Monday, July 31, 2023

New Zealand Gun Owner Leak Shows Gun Registration Dangers

Under Oregon's Measure 114, 'Common Sense Gun Safety' Means Shutting Down Gun Sales
IMG iStock-1327769366

James Bond author Ian Fleming wrote, “Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. Three times is enemy action.” It could be time for New Zealand gun owners to start getting suspicious.

On July 26, the New Zealand Herald reported that the country’s new Firearms Safety Authority had compromised the personal information of more than 100 gun owners. The paper explained,

In an email sent shortly after noon on Wednesday, seen by the Herald, Auckland Central Police District firearms staff emailed more than 100 gun owners to warn them their listed firearms licence address may not be up to date.

Their email addresses, in many cases including their first and last names, were visible in the cc field, rather than hidden in the bcc section.

The visible addresses included various prominent Auckland residents, including lawyers, company directors, police officers and government officials.

The Firearm Safety Authority described the data breach as an “error.”

The Herald quoted one gun owner as saying, “Gangs and criminals would no doubt love to get a copy of this shopping list, and now my information, the fact I’m a license holder, has been sent to 100 people whom I do not know.” The paper went on to explain that this gun owner “said the leak of the list of owners was exactly the reason he was worried about handing his details over to the new firearms register.”

This isn’t the first time New Zealand has had a problem securing gun owner data.

In June 2022, the Herald published an article titled, “Firearm owners’ details stolen in alleged burglary of old Auckland police station.” In August 2022, New Zealand outlet Newshub reported,

Police have revealed the details of around 400 gun owners – including names and possibly the types of firearms they had – were stolen from the old Auckland police station.

Sensitive documents were being stored inside the dilapidated and disused former Auckland City police station where staff no longer work.

The Newshub piece quoted Council of Licensed Firearms Owners Spokesperson Hugh Devereux-Mack, who said, “This makes firearms owners feel incredibly unsafe because the police have let us down in a way that puts a target on our backs for organised crime.”

At the time, the authorities told Newshub that “the chance of paperwork being stolen will be greatly reduced as the new gun register will be a digital system.” Ironic, given recent events.

In 2019, information connected to New Zealand’s mandatory gun “buyback” (gun confiscation) program was compromised. On December 2, 2019, The Guardian published a piece titled, “New Zealand’s gun buyback website ‘a shopping list for criminals.’” The outlet reported, “a gun lobby group said it had spoken to 15 people who were able to access information on a website where firearms owners registered weapons to be relinquished. It included their names, addresses, dates of birth, firearms licence numbers and bank account details, the group said.”

When confronted with the security breach, officials acknowledged the leak, but attempted to shift blame to a government contractor hired to create the website. The Guardian item explained,

New Zealand’s deputy police commissioner, Mike Clement, said an update on the buyback scheme’s website last week had caused personal information to be revealed more widely than it should have been. He blamed the software provider…

Of course, New Zealand isn’t the only jurisdiction incapable of safeguarding gun owner data. Stateside, California has proven itself a model of incompetence.

In June 2022, California Attorney General Rob Bonta announced the launch of the California Department of Justice (DOJ)’s Firearms Dashboard Portal. The data tool was designed to give granular firearm transaction and Concealed Carry Weapons (CCW) permit holder data to anyone visiting the DOJ’s website. However, astute users quickly realized that the dashboard could be used to access the personally identifying information of California CCW holders – including date of birth, full name, and address.

Explaining some of the extent of the breach, an article from firearms news outlet The Reload explained,

The Reload reviewed a copy of the Lost Angeles County database and found 244 judge permits listed in the database. The files included the home addresses, full names, and dates of birth for all of them. The same was true for seven custodial officers, 63 people with a place of employment permit, and 420 reserve officers.

2,891 people in Los Angeles County with standard licenses also had their information compromised by the leak, though the database appears to include some duplicate entries as well.

At the time, NRA was independently contacted by a concerned California resident who provided the organization with an image containing some of the leaked information, including gun owners’ full names and dates of birth.

Despite California’s proven inability to protect gun owner data, on July 26 the L.A. Times published what is ostensibly a news article whining, “The GOP and the NRA want to stop gun violence research. California is a target.” The implication of the piece was that gun rights supporters oppose California-style gun and gun owner registries because doing so denies such data to social “science” researchers.

This is incorrect. Gun rights supporters oppose gun and gun owner registries because of the potential for official and unofficial abuse.

Gun rights supporters correctly understand that such registries facilitate gun confiscation.

For example, New York City has twice used its gun registry to confiscate arms. Starting in 1967, the Big Apple required residents to register their rifles and shotguns. Then, in 1991, the city banned certain configurations of semi-automatic firearms. The city used its registry to inform those with offending firearms that their guns needed to be removed from the city, disabled or forfeited to law enforcement. The city employed this tactic again as recently as 2013, following the reclassification of another group of rifles.

Second, gun owners, just like other Americans, value their privacy. Whether that privacy is from malevolent government officials or criminals looking for a score, privacy has value – as evidenced by the existence of the Fourth Amendment. In the context of a person exercising a Constitutional right, privacy should be guaranteed. Inhibiting the collection of this data is the only way to adequately ensure this privacy.

The L.A. Times and the anti-gun “researchers” (advocates) it cites appear to take the position that it is their right to pry into the private behavior of law-abiding gun owners, as if this data were akin to the minutes of a city hall meeting. Rather, this data, in the unfortunate event it is collected, represents the private Constitutionally-protected conduct of private citizens and should be treated in the most confidential manner. One imagines these same actors would have a very different take on a government keeping and disseminating records on abortions, book purchases, or protest attendance.

Despite what some self-centered anti-gun advocates might think, the primary goal of restricting government recordkeeping of gun and gun owner data is to protect gun owners, not to deprive these activists of data. The fact that privacy measures make it harder for these gun control campaigners to concoct junk science aimed at advocating against Second Amendment rights is a side benefit.

As both New Zealand and California show, the only sure way to safeguard gun owner data is to not collect it at all.


About NRA-ILA:

Established in 1975, the Institute for Legislative Action (ILA) is the “lobbying” arm of the National Rifle Association of America. ILA is responsible for preserving the right of all law-abiding individuals in the legislative, political, and legal arenas, to purchase, possess, and use firearms for legitimate purposes as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Visit: www.nra.org

National Rifle Association Institute For Legislative Action (NRA-ILA)



from https://ift.tt/zEe1kc2
via IFTTT

Permit Numbers Decline Despite Bruen

STR-9S Combat
IMG Jim Grant

The United States Supreme Court ruling striking down New York State’s concealed carry permit rules as unconstitutional was big news in June of 2022, but indications are that officials in the Big Apple are still trying to decide how to best pretend it never happened.

