# Monday, March 31, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 31, 2008 7:02:03 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot )

Position 75 just opened up. This is a position that requires a shooting bench. You can see the pictures and sign up to take the position here.

The shooter in position 76 lost his spotter and:

I need a single entrant from Seattle area that can share gas and lodging expenses. I will be leaving Friday morning and returning Sunday night.

If you would like to be that person send me an email with your contact information and I will forward the information on.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 31, 2008 11:59:55 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot | Gun Rights )

I've made the big time.

If you mouse over the link to me it even says, "He blows stuff up."

Free entry to Boomershoot to whoever is writing this great blog.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 31, 2008 11:53:12 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Quote of the Day )

If there is anything the nonconformist hates worse than a conformist it's another nonconformist who doesn't conform to the prevailing standard of nonconformity.

Bill Vaughan
[Continuing the theme of humans as pack animals.--Joe]

# Sunday, March 30, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Sunday, March 30, 2008 6:57:41 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( )

If anyone doubts that there's an epidemic of gun violence in this country, let these statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention explain just one category of it: In 2004, 5,292 young people ages 10 to 24 were murdered -- that's 15 per day -- 81 percent with a firearm. Homicide is the second leading cause of death in this age group.

And here is a sad commentary on how far removed the nation is from confronting this scourge that leads to the deaths of thousands of children a year and wounds thousands of others, not to mention many more adults: The discussion inevitably gets bogged down in conflict over gun rights and gun control.

The Patriot-News
March 30, 2008
Rather than get bogged in rights vs. gun control, focus on why so many are bent on destruction
[I just thought people should know that someone 24 years old is considered a child. Apparently someone changed the definition and never bothered to tell the rest of us. And that includes Merriam-Webster.--Joe]

# Saturday, March 29, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 29, 2008 12:21:39 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Politics )

Via a tip from the Apex of the Triangle of Death I discovered Kansas is considering allowing private citizens to possess suppressors, machine guns, and short barreled shotguns again. Here are some articles on it:

Here is the existing law. Here is the House bill that quietly repeals it. Here is the Senate Bill with which it must be reconciled.

The Kansas House approved this bill by a vote of 105-18!

And speaking of pack animals and conforming with the herd, this is from another news story on the Kansas class III issue:

The House gave final approval to a bill allowing dealers, manufacturers and private citizens to own machine guns, which would bring Kansas in line with all but a handful of states.

"I don't pass judgment on why people want to own anything — Mercedeses, mink coats, diamond rings, fully automatic weapons," said Rep. Candy Ruff, D-Leavenworth, a sponsor of the measure.

The emphasis is mine.

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 29, 2008 11:36:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

Sign up here.

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 29, 2008 11:22:40 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | When Prophecy Fails )

The observation that most humans are "pack animals" and conformists leads me to conclude that in addition to having the obvious detrimental effects of forcing conformity to harmful and even dangerous beliefs there are ways this human characteristic can be exploited to the advantage of freedom loving people. In essence we need to align the pack norms with our principles rather than let the anti-freedom movement align them for us.

I haven't read it, but I suspect Groupthink: Psychological Studies of Policy Decisions and Fiascoes would be very insightful. In the absence of my doing the proper research here are my speculations on the gun issue and how we might take advantage of this human characteristic:

  • The more gun owners "come out of the closet" the more difficult it is for the anti-gun bigots to herd the pack in the desired direction.
  • The more times you take a new shooter to the range the less people there will be who accept the implied characterization by the bigots of all gun owners as actual or imminent criminals.
  • Every time you speak up when someone else is denigrating gun ownership you make it more difficult for others to agree with the anti-gun position.
  • Every time a piece of pro-gun legislation is introduced and/or passed it makes it harder for the anti-gun forces to introduce their legislation even if it is mostly unrelated to the pro-gun law. Hence getting a state preemption law passed (YEAH Mike!) helps prevent "assault weapon" legislation from getting a toehold. Another example would be a law requiring the ownership of firearms in one city throws into question a proposal in another state or city to limit gun ownership.
  • Every court ruling that says gun ownership, no matter how narrowly defined and incremental from the existing group think, is a right protected by the constitution it makes it harder for the bigots to get critical mass for restricting some other aspect of gun ownership.

We need to create a "pack" where gun ownership and freedom is the predominant viewpoint. When the forces of anti-gun bigotry and socialism are viewed with justified contempt the forces of freedom can then advance and turn back the terrible cloud hanging over our country and the world.

When Prophecy Fails also gives us insight and ideas for breaking people out of the pack

Are there any pro-freedom psychologists and sociologists out there that can contribute more on this topic?

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 29, 2008 10:09:31 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Home Life )
By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 29, 2008 10:06:09 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Ballistics | Gun Rights )

I really like what Ronnie Barrett has to say here:

Be aware there are more companies that will respect this position. If Hawaii or any state bans the sale of the .50-caliber rifle, we will immediately stop the sale and service of all Barrett products to that state’s government agencies. We will also welcome all small arms manufacturers to take the same action.

He already stopped sales to California as did STI.

I did a similar thing with my restrictions on Modern Ballistics. But I have no way to enforce this when the downloads are free and essentially anonymous. Plus I have only received a couple hundred dollars for all the hundreds of downloads and usage of the product over the years. Any income I lose from adhering to my principles is measured in pennies.

While I greatly admire and encourage the Barrett and STI actions it is not my pocket book that suffers from this. I know other manufactures that simply cannot afford to refuse sales to California because of the volume of business they would lose.

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 29, 2008 8:41:54 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Crap for brains | Freedom | Gun Rights )

Via an email from Kirby I get this link and story:

LARP fans at Bowling Green State University may have to contend with a crippled game of Zombies vs. Humans after the University banned Nerf guns on campus.

Nerf guns are banned???

I started poking around the University website to try and figure out what sort of place this is. I found this scary:

Established in 1910 to educate teachers, BGSU is the 14th largest producer of teachers in the country

They pride themselves on producing teachers and they think 18 year olds should not be allowed to have Nerf guns? I think some teachers of teachers need to be taught something. Perhaps some time at a reeducation camp would help. I suggest they start with the U.S. Consitution and the basics of a free society.

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 29, 2008 8:06:40 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Politics | Quote of the Day )

Americans have a very low tolerance for differentness, whether it's racial, ethnic, or sexual.  Despite our rhetoric about individualism, we are a desperately conforming people.

Martin Duberman
[My QOTD from yesterday was on this same topic. As I was laying in bed last night I had a lot more thoughts on the topic and decided to make a post on the subject. When looking for a QOTD for today this one jumped out at me. I'll try to get the post out sometime this morning.--Joe]

# Friday, March 28, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 28, 2008 1:16:35 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot | Crap for brains | Current News | Politics )

Seattle and surrounding areas in the Puget Sound are now getting heavy snow. Visibility is only a few blocks as I look out the window of our building here in Redmond.

I'm fairly certain Al Gore would agree with me, and I know Phil does. It's all because of man caused global warming climate change.

Update: The storm forecast for the Boomershoot site:

OROFINO/GRANGEVILLE REGION-LOWER HELLS CANYON/SALMON RIVER REGION-

132 PM PDT FRI MAR 28 2008

...SNOW ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM 5 PM THIS AFTERNOON TO 5 AM PDT SATURDAY...

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN MISSOULA HAS ISSUED A SNOW ADVISORY...WHICH IS IN EFFECT FROM 5 PM THIS AFTERNOON TO 5 AM PDT SATURDAY.

2 TO 5 INCHES OF SNOW ARE EXPECTED FROM LATE THIS AFTERNOON THROUGH SATURDAY MORNING AS A COLD FRONT PASSES THROUGH THE AREA TONIGHT. QUICK BURSTS OF MODERATE TO HEAVY SNOWFALL WILL BE ASSOCIATED WITH THE FRONTAL PASSAGE.

By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 28, 2008 8:14:54 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Politics | Quote of the Day | Sex )

The problem, it seems to me, is this. People are pack animals and they want -- need -- approval from the herd. So, forcing this one-size-fits-not-nearly-everyone way of life down everyone's throat is detrimental to everyone. Living a life that doesn't fit is miserable and that misery plays out in unhappy ways in people's lives.

Jenny Block
March 27, 2008
Open Relationships: What the World Already Has
[The pack animal observation applies to so many things that bug me about people. It is a huge component of the attacks on freedom. From gay rights and gun control to religious intolerance you will find this urge to conform and to enforce conformity playing a big part.--Joe]

# Thursday, March 27, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Thursday, March 27, 2008 10:19:39 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot | Home Life | Quote of the Day )

I am not amused.

Xenia Huffman-Scott
March 27, 2008
Not amused
[Check out the picture she posted. There are two inches of new snow in Moscow, Idaho this morning. The Boomershoot site, already deeper in snow than I care for this close to the event, is at a higher altitude and probably got even more snow. This could be the year where Boomershooters get to practice long range shooting in "real world conditions" of mud and/or snow. For years Ry has been urging me to make the event more challenging by making people shoot prone from a mud pit mixed with ice and gravel while we hose them down with water. This year might be Ry's fantasy, without the gravel, come true with the help of Mother Nature. I'll bring Ry gravel for his shooting position.--Joe]

# Wednesday, March 26, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 26, 2008 11:39:12 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

Sebastian alerts us to this bigot. Comments are open and appropriate measures have been taken.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 26, 2008 9:06:49 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

H/T to Uncle.

Mangan is reading the Brady script to CNN this time (previous posts about Mangan):

ATF special agent Tom Mangan says the .50-caliber rifle has become one of the "guns of choice" for the drug cartels. The weapon fires palm-sized .50-caliber rounds that can cut through just about anything.

Mangan showed CNN the power of the rifle on a gun range near Phoenix, Arizona. The weapon, a Barrett, was seized in an ATF raid. A round fired from 100 yards away tore through a car door and both sides of a bulletproof vest like those used by Mexican police.

"There's nothing that's going to stop this round," Mangan says.

The rifle was intercepted as it was being smuggled into Mexico. Mangan says investigators believe four others already had passed through the border.

Watch the video to see and hear the emotional appeal these bigots invoke. What they don't seem to realize is all this is caused by the banning of recreational drugs. In other words, governments cause crime.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 26, 2008 8:23:24 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot )

On Saturday Caleb and I visited the Boomershoot site to do some maintenance, explosive experiments, and to inspect the site.

The maintenance went fairly well. I discovered why one of the WiFi access points wasn't working. It will take another trip out there to verify my fix but I'm pretty confident it will work. The new inverter I had installed last fall didn't want to start up until after we fiddled with it for quite a while and I don't trust it. I'm going to get another one. And finally we installed a petcock on the pipe for our "well" so we could easily drain the water out of it.

The explosive experiments went well enough. We mixed up two batches of Boomerite. One was made with the old fertilizer grade ammonium nitrate. The other batch used the new explosive grade ammonium nitrate I purchased last June. We did a quick test with the new stuff last September and suspected it was not as sensitive as the older material. Our tests on Saturday confirmed those suspicions.

Using CCI Stinger .22LR ammo from about 65 yards the old would detonate reliable but the new would only detonate about one out of three hits.

Using American Eagle .22LR ammo at 12 yards the old would detonate about one out of three hits but the new would not detonate even one out of five or six hits. At 10 yards the old would detonate every time and the new only about one out three hits.

Our conclusion is to get the same probability of detonation the new material requires about another 10 fps of velocity. This is measurable but not a big enough deal to spend the effort to try and improve the mix.

The biggest issue I have concerns about is the condition of the site. It was five weeks from the big day (April 27th) and there are still drifts well over knee deep in places.


View of most of the target area and part of the .50 Caliber Ghetto.


This is the road leading into the parking area and a neighbor's car.


This is The Berm shooters use for prone shooting. That snow drift is probably two to three feet deep.


This is the hillside shooting area where targets in the 500 to 700 range are placed. There are some big drifts out there.


I'm really glad we paved the target construction area with concrete blocks last fall. This will keep us out of the mud.


This is the 375 yard target area. It is very, very wet and muddy.


Caleb next to one of the snow piles at my parents and brothers farm.


I spent some time talking to my brother about the ground conditions.

My brother Doug and I talked for a while about the weather. He is of the opinion it would take about three weeks of good weather to dry up to the point where they could start farming. If they can be in the fields we would have excellent conditions for Boomershoot. However, the weather forecast for the next ten days is for rain and cloudy weather. Therefore my best guess is that Boomershoot 2008 will be on the damp side. I'll visit the site again at two weeks and one week prior to the event and have better information. Attendees should have contingency plans for muddy ground unless I give a better report just before the event.


Caleb spotted ten wild turkeys as we were headed home.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 26, 2008 6:40:35 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Crap for brains | Politics | Quote of the Day )

To hear some men talk of the government, you would suppose that Congress was the law of gravitation, and kept the planets in their places.

Wendell Phillips
[I was reminded of this one by BillH's Hillary Is Delusional post.--Joe]

# Tuesday, March 25, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 25, 2008 10:30:43 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

Every once in a while I try posting a comment to Bryan Miller's blog. About two thirds of the time the comment does not appear. The following are my last two failed attempts.

