Thursday, July 14, 2005

If someone says London was bombed because of their involvement in Iraq, or the U.S. involvement in the Mideast was the reason for the repeated attacks (USS Cole, World Trade Center bombing, WTC and Pentagon hit with planes, etc.) we suffered then ask them to think about this:

More than 80 Iraqis have been killed in at least 11 suicide attacks since London had its first taste of suicide bombings a week ago today. In the first half of this year more than 1,000 Iraqis have died in about 130 suicide attacks. It has been a sustained terror assault that has steadily grown in intensity and has no precedent in Israel, Beirut or anywhere else.

The Islamic extremists are killing thousands of Iraqis.  Many, if not most, of them are Muslim.  Further food for thought is available in the same article:

THE local kids rushed to greet the US patrol. “Hello, Mister,” they cried to the American soldiers, who started handing out chocolate bars and keyrings. At that moment a car sped from a side street and exploded right next to the crowd gathered around the Humvee.

More than 30 Baghdad youngsters, aged between six and 15, were killed yesterday in a suicide bombing that marked a new level of depravity even in a city used to daily carnage.

...

One woman, Hana Ali, failed to find her 11-year-old son at the hospital. When she returned to the blast scene, she found his head in the rubble.

“They killed all the children of the neighbourhood,” wept Radhi Hamud, but he was one of the “lucky” ones. His 13-year-old son, Husam, was among another 30 or so children who were merely maimed. Husam lost both his legs.

So what's the motivation?  Osama bin Laden told us.  And in this fight, who is a legitimate target (credit to Clayton Cramer)?

Asked what constituted a legitimate target, Bakri said: “We don’t make a distinction between civilians and non-civilians, innocents and non-innocents. Only between Muslims and non-believers. And the life of an unbeliever has no value. It has no sanctity.”

Think about it.

Joe Huffman  Thursday, July 14, 2005 6:59:48 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

The illegal we do immediately. The unconstitutional takes a bit longer.

Henry Kissinger
[Although he said this decades before on another topic it could have been said about the Kelo decision.]

Joe Huffman  Thursday, July 14, 2005 6:35:27 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Wednesday, July 13, 2005
A few months ago I was asked to help a couple of college kids blow up a car for a movie they were making.  Ry and I agreed and then as the time grew near things changed for the kids and the project fell apart.  I still chat online with one of them occasionally and he has a new project he is working on.  It's called Wolfman's Cabin.  It's described as a horror movie and I don't like horror movies.  But from talking to the director this would be a movie I would probably see anyway.  It's more than just horror...
Joe Huffman  Wednesday, July 13, 2005 3:04:59 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

James came back from his visit with friends in Oregon. He brought a bunch of fish with him.  They went fishing in a nearby river and James did his first successful fishing.  Did he like fishing?  "It was boring when the fish weren't biting.  When there was one on the line it was kinda fun."

Had we, his parents suggested he should try fishing he would have put on his shirt that says, in big letters across the front:

Keep out of direct sunlight

Then he would have glared at us as if we had suggested he give up his video games.

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, July 13, 2005 12:46:57 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

I got a call from a fellow shooter about an hour ago.  He asked if had read the latest American Rifleman magazine.  "How recent?" I asked.  "I just got it in the mail today."  "Definitely not.  What's up?"  He told me and I ran out to the mailbox to find my copy of the magazine.

The article is titled "If You Hunt or Own a Gun... You're Fired!"

The URL associated with this article http://www.nra.org/URfired is broken.  Does anyone have a URL that works?

Update: Here is a scanned version of the article:


Click on the picture to see the full sized article.

Update2: The related info just keeps coming in.  I just got an email with a link to this:

Guns in the Workplace:
State Laws v. Employer's Rights
Duration: 3 hours
Cost: $169

Changes in state concealed weapon laws have created additional burdens on employers. Workplace shootings nearly doubled from 2002 to 2003, increasing from 25 to 45 incidents. The number of employees killed in these shootings rose from 33 to 69. A recent study found that workplaces with policies that permitted guns were five times more likely to experience homicides than those that prohibited weapons.

Get the information and resource you need to ensure a safe and weapon free workplace. Learn why your workplace needs to address weapons in the workplace, changes in state concealed weapon laws, model policy and guidelines and best practices for enforcement.

