Category: Gun Grabbing Fascists

  • Borat’s foiled gun purchase

    Borat’s foiled gun purchase

    Eggs sends us a link to Fox11 which recounts the time that Sacha Baron Cohen tried to trick a Riverside, California gun shop owner into selling him a gun;

    “He comes in, off the bat you can see in the video I’m looking like, this guy does not look like a Hungarian immigrant, tight ass leather pants, a beard, it just didn’t fit,” [Norris] Sweidan said. “The moment his words came out of his mouth I was like this guy is full of s***.”

    Sweidan told FOX 11 Cohen said he wanted to buy a gun, but said it with a very odd sounding accent he didn’t find credible.

    “I’m looking at the producer and I’m just like am I being fooled right here?” Sweidan said. “And I just kept looking at the guy and I was like you’re Borat, as soon as I said that his eyes just looked at me like, and he did a turn right out the door.”

    He says after Cohen left the store, he left his crew behind.

    Sweiden suspects that Cohen had planned to use video clips to disparage gun owners and sellers on Cohens new TV show “Who is America?”. Sweiden is beginning work on his own show “Down the Barrel”.

    This type of BS has been tried in the past and each time attempts to embarrass gun shop dealers has backfired.

  • Joan Vennochi; What I learned at the shooting range

    Joan Vennochi; What I learned at the shooting range

    Parachute cutie sent us a link to the Boston Globe written by associate editor Joan Vennochi describing “What I learned at the shooting range“. The short answer is “Nothing”, but she doesn’t get paid to write short, accurate answers.

    This first-time shooter — an extremely near-sighted baby boomer wearing prescription sunglasses — fired five rounds that hit their mark 50 yards away. All it took was a Bushmaster XM-15 with Trijicon Reflex optical sight.

    I had never touched a firearm before. My only gun-related experience involved childhood visits to a relative’s dairy farm in upstate New York, where my born-in-Brooklyn father would inexplicably spend a morning trying to shoot a woodchuck with a borrowed rifle. Thankfully, he never succeeded. That’s the way I feel about all hunting. As for guns, generally, I like to imagine a world without them. But offered a chance, with colleagues, to learn more about them, I recently spent several hours at a shooting range.

    So, those pesky woodchucks, which do more damage to a dairy farm than they are worth, are free to multiply because her dad didn’t have the good fortune to shoot at the beasts with a Bushmaster XM-15 fitted with a Trijicon Reflex optical sight.

    My prejudices came with me. A firearm, loaded or not, is menacing. A “cold” shooting range, with flags flapping to signal it’s safe to walk across, is still scary. But I did learn something. I started off believing there’s no reason for a nonmilitary person to own a semiautomatic rifle. After firing one, case closed.

    So Joan, here, fired a scary, black rifle, and that makes her an expert on gun control, now.

    Some firearms are definitely harder to use than others. For example, General George S. Patton Jr. called the M1 Garand rifle “the greatest battle implement ever devised.” But the World War II and Korean War soldiers who carried this semiautomatic military rifle had to continuously feed clips loaded with eight rounds. If not done quickly enough, the bolt slams on your thumb. Ouch. Meanwhile, peering through the iron sight line is tricky. I hit nothing but the berm – maybe — and my shoulder ached from the recoil.

    She fired a Garand and couldn’t hit shit, but the scary black rifle scored a 5 for 5 series of target hits. So give each AR-style rifle owner a Garand in exchange.

    Gun rights advocates believe semiautomatic rifles should be available for competitive shooting, where participants follow strict safety rules. Hunters use these weapons, too, and it’s easy to see why: A woodchuck wouldn’t stand a chance. Then there’s the NRA’s favorite argument: A good guy with a gun can stop a bad guy with a gun.

    Yet if someone like me can easily hit a target, it’s terrifying to imagine the same weapon in the hands of someone on a mission to kill. Actually, there’s no need to imagine it. Just watch the news.

    Um, Joan, a Garand is a semi-automatic rifle, too, they were the “assault rifle” of their era – for more than twenty years from 1936 – 1959. If you spent anytime with the rifle, you’d find it at least as accurate as the ARs, but that would cripple your point, wouldn’t it?

    Believe it or not, the whole point of target shooting along with the other things rifles can do, is to “hit a target”. Missing a target is a terrible feature of marksmanship.

    If you want all rifles to miss their target, you would be demanding that all ARs would be fitted with bump stocks.

  • Phil Murphy and the one-track mind

    Phil Murphy and the one-track mind

    Sunday morning, Tahaji Wells, a gangster who had been released from prison recently despite a 2004 conviction for manslaughter which came with a 18-year sentence, opened fire on an opponent from a rival gang, injuring 22 people at an art festival. According to Fox News, Wells had another six years tacked on his sentence for his criminal behavior in prison – that’s a 24-year sentence, but math is hard in New Jersey, apparently.

    Phil Murphy, the new governor of New Jersey wasted no time blaming a lack of gun control for the shoot-em-up in Trenton. New Jersey has, arguably, some of the toughest gun laws in the country and Murphy had just signed six new gun laws last week – but that didn’t stop him from blaming guns laws;

    New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy responded to Sunday’s deadly shooting at a Trenton arts festival by calling for new controls on guns. But a suspect’s gang membership — and early release from prison after Murphy took office — may have been bigger factors in an incident that left one person dead and 22 wounded.

    Meanwhile, Murphy — a first-term Democrat in his first elected office — supports shorter sentences for offenders and cuts in prisoner rehabilitation programs…Less than 24 hours after the gunfire, Murphy — a former Goldman Sachs banker who served as President Barack Obama’s ambassador to Germany — began calling for gun control without addressing the other circumstances involved in the crime.

    “It’s yet another reminder of the senseless gun violence, even having signed six stringent gun laws last week,” Murphy said at a news conference Sunday following a service at Trenton’s Galilee Baptist Church.

    During the service, he said he “and many others around this state are committed to ending this scourge of gun violence” and urged the Congress to take action on guns “as a national matter.”

    You know, because it’s easier to write more legislation than it is to enforce existing laws.

    Did I mention that Murphy stripped funding from a program designed to help criminals return to the civilian life with marketable skills? Well, he did. Look at that skull – Murphy looks like a criminal.

  • How the media covers “good guy with a gun” stories

    How the media covers “good guy with a gun” stories

    Here’s how CNN covered a robbery attempt, as reported by WKTV in Utica, New York;

    Multiple people shot at Atlanta grocery store

    Posted: Jun. 16, 2018 1:50 PM
    Updated: Jun. 16, 2018 1:50 PM
    Posted By: CNN Wire

    According to the DeKalb County Police Department, multiple people were shot near the Kroger grocery store on Wesley Chapel Road.

    Authorities confirm three people were shot and they have been taken to a local hospital.

    Police say this shooting was not random. Two of the victims were targeted and followed to the Kroger. Police believe the shooting stemmed from a robbery attempt.

    We covered this in our Feel Good Stories this morning. What actually happened was that three armed thieves tried to rob a couple leaving the grocery store. The couple was armed, too, and shot the three criminals. Neither of the robbery victims were injured and all three criminals wound up in the hospital. You would never know that from the CNN story, though.

  • AMA backs gun control

    AMA backs gun control

    The Associated Press reports that the American Medical Association has stepped outside their lane and have pressed for increased gun control, ignoring the Second Amendment protections for Americans;

    At its annual policymaking meeting, the nation’s largest physicians group bowed to unprecedented demands from doctor-members to take a stronger stand on gun violence — a problem the organizations says is as menacing as a lethal infectious disease.

    The organization wants a ban on scary-looking black rifles and universal registration for firearms as a panacea for gun violence, you know, despite the fact that neither has ever affected gun crimes.

    Many AMA members are gun owners or supporters, including a doctor from Montana who told delegates of learning to shoot at a firing range in the basement of her middle school as part of gym class. But support for banning assault weapons was overwhelming, with the measure adopted in a 446-99 vote.

    “There’s a place to start and this should be it,” Dr. Jim Hinsdale, a San Jose, California, trauma surgeon, said before the vote.

    The AMA resolution does offer some good points about detecting suicidal tendencies, but largely it’s the same old gun-grabbing bullshit;

    While it is no longer viewed as the unified voice of American medicine, the AMA has more clout with politicians and the public than other doctor groups. It counted more than 243,000 members in 2017, up slightly for the seventh straight year. But it represents less than one-quarter of the nation’s million-plus physicians.

    It’s time to deflect questions about your access to guns from your activist family doctor.

  • Fake News? Could Well Be.

    Recently, AW1Ed posted an article detailing problems with concealed carry permits in Florida. The problem stemmed from a Florida state employee losing access to a database that was required to be checked during the permit process and not performing the required checks. This allowed a number of potentially invalid concealed carry permits to be issued. When discovered, the suspect permits were re-checked; 291 were found to have been issued in error, and were subsequently revoked. The employee responsible for the fiasco was fired.

    In a comment to AW1Ed’s article, a reader posted a comment alleging that the media had greatly exaggerated the issue. While the link posted by that commenter was to an article that I found poorly-written and somewhat confusing, I “pulled the thread” some more. And I think I’ve found, to a relatively high degree of certainty, “ground truth”.

    The initial reports on the issue were somewhat confusing. Those initial reports referred to “tens of thousands” of permits issued over a period of around a year, and also indicated that 291 were ultimately revoked. But other than to say that 291 permits had been revoked, the initial reporting didn’t give much in the way of specific, pertinent details. And the reporting frankly implied the problem was both serious and widespread.

    A subsequent follow-up article, quoting a spokesman for the pertinent Florida cabinet-level official whose department is responsible for issuing concealed carry permits in Florida, subsequently clarified the issue with those pertinent details. It turns out the issue was substantially less serious than originally reported by the media. But I doubt you’ll be seeing much in the way of follow-up from the mainstream media telling you that.

    There’s also substantial circumstantial evidence that this could be a case of deliberately slanted news. Or, alternatively, that it’s a story so inaccurate and/or exaggerated that it indeed qualifies as having been created out of whole cloth, AKA “fake news”.

    ———-

    So, what are the facts? Based on later clarification by a spokesman for Adam Putnam, the Florida Agriculture Commissioner, giving specific numbers and providing significant additional details here’s what appears to have happened:

    1. The Florida concealed carry process requires that three databases be checked before a concealed carry permit is issued. Two of them are criminal history databases: Florida Crime Information Center database (FCIC) and the National Crime Information Center database (NCIC). The third is the Federal firearms disqualification database, the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS).

    2. During the period in question – February 2016 to March 2017 – 349,923 applications for a concealed carry permit were submitted in Florida. The two criminal databases, FCIC and NCIC, were checked in all cases.

    3. In 365 cases, NCIS was not checked. A single Florida employee was responsible for performing these 365 checks, but failed to do so. Permits were issued in these cases which might have been invalid. In the other 349,558 cases, all 3 required databases were indeed checked.

    4. When the matter was discovered, all 365 suspect cases were audited. A total of 291 of those cases were found on investigation to be problematic; the concealed carry permits for those 291 cases were revoked.

    5. The employee who failed to perform their duties in the 365 cases in question no longer works there. Other reporting indicates they were fired, presumably for cause.

    Bottom line: one Florida employee failed to do their job, apparently for a relatively short period of time.

    Specifically, for some undefined but apparently fairly short period of time, a Florida employee lost access to NICS and failed to perform 365 checks in that database associated with the Florida concealed carry permit process – out of a total of 349,923 such checks performed during the overall period of interest. That was later discovered, and the issue was corrected by doing the required checks and revoking 291 permits that apparently were issued in error. The employee is now a former employee.

    ———-

    So, what’s the problem with the initial reporting? I’ll tell you.

    Other than the fact that the reporting was incomplete, it was also so slanted as to be effectively misleading – misleading to the degree that the author’s motive becomes suspect. Here’s how an AP article, apparently carried by (or based on an article in) the Tampa Bay Times, characterized the situation. In the quote below, I’ve redacted the name of the article’s author; follow the link if you want to see it.

    Headline: Florida stopped doing gun permit checks for more than a year
    By (name omitted), Associated Press
    Posted: 8:31 PM, June 08, 2018
    Updated: 10:18 AM, June 09, 2018

    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – For more than a year, Florida failed to do national background checks that could have disqualified people from gaining a permit to carry a concealed weapon.

    The lapse, revealed in an internal report that was not widely known about until Friday, occurred during a time period when there was a significant surge in the number of people seeking permission to legally carry a concealed weapon. Florida does not allow the open carry of weapons, but more than 1.9 million have permits to carry guns and weapons in public if they are concealed.

    The state ultimately revoked 291 permits and fired an employee blamed for the lapse after an inspector general’s report detailing the problem was sent in June 2017 to top officials in the department who oversee the program. The Tampa Bay Times was the first to publish information about the report, which pointed out that the state failed to check the National Instant Criminal Background Check System from February 2016 to March 2017.

    The article continues for several more paragraphs. Nowhere does it indicate that the problem was in reality restricted to a failure to conduct 365 checks, nor that barely 1 in 1,000 concealed carry permits didn’t have one of three required checks.

    Rather, the average reader of that article would conclude that the problem applied to a far larger number of applications – indeed, that the process of issuing concealed carry permits in Florida was broken entirely. That’s not the case at all. The facts indicate that one employee failed to perform required background checks in roughly 1 application out of a thousand.

    ———-

    So, where’s the evidence that this might be polically-motivated and slanted (or outright fake) news? Well, check the update timestamp of the AP article – then check the time stamp of the clarification article released by the Florida Agricultural Commissioner’s spokesman. The AP article was last updated over 12 hours after the clarification – long after the information in the clarification was available. As of about an hour ago, the AP article still did not include those significant and relevant facts.

    Further, Mr. Putnam is a candidate for Governor in Florida’s next gubernatorial election. He’s not liberal, and has made it a point to streamline Florida’s concealed carry permit process. Do you really think the media wants to see him elected, given the media’s documented leftward tilt since at least the Eisenhower administration? Might a sensationalist article leading people to believe, erroneously, that his office was issuing concealed carry permits without due diligence hurt his chances for election?

    ———-

    I’m not prepared to state, flatly, that this was a political hit job and qualifies as fabricated news. Maybe it’s just abysmally sloppy reporting. But there’s an old saying: “If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck . . . . “

    Consider the facts and decide for yourself.

  • YouTube cancels Brownells’ video channel

    YouTube cancels Brownells’ video channel

    The National Review reports that YouTube has deleted the Brownells’ videos. Brownell is an 80-year-old gun supplies company. Their hundreds of videos were used by gun owners to help them repair and alter their firearms. When I bought a Glock, I viewed their videos because I knew nothing of Tupperware-based firearms.

    Powerful advertising platforms like Google, Facebook, and Twitter have come under fire recently from Second Amendment advocates for apparent censorship of gun-related content. Even products meant to increase gun safety, such as ZORE’s highly-rated gun safety lock, have seen their advertisements censored, the internet platforms citing policies restricting ads for firearms sales.

    Facebook has rejected advertising from TAH that was related to our discussions here on Second Amendment issues. Google advertising has also rejected placement of their ads on certain discussions of a related nature. I guess that the gun grabbers can’t convince us, so they plan to limit the flow of information to American voters.

    Thanks to Andy11M for the link.

    Added; I just found this at Brownells;

  • Becky Margiotta: I’m a veteran who has spent my entire life around guns. Here’s why I’m advocating stricter regulations.

    Becky Margiotta: I’m a veteran who has spent my entire life around guns. Here’s why I’m advocating stricter regulations.

    Someone sent us a link to the latest gun-fag’s mental masturbation on the Second Amendment. This one is Becky Margiotta. She says she’s an expert because her father bought her a shotgun when she was 12 years old and she hunted, you know, because that’s why there is a Second Amendment – for hunting with your father. She goes on tell us how she was a West Pointer and a company commander;

    Following graduation from West Point, I commanded two Special Operations companies – small forces structured to complete the most physically and politically challenging missions. Multiple times a year, year after year, we underwent recertification on the weapons that were most central to our mission. Going to the range was treated with the utmost of gravity and military discipline. There was no joking around on the range. Every single round of ammunition was accounted for every single time.

    Another veterinary dietician who wants us to think that she was a top tier door kicking special forces operator.

    I left the Army after completing nine years of service. Right around that time, the shooting at Columbine High School happened. I was heartbroken and horrified to hear how the weapons I had trained to use so carefully – including weapons that don’t belong in civilian hands – had been used in a school to end the lives of 13 innocent children and educators.

    Funny, according to Wikipedia, there were no weapons that she had trained so carefully to use in the shooters’ arsenal;

    On the day of the massacre, Harris was equipped with a 12-gauge Savage-Springfield 67H pump-action shotgun (which he discharged a total of 25 times) and a Hi-Point 995 Carbine 9 mm carbine with thirteen 10-round magazines (which he fired a total of 96 times).[35]

    Klebold was equipped with a 9×19mm Intratec TEC-9 semi-automatic handgun with one 52-, one 32-, and one 28-round magazine and a 12-gauge Stevens 311D double-barreled sawed-off shotgun. Klebold primarily fired the TEC-9 handgun for a total of 55 times, while he discharged a total of 12 rounds from his double-barreled shotgun.

    Columbine happened right smack dab in the middle of Bill Clinton’s “assault weapon ban”, which didn’t seem to slow the pair. In fact they broke all kinds of laws to accomplish their dastardly goals – they took firearms on school grounds, they were in possession of firearms that someone else purchased for them, and, oh, yeah, they murdered people which isn’t legal.

    The reality is that we know a lot about how to prevent gun violence. For example, we know that in states that require a criminal background check on every gun sale, lives are saved. Many people who commit mass shootings have a history of red flags – and we know that disarming people who have demonstrated that they are a threat to themselves or others helps reduce firearm suicides.

    Yeah, well, all states require criminal background checks for gun sales – it’s been that way since before she was a West Point cadet.

    As a veteran, I’m intimately familiar with the destructive power of firearms. And, I know how important it is to make sure they don’t fall into the wrong hands. I also know that many Americans look for leadership from veterans on issues like gun violence prevention.

    That’s why I’ve joined with fellow veterans and Everytown for Gun Safety, a gun violence prevention organization, to launch the Everytown Veterans Advisory Council. The Council will enable military veterans to play a critical role in ending gun violence in America, providing advice and perspective to policy work around the country.

    More than anything, Americans want folks who will tell them the truth about guns, and, Becky, you ain’t it. Any veteran who joins with the Bloomberg folks at “Everytown” isn’t doing what’s best for America, only what’s best for the nanny-class.

    How’s about we start with forcing prosecutors to enforce the existing laws instead of forcing the law abiding gun owners to comply with even more useless restrictions to their Constitutional rights.

    But making our political gatekeepers do their jobs is harder than writing more laws, isn’t it?