This was in response to The Supremes and the 2nd Amendment:

It's also very instructive the Bryan does not answer any questions or engage the people that comment here. He merely makes his pronouncements and ignores the refutations of his claims. If he were to engage what I have found most useful in dealing with his type is to insist they answer Just One Question: "Can you demonstrate one time or place, throughout all history, where the average person was made safer by restricting access to handheld weapons?" I've been pushing this question for years without anyone being able to give a coherent answer they have been able to defend.

This was in response to Pennsylvania's murderous burden on New Jersey:

Or maybe the criminologist and sociologists who study criminals. Claims that restrictions on firearms make people safer are without a factual basis. If they did you would expect to see some benefit from Washington D.C.'s ban. But you don't. Even broader studies of less severe restrictions have been unable to find benefits.

So with so many "experiments" done with firearms restrictions with, at best, nothing to show for it in terms of public safety, what is your real reason for advocating such restrictions?

JadeGold, I'm not rotund, don't own a LaZBoy or similar type chair, haven't had a CheetoTM in months, and have never seen Red Dawn. Perhaps you were engaging in some projection.

The JadeGold comment I was responding to appears to have been deleted.

Update: The first comment above did ultimately appear. I had refreshed the page several times without seeing but I went back after seeing the comment from Rob (below) and it now shows up. Also, I updated my comment to make it coherent. [blush]

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 25, 2008 10:08:37 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

Their website just went live today: FOS Ammunition.

They have .45 ACP, .40 S&W, and .223. They are IPSC shooters and are targeting other IPSC shooters with their offerings.

These are a couple of my shooting buddies so don't expect me to give them unbiased reviews.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 25, 2008 9:16:55 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom )

I sent out a couple emails using some "back channels" after I posted this. I wonder if it got someone stirred up:

Domain Name   usdoj.gov ? (U.S. Government)
IP Address   149.101.1.# (US Dept of Justice)
ISP   US Dept of Justice
Location  
Continent  :  North America
Country  :  United States  (Facts)
State  :  District of Columbia
City  :  Washington
Lat/Long  :  38.9097, -77.0231 (Map)
Distance  :  2,071 miles
Language   English (U.S.)
en-us
Operating System   Microsoft WinXP
Browser   Internet Explorer 6.0
Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1; DOJ3jx7bf; .NET CLR 1.1.4322; InfoPath.1; .NET CLR 2.0.50727)
Javascript   version 1.3
Monitor  
Resolution  :  1024 x 768
Color Depth  :  32 bits
Time of Visit   Mar 25 2008 8:42:16 am
Last Page View   Mar 25 2008 8:43:03 am
Visit Length   47 seconds
Page Views   3
Referring URL http://search.yahoo....args=0&pstart=1&b=31
Search Engine search.yahoo.com
Search Words atf forfeiture blog
Visit Entry Page   http://blog.joehuffm...ThinkForfeiture.aspx
Visit Exit Page   http://blog.joehuffm...ThinkForfeiture.aspx
Out Click    
Time Zone   UTC-4:00
Visitor's Time   Mar 25 2008 12:42:16 pm
Visit Number   273,824

They are looking pretty deep because my blog was number 39 on the list of hits.

I just wonder if they will find it cause to demote or to promote.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 25, 2008 8:21:50 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Sex )

Dr. Joe's cure for everything for over 30 years is getting more attention. The details are here, but the overview is:

  1. Sex Relieves Stress
  2. Sex Boosts Immunity
  3. Sex Burns Calories
  4. Sex Improves Cardiovascular Health
  5. Sex Boosts Self-Esteem
  6. Sex Improves Intimacy
  7. Sex Reduces Pain
  8. Sex Reduces Prostate Cancer Risk
  9. Sex Strengthens Pelvic Floor Muscles
  10. Sex Helps You Sleep Better
By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 25, 2008 7:59:27 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

Now, I think this goes to the heart of the matter, because the gun-control advocates--it isn't so much that they are against guns; they're just against the idea of killing. Guns kill people. And there is simply no way the two sides are ever going to be able to come to terms. But I think the idea of gun control is going to die with this decision.

Dan Henninger
Wall Street Journal columnist and deputy editor
March 24, 2008
The Journal Editorial Report
[He was referring to the Heller case. He betrays his bias with the "Guns kill people" line and his belief that gun controllers are against killing. If they were just against killing they would recognize the fact that guns are used to protect innocent life far more frequently than they are used to take innocent life. But he gets it right that there is no coming to terms between the two sides and that there is a good chance that gun control is going die or at least have some serious health problems if this decision goes down like we think it will.--Joe]

# Monday, March 24, 2008
By: Lyle at UltiMAK Monday, March 24, 2008 6:24:55 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Crap for brains | Freedom | Politics )

I've written about this several times over the years, but it takes a true scholar to do a superior job of it.  A while back, Jonah Goldberg did just that, and Thomas Sowell did a review on Goldgerg's book:

Fascism, initially recognized as a kindred ideology of the left, has since come down to us defined as being on "the right" — indeed, as representing the farthest right, supposedly further extensions of conservatism.

The next time you hear Leftists throwing the word "Fascist" about like a general epithet, and then hanging it around the necks of capitalists or Jeffersonian liberals, you can correct their rather silly (and I have to think willfully ignorant) error.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 24, 2008 7:44:26 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Technology )

I've never had a big problem with automated traffic law enforcement as long as it was used only for enforcement of moving violations and not for general surveillance.

Now you can add another objection to my list of objections. From Dallas:

Citywide statistics obtained by NBC affiliate KXAS-TV found that red light cameras do reduce accidents. That is a good thing.

But they do it by reducing red light violations, by as much as 29 percent from month to month at particularly busy Dallas intersections. On the face of it, that, too, is a good thing — but not, necessarily, if you rely on traffic fines to make up a healthy chunk of your budget.

Dallas lawmakers originally estimated gross revenue of $15 million from their 62 cameras this fiscal year, which ends June 30. But City Manager Mary Suhm estimated last week that the city would fall short by more than $4 million.

So Friday, the city turned off about a quarter of the least profitable cameras, saying it couldn’t justify the cost of running them.

Yeah, I'm naive, I take things at face value. I actually believed traffic law enforcement was to reduce personal injury and property damage, not just a source of revenue. I don't recall ever believing in Santa Claus and having the myth shattered, but this must be what it feels like.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 24, 2008 7:29:18 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Sex )

I remember this sad woman that lived in the same condominium complex as Barb and I who each weekend seemed to have a different guy leaving her place in the early morning. She never seemed happy and we always figured it was self esteem problem and the pond scum she brought home didn't make the situation any better. Now some researchers have some data on women, depression, and sex. I wonder if the researchers investigated the self-esteem issue and if the "self medication" aspects of using sex for treating their depression benefited them in the long term. And of course they should also explore which, if any, was cause and which was effect. Or was it just correlation?

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 24, 2008 7:14:45 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot | Crap for brains )

Just go to Boomershoot. Don't set off dynamite on the sundeck of the hotel you are staying in. Not only do we do it legally and cheaper (considering all the damage they did, let alone the cost of the lawyers), we will detonate about 1000 times more explosives.

[H/T to Sean, Ry, and Glenn Reynolds.]

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 24, 2008 7:05:22 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

The level of intensity in that courtroom defies description. The brain power those nine people brought to bear, on top of the months of prep from the litigants, was exhausting. Any more time than we spent would have been overwhelming. It’s a good thing it’s kept to an hour (and this case ran 38 minutes long, quite rare). You just fit everything in, then declare an ending.

Alan Korwin
March 20, 2008
D.C. v. Heller Eyewitness Report -- Analysis 1
[I wasn't there but the intensity comes through loud and clear from all the reports I've read and listened to. I was surprised at the extent of understanding of the issue. From English common law to the problems with trigger locks the justices were prepped as well or better than anyone I have ever met. To stand in front of the and defend a position would be very, very intense.--Joe]

# Sunday, March 23, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Sunday, March 23, 2008 6:32:24 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Politics | Quote of the Day )

Christmas is the time when kids tell Santa what they want and adults pay for it. Deficits are when adults tell government what they want and their kids pay for it.

Richard Lamm
[This quote reminds me of a book I just finished listening to: The Coming Economic Collapse: How You Can Thrive When Oil Costs $200 a Barrel by Stephen Leeb and Glen Strathy. It has some interesting stuff in it. He claims we are headed for some very bad times, "Unless government does something." Of course this annoys me a great deal unless he means that government should stop meddling in the free market. Published in 2006 he correctly predicted $100/barrel oil when it was $60 and the DOE was predicting it would return to the $35 to $45 range. He said gold would skyrocket. He is saying that we could even see the collapse of civilization because of the shortage of energy and our large debt.--Joe]

# Saturday, March 22, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 22, 2008 9:06:51 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Politics | Quote of the Day )

If you put the federal government in charge of the Sahara Desert, in 5 years there'd be a shortage of sand.

Milton Friedman

# Friday, March 21, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 21, 2008 9:47:57 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Gun Rights )

I met Alan Korwin at the Gun Rights Policy Conference in 1999 and 2000. I was very impressed both times.

Read what more on what he has to say about the Heller case.

By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 21, 2008 9:30:07 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Blog stuff | Boomershoot | Home Life )

Blogging will be light for a few days while I work on Boomershoot 2008 tasks. I give you Xenia as a substitute...

It's becoming a tradition. During Xenia's spring break we go to Portland, visit Powell's, I buy books on explosives, and we get Voodoo Donuts.

And, again, Xenia captures it in pictures.

By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 21, 2008 9:25:17 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Quote of the Day )

A government that is big enough to give you all you want is big enough to take it all away.

Barry Goldwater

# Thursday, March 20, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Thursday, March 20, 2008 8:48:12 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom )

Grrrrr... Even if the ATF and police didn't actually get the lawyer-client conversation tapes (I don't trust them to tell us the truth about this), that they admit to getting a list of the times and duration of the calls is unacceptable to me. Even if I don't have access to the actual content of your phone calls and email if I have all the other information the traffic analysis alone can reveal far more about you than you might want known.

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, March 20, 2008 8:40:12 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Gun Rights | Politics )

Throughout the Heller case I think most hard core gun rights activists have been thinking "Will this help or hurt machine guns? Even if the Supreme Court slaps D.C. down on handguns, rifles, and shotguns will they create a rule or test that slams the door on machine guns becoming commonly available?"

I've been, behind the scenes, asking people not to even talk about machine guns in the context of Heller. My thought was that if machine guns are ignored in the Heller decision, then if we do things right after a Heller win we can get some machine gun relief eventually. Obviously it came up in a big way during the oral arguments. Some people have been critical of Gura for "throwing machine guns under the bus" during the oral arguments. I am not one of them. I viewed it as unfortunate collateral damage. We needed to bomb the crap out of D.C. and they were holding machine guns as hostages. It was more important to destroy D.C. now than to try and figure out a way to get the machine guns to safety. We might still be able to resurrect machine guns, they aren't really dead, just on life support.

Now, via Uncle, I find Gura responds. I agree with him.

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, March 20, 2008 8:09:13 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

The following is from a reader regarding my post Slaves are about to be freed. He reveals that he and his family are so far unarmed but strongly support the RKBA. He lives in the California which puts a severe chilling effect on actually possessing firearms.

From: Rob 
Sent: Wednesday, March 19, 2008 2:42 PM
To: Joe Huffman
Subject: Re: Your post: "Slaves are about to be freed "

 

Joe,

 

I was waiting for the other shoe to drop.

 

I think we should start preparing to use a new weapon that we might well have in our arsenal by July. As with all new weapons we need to train with it and plan how to use it before we can use it to maximum effectiveness.”

 

I thought you were going to write about a newly informed populace and moreover, new shooters

 

The biggest thing we can have/build is numbers.  Politicians can read polls.  If we have the majority of folks behind us (as I think we do) we tend to win.  If we have repeated instances of the Kim du Toit happy dance for new shooters, then we have motivated people behind us. 

 

Numbers are what the Brady Bunch worked on for a long time, but they are in trouble because they are selling a negative – the momentum has shifted. 

 

The intermediate victory is that we have begun to sell gun ownership and carrying as a positive.  A place not to let up is the “Gun Free Zone” nonsense.  We need to make darned sure that private defensive use of firearms in such situations is responsible and underscored in the media as such.  The Brady Bunch has no answer for this.

 

People are the new weapon.  The most potent weapon is people who understand RKBA truth and wield it well - freed slaves, empowered private citizens.

 

I see the training as literal, for new shooters. (My little family - for example - will someday, God willing, be new shooters.  We are pro-gun and pointedly so, but not –yet- armed.)  The gun community needs to train train train,  Now is not a time for a blossoming of gun accidents because people do not know and strictly follow Cooper’s four rules.

 

When we add to our numbers (who this we unarmed white man?) we win.

 

When even those who do not choose to arm themselves are happy to allow us to do so, we triumph.

 

I think I hear the sound of triumph approaching just over the next hill.

 

Rob

All good points. I'm sure there are others that can be made. I just threw things together off the top of my head to get people started thinking. Please keep thinking and if you want it to have more visibility than a comment email it to me and I'll probably post it.

