Archive for March 8th, 2008

Dave Hardy has some interesting commentary.

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Hot on the heels of blaming Pennsylvania for New Jersey’s violence problems, Bryan Miller has decided to turn his attention back to more comfortable pursuits of sticking it to gun owners in his home state.

He continues to peddle the myth that some semi-automatic firearms are more dangerous than other semi-automatic firearms, and pushing to increase penalties for possession in The Garden State:

The enactment of NJ’s Assault Weapons Ban was the subject of enormous public attention, as the gun lobby fought it tooth and nail and subsequently sought to repeal it (remember Governor Florio blowing a watermelon apart?). Claiming ignorance of the illegality of possession of an assault weapon is disingenuous and dangerous.

In fact, any “otherwise law-abiding” assault weapon owner would either have had to obtained his/her gun prior to 1991, purposely avoided the grace period and kept it illegally for 16 years or purchased it out-of-state since 1991 and illegally brought it here. Yet, Bach and his organization believe such illegal, cavalier and menacing behavior merits the equivalent of a ‘Get Out of Jail Free’ card.

Ridiculous.

Remember what an assault weapons in New Jersey can look like.  If you had one of these in your closet for the past 30 years, would you think you were in possession of an illegal weapon that could get you 10 years in the pokey?  You’d almost think Bryan thought it audacious that residents of The Garden State were under this mistaken notion they lived in a free country with a right to bear arms provision in its constitution.  This isn’t gun nut fantasy.  People in New Jersey can and have been arrested and jailed for possessing of of these:

“The New Jersey Supreme Court has a bias against guns and gun owners. In a famous decision they said, ‘When it comes to firearms, the citizen acts at his own peril.’ That was a case in which the court found a citizen guilty of possession of a Marlin Model 60, which holds 22 rounds in a tubular magazine, and New Jersey has a limit of 15, so in New Jersey that’s an assault rifle and the citizen went to jail.”

For possessing a boy’s .22 rifle — a plinker that fires a single round each time you pull the trigger?

“They threw the book at him.”

I have to assume that’s just fine by Mr. Miller.  One more gun owner in jail where they belong, right?  If that’s not really what his sentiment, then he wouldn’t have any problem passing a rimfire exception to the New Jersey ban now would he?  Don’t think so?  I don’t either.

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Bitter has a must read about how left-wing hippies have taken over OWAA:

I think the Outdoor Writers Association is done. It’s about environmental writers now instead of your hook and bullet crowd. Certainly, enough people thought this a few years ago when POMA was launched following OWAA’s attack on NRA. But I think we have a new sign the whole damn thing is up.

I’m particularly interested in the kinds of people they are associating with.

Hunting For A Solution

Wayne Pacelle (Humane Society of the United States), Bart Semcer (Sierra Club) and Paul Helmke (Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence) will host a panel discussion on the merits and intrinsic worth of hunting. These provocative speakers likely will provide ample story material while giving OWAA members a front-lines, front-row seat to an age-old debate that will affect hunters for years to come. Don’t miss this timely and exciting exchange of ideas.

The Humane Society of the United States, which is an anti-hunting group, working with The Brady Campaign, an anti-gun group, could be the thing that helps drive more hunters into the hands of NRA.  It’s going to be tough to argue there isn’t an active movement to end hunting in this country, using the one/two punch of hunting restrictions and gun restrictions.  Hunters need to wake up, and fight both these groups, or they are going to be facing the destruction of their sport.

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Long and rainy trip down to Virginia tonight.  After I arrived here, Bitter and I drove over to Alexandria and paid a visit to the set of Cam & Company tonight while the show was airing, and got to sit in the control room while Lars worked his magic.  Talked with Cam and the guys at NRA News a bit about the Second Amendment Blog Bash, hosted along side the NRA Annual Meeting in Louisville, which is now up to more than twenty confirmed bloggers in attendance.  Cam said he mentioned the blog on the air today.  I’ve heard him mention me a few times, but it always seems I get mentioned when I’m not listening.  Either way, I definitely appreciate the promotion.

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