In that decision, New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, the Supreme Court invalidated the State’s demanding “proper cause” requirement for carry licenses and its discretionary “may issue” licensing standard. Between the fees, paperwork and other requirements, getting a license was already a notoriously difficult and time-consuming process, with an uncertain result.

The New York Post revealed that during the pandemic of 2020, first-time firearm license applicants in New York City faced a turn-around time of 18 months or so, with an approval rate of just over 13%. At the time, a New York City Police Department (NYPD) source “familiar with the situation said the License Division was too short-staffed to deal with the flood of new applications and also blamed an unofficial reluctance to process them. ‘The politicians are generally against giving licenses, to begin with, so it’s not a priority,’ the source said.” By 2021, with government operations returning to normal, the NYPD approval rate for firearm licenses (according to another source) had climbed to 55% (2,591 out of 4,663 applications).

Even though the Bruen decision eliminated a key roadblock in the licensing regime, the apparent result is that the process has stalled even more. Although the number of new license applications overall increased significantly in 2022, only 21% (1,550) were reportedly approved. Data on just the six months following the high court ruling (June 24 to December 31, 2022) suggests that “the NYPD saw a surge in new gun permit applications, from just over 2,000 in the same period a year earlier to nearly 5,000. So far, the department has approved 503 of those, or just above 10%, despite its guidelines and state law requiring applications to be decided upon within six months.”

Meissner v. City of New York, a class action lawsuit filed this spring against New York City, the NYPD and its licensing division, and various government officials, alleges unconstitutional and “excessive delay” in the licensing process, and cites the six-month legal deadline in State law, N.Y. Penal Law §400.00 4-b (requiring, generally, that “in each case the licensing officer shall act upon any application for a license pursuant to this section within six months of the date” the application is submitted). The NYPD License Division website acknowledges the statutory deadline, indicating that new license applicants should expect to know the outcome “within approximately six months of receipt of your handgun application, and all required documents/forms.”

Two of the plaintiffs in the Meissner case had applied for firearm licenses with the NYPD licensing division in September 2021 and June 2022, respectively. As of March 2023, according to the complaint, neither had “received their licenses, nor have they received any communication from the NYPD Licensing Division explaining this delay.” The suit alleges that the delay and lack of a decision regarding their applications are not aberrations, but a widespread “deliberate, willful and wanton attempt to deny individuals their rights under the Second and Fourteenth Amendments,” and an established and sanctioned policy of a “complete disregard of the rights of citizens.” Applicants wait “in limbo” for official action, and “cannot appeal or even get in contact with licensing officers.”

Adding to the executive-level intransigence, New York State lawmakers responded to Bruen by enacting the Concealed Carry Improvement Act (CCIA). Contrary to what the name would suggest, the law replaced the “proper cause” criteria with an as-questionable “good moral character” standard, plus requirements that the applicant provide licensing officials with a list of current and past social-media accounts, the names and contact information of family members, cohabitants, and at least four character references, and any “other information required by the licensing officer.” The law would make almost every public place a no-carry zone, and for good measure, sweeps in private property (making the default status no-carry unless it is posted otherwise).

At a press conference on the new law, New York Governor Kathy Hochul was unmistakable about her administration’s contempt for and need to “fight back” against the high court ruling. She described the Supreme Court as deciding to “strip away the rights of a Governor to protect her citizens … by striking down a 100-year-old law… That decision wasn’t just negligent, it was reprehensible.” The Court justices “decided to take us backward… but we are not deterred, we did not back down, we stood up and fought back.” People who “legally possess [guns] under the Supreme Court ruling” must “understand that there are rules of the road that you must follow, and law enforcement will be making sure that you do follow these. That is what we are doing in the State of New York to make sure that people are safe.”

The plaintiffs in the Meissner case have their own real-life understanding of playing by the rules. In their telling, following the licensing rules resulted in law enforcement failing to comply with the law through a reprehensible, sanctioned policy of excessive delays and stripping away of applicants’ constitutional rights because – hey, it’s a feature, not a bug.


About NRA-ILA:

Established in 1975, the Institute for Legislative Action (ILA) is the “lobbying” arm of the National Rifle Association of America. ILA is responsible for preserving the right of all law-abiding individuals in the legislative, political, and legal arenas, to purchase, possess, and use firearms for legitimate purposes as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Visit: www.nra.org

National Rifle Association Institute For Legislative Action (NRA-ILA)



from https://ift.tt/Mqhrus8
via IFTTT

No Charges for Homeowner After Shooting Violent Intruder

Armed Defender Ends Attack on the Road, iStock-1354934183
No Charges for Homeowner After Shooting Violent Intruder, iStock-1354934183

U.S.A. — In a violent episode that unfolded on the 900 block of McCallister Road in Dothan, Alabama, a man was fatally shot by a homeowner after he forcefully entered the house and began assaulting an individual inside. The suspect, identified as 55-year-old Charles Kevin Sexton from Ashford, Alabama, was seeking his ex-girlfriend, whom he believed to be at the location.

The Dothan Houston County E911 Center received a distress call at approximately 12:20 PM on Saturday, July 29, 2023, reporting that the caller had just shot an intruder. The suspect had forced entry into the residence and assaulted another individual.

Police accounts indicate that Sexton, a passenger in a vehicle that arrived at the scene, exited and aggressively forced his way into the house through the main entrance. Upon meeting resistance from the homeowner at a second door, Sexton overpowered him and proceeded to kick down a third door.

Behind the third door was the object of Sexton’s search—his ex-girlfriend. Upon finding her, he began to assault her. Seeing the situation escalate, the homeowner retrieved a handgun and demanded that Sexton stop his attack. When his pleas fell on deaf ears, and Sexton began charging at him, the homeowner shot him once in the upper torso in self-defense.

Injured, Sexton left the residence, returned to the same vehicle, and was subsequently dropped off at the Southeast Health Emergency Department. Despite the medical attention, Sexton was later pronounced dead.

Following the incident, the vehicle and driver were located by the Houston County Sheriff’s Department outside Dothan city limits. Both the driver and vehicle were detained for further investigation related to this tragic event.

According to a statement released by the Dothan Police Department, “After consulting with the Houston County District Attorney, it is not believed there will be any charges against the homeowner for the shooting death of Sexton due to him acting in self-defense on his property as well as for the protection of another individual.” This indication suggests that the homeowner was acting within the law when he used his firearm, given the circumstances of Sexton’s violent intrusion.

However, the case remains an active and ongoing investigation. Further charges, if any, will be determined as the police continue to probe the circumstances surrounding this violent intrusion and subsequent shooting. The community is urged to stay tuned for further updates as authorities work to complete their investigations.