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, March 20, 2008 7:59:20 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Quote of the Day )

I have heard the bullets whistle; and believe me, there is something charming in the sound.

George Washington
After returning from a battle during the Revolutionary War.
[For a general he was quite the bad-ass. He had horses shot out from under him. His coat had numerous bullet holes in it. His accomplishments as a young officer were rather daring as well. To say that Washington was "highly regarded" by his men and country would be a huge understatement. My school history books did not do him justice.--Joe]

# Wednesday, March 19, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 19, 2008 10:58:47 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

I already told you what TSA really means.

Now Jed spills the beans on what ATF really means and the U.S. Government backs him up on it.

Scary stuff.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 19, 2008 10:00:51 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

H/T to Rob who sent me the link and made at least a tenuous connection to my previous efforts.

Jonathan Rauch. Does that name sound familiar to you? And if so what did he do for gun owners?

Okay, so maybe one out of 50 or 100 gun rights people will recognize it. You would have to be pretty hard core (potential pun material) to recognize his name and make the connection to gun rights.

So, Rauch just published an article in Reason: The Right Kind of Gun Rights--Why the D.C. case is about self defense. Before I tell you the first article he wrote which got my attention and ultimately nearly all gun rights activists here's the final clue--from todays article:

Yesterday, unbeknownst to itself, the Supreme Court heard arguments in a gay-rights case. To most people, admittedly, District of Columbia v. Heller is a gun-rights case. In fact, it's the most important gun-rights case in decades, one that may cast a shadow for decades to come. But to gay Americans, and other minorities often targeted with violence, Heller is about civil rights, not shooting clubs.

To put it all together, this is from the main page on the Pink Pistols website:

"Thirty-one states allow all qualified citizens to carry concealed weapons. In those states, homosexuals should embark on organized efforts to become comfortable with guns, learn to use them safely and carry them. They should set up Pink Pistols task forces, sponsor shooting courses and help homosexuals get licensed to carry. And they should do it in a way that gets as much publicity as possible."

--Jonathan Rauch, Salon Magazine, March 13, 2000

Yeah, now you should remember. Jonathan Rauch wrote an article and the Pink Pistols spontaneously burst up out of nothingness and gives the gun hating liberals severe indigestion to this day.

Cool, you say. But so what?

What's interesting to me is that some other people and I had been trying for a year or two before Rauch wrote his article to get something going (see the Lewiston Morning Tribune and the Seattle Times) using the same concept. We didn't get much traction. Perhaps it was the wider distribution of his article. Or maybe it was just an idea whose time had finally come. Perhaps it was just the right person got the message and had better organization skills than we did. Or maybe Rauch puts his words together in some magic way. No matter. Rauch wrote a single article and did massive damage to those that would take our freedoms away from us.

Sometimes the pen is mightier than the sword and Rauch demonstrated that in a big way.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 19, 2008 9:19:27 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Crap for brains | Gun Rights )

I had seen the graphics below before but just shook my head and went on. Reader Rob sent them to me today and pointed out it's self-parodying. They are from the main page of the Brady Campaign website.

In the first graphic they actually say guns murdered people. It seems to me if that is the case all those biologists trying to create and/or modify life in a "test tube" should be redirected to study common metals, charcoal forges, hammers, and drills. Apparently the secret to life was discovered with the invention of the first firearms four or five hundred years ago.

Okay, so maybe I was taking them a little too literally. But my point is they twist the meanings of words to achieve their goals. It is only by telling half-truths and sometimes outright lies that they can achieve political traction. We need to rub their noses in it in a very public manner.

In the second graphic they try to take advantage of a negative stereotype of the gun owner as a vandal who shoots up a sign. They also imply that disallowing guns makes a workplace safer. To test that hypothesis answer this question, "Which is a safer workplace, a maximum security prison or a police station?" Nearly no one has a gun in the prison (including the guards who are in contact with the prisoners) and almost everyone has a gun in the police station. Of course the police station is safer--because the people there are much more likely to be trustworthy people. It's the people, not the guns, that make the difference.

In the world view of the Brady bunch the concept of there being more than one variable that contributes to personal safety is too difficult of a concept. Guns have no will of their own and are tools that can be used for good or evil but making the intellectual leap from the gun to the person pulling the trigger is just asking too much of their feeble brains.

Either that or they have mental problems.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 19, 2008 8:05:12 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Technology )

Last night I wrote a simple encryption program. Basically it's "Encryption for Dummies". You can use it to encrypt text message such as email or even instant messages.

Here is the zip file: CryptLight_1_0_0_1.zip (225.56 KB)

Download it. Unzip it, read the ReadMe.htm file and you should know all you need to know about it. If it sounds like something you could use run Setup.exe and have fun.

As a test message use this with the passphrase of "Password" (without the quotes):

gmPtGYutvQCrqXMT++rFLwcN53qTuDpieDL/Z3svuIz4RnHNTCeJ+8aGC4Z2orZ9Zsen/rg7
8JG/Rm/cQ33D5bqSWqTXU4ctDCabZAKw2po=

Update: I forgot to mention, because of my exceedingly Microsoft centric view of the universe, this only works on Windows. I tested it on XP and 32 and 64-bit versions of Vista.

Update2: If you enter in corrupted cipher text and try to decrypt the program will crash. I have fixed it but haven't released new version yet. I'll wait for a few more days to get feedback and bug reports. Consider what you have as an Alpha release.

By: Lyle at UltiMAK Wednesday, March 19, 2008 1:09:40 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Crap for brains | Current News | Gun Rights )

What if DC citizens get to exercise their right to keep a functional, loaded firearm in the home for self defense, and the crime rate drops?  What if at some point DC gets legal concealed carry, and crime rates drop even more?

Won't the antis just hate that?

Yes, I think it is reasonable to assume they would see that as a defeat and absolutely hate it (it's exactly how they viewed all other defeats, where crime has dropped after a new concealed carry shall-issue law) which points to the utter depravity of these people, and the lie they've been telling us when they claim that what they're doing is about "safety".

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 19, 2008 1:02:35 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Politics )

We don't have the best Brady score yet, but we are working on it.

Many, many thanks to Mike Brown at Idaho Sport Shooters Alliance who wrote this bill and pushed it through.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 19, 2008 10:22:19 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Gun Rights )

I like the one from SAF. A short excerpt:

“An affirmative ruling, which we anticipate sometime in late June,” he concluded, “will provide a foundation upon which other Draconian firearms laws can be challenged, and more importantly, it will destroy a fantasy that has become a cornerstone argument for restrictive gun control laws. This should put an end to the lie that the Second Amendment only protects some mythical right of the states to organize a militia. That was not true when the amendment was written, it is not true today, and it will not be true tomorrow, regardless how hard extremist gun banners try to make it so.”

The NRA-ILA release looks like it was written the day before. They can do better.

Nothing from GOA.

Update: The NRA did get in the news with some strong statements.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 19, 2008 10:11:48 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Politics )

The day before yesterday I wrote about others contributing to and being a part of history in the Heller case. Certainly the participants in that battle did some really heavy lifting and deserve credit for it. I'm also hearing some of them say encouraging words to the effect that they couldn't have done it alone. That all the decades of activism on the part of the grass roots and enabled them attempt lopping off the head of the beast yesterday.

Listen to what Dave Kopel says.

Ashley Varner at NRA-ILA sent me this in an email after I told her to tend to important things and not to worry about answering my email right away:

I must kindly take issue with your last email. Don't say you are unimportant -- if I were to believe the Brady Campaign claims, we are all a part of the Triangle of Death and each of our different roles are important to the cause of pissing off anti-gunners, educating the mass of gun owners, inspiring others to join the fight and above all, preserving liberty for our future generations. :-)

I have two "take aways" (Is that in common usage? Or is that just a Microsoft thing?) from this:

  1. The big hitters in our political game (a game of life and death!) are gracious.
  2. A contribution even at the very lowest levels make a difference so don't think you can't or don't help by getting involved.
By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 19, 2008 9:30:53 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

I have been reading (and listening) to a lot of material over the last 24 hours. No one has said they think the bigots are going to win on the individual versus collective right issue.

Reading the websites and listening to the statements from the bigots I get the impression that they are trying to hold things together and not collapse into disarray:

The Brady Bunch:

"Today, the Justices of the Supreme Court thoroughly discussed the Second Amendment of the Constitution for the first time in nearly 70 years, in the District of Columbia v. Heller case.  Their probing questions, and the lawyers' responses, highlighted the complex history and competing approaches to gun regulation in our country.  I am hopeful that their ruling will uphold the right of people in communities like the District to enact common sense gun measures they feel are needed to protect themselves and their families.

"One of the reasons we have weak or nearly non-existent gun laws today is because a lot of politicians, and many citizens, think the Second Amendment limits our ability to enact common sense gun restrictions. Today's arguments, however, demonstrated broad support from all sides for responsible regulations concerning guns. 

"Think how much safer we all would be if we made it harder for dangerous people to get dangerous weapons nationwide, not just in a few areas."

The Gun Guys:

The VPC:

<crickets>

While cautioning that, as Barb and I say in cases like this, "I'll believe it when the check clears the bank", I think we should start preparing to use a new weapon that we might well have in our arsenal by July. As with all new weapons we need to train with it and plan how to use it before we can use it to maximum effectiveness.

The biggest issue I see is that we are, in a lot of ways, like slaves that have never known freedom. We are about to be freed from a terrible yoke and we have to learn how to use our new freedom on several different levels. If we don't we will mess up and we will still be "gun n***ers", freed, but still "gun n***ers" and subject to all the Jim Crow laws the bigots can muster.

  • Most importantly we must be responsible with our new tool. Challenging restrictions on RPGs, tanks, artillery, and even machine guns needs to be off the table. Just tell people, "That's not at issue here." When they insist, tell them there is no point in talking about it because it's not at issue.
  • We need to just hammer the bigots who for decades have claimed it was a "collective right". Anytime one of them says anything about gun control remind the world this is the same guy that lied to everyone about what the Second Amendment really means. Capture their quotes now before they try to rewrite history. Make them eat those words every time they open their mouth.
  • The bigots lied before and they are probably lying again. Make them completely justify every word and nuance. Put them and their organizations under the strictest scrutiny we can possibly deliver.
  • Remind the world the CCRKBA/GOA/JPFO/NRA/SAF/etc. was right. These are the people that have been defending inalienable civil rights and have been vilified by lying bigots all these years.
  • Attack, attack, attack. You don't win a war by playing nothing but defense. We must choose the battles, the skirmishes, and the conflicts.
  • 18 USC 241 and 242. It is a right. Those that oppose it are criminals. Tell your prosecutors, tell your representatives, tell the media, tell it to the bigots faces.
  • We must politically destroy the opposition. If nothing else I expect can financially destroy the organizations. We can probably turn a Heller victory in at least a moderate financial win for the pro gun side and even though the bigots might be able to get a short term financial boost I expect this ruling will impair their ability to raise funds long term. Their supporters will realize they have been lied to and it won't sit well that they have been supporting a lie.
  • Gun owners have been and are victims. Yeah, I know, it doesn't feel right to portray ourselves that way, but it's a powerful tool and it's true.

That's just what I can come up with off the top of my head. Think about it and try to realize that we have a completely new game with brand new rules here. Yes, technically the rules haven't changed they are just being enforced for the first time in, well, forever. But the things we can do now that we have rule book the other side is forced to accept changes the picture. Instead of arguing about the rule book we can now play the game.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 19, 2008 8:29:52 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Blog stuff | Gun Rights )
By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 19, 2008 8:15:04 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

I know a little something about state constitutional RKBA and I can tell you that Gura made exactly the wrong argument-- he started talking about how courts had interpreted these provisions 100 years later. Stevens was having none of this: he was allowed to make his point that it was 12-2 for a collective right in the early state constitutions. The correct argument was to put this in historical context: the citizens had just fought and won a revolution. Everybody was armed-- what the state constitutions were saying was:"Hey, we will never disarm the militia like the British just did!" The English did something similar after they kicked James II out-- they put a provision in their bill of rights guaranteeing an individual right for Protestants to have guns for personal protection. Stevens also made a big deal about this English bill of rights language showing that the english predecessor to the second amendment allowed parlimentary regulation of the right.

Gura could have neatly wrapped both these issues up together: The English Bill of Rights was adopted in the context of a revolution against a Catholic King who had disarmed the Protestants and ignored Parliament. The state bills of rights were adopted in the context of a revolution against an imperial power who had disarmed the militia.

Pennsy was an outlier because it was full of Quakers who were pacifists, and so they made the right one of self defense rather than military. Vermont had like 12 people in it when they became a state so they basically cribbed Pennsy's constitution to save money. The Federal Bill of Rights was adopted in the context of nation-building: the convention toned down the states' fire-breathing militia rhetoric in the first clause of the second amendment and then, in the second clause, reaffirmed the common law RKBA of individuals which was protected by the English bill of rights but, without making it explicity subject to congressional regulation.

