So, Did Anyone Actually Get Shot, Or Not?

The Media gets it right again:

CORRECTION

Monday, September 22, 2003; Page A02

A Sept. 21 item in the Metro in Brief column about a woman fatally shot in Prince George’s County and a child who was wounded incorrectly reported the woman’s age, the child’s sex, the child’s location at the time of the shooting, and the street on which the shooting occurred. A correct account of the incident appears in today’s Metro in Brief column.

And we should believe this one…why?

Not with a Bang, but a Whimper?

Everybody bitches about how bad things are, politically. (Well, everybody but Bill Whittle.) And the bitching is pretty much evenly divided on both the left and the right. But I’ve noticed something I find disturbing. It appears to me that the Right is resigning. Giving up. Leaving the field.

For example: Toren Smith of The Safety Valve:

After thinking it over for a while, I think The Safety Valve has run its course. Frankly, I’m tired of getting all bent out of shape about the stupidities of the world, which seem to be getting worse and worse as time goes by. The last few months it seems every day brings worse news about the corruption of science, the destruction of society by PC-think, the complete and utter end of rational political discourse, and the hydra-like expansion of government powers. International politics has gone insane. California is heading into the socialist shit pit, and most of the US seems poised to follow sooner or later. I may escape temporarily to someplace like Texas, but sooner or later I’ll probably have to head for Belize or the Caymans.

To hell with rubbing my face in all the downer crap that’s out there. Yes, I know–even if you don’t go looking for politics, politics will come looking for you. But I’m going to try crossing the street, at least for the time being. And if necessary I’ll shoot the bastard with my carry piece. And in the meantime I’ll let my friends like Kim and James and the rest of the gang off to the right in my blog links “gaze into the abyss.”
They’re clearly tougher than I am.

When you start quoting Nietzsche, you’re pretty depressed.

And Toren’s not alone. Porphyrogenitus comments on the battle with liberalism/socialism/post-modernism:

Everywhere your light touches you get the satisfaction of seeing the cockroaches scurry away. You move the light around the room, and you get to see cockroaches scurrying off. What you don’t see, because you have moved on, is as your light moves, the roaches scurry right back into the places they left. You have changed nothing.

We have been shining a light on this problem for probably a quarter of a century or so now. We know two things. Firstly, that the people doing these things are, like all bullies, cowards as well – they are intellectual bullies, but also intellectual cowards. When the light is shined on them, they complain (their academic freedom is being violated, dissent is being suppressed, the whole litany. Never mind how they close the academy to perspectives that aren’t theirs, how they silence views in the name of sensitivity and the like). But they also tend to back down – back down on speech codes, back down on anti-American course outlines, back down on whatever. Superficially.

Because, having felt we solved the problem, we dust off our hands and move on. Then the roaches go right back into place; the speech codes get put back into place, in a slightly different guise. The same old stuff is taught, with less overtly obvious descriptions in the course descriptions but the same lectures. And it spreads.

There is no good solution to this. I have always believed that if one is going to criticize someone else’s proposed solution to a problem, one better have an alternative in mind. But I don’t. I just know that neither Steven Den Beste’s nor Victor Davis Hanson’s are going to succeed.

Frankly, personally, I am increasingly resigned to the fact that these problems are without solution, to the point that I’m —–>][<—– that close to simply giving up, mothballing this site, and accepting that yes, we're watching Western Civilization self-destruct before our very eyes and there is nothing to be done about it, but in the meantime it's possible to. . .well, I'm not as old as the original "optimist" in that exchange. (And I don't live that well, regardless). I'll probably end my life in a Death Camp of Tolerance for expressing “divisive” views and making “insensitive” remarks.

He says more here:

So we get to the assertion that reason will hammer them. Have you been paying attention? These people have immunized themselves against Socratic methods by declaring reason to simply be the tool by which the White Racist Structure maintains power. They teach that reason is not to be trusted (it is one of the premises of Post-Modernism). How often have you seen them fairly represent and grapple with the real arguments of those on our side of the debate, rather than simply distorting them when it serves their end and/or declaring that these things are “really” just a mask for our fears that our social position is being challenged or the like? In other words, rather than dealing with reasoned arguments, they impute base motives to them as a matter of course so they can dismiss them.