From the Dothan Police’s release regarding the incident: “If there are any criminal charges forthcoming, they will be determined during the duration of this ongoing investigation.”


By Fred Riehl and AI tools. Note: This article was generated using AI technology and may contain some automated content aggregation and analysis.



from https://ift.tt/DYeElf5
via IFTTT

Alaskan Gov Dunleavy Signs First Major Pro-2A Law in Ten Years

SIG P365 X-Macro 9mm
IMG Jim Grant

The National Rifle Association (NRA) celebrates a significant victory today for Alaskans and the Second Amendment. Governor Mike Dunleavy has signed House Bill 61 into law, marking the first major pro-Second Amendment legislation passed in the state in the last decade. This comes ten years after House Bill 24, the “Stand Your Ground” law, which Governor Dunleavy supported by voting ‘yea’ in his first year as a state senator, was enacted on April 11, 2013.

House Bill 61, championed by Speaker Cathy Tilton and backed by the NRA, is a groundbreaking law that safeguards the rights of firearm businesses and gun owners during states of emergency. The bill prohibits state and local government entities from closing lawful firearm businesses or restricting individuals’ access to firearms, ammunition, and component parts during declared states of emergency. The bill passed with bipartisan legislative support, and its Senate companion was carried by Senator Scott Kawasaki (D).

This legislation provides a critical protective shield for our fundamental rights during states of emergency, reinforcing the core principles of the Second Amendment. It not only supports gun owners but also ensures legal recourse for those who experience unjust infringements on these rights.

The NRA, representing millions of members across the nation, applauds Governor Mike Dunleavy for his unwavering support of our Second Amendment rights and for signing this pivotal legislation into law.

“Today is a remarkable day for Alaskans, NRA members, and Second Amendment advocates,” says Aoibheann Cline, NRA Alaska State Director. “This bill is not just legislation; it’s a protective shield for our fundamental rights during states of emergency, reinforcing the core principles of the Second Amendment we deeply respect and uphold. Today is indeed a great victory for all freedom-loving Alaskans.”

Read more from Fox News by clicking here!


About NRA-ILA:

Established in 1975, the Institute for Legislative Action (ILA) is the “lobbying” arm of the National Rifle Association of America. ILA is responsible for preserving the right of all law-abiding individuals in the legislative, political, and legal arenas, to purchase, possess, and use firearms for legitimate purposes as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Visit: www.nra.org

National Rifle Association Institute For Legislative Action (NRA-ILA)



from https://ift.tt/6j90TKY
via IFTTT

Illinois: Are Suppressors Protected by the Second Amendment?

FN Releases the Rush 9Ti 9mm Suppressor
FN Rush 9Ti 9mm Suppressor

U.S.A. — In the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois, on November 25, 2022, Larry Morse and Theodore Ray Buck, Jr. filed a lawsuit against the state of Illinois, claiming the state ban on the sale and possession of silencers violates the Second Amendment. A similar lawsuit was filed by Carlin Anderson and David Clark on February 27, 2023, backed by the American Suppressor Association. The two lawsuits, Morse v Raoul and Anderson v Raoul, have been consolidated as of June 15, 2023. The parties involved have agreed the principle area of contention is whether silencers are arms protected by the Second Amendment. Morse and other plaintiffs claim silencers are obviously bearable arms and are in common use, so they cannot be banned from ownership as they are in Illinois. Here are excerpts from the pleading in Morse v. Raoul. From courlistener.com:

29. As of 2020, there were 2,042,719 suppressors owned by law abiding citizens as registered in the National Firearms Registration and Transfer Record (“NFRTR”), far more than was needed for the DC Circuit to find AR-15s in common use. And that is despite legal impediments to owning a silencer, including the National Firearms Act requirements—paying a $200 transfer tax, submitting a detailed application and fingerprints, and a multi months-long wait for the federal government to process the application. See26 U.S.C. § 5811. Even arms that are far less common have been found to be protected.

Plaintiffs point out that silencers are used for numerous lawful purposes. From the complaint:

33. And the primary purpose of suppressors are for lawful purposes, including hunting, which Heller v. District of Columbia, 399 U.S. App. D.C. 314, 331, 670 F.3d 1244, 1261 (2011) holds is part of the Second Amendment right, self-defense (the core right pursuant to District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 628, 128 S. Ct. 2783, 2817 (2008)) and target shooting which both the Seventh and Third Circuits have already found to be protected Second Amendment conduct. The right to self-defense “implies a corresponding right to acquire and maintain proficiency” with common weapons. Ezell v. City of Chicago, 651 F.3d 684, 704 (7th Cir. 2011) [hereinafter Ezell I].

Silencers are in common use. They are used for numerous lawful purposes, including self-defense. The major contention of the State of Illinois is silencers are not arms, they are merely an accessory. From the motion by the defendants:

Defendants Kwame Raoul, Brendan F. Kelly, Craig Miller, and Bryan Robbins respectfully move the Court to enter judgment in their favor pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c). Plaintiffs raise a Second Amendment challenge to an Illinois law prohibiting the possession of silencers, which are attached to firearms to reduce the noise of gunfire. But the Second Amendment protects only “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms” (emphasis added). Silencers are not weapons. They are not used for self-defense. And they are not necessary to the effective use of a firearm. So they are not “Arms” within the meaning of the constitutional text, and thus plaintiffs cannot prevail on their Second Amendment claim.

Two problems exist with the above claim. The first is that silencers are explicitly treated as arms in both Illinois and federal law. While silencers are not “arms” by themselves, they clearly add to the effectiveness of firearms and aid in the use of firearms for lawful purposes such as self-defense. The second is accessories, which make arms more effective, such as aiding in training, are protected under the Second Amendment. The State of Illinois claim could be used to ban magazines (currently under contention) or other firearms accessories such as telescopic sights, red dot sights, flash suppressors, or even such things as rifled barrels or recoil pads.

The Supreme Court, in Caetano, made clear all items which constitute bearable arms fall under the protection of the Second Amendment. Outright bans on bearable arms are not allowed if the arms are in common use for lawful purposes.

This is why the State of Illinois is contending silencers are not arms. If they are not arms, why are they regulated and banned, especially under Illinois and United States weapons statutes? Illinois code 720 ILCS 5/24-1(a)(6) bans the possession of any device or attachment designed, used or intended for use in silencing the report of a firearm. If they are not useful to make firearms more effective, why ban or restrict them?

If the court rules silencers are arms under the protection of the Second Amendment, the Texas lawsuit against the NFA restrictions on making silencers gains credibility.

