Great idea for anti-gun establishments

Ever start to walk into a store and see a sign saying it was a “weapons free zone” or the equivalent thereof?  I have.  And I have gone through the effort to get people to write/protest and get the sign taken down.  It’s a lot of work.  Here’s another way to perhaps change things.  It’s a “business card” you leave with the merchant instead of leaving them your money:


Front


Back

Only $10/100.  I just ordered some.  I wish I had them with me now.  I am going to the Seattle area tonight and would drop one off at Half-Priced Books in Bellevue.

The perfect is the enemy of the good

The title of this post is a quote from Neal Knox. For those of you that didn’t know him he was a wonderful pro-gun activist. He was very politically savvy and someone I admired tremendously. He died last January (see this post for more detail about his contributions). It was a great loss.

I’ve heard variations of that on numerous topics over the years. One of my favorites, because I’m an engineer, is, “There comes a time in the life of every project when it’s time to shoot the engineers and ship the product.” I think it was Isaac Asimov (not sure on this) who wrote a short science fiction story about a planet or alliance that lost a war and became slaves (?) to a technologically inferior opponent–because of their technological superiority. They wasted time building more advanced weapons and ships to “win the war sooner”. There were schedule slips and unforeseen problems that came up and their inferior enemy with “good enough” weapons won the war.

It’s very easy for people to ignore our fourth dimension–time. What will or might happen while we are waiting just a little bit longer to make things ‘perfect’? This applies in politics as well as business, self-defense, and war.

I wrote up a long post the other day about the bill commonly called Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms in which I hinted at this but probably didn’t go into enough detail about why I both agree and disagree with the Gun Owners of America on what actually got passed. It was listening to Neal Knox and Alan Gottlieb debate tactics at GRPC 1999 that I had my epiphany on this. What I learned in a few short minutes was the “tools” they had available to them in Congress were far more complex than what we might think they are. They are more powerful in some ways as well as far weaker in others than we, non-lobbyists, understand. Giving an ally something you considered a “sell out” could be far more important long term than insisting they strictly adhere to the principals you both shared.

I like what the GOA said. I like that they are a “No compromise” pro-gun organization. I want them screaming bloody murder each time the wimps at the NRA let “the tiger eat a friend” so the rest of us get to “live just one more day”. And I think it was right for them to complain in this case too. Trigger locks are not for everyone and it is a “tax” on gun sales.

I also think that, as said in my previous post, “It’s just a couple of old dried bones. Let them have their bones until after the next election. We get some real meat out of this law.” The NRA-ILA, the CCRKBA and the others were right. Defeat the wolf at the door of the firearms manufactures, distributors, and retailers. Let the snakes in the grass have some bugs to eat. When we regroup and come back we can focus on killing snakes without a wolf gnawing on our butt.

Quote of the day–Amanda Matlosz

They [Clinton’s “good job rating” poll results] would probably be higher if he had made a video.

Amanda Matlosz
12/21/98
[Sarcasm about the public opinion after it was revealed President Clinton had been having sex with an intern in the Oval Office and lied about it under oath. — Joe]

ACLU and the Second Amendment

Once upon a time, long, long ago (over 20 years) I had a membership with the ACLU for one year. They still send me letters telling me the sky is falling and I need to send them more money. For at least the last ten years when I get one of those letters I write them a short note saying when they support the Second Amendment as an individual right I will immediately send them a check for $200.00 but until then they will get nothing from me. I use their postage paid return envelope and send it back to them. They haven’t changed their way yet and I’m not holding my breath.

To be fair, they have been on the same side as pro-gun people on some issues. And I have been told by one very high ranking pro-gun activist that at least one ACLU lobbyist carried a handgun in her purse illegally while on the job because it was such a dangerous town. Just because the top leadership of the ACLU has made a decision not to support the Second Amendment doesn’t mean there aren’t a lot of them on our side. My guess is that a big part of the equation is that certain large donors to the ACLU are very anti-gun and being a pro-gun organization would cost them too much money.

See also my previous posts on this topic:

Advice for Democrats
I wonder if the ACLU will be interested
ACLU responds

PNNL.info site update or “The law doesn’t apply to us”

I updated my web site on the bigotry at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

The changes were about the Freedom Of Information Act (FOIA) request I mentioned in this post.  PNNL responded this week saying:

PNNL completed a diligent, thorough search for responsive documents and was unable to find identify or locate any existing records consistent with your request.

