Update on the Story Below – The Government Responds to People Defending Themselves

Apparently they’re worried about people “taking the law into their own hands,” as this report explains:

When it’s O-K to shoot to protect yourself and your family

There’s debate into when it’s O-K to shoot to protect yourself and your family after a recent rash of shootings involving homeowners. One deadly robbery started at the Union Planters Bank on Quince Road and Perkins Friday night. That’s when the victim’s ATM card didn’t work. The suspects took the man to his home just a few blocks away on Dunn Avenue. That’s where the victim got a gun and shot the two suspects, killing one. The District Attorney ruled the shooting justifiable homicide but issued a warning about cases like this one. And don’t forget the infamous Cat Burglar, gunned down by a home owner in the Hickory Hill area just last month. With a series of home defense shootings this summer, D-A Bill Gibbons wants to make sure the public is aware of the law.

Rosevone Bird knows all to well about deadly force. Last week, a man pushed his way into his home and attacked his wife’s caretaker. Bird responded with one shot from his 357 magnum. “I shot him.” Despite protecting his family, Bird says he is not proud of what he did. “Hell no, I feel bad.”

The shooting was ruled justifiable by the District Attorney’s office. But Bill Gibbons has a warning, protecting your property with deadly force is not justifiable. Gibbons said, “Essentially a person cannot use deadly force in self defense merely to protect personal property. A person has to believe that his or her life is in jeopardy.” In fact, state law spells it out: The person must have a reasonable belief that there is an imminent danger of death or serious bodily injury. “If we face a situation where someone does use deadly force simply to protect property we will be prepared to prosecute that person.”

Rosevone Bird has already made that split second life and death decision. Would he do it again? “If I had to I sure would.” But for others who use deadly force in the future, a warning your actions will be carefully reviewed. It is very hard to say on a case by case basis what is justifiable and what is not. The bottom line, you have to believe that you or someone your with is in danger of serious injury or death if you don’t take action.

In Friday night’s shooting, the homeowner shot and killed Ricky Ricardo Wilborn. Another suspect was shot and is in critical condition. Prosecutors say if he recovers, he could face charges. Last month, two people died in two separate home invasions on the same night, the first on Lark where the homeowner shot and killed one man, another suspect injured, the second on Wildwind Cove, where the homeowner shot and killed the man known as the east Memphis cat burglar.

How about this: Let the people shoot to protect their property. I bet crime goes down.

The More of This There is Now, the Less There Will Be in the Future

AlphaPatriot mentioned this story, but I had to hunt down the link.

Home invader shot to death

By Bill Dries

[email protected]

July 12, 2003

One man was shot to death and another was wounded after they forced a man inside his East Memphis home Friday night, police said.

The shooting was at 4555 Dunn near Perkins and Willow.

Insp. Richard Sojourner said the shooting came after two men confronted the resident of the Dunn home at a Union Planters ATM at Perkins and Quince. They ordered him to withdraw money, but the machine kept his ATM card.

They forced the man back into his car, Sojourner said, and went to another ATM, where the same thing happened with a second ATM card.

The two then forced him to drive them to his home to get some money, and when they went inside, the resident pulled a gun and shot both of them.

Police would not release the identities of any of the three.

The shooting marked the latest in a series of incidents in which homeowners have shot attackers who broke into their homes or forced the residents inside.

Among them:

William Ronnie Payne, 45, was shot to death when he tried to force his way into a home at 4212 Warbonnet Wednesday night.

Kevin Martrell Humphrey, 19, was killed and a second suspect was injured June 13 when they tried to force their way into a home at 2959 Lark.

David Ronald Washington, 44, identified by police as the so-called East Memphis cat burglar, was shot to death when he broke into a home at 3980 Wildwind Cove about 2:35 a.m. June 13.

Gee, it almost looks like a trend! And two in one day!

The unnamed shooter had big brass ones, and I applaud his efforts.

This is Logically Known as a Non Sequitur

Publicola points out a “useful idiot” in this story about a mother whose son was stabbed with a knife, and then used that assault as an impetus to form “Mothers Against GUN Violence.”

The logic behind that leaves my head smoking like Nomad just before Scotty beamed it off the Enterprise.