Mike Brown
March 19, 2008
Lewiston Pistol Club email list, Heller Argument.
[Mike is our resident lawyer at the club and top dog at Idaho SSA.--Joe]

# Tuesday, March 18, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 18, 2008 10:48:31 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Gun Rights )

I have lots to say but a bunch of Boomershoot stuff to get done has a higher priority for me.

In the meantime; Alan is reassuring:


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Full contact info at end

DATELINE: Washington, D.C. 3/18/08

Recovering from the Whirlwind of the Day

Heller Case Goes Better Than Expected

by Alan Korwin, Co-Author
Supreme Court Gun Cases


The bottom line is, I think we’re going to be OK.

When Justice Kennedy flat out said he believes in an individual right  under the Second Amendment, there were no gasps in the hush of the High  Court, but you could tell the greatest stellar array of gun-rights  experts ever assembled, all there in that one room, breathed a sigh of  relief -- we had five votes to affirm the human and civil right to arms.
 
The transcript will be a key for analysis going forward until June,  when the decision is expected, and I’m working without the benefit of that  at the moment. Digesting the fleeting and immensely complex speech  that took place for one hour and thirty-eight minutes a few hours ago,  it’s hard to see how any line of thought could be strung together to  support the idea that the D.C. total ban on operable firearms at home can be  seen as reasonable regulation, even though Mr. Dellinger, the city’s  attorney, tried to suggest it was. He was shot down on this repeatedly, found no quarter from any of the Justices, though several found room to move on what amounts to reasonable restrictions.

And it is easy to see, from the non-stop rapid-fire comments and questions of eight of the Justices (Thomas asked nothing, extending his legendary running silence), how even the most permissive standard of review imaginable for gun-ban laws, could tolerate the District’s level of  intolerance toward some sort of right to keep and bear arms.

That would give the pro-rights side what it so sorely wants – an admission that the Second Amendment protects something for “the people,” and the rest of that pie can be baked later.

Dellinger tried to suggest that rifles, shotguns and handguns had different usefulness, actually implying rifles are better for self defense in an urban home, because handguns were so inherently bad or dangerous that cities had a legitimate interest in banning them, but the Court  wasn’t buying it, and noting that D.C.’s ban banned everything.

Packed into that short rabidly intense section, the Justices examined:

* Original intent, and actions and writings of the colonies at the time of adoption;

* The meanings of the words, though not to the extent some people had anticipated;

* Separability of the terms keep and bear, whether they represented one right or two, how one could exist without the other, if they had civilian meanings or military ones, if you are “bearing” arms to go hunting  and more;

* The scope of the right covered, and whether personal or military  protections stood alone, dependent or had preference over each other;

* The “operative” and and preamble clause, and their relationship,  meaningfulness, and interactivity with each other;

* The types of weapons that might be covered by the term “arms,”
 accepting the idea that some weapons fall outside a sense of militia arms,  like “plastic guns” (that’s what they were called) that could escape  airport metal detection, or “rocket launchers” (actually a commonly used  modern militia arm in some countries experiencing insurgencies, a point  that did not come up), and especially machine guns, a repeated point  which the Justices did not resolve, especially since it has become the  standard issue firearm for our modern armed forces and confused the Miller  doctrine of commonly used arms;

* The rise and meaning of strict scrutiny, a doctrine that evolved  around the First Amendment and had no actual root in the Constitution, and  whose actual definition was fluid and with little consensus.

 

Scalia asked if permissible limits could restrict you to one gun, or  only a few guns, or if a collector couldn’t complete a set like a stamp  collector because of a quantity restriction, and then launched into a  demonstration of his familiarity with firearms by suggesting a need to  have a turkey gun, and a duck gun, and a thirty-ought-six, and a .270,  which sent Thomas into a fit of off-mic laughter that other observers  missed because they were focused on Scalia;

Noting that Massachusetts in colonial times regulated the storage of  gunpowder (it had to be kept upstairs as a fire precaution), Breyer asked  if there isn’t a lineage to permissible restrictions, and the Court  generally agreed. The point of contention, and it would not go away, was  where that line was drawn, and again and again the D.C. absolute ban  was found violative in its absoluteness. The decision to test the  protection of 2A against this law in particular was a brilliant stratagem.

Dellinger either deliberately misled the Court, or didn’t understand  the D.C. ban law (as hard to believe as that is, and it could come back  to bite him), because, in trying to make it appear less odious than it  was, he:

* Suggested D.C. would carve out an exception for an operable gun if it  were used in self defense -- which the law flatly does not abide (and  a point thoroughly undercut by Heller’s attorney Alan Gura, who pointed  out the District had such an opportunity twice and did not do so, and  in fact did the opposite);

* For use in self defense, a gun could be easily and quickly unlocked  and brought to bear, a point undercut by Chief Justice Roberts who had  to fight to get an admission that the gun had to be reloaded as well,  since the D.C. law banned loaded and unlocked arms;

* That lead to a wonderful exchange in which Dellinger said a gun can  be simply unlocked quickly -– he actually said he could do it in three  seconds, after demonstrating a poor understanding of how a lock  (available at a “hardware store” nearby) fits on a gun with or without  “bullets” in it;

* That lead to Scalia asking about turning a dial to find “3” and then  turning it the other way to find the next number;

* To which Roberts noted that, don’t you first have to turn on the  light having heard the sound of breaking glass, and then find your reading  glasses -- which got the biggest audience laugh of the day (there were  only a few other soft chuckles during the proceedings);…


OK, I recognize that this is a bit disjointed, and I’m working on an  unfamiliar machine, at the end of a grueling endurance test that involved  outrageous hours, little sleep, lousy diet, dire cold, miles of up and  downhill walking, and I’m getting pretty hungry. I’ll do a better job  over time, but I wanted to share some inside scoop you might not  otherwise get. Let me, before pausing for some chow (which we’ll have to go  out and find), convey some ambience.

Guests of the Court were ushered into the ground floor early on,  milling around (line waiters including my friend Bob were prepped on the  white marble steps outside). It was a who’s who inside and non-stop  on-your-toes meet and greet. John Snyder, lobbyist for CCRKBA/SAF, had read my  blog entry from last night, and introduced me to the companion on his  lobby bench… Dick Heller, of the Heller case.

A nice mild mannered guy, “I just want to be able to keep my guns.” He  said when they started this in 1994, they had no idea what they were  getting into, and in 1997 they began entertaining the idea that it could  go all the way and started raising funds. Now it had taken on a life of  its own and barely involved him. At 9:30 last night, he walked the  wait-to-get-in line and passed out cough drops. No one knew who he was. He  sat just behind me in the Courtroom. I lucked into the second row.

Directly in front of me was… Mayor Fenty, and I sat in the bright  reflected light of his pate. He turned, and in typical smiling politician  fashion extended his hand, shook mine, and said warmly, “It’s nice to see  you” as if we knew each other. Well at least, I knew him. One seat to  my right was Ann Dellinger, the city’s lawyer’s wife, who turned out to  be fascinating and a wealth of information. In a few moments, the  mayor relinquished his eat to the D.C. Chief of Police, but she didn’t turn  and say hi. Heady stuff. Everybody was a somebody.

Familiar faces were strewn about – there’s David Hardy on the other  side of the aisle, and Bob Dowlut had a front row seat. Stephen Halbrook,  one of my co-authors on Supreme Court Gun Cases had an early spot on  the Supreme Court bar-members line, and my other co-author, Dave Kopel, who  previously told me he would not be attending, turned out to be a  last-minute addition to the Respondant’s table at the head of the Courtroom.
 People who I think were on a better “tier” than I, like Joe Olson,  Clayton Cramer and others, didn’t luck into a seat and listened to  disembodied voices from the lawyers lounge outside the Courtroom.

Three calls for “sshhh” from a clerk at the front instantly dropped the  growing anticipatory cacophony to silence which then ramped up gently  until the next hiss for quiet. Three minutes to go and a call for  silence left everyone with their own thoughts until a tone sounded, the  aides signaled us to rise, God Bless This Court was spoken, and we were  underway.

By a stroke of luck, Justice Thomas was assigned the reading of a decision of a prior case, and we got to hear his baritone voice, which often remains mute throughout. New members of the Supreme Court bar were sworn in, and Justice Roberts asked Mr. Dellinger to begin, which he did promptly.

More later.

Alan.


Alan Korwin, Co-Author
Supreme Court Gun Cases
Bloomfield Press
Scottsdale, Arizona
602-996-4020
alan@gunlaws.com
http://www.gunlaws.com

Go to my site for this and all future postings, use the email signup on the home page to get direct posts, or get RSS  feeds from the blog site, http://www.PageNine.org

 


alan@gunlaws.com
Bloomfield Press, Phoenix
602-996-4020
http://www.gunlaws.com

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 18, 2008 8:02:55 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

This from a law student:

Pat Harvey, a 24-year-old second-year law student at George Washington University, said : "If a democratically elected city council has had a law on the books for 30 years, it's not the court's job to overturn it."

Shall we start discussing laws outlawing abortion and enforcing racism that were overturned? Should those laws have been outside the domain of the court?

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 18, 2008 6:21:02 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Gun Rights )

Sebastian tells us there will be live blogging from the SCOTUS Blog.

Expect the NRA to update their Heller page.

Expect Countertop to give us an early report also.

Bitter is outside the Supreme Court and feeding info to Sebastian.

Update: The SCOTUS Blog appears to be one of the best places. Here is a picture from outside:

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 18, 2008 6:03:47 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

Demoting the Second Amendment to some lower tier of enumerated rights is unwarranted. The Second Amendment has the distinction of securing the most fundamental rights of all—enabling the preservation of one’s life and guaranteeing our liberty. These are not second-class concerns. Yet preservation of human life is also the government’s chief regulatory interest in arms. Constitutional review of gun laws thus finds both individual and governmental interests at their zenith.

Alan Gura
Robert A. Levy
Clark M. Neily III
February 24, 2008
RESPONDENT’S BRIEF On Writ Of Certiorari To The United States Court Of Appeals For The District Of Columbia Circuit
[As I write this the oral arguments have just started. I'm anxiously scanning websites and listening to the news for hints as to what happened.--Joe]

# Monday, March 17, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 17, 2008 10:30:04 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News )

Not that #9. Keep your mind out of the cat house (or the governors office).

Uncle says his state is #6. And in the comments Kevin says his state is number #5. So where is Idaho? We are in the top 10 at #9. But wait, Uncle and Kevin were counting from the opposite end of the scale.

Idaho, as a state, is the 9th safest state in the U.S. That is up from number 12 in 2007.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 17, 2008 9:58:32 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

Tomorrow is a very big day in history for gun rights activists and even in the legal history of this country. I expect the only bigger legal day in my lifetime will be when the decision is announced in a few months. For some reason it never occurred to me to attend the oral arguments; to be a part of history in the making. To be able to say, "I was there and I heard it with my own ears and saw the sweat dripping from the lawyers who were fighting to win what will probably be the most important case of their lives."

Others are there and will be a part of the history being made tomorrow. And they deserve those places much more than I do so it's appropriate that I'm at the opposite side of the continent working on Plan B should it ever be needed.

One of the people who earned a seat at tomorrows event sent me an email:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Full contact info at end

DATELINE: Washington, D.C. 3/17/08

24 Hours Prior to Heller Case

by Alan Korwin, Co-Author
Supreme Court Gun Cases


More people are on line in front of the U.S. Supreme Court for the D.C.
gun ban case tomorrow than seats are available, and the temperature is hovering above freezing, but that's not stopping them.

Bob Blackmer and I were the first to arrive, Sunday night about 5 p.m., answering the big question of -- Would two nights in advance be enough
-- aside from did we have endurance to pull that off.

A few moments later, Jason and Dan arrived from Pennsylvania with sleeping bags and the same question in mind -- would they be in time for the biggest Second Amendment case in the nation's history, and, yes, they were. With no one else around, and the Sup. Ct. police officer pumped for all the info he might have (precious little), Bob and I left for our hotel, confident that we would be in time in the a.m., and Jason and Dan became numbers one and two in line, a distinction the media would dwell on the next day. (Reporters kept zeroing in on Jason since he was number one in line, and fortunately, he was articulate, a poli sci grad, not the bubba the media so often isolates as a "typical"
example.)

Because the line formed two nights in advance (kind of), and because local ABC-TV carried that news (with images)and bloggers spread it, people began arriving first at midnight, and then at the crack of dawn, panicked about access. Bob awoke in the hotel and departed in time to arrive well before 8 a.m., making him 7th, and I ran around looking for propane for his porta-heater (the airline allowed the heater but not the fuel). I was fortunate to have a reserved seat, so it didn't matter that I arrived at 10 a.m., and that didn't matter either, since I was now #16. I was the only person, the whole day, schmoozing on the line, running errands for people, enjoying the atmosphere, but with a reserved seat and a bed waiting for me at night.

People had full blown lounge chairs, sleeping bags, blankets, food... a regular shanty town developed and as police had advised, the line self regulated. Physical position was a non-issue, since everyone knew their place, and Sarah, a Harvard law student, took it on herself to start a list and gather everyone's arrival time and position number. People milled around at will, confident they would not lose their cherished place in line. It was a community.