As of May of this year those “records” (computer programs actually) did exist.  I created a lot of them.  My co-workers used that code (computer program code) in other projects.  Those computer programs were delivered to numerous customers.  If what they just told me was true then they would have had to rewritten numerous computer programs, tested them, updated all their customers with the new versions, ensured those customers deleted all the old copies, and deleted large portions of their source control archives–all within two months.  Some customers were delivered source code (I did training for one customer on it), those customers would have had to also rewritten their derived works, tested the resultant programs, and deleted their source control archives.   If they were able to do that then which government contract did they charge those efforts to?  I don’t believe they did any of that.  I believe PNNL chose to defy FOIA.

Barb said (paraphrasing), “What did you expect?  They don’t care what the law is.  They don’t have to follow the rules.”  Of course in the practical sense that is true even if technically they do have to follow the law.  I had two different lawyers tell me it looked to them that PNNL employees had committed a felony in the actions they took against me.  Those people, as near as I can determine, still work there.

Another blog I’m posting on

Yesterday I was invited to be a guest blogger on Second Amendment matters at Conservative Thinking.  With their permission I have decided to not post anything on their blog that I don’t post here first.  As I pointed out in my introduction I don’t consider myself a “conservative” but on the Second Amendment there isn’t likely to be much divergence.  They do have numerous other bloggers that have very worthwhile postings so please do check them out.  I particularly liked these posts:

Brady bunch CEO resigns?

According to David Hardy at Arms and the Law quoting Daphne Retter, Congressional Quarterly Staff, CQ Today, October 19, 2005:

“It’s not an easy job to get up every day and duke it out with the gun lobby,” Michael Barnes, president and CEO of the Brady Campaign and Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, said Tuesday, “but it’s very important.”

Barnes resigned this week.

I have been unable to verify the resignation.  There is nothing I could find on the Brady Campaign nor the Brady Center websites about it.  Still, it is quite plausible.  They have been running up an impressive string of losses in recent years.  The “assault weapon” ban expired without a battle.  The passage of the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms bill (I commented on this yesterday) just bit a big chunk out of their mission statement.  They have lost numerous court cases.  FL passed the law that affirms innocent people can meet force with force and all the Brady bunch could do was whine about it.  And then the press wasn’t as sympathetic to them as they would normally expect:

Workers for a gun-control group protesting a new law that they say could put Florida tourists in harm’s way got a mixed reaction at Orlando International Airport on Thursday.

At least one visitor admonished workers for the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence for what she called a manipulation of the truth.

“It burns me up that they twist stuff around to misinform the public,” said Tamryn Hunter, who was catching a flight back to Pittsburgh when she ran into the workers handing out leaflets warning about the law.

The paper even included this picture of Ms. Hunter showing that she isn’t someone you would consider the stereotypical NRA member.

We must not let these wins cause us to go into celebration mode and neglect what we really have to do.  We must drive these anti-freedom bigots into political extinction.  As Chris(?) Knox said in a Firearms Coalition Alert email I received last night:

Eternal vigilance is the price of freedom. The game, God willing, is never over.

Jason update 10/20/2005

From his dad:

Sent: Thursday, October 20, 2005 6:23 PM

Jason has improved substantially today. He recognizes people and since morning when he was drifting in and out of reality. He can hold a conversation. His pain medications are very high and he still sees figures from movies like star wars but now he realizes that they are not real and I think he is amused by them.

Jason doctors (I have seen dozens of them literally today), say he is making good improvement. Jason insists, by the way, that he is involved in all conversations with medical staff. Tomorrow they are going to clean wounds and hopefully close the right arm. Although there is tremendous variation among patience he may be out patient in two to three weeks. However, he will still live on campus and will be treated everyday. These treatments will go for months.

Jason is thankful to be out of Iraq and is already making plans about what he wants to do when he recovers. I sure that his feels about the future will go up and down but with love and support of family and friends he will recover substantially physically and emotionally.

There was lots of good news today but I am sure there is going to be lots of pain and emotional stress as he recovers.

I am amaze that will all the suffering Jason is going through that he takes the time learn the name of each caregiver, establish a personal link with them and thanks them for helping him. For me this is true hero behavior.

Susan Jason got a cd player from the Red Cross today, it is a cheapy but things get stole here. I have bought him a i-pod with speakers and his friend said he could put cd on the ipod also. He does not have a tape player. I would not buy books or cd on tape. Yet if any of you have some that you like send it to him if you mind not getting it back. For other books let me see what he is interested in.

There have been some phone calls too.  Xenia posted about them.