What Illinois is attempting to do is a salami slice destruction of the Second Amendment. Under the theory that accessories, which make weapons more effective, can be banned, the Second Amendment could be reduced to the absurdity of allowing only a single, muzzle-loading shotgun for defense in the home. Such an absurd outcome is not allowed under the Second Amendment.


About Dean Weingarten:

Dean Weingarten has been a peace officer, a military officer, was on the University of Wisconsin Pistol Team for four years, and was first certified to teach firearms safety in 1973. He taught the Arizona concealed carry course for fifteen years until the goal of Constitutional Carry was attained. He has degrees in meteorology and mining engineering, and retired from the Department of Defense after a 30 year career in Army Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation.

Dean Weingarten



from https://ift.tt/08CvNnm
via IFTTT

Saturday, July 29, 2023

Justice Alito Grants Temporary Stay for ATF’s “Ghost Gun” Rule

3D Printed Ghost Guns
Alito Grants Temporary Stay for ATF’s “Ghost Gun” Rule

U.S.A. — On July 27, 2023, the Attorney General of the Biden Administration, Merrick B. Garland, applied for a stay to Justice Alito at the Supreme Court in the case of VanDerStok v. Garland. The request for an emergency stay had been refused by a three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit on July 24, 2023, as reported on AmmoLand.  One of the possibilities mentioned was the Biden administration would appeal directly to the Supreme Court. The possibility of a request for an en banc decision existed but was unlikely because the Fifth Circuit has been following the Supreme Court guidance in the Bruen decision for enforcing Second Amendment rights and because an en banc panel would not have been emplaced for a period of time.

The request for an emergency stay to the Supreme Court is based on the false notions the Final Rule of the ATF on receivers and frames is somehow related to public safety; that “public safety” overrides the Constitution; and that the Executive branch (the Biden Administration) must act because the Legislative branch will not do so.  From page 6:

The district court’s universal vacatur is irreparably harming the public and the government by reopening the floodgates to the tide of untraceable ghost guns flowing into our Nation’s communities.

You are correct if this sounds like the familiar song and dance put forward by dictators and authoritarians worldwide.

The Final Rule put forward by the ATF reverses five decades of precedent because the Biden administration wants to do it. Here are some of the arguments put forward in the application filed.  From page 3 of the request for an emergency stay:

The Rule does not prohibit the purchase, sale, or possession of any firearm, nor does it prohibit any individual lawfully entitled to possess a firearm from making one at home. Instead, it simply requires compliance with the uncontroversial federal laws “imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of arms,” District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 626-627 (2008).

This is false. The rule prohibits the manufacture of firearms by individuals who are unwilling to submit to the inclusion of their firearms on a federal data system, using tools and parts which have been available for decades. The Gun Control Act has always been controversial. It passed in 1968 because of the unrelenting pressure of President Johnson and the dominant media, leveraging the emotional tumult of the assassinations of Bobby Kennedy and Martin Luther King. It has remained particularly controversial and has only stayed in effect because the courts have refused to honor rights protected by the Second Amendment. With the publishing of the Supreme Court Bruen decision restoring Second Amendment protections, numerous provisions of GCA 68 are being challenged in the Courts.

The ban on possession of a firearm where the serial number has been removed is being challenged as well.

From page 6:

This Court should stay the district court’s vacatur in full. A stay would prevent further irreparable harm to the public while allowing the litigation in this case and other challenges to the Rule to proceed in the ordinary course. But given the gravity and urgency of the public safety issues at stake, if the Court is not prepared to grant a stay it may wish to construe this application as a petition for a writ of certiorari before judgment, grant the petition, and set this case for argument this fall.

The claim there is irreparable harm to the public is laughable. There are hundreds of millions of firearms already in circulation in the United States. Hundreds of millions of them are already “untraceable.” Once a firearm is more than a few years old, “tracing it” is an exercise in futility. Tracing firearms is virtually useless in solving violent crimes. Criminals rarely leave firearms that can be traced to them at the crime scene. All that is accomplished by tracing is to waste public resources on accumulating useless data. Even full-blown registration of firearms almost never is used to actually solve crimes. The idea of “tracing guns” as a useful crime-fighting tool is a myth. The serious danger to a viable Second Amendment is the potential of a national gun registry using the requirement for serial numbers imposed by the federal government.

From page 18:

An ordinary speaker of English would recognize that a company in the business of selling kits that can be assembled into firearms in minutes — and that are designed, marketed, and used for that express purpose — is in the business of selling firearms. A contrary conclusion blinks reality.

No. A kit is not a completed product. When the pieces of a kit must be physically altered to allow the parts to be assembled into a functional firearm, it is not a disassembled firearm. It is a kit, where the purchaser finishes the manufacturing process. Individuals in the United States, who are not manufacturing firearms for commercial sale have always been able to make their own homemade firearms using parts purchased from other parties.

From page 20:

The court appeared to accept that “disassembled” weapons are subject to the Act’s requirements, App., infra, 39a, but exempted parts kits that can be assembled into a fully functional weapon in a matter of minutes, see id. at 70a-71a, 81a-88a.

No, this is incorrect. If it takes time and effort to make parts compatible, it takes more time and effort than merely assembling parts. Functional firearms can be made from hardware supplies in “minutes”. That does not make pipes into firearms. The pipes are not firearms until the work is done to make them functional.

An unusual part of the brief is the Biden administration’s attack on “universal relief”, where a single district court judge can vacate a law for the entire nation. This tactic has been used, particularly by the Left, for decades. If the court uses this case to eliminate the ability of single district courts to vacate national laws for the entire nation, it will be a victory for limited government. The court could both uphold the ruling, which was upheld by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, and still disapprove of a single district court vacating national law. From Page 29, the Biden Administration attacks “universal relief” :

Universal relief also creates other constitutional, legal, and practical problems. It “strains our separation of powers” by “allowing individual judges to act more like a legislature by decreeing the rights and duties of people nationwide.” Texas, 143 S. Ct. at 1985 (Gorsuch, J., concurring in the judgment). It circumvents the procedural rules governing joinder and class actions. See id. at 1981. It encourages forum shopping by empowering a single district judge to nullify the decisions of other courts upholding the challenged agency action.

The Biden administration made a laughable claim about reality in 1968. Serial numbers were not required on most firearms (handguns and high-powered rifles were an exception) in 1968. Millions, perhaps tens of millions, of firearms without serial numbers were grandfathered into the system in 1968. Homemade firearms without serial numbers, have been made in the United States since colonial times. From Page 39:

More fundamentally, there was no such thing as a ghost gun in 1968. As recently as 2017, they were a novelty being sold in relatively small numbers. It is only over the last five years that the manufacturing respondents and others have dramatically changed the status quo by selling tens if not hundreds of thousands of firearms outside the Act’s regulations.

