Look Out Oregon, You’re Next!

Bloomberg is setting his sights on Oregon next:

“Everytown and Moms invested in extensive voter education efforts, including old-fashioned, door-to-door canvasses, to make sure voters knew that Senators Betsy Close and Bruce Starr opposed criminal background checks on all gun sales. Senator-elect Sara Gelser will join other gun sense leaders in the legislature and create a pro-background check majority in the state Senate, which is a resounding victory for our moms and families,” said Anneliese Davis, volunteer with the Oregon Chapter of Moms Demand Action, a project of Everytown for Gun Safety.

“Now the real work begins. When the legislative session starts next year we will roll up our sleeves and work to pass legislation that will keep guns out of the hands of criminals and save Oregonians’ lives,” Davis continued.

Everytown for Gun Safety Action Fund strategically invested $600,000 in Oregon to support grassroots organizing, direct mail, paid advertising and digital organizing to identify Gun Sense Voters and turn them out to vote.

Sounds like they are targeting another “universal background check” law. Remember, most of the people of Washington did NOT vote for a law that would make it a crime to simply HANDLE a gun that did not belong to you, or lend somebody a firearm either for something like hunting or sport shooting, or because they were in need of personal protection. This bill was ONLY sold as something that only applied to gun shows and online sales, and given that nature it’s very easy to think most of the electorate took their word for it.

START CAMPAIGNING NOW! Get the word out! Talk about Washington and other states with laws like this. DO NOT WAIT FOR BILLS TO BE PRESENTED! You need to start fighting NOW.

As I type I’m working on doing just this for Bloomberg’s statement about future action in my home state of Maine.

Spread the word, and get out there and start talking about the REALITY of these laws. Bloomberg has a lot of money, but he’s buying what we do for free, so without dropping a dime we can do ourselves what will cost him thousands. By motivating others to join in, we can easily “Outspend” him in the unit effort department.

But you need to act NOW! RIGHT NOW!

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libertariansim vs. Anarchy

So I might as well blab about this. So this blog post is making the rounds.

I’ll build my thoughts up around what was said by McThag and a little bit said by Sean in this week’s Gunblog Variety Cast.

Here’s the money quote that really rubs me the wrong way:

Any libertarian who tells you he is trying to win an election is either lying to you about trying to win the election, lying to us about being a libertarian, or terribly misinformed. As far as we’re concerned, elections are a bad thing. We’re trying to end them, not win them.

…Libertarians are anarchists, whether they realize it or not. Even the ones who are delusional enough to think that they are going to get elected and restore the bloody republic, are little more than useful idiots who are repeating anarchist propaganda for us through channels normally reserved for government.

First up let’s look at Anarchy. From Webster’s:

1
a : absence of government
b : a state of lawlessness or political disorder due to the absence of governmental authority
c : a utopian society of individuals who enjoy complete freedom without government

I think we all know what we’re talking about when somebody says “Anarchy” or “Anarchist”, still it’s always nice to read a dictionary definition so we can step away from any ambiguity or confusion.

Now just so I can continue this post in an earnest fashion, let’s look at Libertarian, again from Webster’s:

1
: an advocate of the doctrine of free will
2
a : a person who upholds the principles of individual liberty especially of thought and action

Ok to dive all the way in we need to look at Liberty:

1
: the quality or state of being free:
a : the power to do as one pleases
b : freedom from physical restraint
c : freedom from arbitrary or despotic control
d : the positive enjoyment of various social, political, or economic rights and privileges
e : the power of choice

Ok, that’s out of the way, let’s dive into the similarities and differences of both ideologies. First up, personally I don’t see much similarities on their face. Still there are many people who claim to be both libertarian and anarchists, so why is that?

Simple, nothing happens in a vacuum. I think both ideologies will agree that on a very gross level our current government is an enemy to our freedom and individual liberty.

Still look at those two, and even at this level they aren’t that similar. Anarchists see government, and really social order as the “enemy”, while libertarians look to preserve or restore liberty. In the case of a oppressive government they seek for LESS government, but in a state of anarchy a libertarian quests for MORE government.

Now let’s look at anarchy in a real-world way. Honestly I see Anarchists on the same level of child-like naivete as Communists. Now I think we all know any state claiming to become “Communist” quickly stops at a military dictatorship where the ruling class lords over, and lives at a much higher comfort level to their working-class “equals”. Anarchy is the political equivalent to a vacuum in nature. They practically don’t exist. A Vacuum is the absence of matter, Anarchy is an absence of social order.