Update3: An email from a friend:

I seriously question this assertion;

"A recent study found that workplaces with policies that permitted guns were five times more likely to experience homicides than those that prohibited weapons." Where can that be verified?

My response:

There is a pretty good chance it's true. But almost for certain it includes armed robbers having their I.Q. reduced to zero from lead poisoning under the category of "experienced homicides" at a workplace. They aren't lying, they just don't distinguish being unjustified, justified, and praiseworthy homicide. Another point to be made is that workplaces at high risk are the ones that are most likely to allow firearms--hence it's not the cause and effect they want to imply that results in homicides. Instead it's homicides are likely hence firearms are allowed.

If I wanted to spend enough time on it I think I could find the statistics. But I don't think it's worth the effort at this point.

Update4: Another item from the August 2005 issue of American Rifleman:


And editorial by Wayne LaPierre.  Click on the picture to see the full sized article.

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, July 13, 2005 11:52:41 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

Kim du Toit reports on Walter who was one of the Boomershoot instructors in 2004:

Folks, I just heard that SSGT Walter Gaya (the “Walter” in the Walter-Adam Fund) was slightly injured by shrapnel caused by an IED in Mosul.

Thankfully, his wounds aren’t too bad ("He has a wound to one eye [he said he could still see out of it just after it happened] and a wound to his leg that has something to do with his tendon," from Adam’s Mom), and he’s recovering nicely, and in good spirits, at the Army hospital in Landstuhl. He’ll be returning Stateside for full recuperation and rehab.

Go read the rest as well. Kim is asking for a donation for Walter's wife.  I don't even have a job right now and I donated $10--you can do the same.

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, July 13, 2005 8:07:23 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  |  Trackback

If a law containing the word "gun" or "firearm", etc.... would still describe an illegal act regardless of that word, the word should be removed as being unnecessary.  Furthermore, laws that describe mere possession of an item (that can be safely controlled and maintained by the possessor) as the punishable "act" are not "reasonable" ...

Paul Smith
Email Sept 3, 2001, 7:13 PM

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, July 13, 2005 7:44:36 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Tuesday, July 12, 2005

I suck.

As I stated the other day I'm participating in the postal match put on by Analog Kid over at Random Nuclear Strikes.  I didn't even both to score the target.  But here are the results of the first contest:

I was using a AR-15 carbine.  The larger holes around the orange dots were from something else a few years ago.  Just the smaller holes in the 8.5" x 11" paper are important.  I got a few points but hardly enough to matter.  Another couple additional data points--I started with an empty gun, loaded magazine on the table in front of me and from the time I moved to pick up the gun until the last shot was 55 seconds.

Pathetic. 10 shots from 50 yards, "rapid fire", open sights, center-fire rifle, offhand.  I have hit 18" targets 7 times out of 10 at 200 yards offhand before ("infinite time between shots). This is terrible performance. I need to practice more.

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, July 12, 2005 10:32:26 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [4]  |  Trackback

Analog Kid at Random Nuclear Strikes asks:

Do you think the vast array of surveillance cameras in London helped even a tiny bit?

Security expert Bruce Schneier has this to say:

I was going to write something about the foolishness of adding cameras to public spaces as a response to terrorism threats, but Scott Henson said it already...

Henson has been blogging on this topic for quite a while and points out that when private businesses install cameras they can have some success.  When governments install cameras in public areas they have little positive effect.  England has millions of cameras but they are now to the point of outlawing certain types of clothes that thugs use to easily defeat the cameras.  And as long as you are allowed to wear clothes and carry backpacks, shopping bags, and brief cases in public there will be no surveillance system which can prevent crime or especially prevent terrorist activities.  Spending the resources on better intelligence and destroying the culture of terrorism is a much wiser plan of action.

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, July 12, 2005 8:53:30 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

You should be able to put the second bullet in the same hole as the first bullet. That's gun control.

Ted Nugent
July 2005
From http://www.austin360.com/music/content/music/statesman/2005/07/11nugent.html

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, July 12, 2005 8:34:30 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Monday, July 11, 2005

This came in from an email list I am on:

Sent: Monday, July 11, 2005 8:16 AM
Subject: Denver Airport Checked Firearm Experience

 

One of my good friends goes prairie-dog hunting every year in the west.

