“Easy Availability?”

Seems that one Dave King, body-builder, security-type, guy with a known “record of ‘considerable criminality'” was shot to death on September 5. He was sitting in his car when two masked men drove by and opened up with an AK-47 automatic rifle. Twenty-five rounds of “armor piercing” (probably just standard military-spec steel-core stuff) 7.62×39 Russian were fired at the car, killing him, and wounding another.

Damn, just another case of those awful assault weapons that ought to be banned, BANNED I say!

Oh, wait…

This happened in ENGLAND. You know, where automatic weapons have been illegal since the 30’s and semi-automatic weapons since the mid 80’s.

As an interesting addendum, the story has a sidebar that says:

Appeal to underworld

OFFICERS leading the hunt for Mr King’s killers this week identified the weapon and ammunition used in the murder.

They are almost certain the weapon used was an AK47 Kalashnikov Russian-built military assault rifle and the ammunition was armour piercing.

Senior investigation officer Det Chief Supt Steve Read said: “Preliminary detailed examinations have confirmed that at least 25 rounds of 7.62mm x 39mm armour piercing ammunition was used in the murder of David King.

“I am keen to hear from members of the criminal fraternity who, although they may have a high tolerance to the use of firearms, would probably be shocked that a weapon designed for battlefield use which discharges high velocity armour piercing rounds has been used on a public street in suburban Hertfordshire.”

Really? Why? Automatic weapons are turning up in England fairly often. A submachine gun was used not so long back to gun down two young women, Charlene Ellis, 18, and Latisha Shakespear, 17, on New Year’s day, and police seize “assault weapons” repeatedly in raids.

If criminals want them, they’ll get them. “Easy availability” is not the problem.

Hell, in March a gang used automatic rifles and an anti-tank rocket to bust a gangster out of a Paris jail! I don’t believe those are all that “easily available” in France, either.

Any News on Roderick Pritchett?

His twice-delayed trial was supposed to start on Oct. 7.

Did it? Anybody in Illinois have any news? Google is useless on this one.

What?! Someone in England Advocating RESISTANCE?!?

In the UK paper The Telegraph comes this story (registration may be required)

How to bring out the Lara Croft in you

Helen Kirwan-Taylor takes kung fu lessons and learns that the contents of her handbag can be lethal

Especially if there’s a .38 in it. But not in England.

You really want to believe that Kung Fu for Girls: Self-Defence for Divas by Simon Harrison is just another violent comic book. The heroine, a sexy, Lara Croft-style character, uses stunts, such as gouging out the eyes of a psychotic-looking mugger, to defend herself.

Sadly, however, as Harrison, a second degree black belt in Shaolin Ngor Chor kung fu and full-time martial arts coach, knows, street crime – and the scenes depicted in the book – is real. According to Metropolitan Police statistics, 4,558 people were robbed of, or had their personal property snatched in August alone.

It hadn’t occurred to me to learn self-defence until I witnessed a mugging from my window.

It’s never real to people until it happens to THEM, for some reason.

Our neighbour was attacked at 6pm by two young boys wanting his Rolex. It was terrifying. Then, one night, we woke to find a man in our hallway. He only managed to take my husband’s bike, but he left us all in a state of heightened anxiety. That same week, as a friend unloaded her shopping bags, a man attacked her from behind and stole the car.

One person, three personal stories of recent victimization. Sure is safe over there, isn’t it?

It was such stories, where the victims are defenceless, that inspired Harrison to write the book. “There are no accessible martial arts books available, and certainly none specifically targeted at women,” he says. Although there is a clear disclaimer at the front, each of the moves and techniques, which are given humorous names such as “Folding Villain” and “Bashing Barry”, are meant to be used only after everything else has failed.

According to Harrison, the first lesson of self-defence is to use no defence at all, but to run away: “A moving target is much harder to hit.”

Good advice, if you can take it.

The other best measure is to prevent the attack. “The most important weapon you can have is a preventative attitude,” he says. This means paying attention to “transitional phases” – when an individual is most vulnerable. “A woman will be driving and talking on a phone. She’ll open the car door, still talking, and whack, she’s attacked from behind,” he says.

This is called “situational awareness” – and most people go around in the state described.

Instead, the smarter move would be to: “Stay in the car and to have a good look round before you get out. Otherwise, stay in the car, where you’re protected, and finish the conversation.”