Publicola put it well: “Personally I would have thought, ‘Since my unarmed son was stabbed with a knife then obviously he wouldn’t have been stabbed if he had a gun. So therefore I will encourage people to learn how to use & carry guns so they won’t be stabbed to death by criminals the way my son was.’ But that’s just me.”

Me, too. (But her son didn’t die. He recovered.)

Oh, Bite Me, Clayton!

I really respect Clayton Cramer – most of the time. His tireless defense of the Second Amendment, his exhaustive research into the history of the right to arms awes me, some times. But he has a serious bug up his ass where it comes to homosexuality, and this post is really over the top. Let me fisk:

There Are Days That I Despair for America

Me too, Clayton, but usually only when some Darwin Award candidate ends up in public office.

Along with the absurd “historical” arguments based on Puritans being gay-friendly, one of the other arguments for overturning the Texas sodomy statute was that sodomy laws were originally part of a larger system of traditional, religious sexual morality laws–the rest of which no longer exist. Texas, for example, had repealed its bestiality statute in 1973, when the legislature wrote the dearly departed homosexual sodomy law. What were they thinking? Did bestiality have so much support in Texas in 1973 that the legislature felt like legalizing it?

I don’t know. I hear a lot of Texan jokes…

Most Americans purport to be Christians–a sizeable fraction identifying themselves as evangelical or fundamentalist Christians. Yet American life is built increasingly around the unlimited pursuit of sex: premarital, extramarital, and postmarital. A lot of Americans have taken marriage vows that they asserted were permanent–and yet in the last 20 years, I have seen divorce become the norm–even among regular churchgoers.

Which pretty much puts to lie the assertion that these people really are Christians, doesn’t it? There certainly seems to be a large quantity of church-going seculars in this country.

Unfortunately, America is a fundamentally hypocritical and depraved nation. There are some who see the Lawrence decision as the beginning of the end of America. They are wrong. It is really just the final blow. There will be some more shocking decisions of the courts, and I’m sure that there will be considerable popular outrage when the Court rules that states must offer gay marriage. There will be even more outrage when the Court rules that age of consent laws violate the Constitutional rights of children to express their sexuality, and bestiality and incest statutes have no rational basis. I’m not sure that the Court will ever rule that child molesters have a right to rape, but in practice, it will become so common and so lightly punished that it won’t much matter that it is still illegal. There’s an interesting article here about how the courts are scrapping the last vestiges of decency from heterosexual marriage, by removing any incentive to fidelity.

The die is now cast. The only way that America can reverse course on these matters is for Americans as a whole to give up on depravity and selfishness. That will take a horrific wake-up call. It seemed for a while as though 9/11 would be that wake-up call. For a few weeks, I saw clear evidence of a nation waking up to the very real danger that every day could be your last, and the need to live based on that. But Americans have returned to their old ways–the desire to let the news/entertainment media tell them what to think, and what to feel takes precedence over anything deeper.

The sky is falling! The sky is falling!

America is populated by human beings – and human beings have: committed genocide, practiced human sacrifice and cannibalism, slaughtered millions in the name of religion, engaged in orgies and done other things as bad or worse throughout history. Human beings have also created beauty, expanded freedoms, increased our life expectancy and quality of life, conquered diseases, travelled to the moon and other things unmatched in history.

The fact that America no longer views homosexuality as a sin worth stoning someone to death over is not a sign of the apocalypse.

I, for one, am all for replacing Christian morality with objective reasoning when it comes to American jurisprudence. “Homosexuality is wrong because God says it is” isn’t good enough for me. The seculars are the majority, no matter how much and how many of them claim to be “Christians.”

John Adams wrote “Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.” I think he was wrong. I think it requires a moral people, but not necessarily a religious people. It’s quite possible to be moral in his meaning without being religious, but impossible to be religious in his meaning without also being moral. What Clayton protests is a change in morals from those dictated by the various Christian sects. And yes, there is immorality – there always has been. Yes, immorality is attractive to people who can’t or won’t think logically. But Clayton asserts that the majority of America is “fundamentally hypocritical and depraved.” Well perhaps by his morality, but not by mine. There are a lot of people capable of logical thought who have decided that – prior to and regardless of the Supreme Court’s decision – what consenting adults do in the privacy of their bedrooms isn’t the government’s business. Our morality, based on logic not on religious decree, says so. And you know what? The rights of the individual are more important than the will of any majority. That’s the basis of this country, not the Ten Commandments.