This is the progressive argument: that was then, and this is now; therefore, we must ignore the rules in place and act by diktat!

Predicting what the Supreme Court will do on any issue is difficult. The Court consists of nine people who can see through obvious, inflated rhetoric.  The Supreme Court has already spanked the Biden Administration for attempting to act with dictatorial authority on student loans. The Court has ruled the EPA cannot change law for the entire country by administrative whim.  Refusing to grant the emergency stay to the Biden administration only returns firearms regulation to the status quo before the Biden administration’s gambit to expand ATF authority was attempted.

The question of whether the entire firearms regulation scheme concocted with the National Firearms Act of 1934, the Federal Firearms Act of 1938, the Gun Control Act of 1968 and the 1986 Gun Owners Protection Act are all an overreach of federal power, not allowed under the Second Amendment, is not addressed.

Update: Justice Alito grants administrative stay for a week. Responses are due on August 2, 2023.

Alito Grants Temporary Stay for ATF’s “Ghost Gun” Rule by AmmoLand Shooting Sports News on Scribd


About Dean Weingarten:

Dean Weingarten has been a peace officer, a military officer, was on the University of Wisconsin Pistol Team for four years, and was first certified to teach firearms safety in 1973. He taught the Arizona concealed carry course for fifteen years until the goal of Constitutional Carry was attained. He has degrees in meteorology and mining engineering, and retired from the Department of Defense after a 30 year career in Army Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation.

Dean Weingarten



from https://ift.tt/O8FeA5l
via IFTTT

A Bill to Stop Armed IRS Agents

U.S.A. — On June 14th, 2023, a Montana gun shop was searched for the purpose of the federal government questioning the company’s business financials.

Under normal circumstances, research may be justified, but in this case, 20 armed IRS Agents spent the entire day at the Highwood Creek Outfitters in Great Falls, Montana, going through documents, only to leave a half hour before closing time.

If that wasn’t bad enough, not only were financial documents seized, but 4473s were taken as well. The 4473 application includes, among other things, the name, birthdate, birth location, gender, home address, and serial number of firearms purchased by customers of the shop.

Some would argue the federal government is giving too much power to agencies run by unelected employees, but the Biden Administration seems to think this type of violation and strong-arming of private citizens is perfectly fine. After all, they remind you all the time that they just want to “keep people safe.”

After the document seizure and occupation of the gun shop by the armed agents, U.S. Senator Steve Daines (R) sent a letter to the IRS asking for more information about the incident. He wrote:

“According to the owner and local reporting on the event, 20 armed federal agents entered the store, remained on the premises for several hours, and confiscated several boxes worth of documents. Among the documents reportedly seized were Firearms Transaction Records (ATF Form 4473) that contain the Personally Identifiable Information (PII) of prospective firearm purchasers. With the PII of an unknown number of Montanans potentially collected by your agents, the store’s customers and the community are rightfully concerned. As a result, local law enforcement has been inundated with calls and inquiries seeking information they are unable to provide.”

Thankfully there are still people in Congress who value the Constitution and are willing to stand up for the rights of Americans. Only two weeks after the gun shop raid, Republican Congressman Matt Rosendale from District 2 in Montana introduced and sponsored H.R.4436 with (11) co-sponsors, including Clay Higgins (R-La.), Randy Weber (R-Texas), Harriet Hageman (R-Wyo.), Eli Crane (R-Ariz.), Mary Miller (R-Ill.), Robert Good (R-Va.), Brian Babin (R-Texas), Jeffrey Duncan (R-S.C.), Nancy Mace (R-S.C.), Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.), and Barry Moore (R-Ala.). The bill’s intent is “To prohibit the Internal Revenue Service from providing firearms and ammunition to its employees, and for other purposes.”

On the same day (June 30th, 2023), H.R.4416 was introduced by Louisiana Congressman Clay Higgins with (8) co-sponsors including Jeffrey Duncan (R-S.C.), Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.), Randy Weber (R-Texas), Robert Good (R-Va.), Russ Fulcher (R-Idaho), Matt Rosendale (R-Mont.), Nancy Mace (R-S.C.), Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.). Its intent is “To prohibit the use of Federal funds to hire armed Federal regulatory enforcement officers in certain agencies.”

Details of both bills are as follows:

H.R.4436 — 118th Congress (2023-2024)To prohibit the Internal Revenue Service from providing firearms and ammunition to its employees, and for other purposes.Sponsor: Rosendale Sr., Matthew M. [Rep.-R-MT-2] (Introduced 06/30/2023) Cosponsors: (11)Committees: House – Ways and Means; JudiciaryLatest Action: House – 06/30/2023 Referred to the Committee on Ways and Means, and in addition to the Committee on the Judiciary, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned. (All Actions)

H.R.4416 — 118th Congress (2023-2024)To prohibit the use of Federal funds to hire armed Federal regulatory enforcement officers in certain agencies.Sponsor: Higgins, Clay [Rep.-R-LA-3] (Introduced 06/30/2023) Cosponsors: (8)Committees: House – Ways and Means; Education and the Workforce; Energy and Commerce; Transportation and Infrastructure; AgricultureLatest Action: House – 06/30/2023 Referred to the Committee on Ways and Means, and in addition to the Committees on Education and the Workforce, Energy and Commerce, Transportation and Infrastructure, and Agriculture, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for… (All Actions)

Should we have to create legislation to prevent our government employees from violating the rights of the very people they have been elected to protect? Of course not, but under this Marxist-influenced White House coupled with the obvious radicalization of the Democratic party, it would seem, we must.


About Dan Wos, Author – Good Gun Bad Guy

Dan Wos is available for Press Commentary. For more information contact PR HERE

Dan Wos is a nationally recognized 2nd Amendment advocate, Host of The Loaded Mic and Author of the “GOOD GUN BAD GUY” book series. He speaks at events, is a contributing writer for many publications, and can be found on radio stations across the country. Dan has been a guest on Newsmax, the Sean Hannity Show, Real America’s Voice, and several others. Speaking on behalf of gun-rights, Dan exposes the strategies of the anti-gun crowd and explains their mission to disarm law-abiding American gun-owners.

Dan Wos



from https://ift.tt/nFyjOws
via IFTTT

Proven Lies and Weaponized Propaganda

By Salam Fatohi

SCAR 20s NRCH 01
IMG Jim Grant

Antigun activists are getting so desperate that they are relying on incorrect methodology against the firearm industry to spread their own gun control agenda. Put simply: junk science will always be junk science. Regardless of whether the ‘scientist’ believes it or not.