Muggers are usually opportunists. “If you throw an obstacle in the way of the attacker, he’ll pick another victim,” says Harrison. “The purpose of martial arts is to teach you to overcome the fear of violence, but not to foolish ends. If they want your watch, give it to them. Is a Rolex worth dying for?”

No, but stopping a criminal may be worth the risk of your life. That’s a decision that should be left to the individual – not pre-empted by the government. After all, if he’s willing to kill to steal my Rolex, his next crime might be to murder someone for one, no? And I will have not prevented a possible murderer from committing that heinous crime.

It’s not a matter of equivalence, it’s a matter of value. The attacker sets the value – to him my life is worth my watch. He’s apparently willing to kill me to get it. Well, my life is worth considerably more than that, but he is risking his life to get it. Except in England, where the possibility of him actually getting killed or injured is almost nil because of the laws there that require the attacked to respond with “an appropriate level” of resistance. Sorry. I think three rounds from a .45 is an “appropriate level of resistance.” So is kicking him in the nuts and beating him to a bloody pulp.

If preventative action fails, there are simple and effective moves to try. An obvious manoeuvre is to attack the groin – the most vulnerable part of the male anatomy. This explains why martial arts experts walk in a funny circular fashion, called circle stepping moves.

Harrison teaches me my first lesson in the park. We start with a move known as “Give Him Five”. For this, you assume the guard position, with one leg in front of the other (like a boxer), and use one arm to block the assailant’s arm, while using the palm of your other hand to push his head away. This is followed by a front kick to the groin and a secondary elbow attack to the side of the head.

The second position that Harrison teaches me is the “Back Seat Special”. It’s for use when, “You’re sitting on a bench and someone wraps their arm around your neck, attempting to drag you away”. This move, which is particularly vicious, again, involves using your palm to push his head back. Then, grab his nostrils, or eyes, to keep the head in place while hitting the throat with hand strikes.

Sounds effective. It’d be more effective if she had some sort of weapon in her hand. A 120 lb. woman being attacked by a 250 lb. man doesn’t have much in the way of advantage.

It took me several trial runs, but once I got the hang of it, I felt invincible.

Trial runs you won’t get if you’re actually attacked.

Practice, practice, practice.

If you learn to protect the centre of your body – which is where an attacker generally strikes – with a combination of arm blocks and kicks, you can proceed to the more advanced moves.

Protection is not just about Bruce Lee-style stunts. Harrison has an alternative set of self-defence weapons. For example, he suggests using the “awkward little tables” in bars as a shield against flying bottles and drunken attackers. The contents of a handbag are also lethal: a mobile phone can be used to beat an attacker over the head. Keys, too, can be used as a spiky assault weapon, when held between the knuckles. Even coins have a function: you can throw them in an attacker’s face as you flee. Stilettos are useful, too – the heel can be used to stomp on a shin bone.

Remember when “Stilletto” meant a long, slim-bladed knife?

Let me expound for a moment. England is suffering its high level of contact crime not because they have a handgun ban, but because the law since the 1950’s has made it legally hazardous for the victim to defend himself. Use force to defend yourself and you will risk being arrested and charged with use of “excessive force.” Use a weapon and you WILL be, and you’ll be charged with “carrying an offensive weapon” – and even if you win, going to trial is not cheap. The law has made the population of England sheep ready to be sheared.

Here in America much moaning and writhing and gnashing of teeth occurs whenever concealed-carry legislation is proposed where the gun-phobes and the pundits claim that “arming everyone” will make the streets much more dangerous. And it never happens. The streets get safer, and not everyone is armed. Usually only a small percentage of people eligible for concealed carry get the permits. Usually only a small percentage of the permitted actually carry.

But the criminals don’t know who is or who isn’t armed, they just know that mugging someone might get them shot. And THAT is “an obstacle in the way of the attacker” that will cause him to choose another victim – or another occupation. Contact crimes in England are only dangerous to the victims. That must change, or their crime rates will never go down.

Perhaps now that the levels have reached the point where there are so many victims, the attitude may finally change. When it does, and someone witnesses a mugging in progress, the mugger will be attacked by everyone around, and when the Bobbies show up, there will be a mugger’s bloody corpse on the ground and no one will have seen anything…

Update on the Ecodinnerswarriors Killed in Alaska

According to Yahoo! News there’s an audio tape of the incident. (Oh, and Amie Huguenard was a woman, not a man, as I’d mistakenly assumed.)

“They’re both screaming. She’s telling him to play dead, then it changes to fighting back. He asks her to hit the bear,” Hill said. “There’s so much noise going on. I don’t know what’s him and what might be an animal.”