Cox and Forkum have an interesting cartoon up on their site, and a copy of a letter to the editor of the New York Sun from a Dr. Harry Binswanger. Dr. Binswager says this about the recent Supreme Court decision that has Clayton’s underwear in a wad:

“Scalia in his dissent on the sodomy decision writes: ‘It is the premise of our system that those judgments are to be made by the people, and not imposed by a governing caste.’

“Sounds like he’s trying to keep meddlesome government out of people’s lives doesn’t it? But look at the switch he has pulled: the ‘judgments’ he wishes to protect are the laws passed by the Texas legislature — laws arresting individuals for behavior that, whatever one thinks of it, is clearly within their rights. The meddlesome ‘governing caste’ is the Texas legislature, which the Supreme Court properly told: stop arresting individuals for private, peaceful, consensual activity.

“Yes, I’m sure the Texas law does reflect the will of the majority of Texans. So what? Slavery represented the will of the majority in the ante-bellum South. Hitler’s Reich reflected the will of the majority of Germans in the Nazi era.

“Unlimited majority rule is a form of statism, not Americanism. Our system, contrary to Scalia’s notion, holds individual rights above the power of any majority to infringe, ‘and among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.’ A right is the individual’s protection against the will of any collective, whether that collective is called ‘the State,’ ‘the people,’ or ‘Das Volk.'”

This is no longer a Christian nation. That, in my opinion, does not foreshadow the coming of the Four Horsemen, no matter how much Pat Robertson beseeches God-uh.

Give Us a Sign, Oh Lord!

Steven Den Beste points to this ABC news report about past Presidential-hopeful Pat Robertson. Seems he’s beseeching God-uh to “remove three justices from the Supreme Court so they could be replaced by conservatives.” Robertson says:

“One justice is 83-years-old, another has cancer and another has a heart condition. Would it not be possible for God to put it in the minds of these three judges that the time has come to retire?”

Or if they won’t retire, might God-uh not smite them for their wickedness?

Robert Heinlein once wrote:

The most preposterous notion that H. sapiens has ever dreamed up is that the Lord God of Creation, Shaper and Ruler of all the Universes, wants the saccharine adoration of His creatures, can be swayed by their prayers, and becomes petulant if He does not receive this flattery. Yet this absurd fantasy, without a shred of evidence to bolster it, pays all the expenses of the oldest, largest, and least productive industry in all history.

Pat Robertson and his ilk illustrate this perfectly.

Now if God-uh struck down Pat Robertson with a lightning bolt, I might reconsider my agnosticism.

“A Mistake a Free People Get to Make Only Once”

“May you live in interesting times.”

That fits. A lot happened in the last couple of weeks. Brian Borgelt, the owner of Bull’s Eye Shooter Supply in Tacoma, Washington, the gun shop from which Muhammed and Malvo “acquired” their Bushmaster AR-15, is finally getting his Federal Firearms License pulled for improperly tracking and losing records for over 200 firearms, while the GAO reported that the federal government has lost 824 firearms, some of which were full-auto weapons, and many of which were not properly reported or reported long after the loss. Canada’s gun registration deadline has passed with (a government estimated) 20% of rifles and shotguns remaining unregistered. Another workplace multiple shooting occurred. This time there were five dead and nine wounded at a Lockheed plant in Mississippi (not including the perp.) Three teenagers were arrested before they could carry out what certainly appears to be a premeditated killing spree. A grandmother, mother, and three children – all infants to toddlers – were shot to death in Bakersfield, California. (A quick Google news search on the word “shooting” brings up the normal long list of single-victim stories, as well.) The Supreme Court received the petition for a writ of certiorari in the Silveira v. Lockyer case. And the UN released its Small Arms Survey 2003 that detailed worldwide civilian gun ownership. That report proclaimed that there is a near 1:1 parity of guns and people in the United States.

