“Gun-Polluted” America?

Well here’s a lovely little editorial. From the Charleston, West Virginia Gazette comes this screed against guns. Let us fisk:

Unsafe

No hiding from guns

WHEN the West Virginia School Boards Association met last week at the Charleston Marriott, a panel discussion was held on a deadly topic: how to protect board meetings from attackers like the disturbed employee who brought a 75-shot AK-47 to a Kanawha County board session, plus buckets of gasoline, and wounded a teacher before he was subdued. (The assailant also had two pistols and a rifle in his pickup truck parked outside.)

The assembled school board members from around the state realized that dozens of Kanawha people might have been killed at the July 17 session. Only swift tackles by four brave administrators prevented a massacre. Ever since, armed police have been posted at Kanawha school board meetings, a $14,000 video surveillance system has been ordered, and electronic door locks are being considered.

Let’s see: instead of resigning themselves to be victims, four administrators decided to be a pack, not a herd, and defend themselves and others. They didn’t rely on “the authorities” to save them, they did it themselves – at great personal risk. BUT, you’ll note, they did it by physically attacking the perp because (obviously) none of the four defenders (or any of the other potential victims) was armed. What subsequent action did they take in order to protect themselves in the future? THEY EMPLOY AN ARMED GUARD. Nobody (apparently) bothered to get a concealed-carry permit, instead they HIRED OUT their protection. So if someone in the future wants to do what the original perp tried, all he has to do is cap THE GUARD. The herd will then be suitably cowed (no pun intended) and he can carry out whatever nefarious plan he wants.

At the statewide conference, lawyer Kimberly Croyle told the delegates that America suffers an average of 20 workplace murders per week, and 18,000 woundings. The worst death rate is among defenseless taxi drivers, she said, but plenty of other killings happen in offices and plants — usually committed by dismissed employees, angry clients or estranged husbands stalking their wives. Most of the slaughter is by guns.

Really? “Usually committed by dismissed employees, angry clients or estranged husbands”? I thought the overwhelming majority of “workplace murders” were robberies. I’d really like to see her source data for this.

It’s extremely difficult to predict which person will go on a murder rampage, she said. Therefore, all organizations should have “zero tolerance” for threats — and also have attack drills, like fire drills. Employees should rehearse how to barricade themselves safely and dial 911.

More “zero tolerance” idiocy, and more “don’t defend yourself – you’re not qualified” preaching from our self-appointed superiors.

Fellow lawyer John Teare gave school administrators some practical advice: When it’s necessary to discipline or fire a problem employee, try to avoid humiliating or enraging the worker. Use a gentle voice. Let the employee talk, without a dismissive brushoff. Do it at the end of the day, after other employees have gone, so the dismissee can remove personal possessions without being watched by fellow workers. At day’s end, he said, employees are weary and less likely to explode in anger.

This I can agree with. I have never understood why it was necessary to publicly humiliate someone if it’s necessary to fire them. Regardless of whether it will render them less likely to come back and shoot the place up, it takes very little effort to treat people as well as you can.

Our editor, one of the panelists, told the state delegates that workplace massacres are so rare and unpredictable that safeguards are dubious. For example, if the Kanawha school board had been shielded by metal detectors and armed guards, the killer could have pulled his pickup to the front curb and used his four guns to mow down people leaving the meeting. Likewise, it’s doubtful that detectors and guards would have deterred the psychotic students who invaded Columbine High School.

Holy shit, a voice of reason. And he’s an editor of the newspaper, no less!

However, Kanawha board member Bill Raglin replied that he worked many years in dangerous chemical plants, where strict safety practices prevented deadly spills.

Except “deadly spills” are accidents. “Strict safety practices” do nothing to prevent deliberate acts – and Mr. Raglin should certainly understand that. Apple? Meet orange.

Of course, Raglin is correct that intelligent security measures should be used. They may avert some murders. But the irrational nature of attacks — and the easy availability of deadly guns — mean that no Americans truly are safe.

“Easy availability” or not, the fact of the matter is no Americans are truly safe – and if you understand that fact then you understand that the government cannot protect you. YOU are responsible for your safety. But that’s not the mantra of this piece.