Almost everyone was a law student, almost no one would qualify as a "gunnie" (well, maybe a small handful) but nearly everyone was on the side of Heller, advocating for a strong Second Amendment. The conversations were electric, a bunch of well educated, thoughtful, intelligent people self selected for a historic moment. When was the last time you saw a line of people hanging out reading legal briefs?

The promise was for 50 seats for the public, but the Marsahll's office was clear to me that this number could change, and would only be known in the morning, giving a distinct feeling it would shrink as "dignitaries" decided to attend at the last minute.

By 2:30 p.m. Monday, today, the day before the case, 32 people were in line, neatly numbered thanks to Sarah (and everyone in line ahead of them). The lucky (maybe) 50th person arrived at 4:45 p.m., and folks continued to arrive and queue up, hoping against hope for a greater number of seats, or line abandoners.

No paid place holders were apparent.

The most novel legal theories were:

-- The case could be decided on standing, with the Court concluding Heller didn't really have any after all, and the case falling apart on those grounds (highly unlikely, but it shook up conversations);

-- The Court would parse "keep" and "bear," finding an individual right, but applying strict scurtiny to "keep" and rational basis standard of review for "bear," effectively gutting the Second Amendment;

-- A decision narrower than everyone expects would get a nine to zero affirmation of an individual right (a seven-to-two split got a lot of voice);

-- The Solicitor General would recant his position (calling for reduced scrutiny and a remand of the case), artfully saying that was a mistake or oversight, an extremely unlikely but appealing (to some) possibility that would get Clements out of supposed hot water and be talked about, well, forever;

-- No one expects anything but an individual right finding, but the level of scrutiny for any law anywhere was up for grabs;

-- Obviously, no one has a clue, but you get the idea of what was going on in the cold, windy, sleep deprived, hard scrabble concrete world of Hellertown in front of the Court.

As for me, I'm sun burned, exhausted, undernourished, but at least in a hotel lobby, getting ready for what sleep I can and an early start to what will be an amazing day tomorrow. I'll relieve Bob so he can use the Court restroom to shuck his thermals, freshen up, stash his goods in the Court lockers, grab some chow in the Court cafeteria (great food, low low subsidized prices), and join the rabble in the cheap seats upstairs.

Written without adequate review or a spell checker, I reserve the right to change any of this... will attempt a swift review of the orals as soon after as I can muster.

Alan.


alan@gunlaws.com
Bloomfield Press, Phoenix
602-996-4020
http://www.gunlaws.com/
All posts will be on the website... soon.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 17, 2008 9:34:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot )

Last week I ordered some supplies. I picked up the cardboard boxes for the targets last Thursday and the Potassium Chlorate was just delivered (as in Barb is on the phone this very second asking where to put it). Everything is on schedule.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 17, 2008 4:53:07 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

I'm pleased but somewhat surprised. It is a news story on the Heller case rather than an editorial disguised as news.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 17, 2008 4:42:45 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot )

Ry was on site this weekend, took some pictures, and reported "The Boomershoot site was a snowy marsh".


Yup. It sure is. And with Boomershoot only six weeks away one might be quite reasonably be concerned about the conditions we will have for the event. Will it be nothing but mud or even still have some snow?

Anything is possible but here are some pictures from 1999 to give us some hints about how things dried up back then:



Boomershoot target area March 7th 1999.


Target area April 25th 1999


Shooting area April 25 1999.

In 1999, seven weeks prior to the event, the ground was covered with snow and even more "in the deep freeze" than this year. Yet by the day of the event the ground was ground was damp (I remember the picture above being taken*) but clearly it wasn't so muddy that people couldn't shoot directly from the ground. Hence there is nothing to be particularly worried about at this time.

I probably will take some more pictures this coming weekend and examine the site two weeks and probably one week before the event. I'll keep you posted.



* I was trying to connect with a half-pint milk carton at 600 yards away with my AR-15 to see if the .223 could detonate the targets at that range. It was particularly challenging because of the wind (see the streamer flying essentially horizontal?). I fired about 60 rounds without getting a detonation. Later examination of the target showed that I had gotten one solid hit and a couple of nicks. It did not detonate. The target recipe has been modified extensively since then although at 600 yards the .223 is still marginal for both wind and ability to detonation the targets.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 17, 2008 3:51:04 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

On July 6, 1775, after Lexington and Concord, after General Gage had declared martial law in Boston on June 12 of that year, Congress issued the Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of Their Taking Up Arms. In the Declaration the Congress states, as one of the reasons for taking up arms, that Gage had disarmed the people of Boston and seized their weapons. Finally, one year after the Declaration of Causes, the Continental Congress concluded that it was forced to declare independence.

It would seem strange if the authors of the Bill of Rights were to insist upon protecting other rights against government interference yet exclude from that protection the auxiliary right which is necessary to protect the most fundamental of all rights, the right to life. Recall that the confiscation of private arms was list as one of the causes for taking up arms against the Crown. Recall that the Declaration of Right asserted that we are entitled to the protection of the laws of England, including the right to arms for self-defense, which was declared to be our birthright which was restored by act of parliament. Would they have written such amendments to protect against oppressive government, having recently experienced oppressive government, without protecting the auxiliary right which is necessary to protect the one right without which no other right may be enjoyed? Of course, as we have said, contemporary thinkers believed that this right had been secured in the Second Amendment.

At the time Madison wrote the Second Amendment, there was a right of the people to keep and bear arms for self-defense. This right was believed, by the Framers, to be an right inalienable. Every word of the Constitution, and the articles of amendment, was written, approved, and ratified by men who believed this.

James H. Warner
February 2008
Brief for amici curiae Disabled Veterans for Self-Defense and Kestra Childers in support of respondent.
[Only one more day until oral arguments.--Joe]

# Sunday, March 16, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Sunday, March 16, 2008 8:37:44 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Home Life | Sex )

I sort of remember that picture being taken now--and thinking, "No one will really notice, will they?" (notice the smirk on my face). Of course I have had my hand down her shirt so often for the last 30+ years that by now Barb is almost oblivious to it.

Mr. Completely politely ignores it and tells us about the other joys of attending the Gun Blogger Rendezvous and urges you to sign up for the next one.

By: Joe Huffman Sunday, March 16, 2008 8:13:31 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

It made me smile:

Consumption of alcohol is a threat that costs hundreds of innocent lives every year in Virginia, many of them children. We must stop giving in to the alcohol lobby and enact reasonable restrictions on the sale of alcohol for outside the home consumption! As you are no doubt aware, Virginia does not have "bars" in the traditional sense of the word. They have restaurants that are also licensed to serve alcohol. Although, there are establishments which are truly "bars" that are very thinly disguised as restaurants. This circumvention of the law is known as the deadly "restaurant loophole."

There's more too.

By: Joe Huffman Sunday, March 16, 2008 8:01:25 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

In 1946 there were 34,400 civilian firearms per 100,000 Americans and the murder rate was 6.9 per 100,000 population; 60 years later in 2004, gun ownership had almost tripled (85,000 guns per 100,000). Yet the murder rate had actually declined to 5.5 per 100,000. This evidence discredits the simplistic notion that increasing the civilian gunstock produces concomitant (or any) increases in murder.

Marc James Ayers
February 8, 2008
Brief of criminologists, social scientists, other distinguished scholars and the Claremont Institute as amici curiae in support of respondent.
[Only two more days until oral arguments.--Joe]

# Saturday, March 15, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 15, 2008 7:10:48 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

Many of the proponents of gun control have commented on the need to restrict other constitutionally guaranteed rights in order to enforce gun control or prohibition laws. A federal appellate judge urged the abandonment of the exclusionary rule in order to better enforce gun control laws. Malcolm Wilkey, Why Suppress Valid Evidence?, Wall Street J., Oct. 7, 1977 at 14. A police inspector called for a "reinterpretation" of the Fourth Amendment to allow police to assault strategically located streets, round up pedestrians en masse, and herd them through portable, airport-type gun detection machines. Detroit Free Press, Jan. 26, 1977, at 4. Prominent gun control advocates have flatly stated that "there can be no right to privacy in regard to armament," Norville Morris and Gordon Hawkins, The Honest Politician's Guide to Crime Control (1970).

Stefan Bijan Tahmassebi
February 2008
Brief of Amicus Curiae Congress of Racial Equality in Support of Respondent
[Only three more days until oral arguments.

These aren't the only outrages documented in the brief. Most of the others were familiar to me such as the laws enacted and enforced explicitly for the purposes of suppressing Italians (the Sullivan Act), blacks, and other minorities and enabling the Klan and other bigots.

To those that would say gun control doesn't mean encroaching on other guaranteed rights please remind them of the exceptions carved out of the Bill of Rights for the "wars" on drugs and terror.--Joe]

# Friday, March 14, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 14, 2008 10:42:47 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

A friend sent me this link to a video (about 45 minutes long). The synopsis is:

Naomi Wolf on

It not only can happen here, it is happening here.

Mussolini created the blueprint (with inspiration from Lenin), Hitler elaborated on it, Stalin studied Hitler...

Here's how it works (notice how many Bush & Co. is using now.):

1. Invoke a terrifying internal and external enemy
2. Create a gulag
3. Develop a thug caste
4. Set up an internal surveillance system
5. Harass citizens' groups
6. Engage in arbitrary detention and release
7. Target key individuals
8. Control the press
9. Dissent equals treason
10. Suspend the rule of law

Wolf's conclusion? Impeachment of Bush and Cheney is not enough. Prosecuting (and jailing) them for crimes committed is the only rational solution.

I wouldn't normally think my readers would be interested in this kind of stuff but something came up in this video that surprised me. She mentioned the 2nd Amendment. Each time she immediately went on to something else. She just used the words, "Second Amendment" then, basically, changed the subject.

Are the extreme left wing people (the organization who owns website for this video and many others with a similar theme is based in San Fransisco) thinking it's time to consider the 2nd Amendment as an individual right?

By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 14, 2008 10:25:28 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

The so called "Gun Guy" seems to think there were or are some such thing as "local rights". I've never heard that phrase before. A quick check on Live Search and Google didn't reveal anything meaningful either.

It's times like this that one has to give serious consideration that he's just doing a poor job at a VPC blog. He obviously has no clue when he says crazy stuff like this:

No American should be held hostage to the stranglehold of the gun industry and gun enthusiasts who value firearms over life.

Philadelphia and cities like it should be able to determine their own law enforcement and gun violence prevention policies.

That’s a freedom that a city that is our cradle of liberty deserves to have.

Just, "Wow!". Cities have freedoms? Now one could argue that King George had freedoms, but not England. Americans fought for their individual liberty, not to replace one tyrant with another.

He's just loco, right?

By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 14, 2008 10:04:15 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Freedom )

Sometimes there are no compromises possible. This is one of those times:

"I don't think freedom of expression should mean freedom from blasphemy," said Senegal's President Abdoulaye Wade, the chairman of the 57-member Organization of the Islamic Conference. "There can be no freedom without limits."

By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 14, 2008 9:58:35 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

A collective right view could logically include all variety of weapons currently within the federal arsenal, because the states would be empowered to arm themselves sufficiently to thwart those same federal forces. Pet. Br. 21. Given the fact that there is no Constitutional limitation upon the types of weapons that the federal government can possess, a collective states’ right position could logically require a similar freedom for the respective state militias. If the logic behind the Second Amendment is to preserve the right of states to maintain militias that constitute a counterweight to federal forces, as Petitioners contend, then states would logically be allowed to keep and bear even the most potent and destructive weapons of modern warfare.

Renee L. Giachino
February 11, 2008
Center for Individual Freedom
[Only four more days until oral arguments.

Wow! For some time now one of my biggest fears in this case was the concern the Court might have about the harmful consequences of deciding the 2nd Amendment was an individual right. It never occurred to me the consequences of a decision that it is "state right" (there is no such thing, states have powers not rights) might be an even bigger issue--it means the individual states are constitutionally justified if they want nukes. I love it, sort of a Cornelian dilemma for the fuzzy liberals.--Joe]

# Thursday, March 13, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Thursday, March 13, 2008 9:52:11 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

What arrogance! Read this brief then tell me the following is something you would let the D.C. police get away with:

D.C. police are so eager to get guns out of the city that they're offering amnesty to people who allow officers to come into their homes and get the weapons.

Mayor Adrian M. Fenty and Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier announced yesterday the Safe Homes Initiative, aimed at parents and guardians who know or suspect that their children or other relatives have guns. Under the deal, police target areas hit by violence and seek adults who let them search their homes for guns, with no risk of arrest. The offer also applies to drugs that turn up during the searches, police said.

The program is scheduled to start March 24 in the Washington Highlands area of Southeast Washington. Officers will go door-to-door seeking permission to search homes for weapons. Police later plan to visit other areas, including sections of Columbia Heights in Northwest and Eckington in Northeast.

"If we come across illegal contraband, we will confiscate it," Lanier said. "But amnesty means amnesty. We're trying to get guns and drugs off the street."

The "amnesty means amnesty" line is a lie. Later in that same article they say:

If guns are found, they will be tested to determine whether they were used in crimes. If the results are positive, police will launch investigations, which could lead to charges.