This year they went to Colorado.

He has always used the same procedure when shipping his rifles:

1. Remove the bolts and put into a separate piece of baggage.
2. Declare the firearms, go through red tag procedure, etc.

On his return trip, the bolts ended up in a carryon bag. They were spotted going through the x-ray machine and flagged by the TSA. When asked what the bolts were, he explained that they were a piece of a rifle, but not enough to call it a gun and that he had separated them for safety and security.

TSA immediately called airport police and local Denver police. TSA explained that their definition of a gun is that it has a firing pin and a serial number, and that these bolts had both and were therefore guns.

He was taken to a security holding area.

My friend reports that the TSA folks and airport security were very tough on him, but the Denver police refused to arrest him when he explained his logic for removing the bolts and not thinking that they would be an issue going through screening.

He was given the option of surrendering the bolts for destruction or missing his flight to check them on a later flight.

Not liking either of those options, he suggested that there was a post office in the Denver airport and could he mail them home. The answer was sure!, good idea. He mailed them home and made his flight.

TSA is still threatening to follow up with charges. I'll post more as I hear it.

I checked out the TSA Permitted and Prohibited Items (PDF file) web page.  It says parts of guns and firearms are prohibited as carry on.  So even a magazine spring or a basepad are prohibited.

I had my own "interesting experience" with my guns with TSA at the Denver airport once but it turned out better.  I thought I had written it up somewhere but I can't find it right now.

Joe Huffman  Monday, July 11, 2005 8:13:33 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

Analog Kid has his announcement of the series here.  The first week is here and is for your carbine.  Variations exist if you don't have a carbine.  I've printed out my target and will be headed to the range either today or tomorrow.

This isn't about competition so much as it is about getting out to the range to practice.  To exercise your freedoms.  If you don't use it you lose it.  I've been extremely negligent in getting out to the range in recent months and it's going to change.  This postal match is going to be part of it.

Joe Huffman  Monday, July 11, 2005 7:39:47 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  |  Trackback

The people cannot delegate to government the power to do anything which would be unlawful for them to do themselves.

John Locke

Joe Huffman  Monday, July 11, 2005 12:00:40 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Sunday, July 10, 2005

For local people only.

I had severely neglected a couple web sites starting sometime before the Boomershoot and just now got them all up to date.  Match results in particular were way behind.  That has been fixed.  Check out the following for new stuff:

Lewiston Pistol Club
Lewis Clark Wildlife Club

Joe Huffman  Sunday, July 10, 2005 1:40:45 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

As hopeful as I am about our progress on the gun rights front it's certainly true we have been losing major battles on other fronts. This article by Radley Balko at the Cato Institute is concise and to the point:

This past term, the Supreme Court handed down two rulings that will have a catastrophic effect on our personal freedom. In Raich v. Gonzaelez, the Court ruled that the Constitution's provision to regulate interstate commerce permitted federal agents to raid the home of a sick woman and confiscate the six marijuana plants she was growing for her own medication -- all in a state whose population had overwhelmingly voted to make medical marijuana legal. In Kelo v. New London, the Court found that the phrase "public use" in the Fifth Amendment allows local governments to snatch land from law abiding people, and sell it off to wealthy developers.

Both cases will have negative repercussions for liberty that reach far beyond their specific facts. The founding fathers understood that every right we have emanates from our right to private property. In this sense, "private property" means not only the right to one's home and land, but also the right to own the product of one's labor. James Madison, the father of the U.S. Constitution, wrote in 1789, "A man is said to have a right to his property, he may be equally said to have a property in his rights. Where an excess of power prevails, property of no sort is duly respected. No man is safe in his opinions, his person, his faculties, or his possessions."

Every right we have stems from government's recognition that we, the people, are born with our rights intact. We own them. We have property in them. We voluntarily forfeit some of these rights to government, in exchange for protection from outside threats, the administration of justice, and the rule of law. The purpose of the U.S. Constitution, then, is not to tell us what rights we have. We're born with the right to do as we please, so long as we don't harm others. The Constitution's purpose is to outline what rights we give to the government, and to firmly define the limits of government power.