In my opinion, it takes more courage to recognize that the methods that people have been using to combat this are not working than it takes to pretend otherwise. I have returned to where I was on Thursday, that I’m just going to do the best I can. But this isn’t working – not just for me, but as a whole. It’s having no lasting effect. Have the courage to realize that.

Those are just two recent, noteworthy examples of reasoning, logical, intelligent people who have – for want of a better phrase – given up on the ideological battle that has been waged since about 1900 when Marx and Engels’ little thought experiment infected the body politic.

It took a little bit of time before the danger was really recognized, even though it hasn’t been fully understood by enough people. For example, the battle has been illustrated in literature only since the 1940’s: Orwell with Animal Farm and 1984, Rand with Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead just to name some big hitters.

The problem, and I think that most people still able to look can see it, is in our education system, and it’s really taken a death-grip on the nation since the 1950’s. Probably the most outspoken bell-ringer on this was Rand herself. Read her essay The Comprachicos for a chilling, explicit denunciation of what the education system was (even then!) doing to our children. (I would quote from it, but it is of a whole, and excerpting would not do it justice.) Now the products of those 1950’s preschools (at that time for only the wealthy) are tenured college professors and public school administrators, and part of the problem. I comment about it in my numerous “Our Collapsing Schools” pieces. The Volokh Conspiracy has recently had a number of posts concerning the overwhelming leftist bias in higher academia. There were these recent posts about undergrad and doctoral student experiences on major U.S. campuses. But it’s discussed in the blogosphere in a *shrug* “What can we do about it?” tone. The only solution seems to be home-schooling, but given the economic and social realities (single-parent families being but one) it’s not a viable choice for many, and in fact the number of people who actually recognize the problem is, in reality, pretty small – because today’s parents are products of that corrupting system. We’re obviously pretty outnumbered.

So the question is: “Have we reached a critical mass?” Are there now so many people who have gone through the education mills and been taught not how to think, but not to think that we’re outnumbered to the point that resistance is futile? Steven Den Beste (one of the brightest brains out there today, in my opinion) points to a NRO column by Rich Lowry concerning the current platform of the Democratic candidates for President. He says:

(Their) credo is often nonsensical and hypocritical, but it is clearly discernible. The Democrats of ’04 believe:

That wars should be authorized, but never fought.

That the United Nations is the world’s last, best hope, and every jot of its writ should always be respected, unless it inconveniences Saddam Hussein.

That nation-building is always a humanitarian and just cause, unless it is undertaken in Iraq.

That anyone who said Saddam had weapons of mass destruction prior to the war was lying, unless his or her name is Bill Clinton, Al Gore, Madeleine Albright, Bill Cohen, John Kerry, or Joe Lieberman, or the person ever served in the Clinton cabinet or as a Democratic senator.

That French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin is always right.

That President Bush isn’t devoting enough resources to the reconstruction of Iraq, and that — in light of his $87 billion aid proposal — he is devoting far too many resources to the reconstruction of Iraq.

That George Bush maneuvered the United States into war in an act of manipulative genius, and also is very stupid.

And much more in the same vein. And he’s right. And what about the Republicans? They seem to have surrendered too. As Brian Reidl in the same forum puts it:

The Republican party may have once stood for fiscal responsibility, but it has since succumbed to the temptation of playing Santa Claus to whatever voter blocks (farmers, seniors, soccer moms) it thinks will swing the next election. To those who see government spending mainly as a means to buy re-election, reducing waste is a thankless and potentially dangerous distraction.

In short, they’ve done what they feel they have to do to keep getting re-elected by a voting populace that wants bread and circuses. And national security, and a prescription drug plan, and Social Security and….

Have we reached the point Alexis de Tocqueville warned us of when he said “The American Republic will endure, until politicians realize they can bribe the people with their own money”? Was Alexander Tytler right, and we’re on our way back into dependency and bondage?

Are we going with a whimper, and not a bang?

Perhaps more on this later. Some discussion would be appreciated.