Well, they’re now “one with the bears.”

Remember kids: Stupidity kills.

Or as Robert Heinlein put it: “Stupidity cannot be cured with money, or through education, or by legislation. Stupidity is not a sin, the victim can’t help being stupid. But stupidity is the only universal capital crime; the sentence is death, there is no appeal, and execution is carried out automatically and without pity.”

Hey! I’m Voting for Kucinich in the Primary!

Jebus, this one’s hilarious!

Check out Kucinich behind the podium. And where’s Carol? Did she drop out while I wasn’t paying attention?

(Though I’d think Clark would trump Kerry’s military experience.)

Artist, Robert Ariail, of South Carolina’s The State.

The SciFi Channel Weighs in on the Recall

With an Arnie double-feature: Terminator II: Judgement Day, and Total Recall

They were advertising this last night. I literally laughed out loud.

And Another One

Ravenwood illustrates again that the power to regulate is the power to prohibit.

I don’t have a problem with requiring a permit for concealed-carry* – I think that the legal history indicates that the contemporaries of the Founders (original intent) would not have found this Constitutionally objectionable (a majority of them, anyway.) BUT – it does raise the specter of government denying the right to self-defense through denial of due process, which is what Ravenwood’s piece illustrates.

* Open carry on the other hand should not be legally restricted. All the early court cases were quite clear on this.

More Linkage

Once again Steven Den Beste whips out the million-candlepower spotlight in his peice on media influence entitled Demonstration of Power. Excerpts:

(M)any in the media think they are, or should actually be, our true leaders. They see their job not merely to serve as the eyes and ears of the public, but also as its brain. This isn’t new, of course, and when it’s managed well it’s valuable. When news reporting is isolated from editorializing then it works quite well.

But when the two are no longer segregated, and when there’s a concerted attempt to deceive the public through deliberate selection of what to report and by deliberate distortion in how it’s reported, then it actually threatens our system.

Many in the press deny that anything like this happens. Some are naive, others are disingenuous. But it’s beyond dispute that it happens.

When it happens in peace, it’s a problem. But when it happens in war, it can threaten the existence of the nation.

In yesterday’s election the people of this state voiced their opinion about how their government was being run. And from Kuntzman’s point of view, they said the wrong thing. It appears that he thinks this is much too important an issue to be left to the people to decide. He feels that the press failed because it didn’t work hard enough on supporting Davis by trying to prevent recall, or in trying to defeat Schwarzenegger.

As always, RTWT.

Publicola On a Rant

Fellow blogger Publicola has a lot to say, and does it well in this piece. Excerpts:

Republicans. Not worth a damn. Not the individuals who call themselves republicans, but The Republican Party. Only thing worse is the Democrat Party. But not by much.

In D.C. we have a republican in the White House who lowered taxes. That’s it. That’s all he’s done that the Republican Party is supposed to stand for.

Not that he’s not done anything else; he just hasn’t done anything else that’s supposed to be ‘republican’.

He (& the Republican Party in general) is too devoted to the idea of government fixing all our problems. They have totally abandoned the political philosophy that set them apart from the Democrat Party. Bush may not have caused this situation himself, but he is in a position to affect a positive change. He won’t.

Much more – mostly about illegal immigration. Go read. It’s worth your time.

Damn, but That Man Can WRITE

Thursday’s Bleat. Excerpts:

South of the WTC site is the Deutsche Bank building, now wrapped in black fabric, abandoned. There was no one here, and there were no sounds. I’ve never ever been anywhere in Manhattan where it was this quiet. No horns, no voices, no car alarms, nothing. Absolute silence. The wind had picked up, and was rippling the shroud over the DB tower. All the ripples went up. It looked as if the building was still shedding souls, and they were running beneath the thin dark blanket, looking for the way out.

I walked around and saw the other giants of lower Manhattan – 40 Wall, Cities Service. The Woolworth building. One after the other – giant monoliths old and new, gargantuan towers assembled in the sky by human hands, each one just another piston stroke in the motor of American commerce.

The men who brought down the towers did nothing more than take a hammer to the tooth of a sleeping lion. Oh, you can do that.

But you can only do it once.

I think this was the New York trip I wanted all those years I was a dorkboy in Fargo, reading ancient New Yorkers and wishing I could be a bitter alcoholic at the Algonquin.

Just tell us when the book comes out, James. I’ll be buying it.