Unfortunately, this isn't widely understood. Commonly, we hear people say things like, "where in the Constitution does it say you have the right to smoke a cigarette?" Or, "where in the Constitution does it say you're allowed to look at pornography?" James Madison worried about questions like these. He feared that if we included a Bill of Rights in the Constitution, people would eventually come to assume the rights it listed would be the only rights we have. Others felt some rights -- speech, arms, etc. -- were so vital as to merit explicit mention. As a compromise, they included the Ninth Amendment, which says that the enumeration of some rights should not be construed to exclude rights not enumerated. So to answer the questions above, your right to smoke a cigarette or consume pornography are both in the Ninth Amendment.

This is why the decision in Raich is so important, and so devastating. While the Supreme Court has ignored the Ninth Amendment for decades, Raich may serve as its obituary. If the Ninth Amendment doesn't protect a man's right to consume whatever medicine might give him relief from pain -- or that in some cases could save his life -- what's left that it could possibly protect?

If the Supreme Court killed off the Ninth Amendment with Raich, Kelo in many ways represents the culmination of its complete disregard for even our explicitly enumerated rights.

Go back to Madison's quote above. A government that doesn't respect the title to your land is in all likelihood a government that will in time lose respect for your property in your right to speech, arms, and due process. And indeed in recent years, with help from the Supreme Court, government at all levels has run roughshod over even our explicitly enumerated rights.

With increasingly restrictive campaign laws, for example, we've lost the most important of our First Amendment protections -- the right to criticize the people who govern us at election time. The Second Amendment has been trampled by gun control legislation. In our nation's capital, for example, guns of any kind have been all but outlawed. The PATRIOT Act and a spate of Supreme Court Drug War decisions have rendered our Fourth Amendment protections from warrantless searches meaningless. Our Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination has been diluted in many contexts, and outright suspended in others (drunk driving cases, for example). Many prosecutors treat its grand jury provision not as a criminal protection, but as an invitation to abuse. And, of course, Kelo wrecked the Fifth's takings protections. There are only cursory examples. There are many more.

In this sense, Kelo's symbolic significance is probably more damaging than its practical application. By deferring to state and local governments, who may now seize property for virtually any reason at all, the Supreme Court has announced its complete disregard for private property. Which means that America may have finally achieved Madison's dim vision: "An excess of power" now prevails, and we're now living under a government that neither respects our right to property, nor acknowledges the property we own in our rights.

Perhaps this isn't the cheeriest of columns to write for Independence Day. But it's certainly appropriate. Thomas Jefferson famously wrote that, "eternal vigilance is the price of liberty." We obviously haven't been vigilant enough. Coincidentally, July 4 marks not only the birth of America, but the death of two of its founders -- Jefferson, and John Adams died on this day in 1826. Perhaps we should mark the date not only by celebrating America's independence, but by working to insure that this July 4 doesn't also mark the death of the ideas that animated its founding.

It's difficult to achieve the grass roots support for many of our other rights like we have in the gun rights movement.  We, as gun owners, go to the range, gun shows, clubs, buy and read magazines and in general associate with others and exercise our rights on a regular basis.  All of us are similarly impacted by unconstitutional restrictions on our guaranteed freedoms.  There are many millions of us.  But how do we, as property owners and others in fear of unconstitutional takings of various types organize the critical mass to get the appropriate message to the politicians on other freedoms?  Only a few hundred or a few thousand are impacted each year--not millions as in the case of gun owners.

Joe Huffman  Sunday, July 10, 2005 1:05:24 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

Family member Dr. Werner Weissenhofer reports from Vienna. It seems that a felon armed with a 357 revolver robbed a bank. As he left the bank, he was accosted by a policeman whom he murdered with one shot. Great excitement ensued, with the felon taking hostages and racing madly around from one store to another. When the forces of law and order had been mobilized and surrounded the goblin, a policeman volunteered to trade himself to the goblin for two hostages. This offer was accepted, at which time the felon fired at the policeman and seriously wounded him. The forces of law and order opened up with everything they had, which was mostly AUG and Glock fire. Shortly, the goblin killed himself with one round. He had fired three times and achieved three hits. The police, according to their official report, fired 1,261 rounds without drawing blood.

At one time, we used to refer to an event of this sort as a "Chinese Fire Drill." Later we came to call if "Father's Day in Harlem." After the interment of the Ayatollah Khomeini, we began to call it "An Iranian Funeral." Now, I guess we can call it "A Viennese Bank Robbery."