Now imagine a situation of social anarchy. Society has collapsed, and there is no government. Be this a military attack, or a pandemic, or some such thing. Now as a lone survivor you’ll be in your Anarchy “Utopia”, but let’s face it you won’t be happy. Humans are social animals, there’s a reason why most of us put up with the bullshit of living in a city, and also why so much of this nation is filled with empty wilderness. A lone human will seek other humans, and generally when a lone human finds another loner, or a small band of people they will naturally want to join them. Even a fickle lone person who won’t just join any group WILL be seeking out others. Hell even the “Anarchist” who wrote this post has roommates, friends, and political allies.

Now you have a band of people living in the “Anarchy”, but is that true Anarchy? Probably not. What we’re really looking at in the social sense is a tribe. When people live, work, or travel together in an absence of other social influences will quickly come up with rules for the tribe. They’re forming a government, and it is rapidly looking a LOT less like Anarchy. Somebody hordes food, or refuses to help the group they will quickly lose social favor and could be abandoned by the group, or worse, harmed or killed.

Now on the small scale ANY form of governance will work. Most households work on a true Communist system. Small children contribute almost nothing to the home due to their lack of maturity and skills, but reap HUGE benefits. The adults shoulder most of the burdens of the home because they have the most to offer. Older children chip in with chores and tasks, but still they are benefiting more than they put into the system. This is “From each according to his ability, to each according to his need”, and in a household it works great!

But what about on the larger scale. Well the pitfalls of communism/socialism has been very well documented. In the large scale a communist/socialist government can’t be run by the individual members, it’s just too big for that to be done efficiently. It is more efficient and logical to have a group of people who’s job is to oversee the system. You can witness this with the formation of a union. Unions generally form (free from outside influence of course) when workers discuss and band together as one to negotiate with their employer as a collective. Still when this becomes more than say a hundred workers, the individuals managing the collective becomes like herding proverbial cats, so they hire union representatives and bosses who are NOT workers within the collective to take on the large task of managing the collective, and speaking for the collective in negotiations.

Well once you get to this point the system almost immediately stops running like a well-oiled machine and immediately finds the pitfalls. Now the workers start sneaking behind the overseers, they start limiting their own production, and they start taking advantage of the system. Communists/Socialists get only what they “Need” (boy we could add another thousand words just talking about THAT loaded term) so going the extra mile at your job has ZERO benefit over working JUST enough to avoid reprimand. On the other side the overseers begin to abuse their power to take more than they are entitled to. Next up comes bread lines and mass execution for government, and bankruptcy for the employer and unemployment for all in the union.

Now let’s go back to our merry tribe in the world of anarchy. If they can they will continue to add members to the tribe, more people means more power and more resources, but once the tribe becomes large enough, it’s no longer a band of individuals. Eventually somebody will seek, or be chosen for a leader. This is inevitable, but often overlooked as most people preaching anarchy are people who see themselves as a leader, but not all people are born leaders, so leadership and hierarchy will always happen in larger groups.

This is certainly NOT Anarchy, and it really happens without effort. Now how this tribal leadership can go in any direction. Dictatorship, democracy, socialism, or a libertarian government are all possibilities.

Still in the early days of the tribe there is no liberty. You are constantly at a battle to assert your interests and liberty while keeping your fellow tribesmen happy with you so they won’t give your ass the boot.

And then there are all the problems McThag talks about. What happens when there is a dispute in the tribe? With no leadership or rule of laws there really isn’t even a way to DEFINE the dispute in terms of fault and damages, and generally it will fall down to might = right, which is the OPPOSITE of liberty. If there is leadership, rules, and a constabulary to settle disputes peacefully and justly, there very well can be liberty, but there is no anarchy.

So yeah, libertarians may call themselves, or associate with anarchist, but really the two ideologies couldn’t be different. You can CALL yourself a libertarian AND an anarchist, but you’re just showing you don’t understand the two terms and how they work in reality.

Posted in Freedom, Politics | 9 Comments

“Gun Death” Unwanted Baby

How many more of these are are we going to read about?

An Indianapolis woman has been arrested for allegedly giving birth to a baby then dumping it in a bathroom trash can.

Thankfully the baby lived, and will hopefully be adopted into a loving family. Of course while the gun banners focus on “Gun Death” they don’t look at this prevalent problem.

Still a similar thread between them shows that laws on their own don’t work. Indiana has a Safe Haven Law where parents of unwanted children can give them up for adoption with no questions or paperwork. Of course this law didn’t protect this child from being dumped like garbage.

H/T Bob

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Podcast With The Bloggers!

Episode 12 of the Gunblog Variety Cast is up for your consumption!

Such a good show! You know you want to listen!

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Play Me Out: Parliment

Been enjoying this one with the baby who LOVES Parliment

Enjoy with us, will you?

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Cheap Wine Reviewed By An Irish Brewmaster

Hilarious!