When a disturbed school employee can arm himself with a 75-shot assault weapon, two pistols and a rifle, planning to wipe out a school board meeting, who’s really safe? When deranged students can bring guns to school to kill teachers and fellow students, who’s safe?

When they can bring pipe bombs and cans of gasoline, who’s safe? When they can load a Ryder truck with fertilizer and diesel fuel (ANFO), who’s safe? When someone can drive a three-ton Cadillac through a crowd, who’s safe? When men armed with box cutters can hijack airliners and fly them into buildings WHO’S SAFE? Wake up. The world isn’t safe. Never has been.

Gun-polluted America has a murder rate much worse than nations that protect people by controlling illegal weapons.

And there are countries with strict gun control with murder rates far higher, too. (But those are “third-world” countries and don’t count – right?)

But America’s “right to bear arms” (Note the ubiquitous “scare quotes” – A “right to bear arms?” Oh, please. Don’t be gauche.) lobby is so strong that timid U.S. politicians won’t impose safeguards. Even if they did, it might require generations to cleanse the country of concealed pistols and other unlicensed murder instruments.

Note that the author completely ignores the possibility that “cleansing the country” of “unlicensed murder instruments” is IMPOSSIBLE – as has been AMPLY demonstrated by England’s experience. “Facts? Don’t confuse me with the facts. My mind’s made up! Guns are eeeeeevil!

Except, of course, when they’re in the hands of our proper masters.

Edited to add: And note the characterisation of “concealed pistols” as “murder weapons”. This completely disregards the fact that in every state where concealed carry is “shall issue” homicide rates have gone down. The people who have permits and carry are not homicidal. But this editorial paints them with the same bloody brush as the Columbine killers.

Agenda? What agenda?

Therefore, Americans are condemned to live with the daily risk of gun murders, and the rare risk of gun massacres.

Yup. And, as I pointed out before, we’re willing to live with that. It beats giving up our personal sovereignty and making the mistake a free people get to make only once.

(And, of course, the editorial is unsigned.)

“They could carry Mace if they really felt threatened.”

The fifty-year propaganda campaign has worked very well. A recent Star Tribune story on the status of Minnesota’s concealed-carry law was…interesting. First, it appears that the number of permits isn’t going to be as large as some predicted. Since the law went into effect about 8,000 new permits have been issued. Prior to the change from “may issue” to “shall issue” there were about 11,000 permits. According to the story, prior to passage the estimate for new permits went as high as 90,000, but by all appearances that is exceedingly high.

The interesting part of the story, though, is the public attitude shift concerning concealed carry:

(T)he biggest change in public opinion since late April, before the new law took effect, is an increase in those who foresee no change in overall safety — to more than one-third of the state’s adults.

The current Minnesota Poll of 817 adults was conducted Sept. 2-8 amid news reports of an Anoka County gun owner whose permit was canceled after an incident in which he fired repeated shots into the hood of his brother’s car.

The percentage saying that the new law will make Minnesota safer fell 6 points since April, to 11 percent. The percent saying that the state will be more dangerous stood at 51 percent; in April it was 55 percent. The percentage predicting no effect from the law rose 10 points to 35 percent.

A pessimistic view of the new law is especially marked among women (68 percent see a more dangerous Minnesota, 4 percent a safer one), Democrats and liberals, college graduates, adults younger than 25 or 55 and older, and the state’s lowest income earners.

A larger percentage of men than women offer the most positive opinion of the law, with 19 percent saying the state will be safer and 34 percent saying it will be more dangerous. Nearly half of men, however, see no effect. Among Republicans, whose party championed the gun law in the Legislature and the governor’s office, 20 percent see a safer Minnesota and 40 percent a more dangerous one.

Meanwhile, Democrats with similar views outnumber those who think Minnesota will be safer by a ratio of 10 to 1 (60 percent to 6 percent). Among liberals, it’s 60 percent to 3 percent. Among conservatives, the ratio is nearly 3 to 1 on the more dangerous side, 51 percent to 18 percent.

The belief that the gun law will have little or no effect on public safety is most prevalent among men (46 percent) and upper income earners.