As I have often stated, if someone wants to shoot at me, I sure hope he does it on full-auto.

Jeff Cooper
Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
Vol. 1, No. 9
October 1993

Joe Huffman  Sunday, July 10, 2005 9:30:24 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Saturday, July 09, 2005

This is basically further confirmation of what I said a while back about the gun registry in Canada: 

The gun controls implemented by the federal Liberal government in 1995 appear to have had little if any effect on gun-related deaths, despite a $1.3-billion price tag and the government's extravagant claims that the measures would produce "a culture of safety" and dramatically reduce crime.

Last fall, Statistics Canada declared that "the specific impact of the firearms program or the firearms registry" on Canada's declining homicide rate could not "be isolated from that of other factors." On Tuesday, following the release of her paper, Deaths Involving Firearms: 1979 to 2002, StatsCan researcher Kathryn Wilkins explained, "there have been gun-control laws for most of this last century, of one sort or another," so it is difficult to identify a single cause of Canada's shrinking rate of firearms deaths (a category that includes murders, suicides and accidents).

...

We can understand Statistics Canada's reluctance to come right out and pronounce Ottawa's gun controls to be irrelevant: They're statisticians. But taxpayers and laymen are not similarly constrained.

They have spent over a billion dollars to try and answer just one question.  Their answer is "No."  And my response is "Nice try, you lose--in so many ways".

Joe Huffman  Saturday, July 09, 2005 7:24:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

Michelle Malkin is the most recent blogger to bring this to my attention.  Someone else did a few days ago but I can't seem to find that post right now. 

The story is that some wacko judge ruled that two radio talk show hosts (I've met and talked with both personally, but those are stories for another time) were campaign contributors because of their on the air support of an effort to eliminate a gas tax increase in Washington State.  The Seattle Times carried the AP story

KVI and Fisher Broadcasting executives were aghast. They said talk-show hosts John Carlson and Kirby Wilbur were only doing what political commentators and newspaper editorial pages do across America: discussing issues and recommending action.

"Each host is entitled to his own opinion on the issues of the day," said Dennis Kelly, a top official at Fisher Broadcasting, KVI's parent company. "We don't agree with the premise of the ruling. If the judge's ruling holds, it will have a chilling effect on talk and news shows across America. It was a really unwise ruling."

The Seattle Times editorials, somewhat surprisingly, had strong words against this ruling:

See what is being done here. The judge is following a simple syllogism:

All political contributions may be regulated;

Speech is a political contribution;

Therefore, speech may be regulated.

...

Though state law sets no spending limits on initiative campaigns, it does set a limit of $1,375 per contributor to state election campaigns. Suppose, then, that Dino Rossi ran for governor again, that Wilbur and Carlson strongly supported him, and that the Rossi campaign were required to report it as a $20,000 in-kind contribution by Fisher Broadcasting.

In that case, Fisher would have violated the law. And how? By speaking on political topics during an election campaign.

Two years ago, when the federal campaign-finance law reached the U.S. Supreme Court, dissenting justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas warned that something like this would happen. We doubted it; it seemed clear to us that the law applied to ads, not editorial content. We thought Thomas was over the top when he said campaign-finance law was leading toward "outright regulation of the press."

Judge Wickham has made a step toward just that. It is a dangerous, unconstitutional ruling. The losers need to appeal it and the appellate courts need to reverse it.

The more astute people on the left have began realizing that all that power they gave, and in this case are giving, to government is more and more being put in the hands of their political enemies.  The editorial writer(s) were able to think far enough ahead to see they could be next.  I don't know the exact process that occurred in their mind(s) but I envision it was something like what Lyndon Johnson articulated.  This is what we call a learning moment.  It's not too much of a stretch to imagine them having a learning moment about firearms as a result of this same incident.

Joe Huffman  Saturday, July 09, 2005 10:13:34 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

I live in a state where machine guns are legal and people often ask if I have any.  I don't.  I'm not a fan of machine guns.  I've fired a few, when other people were paying for the ammo, but my impression was that I could get more rounds on target in the same amount of time with a semi-auto.  I've also read of fairly well done tests and saw one video of such a test where similar conclusions were reached.  The bottom line for me, assuming you are using a reliable gun in the right caliber for the job, is always time and accuracy.  Machine guns just don't improve my bottom line.  I'll agree there are valid applications for full automatics but I just don't envision myself being in a situation where it would be the proper tool for the job.