This isn't receiving universal approval:

Ronald Hampton, executive director of the National Black Police Association, questioned the Washington effort. As a lifelong D.C. resident and a former police officer, he said, he would not consent to his house being searched.

"They haven't earned that level of access or respect from the community," Hampton said.

I think Congress should issue hunting licenses with no bag limits on D.C. politicians and cops, no restrictions on baiting (I've heard recreational drugs and/or hookers work well), no restrictions on hunting zones, with bounties for ears turned in. After a couple weeks D.C. residents could start over with no new laws and all new public servants.

H/T to Uncle and Ravenwood for the link.

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, March 13, 2008 9:17:20 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Home Life )

Here is the picture the New York Times has of Spitzer's playmate:

Here is the picture found elsewhere:

I wonder why the cropping of the picture. Was it just for space or was there some other reason?


As a side note the above pictures reminds me some of Barb and I can't help but think she would have made a lot more money had she not married me when she was 21. Here is a picture of her at about age 18:

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, March 13, 2008 7:53:09 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

Fellow Lewiston Gun Club and IPSC/Steel/etc shooter Mike Brown has been working on strengthening the gun owner protections in Idaho. Technically Idaho already has a range protection law but it turns out it is essentially made of tissue paper and the anti-gun people can drive VW Micro Buses right through it.

Here is Mike's latest report. 

What interests me is the politics involved:

All of the concerns raised were red herrings (for instance: the police department won't be able to tell the cops which guns they can carry) planted to give cover to closeted anti-gunners who want to vote against freedom!

They find excuses, no matter how flimsy and transparent, to avoid being open and honest about their motivations. One law enforcement person told Mike he was 110% behind the proposed law. Currently the county limits them to four night training exercises per year and they must be done by 10:00 PM. The proposed law will overthrow that restriction and be very unpopular with the "furry liberals" as the LEO called them.

If you are a voter in Idaho please sign up for the alerts Mike sends out and contact your representative when he asks for your help.

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, March 13, 2008 7:23:47 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

Amici therefore set out below the right to have and use arms in English law by the time of the Founding. Amici then show how early American authorities claimed and extended that right, including in interpreting the Second Amendment. The English right was a right of individuals, not conditioned on militia service; individuals might exercise the right collectively, but the unquestioned core was a broadly applicable and robust right to "keep" firearms in one's home for self-defense. Even the "well recognized exceptions" confirmed this core right, by focusing on the carrying, not the keeping, of weapons. That core right is what the District of Columbia tramples. It bans keeping a handgun in one's home (including use there in self-defense) and keeping any functional firearm in one's home.

C. Kevin Marshall
February 8, 2008
Brief of the Cato Institute and history professor Joyce Lee Malcolm as amici curiae in support of respondent.
[Only five more days until oral arguments.

This brief makes it very clear the individual right to keep and bear arms was universally agreed upon, not only in America, but in England at the time of the writing of the 2nd Amendment. It is not a recent "invention" by the Apex of The Triangle of Death.--Joe]

# Wednesday, March 12, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 12, 2008 10:52:21 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Sex )

Dr. Joe is further validated:

LONDON: A steamy sex session in the morning can keep you in good health, say British researchers.

According to a research from Queen’s University in Belfast, a good morning session at least three times a week, decreases the risk of heart attack or stroke by half and a regular session improves circulation, thereby reducing blood pressure.

According to a study in New Scientist, a steamy session twice a week enhances IgA, an antibody that provides protection against microbes that multiply in body secretions, reports the ‘Sun’. Morning sex also helps in alleviating arthritis and migraine. It burns around 300 calories an hour that simultaneously diminishes the risk of developing diabetes.

Moreover, an American study involving 300 sexually active women whose partners did not use condoms revealed that they were less prone to depression.

Sex increases the production of testosterone that provides stronger bones and muscles thus helping to stave off osteoporosis.

A good morning session can make the hair shine and skin glow by raising the output of oestrogen and other hormones which are associated with it.

According to Yale School of Medicine researchers, having morning sex can aid in averting endometriosis, a condition where the tissue that normally lines the uterus, grows in other parts of the pelvis.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 12, 2008 10:49:12 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

I said some nice things about an ATF agent and the DOJ takes notice. Good.

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By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 12, 2008 6:19:58 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

The District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) has failed to provide adequate police services to the District of Columbia’s citizens. The District is consistently a national leader in various crime categories while simultaneously demonstrating inability to adapt or change under the crippling bureaucracy endemic to the District. Compounding this deadly combination of high crime and inflexibility are constant examples of corruption, incompetence and outright misfeasance in the operation of the department.

[...]

Unfortunately, this is not a mere phase or temporary problem for the District. Since the 30-plus year old implementation of what amounts to a complete ban on owning, carrying or using firearms for self-defense, the MPD has cycled through new chiefs and precinct commanders with depressing frequency. The only constant within the department has been the incompetence, corruption, cronyism and failure to perform the most basic duty of a police department--to protect and serve.

L. Kenneth Hanson III
Brief of Buckeye Firearms Foundation LLC, National Council for Investigation and Security Services, Ohio Association of Private Detective Agencies, Inc., dba Ohio Association of Security and Investigation services (oasis), Michigan Council of Private Investigators, Indiana Association of Professional Investigators, and Kentucky Professional Investigators Association, as amici curiae supporting respondent.
[Only six more days until oral arguments.

I've only read about a quarter of the briefs supporting the respondent but surprisingly this brief makes the strongest case, for me, for supporting the RKBA in D.C. Had they concluded, instead of urging the court to affirm the lower court decision, asked the court to issue varmint hunting licenses (no bag limits) for residents for the taking of D.C. cops and politicians I would have cheered.

Assuming you have the stomach and the blood pressure meds for it, read the whole thing.--Joe]

# Tuesday, March 11, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 11, 2008 7:31:17 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot | Technology )

Sean said he has a dream. Now he just has to get a really big bonus this fall so he can bring it to Boomershoot 2009.

Mobile Tactical High Energy Laser (6 MB WMV).

Boomershoot enthusiast, Bruce, sent this to me. He wants one for the flat trajectory when shooting squirrels.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 11, 2008 6:53:19 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Blog stuff | Boomershoot | Freedom )

DOJ and now DHS.

This time they are interested in the 5000 pounds of ammonium nitrate I bought and had my daughter pose for a picture with it.

I really need to do a Privacy Act request and get a copy of the file they have on me.

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By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 11, 2008 7:22:42 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

I suspected the Heller case had the most amicus briefs ever. I was wrong. Amicus Briefs Are Ammo for Supreme Court Gun Case:

The 67 amicus briefs in what is simply known as "the D.C. gun case" fail to topple the record number filed in the University of Michigan affirmative action cases in 2003 -- 107 -- but they easily fit within the top 10 filings at the high court.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 11, 2008 6:12:52 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

Guns are not pathogens, and the loss of lives from guns is not a public health phenomenon in any meaningful sense. Vaccines could be taken as a public health analogy for guns. Vaccines are widely recommended or even mandated with the support of the APHA and AAP despite the fact that many are killed or injured by them, and their effectiveness is imperfect. But the APHA’s and AAP’s logic could be applied to vaccines with the false conclusion that all vaccination programs are harmful because all vaccines have some side effects. The benefits of vaccines and guns are both indirect, but the benefits are very real in both cases, and it is essential to address those benefits in any argument attempting to ban the product.


Andrew L. Schlafly
February 7, 2008
Brief for amicus curiae association of American Physicians and Surgeons, Inc. in support of Respondent.
[Only seven more days until oral arguments.--Joe]

# Monday, March 10, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 10, 2008 10:27:26 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Gun Rights | Sex )

I keep wondering if disgraced New York Governer and anti-gun bigot Spitzer was aware of the book Mayflower Madam when he booked a room at this particular hotel:

As recently as this past Valentine's Day, Feb. 13, Spitzer, who officials say is identified in a federal complaint as "Client 9," arranged for a prostitute "Kristen" to meet him in Washington, D.C.

The woman met Client 9 at the Mayflower Hotel, room 871, "for her tryst," according to the complaint.

The book was a true story and a very good one. If he hasn't read it already maybe he'll have time while he is in prison.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 10, 2008 8:53:08 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot )

Just a couple of minutes ago I ordered the last of the critical items for Boomershoot 2008. I now have another 275 pounds of potassium chlorate scheduled to arrive within a week or 10 days. Over the weekend I ordered 1100 cardboard boxes.

The only remaining items are small things like air horn cartridges, wooden stakes, and garbage sacks.

Combined with the existing materials we have stored in the Taj Mahal we plan to build over 1600 reactive targets for Boomershoot 2008. This will require over 1700 pounds of high explosives which we will be manufacturing on-site in the two days prior to the event.

It's going to be a real blast.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 10, 2008 8:20:37 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot )

Another person canceled and position 41 will become available at 8:00 AM Tuesday March 11th. See details of the position here. Refresh the page at 8:00 AM tomorrow to sign up. Remember, once you press the button for that position you have taken the position.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 10, 2008 12:00:02 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

When viewed from a national perspective, the right to keep and bear arms is not an archaic right. The right to arms is deeply rooted in our nation's tradition and history. The Second Amendment to the Bill of Rights was adopted in 1791. The earliest guarantees to arms were adopted in 1776 by Pennsylvania and North Carolina. The most recent guarantee was adopted by Wisconsin in 1998. Since 1945, twenty one (21) states have adopted or readopted the right to bear arms in their state constitutions. Presently, forty-four (44) states have a guarantee to arms. The people have spoken in support of the right to arms. It is a mainstream right that is still valued in the 21st Century, and it is a vital part of the Constitution.

Robert Dowlut
February 2008
Brief for amicus curiae American Legislative Exchange Council in support of respondent.
[Only eight more days until oral arguments. This brief includes all the state constitution provisions for the right to keep and bear arms. A nice reference.--Joe]

# Sunday, March 09, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Sunday, March 09, 2008 11:51:02 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Technology )

Sebastian points out new technology may make concealed carry more difficult.

What the people that develop these tools don't tell the politicians that will buy them is they are easy to defeat. Just as a tank can be defeated with a Molotov Cocktail, if you know what you are doing very simple and readily available materials can defeat multi-million dollar surveillance equipment.

In this particular instance what the developers probably aren't telling the potential buyers is that there is something called the Skin Effect. This is, in essence, a law of physics that says the higher the frequency of an electromagnetic wave the shallower the penetration of that wave through a conductor. It depends on the resistivity and magnetic permeability of the conductor but for copper a 1 Terahertz wave will have a skin depth of about 66 nm. The typical aluminum foil you buy at the grocery store has a thickness of 200 um which is over 3000 times thicker. I don't have the skin depth numbers for aluminum but I can tell you that lining your jacket with aluminum foil will make your jacket completely opaque to such machines. Even aluminized mylar balloons or "space blankets" will be opaque. Hence, these machines will not be able to see anything on the other side of the metal lined clothing. I expect even sequined purses and dresses will be opaque.

By: Joe Huffman Sunday, March 09, 2008 10:38:03 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

I just finished reading the DC response in the Heller case. The following sentence jumped out at me:

The Council concluded that concealable and lethal handguns are responsible for a disproportionately high number of violent crimes, accidents, and suicides, particularly in an exclusively urban jurisdiction.

Apparently "The Council" believes inanimate objects have volition and commit violent crimes, accidents, and suicides. Why suicides of handguns are a problem for them when "The Council" already bans them seems particularly odd but one cannot expect these type of people to be rational.

But what is even more odd to me is the mindset that in some jurisdictions the public servants apparently believe their masters to be morally and/or intellectually deficient. I've run into this before with people from the Chicago area. They will say something like, "Its okay for people in the country to have guns but the people in the inner cities just can't be allowed to have guns--they will use them to commit crimes." Realize what these people are saying. They are admitting to being bigots and frequently they are racist bigots. They don't trust the inner city minorities to own firearms. In their view the inner city residents are inherently immoral and if allowed the tools to commit violent crimes they will do so.

By: Joe Huffman Sunday, March 09, 2008 9:56:00 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

Of course, we also urge the Court to reject the invitation of Petitioners to read a fundamental Constitutional right stated in plain English in the text out of the Constitution altogether. The American people can read, and they can see that unlike some of the other rights found by the Court on the basis of complex reasoning, the Constitutional text forthrightly promises that "the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." No amount of artful linguistic acrobatics or fanciful historical tales can rub those plain words out of the text. We respectfully submit that the rights clearly stated in The Bill of Rights should be read broadly and vigorously enforced, rather than minimized to suit a particular ideology.

Peter J. Ferrara
February 2008
Amicus curiae brief of the American Civil Rights Union in support of respondents.
[Only nine more days until oral arguments.--Joe]

# Saturday, March 08, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 08, 2008 5:52:20 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

It is the cornerstone of American political philosophy that, as a human being, every individual possesses certain inalienable rights. Even a cursory glance at the text of the Founding documents reveals a recurrent intention to preserve these "endowed" human rights.

