Tuesday, February 28, 2023

Biased Ruling Supporting Semiauto Ban Enabled by Sham Confirmations

Activist Judges Need Not Apply
Republican-confirmed federal judges ought to have a better understanding of the right to keep and bear arms than magistrates for King George III.

“A federal judge in Chicago denied a Naperville gun store owner and other plaintiffs a temporary restraining order against the Illinois assault weapons ban,” ABC 7 Eyewitness News reported.

“Two state lawsuits … have succeeded in getting temporary restraining orders against the ban for thousands of plaintiffs,” the report notes, while pointing out a significant difference with this development. “This is the first ruling issued in federal court, and the first to deny a temporary restraining order against the ban.”

“Because assault weapons are particularly dangerous weapons and high-capacity magazines are particularly dangerous weapon accessories, their regulation accords with history and tradition,” United State District Judge Virginia M. Kendall wrote in the Memorandum Opinion and Order in Bevis v. Naperville. “Naperville and Illinois lawfully exercised their authority to control their possession, transfer, sale, and manufacture by enacting a ban on commercial sales. That decision comports with the Second Amendment…”

No, it comports with some past decisions where judges proved deliberately indifferent to “shall not be infringed” and fraudulently “legitimized” subversive legislation that did just that. If Kendall wants to talk about comporting with the Second Amendment, she’ll first need to be intellectually honest and logically consistent enough to admit “weapons of war” are precisely what “We the People” are entitled to have.

In U.S. v. Miller, the “landmark” case from 1939, the Supreme Court observed a weapon would need to have “some reasonable relationship to the preservation or efficiency of a well regulated militia [or] that this weapon is any part of the ordinary military equipment, or that its use could contribute to the common defense.”

Who but someone willfully deluding herself, a liar, or both, would deliberately ignore that the militia is comprised of citizens “capable of acting in concert for the common defense [and] bearing arms supplied by themselves and of the kind in common use at the time”? Its function was — and still is — to field citizen soldiers. And these citizens bore arms that were suitable for that purpose, “ordinary military equipment” intended to be taken into “common defense” battles. The militia did not assemble on the green bearing torches and pitchforks. They came with the intent to match and best a professional military threat.

To suggest the Framers of the Constitution meant anything else is to accuse them of being incompetent and insane, and of codifying into “the supreme Law of the Land” that sending an ill-equipped citizenry to their slaughter was “necessary to the security of a free State.”

Judge Kendall is being neither honest nor consistent in imposing her personal political biases to help swindle her countrymen out of what Continental Congress delegate Tench Coxe called their “birthright.” What makes that especially intolerable is she was nominated to the court by President George W. Bush, a Republican the National Rifle Association endorsed, apparently because he “and Vice President Cheney both love to hunt and fish.”

“They know the Constitution gives people the personal right to bear arms,” NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre assured the membership.  “And, they want to pass the values of our Nation on to a new generation.”

NRA and the Brady Center both arguing over which rights the Constitution gives might help explain why the new generation finds things so confusing. You’d think at least Wayne would know better. It might also help explain why the bar for “A” ratings and endorsements is sometimes set so low.

“Kendall was confirmed by the U.S. Senate on December 21, 2005, on a Senate vote and received commission on January 3, 2006,” Ballotpedia documents. That made it during the 109th Congress, where both the House, and more importantly the Senate since it’s the body Constitutionally authorized to advise and consent on nominees, were controlled by the Republicans.

Kendall’s sitting on the bench and making inane, unsupportable (by Founding intent) rulings, is on them. And a big part of the reason for that is nominees are traditionally given a pass on tough questions about “their views on legal or constitutional issues.”

Think of one job you’ve ever applied for where you’d have gotten it if you decided to play coy with the hiring managers. While it may be “inappropriate” for a judge to weigh in on a specific case before confirmation, there’s no reason why general principles of understanding should be off-limits. Understandably candidates have to be circumspect, particularly since they’re not privy to all the facts and evidence yet, but that doesn’t mean they shouldn’t be expected to provide an honest understanding of the ideologies that guide them.

Think of one job you’ve ever applied for where you’d have gotten it if you decided to play coy with the hiring managers. So there’s no reason, at least a legitimate one, why general principles of understanding should be off-limits. There’s no reason, again at least a legitimate one, why answers to specific questions of legal understanding and principles should not be expected.

There’s no reason to trust any politician who thinks the voters shouldn’t be informed of what a nominee’s understandings and principles are. Because until that changes, we’ll continue to have statist tools like Kendall codifying the evisceration of their countrymen’s rights from positions of power and privilege while those who put them there continue inflicting appointed despots, apparatchiks, and outright boobs on their constituents.


About David Codrea:

David Codrea is the winner of multiple journalist awards for investigating/defending the RKBA and a long-time gun owner rights advocate who defiantly challenges the folly of citizen disarmament. He blogs at “The War on Guns: Notes from the Resistance,” is a regularly featured contributor to Firearms News, and posts on Twitter: @dcodrea and Facebook.

David Codrea



from https://ift.tt/3pD0B5c
via IFTTT

Wait…What? Defendant In N.Y. Gun Rights Case AGREES Court Should Grant Injunction!?

Doing the Right Thing or Wrong Good Bad Yes No
iStock

BELLEVUE, WA – A defendant in the Second Amendment Foundation’s challenge of New York’s gun control law has filed a brief with the federal appeals court supporting the plaintiffs’ application for a preliminary injunction, a move which SAF’s Alan Gottlieb welcomed as a pleasant surprise. The case is known as Hardaway, Jr. v. Nigrelli.

Gottlieb, who is SAF founder and executive vice president, said the brief filed by Niagara County, N.Y. District Attorney Brian D. Seaman reinforces plaintiffs’ assertion that the gun control law, which prohibits concealed carry in broadly-defined “sensitive places,” including places of worship, is unconstitutional.

Seaman’s brief states he supports the application for a preliminary injunction “for the purpose of furthering a judicial determination as to the constitutionality of New York Penal Law,” adding;

“Therefore, the Court should affirm the Decision and Order of the district court granting the Plaintiffs-Appellees’ application for a preliminary injunction.”

SAF is joined in the lawsuit by the Firearms Policy Coalition and citizens Larry A. Boyd and Jimmie Hardaway, Jr., for whom the lawsuit is named. Defendants, in their official capacities, include Seaman, Erie County District Attorney John J. Flynn and New York State Police Supt. Steven A. Nigrelli.

Federal District Judge John L. Sinatra granted the preliminary injunction, and the state appealed to the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals.

“While this is certainly an unusual development,” said SAF Executive Director Adam Kraut, “we welcome the concurrence of District Attorney Seaman in our effort to secure the preliminary injunction. We believe New York’s gun control scheme is wholly unconstitutional. The New York Legislature needs to go back to the drawing board and try again, and this time, craft a law that complies with the Supreme Court’s guidelines in the Bruen ruling, rather than attempt to dance around that decision.”