Regardless of the above position on machine guns, I have a big problem with government restricting firearms of any type.  Part of the reason is the "slippery slope", part is the obvious "someone else has legitimate use", and part is the problem of distinguishing between "good guns" and "bad guns".  This latter problem is addressed on this JPFO web page:

The technicians who work at FTB testify before the courts as “experts” on the technology of firearms. They may or may not have any real-world or industry experience. It is a fact that no technician at FTB has ever held a federal firearms license or ever designed a firearm. Unfortunately the problem runs even deeper than that. The recent public exposure of an incompetent FTB technician, Michael J. Cooney (U.S. v. Glover), which resulted in the dismissal with prejudice of a federal prosecution of an innocent citizen, raises troubling questions about the legal validity of past prosecutions in which Mr. Cooney testified, and possibly those of other FTB technicians.

Congress has given the ATF the task of “classifying” firearms - for instance, determining whether a firearm is a common, semi-automatic that fires one shot with each trigger pull or whether it is a machine gun, designed to fire multiple rounds on one trigger pull (full auto). Numerous gun owners and gun makers have been bankrupted or imprisoned because the ATF stated that their firearms were “illegal machine guns” rather than semi-autos. If the ATF's classifications were accurate, then this would just be a matter for lawyers and lawmakers. But there is ample evidence – and not only in the case of Mr. Cooney -- to indicate that the ATF's classifications are arbitrary and inaccurate. The ATF seemingly does not employ consistent testing criteria and standards.

The core issue is the methodology (or lack of) in making firearm classifications. The ATF does not employ the time-honored and well-honed methods of scientific inquiry.

...

In attempting to “prove” that a semi-automatic firearm is, or can easily be made, full-auto, ATF “experts” have been known to attach a variety of devices to the gun being tested. They commonly, for instance, fasten new parts to the firearm or remove parts from the firearm, then hold the resulting device together with duct tape, plastic cable ties, or small metal bars before test firing it. They use these aids because otherwise the components of the jury-rigged test weapon will not hold together on their own. Such a device would be useless in the real world, yet the ATF freely uses these Rube Goldberg contraptions to “prove” that a weapon is illegal, and that the original maker or owner of the firearm is committing a federal crime!

These strange ATF-created lab contraptions can also be so dangerous that the testers hide behind barriers to protect themselves against exploding firearms. Yet ATF agents may still tell a jury that such a weapon is a usable “machine gun.”

I didn't follow up on the story to verify it for myself but I heard several years ago a guy had a machine gun which was made inoperable by the receiver being cut in half.  He was a successful gun rights activist.  The anti-gun politicians didn't like his successes.  A police raid on his place turned up the cut in half machine gun.  It was claimed by my story teller than the ATF lab used duct tape to hold the two pieces of the receiver together and got it to fire two rounds with one pull of the trigger before it fell apart.  What I do know is true is that the gun rights activist spent several years in prison for illegal possession of a machine gun.

And as Alphecca points out today:

Poorly worded laws are an open invitation to abuse by authorities.

...

A bad law is worse than no law.

And I'm with Jeff Cooper on machine guns (full story in tomorrows "Quote of the day"):

As I have often stated, if someone wants to shoot at me, I sure hope he does it on full-auto.

Jeff Cooper
Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
Vol. 1, No. 9
October 1993

Let's just get rid of the silly restrictions on full automatics.  There is no valid use for such a law.

Joe Huffman  Saturday, July 09, 2005 5:36:02 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

We have reached an age in which entrepreneurial capitalism is no longer relevant. It's an end to the myth that the little guy who works hard and believes in himself can succeed in America. We have entered an age of collective entrepreneurialism. Where resources and investment must be directed for the good of society.

Robert B. Reich
Secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton
Quoted by Jack Kemp at the CPAC, 2/12/94

[For those of you who think nothing has improved under the Bush administration. --Joe]
Joe Huffman  Saturday, July 09, 2005 4:16:55 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [3]  |  Trackback
 Friday, July 08, 2005

I can announce it now.  She should have turned in her resignation at her old job 30 minutes ago.