But here’s the money quote:

“There’s really no purpose to having guns available,” said Salwa Williams, 24, a Republican speech and language pathologist from Eagan. “I just think that people make irrational decisions sometimes. They could carry Mace if they really felt threatened.”

The brainwashing’s still working, obviously.

But there’s hope:

Dianna Saunders, 62, a DFL circuit-board inspector from New Market, said she thinks the law will make Minnesota safer, even though she said she doesn’t like guns and would never carry one. “There’s already guns out there,” she said. “It would be safer if law-abiding people had them, too. It’s been proved in other states.”

Somebody’s paying attention.

And This is Why I Read Lileks

Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy it when he waxes poetic about Gnat and Jasper, describes the changes of the seasons with such vivid imagery, but when he screeds….

I went back to the editorial archives today, to see what was said around the time of the Dec 1998 “Desert Fox” campaign. (And let us just imagine the panic if the current administration started naming military operations after famous Nazi nicks.) As I trolled back and forth in the microfiche looking for the relevant piece, I was struck by the other things the chattering classes brayed five years ago. “Lift the sanctions” was a popular item. And why? Because it would show Saddam the world was serious about giving him one last chance. Okay, here’s your gun back. But if you shoot us we’re going to take it away. The naivety nearly makes you weep. These people didn’t want Saddam’s body bobbing ass-up in the Tigris. They wanted a world in which the fascist clique that ruled Iraq curtseyed and bowed in the lovely gavotte of international diplomacy. However many people died in Saddam’s gulags was irrelevant; what mattered was that the UN was Concerned, and that the Iraqi Ambassador – clad in a nice Western suit, skilled in many tongues, daubed with a Macy’s cologne – agreed to facilitate the process of calibrating the precise nature of the consquences of failing to live up to the spirit of the letter of the penumbra of the –

That’s right. “Lift the sanctions” was the meme. And that’s why (I believe) that the invasion of Iraq and the overthrow of Saddam was on Bush’s agenda from before the election.

And I’m perfectly fine with that.

Anyway, that’s just a small taste of today’s Bleat. Go Read.

And Then There Were Ten

Mike over at Feces Flinging Monkey has a very interesting post up on the tenth dwarf running for Democratic Presidential Nominee, entitled Hillary’s Golem. It’s worth a look. Go read.

UPDATE: John Donovan at argghhh!! has this to say about Wesley Clark – AKA “POD” or “Prince of Darkness” (actually he has a lot to say, just scroll through the site):

The POD served as Commander, National Training Center during Desert Storm and Desert Shield. That was where I first worked for him. He also served as the commander of the BCTP at Fort Leavenworth – which is the agency responsible for critiquing the performance of general officers. The point being – the POD not only is used to engaging in self-criticism, he knows how to do it. And believe me, he will. And he’ll learn and adapt fast.

Which won’t change a whit my opinion that he’s not the right guy to be President. Problem is, he has the people skills of Eisenhower, with the ego and self-image of MacArthur. Not a good combination.

Since John’s worked for the man, IMHO he’s a good place to get an opinion. Go see what he has to say.

Firearms On a School Campus?!?!?

Via Boots & Sabers comes this short pleasantly surprising story of the Texas A&M Pistol Team Tryouts!

Take your best shot

Sophomore agriculture development major Tammy Gebert aims down range at a target 50 feet away, practicing before tryouts for the Texas A&M Pistol Team. Tryouts for the team will be held through Sept. 26th at 7 p.m. in the basement of the Military Science building and include a rapid fire test, a target test and slow shot test. The pistol team welcomes students of all skill levels to participate in tryouts.

But of course the eye-catching part of the story is a picture of Ms. Gebert:

I cannot help but wonder if she is a member of the Second Amendment Sisters. And I am heartened to know that there is still at least one University where guns aren’t verboten on campus.

“…Only Democrats and Dictators are Afraid of Elections.”

