Too Long to be the QotD, Too Good to Pass Up:.

The press coverage of Iraq, the WoT, and conservatives generally seems to be getting worse almost by the day. I see an analogy between hunger and the story the lefty press is hankering for – the one that busts the “we’re making progress” idea wide open. Imagine a small animal in cover that would have to leave the cover and risk predation to get food. The species has evolved a sensible moderate fear of being in the open – too willing to leave cover, the animal gets eaten. Too unwilling, it dies of starvation. Over generations, a roughly sensible degree of willingness to leave cover evolves. But now suppose food becomes scarce. The value of staying in cover rapidly drops as starvation threatens, so the animal becomes more willing to leave cover in search of food – becomes reckless, even, if food is scarce enough. Recklessness in search of food becomes a better bargain as hunger increases.

The reporter looking for the big story that finally, finally gets Bush – the story Chimpy McHitlerBurton cannot escape – that reporter is facing an increasing threat of starvation. 10 months and counting down. Time is running out. The animal must leave cover. The press must dispense with even the pretense of objectivity and go out into the open. I predict more and more recklessly open bias in reporting between now and January. They’re getting hungrier and hungrier. They’re staring starvation right in the eye… – “Hyperpotamus” in a quote at Confederate Yankee: MSNBC Games McCain Speech with Irrelevant “Breaking News”

As I told him, he just described the end of Dan Rather’s career!

Irony, Indeed!

The post below, I Love My People has been linked at Un-DemocraticUnderground

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=118×165622

(Link left cold, on purpose.)

One “Iverglas,” hit the site some time after, I believe, I was ceremoniously kicked off after my own six month stint there – September 3 of 2002 by none other than Skinner, the site administrator. “Iverglas” appears to hate all firearms and anyone who does not hate all firearms, and posts this:

I see no reason for thinking that this post is anything other than the astroturf effort undertaken by the online “gun rights” community to take over discussion at that site:

http://smallestminority.blogspot.com/2008/04/i-love-my-…

The original post is dated January 6, 2008, so it took a while for our grassroots to find it, but just damn!

I complained awhile ago about some of our more vocal elements sometimes being a detriment to our cause, but the comments to this post are outstanding, even given the inevitable minor errors. The entire tone is calm, logical, factual, and fierce.

Everybody who commented? Take a bow. You deserve it.

Everybody who linked? You are the difference between Joyce-funded astroturf, and the grassroots from the divots our opponents keep picking out of their teeth.

Ah, irony.

Indeed. Obviously, “Iverglas” has A) no understanding of the word “grassroots,” and B) no understanding of the word “irony.”

Because they just whacked him/her in the mouth.

Heh. How’s that divot taste, Iverglas?

I Love My People…

…we People of the Gun. There are currently at least eight posts all linking to one very interesting post and comment thread at Sociological Images. They are as follows:

If You Read Nothing Else Today

WARNING: Possible tools of the gun lobby

Quote of the Day

A Basic Human Right

Visual Rhetoric

Their Own Weapon Turned Against Them

Interesting Images

A Rant Deleted

The original post is dated January 6, 2008, so it took a while for our grassroots to find it, but just damn!

I complained awhile ago about some of our more vocal elements sometimes being a detriment to our cause, but the comments to this post are outstanding, even given the inevitable minor errors. The entire tone is calm, logical, factual, and fierce.

Everybody who commented? Take a bow. You deserve it.

Everybody who linked? You are the difference between Joyce-funded astroturf, and the grassroots from the divots our opponents keep picking out of their teeth.

I love all y’all.

UPDATE: If you’re visiting from DemocraticUnderground, you might want to read this response to Iverglas.

“A New Constitutional Right”

A lot has been made recently over Slate legal columnist Dahlia Lithwick’s characterization of the Supreme Court’s Heller arguments as “fall(ing) in love with a new constitutional right.” Eugene Volokh and Glenn Reynolds, among others, took exception to her choice of words.