Jay Alan Sekulow
February 2008
Amicus Brief of the American Center for Law and Justice
[I find it very frustrating that many people believe governments grant rights. This leads to all kinds of kooky ideas such as people having a right to health care. Rights cannot be granted by a government--only infringed.--Joe]

# Friday, March 07, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 07, 2008 12:17:47 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Technology )

I've explained build breaks before and why they are big deal.

Last night about 10:40 the guy across the hall submitted a code change for review. About 11:35 someone else replied saying it looked good. At 11:49 the guy across the hall checked it in.

This morning I saw the request for a code review and took a look at it and thought, "Hmmm.... just one line was changed. I'll look at the bug report to make sure this is the right thing to do but it almost for certain should be fine as long as it passes the buddy build." Then I saw that he had already checked it in--without any mention of a buddy build. Hmmm... Okaaaaay.

Then I saw the email about the build being broken this morning. Then I saw the email about a new bug assigned to the guy across the hall. About 30 minutes ago another other guy showed up with a very large baseball bat* in the hall. I started laughing and went out to watch more closely. I stopped laughing and left when the thumping started. It wasn't going to be pretty.

I came back after a few minutes and the guy with the baseball bat was gone and I examined the guy across the hall for bruises. There were none showing so I'm assuming his clothes cover them all.

They take their coding processes seriously around here.


*Made of hollow plastic.

By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 07, 2008 9:58:37 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

Yesterday a friend (nameless to protect the guilty) and I were chatting over cups of hot beverages. He told me about ending up spending $1000* to save $100. He had purchased a noise suppressor for one of his toys and was going to save the $100 fee the suppressor manufacture charged to remove the "permanently attached" flash hider. After he and his grinding wheel were done he concluded it was less painful to purchase a new barrel than to submit the old mangled one for the installation. I think I managed to look sympathetic throughout the entire story even though I was thinking of Tam's relevant post with a smirk struggling to burst out. When he finished his story he read my mind and said, "Tam's post was so timely."

Yup.

*The $1000 included some other stuff that was a side effect, not just the barrel replacement.

By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 07, 2008 8:44:34 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

The President of the Brady Campaign is not anti-gun. He says so, so it must be true:

Helmke said he’s not pro-gun and he’s not anti-gun, but he is for establishing rules so that guns can be owned by responsible people.

I've said this before but it's worth saying again. If someone walking unsupervised on our streets can't be trusted with a gun then they can't be trusted with a can of gasoline and a book of matches. Hence, the rule for gun ownership has already been established: "The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed."

By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 07, 2008 8:34:52 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

As reported by TFS Magnum (via Uncle) we are informed that a burglar had his lawsuit against the homeowner who shot him thrown out with these words from the judge:

“There is no doubt that the jury would find for the defendant,” Judge James Welker wrote in his memorandum decision. “In fact, it is likely that the jury would prefer the option of throwing the plaintiff down the steps of the courthouse.”

TFS concludes this is why we need Castle Doctrine laws but investigating further I respectfully disagree in this case. The homeowner used a gun that had the number ".380" on the side. A better result would likely have been reported had the number started with ".4" or "12".

By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 07, 2008 8:21:03 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )
By: Joe Huffman Friday, March 07, 2008 8:06:05 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, not a single American political theorist or legal commentator on the Constitution ever suggested a collective rights interpretation of the Second Amendment. Joel Barlow, for example, writing in 1792, argued that in a democracy "the people will be universally armed: they will assume these weapons for security, which the art of war has invented for destruction". Only tyrants, he wrote, "disarmed their people"; "[a] republican society", he argued, "needed armed citizens".

Jack Brian McGee
Brief of the Alaska Outdoor Council, Alaska Fish and Wildlife Conservation Fund, Sitka Sportsman’s Assoc., Juneau Rifle and Pistol Club, Juneau Gun Club, and Alaska Territorial Sportsmen, inc. as amici curiae.
[Only tyrants disarm their people. Remember that.

Only 11 more days until the oral arguments.--Joe]

# Thursday, March 06, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Thursday, March 06, 2008 8:53:48 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Blog stuff | Freedom )

Are these people interested about what I have to say in a friendly manner? Or are they gathering material to put in my file?

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By: Joe Huffman Thursday, March 06, 2008 8:42:55 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

The Second Amendment did not erupt in a philosophical vacuum. The Amendment, like the remainder of the Bill of Rights, arose from widely shared judgments regarding citizenry, government, and the distribution of power. Three of these judgments are particularly relevant here.

Private possession of arms is not merely acceptable, but virtuous.

[...]

There is a natural right to arms, linked to that of self-defense.

[...]

A militia composed of all freeholders and voters is the only safe and effective defense of a republic.

David T. Hardy
Brief of amicus curiae, Academics for the Second Amendment
[Remember that. It is not merely acceptable, but virtuous! Don't let the bigots try to shame you.

Only 12 more days until the oral arguments.--Joe]

# Wednesday, March 05, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 05, 2008 4:00:47 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Technology )

News from STI:

.22 Caliber Conversion Kit

STI international, Inc has joined with Bob Marvel to bring you the finest .22 conversion kits available anywhere. With these conversion kits, you can easily swap out your top end to go from one caliber to another- it’s like getting a second pistol for less than half the price. This will allow shooters to increase their trigger time while decreasing the cost of good training.

The improved Bob Marvel design locks the barrel in place for improved reliability and accuracy. The conversion kit may be purchased for either the 1911 (single stack) platform or the world famous 2011 (double stack) platform. The kit comes complete with adjustable sights, lock back on last round (single stack), an excellent extended 10 round magazine, complete cleaning kit, magazine loading tool, and a custom fitted hard case. The top end works on either 1911 or 2011 frames with only the magazine to replace if the shooter wishes to change frames. Extra magazines for the 1911 and/or 2011 are available.

It's an extra $35.00 for the 2011 frame over the 1911 frame but that is a small price to pay if you don't have the 1911 frame to put it on.

In competition I shoot a STI gun, I carry a STI gun and you should too.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 05, 2008 2:57:26 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

The Apex of the Triangle of Death has a good web page up on the Heller case. It has all the briefs in one convenient location.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 05, 2008 9:30:09 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

I can't really claim credit for creating the concept but I have been a big proponent of it for a long time. It's nice to see others adopting the language such that anti-gunners are openly called out as bigots.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 05, 2008 9:25:45 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Home Life | Politics )

Jonah Goldberg's Liberal Fascism is at the top of my must read list. Unfortunately the audio version isn't out yet and I have a very large stack of paper books that I haven't read beside my bed already.

My latest urge to get this book was fueled by Initial Thoughts... from Musings of The GeekWithA.45. Uncle and Kevin are also impressed with his post.

Last night while watching Farscape with son James I told him he must read the Geek's post. It's just wow!

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, March 05, 2008 8:55:53 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Places Without Guns | Quote of the Day )

Whether one examines the District’s murder rates relative to other large US cities, the neighboring states of Maryland and Virginia, or relative to the US as a whole there is no evidence that the ban reduced the District’s relative murder rate. Indeed, if anything, the evidence points to the opposite conclusion. The District’s rising murder rate cannot be explained as a result of the crack cocaine epidemic during the late 1980s because this increase started occurring right after the ban was instituted, long before crack cocaine became an issue.

Everyone wants to disarm criminals. However, the problem with bans is who is most likely to obey them. If the ban primarily disarms lawabiding citizens and not criminals, the ban can have the opposite effect of what was intended.

Richard E. Gardiner
February 2007
BRIEF OF ACADEMICS AS AMICI CURIAE IN SUPPORT OF RESPONDENT
[I really liked reading this one. The comparision data was represented as ratios between D.C. and other areas (such as large cities, nearby states, etc.) over time. Usually I see the data represented as absolute numbers. The ratio representation is a good tool.--Joe]

# Tuesday, March 04, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 04, 2008 12:12:05 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )
By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 04, 2008 11:54:50 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

As I have said before, a lot of crime is created by the government. Here is a great article with the details of one such area.

As street values rise, gun thieves get bolder

Most of us know the gun debate as a war of words - a battle of sound bites between this side and that.

The real front lines are on the streets, where good guns try to hold back the bad ones, and no one takes the time to hold rallies, give speeches or argue about the Second Amendment.

There, the struggle is as intense as ever.

"In so many murders and robberies, the weapon of choice is a gun," said Norfolk Police Chief Bruce P. Marquis. "Millions are being manufactured every year, and we know a lot of them end up in criminals' hands. We put a higher priority on taking guns off the streets than we do drugs."

But clamping down on firearms can have an unintended effect.

"You create a market when you tighten things up," Garfield Headlam said.

He should know. Headlam is serving a 10-year prison sentence for operating a gun-running ring out of Norfolk in the late 1990s. His customers lived in Washington, D.C., where handguns have been outlawed for more than 30 years. Saturday night specials were Headlam's bread and butter.

"You could make a 300 percent profit on those," he said. "Buy 'em from the gun shop for $89 to $150. Cheap quality. That's what they wanted up there."

Money like that has made gun runners bold. Fourteen Virginia gun shops were burglarized last year, including six in Hampton Roads. In two of the cases, thieves sawed a hole in the roof and used ropes to drop inside. In another, armed men forced a clerk to the floor and walked out with 75 handguns.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 04, 2008 10:24:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Technology )

I found the following line here:

Want to find some tools for fighting junk email?

It made me laugh. Actually a pretty good argument could be made for imposing the death penalty on people that send mass junk mail--assuming that sending junk mail should be considered a crime. As much as I hate spam I don't think it should be a crime, but the argument for making the offense punishable by the death penalty is an interesting intellectual exercise for me. I may have hinted at it here before, I'll have to see if I can find it and flesh it out a bit more sometime.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 04, 2008 8:51:37 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

An ATF whistle blower got demoted and had other problems:

Edgar A. Domenech says he thought Justice Department officials would welcome information about mismanagement at the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Instead, the 23-year ATF veteran says, Justice officials ignored his complaints and later retaliated against him by demoting him, denying him a bonus and attempting to give him a poor job review.

"I realized I was committing career suicide at the time, but I felt I had a moral obligation as the deputy director to protect the agency and the men and women of the agency," Domenech said in an interview yesterday. "In retrospect, I was naive to believe that the department would welcome my honesty."

Domenech filed a 13-page complaint yesterday with the Office of Special Counsel, saying that ATF and the Justice Department punished him for raising questions about the performance of former ATF director Carl J. Truscott, who resigned in August 2006 while under investigation for alleged financial mismanagement.

I know from personal experience that people in power do not follow the rules and will find a way to harm you if they decide that is what they want to do. We do not have a "Justice System". We have "Legal System". It will not protect you. At best it will give you an opportunity to compensate you for your losses.

In larger terms what this means is that abuse of power is seldom prevented by the legal system. Only when it becomes egregious and a large majority of people demand the abuse stop will it actually take place. Case in point is the ATF and their abuse of firearms owners and dealers. ATF Special Agents who read Brady scripts to the press should be prosecuted for violation of 18 USC 242 but what Federal Prosecutor is going to take on that case? The prosecutor who should be building a case to put the agent in jail is a work associate of of the ATF agent. It's no different than law enforcement and prosecutors not caring if a few blacks get lynched every once in a while. It may be against the law but, basically, their reasoning will go, the people that did it are "good people" and don't deserve to have their careers ruined over something like that. "It just doesn't matter, it's only about about 10%" (inside "joke" for people that know my sociopathic ex-friend Walter).

In most cases law enforcement will not protect you from government abuse of power. Only you can protect yourself. Naive people believe we have a system of laws that will protect us. But the examples of this not being true are too numerous to even attempt to count.

That is why we have the 2nd Amendment. It is the last ditch guardian of inalienable rights.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, March 04, 2008 7:50:41 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

Even in their homes, LGBT individuals are at risk of murder, aggravated assault and other forms of hate violence because of their sexual orientation. In fact, the home is the most common site of anti-gay violence. Thus, for certain LGBT individuals, the possession of firearms in the home is essential for a sense of personal security -- a fact generally lost in the majoritarian debate about restricting individual’s access to, and use of, firearms. As shown below, not only do members of the LGBT community have a heightened need to possess firearms for self-protection in their homes, the Second Amendment clearly guarantees this most basic right. This Court should not permit the democratic majority to deprive LGBT individuals of their essential and constitutional right to keep and bear arms for self-defense in their own homes.

Michael B. Minton
Brief of Pink Pistols and gays and lesbians for individual liberty as amici curiae in support of respondent.
[As suggested by Kevin I downloaded the entire set of Heller briefs from Constitution Arms and found it quite useful.