The air is out of the gun control balloon

The house passed the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms today.  As a libertarian and a 2nd Amendment purist (“What part of shall not be infringed don’t you understand?”) I’m opposed to the law.  It simply shouldn’t be necessary.  These cases should be thrown out of court after the first 30 minutes.  As a pragmatist I support it because things are not working as they should and we apparently need to engage in some dirty fighting rather than remain pure.  As Joe Waldron (see also his comments in this news release) recently stated in an email to the WA-CCW Yahoo group:

We’re giving up required provision of a $5 locking device (nothing says you have to use them, nor does it say you can’t bring your own device from your previous gun purchase; you give the lock to the dealer, he gives it back to you with the gun) for the most significant tort reform bill in recent history, a bill that will protect gun manufacturers, distributors and dealers from nuisance lawsuits that are killing the industry. These suits are filed with almost no chance of succeeding, but cost the industry millions annually to defend.

The alternative is to hold out for a “pure” bill… and watch it die again this year. And the manufacturers/distributors/dealers will continue to shell out $$$ in legal costs.

It looks like the bill went 90% our way, 10% the other way. Those are pretty good odds/returns to me.

I’m all for winning and getting a little bit dirty rather than losing and staying clean.  Yes, it might have some unintended consequences with the trigger lock and armor piercing ammo provisions in it.  More on that later.  But more important is the favorable impact it has both practically and politically.  As reported by Reuters:

Opponents said they would oppose it in the courts, arguing it violated the U.S. Constitution.

But Wayne LaPierre, executive vice president of the National Rifle Association said he believed the bill’s passage would mark a big setback for gun control advocates.

“I think the air is out of the gun control balloon, and I think what popped the balloon is politics and elections,” he said. He predicted that several dozen Democrats would join most Republicans in backing the legislation.

I wouldn’t say “popped”.  It’s been leaking out for a couple years now.  It’s getting more and more obvious to everyone that the anti-gun crowd is suffering a meltdown.  Of course they have mental problems to support anti-freedom legislation to begin with but can be dealt with another day.  But because the people at large, many of the politicians, and to some extent the mainstream media are recognizing how really whacked out they are we have made huge gains.  Politically we are no longer on the defensive at the Federal level and in most states.  We need to build and maintain momentum against these nut cases.  I’ve posted on this before:

And just yesterday John Stossel demonstrated they are out of touch with reality quite well in a column on Townhall.com:

What if it were legal in America for adults to carry concealed weapons? I put that question to gun-control advocate Rev. Al Sharpton. His eyes opened wide, and he said, “We’d be living in a state of terror!”

In fact, it was a trick question. Most states now have “right to carry” laws. And their people are not living in a state of terror. Not one of those states reported an upsurge in crime.

But back to the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms bill.  It will be signed by President Bush and it will become law within a few days or weeks.  It will save the firearms industry millions of dollars each year.  It might even save your local gun range money in reduced insurance costs.  That money will be in your pocket (you do buy guns and ammo and use them, right?).

There are two downsides of the proposed law; 1) The trigger-lock requirement the Gun Owners of America have been harping on and 2) the armor piercing ammo portion of the law.  The GOA had this to say in a recent pre-written email they wanted people to send to their representatives:

S. 397 takes us dangerously close to mandatory trigger locks, and mandatory trigger locks kill.  Just ask Mary Carpenter, who has had to live with the fact that two of her grandchildren were killed in 2000, because no one in the house could disengage the gun locking device that kept the family from protecting themselves against a pitchfork wielding thug.

Yes.  Mandatory trigger locks are a bad thing.  I have a t-shirt I wear that says Trigger Locks–Rapist Approved (they are closing this item out and only have a few shirts left so buy one now!) but every new gun I have purchased over the counter, as opposed to special ordered, had a locking device with it anyway.  The impact of this law is very nearly zero in cost and behavior for everyone.

The armor piercing ammo portion of the law does not change the definition of the armor piercing ammo which was my big worry.  It’s still:

(A) The term “ammunition” means ammunition or cartridge cases, primers, bullets, or propellent powder designed for use in any firearm.

(B) The term “armor piercing ammunition” means—

(i) a projectile or projectile core which may be used in a handgun and which is constructed entirely (excluding the presence of traces of other substances) from one or a combination of tungsten alloys, steel, iron, brass, bronze, beryllium copper, or depleted uranium; or
(ii) a full jacketed projectile larger than .22 caliber designed and intended for use in a handgun and whose jacket has a weight of more than 25 percent of the total weight of the projectile.

(C) The term “armor piercing ammunition” does not include shotgun shot required by Federal or State environmental or game regulations for hunting purposes, a frangible projectile designed for target shooting, a projectile which the Attorney General finds is primarily intended to be used for sporting purposes, or any other projectile or projectile core which the Attorney General finds is intended to be used for industrial purposes, including a charge used in an oil and gas well perforating device.