From Hud’s Blog-O-Rama (nod to Kim du Toit for the pointer):

If there’s any universal truth these days it’s only Democrats and Dictators are afraid of elections. They do anything to block, challenge or fix them at every turn. Gore tried to overturn the Florida election by specious means, in New Jersey they had Senator Toricelli substituted by a more winnable candidate against every law, and in California they are trying to block the recall even though it’s constitutional and the public has spoken with a serious mandate (they also condemn it while trying t recall Bush). They used the left wing 9th circuit court of appeals to block it, using the racist argument that minorities can’t understand a punch card. This after the fact that these punch cards elected the presidents who appointed these left wing judges.

I will repeat my previous assertion that the Democrat’s antics and hysteria is going to destroy them in the next election. They have cried wolf too many times, they have lied about serious issues to the point of absurdity.

Which is why they are trying to throw so many elections. It’s the only way they think they can win.

No wonder they’re so pissed off.

Which is to a large measure an extension of what I wrote during the 2000 election debacle:

However, the end result of this downward spiral has been an electorate ignorant in the simple foundations of this country and its government. Most especially the foundation of a rule of law in which EVERYONE is equal under the laws of the land. The Democrats have taken advantage of this general ignorance to its logical extreme. President Clinton, when testifying under oath, debates the meaning of the word “is”, and essentially gets away with it. Vice President Gore, when shown to be in direct violation of campaign finance law states that there was no “controlling legal authority”.

Laws don’t MEAN anything to them. A law is an inconvenient bit of wording that just has to be “interpreted” properly to achieve their ends. When they file suit, they must shop for the proper judge, or they might not be able to get the “spin” they want. Like the Mad Hatter in Alice in Wonderland, words mean just what they want them to mean, no more no less. And that meaning can change at any time.

What has this election proven? The system is broken beyond a shadow of a doubt. Humpty-Dumpty is smashed. Regardless of who wins the recount in Florida, we have a system that has abandoned the rule of law because the populace let it, not knowing any better. Everything is up for interpretation.

The subsequent Torricelli replacement and now this 9th Circuit decision simply illustrates that pessimism.

So let’s see what the political cartoonists have to say.

Mike Keefe of the Denver Post is spot-on there.

Larry Wright of the Detroit News is one of my favorites, and boy did he call this one!

Rex Babin of the Sacramento Bee might be right about the Supreme Court ignoring the behavior of the 9th Circuit this time.

Steve Breen of the San Diego Union Tribune simply describes the situation as he sees it.

Kevin Kallaugher of the Baltimore Sun also describes without actually commenting.

And finally, Jack Ohman of the Portland Oregonian has the right idea.

“The worst thing about living in the declining era of a great civilization, is knowing that you are.” Robert A. Heinlein

Gone for a Couple of Days

I’ve got a short business trip, and won’t be able to post from the road. Sorry.

But I’ve got an essay fermenting in the back of my mind on self-defense, concealed-carry, licensing & registration, “need,” etc. Hopefully I’ll have it up by this weekend.

Lileks and the Care and Feeding of Envy

It looks like James is channelling the liberal care and feeding of envy through the conservative filter. In this case, instead of “winning life’s lottery,” Lileks protests the “vapid, genetically-blessed bipeds we have elevated to the status of impotent royalty.”

This one should have been a screed.

I am incapable of caring any less than I did when that horrid symbiotic organism they called Bennifer first appeared on the covers of US and People and WE and Them and Pretty Humanoid Penile / Mucoid-Membrane Interface Update….

That’s why we need People! Lesser mortals might figure that the usual triplicate enticements of money, fame and smokin’ pokin’ are at play here…

Cameron would be that goofy Diaz creature who was so lovely in “The Mask” but suffered so many internal tapeworms she will compete with Courtney Cox for a nomination in “The best performance by a prominent sternum bone” in the 04 People’s Choice Award.

Damn, that’s funny. Thank you, James. I needed that.

In England, He’d be in Jail

For that matter, in New York City he would, too. (Registration required to view article. Originally published 9/1/2003)

Shotgun In Hand, Homeowner Waited In Dark For Intruders

Norwich Man Shoots At Pair He Couldn’t See, Hitting One In Stomach

Three times during the past month thieves broke into a home at 154 Salem Turnpike owned by George Blacker. They took books, lamps, clocks and other family possessions.