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Morning Tunes GG Allin

A great punk song:

Overall I take many of his lyrics with a grain of salt. Maybe I shouldn’t given the amount of time he spent in jails and prisons for horrible and unlawful acts. Still this song takes a darker tone when you remember that GG died of a Heroin overdose at age 36.

Guess he got his wish.

Posted in Music | 1 Comment

“Gun Death” Block Party

People party, and sometimes it becomes deadly:

A teenager has become the second person to die after apparently overdosing during a music festival in the U.S.

Police say a 17-year-old boy from northern Virginia, has now died of a suspected overdose following Friday’s ‘Mad Decent Block Party’ event at Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia, Maryland.

The youngster, who has not been identified, was one of about 20 people taken to hospital late on Friday. Many of them had drug-related symptoms.

So two are dead, and several more hospitalized because of some unknown drug taken at the party.

Hey, but nobody was shot, so it’s all good!

H/T Bob

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Images of the Antis: Wahhh???

Miguel found this one that just gets me scratching my head:

Woah, WHAT???

What are they even trying to say?

Now I call where I keep my guns “The Armory”, not only as a boast that I own a bunch of guns, but it’s also where I work on my guns. I have lots of gun-related tools down here. From hammers and screw drivers, and micrometers, scales, bullet pullers. I also this is where the house tool rack is. In that are wrenches, clamps, saw horses, saws, drills ect.

Also there is a big old pipe wrench.

So yeah, I did buy a monkey wrench, specifically when we were replacing a shower head and our smaller wrenches wouldn’t get that thing to turn. I had guns, but since I’m not as stupid as CSGV obviously is, I didn’t reach for my shotgun, I went out and bought the proper wrench for the job.

Now when I got up this morning I stuck my Ruger LCR .357 in my pocket along with a few speed strips of ammo. I also tucked a knife in my pocket. I used the knife to break down a few boxes to recycle, I also grabbed a bigger knife to cut up some of the bigger boxes into smaller pieces because the larger blade does a better job on thick cardboard than my little pocket knife….but the larger blade isn’t very good for carry or smaller jobs.

The point I’m making, and should be obvious is that tools have uses. Some tools like a waffle iron have very limited applications, while a hammer or a screw driver can be used for any number of tasks from manipulating screws to poking and prying things.

Guns are tools too, and their applications are ideal for projecting a bullet at things.

This is just another example of the antis wanting to change the language, but really just making them look like a bunch of children who don’t even know how to hammer in a nail by themselves.

Posted in Freedom, Guns, Random | 11 Comments

Another Report of the Demise of the 2nd Amedment

From who else, but Mother Jones:

Most postelection coverage has focused on how Republicans drubbed Democrats in the battle for Congress, but there was another resounding victory on Tuesday worth noting, and it wasn’t a partisan one. Universal background checks for gun buyers became law in Washington state, the first such measure to be passed by popular vote in any state in recent memory.

And popular it was, supported by 60 percent of voters. They agreed that buying weapons at gun shows or on the internet should no longer be possible without basic regulations. “Our goal has never been about finding a single solution that will end gun violence once and for all,” said Seattle Mayor Ed Murray after Initiative 594 passed. “Instead, our goal has been to enact a sound system of commonsense rules that can, by working in concert, make an enormous difference.” Murray noted that states with expanded background checks—now 18 of them, plus Washington, DC—have fewer women killed in domestic-violence situations, fewer law enforcement officers shot, and fewer suicides with firearms. The editors of the Seattle Times said the wide margin of victory showed that “voters feel the grim, relentless toll of gun violence.”

…The gun lobby has long tapped allies in statehouses to block firearms regulations, but the Washington experience may have just revealed a potent threat to that modus operandi. Next up? Glaze says Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, and Maine are strong prospects. Ballot initiatives tend to be expensive (and aren’t allowed in all states), but expanded background checks look to be a solid bet, consistently drawing overwhelming support in national polls.

We shall see, again the lie being toted is that this is simply a law to regulate online and gun show sales, when in fact it is a law against touching a gun you don’t own. It’s poorly written, nearly impossible to enforce, and intentionally draconian.

I can’t imagine this law behaving any differently than many of the other overbearing laws in the United States. You see there are activists like me who are quick to oppose any malum prohibitum laws because I KNOW gun laws well, and know what will do good, and what will just punish lawful gun owners. Still most gun owners and gun-friendly people in America aren’t as well versed in National and local gun laws. I frankly don’t blame them, they’re confusing, illogical, and numerous. Because of this, they can be fooled that a “Simple Law” both A) is what it says it is, and B) will actually accomplish it’s stated goal.