One of the points made in the Pink Pistols brief is that majority rule without the minority right to self-defense leads to physical abuse and even death of those minorities. The essence of the way I see it is the minority individual has a much easier time defending themselves in court against a prosecution than being protected from the initial attack by an uncaring or hostile police force. Think of it in terms of what is required for successful prosecution versus a successful unlawful attack on the minority individual. Or, if you want, use the old standby, "It's better to be judged by 12 than carried by six."--Joe]

# Monday, March 03, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 03, 2008 7:46:39 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Home Life )

Both in January of 2007 and 2008 our group at work took the day off (with pay) to go to Stevens Pass to ski (all expenses paid--including transportation and two meals). Those not interested in downhill skiing could snowshoe or cross country ski. Both times I took my own snowshoes (rentals would have been covered but I would rather take my own) and opted for the hike through the trees instead of the downhill adventure my knee surgeon (after the second surgery) advised me to never take up. Even though snowshoes were recommended I found my size 14 boots were more than adequate for the packed trails. It was a very nice hike and I kept wanting to take Barb up there. Yesterday I finally got around to it. She agreed, it was a very nice place to go hiking. Below are some pictures:

Here is what it looked like in January when I went with the people from work:

Although there was less snow on the trees it was sunny and nicer weather when Barb and I went.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 03, 2008 9:20:13 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

Since the Federal government has a huge regulatory agency charged with the regulation and taxing of a right guaranteed by the 2nd Amendment why not expand it or create a new agency charged with regulation and taxing of the 1st Amendment? It seems entirely in line with those that admit we have an individual right to own firearms but claim that right can be restricted. Those same type of regulations should be considered "reasonable" when applied to the 1st Amendment, right?

Doesn't having to get a license involving fingerprints and a background check before you can attend church sound like a good idea? Opening a new church would, of course, require a license, an environment impact statement, and noise abatement plans. And no churches could be located within five miles of a school or public park.

You should fill out the equivalent of a 4473 and get a NICS check before you can write a letter to the editor. And of course there would be a government mandated 10 business day waiting period before it could be published.

All the complaints about the lies by the media would all be solved if we just had better government regulation. Reporters and editors of all media types would be required to keep meticulous records in bound books showing they had properly researched each story. The books could be viewed by government inspectors anytime there was a claim of a falsehood in a story. The entire news organization would have all their computers, printing presses, and printed material seized before they even heard the specifics of the "Federal Press Laws Violations" let alone had their day in court.

"Free-Speech Free Zones" would extend for 1000 feet around schools and in our National Parks. Anyone with a pamphlet, newspaper, magazine, voice or music projection device, Bible, or any other religious printed matter or symbols within ready access of an occupant of a vehicle could be charged with a crime.

That's just a very, very small sample of what would be possible if the analogs of the laws and regulations imposed on the 2nd Amendment were imposed on the 1st Amendment.

Remember what Alan Dershowitz had to say:

Foolish liberals who are trying to read the Second Amendment out of the Constitution by claiming it's not an individual right or that it's too much of safety hazard don't see the danger of the big picture.  They're courting disaster by encouraging others to use the same means to eliminate portions of the Constitution they don't like.

Alan Dershowitz
Quoted in Dan Gifford
The Conceptual Foundations of Anglo-American Jurisprudence in Religion and Reason
62 TENN. L. REV. 759 (1995)

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 03, 2008 8:24:54 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Blog stuff )

I thought Sebastian (Snowflakes in Hell) was already on my blogroll. I've been reading him everyday for months.

That oversight has been corrected.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, March 03, 2008 7:59:03 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

Demoting the Second Amendment to some lower tier of enumerated rights is unwarranted. The Second Amendment has the distinction of securing the most fundamental rights of all—enabling the preservation of one’s life and guaranteeing our liberty. These are not second-class concerns. Yet preservation of human life is also the government’s chief regulatory interest in arms. Constitutional review of gun laws thus finds both individual and governmental interests at their zenith.

Alan Gura
Robert A. Levy
Clark M. Neily III
February 24, 2008
RESPONDENT’S BRIEF
On Writ Of Certiorari To The United States Court Of Appeals For The District Of Columbia Circuit
[I find this last sentence a very interesting point. It explains why, obvious in hindsight, the 2nd Amendment has come under such vicious attack and those attacks have been tolerated so well by the courts and the people. It is much more difficult to justify similar attacks on the 1st Amendment and it has flourished. And a similar analysis explains why we don't have much of our 4th Amendment rights honored as well.--Joe]

# Sunday, March 02, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Sunday, March 02, 2008 9:33:40 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Freedom )

Showing questionable restraint Israel fired a few missiles recently:

Israeli aircraft fired missiles at the office of Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh in Gaza City, escalating an offensive aimed at halting Palestinian rocket attacks.

Israel says the attack is a message that it is now targeting the political leaders of Hamas, the Islamic militant group that rules Gaza. Hamas refuses to renounce violence or recognize Israel.

Had Cuba been firing multiple rockets into Florida every day for months do you think we would have just fired a few missiles back? I can't imagine people expecting anything less than encouraging non government leaders in Cuba to find refuge with friends and relatives elsewhere while our military exterminated all the vermin and started rebuilding with the only communists allowed back on the island being members of the MSM.

Instead Israel tried to get in a rational discussion with those that are irrational:

"Nothing will prevent us from striking at the terrorist organizations responsible for rocket attacks," Mr. Olmert said. "He said that no one has the moral right to preach to Israel for exercising its legitimate right of self-defense."

Responding to the bloodshed, the internationally-backed Palestinian government in the West Bank suspended peace talks with Israel.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas described the Israeli actions in Gaza as a "holocaust." Mr. Abbas has suspended Mideast peace talks in protest at Israel's military offensive against Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip.

No, it's not a holocaust. But if they do not get the message (see the first quote above) they are inviting a demonstration of the difference between their current situation and a true holocaust.

By: Joe Huffman Sunday, March 02, 2008 9:14:05 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom )

Roberta X says she sucks at shutting up and doing what she is told.

I have that same "problem". Ask anyone in my family. Vivid examples date back to at least early grade school when my conflicts with Mrs. Cole became legends. More recent examples involved the court system.

By: Joe Huffman Sunday, March 02, 2008 9:05:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( A Security Theater | Freedom )

Instead of screaming bloody murder about the TSA (A Security Theater) Gail Todd chides the victim. The background is here:

When reader Marlys Powers prepared for a flight to visit her daughter in Phoenix, Ariz., she purchased a vinyl see-through bag to hold all her toiletries. She packed the bag with 3-ounce bottles of shampoo, lotions and toothpaste, as well as her toothbrush and hairbrush.

Marlys thought it would make it easier for security to see what was in her carry-on bag. Security didn't see it that way. Because it wasn't a quart-size bag, they took the lady aside and placed her in a private room for a thorough pat down.

After confirming she wasn't carrying any concealed weapons, they told her they would have to confiscate all her 3-ounce bottles because they weren't in an acceptable-size plastic bag. Then one agent discovered something else: two sandwich bags filled with cookies and banana bread Marlys was taking to her grandchildren.

The agent told her if she could combine her treats into one of the bags, she could use the other to stow her plastic bottles -- which she did. The agent placed that plastic bag back inside her original plastic container and told her to have a good flight -- which she didn't.

Marlys had already missed her flight. And because all carriers were overbooked, she spent several hours standing by for a flight with an empty seat.

While packing all your personal items in a single plastic bag might sound like a sensible thing to do, remember that common sense is not a prerequisite for security rules. And if it doesn't adhere strictly to the rules, it won't fly -- and neither will you.

She goes on to inform her readers how to avoid this by following the rules exactly. It doesn't matter they don't really make sense and are totally ineffective at preventing weapons from getting on planes. But Ms. Todd apparently lives in or near Chicago so it's not too surprising that she uncritically accepts government tyranny as just part of everyday life.

By: Joe Huffman Sunday, March 02, 2008 8:52:35 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Crap for brains | Sex )

If I were a peer reviewing this piece of work I would ask the "researcher", "Please repeat after me, 'correlation is not causation'. Again, 'correlation is not causation'. Good, keep doing that until you can remember it when you are writing your papers."

It looks to me like this guy has staked his career on something and is looking for evidence to support his hypothesis. And of course if that is all you are looking for and you ignore contradictory evidence you can probably convince yourself your hypothesis is valid.

Here is a sample of his conclusions:

Straus analyzed the results of four studies and found that spanking and other corporal punishment by parents is associated with an increased probability of three sexual problems as a teen or adult:
• Verbally and physically coercing a dating partner to have sex.
• Risky sex such as premarital sex without a condom.
• Masochistic sex such as being aroused by being spanked when having sex.

“These results, together with the results of more than 100 other studies, suggest that spanking is one of the roots of relationship violence and mental health problems. Because there is 93 percent agreement between studies that investigated harmful side effects of spanking, and because over 90 percent of U.S. parents spank toddlers, the potential benefits for prevention of sexual and relationship violence is large,” Straus says.

I haven't read all his papers so it's possible he has considered an alternate hypothesis but I could find no evidence of that in the web pages I viewed this morning. The alternate hypothesis that is just "screaming at me" is that children with behavioral problems are more likely to behavioral problems as adults. And if they have more behavioral problems as children then they are more likely to get spanked.

By: Joe Huffman Sunday, March 02, 2008 8:37:58 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

In short, the argument that "the right of the people" is subject to reasonable regulation and restriction tramples on the very words of the Second Amendment, reading the phrase -- "shall not be infringed" -- as if it read "shall be subject only to reasonable regulation to achieve public safety."

Herbert W. Titus
February 11, 2008
Gun Owners of America
Brief amicus curiae in D.C. v. Heller
[I'm tempted to quote nothing but amicus curiae briefs until March 18th.--Joe]

# Saturday, March 01, 2008
By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 01, 2008 5:59:02 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Blog stuff | Gun Rights )

The VPC Blog is a must have. "Everyone" is talking about it and it's good:

The Adventures of Roberta X keeps me looking up words in the dictionary but anyone that likes guns, science fiction and geeky stuff is interesting.

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 01, 2008 5:29:02 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Technology )

I listen to a lot of Audible.com books on my long commute (300 miles one way) between Moscow Idaho and Redmond Washington. This is one book that I can see raising my adrenaline level to "no sleep for you tonight" levels. From Audible:

In a hard-hitting and provocative polemic, Silicon Valley insider and pundit Andrew Keen exposes the grave consequences of today's new participatory Web 2.0 and reveals how it threatens our values, economy, and ultimately the very innovation and creativity that forms the fabric of American achievement.

Our most valued cultural institutions, Keen warns, our professional newspapers, magazines, music, and movies, are being overtaken by an avalanche of amateur, user-generated free content. Advertising revenue is being siphoned off by free classified ads on sites like Craigslist; television networks are under attack from free user-generated programming on YouTube and the like; file-sharing and digital piracy have devastated the multibillion-dollar music business and threaten to undermine our movie industry.

From Amazon:

Keen's relentless "polemic" is on target about how a sea of amateur content threatens to swamp the most vital information and how blogs often reinforce one's own views rather than expand horizons. But his jeremiad about the death of "our cultural standards and moral values" heads swiftly downhill. Keen became somewhat notorious for a 2006 Weekly Standard essay equating Web 2.0 with Marxism; like Karl Marx, he offers a convincing overall critique but runs into trouble with the details. Readers will nod in recognition at Keen's general arguments—sure, the Web is full of "user-generated nonsense"!—but many will frown at his specific examples, which pretty uniformly miss the point. It's simply not a given, as Keen assumes, that Britannica is superior to Wikipedia, or that record-store clerks offer sounder advice than online friends with similar musical tastes, or that YouTube contains only "one or two blogs or songs or videos with real value." And Keen's fears that genuine talent will go unnourished are overstated: writers penned novels before there were publishers and copyright law; bands recorded songs before they had major-label deals. In its last third, the book runs off the rails completely, blaming Web 2.0 for online poker, child pornography, identity theft and betraying "Judeo-Christian ethics."

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 01, 2008 11:17:54 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

It's back:

Combining the double stack capacity of its patented 2011 technology with the light weight benefits of aluminum, the V.I.P. is the best carry pistol on the market today.

Due to overwhelming customer requests, STI International, Inc. has brought back their popular V.I.P. model. Built on the patented modular frame design with a reduced length polymer grip, the VIP delivers the advantages of a high capacity firearm configuration that is well-suited for conceal carry circumstances. The frame is constructed of highly durable 7075 aerospace grade aluminum to keep the weight of the pistol to a minimal 25 oz. The frame is also available in 4140 maxxell alloy steel (which comes in at 29.7 oz)

The VIP has a stainless steel scalloped slide with rear cocking serrations, STI dovetail front sight and Heinie fixed rear sight. The slide is also available in 4140 carbon steel. The VIP comes standard with features such as a stainless steel STI hi-ride grip safety, stainless steel STI single sided thumb safety and an STI stainless steel fully supported, ramped bull barrel. Calibers available are 9x19, 40 S&W, and .45 ACP.

In competition I shoot a STI gun, I carry a STI gun and you should too.

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 01, 2008 11:05:58 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

STI is giving away a free gun. Send them your business card and they may draw it out of a fishbowl on March 28th.

The unfortunate subjects of California need not apply.

In competition I shoot a STI gun, I carry a STI gun and you should too.

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, March 01, 2008 10:38:37 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( )

This promotion is available only to citizens of the USA. Unfortunately, citizens of California are not eligible for this promotion.

STI International
February 17, 2008
Spartan Giveaway
[Unfortunately, citizens of California have been subjugated by a tyrannical regime and have their rights infringed so badly they are unable to fully exercise even the most fundamental of human rights--the right to keep and bear arms.--Joe]