America, it is often pointed out, has one of the highest firearm-related homicide rates in the world, and easily the most civilian-owned arms. Gun control supporters constantly decry the “number of guns” in America as being the, or at least a cause of our firearm-related mayhem. It is the point of the UN Small Arms Survey: the number of guns in civilian hands worldwide represents a threat to the health and safety of those civilians and their societies, and that governments should work to reduce the number and so reduce the threat.

And here’s a shocker – to some extent I agree with the basic premise that having a lot of guns around, indiscriminately, uncontrolled, does contribute to the volume of injury and death inflicted with firearms. It’s almost – almost – a tautology. Here in America if John Q. Wifebeater didn’t have a .357 revolver laying around, he might not be able to kill the Mrs. (or vice-versa) the next (and last) time they get into a knock-down, dragout fight. It’s possible that a distraught teenager in a moment of bleakness might not kill himself with his father’s shotgun if Daddy just didn’t have one. If no one kept a gun at home, there wouldn’t be twenty or so toddlers killed accidentally with them each year. If guns were less available, it’s possible that more armed robbers would be armed with crowbars and baseball bats rather than 9mm’s, and fewer convenience store clerks and cab drivers would end up shot.

Yes, America has a lot of guns and a lot of death and injury by them. I’ve been asked “How many people have to die before you realize that we need effective gun controls?!?”

And I’ve responded: “How many deaths will it take before you realize that gun control isn’t effective, and stop pushing for new gun control laws?”

Because that’s the question, isn’t it? We all realize that there’s a problem, but we’re divided by the proposed solution to that problem. And we’re really divided on just what that solution entails – because if you believe that “the number of guns” is the problem, then the only answer is to reduce (to some arbitrary “this is enough” level) or eliminate those guns. I’m willing to bet that the arbitrary “this is enough” level is roughly equivalent to zero. In order to eliminate those guns you’ve got two choices: render the Second Amendment meaningless in the minds of the citizens and in the courts of America, or find some way to legally give government the power to do what the Second Amendment prohibits – disarm America.

So far the legal process of making gun ownership by the law-abiding difficult in America has only been successful in a few places: Chicago, New York City, Washington D.C., Maryland, New Jersey, and some others. Generally, buying a gun legally still a fairly easy thing to do nationwide. (You’ll note that it hasn’t affected illegal acquisition in the least.) The second part, rendering the Second Amendment meaningless, has progressed somewhat better. At this time there is no legally recognized individual right to arms in the states of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, and to be honest, that right is only recognized – and weakly – in the 5th Circuit. The other circuits are largely mute on the question, but lean towards the 9th Circuit’s opinion. If the Supreme Court grants cert. on Silveira that question might finally get an answer. (And I’m not betting on just what that answer will be, either.)

However, I’ve made a blanket statement: “Gun control isn’t effective.” How can I claim that? Gun control works in other countries, doesn’t it? What about the 1934 National Firearms Act? Hasn’t that been effective? Gun rights proponents proudly proclaim that only one legally registered fully-automatic weapon has been used in a crime – and that by an off-duty police officer. Gun control proponents respond that this means that licensing and registration does work. Well, admittedly the use of NFA weapons is much less than, say, basic handguns, but how do you define “works?” In a discussion I had a while back on another site it was defined to me as “not hindering law abiding citizens from owning guns but making it more difficult for criminals to acquire guns.” My response to that was that the question of “hindering” was one of degree (as in “what, exactly, constitutes ‘infringing’ on a right?”), but that licensing and registration – in some countries – indeed did not significantly hinder the law abiding from owning guns, and that it did, indeed make it “more difficult” for criminals to acquire guns – but it didn’t make it effectively difficult. As an example, the “war on (some) drugs” does not prevent the law abiding from getting needed medications, but it doesn’t effectively prevent criminals from getting illicit drugs, does it? Harder, yes, but I think that scoring a tab of Ecstasy or a baggie of pot is probably only a little more involved than driving down to the neighborhood Walgreen’s if you’re inclined to use that stuff. And if you want to buy a gun while you’re at it, that probably isn’t any harder. You might even get a discount for doing both at once.

What I did note in that discussion, however, is that in many societies that had gun licensing and registration, the registry had been used for gun confiscation, and that I believed that they would be used that way here, as well. Nor am I alone in that belief. Charles T. Morgan, at the time Director of the Washington office of the ACLU said in Senate testimony in 1975 when asked about gun registration:

What the administation’s and Congressman McClory’s bills . . . call for is a whole new set of Federal records. . . .