The Second Amendment Foundation (www.saf.org) is the nation’s oldest and largest tax-exempt education, research, publishing and legal action group focusing on the Constitutional right and heritage to privately own and possess firearms. Founded in 1974, The Foundation has grown to more than 720,000 members and supporters and conducts many programs designed to better inform the public about the consequences of gun control.

Second Amendment Foundation



from https://ift.tt/Fqo20gW
via IFTTT

Lawmakers Say ‘Not So Fast’ on Credit Card Gun Store Tracking

By Larry Keane

SW5905 gun money credit card
Amalgamated Bank CEO Priscilla Sims Brown isn’t shy about catering to Democratic politics and progressive causes. IMG Jim Grant

Amalgamated Bank CEO Priscilla Sims Brown isn’t shy about catering to Democratic politics and progressive causes. The New York Post even described her as “the Left’s private banker.”

Sims Brown is especially proud of herself after she lobbied the main international credit card standards organization to create a special tracking code for gun store purchases. She wants to know who’s buying what and why. It’s a ruse under the guise of stopping criminals from misusing firearms.

Fortunately for law-abiding Americans who support the Second Amendment, lawmakers at the state and federal level are saying “Not so fast,” and proposing legislation to block the tracking of such lawful purchases.

What’s In Your Shopping Cart?

Sims Brown’s goal is to have credit cards implement a special code to track purchases made by law-abiding Americans at firearm retail stores. She urged the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) to create a Merchant Category Code (MCC) and they acquiesced. She spoke with New York Times columnist Andrew Ross Sorkin – a proponent of the scheme – and admitted the code is only the beginning. “We’re at the very early stages of this –,” Sims Brown told Sorkin. “But as this is implemented, those scenarios will be used.”

The “scenarios” include “detection scenarios” in which a purchase prompts a bank to file a Suspicious Activity Report to the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). There have been no guidelines on what any of that means or what purchases would be flagged. That’s because the MCC won’t identify what is in the customer’s shopping basket. The customer could have passed an FBI National Instant Criminal Background Check (NICS) verification to lawfully buy a firearm and ammunition. Or the purchase could be for camping supplies, waders, decoys, blinds and other outdoor gear for a hunting trip. The total cost could be flagged as “suspicious” since it might be an outlier on a customer’s purchase history.

Bloomberg News – owned by gun control advocate Michael Bloomberg – even threw cold water on the idea, saying the code wouldn’t work. “The payment network and its banking partners would have no idea if a gun-store customer is purchasing…a rifle or safety equipment.”

Credit Card CEOs Respond

The new MCC for gun store purchases was approved in September of last year so the implementation process is still under development. Still, some of the CEOs at major credit card companies are speaking up.

Discover announced it will begin using the gun store-specific code in April, becoming the first major credit card company to confirm they’ll use the code. Discover has the smallest market share of the four major credit card companies by far at about four percent, and other estimates put it at just two percent, but the move is still significant.

In announcing they will use the code, a Discover spokesperson was coy. “We remain focused on continuing to protect and support lawful purchases on our network while protecting the privacy of cardholders,” said a statement. “We were following the industry for consistent implementation.”

The Discover spokesperson also let it slip that other credit card companies will roll out their MCC gun store codes. That includes Visa’s CEO Al Kelly. Kelly explained that the new codes won’t be as effective in flagging purchases as antigun activists have claimed.

“If [Visa’s Chief Communications Officer] K.C. Kavanagh goes into a gun store and buys three thermoses and a tent, and you go in and buy a rifle and five rounds of ammunition, all I know is you both went to the same gun store… But I don’t know what you bought,” Kelly said.

On Visa’s website, a statement reads, “Many are advocating the use of MCCs to track gun sales as a potential tool in combating gun violence. That’s not what merchant codes are designed for, nor should they be.”

Mastercard and American Express have yet to comment in more specifics about their plans to implement the tracking code.

Legislative Protection

There’s good news for supporters of the Second Amendment and those concerned about government agencies tracking their completely lawful behavior. Mississippi, West Virginia and Florida are leading the way with legislation to block the tracking scheme.

In Mississippi, a bill is pending to preclude the use of the gun store MCC. House Bill 1110 was already approved overwhelmingly by the Mississippi House of Representatives, 87-26. The bill is expected to move swiftly through the state Senate.

In Florida, the Republican-controlled Senate Banking and Insurance Committee approved Senate Bill 214 that would target yet-to-be-enacted plans by some credit-card companies to create a gun store MCC. That bill would even fine credit card companies up to $10,000 per violation.

In West Virginia, Republican state Treasurer Riley Moore spoke of efforts to block the code as well, praising the House of Delegates for approving legislation that would ban any credit card company that tracks gun and ammunition purchases from bidding on state contracts.

There is also a buzz in Washington, D.C., as efforts to block the tracking code on a federal level are gaining steam, even as Members of Congress and U.S. Senators back other efforts to ensure financial companies cannot discriminate against the lawful and Constitutionally-protected firearm industry.

Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.) introduced the Firearm Industry Nondiscrimination (FIND) Act that would end the ability of corporate entities from profiting from taxpayer-funded federal contracts while discriminating against a constitutionally-protected industry at the same time. The same legislation was introduced in the House of Representatives earlier this year by U.S. Rep. Jack Bergman (R-Mich.).

Also in the upper chamber, Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) introduced the Fair Access to Banking Act, S. 293. That bill would work to end the discriminatory lending practices of major banking institutions that seek to circumvent the legislative process and set social policy from the boardroom.

As these legislative efforts continue to block boardroom gun control, NSSF will be watching closely.


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/USoKTmp
via IFTTT

Monday, February 27, 2023

Illinois’ Ban on Suppressors is on Borrowed Time

AP5 P Core Suppressed
The AP5 P is an excellent suppressor host. IMG Jim Grant

Today, the American Suppressor Association Foundation (ASA-F) and Silencer Shop helped file a lawsuit against the State of Illinois, alleging that Illinois’ ban on suppressor ownership and possession is an unconstitutional violation of the Second Amendment.

“The American Suppressor Association Foundation has always believed that the Second Amendment protects the right of law-abiding Americans to possess and own suppressors,” said Knox Williams, Executive Director of ASA-F. “After last summer’s Bruen ruling, we knew it was time to get to work on a case that would apply these Second Amendment protections to the States.”

“This case argues that suppressors are covered by the Second Amendment’s protection of the right to keep and bear arms, and that Illinois’ flat-out ban on suppressor ownership is therefore unconstitutional.” said Chris Boeck, ASA-F Board Member and General Counsel of Silencer Shop. “We’re optimistic the courts will agree with our interpretation, and extend the right to own suppressors to the people of Illinois. Suppressors offer critical hearing protection, reduce recoil, and improve accuracy. They facilitate communication and situational awareness while hunting, at the range, and during urgent moments of self-defense. They make firearms safer.”