England: Defend a Loved One, Go to Jail

Submitted without comment (for now):

Teenager jailed for knife attack

A TEENAGER who slit the throat of his mother’s violent lover was today starting a two-and-a-half year prison sentence.

One of Alex Court’s jugular veins was cut when 18-year-old Benjamin Gunton sliced open his neck with a knife.

He had turned on Mr Court, 37, who had numerous convictions for violence, after seeing him attack his mother, Norwich Crown Court heard yesterday.

Gunton, of Chestnut Court, Norwich, was sent to a young offenders’ institutions for 30 months after admitting causing grievous bodily harm with intent.

Passing sentence, recorder Alistair Wilson, QC, said: “The cut to his throat could well have killed him.

“It opened one of his jugular veins, but fortunately he survived. It is obvious this was as serious an assault as one can possibly imagine.”

Prosecutor Jonathan Seely said at the time Gunton, his four siblings, his mother Sheryl Barber and Mr Court were living in three rooms at the Sandcastle Hotel in Great Yarmouth.

On February 2 Gunton, who had been drinking for most of the day, was told by other residents that Mr Court was attacking his mother in their room.

When Gunton went into the room, Mr Court was hitting his mother across the face and had her pinned her on the bed.

Mr Court then moved towards him and Gunton said he feared he was about to be attacked too, so he used a knife to inflict a 10cm cut to Mr Court’s neck.

Mr Court lost a lot of blood at the scene and was taken to the James Paget Hospital in Gorleston.

He underwent an operation on his severed external jugular vein and his wounds were stitched and stapled. He was in hospital for three days.

Luke Brown, for Gunton, said he has a difficult family background and had witnessed his mother being abused by previous partners.

He added Mr Court had numerous previous convictions for violence and was acting aggressively when he was attacked.

The court was told Gunton’s previous offending involved dishonesty in order to feed a £60 a week heroin habit he had when he was young, but he had since weaned himself off drugs.

OK, ONE comment: This is JUSTICE?

UPDATE:  As of August 6, 2013, due to the herculean efforts of reader John Hardin, the original JS-Kit/Echo comment thread for this post (read-only) is available here.

You Know, I Think He’s Right

James Lileks is ON in todays Bleat. But for me, the best part was this in the foot comments:

This alsso<(sic) means I will have nothing to say about current events this week – like this Limbaugh thing which is breaking; my gut says guilty. I am also sure that upon hearing the news, Al Franken spronged sufficient wood to knock the table over. In terms of his credibility with his followers, I think Rush just had his Aimee Semple McPherson moment. The faithful will be divided. Short term? His 4Q ratings book is going to rock.

And I hope Franken hurt himself knocking that table over.

More Propaganda

Today’s editorial (originally printed Saturday, 10/4) comes from the Washington Post, and is entitled

To Quell the Killings

Bear in mind while you read this that “Quell” is defined:

to thoroughly overwhelm and reduce to submission or passivity (quell a riot)

That’s not what they’re talking about here.

But what a nifty title, eh?

MARYLANDERS HAVE long recognized how outlandish it is to allow the marketing of military assault-style weapons that have no place in any civilized state.

Unless they’re in the hands of government employees, of course.

A decade ago Maryland banned the sale or transfer of a number of assault-style pistols; but even with a federal ban on the manufacture of 19 different models of assault weapons, creative copies of these high-powered firearms keep flooding the street markets that cater to violent criminals.

Really? Then the Violence Policy Center’s report indicating that Bushmaster sold 150,589 semi-automatic rifles in the period between 1994 and 2000 means that every single one of them went to “violent criminals?” That’s odd. The lower receiver of my AR (the part that’s legally a “gun”) is a Bushmaster, and last I checked, I don’t have so much as a speeding ticket on my record. But all those guns were “flooding the street” eh? What about the 18,211 made by DPMS? Or the 32,504 made by Armalite? And those are just the domestically manufactured versions of the AR-15 type rifle. That doesn’t include the imported AK variants.

Right, the only people who want to buy “assault rifles” are violent criminals. Sure.