What it does do is slightly reword some existing law and adds penalties for committing a violent crime with AP ammo.  The rewording has no legal impact as near as I can tell (I’m not a lawyer if this your life at stake talk to a lawyer).  This:

(7) for any person to manufacture or import armor piercing ammunition, except that this paragraph shall not apply to—

(A) the manufacture or importation of such ammunition for the use of the United States or any department or agency thereof or any State or any department, agency, or political subdivision thereof;
(B) the manufacture of such ammunition for the purpose of exportation; and
(C) any manufacture or importation for the purposes of testing or experimentation authorized by the Attorney General;

(8) for any manufacturer or importer to sell or deliver armor piercing ammunition, except that this paragraph shall not apply to—

(A) the sale or delivery by a manufacturer or importer of such ammunition for use of the United States or any department or agency thereof or any State or any department, agency, or political subdivision thereof;
(B) the sale or delivery by a manufacturer or importer of such ammunition for the purpose of exportation;
(C) the sale or delivery by a manufacturer or importer of such ammunition for the purposes of testing or experimenting authorized by the Attorney General;

Becomes:

(7) for any person to manufacture or import armor piercing ammunition, unless–

(A) the manufacture of such ammunition is for the use of the United States, any department or agency of the United States, any State, or any department, agency, or political subdivision of a State;
(B) the manufacture of such ammunition is for the purpose of exportation; or
(C) the manufacture or importation of such ammunition is for the purpose of testing or experimentation and has been authorized by the Attorney General;

(8) for any manufacturer or importer to sell or deliver armor piercing ammunition, unless such sale or delivery–

(A) is for the use of the United States, any department or agency of the United States, any State, or any department, agency, or political subdivision of a State;
(B) is for the purpose of exportation; or
(C) is for the purpose of testing or experimentation and has been authorized by the Attorney General;

So what is happening, in Joe’s model of the political world, is that the good guys are throwing a couple bones to the politicians that need to appease some anti-freedom people “back home”.  Those politicians can say, “I voted for the safety of our children by mandating trigger locks and against armor piercing ammo.”  It’s just a couple of old dried bones.  Let them have their bones until after the next election.  We get some real meat out of this law.

Quote of the day–Harry S Truman

At the present moment in world history nearly every nation must choose between alternative ways of life. The choice is too often not a free one.

One way of life is based upon the will of the majority, and is distinguished by free institutions, representative government, free elections, guarantees of individual liberty, freedom of speech and religion, and freedom from political oppression.

The second way of life is based upon the will of the minority forcibly imposed upon the majority. It relies upon terror and oppression, a controlled press and radio, fixed elections, and the suppression of personal freedoms.

I believe that it must be the policy of the United States to support free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures.

I believe that we must assist free peoples to work out their own destinies in their own way.

Harry S Truman
Message to Congress
Later known as Truman Doctrine
March 12, 1947

Hint to criminals using computers

Hint to criminals using computers–don’t.  The following is just the tip of the iceburg.  From Bruce Schneier:

Many color laser printers embed secret information in every page they print, basically to identify you by. Here, the EFF has cracked the code of the Xerox DocuColor series of printers.

Update: For those of you who didn’t really get what I was hinting on the first pass here it is spelled out for you:

Schoen said that the existence of the encoded information could be a threat to people who live in repressive governments or those who have a legitimate need for privacy. It reminds him, he said, of a program the Soviet Union once had in place to record sample typewriter printouts in hopes of tracking the origins of underground, self-published literature.

Jason Update 10/19/2005

From his Dad:

Tuesday, October 18, 2005 

Jason’s wounds were cleaned in preparation for his trip.  According to the Doctor his flesh looks healthy. 

He arrived in the U.S. about 7:00 PM.  Dan was able to see him.  Dan said that he did not look as bad as he expected.  He is stable and heavily sedated.

Wednesday, October 19, 2005

I just talk with Jason’s nurse.  She said that he is stable and able to follow simple commands.  He seems to be aware of his surrounding.  Jodi should arrive in D.C. this morning.  The Army is arranging for Katy, Lisa and my flights out.  I should fly out this afternoon.  Jason will go into surgery today to close his wounds. 

I may have trouble communicating regularly once I leave for D.C. 

Thank you all for nice emails and phone call.  We appreciate your support.

National Ammo Day–with a twist

National Ammo Day is only a month away and some people are talking about putting a twist on it this year.  The plan is for everyone to buy the same brand at the same time of day at WalMart.  I agree it has some amusement value.  Winchester white-box or Remington value-packs in your favorite caliber at 15:30 Central time on November 19th.