Williams continued, “the standard of review laid out by the Supreme Court in its Bruen decision last summer requires Illinois to justify its ban on suppressor ownership by showing that the ban is consistent with ‘the Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.’ Since there has never been a nationwide ban on suppressor ownership, and since suppressors are neither dangerous nor unusual, we are confident that Illinois will not be able to justify its ban to the court.”

Illinois’ ban on suppressors is on borrowed time. ASA-F and Silencer Shop are confident that this lawsuit will open up the door to legal suppressor ownership in the Prairie State.


About ASA Foundation

The American Suppressor Association Foundation (ASA-F) is a 501(c)(3) educational nonprofit organization. Formed to educate the public on the realities and merits of suppressors, ASA-F stands at the forefront of pro-suppressor Constitutional litigation. The ability of the American Suppressor Association Foundation to educate and litigate for your Constitutional rights is tied directly to our ability to fundraise. For more information on how you can help, visit www.Suppressor.org.American Suppressor Association

About Silencer Shop

As the industry’s largest suppressor distributor, Silencer Shop provides dealers and customers with a complete suite of services making silencer ownership simplified. With a nationwide network of biometric kiosks, the most trafficked suppressor website, and a robust service platform complete with ATF compliance & customer support, Silencer Shop provides the most efficient process of acquiring an NFA item. To learn more about Silencer Shop, visit them online at www.SilencerShop.com.



from https://ift.tt/0r1DaUK
via IFTTT

Pro-Discrimination, End-Game Gun Control Introduced in California

California Flag Guns Gun Control
California is a laboratory for oppressive and ineffective gun control. IMG iStock 884191010

California is a laboratory for oppressive and ineffective gun control. And, for the most part, the proponents of these measures have kept up the charade that they are aimed at reducing crime, accidents, or suicides. But now some activists are becoming emboldened to drop the pretense and to admit they simply want to do away with guns entirely. California Senate Bill 637 is a case in point. It is the sort of end-stage gun control that doesn’t even attempt to distinguish between the bad actors and the law-abiding and simply seeks to suppress firearm-related activity as such. The point of the bill, introduced by Sen. Dave Min (D-37), is nothing less than to end firearm-related commerce in the Golden State.

As described by its sponsor, SB 637 would require “every aspect” of California’s sprawling portfolio of public spending – including municipal bonds, capital projects, investments, pension systems, and more – to “cut off business with any banks or lenders with business customers that manufacture firearms.”

Note that the bill is not aimed at banks that launder money for illegal firearm traffickers. Nor does it limit itself to circumstances involving manufacturers that, while otherwise legal, produce any of the ever-increasing types of firearms that are prohibited from sale or possession in California.

Indeed, the bill is expressly aimed at manufacturers with above-board banking relationships, exactly the type that could survive the “risk management” scrutiny of the banks themselves, which itself is no easy task after Operation Choke Point and similar efforts sought to make firearm-related commerce toxic. Any such bank, no matter what level of due diligence it applied to those relationships or how scrupulously managed and law-abiding the firearm manufacturer itself happened to be, would be punished by the state for participating in this sector of lawful, constitutionally-protected commerce.

Simply put, the bill would isolate and segregate firearm manufacturers out of the innumerable types of lawful businesses operating in California and REQUIRE banks to discriminate against them or face grave financial consequences and perhaps even shareholder actions for breach of fiduciary duty.

According to a press release announcing the bill, “the state manages $3.1 trillion in banking transactions within a fiscal year.” Wikipedia describes California as having “the largest sub-national economy in the world,” with a nominal GDP that is exceeded only by four entire nations. Meanwhile, California has been cited as having the most burdensome tax structure in America. Its per capita state and local spending has also been ranked as the 6th highest in the nation. It is, therefore, unlikely that any bank operating in California could or would be willing to forgo any sort of business relationship with the state, merely to continue servicing its gun manufacturing clients.

Min himself was not coy about his intentions in announcing the bill, stating it would “force Wall Street to make a choice between the blood money offered by the gun industry and doing business with the State of California.” He also said it would send a “strong market signal that the State of California will not, either directly or indirectly, finance gun violence.”

It is telling that doing business with lawful gun manufacturers is indistinguishable in Min’s mind with financing “gun violence.” California gun owners and gun businesses have been hearing for years that additional burdens on their rights and livelihoods are necessary to enhance public safety. But having achieved the most gun-controlled state in the nation is not enough for the likes of Dave Min. Now, extremists like him are forced to admit they simply want to stamp out the firearm industry altogether.

Meanwhile, pro-gun states like Texas are taking affirmative action to combat discrimination against lawful, financially-sound businesses in the firearm industry. Banks that have caved to anti-gun politics are starting to experience real consequences in the Lone Star State, with Citigroup recently having been disqualified from a $3.4 billion municipal bond deal over its own refusal to conduct business with law-abiding members of the firearm industry. Similar legislation is now pending in Congress.

To date, it is not clear that Min’s bill is attracting much support, even among the firearm prohibitionists who compose the majority of the California State Legislature. But its very introduction does indeed send a “strong signal” that given the chance, gun controllers would end lawful firearm sales entirely.

The NRA, for its part, doesn’t intend to give them that chance and will oppose this and any other legislation that seeks to cripple the industries that serve America’s law-abiding gun owners.


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/yBizVgM
via IFTTT

DOD Suicide Report Long on ‘Gun Control’ But Short on Who’s at Risk and Why

Is a report ignoring the basics and telling servicemembers they’re not really trusted the best way to help those in serious pain and immediate need? (U.S. Army/Facebook)

U.S.A. – -(Ammoland.com)- “Today, the Suicide Prevention and Response Independent Review Committee (SPRIRC) released their independent report, providing their findings and recommendations,” DoD announced Friday. “The Department of Defense has taken note of the SPRIRC’s work and will use it to enhance their current approach in three key priority areas. These areas include fostering quality of life, building healthy climates and cultures, addressing stigma as a barrier to help-seeking, and promoting a culture of lethal means safety.”

That means focusing on guns, and considering that’s what the majority of service suicides use to end their lives, that’s understandable. What’s arguable, though, is whether putting the major emphasis on means neglects the important questions of “Who?” and “Why?”

With a team of 10 experts and a price tag of $2.4M, it doesn’t seem unreasonable to expect the 115-page “Preventing Suicide in the U.S. Military: Recommendations from the Suicide Prevention and Response Independent Review Committee” report to identify at-risk personnel subsets more prone to suicide within the greater military population, instead of one-size-fits-all programs requiring administrative bureaucracies and facility improvements (and some cost estimates for those shouldn’t have been too much to ask), and, of course, across-the-board restrictions on guns.