The 61-year-old Blacker, who says he is legally blind, had seen enough.

So a week ago, after the last burglary, he began spending the night at the usually vacant house instead of his home on Scotland Road. He also removed some items from the house.

On Friday night, Blacker was sitting in a chair listening to a radio just before 10 p.m. He was holding his father’s 12-gauge shotgun. It was dark inside because the house has no electricity.

Blacker said he heard someone breaking in through the back door. He could tell there were two men because they were talking to each other.

“There’s a lot less stuff than the last time we were here,” he heard one man tell the other.

As the men came into the living room where Blacker was sitting, he raised the shotgun. He said he couldn’t see the men, so he fired in the direction of the sounds they made. He estimated they were just a few feet away.

Blacker said the men never saw him and he never said anything to them.

“I was afraid for my life,” he said Sunday. “ I hit one and he ran out with the other one. I can’t get around very fast and by the time I got outside they had disappeared. I looked around and then came in and called 911.”

After he fired the one shot, he said that one man told him, “Don’t shoot! Don’t shoot!”

“I scared them half to death. They didn’t even know I was there,” he said.

Police responded and found the man Blacker shot in the stomach, William R. Derose, 43, of 6 Union St., Apt. 1. He was taken to The William W. Backus Hospital, where he was listed in good condition Sunday. Police are investigating the incident and, as of Sunday night, Derose had not been charged.

Blacker was interested in how the man was doing Sunday and wanted to know whether police were guarding him in the hospital. They were not.

On Friday night, police searched nearby Maplewood Cemetery for the second suspect, who has not been identified, but could not locate him. Police ask anyone with information on the incident to contact the Norwich Police Department’s detective’s division at 886-5561 or leave a message on the anonymous tip-line at ext. 500.

Blacker said he felt justified in shooting Derose.

“I was there to protect my house and my goods. They wouldn’t have got shot if they hadn’t of been in there,” he said. “I didn’t shoot him in the street. I shot him in my house. It’s my house.”

Well, Mr. Blacker, that seems to depend on just where you live, doesn’t it? But I’m on your side.

He was questioned by police early Saturday morning.

Blacker, who is married with a son, said he checks on the house each day. He said his family has praised him for his actions.

“They’re happy it turned out the way it did,” he said.

So am I. But you could have fired a couple more rounds, IMHO.

UPDATE: 9/15/03 – As of this time, Mr. Blacker has still not been charged. Apparently the District Attorney for Norwich is a far more reasonable man than any DA in NYC.

Look in the Dictionary Under “Overreaction” and You’ll Find This:

Seems an off-duty Australian police officer was taking a flight out of Melbourne, Australia and while sitting in his seat he discovered that he had some ammunition in his possession. No gun, mind you, just some ammo. The story is not very helpful, since it refers to his “revolver” but later mentions a “magazine,” so I don’t know if he was wearing a speedloader, had a couple of rounds in his pocket, or actually had a loaded magazine for a pistol in his possession, but no matter.

THEY EVACUATED THE AIRPLANE AND RAN EVERYONE BACK THROUGH A SECURITY SCREENING

Plane evacuated after passenger realised he had bullets

A Christchurch-bound aircraft was evacuated after a passenger realised he was carrying a full magazine of ammunition.

The off-duty policeman got through all security procedures at Melbourne’s Tulamarine Airport and was in his seat on the Qantas 737 preparing for take-off when he discovered that while he had left his revolver at home he still had the bullets.

After telling a stunned attendant of his mistake he and all the other passengers were immediately taken from the plane, returned to the terminal and scanned again before being allowed to reboard.

The incident happened earlier this week.

A Qantas media spokesman said the incident appeared to be an isolated one, but his company was concerned.

“The security screening at Tulamarine lies with the Melbourne airport authorities and the fact that this man was able to get the magazine through unnoticed is a problem they will have to sort out,” Simon Rushton said.

He said the off-duty Victorian policeman was allowed to continue flying on Tuesday after handing over the bullets.

Politicians in Australia are calling for security to be boosted as a result of the incident.

What do they suggest? Full body-cavity searches?