Recently, The New York Times posted an article asserting that it is 2.7 times more likely that a homicide will occur in the home if you have a firearm. This claim comes from the 1993 Arthur Kellermann study, “Gun Ownership as a Risk Factor for Homicide in the Home,” that is overflowing with falsehoods and biases. So much so that it has been discredited before.

Biased Research Leads to Biased Findings

There are numerous falsehoods made by Kellermann to unpack here. So, let’s start from the beginning.

First, in the 1993 referenced study, Kellermann et al. break rule number one when creating an ethical scientific study: engaging in selection bias. The ‘controlled’ population in this study came from a cherry-picked population of reported burglaries in a single county. Thus, creating a biased population and variables to measure. Kellermann’s team also used data where the guns were brought to the victim’s home and not owned by the victim. It seems like Kellermann et al. already had their ‘conclusion’ settled upon before the study even began.

Further, Kellermann et al. do not seem to know the difference between the general population and the population the study created to fit its needs. As noted by Dr. Pat Baranello in a letter to the editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, Kellermann et al.’s findings do not represent the actions of responsible people. Of course, a cherry-picked population encompassed by individuals with criminal records, aggressive behaviors and homicidal tendencies are going to become more dangerous with a gun in hand than the responsible, law-abiding gun owner. But in this false reality created by Kellermann et al., the two are one and the same.

Expanding on the biased-selected population by Kellermann et al. comes the question of whether this population is conclusive of the general population of gun owners in America. Many gun owners will deny owning a firearm. As noted in a law review article, many gun owners are hesitant to reveal that they own and possess a firearm. In cases where guns were not found by the investigative body, there is a chance that the family of the deceased could have entered the crime scene and searched for a firearm on their own. Therefore, the assertion that it is 2.7 times more likely to have a fatality in the house if you have a gun is based on the “truthfulness of the interviewees.”

These significant problems further the question even more as to whether Kellermann et al.’s biased-chosen population has any representation of the gun owning population at all.

If Kellermann was not hypocritical enough, he would prefer his own wife to have a “.38 special in her hand,” in the case of an attack against her life so she could resist the attacker.

Kellermann’s Fraudulent Representation

Unsurprisingly, this is not the first time Kellermann has tried to use his own bias against firearms to dissert a fraudulent “scientific” claim. In an article written in The New England Journal of Medicine, Kellermann and his coauthor miscited a book written by James Wright and Peter Rossi, Under the Gun.

Kellermann and his coauthor tried to assert that, “restricting access to handguns could substantially reduce our annual rate of homicide.” However, the original authors did the exact opposite of that. With reference to that particular notion, Wright and Rossi, as a Forbes article notes while debunking Kellermann’s multiple false claims, actually said, “There is no persuasive evidence that supports that view.”

Another push of his own biased science, Kellermann again tried to assert a claim in the New England Journal of Medicine in which he says, “limiting access to firearms could prevent many suicides.” The referenced study actually concludes that individuals who are suicidal and do not have access to a firearm will still find another way to commit suicide.

The bogus 1993 study that asserted it is 2.7 times more likely to have a fatality in the house if you have a gun has been a point of ridicule but that has not stopped the lie from being repeated. The erroneous gun ownership study was one factor that led to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) being barred from advocating for widespread gun control.

Utilizing taxpayer dollars to advocate for gun control is abhorrent and illegal due to the 1996 Dickey Amendment. Unfortunately, the clearly one-sided research with predetermined conclusions is still misused today, including, unsurprisingly, by The New York Times.

Responsible Gun Ownership

Safe and secure firearm storage in the home is a pillar effort of the firearm industry under Real Solutions. Safer Communities. Initiative. One of the programs, Project ChildSafe, partners with local law enforcement agencies in every state and five U.S. territories to distribute free firearm safety kits, including a gun cable locking device, no questions asked, to anyone who requests one. The effort is meant to keep firearms in the home away from children and those who shouldn’t have access or perhaps are going through mental health difficulties. To date, the firearm industry has distributed more than 40 million of these free firearm safety kits, and when coupled with the gun locks that are included by manufacturers with every firearm sold at retail, the total rises to more than 100 million free gun locks.

These firearm safety initiatives led by the firearm industry have had a real positive impact. Since data was first recorded in 1903, unintentional firearm deaths and accidents have trended down and recently hit the lowest levels on record.

Since the flawed 1993 Kellermann et al. study that was included by The New York Times to make a false claim, things have changed. There have now been 47 months in a row of one million or more firearm purchases at retail, according to NSSF FBI National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS)-adjusted data. What’s more is that the number of first-time gun owners has skyrocketed in recent years, including more than 8 million first-time gun buyers between 2020-2021. With many of those still skeptical and refusing to tell random survey phone callers whether they own a gun in the household, the 2.7 figure used by The New York Times becomes even more laughable.

One thing remains abundantly clear. Instead of concentrating on Real Solutions, the media continues to perpetuate propaganda around their gun control agenda.


About The National Shooting Sports Foundation

NSSF is the trade association for the firearm industry. Its mission is to promote, protect and preserve hunting and shooting sports. Formed in 1961, NSSF has a membership of thousands of manufacturers, distributors, firearm retailers, shooting ranges, sportsmen’s organizations, and publishers nationwide. For more information, visit nssf.org

National Shooting Sports Foundation



from https://ift.tt/xCpSsn9
via IFTTT

Friday, July 28, 2023

Mass Shootings Have ‘No Correlation to Gun Laws,’ says Report

Gun Control Cross Roads iStock-830561644
New research reported by the Daly Mail suggests anti-gunners have just lost another point of contention. (Gun Control Cross Roads iStock-830561644)

U.S.A. — Washington, D.C.—a jurisdiction with some of the strictest gun control laws in the country—leads the nation with “the highest rate of mass shootings per capita,” according to a report in the Daily Mail, citing new research released this week by medical researchers in Colorado.

Here’s how the Daily Mail headlined its story: “America’s mass shooting hotspots revealed: First of its kind study breaks down thousands of massacres by state – and there’s NO correlation between gun control laws.”

The study is published in JAMA Network Open, and it relies on data from the Gun Violence Archive, a database often criticized by the firearms community. The work was done by researchers at the University of Colorado: Leslie M. Barnard, MPH, Department of Epidemiology, Colorado School of Public Health; Erin Wright-Kelly, DrPH, MA, Injury and Violence Prevention Center, Colorado School of Public Health, and Marian E. Betz, MD, MPH, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora.

The report may cool some jets in the gun control community, which has maintained that states with the most guns and “lax” laws have the highest number of shootings. But here’s what the report says:

“The rate of mass shootings per 1,000,000 people was highest in the District of Columbia (10.4 shootings), followed by much lower rates in Louisiana (4.2 mass shootings) and Illinois (3.6 mass shootings), the states with the next 2 highest rates (Table).”

Translation: Gun laws do not appear to have an impact, since the District of Columbia and the state of Illinois have restrictive laws, while Louisiana is far less restrictive.

As detailed by the Daily Mail, the “Top Ten” jurisdictions for mass shootings are:

  • Washington, D.C. (10.43 per million)
  • Louisiana (4.28 per million)
  • Illinois (3.61 per million)
  • Mississippi (2.91 per million)
  • Alabama (2.32 per million)
  • Missouri (2.29 per million)
  • South Carolina (2.26 per million)
  • Delaware (2.18 per million)
  • Tennessee (2.03 per million)
  • Maryland (2.2 per million)

Another interesting revelation in the report explains, “From 2014 to 2022, there were 4011 mass shootings, ranging from zero events in Hawaii and North Dakota to 414 events in Illinois. For these 9 years, one-third (27.3%) were social-related mass shootings, 15.8% were crime related, 11.1% were domestic violence (DV) related, 1.4% were school or work related, and 52.0% were not a part of these categories (Table). There was a median of 45 mass shootings per state for all states and the District of Columbia (mean, 78.6). A total of 21 006 people were killed or injured (Table).”

More data which may be problematic for proponents of stricter gun control laws, shows Illinois had the most mass shootings (414), California came in second with 367 while Texas reportedly had 270 such incidents. Gun law differences between the three states are dramatic.

The state with the highest rate of gun ownership, according to World Population Review, is Montana, where 66.3 percent of adults own a gun, and it had one of the lowest numbers of mass shootings at 4. Neighboring Wyoming, which is second highest for gun ownership at 66.2 percent of adults owning guns had only one (1) mass shooting.

Meanwhile, New York, with 19.9 percent gun ownership, had 186 mass shootings, and neighboring New Jersey, with 14.7 percent gun ownership, had 93 mass shootings, according to a state-by-state chart published with the study.

And to demonstrate further how gun laws do not correlate with mass shootings, Hawaii, with 14.9 percent gun ownership and North Dakota, with 55.1 percent gun ownership, had no (0) mass shootings, the only two states on the chart with zero incidents during the study period.

The Daily Mail report quotes Ph.D. student Barnard, who stated, “We wanted to help explain the ‘why, where and how often’ to give people an understanding of this issue.

“This study is not intended to answer every question, but highlights components to generate more hypotheses,” she added.

Barnard acknowledged that the definition of a “mass shooting” varies, “depending on the source.”

“While we consider mass shootings as four or more persons shot or killed,” Barnard said, “some data sources only count deaths.”

She acknowledged that this discrepancy could make research difficult for epidemiologists.

The report could make things just as difficult for the gun prohibition lobby, which has argued frequently that states with so-called “lax” gun laws are more deadly than states with more restrictive laws. This new research tends to refute that claim.


About Dave Workman

Dave Workman is a senior editor at TheGunMag.com and Liberty Park Press, author of multiple books on the Right to Keep & Bear Arms, and formerly an NRA-certified firearms instructor.Dave Workman

 



from https://ift.tt/QIEmh6s
via IFTTT

Bloomberg’s ‘Trace’ Outed as Another Gun Control Group

Bloomberg’s ‘Trace’ Outed as Another Gun Control Group, iStock-1420114631
Bloomberg’s ‘Trace’ Outed as Another Gun Control Group, iStock-1420114631

U.S.A.The Trace, the propaganda arm of former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg’s gun control empire, wants the public to believe it’s an actual newsroom comprised of actual journalists. It’s a fiction they’ll go to great lengths to maintain.

The Trace calls itself “The only newsroom dedicated to covering gun violence.” Its staff refer to themselves as journalists, rather than anti-gun activists who are paid by Bloomberg to write propaganda.

Since the Trace was founded eight years ago, scores of newspapers, websites and other legacy media outlets have fallen victim to this ruse. Gannett’s flagship newspaper, USA Today, has collaborated with the Trace multiple times, and has even allowed Trace activists to produce and edit content, which appeared in the newspaper under a joint byline.

“We have partnered with more than 170 national and local media organizations,” the Trace says on its website. “We’re always looking to start new partnerships.”

One Trace activist, Jennifer Mascia, who describes herself as a “Senior news writer @TeamTrace,” bristled recently when her employer was compared to Everytown, another anti-gun group funded by Bloomberg.

“You know The Trace is not a gun control org. We don’t lobby. We don’t tell readers to support laws. We don’t publish our opinions. We are all journalists. None of us have ever worked in advocacy. Our backgrounds are easily searchable. Why do you persist with this myth?” Mascia tweeted Tuesday.

“Follow the bios. We all went to journalism school. The facts don’t support your claims,” Mascia tweeted when pressed.

Enter Rob Romano, an intelligence associate at the Firearms Policy Coalition.

Romano examined the IRS Form 990s for the Trace and Everytown and found a stunning similarity. Both nonprofits share the same president, John Feinblatt.

Further examination shows Feinblatt is also listed as the two nonprofits’ principal officer. The 990s show that the Trace and Everytown also use the same phone number, 646-324-8250. Both nonprofits were incorporated in Delaware, which is known for its stringent corporate privacy laws.

Romano published his findings in a tweet to Mascia, stating: “The president of your organization is literally the president of Everytown.”

Ethical Violations

Gun owners have always known of the nexus between the Trace and Bloomberg’s other Astroturf (they’re not grassroots) gun-control groups. But the legacy media has purposefully turned a blind eye to this connection, so they can continue to publish the Trace’s propaganda guilt-free.

If the legacy media accepted that the Trace was nothing but another anti-gun advocacy group, ethically, they couldn’t publish their work. Most newspapers have ethical guidelines that prohibit partnering with activists.

Gannett uses its “Principles of Ethical Conduct for Newsrooms” as a way to keep control of its thousands of journalists. The numerous collaborations between the Trace and USA TODAY clearly violate many of these ethical principles:

Exercising fair play:

We will strive to include all sides relevant to a story and not take sides in news coverage.

Maintaining independence:

We will maintain an impartial, arm’s length relationship with anyone seeking to influence the news.

We will be free of improper obligations to news sources, newsmakers and advertisers.

Ensuring the Truth Principle:

We will not intentionally slant the news.

Conducting investigative reporting:

Evaluate legal and ethical issues fully, involving appropriate colleagues, superiors, lawyers or dispassionate outside parties in the editorial process. (For example, it may be helpful to have a technical story reviewed by a scientist for accuracy, or have financial descriptions assessed by an accountant, or consult an ethicist or respected outside editor on an ethical issue.)

Be careful about trading information with sources or authorities, particularly if it could lead to an impression that you are working in concert against an individual or entity.

Editing skeptically:

Protect against being manipulated by advocates and special interests.

Takeaways

In a perfect world, every newspaper that published Trace propaganda as news stories would retract every single story and then issue a massive apology to its readers, along with a promise to never do it again.

Unfortunately, that will never happen, because guns. The legacy media couldn’t care less about facts, accuracy, fairness or ethics if it involves an anti-gun story.

If the legacy media continues to publish stories from proven anti-gun activists, I can’t help but wonder when they’ll partner with NRA, GOA, NSSF or even SAF.

It would seem to be the fair thing to do.

This story is presented by the Second Amendment Foundation’s Investigative Journalism Project and wouldn’t be possible without you. Please click here to make a tax-deductible donation to support more pro-gun stories like this.


About Lee Williams

Lee Williams, who is also known as “The Gun Writer,” is the chief editor of the Second Amendment Foundation’s Investigative Journalism Project. Until recently, he was also an editor for a daily newspaper in Florida. Before becoming an editor, Lee was an investigative reporter at newspapers in three states and a U.S. Territory. Before becoming a journalist, he worked as a police officer. Before becoming a cop, Lee served in the Army. He’s earned more than a dozen national journalism awards as a reporter, and three medals of valor as a cop. Lee is an avid tactical shooter.

Lee Williams



from https://ift.tt/0Lon6yE
via IFTTT

Shannon Watts Demands, Brags About Nixing Free Speech

By Larry Keane

Beretta 80x black and white
IMG Jim Grant

Shannon Watts, founder of Moms Demand Action, announced in January that she would retire from her antigun group sometime this year. Don’t expect a quiet exit, as she’s now talking about restricting free speech.

Watts, whose gun control group is controlled by billionaire and former failed gun control presidential candidate Michael Bloomberg, took to social media and bragging about her role in forcing a music video network to remove country music star Jason Aldean’s latest hit. Watts, along with other gun control activists, jumped through hoops to claim Aldean’s song lyrics glorify and encourage the use of firearms to commit acts of violence. Hardly the case, but the truth has never mattered when gun control activists push to limit constitutional rights.

Music Lyric Delusions

Aldean drew Watts’s ire because of the lyrics of his song “Try That in a Small Town.” The only reference to a firearm in the song is in the phrase, “Got a gun that my granddad gave me / They say one day they’re gonna round up / Well, that sh*t might fly in the city, good luck.

Watts tweeted her outrage at the artist and his lyrics, even referencing that Aldean was performing at the Las Vegas Route 91 music festival in 2017 as if Aldean had anything to do with the fact that a deranged murderer took the lives of 60 innocent Americans.

Watts falsely claimed the lyrics matter-of-factly state, “…how he (Aldean) and his friends will shoot you if you try and take their guns.”

Watts stirred up the mob against Aldean and pressured Country Music Television to take down the music video of the song. CMT – owned by Paramount – caved and took down the video. Watts took a victory lap.

“Proud to have a hand in getting CMT to reject this racist and violent song…,” Watts tweeted, linking to a news article about CMT’s decision.

To Aldean’s credit, he’s unbowed and rejected the claims of stoking violence. It turns out that standing up to gun control activists like Watts is good for business, beyond being good on principles. Streaming downloads of Aldean’s song jumped 999 percent and the tune shot to the top of the charts. It’s the Number 1 song on iTunes for music and video and currently Number 4 on YouTube’s chart for trending music videos.

Selective Outrage

Watts’s move to music censorship isn’t all that surprising and mimics a similar mission creep among the most ardent gun control activists. When they fail to restrict one Constitutionally-guaranteed right, they try to change the rules of the game or go around it completely. When it comes to music lyrics, one example is especially aggravating.

Look no further than California, where Gov. Gavin Newsom praised legislation he signed into law last year. At the time, the governor hosted a video bill signing for AB 2799 and was joined by several hip-hop artists. The bill, titled the Decriminalizing Artistic Expression Act, prevents prosecutors from using violent and descriptive rap music lyrics in criminal court cases against criminals who have broken the law. In addition, AB 2799 requires “a court, in a criminal proceeding where a party seeks to admit as evidence a form of creative expression, to consider specified factors when balancing the probative value of that evidence against the substantial danger of undue prejudice.”

“Artists of all kinds should be able to create without the fear of unfair and prejudicial prosecution,” Gov. Newsom said. “California… is taking a nation-leading role to protect creative expression and ensure that artists are not criminalized under biased policies.”

In contrast to Aldean’s innocuous lyrics, while there certainly is plenty of non-violent rap music, it is no secret that much of it also contains violent, descriptive language. Violent crimes are often bragged about, including criminal firearm misuse against law enforcement.

Earlier this year, the governor signed a different piece of legislation into law that criminalizes First Amendment freedom of speech by banning firearm advertising “attractive to minors.” That law, AB 2571, prohibits firearm industry businesses, including gun and ammunition manufacturers, distributors, retailers and ranges, “from advertising or marketing any firearm-related product, as defined, in a manner that is designed, intended, or reasonably appears to be attractive to minors.” State authorities in California are the arbiters determining if an advertisement is “attractive” to minors. Breaking the law could lead to a $25,000 minimum penalty for sponsoring any adult-supervised youth shooting event. That includes the state’s Department of Fish and Wildlife’s hunter education, and Boy Scouts target shooting merit badge courses.

For Gov. Newsom, Watts, and others, they are losing the argument over gun rights and turning their attention to free speech rights. Watts has never crowed about the criminal misuse of firearms portrayed in music videos on other channels.

Listen To This

Watts has no interest in listening to any pro-Second Amendment voice that may oppose her radical gun control views. Her group Moms Demand Action, Bloomberg’s Everytown for Gun Safety, and other gun control groups are failing to convince the American people they need more gun control, and she’s now changed her tune to censoring free speech.

That effort is a failing one, too. When they push for increasing gun control, America continues to vote with their wallets. In June, background checks for firearm sales topped 1 million for nearly four years running. When Watts and others tried to silence free speech as an end run around, Aldean’s video skyrocketed to the top of the charts.

Turns out, no one is tuning into what Watts is broadcasting.


About The National Shooting Sports Foundation

NSSF is the trade association for the firearm industry. Its mission is to promote, protect and preserve hunting and shooting sports. Formed in 1961, NSSF has a membership of thousands of manufacturers, distributors, firearm retailers, shooting ranges, sportsmen’s organizations, and publishers nationwide. For more information, visit nssf.org

National Shooting Sports Foundation



from https://ift.tt/adhjRuI
via IFTTT