I have not one doubt, even if I am in agreement with the National Rifle Association, that that kind of a record-keeping procedure is the first step to eventual confiscation under one administration or another.

Only one legally owned NFA firearm has been used in a crime, but it didn’t stop two gunmen from using at least three fully-automatic weapons during the North Hollywood bank robbery. It certainly hasn’t stopped criminals from sawing off shotgun barrels.

But let’s look at the NFA for a second. The primary effect of the 1934 National Firearms Act was the registration of fully-automatic weapons and the strict control of their transfer between law-abiding owners. On top of that, at the time the law was passed a truly draconian “tax” was assessed on each transfer of NFA restricted weapons – $200. In 1934 that was a lot of cash. The effect was to essentially stop the production of many otherwise legal NFA firearms for public consumption such as the Ithaca Auto & Burglar – because the guns themselves didn’t cost $200. Now, of course shotguns like these

are sold for about $400 plus, of course, the $200 transfer tax. Machine guns, on the other hand, have always been pretty pricey with the exception of a few really cheap models like the M3 “grease gun” and the Sterling. But throw $200 on top of the price, and the legal market for them shrinks. With a small legal demand, not too many hit the illicit market either. They weren’t there to steal, and there was a significant obstacle to straw-purchases: owner registration. So, in a sense, the NFA licensing and registration scheme “worked” – it made it harder for criminals to access NFA restricted weapons – but it obviously wasn’t effective at reducing gun crime. Criminals got the weapons they wanted, or just substituted different weapons. If someone really wants a fully-automatic weapon, he can get one – as evidenced by the North Hollywood shootout and other crimes. If someone really wants a short-barrelled shotgun, all it takes is a hacksaw. If someone really wants a suppressor, it just takes a decently equipped shop. Licensing and registration “works” at making it more difficult for criminals to get guns if you can stop or greatly reduce the influx of the weapons you’re trying to restrict. Once they’re in circulation, it’s too late. They don’t get registered, or they get stolen (or reported stolen). In a country with (according to the UN report) 238,000,000 to 276,000,000 guns, registration as a “gun control” measure is a forlorn hope. As a precursor to confiscation, however…

So, reducing the number of guns available to the public could reduce the “heat of the moment” type killings, and the accidental deaths by firearm, but it doesn’t really affect deliberate criminal useage. In fact, as evidenced by England, it might result in an increase in deliberate criminal use. It might prevent, say, the Lockheed slayings, but it won’t have much of a positive effect on the number of convenience stores robbed annually, and might even result in a negative effect when criminals realize they have little to fear from their targets.

The initial argument against semi-automatic “assault weapons” was that these were the “weapons of choice” of criminals, but the fact of the matter is, with well over 2 million (depending on your definition) “assault weapons” in circulation, the most popular firearms in criminals hands remains the handgun – and only the Violence Policy Center is willing to come out in favor of banning those. Now the argument against “assault weapons” is that they’re only good for killing a large number of people indiscriminately (which of course is why police forces across the country are equipping with them. Right?) But using that argument there is now a Federal “ban” on some “assault weapons” and there are some state and local “bans” on them as well. The “bans” just resulted in some redesigns and some workarounds, but the intent was clear – these weapons were no longer to be offered to the general public ostensibly in an effort to keep them out of the hands of people who would misuse them. The same holds true now for .50 BMG caliber rifles – efforts are afoot both locally and nationally to (at a minimum) include these weapons in the NFA restricted list. Demand for both has skyrocketed – if we think the government is going to ban them, we want them.

So, to date the path to civilian (some say “victim”) disarmament has been pursued through the “death-by-a-thousand-cuts” strategy, or, more aptly the “frog in a pot” analogy. This is illustrated well by the “assault weapons ban” that really isn’t. Charles Krauthammer made the true point of the law quite plain in his 1996 Washington Post op-ed “Disarm the Citizenry:”

It might be 50 years before the United States gets to where Britain is today. Passing a law like the assault weapons ban is a symbolic – purely symbolic – move in that direction. Its only real justification is not to reduce crime but to desensitize the public to the regulation of weapons in preparation for their ultimate confiscation.”