Thomas Girsch, guest-posting at SayUncle (and crossposting at LeanLeft) finds this amusing, apparently, and links to a post at Obsidian Wings on the topic. I read the piece. Written by “Publius,” I for one have to take extreme exception. He (or she, you never can really tell on the internet) states:

(T)he meaning of constitutional text isn’t self-evident. To be blunt, the Constitution means what the Court ultimately says it means. We can say “First Amendment” all we want, but it’s ultimately the Court that defines the scope and meaning of the “freedom of speech” text as applied to various types of circumstances (e.g., Bong Hitz 4 Jesus, crowded theater, libel, etc.). Now maybe you like this, and maybe you don’t. But that’s the way things have been for some time.

In this sense, the “individual rights” interpretation of the Second Amendment is absolutely a “new” constitutional right. Courts have traditionally adopted a “collective/militia” interpretation. Maybe that’s good, maybe it ain’t. But that’s been the traditional judicial interpretation.

That depends on just how far back you want to go in your research into “judicial interpretation.” It would appear that depth of inquiry only goes back as far as you can find (or interpret, or invent) the finding you want. If you go too far, well then, the decisions must have been flawed or otherwise discountable.

I’ve been through this before with the “honorable opposition.”

The earliest case in which the Supreme Court discusses what are our individual rights as citizens is Dred Scott v. Sanford in 1856 – a case in which seven of the nine Justices decided that blacks could not be citizens – slave or free – because citizenship:

“would give to persons of the negro race, who were recognised as citizens in any one State of the Union, the right to enter every other State whenever they pleased, singly or in companies, without pass or passport, and without obstruction, to sojourn there as long as they pleased, to go where they pleased at every hour of the day or night without molestation, unless they committed some violation of law for which a white man would be punished; and it would give them the full liberty of speech in public and in private upon all subjects upon which its own citizens might speak; to hold public meetings upon political affairs, and to keep and carry arms wherever they went.”

In that I count: freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, freedom from unreasonable search and seizure, and the rights to keep and bear arms outside of any mention of militia service.

This was followed by U.S. v. Cruikshank in 1875, which declared that the right the Second Amendment protected was “that of ‘bearing arms for a lawful purpose.’ “ Not only that, but that right “is not a right granted by the Constitution. Neither is it in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.” No, in that case the Supreme Court declared that (and Alan Gura made use of) the Second Amendment prevented only the Federal government from passing laws infringing on it.

D.C. is under Federal law, not State.

But Cruikshank made it OK for states to violate this pre-existing right to “bear arms for a lawful purpose.” Again, no mention of militia service was made. Apparently the 1875 Supreme Court hadn’t yet had a chance to study up on the (1868) 14th Amendment’s first paragraph, the second sentence of which is:

No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States;

You know, the “privileges or immunities” listed by the Court in Dred Scott, one of which was “to keep and carry arms” wherever we go?

Third, in Presser v. Illinois of 1886, the Supreme Court found it was acceptable to forbid private militias, using Cruikshank as precedent, but – most fascinating – that court stated not once but twice that:

(I)n view of the fact that all citizens capable of bearing arms constitute the reserved military force of the national government as well as in view of its general powers, the States cannot prohibit the people from keeping and bearing arms, so as to deprive the United States of their rightful resource for maintaining the public security.

and:

It is undoubtedly true that all citizens capable of bearing arms constitute the reserved military force or reserve militia of the United States as well as of the States, and in view of this prerogative of the general government, as well as of its general powers, the States cannot, even laying the constitutional provision in question out of view, prohibit the people from keeping and bearing arms, so as to deprive the United States of their rightful resource for maintaining the public security, and disable the people from performing their duty to the general government.

Yet, we are to believe, the right to arms is a new right, heretofore undeclared and unrecognized by the Supreme Court?

I was called on this by a commenter, once. He said:

In the Supreme Court cases from which you quote, all individuals who sought protection under the Second Amendment LOST.

Indeed, they did.

I replied:

BINGO! You win the kewpie doll! Let me rephrase your statement a bit more accurately: In the Supreme Court cases from which I quote, the Supreme Court was complicit in violating the right(s) it was tasked to defend.

And the excuse used each and every time? Let me quote Mayor Adrian Fenty:

I want to again emphasize that this case is a public safety case.