The federal ban is set to expire in 11 months unless Congress acts, and some Maryland leaders — including two top Democrats who may run against each other for their party’s nomination for governor — are united in support of a state bill to outlaw the sale or transfer of 45 models of assault-style rifles and shotguns. Their shared concern: If Congress caves in to the all-guns-are-great lobbyists and lets the limited federal protections die, Maryland ought to have an even better ban on its books. One of the weapons that would be banned, a Bushmaster semiautomatic rifle, was used in the sniper attacks in this region a year ago.

An “even better ban” that won’t do what it’s purported to do – keep “assault weapons” out of the hands of the violent criminals. Let’s look (again) at Muhammed and Malvo.

Point 1: The rifle they used was a post-ban AR – one of the hundreds of thousands already in circulation (and this is what the gun grabbers banners are protesting). Yet these guns (and the tens of thousands of pre-ban rifles) will still be out there – unless, of course, the next step is confiscation.

Point 2: Muhammed and Malvo have already stated that they stole the rifle from a gun shop in Washington state, so a ban in Maryland wouldn’t have any effect on the “availability” of the gun, would it?

Point 3: Muhammed and Malvo fired one shot at each of their victims, so the type of firearm involved was immaterial. Had they used a deer rifle chambered in a cartridge such as the 7mm Remington Magnum, then it is likely there wouldn’t have been a single survivor, and they could have made their shots from a considerably greater distance. I guess those “long range sniper rifles” are next on the list, right?

But they keep milking the fact that an “assault rifle” was the weapon used.

Montgomery County Executive Douglas M. Duncan and Baltimore Mayor Martin O’Malley have good political as well as safety reasons for backing a more inclusive ban.

No, they just have a political reason. Safety doesn’t enter into the issue.

Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. voted as a member of Congress to overturn the federal ban on assault weapons; he prefers to echo the National Rifle Association position that stiffer sentences for gun crimes are a more effective approach. That may scare some criminals, even if it does nothing to lower the number of suicides or accidental deaths of children. But what is so essential about these weapons?

And what does “suicides and accidental deaths of children” have to do with an assault weapon ban? Or are we just supposed to ignore this non sequitur?

The 1994 federal ban should be extended, not ended.

Although it was illustrated at the beginning of the editorial that it was, essentially, useless.

The 19 weapons covered are listed by name, and the provisions include a ban on “copies” or “duplicates.” But state Sen. Robert J. Garagiola (D-Montgomery) and Del. Neil F. Quinter (D-Howard) fear that the federal ban may not be renewed, never mind improved. Federal uniform protection would be best, but in the meantime states are and should be enacting measures of their own. As of August 2002, seven states had some form of assault weapon ban: California, Connecticut, Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York.

Yes, and it’s worked so well in those states, hasn’t it? Kept them out of the hands of the law-abiding, gotten some people who were otherwise law abiding to break a new law, and done nothing to make anybody safer. And now, at least, California’s ban is being challenged at the Supreme Court level. (We’ll see if the Court deigns to actually hear the case.)

It isn’t as if sportsmen would be denied their firearms. The federal law provides specific protection to 670 types of hunting rifles and shotguns currently being manufactured. Isn’t that ample?

First: The Second Amendment isn’t about “sport.”

Second: If you can ban one type of weapon on appearance or function, you can ban more, or all. It’s called “the slippery slope” for a reason. The law protects 670 weapons now – that could change tomorrow.

Third: Sportsmen actually do use these weapons. The AR-15 is the rifle of choice for National Match competition, and makes a damned fine varmit rifle in some configurations. But who cares about that? They’re eeeevil black rifles!

The weapons prohibited are those with multiple assault-weapon features such as a protruding pistol grip or grenade launcher or designs for spray-firing from the hip as fast as a shooter can keep pulling the trigger.

What? No mention of the bayonet lugs? The original ban made those illegal. Or the folding or collapsable stocks – what about those? I thought those defined an “assault weapon.” Now it’s the pistol grip and grenade launchers? We have a problem with criminals launching grenades now?

Little wonder, then, that law enforcement officials — those who work to protect people from sniper fire or armed criminals — support proposals to do away with assault-style weapons.

Except, of course, for the ones THEY have. You know, the ones that are often fully automatic and equipped with collapsable stocks.

How effective can homeland security measures be in a country awash with some of the most efficient firearms sought by international as well as domestic terrorists?

Right. Terrorists who can rent Ryder trucks and fill them with ANFO. Terrorists who can smuggle the full-auto versions of the AK into the country. Terrorists who will have no problem getting any weapon they want because they don’t care about the law.

Can they get any more wound up without becoming hysterical?

Once again, I’m reminded of the VPC’s comment about the “assault weapon” issue, because (remember the title of the op-ed? To Quell the Killings?) “assault weapons” aren’t the problem the VPC sees. The VPC believes that handguns should be banned (and confiscated) because they are used in the overwhelming majority of killings in this country. But the effort to accomplish this has fallen flat. So the Violence Policy Center has latched onto the “assault weapon” frenzy for purely pragmatic reasons:

It will be a new topic in what has become to the press and public an “old” debate.

Although handguns claim more than 20,000 lives a year, the issue of handgun restriction consistently remains a non-issue with the vast majority of legislators, the press, and public. The reasons for this vary: the power of the gun lobby; the tendency of both sides of the issue to resort to sloganeering and pre-packaged arguments when discussing the issue; the fact that until an individual is affected by handgun violence he or she is unlikely to work for handgun restrictions; the view that handgun violence is an “unsolvable” problem; the inability of the handgun restriction movement to organize itself into an effective electoral threat; and the fact that until someone famous is shot, or something truly horrible happens, handgun restriction is simply not viewed as a priority. Assault weapons—just like armor-piercing bullets, machine guns, and plastic firearms—are a new topic. The weapons’ menacing looks, coupled with the public’s confusion over fully automatic machine guns versus semi-automatic assault weapons—anything that looks like a machine gun is assumed to be a machine gun—can only increase the chance of public support for restrictions on these weapons. In addition, few people can envision a practical use for these weapons. (Most emphasis mine, but the emphasis on “a new topic” was theirs)

Efforts to stop restrictions on assault weapons will only further alienate the police from the gun lobby.

Until recently, police organizations viewed the gun lobby in general, and the NRA in particular, as a reliable friend. This stemmed in part from the role the NRA played in training officers and its reputation regarding gun safety and hunter training. Yet, throughout the 1980s, the NRA has found itself increasingly on the opposite side of police on the gun control issue. Its opposition to legislation banning armor-piercing ammunition, plastic handguns, and machine guns, and its drafting of and support for the McClure/Volkmer handgun decontrol bill, burned many of the bridges the NRA had built throughout the past hundred years. As the result of this, the Law Enforcement Steering Committee was formed. The Committee now favors such restriction measures as waiting periods with background check for handgun purchase and a ban on machine guns and plastic firearms. If police continue to call for assault weapons restrictions, and the NRA continues to fight such measures, the result can only be a further tarnishing of the NRA’s image in the eyes of the public, the police, and NRA members. The organization will no longer be viewed as the defender of the sportsman, but as the defender of the drug dealer. (The “divide and conquer” strategy.)

Efforts to restrict assault weapons are more likely to succeed than those to restrict handguns.

Although the majority of Americans favor stricter handgun controls, and a consistent 40 percent of Americans favor banning the private sale and possession of handguns, many Americans do believe that handguns are effective weapons for home self-defense and the majority of Americans mistakenly believe that the Second Amendment of the Constitution guarantees the individual right to keep and bear arms. Yet, many who support the individual’s right to own a handgun have second thoughts when the issue comes down to assault weapons. Assault weapons are often viewed the same way as machine guns and “plastic” firearms—a weapon that poses such a grave risk that it’s worth compromising a perceived constitutional right.

For the VPC, the ends (gun bans) justify the means (fearmongering, distortion, and outright lying.) We “mistakenly believe” the Second Amendment means what it says. We are supposed to believe that “plastic firearms” that can get through a metal detector actually exist. And – taking advantage of the poor ignorant public they so urgently want to protect from itself – they want to take advantage of the mistaken assumption that “anything that looks like a machine gun is assumed to be a machine gun.” (See The Lying News Media piece for an illustration of this tactic. Don’t even bother to try to convince me that it was “an honest misunderstanding.”)

Seems the Washington Post and a lot of politicians and other newspapers see it that way too.