The gun control groups term it as the “next step” – as in “Gun DNA is the next step for New York as we continue to develop innovative crime fighting policies.” – so said New York Governor George E. Pataki in 2000. There’s always a “next step” because all the previous steps didn’t work to reduce crime or accidents – but they do work to make it more difficult to legally acquire and keep a firearm.

There is no doubt that there is a movement out there intent on disarming not only Americans, but civilians around the world, because the only “effective” gun control is gun elimination, and the only way to reduce the number of guns in civilian hands is to take them from us, or make us give them up. As with all things political, there is no single reason for this movement. There’s the tinfoil-hat bilderburg/zionist/mason/communist/skull-and-bones conspiracy-of-the-week, there’s the “we know what’s best for you” crowd (which can be rolled into the first group pretty easily), there are the people who have lost loved ones to gun violence, and there are the people who “care” but don’t tend to think much (the “useful idiots.”) And on the face of it, it seems pretty obvious to a lot of people that fewer guns would be a good thing, even to many gun owners. It seems pretty obvious to a lot of people that “assault weapons” have no place in our society. In fact, our gun control laws have, for years, been predicated on a “sporting use” philosophy – and even I will admit that there isn’t a lot of “sporting use” for a gun like an AK-47 or even my Mossberg 590.

This movement, however, has lost traction here in the last few years. More and more states have adopted “shall-issue” concealed-carry laws in the face of vociferous opposition from the gun control crowds. And, most telling, incidents like the Lockheed shooting and Columbine haven’t resulted in the kind of overwhelming outcry for more gun control that incidents like Port Arthur, Dunblane, and Erfurt elicit in other countries. A lot of people ask why that is? What is it about Americans that makes us ignore what is so obvious to others – that guns shouldn’t be in private hands, uncontrolled?

I think I have an answer to that. And to give you an example, I will quote, in its entirety, a letter recently submitted to Kim du Toit (and republished with his permission):

Your offhand comments about keep-and-bear supporters who do not, themselves, keep and bear hit a nerve.

I’ve seen the light, and I’m here to testify.

To those of you who grew up with guns, I expect that what I’m about to say will seem painfully obvious. But I came to class late, and what I learned there is still fresh and vibrant.

I thought, all my life, that I couldn’t own a gun safely, that no one could, really. Guns were dangerous and icky. Even after I realized that the Second Amendment was not quite the shriveled, antiquated appendix I’d been taught, for a couple of years or so I still wobbled around with the training-wheel comfort of believing that while not all gun owners were necessarily gap-toothed red-necked fascist militia whackos, I myself ought not to own firearms. I was too clumsy and careless, and guns were still dangerous and icky.

Just before 9/11 I woke up to how quickly my liberty was eroding, and in a fit of anger and defiance started saving for a handgun while training with rentals. (Thanks to Harry at Texas Shooters Range here in Houston.) When I actually bought one (to the horror and confusion of my friends and family), having it around the house, carrying it in my car, talking about it, showing it off, and of course shooting and maintaining it, taught me what I could not learn from books, magazines, classes, or even Usenet:

It taught me that freedom takes practice.

I thought I’d practiced. I’m as full of opinions as the next guy, and not shy about passing ’em out to anyone who’ll listen. I read banned books and underground comics. I’ve walked the picket lines and hung out with undesirables. A preacher’s kid, I pointedly don’t practice a religion. I’ve done stuff that Wasn’t Allowed.

But when I got a gun, I discovered it had all been safe, padded, wading-pool-with-floaties dabbling. After near on to fifty years, I finally started to grow up. If my Grands are any clue, I’ve still got twenty or thirty years to work on it, and get to be something like mature by the time I go senile.

It’s not just that rights are useless if they are not exercised, not even that rights must be used or be lost. It’s that exercising your rights, constantly, is what instructs you in how to be worthy of them.

Being armed goes far beyond simple self-protection against thugs or even tyrants — it’s an unequivocal and unmatched lesson that you are politically and morally sovereign; that you, and not the state, are responsible for your life and your fate. This absolute personal sovereignty is the founding stone of the Republic. “A well-regulated militia” (where the militia is “the whole people”) isn’t just “necessary to the security of a free state” because it provides a backup to (and defense against) the police and the army. More importantly, keeping and bearing arms trains sovereign citizens in the art of freedom, and accustoms us to our authority and duty.

