Hypocrisy

One of my co-workers dropped an op-ed on my desk this afternoon from the local daily rag, entitled Yes, we’ve had reason to fear, but we’ve chosen not to own a gun. Please do hop over and read it, as I won’t excerpt much from it here.

Done? Good.

I was inspired to leave a comment, which was this:

“Call us naive, but we believe that although there is evil in the world, most people are good; we have a moral obligation to help one another whenever we can because that’s the kind of world we want to inhabit.”

I am reminded of this quote:

The most glaring example of the cognitive dissonance on the left is the concept that human beings are inherently good, yet at the same time cannot be trusted with any kind of weapon, unless the magic fairy dust of government authority gets sprinkled upon them.

So Sharon and Dick, instead of opening their door and inviting the burglar in to take whatever he needed to survive, instead called the Sheriff’s department to send out an deputy – an armed deputy – to prevent their property from being stolen, or their lives from being threatened.

They’re not actually morally superior, they just think they are. They’re more than willing to farm out the threat of lethal force in their defense, they’re just not willing to take that responsibility on themselves.

Just so they can claim the moral high ground.

In other words, they’re hypocrites.

Self-inflicted

Yesterday’s QotD came from a comment left by the Geekwitha45 to a previous post.  That comment in its entirety goes:

The MSM isn’t broken.

It’s operating effectively, as designed and intended. Unfortunately, being a source of unbiased, deep information is not a design consideration.

What *is* broken is the electorate, which failed to detect that condition and correct for it.

This is why I no longer believe myself to have any duty of conscience to be chained to the outcomes of a broken electorate or electoral process.

Which sucks, because all I ever really wanted from my government was a vigorous defense of my natural rights, in a package that was safe enough to mostly ignore, instead of the ringside seats at the horror show.

Wheee.

One of my co-workers has a cartoon-a-day calendar of New Yorker cartoons.  This one is from a few days ago:
I’ve got a few thousand words to say on this topic that I just can’t get written down.  I hate when that happens, but I thought I’d share the picture with you and prompt you for your thoughts.  Maybe you’ll break my damned dam free.

Quote of the Day – History Doesn’t Repeat Itself

…But It Does Rhyme Edition:

I am more convinced now … that the West has gone over the tipping point in its terminal decline. That intelligent people, or people who claim to be intelligent, (I have in mind the talking heads in the U.S. media such as Chris Matthews or Fareed Zakaria) cannot make the difference between the sham of the Muslim Brotherhood talking about freedom and democracy and the generic thirst in man to be free. These are the people who have like the Bourbons learned nothing and forgotten nothing. They are glibly about to put the Lenins of our time into trains heading for Moscows of our time….

Salim Mansur as related by Claire Berlinski

(h/t: Instapundit)

RTWT.  There’s still hope, but it’s fading fast.  Billy Beck’s Endarkenment comes ever nearer.

Renormalizing the Gun Culture

…or “Scaring the White People”?

I think I first ran across the “Scaring the White People” meme at Say Uncle, and again a bit later. I took up the theme myself.

As I see it, there are essentially three “gun cultures” in this nation: the criminal gun culture, the genteel gun culture, and the gonzo gun culture.

The criminal gun culture is self-explanatory. It exists everywhere, even (perhaps especially) where gun ownership by individuals is heavily restricted or forbidden. The genteel gun culture is the culture of what many of us term the Fudds, the people whose only interest in firearms is for hunting, for example,  or who only shoot sporting clays and see “no reason” for any type of firearm other than what they themselves own.  “Nobody needs” type X gun, as far as they’re concerned.

The gonzo gun culture is the one that encompasses all other forms of shooting and collecting, from those of us who shoot IPSC and USPSA to those who spend literally thousands of dollars annually just feeding their Class III habit. We’re the ones who shoot a lot, and like pretty much anything that goes “bang!”  True, there is some overlap between groups, but we still hear from the genteels from time to time.

Then there’s the two groups who are not gunnies:  the ones who don’t think about them, and the ones who are afraid of them.  And there are a lot more of those than there are of us.

For years the only attention that firearms really got in the media was either crime reports on the news, or the occasional hunting show. Perhaps Wide World of Sports would do a piece on pheasant hunting in Montana, or elk in Wyoming. (Robin Williams did a funny riff about “hunting the monarch butterfly with the .44 Magnum” in one of his routines years ago.)  With the explosion of cable and the need for more content, we got shows like Jim Zumbo Outdoors, but Jim was a member of the genteel gun culture, as evidenced by the Great Zumbo Incident of 2007.

We also got shows like American Shooter with Jim Scoutten, and now his Shooting USA, both arguably a much broader-based view of the shooting sports and recreational shooting in general. Still, Jim isn’t what I’d call an avid supporter of the gonzo gun culture.

Now we have shows like the Outdoor Channel’s Wednesday night lineup of Shooting Gallery (which recently did an entire show on Joe Huffman’s Boomershoot event), Best Defense, the aforementioned Shooting USA, Sighting In, American Guardian, American Rifleman, Impossible Shots, and Cowboys. (Michael Bane is definitely a member of the gonzo gun culture!) Last year brought us History Channel’s Top Shots, about to begin its second season. We’ve actually begun to see some relatively fair treatment in the print media. What there is is overwhelmed by the rest, but still, it’s a sign that the times have been changing.