That’s what this does, and while that fits in with the Administration’s biases and goals, as with all “commonsense gun safety” schemes that focus on the inanimate object, it completely ignores the reality that firearm restrictions don’t stop those motivated to acquiring them for abusive purposes. They have no problem doing so.

The term “firearm” shows up 132 times in the report. The “recommendations” include things that have been tried over and over again for years in civilian life – and never worked – as well as some military-specific infringements. Among the “solutions” identified by the Review Committee:

  • Substitute real due process with “procedural due process regarding the collection and recording of information relating to the lawful acquisition, possession, ownership, carrying, or other use of a privately owned firearm or weapon by military personnel and civilian employees of the DoD.”
  • Have the lawyers figure out a way to bypass current legal protections so that “information about firearm acquisition, possession, ownership, carrying, or other use of a privately owned firearm or weapon by military personnel and civilian employees of the DoD can be legally collected by program evaluators.”
  • Mandate “safety training” for privately owned firearms, with five-year renewals.
  • “Implement a 7-day waiting period for any firearm purchased on DoD property.”
  • “Develop a national database for recording serial numbers of firearms purchased on DoD property.” – Presumably, that information will still be available and accessible by a changeable list of “authorized persons” yet to be determined even after the servicemember has retired.
  • “Implement a 4-day waiting period for ammunition purchases on DoD property to follow purchases and receipt of firearms purchased on DoD property.”
  • “On DoD property, raise the minimum age for purchasing firearms and ammunition to 25 years.”

There’s more: Locks. Notifying command of purchases. Registration. Living quarters restrictions. A total gun ban for visitors. How much of this is already required has not been stated. Evidently, it wasn’t required that the committee know.

But to show that they haven’t fixated exclusively on guns, the committee also recommends retrofitting shower and window curtain rods, and closet rods that “can ‘break away’ with excessive load” (they don’t already?) That and banning discounts on and promotion of “energy drinks.”

There’s also an expectation that nominal training will allow store clerks to practice psychoanalysis without a license:

“Require Military Exchange personnel to complete skills-based training designed to recognize indicators of elevated emotional distress and effective methods for interacting with and responding to acutely distressed customers. Military Exchange personnel who sell firearms and ammunition may be ideally positioned to identify and intervene with at-risk military personnel experiencing acute emotional distress. DSPO should create and implement customized suicide prevention training for Military Exchange personnel who sell firearms and ammunition. The training should include content focused on observable indicators of emotional distress and skills training focused on approaching and effectively responding to distressed customers.”

At this point, it doesn’t seem out of line to ascertain the qualifications of the experts returning such advice in exchange for a healthy chunk of taxpayer money. The study’s “lead” is identified as Dr. Gayle Iwamasa, who, in addition to “serv[ing] as the National Inpatient Mental Health Program Director in the VA Central Office (VACO), Office of Mental Health and Suicide Prevention (OMHSP), Department of Veterans Affairs (VA),” also “co-leads OMHSP’s diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts.”

That’s a relatively recent term— looking back through the Internet Archive, just in 2016, Dictionary.com treated “D.E.I.” as either “Dutch East Indies” or the Latin word for “God.”  It would appear it was not until mid-2021 that the term was updated on that site to include “diversity, equity, and inclusion.”

That makes it fair to wonder what recent, sudden, and dramatic social changes, expectations, and pressures are service members now being subjected to, and do those changes factor into suicides? Especially noting that the DoD press release cited “addressing stigma as a barrier to help-seeking”…?

Does the new “woke” military culture, with the potential to be humiliatingly and publicly “canceled” if one falls afoul of command and peer expectations, play a role?

What about reports that recruiting shortfalls have resulted in the Army lowering physical and academic standards? Is there a corresponding lowering of emotional health? And does lowering standards for women have any effect? The Committee apparently didn’t see much need to explore this.

Are suicides evenly distributed across the board, or do age, race, and orientation factor in, as they do in the civilian population? How and how much, and if so, wouldn’t allocating expenditures to address those special needs better serve suffering servicemembers, instead of, say, “light-blocking window coverings”? (And note all of the times expansion of “behavioral health” is mentioned—at times it seems this tax-funded report is being used as a fundraising appeal for the behavioral health industry.)

“You and your families sacrifice every day for us,” the Review Committee told Service Members in their “Foreword” to the report. “You deserve excellence, dignity, and respect, and to have your voices heard. Our freedom and national security depend on each and every one of you, and we endeavor to work equally hard to support you in the ways we can.”

How lumping the good in with the bad and the healthy in with the troubled, ignoring politically inconvenient realities, and mandating increased restrictions on the fundamental rights of all demonstrates excellence, dignity, and respect is not explained. Such “equity” seems a curious way of saying “Thank you for your service.”

On the plus side, Lloyd Austin and Joe Biden have something new to show the press besides Obama-era empathy pregnancy bellies and high heels. They can act like they’re doing something about the mess that years of mismanagement and neglect of basics created and are making worse.

Don’t think for a moment the Russians and Chinese haven’t noticed.


About David Codrea:

David Codrea is the winner of multiple journalist awards for investigating/defending the RKBA and a long-time gun owner rights advocate who defiantly challenges the folly of citizen disarmament. He blogs at “The War on Guns: Notes from the Resistance,” is a regularly featured contributor to Firearms News, and posts on Twitter: @dcodrea and Facebook.

David Codrea



from https://ift.tt/S7Q62Ob
via IFTTT

Plaintiffs Request Injunction Against Tennessee Parks Statue

Virus Shutdown Threatens Constitutional Carry Bills in Tennessee, iStock-884202954
A lawsuit was filed by multiple people and Gun Owners Foundation against Bill Lee, the governor of the state of Tennessee. IMG iStock-884202954

On February 16, 2023, a lawsuit was filed by Stephen L. Hughes, Duncan O’Mara, Elaine Kehel, Gun Owners of America, Inc., and Gun Owners Foundation against Bill Lee, in his official capacity as the governor of the state of Tennessee. See Stephen L. Hughes et al., v. Bill Lee, Chancery Court for the 28th Judicial District, Gibson County, No: 24475. The plaintiffs seek a determination by a state court that Tennessee’s “parks statute” (Tennessee Code Annotated § 39-17-1311) and Tennessee’s state-wide “gun free zone statute” (Tennessee Code Annotated § 39-17-1307) are unconstitutional under the Tennessee Constitution.

At the same time, the plaintiffs filed a motion with the trial court asking for the issuance of a preliminary injunction to prohibit the state from enforcing those 2 specific statutes. (See TFA website for copy)

TFA has already heard that several legislators are aware of the Gibson county lawsuit and are potentially considering whether the Legislature should step in and look at whether the United States Supreme Court’s opinion in in New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen would require that responsible legislative action looks at repealing or amending these laws to eliminate state infringements that they create and which are now prohibited by the 2nd and 14th Amendments according to the Supreme Court.

At least one Tennessee appellate court decision has already concluded that the Supreme Court’s decision in Bruen required that a local government practice in Tennessee be declared unconstitutional. See, Columbia Housing & Redevelopment Corp. v. Braden, M2021-00329-COA-R3-CV (Oct, 13, 2022.)


About Tennessee Firearms Association:

The Tennessee Firearms Association is dedicated to defending the right to keep and bear arms and promoting the responsible use, ownership, and carrying of firearms.

  • TFA Website: www.tennesseefirearms.com
  • TFA PAC: www.tfalac.org
  • Facebook TFA Page: https://ift.tt/j8NrlZt
  • Facebook TFA Group: https://ift.tt/EkQqGo6
  • Twitter: @Tennfirearms

Tennessee Firearms Association



from https://ift.tt/OEg0bJt
via IFTTT

Saturday, February 25, 2023

California Rifle Pistol Association Files Appellants’ Brief for AB 2571

California Flag Guns Gun Control
Seemingly unsatisfied with attacking just one aspect of the Bill of Rights, the state last year passed AB 2571 to prohibit any communication or marketing relating to firearms that might be “attractive to minors”. IMG iStock 884191010

California, USA – Seemingly unsatisfied with attacking just one aspect of the Bill of Rights, the state last year passed AB 2571 to prohibit any communication or marketing relating to firearms that might be “attractive to minors”.

The law allows for fines of up to $25,000 for violations and initially put all ranges, associations, camps, clubs, FFLs, instructors, and youth organizations in jeopardy every time they sent out an email or placed an ad.  The law was slightly changed in the weeks following passage but only complicated the situation more.

CRPA moved immediately to stop the law from being implemented, filing a suit known as Junior Sports Magazine, Inc. v. Bonta.  In October, the Central District Court of California denied a preliminary injunction, a decision that CRPA is now appealing.

Recently, CRPA’s legal team filed its latest brief in the case, citing a host of First and Second Amendment tests that are simply not met by the new law and asserting that the merits of the challenge remain sound.  Oral arguments may be ordered in the case and would likely take place later this summer.

“Attacks on ‘gun culture’ are a fact of life with the California legislature, but AB 2571 is egregious even by their own standards,” states CRPA President & General Counsel Chuck Michel.

CRPA will keep fighting to stop this law and have it ruled unconstitutional.  Stay tuned to our emails, social media, and CRPA News for updates!


ABOUT California Rifle & Pistol Association

The California Rifle & Pistol Association (CRPA), founded in 1875, is a nonprofit membership and donor-supported organization with tens of thousands of members throughout California. We need you!CRPA logo



from https://ift.tt/NQrL6Zd
via IFTTT

Friday, February 24, 2023

President Trump Promises Concealed Carry Reciprocity When Reelected

WASHINGTON, D.C. -(Ammoland.com)- Former President Donald Trump vows to institute concealed carry reciprocity if the American public chooses him to be the next President of the United States.

“I will protect the right of self-defense everywhere it is under siege, and I will sign concealed carry reciprocity,” President Trump said. “Your Second Amendment does not end at the state line.”

Trump made the statement in a video address released on Rumble. The ex-President is making a run for the White House after losing in the highly contested 2020 Presidential elections. He seems to be trying to appeal to gun owners after losing some support after the Trump-era bump stock ban. The former President faces a tough race against Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who is expected to announce his candidacy any time now. Governor DeSantis is also courting gun owners by vowing to sign “Constitutional Carry” in the Sunshine State.

In the video titled “End Crime and Restore Law and Order,” the President lays down a plan to fight crime in cities that have skyrocketed since Joe Biden took office.

The video will be sure to ruffle the feathers of some Democrats and libertarians because he targets not only leftist policies but also policies that libertarians consider civil rights violations.

President Trump vowed to make a “record investment” in hiring police nationwide. He also pitched “liability protections” for law enforcement officers. Libertarians and Democrats alike have railed against qualified immunity, which prevents police from being sued for violating the rights of suspects. These groups claim that these protections give law enforcement the green light for civil rights violations. Police organizations counter these arguments by claiming that these protections help prevent frivolous lawsuits against officers.

Trump also vows to block federal funding for police organizations unless those agencies enact policies such as “stop and frisk.” Many on both sides of the aisle claim that “stop and frisk” violates Fourth Amendment protections against illegal searches and seizures and the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process clause. The technique was used heavily in New York City under Michael Bloomberg before being stopped over Constitutional concerns. Proponents claim that it helps reduce crime because criminals do not know when they will be searched.

This controversial policy isn’t the first time Trump has faced backlash over delaying Due Process.

Shortly after a mass murder in Las Vegas where 50 people were killed, President Trump called for “red flag” laws. He suggested law enforcement take away guns first and then worry about the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process clause. This stance and the pushing of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) to ban bump stocks through Chevron deference led many Gun Rights groups to speak out against the Trump policies.

Trump also would require law enforcement to crack down on drug use. He also would block funding to law enforcement agencies that refuse to cooperate with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). So-called sanctuary cities have sprung up around the country where local law enforcement is forbidden from working with ICE. He also blamed liberal prosecutors and the practices of cashless bail and not charging for petty crimes. The former President considers this surrendering American cities to violent criminals. He promised to direct the Department of Justice (DOJ) to open investigations into liberal prosecutor’s offices in cities like San Francisco, LA, and Chicago.

Trump also said he would order the DOJ and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to dismantle street gangs through stricter punishment for crimes. Some of these punishments include the death penalty for drug dealers and human traffickers. The United States is the only Western nation with the death penalty. There are less than ten countries in the world that have the death penalty for drug dealing, and it would be an extremely long shot to expand capital offenses to drug dealing.

He also says he will send the National Guard into major cities. He claims this is to protect the rights of Americans. He noted that the January 6 unrest would have been prevented if Nancy Pelosi had accepted National Guard assistance. He also blamed the mayor of D.C. for turning down the National Guard’s help.

Trump also said he would end the “leftist takeover” of school discipline and juvenile justice. He says that many carjackers are 13, 14, and 15. He said he would order the DOJ to overhaul federal standards for disciplining minors. The former President said that when the youth are “going wild, the consequences will be swift, certain, and strong.”

Trump finishes his plan by promising to secure the border and wage war on the cartels. He claims that the United States never had a border as secure as it was under his administration. He calls the border under the Biden administration the worst in the world and possibly of all time. Biden has eased restrictions leading to an influx of migrants that has caused a crisis at the border.

Trump will face stiff competition in the Republican primary, with many Republicans ready to move on from the Trump era. At the same time, he still has a rabid support base.


About John Crump

John is a NRA instructor and a constitutional activist. John has written about firearms, interviewed people of all walks of life, and on the Constitution. John lives in Northern Virginia with his wife and sons and can be followed on Twitter at @crumpyss, or at www.crumpy.com.

John Crump



from https://ift.tt/uXFd1HI
via IFTTT

Another “Mass Shooting” Because Those Who “Hate Guns” Are Blind To The Solution

Opinion

New York – -(AmmoLand.com)- Mass shootings need not happen but continue to happen because of ineffective security measures.

Video footage shows the assailant, Anthony McRae, walking through an unlocked door with a handgun.

Yet, security officers didn’t stop him. A “mop-up” operation occurred after the fact, much too late to save lives.

Mass shooting incidents don’t occur at our airports or in federal courts and office buildings because they are “hardened” against criminal violence.

But the Biden Administration and the “woke” community oppose “hardening” schools and universities.

Instead, they focus attention on futile gestures, like trying to discern a lunatic’s motive and decrying “guns,” “gun violence,” “far-right extremism,” and the Second Amendment.

Such topics satisfy the predilections of some. They also deflect discussion away from solving a root problem and direct it toward reinforcing a narrative—one in service to an agenda. And the agenda is aimed at achieving a long-sought goal: erasing the exercise of the natural law right to armed self-defense.

The Country is not served well by this. The MSU tragedy was senseless but, unfortunately, predictable.

Places of learning remain both “soft targets” and desirable targets. Sadly, “mass shootings” will recur. That is a dead certainty.


About The Arbalest Quarrel:

Arbalest Group created `The Arbalest Quarrel’ website for a special purpose. That purpose is to educate the American public about recent Federal and State firearms control legislation. No other website, to our knowledge, provides as deep an analysis or as thorough an analysis. Arbalest Group offers this information free.

For more information, visit: www.arbalestquarrel.com.

Arbalest Quarrel



from https://ift.tt/M1Zgyb4
via IFTTT

Debunking the Gun-Banners’ False Constitutional Carry Claims

Constitution Glock iStock-697763612
Debunking the Gun-Banners’ False Constitutional Carry Claims, iStock-697763612

Nearly every anti-gun group in the country has descended upon Tallahassee to try to stop Florida from becoming the 26th state to allow residents and visitors to carry concealed firearms without a permission slip from the government.

It’s an important mission for the gun-ban industry, because once Gov. Ron DeSantis signs the bill – and he will – a majority of states will allow unlicensed or permitless carry. For pro-gun advocates, this would be a significant victory in the war to restore our Second Amendment rights, and the other team will do anything they can to prevent that from happening.

It’s important to point out that neither Florida’s HB 543 nor its companion bill, SB 150, are traditional constitutional-carry bills, since neither bill legalizes the open carry of arms. True constitutional carry allows gun owners to decide for themselves whether to carry arms openly or concealed. Despite Republican super-majorities in both the House and the Senate, and a governor who’s promised to sign “constitutional carry” legislation, open carry was not included in either bill. We still have not been told why, at least not officially.

In what has been called “smart bundling,” SB 150 also includes numerous school-safety provisions, such as expanding Florida’s School Guardian program, adding funds for hardening schools, providing additional money for gun-sniffing dogs, clarifying zero-tolerance policies and ensuring every law enforcement agency has an active-shooter policy. So, a vote against the bill can be seen as a vote against school safety.

Regardless of what the bill is called or its other offerings, the very thought of restoring more gun rights – especially in Florida – has brought the gun-banners out in droves. We’ve seen members of Everytown, Demanding Moms, Demanding Students, Giffords, Brady and Florida’s extremely anti-gun League of Women Voters all shuffle to the mic. Their testimony before House and Senate committees has been interesting, desperate and at times, comical. If the gun banners sent their A-team to Tallahassee and this is the best they can do, freedom will most certainly prevail.

It’s clear the gun-banners’ moves are well organized and orchestrated. Too many of their objections seemingly come from the same playbook. Keep in mind anti-gunners have phones, Skype and Zoom, too. They’re sharing information and ideas. Florida has become their latest battle template. They are throwing a lot of crap against the wall. That which sticks likely will be used in the next state they attempt to victimize.

Here are some of the lowlights of their testimony.

‘Untrained carry’

Currently, unless the gun owner has a DD 214, they must provide proof of training before qualifying for a Florida Concealed Weapon or Firearm License, or CWFL. One of the byproducts of HB 543 and SB 150 is an end to this training requirement because a CWFL will no longer be needed to carry a concealed firearm.

As you can imagine, more than a few rabid Demanders railed against “untrained carry,” even though nothing could be further from the truth.

Their tactic was unwittingly bolstered by Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri, who serves as the legislative chair of the powerful Florida Sheriff’s Association. Gualtieri testified about how poor some of this mandatory training had become. He described several firearm instructors who only required students to shoot one round into a water barrel before issuing them the certificate needed to obtain a CWFL.

Gualtieri’s comments, which are somewhat dated, set off a firestorm among the anti-gunners. Rather than allowing unlicensed carry, they said, the state should fix these training issues. The bills’ Republican supporters never adequately explained how any government requirement, even a training requirement, infringes upon the Second Amendment.

The gun banners never acknowledged that most Floridians who choose to carry a concealed firearm will seek professional training first, nor did they ever mention the more than 1.5 million well-trained veterans who call Florida home, many of whom have already put their training to use downrange.

‘No one wants the bill’

Most of the pro-gun advocates who testified at the House and Senate hearings said they supported the bill, but they wanted it amended to include open carry. One Demanding Mom seized upon this. “Apparently no one’s for this bill today,” she said. Several Democrats on this committee echoed her comments and called for the bill to be withdrawn.

It should be noted that NRA, GOA, NAGR and Florida Carry, Inc., have all voiced support for the legislation. Sure, it is hoped that it will be amended to include open carry, but it is still the most significant restoration of our gun rights since 1987. This was ignored by the legacy media who covered the hearings.

Frivolous amendments

It is clear the Democrats tried to amend these bills to death. However, every amendment the Democrats tried to tack on failed, which is a good thing for gun owners since they would have scuttled the legislation. Here are some of their amendments.

The Democrats wanted gun owners to:

  • Obtain $100,000 worth of insurance if they “opt out” of the CWFL program and carry concealed.
  • Be prohibited from possessing homemade firearms.
  • Be prohibited from carrying in grocery stores, gas stations, music venues or any religious institution.
  • Be prohibited from open carrying at concert venues and polling places. (Under current law, open carry at polling places is already prohibited, as is concealed carry at polling places.)
  • Be prohibited from carrying firearms in cars.
  • Submit to background checks for private sales or when a firearm is loaned to family members for hunting or recreation.
  • Take a firearm safety class and pass a written exam.
  • Provide a written statement from a Florida physician certifying they are mentally fit and free of drug abuse.
  • Pass a mental health exam and drug screen.
  • Take and pass a one-day firearm class that includes a live-fire test.
  • Establish secure storage for guns and ammunition, which would be inspected by a law enforcement officer.
  • Submit to fingerprinting and a background check.
  • Be limited to carrying only one firearm at a time.
  • Be prohibited from carrying a firearm if convicted of domestic violence. (Florida law already prohibits someone with a domestic-violence conviction from carrying a firearm.)

False Equivalencies, false statements  

Throughout the bills’ three committee hearings there were numerous comparisons between driving a car and carrying a firearm: “You need a license to drive a car so you should also need a license to carry a gun,” they said.  To be clear, driving is a privilege, but carrying a firearm is a constitutional right. Therefore, you don’t need a license to exercise a constitutional right.

Both HB 543 and SB 150 enjoy strong support from law enforcement, including the Florida Sheriff’s Association, the Florida Police Chiefs Association and the Police Benevolent Association, which represents rank-and-file officers and deputies. Despite this strong support, nearly everyone who testified against the legislation claimed that law enforcement opposed these bills because it would make their job more difficult. Even after Sheriff Gualtieri testified that the bills would not prove problematic for his deputies, the false claims continued unabated.

Going forward

Florida’s unlicensed concealed-carry bills are rocketing through the state legislature. Since the Republicans have super-majorities in both houses, no roadblocks are foreseen. The next legislative session begins March 7 and Gov. DeSantis will likely sign this legislation into law far sooner than its July 1st effective date.

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/FN0hEYl
via IFTTT

Discover Becomes First Gun-Store Tracking Credit Card

By Larry Keane

Florida Will Act Against Credit Card Companies Who Target the 2nd Amendment, iStock-471542783
Discover credit cards needs to go slogan shopping. The old ones won’t work now that the credit card financial services company has decided to go along with the newly-assigned Merchant Category Code (MCC) for purchases at firearm retailers. IMG iStock-471542783

Discover credit cards needs to go slogan shopping. The old ones won’t work now that the credit card financial services company has decided to go along with the newly-assigned Merchant Category Code (MCC) for purchases at firearm retailers.

Here are the past slogans that won’t work anymore.

  • It pays to Discover.
  • The Card That Pays You Back.
  • We treat you like you’d treat you.
  • Here to help. Not to sell.

Somehow, they all seem disingenuous now that Discover is selling out customers using their credit cards at firearm retailers.

Discover Financial Services announced it will begin using the new controversial codes in April. Reuters reported that Discover will become the first credit card company to use the specific code for purchases at a firearm retailer.

“We remain focused on continuing to protect and support lawful purchases on our network while protecting the privacy of cardholders,” Discover said in its statement to Reuters. To date, no other credit card providers have announced they will adopt the new code.

Discover will track purchases at firearm retailers but still won’t be able to see what is listed on the sales receipt. This was the brainchild of Andrew Ross Sorkin, a New York Times columnist who proposed that credit card companies and banks could play a pivotal role in ushering gun control outside of public policy channels.

‘Woke’ Banking Gone Wild

That idea of sidestepping Congress and state legislatures to have nameless and unaccountable Wall Street banking executives monitoring and even curtailing Second Amendment rights sounded too good to pass up for Amalgamated Bank’s CEO Priscilla Sims Brown. Amalgamated Bank, a “socially-responsible” bank, pressured the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) for the specific MCC to categorize firearm retailers. That’s the same bank that refuses to do business with anyone in the gun industry but bankrolls the Democratic National Committee and Political Action Committees, including Biden-Harris Democrats, Ready for Hillary (which is Hillary Clinton’s Super PAC), Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s (D-Mass.) Warren Democrats and former U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) PAC, among others.

Real Clear Investigations writer Ben Weingarten exposed the bank for what it truly is. “As the New York Times said of Amalgamated, it is ‘the left’s private banker.’”

Amalgamated Bank pressured the ISO to adopt Sorkin’s firearm retailer MCC proposal several times. The first time was in October of 2021, but was rejected. Amalgamated Bank tried again in February 2022 but was unsuccessful. But the third time was the charm. Sims Brown was encouraged by ISO to apply yet again in June 2022, just as Democratic Sen. Warren sent a heavy-handed letter, signed by nearly 30 U.S. senators and Congressional representatives, to payment processors pressuring them to get behind Amalgamated Bank’s “woke” MCC scheme.

In September of 2022, the ISO committee declined to endorse the proposed. But this time, on the very same day, the proposal was rebuffed for the third time; the matter was appealed to Geneva, Switzerland, where ISO is headquartered. This immediate appeal did not follow ISO’s prescribed policy for appealing matters. On that same day, ISO reversed the decision and adopted the code.  This very unusual process by ISO raises serious questions about the politicization of ISO standard setting. It is something Congress should investigate.

Suspicious Undefined

“The new code will allow us to fully comply with our duty to report suspicious activity and illegal gun sales to authorities without blocking or impeding legal gun sales,” Sims Brown said at the time.

Suspicious activity is never clearly defined. That could be defined later since Sorkin openly said creating the codes is just “the beginning.”

Gun control advocates see this as the proverbial camel’s nose below the tent. NSSF warned that these heavy-handed backdoor intrusions into the free exercise of Second Amendment rights is alarming. Sims Brown and Amalgamated Bank, through an international standards-setting organization, is opening the door to see who is shopping at gun stores. Right now, they can’t drill down to see if a customer was buying a shotgun and ammunition or sleeping bags and a tent. NSSF is working with Congress, state legislatures, and attorneys general to prevent this and protect the industry and those it serves.

The other large payment networks all announced back in September they would implement the code and will soon follow Discovery’s lead when they update their network rules.

Discover is the first credit card company to fall in line with this “woke” banking credit card code scheme. They’re just two percent of the credit card business, but they might want to use their own cards to buy new slogans. The old ones of promising not to sell out their customers no longer apply.


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/nHeBZzr
via IFTTT

Thursday, February 23, 2023

“Gun Violence” is Fake News

The term “gun-violence” is used to blame guns for human behavior in an attempt to push society towards supporting the elimination or destruction of our 2nd Amendment. The narrative and rhetoric are just tools used to achieve those ends.

There is no such thing as “gun violence.” What we are talking about is human violence, but people who believe more gun legislation is good for our society, will ignore the fact that “the person” is responsible for the action, not the gun. Those folks who refuse to succumb to the dishonest rhetoric and false narratives surrounding the gun conversation are starting to speak out.

Violence can only be committed by a person or animal. Violence is a behavior. Putting the word “gun” before the word “violence” is misleading because it creates a premise that doesn’t exist. It creates imagery in the mind that could never occur in reality. Those who profit from this type of rhetoric, need it because if they had to tell the truth and discuss human behavioral issues, they would not have the likes of CNN promoting their sham. Isn’t it interesting that the FBI will list the number of murders and the weapons used by number on their website, giving an accurate breakdown for informative purposes. Yet the anti-gun folks will only focus on gun related deaths and label them, “gun violence.”

Mark Bryant, Founder of the “Gun Violence Archives,” uses this and other similar terms in what would seem an attempt to perpetuate an irrational fear of guns. Mark also claims to have created the term “mass shooting” to qualify four people being hit with a bullet. This is similar to Barack Obama’s executive action to change “mass killing” from four to three people in an attempt to qualify more gun related deaths in his push for overreaching national gun laws. Of course, these terms are used in a way that encourage people to view guns as the problem and redefining the word “mass” (indicating a large quantity) as only 3 is clearly a way to justify the use of rhetoric for the purpose of fear and hype.

Is it a coincidence that those who create this type of anti-gun rhetoric fail to share the fact that guns are used defensively between 1.67 million and 2.5 million times per year in America. Have they not read the studies? Maybe they just don’t want you to read them. Maybe the anti-gun folks should start using the term “gun benevolence,” because for every 1 time a person uses a gun to do harm, there are 174 times when a gun is used to stop an act of violence and potentially save lives.

Those who profit from violence will also claim they want to save lives but in order to do that, they need you to support illegal violations of the 2nd Amendment. Portraying themselves as wanting to prevent suicide is often a good tool to emotionally coerce large numbers of people. Many of these folks will claim that most suicides wouldn’t exist had a gun not been present. Bloomberg funded “The Trace” claimed that “Research indicates that red flag laws and waiting periods are more effective at reducing firearm suicide.”

Do we ever stop to question this and other similar claims? Do we ever stop to ask how they are tracking suicides that never actually happened? How is it possible to measure something that never occurred? Is it likely that a person intent on killing themself would simply decide not to do it because they couldn’t find a gun? How do they know that even if a person attempted suicide and failed by other means that they would have gone through with it if they had a gun? The truth is they don’t, yet they hypothesize so you will believe that suicides would be reduced in the absence of guns even though we have data showing that not to be true. Australia is a perfect example of the suicide rate not being affected after a gun ban.

The suicide angle helps them portray themselves as caring, while guilting those who don’t know any better into supporting gun restrictions. The “gun violence” narrative helps those lacking critical thought believe that guns are lurking around every corner just waiting to attack.


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
Dan Wos


from https://ift.tt/8s1wTy2
via IFTTT

Merchant Codes Show for Gun Owners It Doesn’t Pay to Discover

With Merchant Category Codes being used to trigger Suspicious Activity Reports, cash is king.

“Discover Financial Services, a provider of credit cards, told Reuters it will allow its network to track purchases at gun retailers come April, making it the first among its peers to publicly give a date for moving ahead with the initiative, which is aimed at helping authorities probe gun-related crimes,” the news agency announced last Friday in an “exclusive” report.

“We remain focused on continuing to protect and support lawful purchases on our network while protecting the privacy of cardholders,” Discover told Reuters. “We were following the industry for consistent implementation.”

“While the codes will not show specific items purchased, some Republican politicians have spoken out against the move, arguing it could violate the privacy of U.S. citizens lawfully buying guns,” Reuters notes.

Not just Republican politicians. While two dozen state attorneys general have warned “the CEOs of credit card giants Visa, American Express, and Mastercard” against implementing the codes, much of that has been driven by the demands of gun-owning constituents. AmmoLand writers, as well as other gun interest publications, have been on top of developments since they first became known, as have all the major “gun rights” groups.

But if the merchant codes don’t go to the SKU (stock keeping unit) level and identify specific items purchased, some may question what the big deal is. For that, look to the proponents of the codes and how they have announced they intend to use them.

“Banks are developing technology to identify potential mass shooters, according to a CEO backing the push to get credit-card companies to more closely track gun purchases,” Daily Business Review/Bloomberg News (!) claimed in November. “Detection scenarios’ are in the works that, if triggered, would prompt banks to file a Suspicious Activity Report to the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.”

When law enforcement makes assumptions and suspects that someone may be armed and dangerous, what can happen was just acted out in North Carolina: A SWAT team lit up an unarmed man complying with its commands.

It’s fair to wonder if Discover’s risk management department has considered what the company’s liability would be should one of their “Suspicious Activity Reports” be the catalyst for a similar series of unfortunate events. Trying to excuse that by saying reports are made on other “suspicious” transactions doesn’t alter the fact that when guns are assumed to be prominent factors in an encounter, the danger level goes up.

DBR/Bloomberg’s ”go-to” source for its gushing press release masked as a news report was Amalgamated Bank Chief Executive Officer Priscilla Sims Brown. She has been touting for months what could also be described as Department of Pre-Crime “snitchware” to any media outlet that will lend her its megaphone. And relevant to note, per The New York Times, Amalgamated, majority owned by Workers United, “has aggressively carved out a position as the left’s private banker, leveraging deep connections with the Democratic establishment.”

As pointed out in a prior AmmoLand article, Workers United is a Service Employees International Union (SEIU) affiliate, which, per The Washington Free Beacon, “rakes in millions from Dem campaigns, liberal orgs.” And the SEIU, just to be clear, has organized rallies and marched in solidarity with communists.

A (disputed) quote about capitalists selling rope comes to mind.

For its part, Discover, at this writing, appears to be keeping a low profile about the new merchant category code (5723) on its press release page and on its Twitter feed.  Perhaps that latter forum will change as more gun owners become aware of its part in the unauthorized feeding of its customers’ financial transactions to the feds. And perhaps blowback will involve more than disapproving comments.

Because the reality is, any gun owner who does not cancel his Discover card is giving aid and comfort to the enemy. Any FFL who accepts them is willfully giving up customer information.

In this case, and seeing as how the financial industry seems overwhelmingly committed to banking on disarmament, making purchases using cash seems prudent if one doesn’t want a transaction to trigger special government attention.

That seems like the kind of sentiment the far-reaching National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF), the firearms industry trade association,  could influence — if it wanted to. Combined with the warned actions by the above-cited attorneys general and support from politicians beholden to gun-owning voters, other credit card companies that “declined to comment to Reuters on what their schedules for introducing the new code are,” may see what a can of worms they’re needlessly opening.

Because it’s not like any of this will stop “mass shootings,” especially where they’re most likely to occur. Those serious about reducing those would do well to instead focus on so-called “gun-free zones.”


About David Codrea:

David Codrea is the winner of multiple journalist awards for investigating/defending the RKBA and a long-time gun owner rights advocate who defiantly challenges the folly of citizen disarmament. He blogs at “The War on Guns: Notes from the Resistance,” is a regularly featured contributor to Firearms News, and posts on Twitter: @dcodrea and Facebook.

David Codrea



from https://ift.tt/swzDA7B
via IFTTT