun laws.

New additions to the coalition include Mayor Richard Daley of Chicago, Mayor Shirley Franklin of Atlanta, Mayor Martin O’Malley of Baltimore, Mayor Bill White of Houston and Mayor Manuel Diaz of Miami.

I don’t think a few of those mayors realize that guns that are illegal in NY (that he wants to fight) are not illegal in their cities. Seriously, the mayor of Houston?

Lesson not learned

WWLTV:

In an interview with WWL Radio, Riley said his officers would seize guns from people on the streets if another storm was to hit New Orleans.

National ask day

Via Bitter, we learn National Ask Day (in which busy bodies are encouraged to ask you if you have guns in an effort to shame you into admitting you’re bad parent) is set for June 21. In the event you’re asked by some bed-wetter about the contents of your gun safe, I’ve prepared this handy list of responses to being asked if you have guns in your home:

Do you have a warrant?

Yes. Don’t you have the best tool to defend your family as well?

No, but the kid has, like, fifteen.

None of your damn business

Yes, a couple of super soakers, which I hear are good for getting the sand out of your vagina.

No but I do have a nice big cup of mind your own fucking business.

What did five fingers say to the face?

Why, what do you need?

Well, they were used to assault someone

HL has pictures of the supposed assault weapons that some psychopath used to kill 7 people. I concur with his assessment that two of them look like a shotgun and a hunting rifle. He says the third looks like an air rifle. I think it looks like a Saiga, which is a post-ban, sporterized version of a Kalashnikov.

Update: In comments, Dr. Strangegun says air rifle gets his vote too. And he says it is not a Saiga:

I don’t think it’s a saiga, the front sight isn’t tall enough and the barrel is too long.

So, what is it?

G confusion

Anarchangel’s post is entitled Replacing the G36. At first, I thought he meant one of these and was wondering where he got one. Then I realized it was the compact 45 Glock.

We’re number one!

At incarcerating folks anyway.

Quote of the Day

Countertop:

I’m for the death penalty, preferably rendered prior to the crime being committed.

June 04, 2006

Sopranos

Thought this was supposed to be an extra long season ending the series. I find out tonight’s episode is the season finale? What’s up with that?

But next week is Deadwood. W00t!

Remember, I do this to entertain me, not you.

Uncle Pays the Bills

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