Well, maybe not the Times.

The renormalization of firearms in American culture is proceeding apace.

Tonight I watched my first episode of the Discovery Channel’s Sons of Guns, another “reality” show, this time about a Class III II SOT (Special Occupational Taxpayer) manufacturer in Louisiana. I haven’t seen that many short-barreled, suppressed, full-auto firearms in my life, and especially not on TV.

It must give Joan Peterson, Paul Helmke, Sarah Brady, Josh Sugarmann et al. nightmares.

And I can’t help but wonder if it “frightens the white people.” The show I saw did indicate, once, that you can’t just walk into a gun shop, buy an NFA restricted weapon and walk out the door with it, but it gave that impression at least one other time. The show I watched involved the assembly of a full-auto Browning M2 “Ma Deuce” machinegun from a parts kit, including the milling of the sideplates to convert the kit from semi- to full-auto.

It never mentioned that only licensed manufacturers can do that legally.  No mention of the 1986 ban was made.  No mention of NFA registration was made.  Just buy a ($6,000) parts kit, and put it together!

It showed the owner’s daughter making sales of multiple quantities of short-barreled suppressed “assault weapons” at “dealer pricing,” without bothering to mention that those sales were going to other licensed dealers. It showed her selling two short-barreled folding-stock suppressed 10/22 rifles, and knocking $500 off the price in exchange for a guided bowfishing trip. No mention of an NFA delay on that one.

This show, I think, could be a treasure-trove of propaganda for The Other Side. After all, remember what the Violence Policy Center wrote in its effort to ban “assault weapons”:

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.

(Bold emphasis mine.)  They’ve made it clear that lying to the public in order to frighten them into passing gun bans is perfectly acceptable, and we’ve seen that tactic used more than once.  It’s been a staple of this blog and several others pointing out incidents where it’s done.

My point is, we shouldn’t be helping them.  Personally, I like the show, but I know what’s being left out.  Joe and Jane Average haven’t got a clue.

Discuss.  I’m interested in what you think.

UPDATE:  It’s a topic of discussion at AR15.com.

When Just Plain Lying Isn’t Enough

Snowflakes in Hell illustrates how one branch of the Media pushes its agenda by deliberate mendacity:

Earlier in the day, Carl from Chicago alerted me to an NPR interview that was going on with Paul Helmke, Robert Levy, and some unknown person being touted as a gun rights blogger. Noting that it looks like her blog was just getting started, that immediately raised suspicion that something wasn’t going to pass the smell test. How did they pick out some unknown blogger who is just getting started while ignoring the whole of us? The answer, would obviously be this person is not an unknown blogger, but a false flag; someone flying under the banner of being pro-Second Amendment while in truth being no such thing. Google shows the truth:

Go.  Read.  And be as pissed-off as I am.

Ravenwood’s Law

Ravenwood’s Law is expressed:

As a discussion about guns grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Dodge City or the Wild West approaches one.

It doesn’t have to be a “discussion,” apparently.  This was in Wednesday’s local paper “letters to the editor” section:

Harper’s plan for education: guns Re: the Dec. 23 article “Legislator wants end to campus gun bans.”
Bravo state Sen. Jack Harper, the Old West’s true son! Got a big issue? Just grab a big gun!

Armed guys on campus? Jack finds it prudent to arm the professor as well as the student.

But one little problem: This plan no doubt shall turn every classroom into the O.K. Corral.

Ernest von Nardroff
Retired, Tucson

And immediately below that gem came another example of “The Philosophy Cannot Be Wrong! Do It Again Only HARDER!”

Economic theory not fully tested

Re: the Dec. 24 letter to the editor “Keynesian theory proved to be a failure.”

A letter writer claims Keynesian economics is dead and cites the failure of the stimulus package to end the recession as proof.

The death proclamation is both premature and wrong.

The Bush recession (began in 2007) has resulted in historically high consumer debt levels and $12 trillion in lost home and investment values.

Consequently, because of demand/supply inelasticity, consumers are not positioned to spend (demand) the economy out of the recession.

Clearly, what is needed is stimulated demand.

U.S. economic expansion is currently so slow that in order to grow demand, a multi-billion or even a multi-trillion dollar stimulus is needed.

The only lesson from the failure of the first stimulus package is that it was far too small.

Stuart A. Ulanoff
Tucson

I’m very glad I don’t waste my money on a subscription.

Quote of the Day – Media and Education Edition

It’s not just crappy education [although that certainly contributes], it’s that most ‘reporters’ study ‘journalism’ in college, where they’re taught not to ‘report’ facts and such but to ‘describe’ and ‘explain’ ‘narratives’ and ‘messages’ to the ignorant public. They are to become ‘journalists’, which apparently means they don’t really need to know anything except how to string together words to make a sentence. And they don’t need to understand anything at all.

The journalism majors I get in my class are second worst, only better than the education majors.

Posted by: JorgXMcKie at January 6, 2011 10:21 AM

Found at Arms and the Law, Media ignores ATF internal scandals

Bah, HUMBUG!

Just another reminder of how “The Other Side” views their opposition, from Madison, Wisconsin’s “Progressive Voice,” The Cap Times:

Yup, corruption and greed. That’s all.

Amazing how the “plutocratic” “Grinch-elect” got elected isn’t it?  

I guess the Progressive Whos in Who-ville don’t vote.