“Public Safety.” That was the argument the Dred Scott court used to deny citizenship to a whole class of people. Here’s the quote again, with one extra line:

(Citizenship) “would give to persons of the negro race, who were recognized as citizens in any one State of the Union, the right to enter every other State whenever they pleased, singly or in companies, without pass or passport, and without obstruction, to sojourn there as long as they pleased, to go where they pleased at every hour of the day or night without molestation, unless they committed some violation of law for which a white man would be punished; and it would give them the full liberty of speech in public and in private upon all subjects upon which its own citizens might speak; to hold public meetings upon political affairs, and to keep and carry arms wherever they went. And all of this would be done in the face of the subject race of the same color, both free and slaves, and inevitably producing discontent and insubordination among them, and endangering the peace and safety of the State.”

Boy, good thing the Court didn’t find in favor of Mr. Scott and his entire race. There might have been a Civil War or something!

As I have said before, the history of the Second Amendment is what has made me an advocate for it. Its legislative and legal history illustrates precisely what happens when judges and legislators “constitutionalize their personal preferences” instead of upholding their oaths to “support and defend the Constitution of the United States.”

The Supreme Court has the opportunity to correct 151 years of bad precedent and protect the rights of individual citizens whose rights they’ve folded, spindled, and mutilated in the name of “public safety.”

Long ago, Thomas Jefferson found a quote by Cesare, Marquis of Beccaria in his 1764 treatise On Crime and Punishment so profound that he copied it into his own “Commonplace Book”:

Laws that forbid the carrying of arms … disarm only those who are neither inclined nor determined to commit crimes … Such laws make things worse for the assaulted and better for the assailants; they serve rather to encourage than to prevent homicides, for an unarmed man may be attacked with greater confidence than an armed man.

Here we are, over two hundred and forty years after Beccaria’s astute observation, and still we are arguing over whether disarming the law-abiding should be legal, and Fenty is arguing that disarming the law abiding has made them safer.

It’s insane, and it needs to stop.

“…a more educated, sophisticated and straight thinking hunter and shooter demographic.”

Bob Ricker of the astroturf gun-ban er, –control, ah, -safety “organization” American Hunters and Shooters Association, has been dropping by pro-gun blogs and leaving comments. First, one over at Bitter’s that piqued SayUncle’s ire, and then one at SayUncle’s post about it.

Here’s the key graph of the first one:

I think it should be clear from my comments here and on other “whacko” blogs that AHSA is reaching out to a more educated, sophisticated and straight thinking hunter and shooter demographic.

And here’s his second comment, with his really poor attempt at superiority:

Hey SayUncle- only seven comments to this post? I’m stunned. Of the 30 to 40 million so called NRA members Bitter writes about, you could only find 7 who don’t agree with me. How many “whackos” do you represent?

Let me take on, as others have done, his first comment:

“More educated” – I have a BA from the University of Arizona. Granted it’s in “General Studies,” but the three areas of concentration are Math, Physics and Engineering. It was enough to qualify me (with work experience and recommendations from other licensed engineers) to take the exams necessary to get my own license to practice Electrical Engineering. I took each exam once, and passed.

“Sophisticated” – Boy, you got me there. I don’t eat Brie or drink wine (even out of a box!) I can’t discuss opera or the theatah, and ballet absolutely bores me to tears. I’m just unsophisticated as all get-out.

“Straight-thinking” – I won’t go where Uncle went, but I think if Bob spent some time reading the “Best Of” posts on my left sidebar, he might conclude that my brain works just fine. It has to: I’m an engineer.

“Hunter” – Well, I’ve been on one deer hunt and one javalina hunt. No joy either time. But hunting is not really my bag. Hunting, to me, is taking your gun for a walk.

“Shooter” – Not as much of a shooter as I’d like to be. All this reading and writing cuts into my time to reload and get out on weekends to shoot. But I have started participating in action matches, and I look forward to burning about 250 rounds of .45ACP a month doing that, plus whatever time I can spare shooting some of my other firearms.

So, the demographic Bob is after is the $10,000+ Perazzi wingshooting set?

Good luck with that, Bob! (I prefer shooting thrown clays with my .30-06 1917 Enfield. It’s a bit more of a challenge.)

Perhaps my sixteen regular readers might want to opine over at Uncle’s. His post is up to thirty-two replies as I write this.

The Geek Turns Five!.

Contrary to the beliefs of some, The Geek with a .45 is one of the blogosphere’s better “critical thinkers.” I’d suggest you go congratulate him, but his comments are currently turned off due to a problem with Haloscan. (Odd, mine still seem to be working fine.)