As Eric S. Raymond wrote:

“To believe one is incompetent to bear arms is, therefore, to live in corroding and almost always needless fear of the self — in fact, to affirm oneself a moral coward. A state further from ‘the dignity of a free man’ would be rather hard to imagine. It is as a way of exorcising this demon, of reclaiming for ourselves the dignity and courage and ethical self-confidence of free (wo)men that the bearing of personal arms, is, ultimately, most important.”


Unless you have some specific impediment (and most impediments can be overcome), arm yourself. Find out who you really are. (Yes, there are many paths to self-knowledge. But this tests something you cannot access any other way. No one path goes everywhere.) You’ll probably discover you’re not all that bad. And if not, well…

Think of it as evolution in action.

THAT is what separates us from everybody else: the belief in personal sovereignty, as a citizen of this nation. In fact, there’s a guy out there who has a site dedicated to opposing the very idea of personal sovereignty. (It’s a very good site from an informational standpoint, although I disagree violently with his position.) Why don’t we get rid of our guns? Because we’re not subjects, we’re citizens. The majority of Americans – still, somewhere deep inside, perhaps dimly – understand that we are sovereigns, that we are responsible, not government. Our collapsing schools have not yet broken us of this belief, though I don’t think it exists in many of our children any more. For the majority of us who bother to vote, however, being told that we are not responsible enough, grates. We are not willing to yeild, yet, our right to self defense, and eventually self determination. Somehow, the majority of voters sense a threat to their sovereignty.

I find this encouraging as I watch Europe proceed in its formation of its union. I read as Steven Den Beste points out the disastrous path they are taking, and wonder what’s going to happen there if it all comes crashing down (as I believe it will.) That collapse would have worldwide repercussions. We don’t make a lot of things here any more. There really is a ‘global economy’ all connected together like a vast power grid, just waiting for a circuit failure somewhere to crash the system in whole or in part. And if such a collapse does occur, I believe the results will be very, very bad. I wonder what North Korea is going to do, and when or if China will make a grab for Taiwan. I wonder if Pakistan and India will throw nukes at each other some day. In short, I wonder if the wheels might come off the wagon without much warning, and leave the U.S. and the rest of the world in a really bad position. “Interesting times” indeed.

For all the mayhem guns in civilian hands have caused, guns in the exclusive control of governments have resulted in far more. “Assault weapons” may not have much of a “sporting purpose,” but the Second Amendment isn’t about “sport.” Judge Kozinski in his eloquent dissent to the denial of appeal for an en banc rehearing of Silveira explained it perfectly:

The majority falls prey to the delusion—popular in some circles – that ordinary people are too careless and stupid to own guns, and we would be far better off leaving all weapons in the hands of professionals on the government payroll. But the simple truth – born of experience – is that tyranny thrives best where government need not fear the wrath of an armed people.

All too many of the other great tragedies of history – Stalin’s atrocities, the killing fields of Cambodia, the Holocaust, to name but a few – were perpetrated by armed troops against unarmed populations. Many could well have been avoided or mitigated, had the perpetrators known their intended victims were equipped with a rifle and twenty bullets apiece, as the Militia Act required here. If a few hundred Jewish fighters in the Warsaw Ghetto could hold off the Wehrmacht for almost a month with only a handful of weapons, six million Jews armed with rifles could not so easily have been herded into cattle cars.

My excellent colleagues have forgotten these bitter lessons of history. The prospect of tyranny may not grab the headlines the way vivid stories of gun crime routinely do. But few saw the Third Reich coming until it was too late. The Second Amendment is a doomsday provision, one designed for those exceptionally rare circumstances where all other rights have failed – where the government refuses to stand for reelection and silences those who protest; where courts have lost the courage to oppose, or can find no one to enforce their decrees. However improbable these contingencies may seem today, facing them unprepared is a mistake a free people get to make only once.

Somehow, I think that we are almost alone in the world still understanding in our bones that tyranny isn’t something relegated to history, never to raise its ugly head again. And because we understand that, we’re willing to endure our daily mayhem and slaughter. It’s better to live with that, than to make the mistake we only get to make once.