Barb has comes through for our family again.  Numerous times in the past I have quit my steady paying job to work for a startup, some of them my own, other times someone else's and Barb had to pick up the slack in our finances.  Our move to Moscow in fact was because Barb got a job here for 2X her pay in Sandpoint.  And it is that same employer who is now is going to pay her 3X what she was earning in Colfax.  She is a hot commodity right now and we have suspected she was underpaid for a quite a while but we didn't know the extent.  It's not quite as blatant as you might think because she was working part time at both the Sandpoint and Colfax jobs.  But even ignoring the benefits she now gets the raw dollars per hour increase was 15%, plus the sign-on bonus, plus the $1600/year educational stipend.  It's great to be married to someone that can more than pull her own weight when needed.

Joe Huffman  Friday, July 08, 2005 8:03:04 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

James and Xenia left town last week just as Kim was moving back in (merely a coincidence).  James went 'camping' with friends at some cabin in Oregon.  Xenia went to summer camp and is then off to Montana with her boyfriend and parents for a couple weeks.

James called and left a message on my cell phone while we were in the mountains far from any cell phone service.  The message was, "Who's taking care of the dogs?"  Nothing about if we survived our Jeep adventure.  Nothing about how he misses us.  Nothing about how he hates the outdoors unless it is with someone other than his parents.  Nope.  He wanted to know about the dogs.

Xenia is not allowed to use her cell phone at camp.  However she snuck off to her cabin for a few minutes on Tuesday and called--to ask about her cat.

Joe Huffman  Friday, July 08, 2005 7:32:14 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

Truth never damages a cause that is just.

Mohandas K. Gandhi
(1869-1948), Indian political and spiritual leader.
Non-Violence in Peace and War, vol. 2, ch. 162 (1949).

Joe Huffman  Friday, July 08, 2005 6:12:38 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Thursday, July 07, 2005

I ran across a couple new (to me) anti-gun web sites today.

I haven't really looked over either of them very well.  They are mental cases just from the names of the organizations. The first thing I saw on Handgun-free America was this screed on "assault weapons" which confirms my diagnosis:

These weapons, which are designed to spray bullets while shooting from the hip, are built to kill large numbers of human beings as quickly and efficiently as possible.

...

Plain and simple, these guns are used to commit crimes by criminals and terrorists.  While the NRA claims that assault weapons have never been used in crime, they are simply lying. 

[heavy sigh]

The NRA has never claimed anything like that.  They have claimed they are rarely used in crime--which is true.  And we don't really need to get into the "spray bullets while shooting from the hip" portion do we?  The guns have all have sights on them!  And I'm nearly certain there are more rounds fired from "assault weapons" at the Boomershoot each year than there are in criminal acts.  Here are some pictures of the more common uses for "assault weapons" (click on the pictures for the video):


No video available for this one.

That should put the "Handgun-Free America" people at ease, don't you think?

Joe Huffman  Thursday, July 07, 2005 2:29:23 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

I get email about once a day from Gun Guys.  They are rabidly anti-gun and put their own perverted spin on the news.  For example on this story they have this to say:

Rapper Lil' Kim Disappointed To Only Serve Time For Lying About A Shooting.  Serving Time For A Shooting Is WAAAAY More Chic.

Of course just being anti-gun qualifies them having mental problems in my book, but now they comment on the London bombing which should put them into that category with a lot more people:

It's a humbling reminder that for all the talk about safety and self-protection, no amount of firepower can avert an attack like this.  No amount of violence can ensure such attacks won't occur again.  Perhaps the world will gradually realize that talking your differences out is much easier and more ethical than shooting them out.

"Talking your differences out"?  Osama sent us a letter and told us he was done talking.  He said either submit or prepare to fight.  And these "gun guys" claim "No amount of violence can ensure such attacks won't occur again?"  Get a clue guys!  How many villains have faced a firing squad and gone on to be repeat offenders?

Joe Huffman  Thursday, July 07, 2005 2:04:04 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

From his blog posting:

I would also like to urge everyone not to get wrapped up in the particulars of the terrorist tactics. We need to resist the urge to react against the particulars of this particular terrorist plot, and to keep focused on the terrorists' goals. Spending billions to defend our trains and busses at the expense of other counterterrorist measures makes no sense. Terrorists are out to cause terror, and they don't care if they bomb trains, busses, shopping malls, theaters, stadiums, schools, markets, restaurants, discos, or any other collection of 100 people in a small space. There are simply too many targets to defend, and we need to think smarter than protecting the particular targets the terrorists attacked last week.