Again the Federal Assault Weapons ban was A) Supposed to ban certain guns, B) Lower Crime, and C) Take “Overly Dangerous Guns”, often mislabeled and incorrectly described as “machine guns” off the streets. In the 10 years of that law before it was allowed to sunset, people found out all over the nation that it was a lie. So it passed with a good degree of popularity, and it was repealed with just as much popularity.

Bloomberg is taking a victory lap before attempting to target more states. Some I’m more concerned about than others. Oregon tends to have a similar political dichotomy as Washington, so people in that state should fortify their position as a preemptive strike against Michael Bloomberg. Nevada also has some interesting political dynamics that could be exploited, but that’s a state well known for people just going off into the desert to shoot, which would become a crime if more than one party is shooting, and guns are traded. Maine I really don’t see as anything but a hill for Bloomberg to die on. They just had a similar turnout AGAINST a bill that would severely restrict the hunting of bears. Nationally hunting is on the decline, but it is still VERY popular in Maine, and this defeat by another overbearing outside organization (in this case the Humane Society of the United States) could be a canary in the coal mine for Maine. A strong hunting population will be tough to avoid when passing a similar bill as it is VERY common for friends to lend or exchange guns during a hunting season. Hunting guns can be VERY specialized, and if you have a hunting trip planned, and want a particular gun that will do better where you’re hunting than anything in your personal collection, you might ask a buddy who isn’t hunting at the time to borrow their gun. Also from all accounts I’ve generally heard, most people going out for a first-time hunt don’t buy much equipment. Blaze Orange safety clothes, guns, stands, blinds, calls et al, add up very quickly, so new hunters tend to just borrow all that stuff, and later buy their own if they decide to make it an annual pastime. Hell the only time I’ve hunted was in Colorado on Prairie Dogs. I didn’t have a rifle with me, so I borrowed one. In Colorado NOW this would have been a crime (not that law enforcement would have said peep if I was questioned).

Arizona, I just don’t see it happening. The Gabby Giffords PAC is based there, but even when Ms. Giffords was a public representative she was pro-gun. I have a few readers in Arizona, so maybe you can point out any nuance that I’ve missed in the state politics.

Last up, let’s talk money:

Groups on both sides of the background checks issue poured considerable money into the state in the hopes of swaying voters in their direction. The National Rifle Association spent approximately $450,000 trying to defeat I-594

…Everytown for Gun Safety, the organization founded by former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, invested a whopping $4 million into promoting I-594.

…Everytown dedicated its resources to strategy and media on the ground, as well as to voter turnout operations. The group also donated $2.3 million to the Washington Alliance for Gun Responsibility, the committee behind the efforts to expand background checks in the state.

Americans for Responsible Solutions, the anti-gun violence group created by former Rep. Gabby Giffords (D-Ariz.) and her husband Mark Kelly, also made its presence felt with a $500,000 expenditure on voter persuasion mail.

…Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and his wife, Melinda Gates made donations in support of I-594 that totaled approximately $1 million, as did former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and his wife Connie. Seattle-based entrepreneur Nick Hanauer contributed $500,000 to the background checks effort.

Got that? Every anti-gun PAC outspent the NRA in a twofold to over Tenfold margin for this win. When you factor in that the NRA has a constantly growing membership, and the anti-gun pacs are not member-driven groups, but top-down groups where people can choose to donate to various people to dictate political action as they feel fit, this is really a small loss for the NRA, and a HUGE expense for the anti-gun victory.

Yes they won, and won handily, but it cost them a LOT of money. Adds an ironic twist to this Brady Campaign video:

Of course the Brady Campaign really has no money anymore, the few high-dollar donors have switched over to one of the several Bloomberg driven PACs, so in a sense this video is yet another example of in-fighting in the anti-gun world.

Also let’s talk about the private actors. Bloomberg is going to steam on, but this wasn’t his only fight he was throwing money at. He’s LOADED, but all you need to do is look at amazingly wealthy celebrities who have overspent their massive pocketbooks to see how fallible the rich can be when their primary action is throwing their money around. Names like Michael Jackson, Burt Reynolds, and Nicholas Cage come to mind. This is also why Bloomberg has essentially abandoned Mayors against Illegal guns, and started groups like Moms Demand Action, and Everytown. Mayors has become synonymous with his name, which is a detriment, same goes for him personally stumping for the laws he has drafted and supplied. He is ONLY a wallet right now.

Ballmer and Gates, I don’t see as national gun control advocates, and I don’t see them spending the same kind of money in states where they don’t reside. I could be wrong, but that’s my prediction. Even if they do start and national crusade they’ll quickly get their triumphs at Microsoft overshadowed by their desire to become Authoritarian carpetbaggers.

So again, I594 was a huge loss for gun rights, I won’t belittle that, but so was the Federal AWB, and I can’t help but see strong comparisons between those two laws.

Posted in Freedom, Guns, Politics | 4 Comments