Thank You “CU3008124-A”

Whoever you are, you were visitor 9,000, and you spent a good 15 minutes perusing the site, too!

There’s no prize, though.

While You’re Waiting…

Clayton Cramer links to this hilariously funny Federal Court decision Bradshaw v Unity Marine.

I’ve read a lot of decisions in my years of gun law research (though obviously not as many as Clayton) and I’ve got to admit, this is the funniest thing I’ve seen. Judge Kent should get an appointment to the 5th Circuit (preferably the 9th). There’s a lot of funny stuff in this, but here are some choice excerpts:

Before proceeding further, the Court notes that this case involves two extremely likable lawyers, who have together delivered some of the most amateurish pleadings ever to cross the hallowed causeway into Galveston, an effort which leads the Court to surmise but one plausible explanation. Both attorneys have obviously entered into a secret pact — complete with hats, handshakes and cryptic words — to draft their pleadings entirely in crayon on the back sides of gravy-stained paper place mats, in the hope that the Court would be so charmed by their child-like efforts that their utter dearth of legal authorities in their briefing would go unnoticed. Whatever actually occurred, the Court is now faced with the daunting task of deciphering their submissions.

With Big Chief tablet readied, thick black pencil in hand, and a devil-may-care laugh in the face of death, life on the razor’s edge sense of exhilaration, the Court begins.

Despite the continued shortcomings of Plaintiff’s supplemental submission, the Court commends Plaintiff for his vastly improved choice of crayon — Brick Red is much easier on the eyes than Goldenrod, and stands out much better amidst the mustard splotched about Plaintiff’s briefing. But at the end of the day, even if you put a calico dress on it and call it Florence, a pig is still a pig.

Take heed and be suitably awed, oh boys and girls — the Court was able to state the issue and its resolution in one paragraph … despite dozens of pages of gibberish from the parties to the contrary!

Go read the whole thing, and do not miss the concluding paragraph!

Ok, I’m Not Quite Back…

Man, I’m busy! I am working on a new essay, but it’s going slowly. And today, I find this:

AAAAAGHH!!! I’ll suffer withdrawal!

My apologies for the light posting, but it means I’m earning a living.

I’m Baaaaack!

And suffering from severe Internet withdrawal. I’m trying to catch up on all my reading, and I have a serious jones to write something long and pithy, but that will have to wait until I get my honeydo’s done.

(Hey, if Nigel can do it, so can I.)

In the mean time, I can strongly recommend that you go read The Real Moral of the Story over at Feces Flinging Monkey.

Acidman survived his bionic, uh, appendage surgery and has been posting profligately – entertaining, as usual.

Kim du Toit’s Reader Mail – specifically the letter from “refugee,” is outstanding. I’ll hopefully have a post up concerning that letter soon.

Steven Den Beste writes about the UN’s report that America is nearing a 1:1 ratio of guns per capita. I wanted to comment, but he and Kim du Toit and Jeff at Alphecca have done a bang-up job. Hmm. Maybe I’ll work it into my “long and pithy” piece.

Publicola has a great post and a link to a story about 5th grader’s deciding whether guns in schools were a good thing or not. He’s also got a pretty withering comment about a JoinTogether press release concerning the UN’s Small Arms Agreement.

And finally, for now, Hell in a Handbasket has an excellent post up on “Why we shoot” that was linked to by several people. That’s a must-read. Money quote:

Every so often you see an item in the newspaper about some nutbag who shoots up a bunch of innocent and unarmed people. Talk to someone like me and they’ll tell you that they wish they had been there. We wish we were in the same room with the nutter, the guy who has a weapon and is desperate to hurt people.

By any reasonable criteria this is completely insane. We’re fantasizing about putting ourselves in harm’s way, about allowing someone to shoot at us! This is hardly a sound strategy to a long and healthy life.

This isn’t because we want to kill someone and the nutbag shooter provides a chance to do it in a legal way. Instead we want to stop the violence before some innocent person dies.

Oh, one more thing: Jack over at The Commentary has responded with a textbook example of the “don’t trust my fellow man” argument. That’s going to rate a response soon, too.

More later. I promise!