Smart counterterrorism focuses on the terrorists and their funding -- stopping plots regardless of their targets -- and emergency response that limits their damage.

And as usual Sen. Schumer gets it wrong:

The bombings apparently also prompted Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., to look at tightening ground transportation systems. He announced he would introduce amendments to the Homeland Security appropriations bill that would double the current $100 million proposed for mass transit and rail security and double funding to $20 million for bus security improvements, particularly for New York.

Joe Huffman  Thursday, July 07, 2005 12:33:12 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

Last night I read this news:

...the link between breast cancer and bras is slightly more convincing than the link between smoking and lung cancer.  They speculate that the cause is restriction of lymph circulation and resulting long-term exposure of cells to toxins, but whether this is the true mechanism or not is pretty irrelevant to the facts above.

I've been telling Barb to forget the bra for over 30 years now.  No luck.  Pointing this news out to her last night was no more convincing.  [heavy sigh]

I found this news on the web site of our ISP in a short article by Monica.  Monica has long been someone I found exceptional attractive.  Sure, she is probably as old as I am but she has the body shape that never fails to get my attention.  She appears to be is almost painfully shy but I enjoy talking to her.  I wonder if she has taken the advice on the bra more to heart that Barb...

I needed to talk to her about something today anyway.  I'll check things out while I'm there.

Joe Huffman  Thursday, July 07, 2005 9:56:21 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

Washington D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams, a Democrat, apparently has some sort of mental problem.  This was reported about some things he had to say yesterday:

Bitter about efforts to loosen gun restrictions in the US capital, Washington's mayor yesterday told Congress to stay out of the District of Columbia's business and contrasted the fight for democracy abroad with the lack of rights for the city's residents.

...

In wielding its budgetary power over the district last week, the Republican-led House voted to prohibit the city from spending funds to enforce a 29-year-old gun control law requiring any firearms kept at home to be unloaded and disassembled or protected by a trigger lock.

...

''It's really no one's business other than the citizens of the district," Williams told reporters. ''It really is so galling when you're fighting for rights overseas, to build democracy overseas, and then you have the capital of this country just totally disregard any kind of home-rule consideration."

Apparently he is concerned about his "rights" as mayor to deprive the citizens of their inalienable rights guaranteed by the Bill of Rights.  A reminder to Williams--governments have powers, people have rights.  And in this country governments have enumerated powers.  If they aren't give those powers by the people in the constitution then they don't legitimately have those powers.  And our Bill of Rights says, "... The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed."

Alphecca has a slightly different, but entirely supportable, view on the same thing.

Joe Huffman  Thursday, July 07, 2005 9:32:26 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
While we were out in the mountains we placed a geocache.  The listing was just approved.
Joe Huffman  Thursday, July 07, 2005 9:14:50 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

London was hit this morning.  Three explosions in "The Tube" and one on one of their famous double-decker buses.  Dozens killed perhaps a 1000 injured.

From the San Francisco Chronicle and others Al-Qaida in Iraq said it had killed Egypt's top envoy in Iraq.

I've reported on these particular terrorists before.  And I've said before they just don't understand what their actions mean to us.  Their attacks on the innocent only serve to further convince us that harsh actions need to be taken against them.  Of course they don't believe there are any innocents.  We don't understand how they think and they don't understand how we think.  They make demands of us that we cannot and will not submit to.  They give us no choice but to fight them:

If you fail to respond to all these conditions, then prepare for fight with the Islamic Nation. The Nation of Monotheism, that puts complete trust on Allah and fears none other than Him.

As sad as it makes me and I'm sure most others we have only one option available to us.  We must destroy their extremist culture.  Todays attacks will only convince still more people of what I see as a moral necessity.

Joe Huffman  Thursday, July 07, 2005 9:02:07 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

Whoever uses force without Right... puts himself into a state of War with those, against whom he uses it, and in that state all former Ties are canceled, all other Rights cease, and every one has a Right to defend himself, and to resist the Aggressor.

John Locke

Joe Huffman  Thursday, July 07, 2005 7:00:03 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback