Category Archives: Guns

Banning Clinton’s stupid gun-free zones

Ted Nugent sums it up in a letter to VP Joe Biden and his commission on “gun violence”:

“You will find in your assessment that all of the massacres have occurred in gun-free zones. What gun-free zones create is an environment where good people are unarmed and virtually defenseless against an unstable person intent on committing mass murder. Gun-free zones are modern killing fields. I implore you to recommend that Congress pass a law to ban gun-free zones immediately.”

Not that we can expect Slow Joe, the Democrat’s champion moron, to recommend such an anti-PC position, especially not when these “hunting preserves” were created by Slick Willie’s administration.

Indeed, the Progressives probably want to expand the preserves, ’cause every time a bunch of people are killed in one of them, the party of the KKK and Jim Crow gets that much closer to restricting gun ownership to the aristos.

Via Instapundit.

Gotta get a Glock?

So, I’m thinking of replacing my aging S&W .38 revolver with something newer. A semi-auto, for sure. Before the wackos pass a ban on them. I doubt they could but, then, I never thought Barry, the high-unemployment, food-stamp president, could be re-elected.

Since we’re talking home protection here, rather than range or carry, should I shop for stopping power or would that be, ahem, overkill? Maybe a 1911 like the one I carried in the Army, but spiffier in, say, all-black, or would a .32 Baretta be nicer? Smaller, for sure. Could do with a smaller gun safe.

Glocks just seem too trashy, too Saturday-night-specially. Or am I being prejudiced or something?

Meanwhile, it is to laugh that Barry & the Looners (sounds like a grunge band) are out to ban “assault rifles” and high-capacity mags. Heh. Go for it, morons, I say. It’s strictly feel-good legislation to make the Progressives think they’re getting closer to the totalitarianism they so crave.

The right to self-defense

It’s presidents like Barry and their overweening insistence on imposing their private opinions on the rest of us, by executive order if Congress can’t be pushed to do their bidding, that calls to mind the real reason for the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

It was not just about raising a militia, or about hunting for one’s supper, or even stopping a tyrannical government, but for the right of self-defense, a privilege theretofore guaranteed only to the aristos of the social elite.

Their modern descendants are trying hard now to reclaim the privilege for themselves alone via such excuses as  mass murderers like the evil bastard who slaughtered the children in Newtown. He shot each child separately, one trigger pull at a time.

That’s the definition of semi-automatic, one trigger pull per bullet, the latest proposed excuse for gun control, though it’s a feature of weaponry that’s been around more than a hundred years. Revolvers don’t strictly meet the definition but they do the same thing, bringing a new round into ready position after each pull of the trigger. Just like the evil SOB’s military-lookalike, semi-automatic Bushmaster rifle. Only a lookalike.

But self-defense is the crux of this post. Denial of the right to the masses is well expressed in Count To A Trillion, a recent fine space opera by John C. Wright, whose sequel was released in December. Reading the sequel I realized I’d forgotten the first book and so I’m reading it again. Hence this passage I want to quote:

“But it was the fact,” the main character Menelaus Montrose is thinking about life on Earth in 2400, “that the people among the crowds outside [the castle] did not wear those sashes or baldrics…none of them could carry a weapon, drunk or sober. The members of the upper class…or soldiers in their employ or retainers in their service, only they could bear arms…The fact that this world was one where not all men had the right to self-defense was one he deeply resented. Resented? No, it was a hatred, so black and primal…”

And later on he has an epiphany, reading a censored history in electronic form, realizing how easy it is for a politico to alter electronic text:

“Montrose decided then and there that a full library, one made of old-fashioned paper books with bindings, the kind that cannot be electronically re-edited by anonymous lines of hidden code, was just as much a necessity for a free man as a shooting iron….”

It’s as fashionable as ever these days to complain about our fractured, contentious society, a meme I remember hearing in slightly different form as a child way back in the dark ages of the 1950s, and it was even so back in the late 1700s when the Constitution was written.

This time, however, the dispute is over the increasing power of government, particularly federal government, and the megalomania of presidents like Barry, whose support for gun registration and other forms of control is forcing more and more of us to decide that we do not want to live in a world where only the elite can bear arms (or hire it done for them) and ebooks can be altered by sellers at their or a government censor’s whim.

UPDATE:  If Illinois Dems get their way, self-defense with guns will be a thing of the past there. Except for the aristos, of course, who’ll be exempted in one way or another. Wait and see. And the criminals will be armed as always, naturally.

Captain John Coffee “Jack” Hays

72

Mathew Brady’s rendition of the famous Texas Ranger, whose early exploits are commemorated in a plaque atop Enchanted Rock, in the Hill Country west of Austin. He was the first of the great captains who built the Ranger legend. A quiet, unassuming fellow who exploded into action when confronted with peril, usually in the form of raiding Indians, often Commanche. “Powder-burn them!” he would yell, as his men chose individual warriors to ride down and kill. I can’t imagine what he would have made of political correctness, let alone modern Hollywood claptrap about Indians. But I suspect it would have been profane. Read more about him here.