A chronicle of vile and pernicious truths.
About This Blog
The right to keep and bear arms, occasional attempts at satire, frequent recourse to sarcasm, and anything else I can think of. Oh yeah, and pipe smoking. Sometimes H.P. Lovecraft. And obscure Monty Python references when applicable.

Email:


More about me.
Support This Blog!

Any and all proceeds go to this humble blogger's ammo & gun fund. (Because everybody else has one).
Blogonomicon CafePress shop

My Amazon.com Wish List
Filthy Lucre
I've been published!
Hell's Hangmen
What really happened to the Anasazi people? Was Jack the Ripper someone's second choice? What was the famous Ranger tracking in Gypsy's Gulch? These and other questions are answered in Hell's Hangmen: Horror in the Old West as twenty-two of today's most talented writers bring you fantastical tales with a Western Flavor. Thrill to those eerie days of yesteryear...

You can order it by clicking here.


Most recent update: 5 August 2007.
Most Recently Abhorréd
This Month
October 2005
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31
Year Archive
Local Weather
View Article  Translation: "I Feel More Self-Righteous as a Defensless Victim"
News from North Carolina:
One example, Valone said, is a recently passed requirement that people who obtain domestic violence restraint orders against perpetrators be provided information about how to obtain a concealed handgun permit.
'We advocated this law in response to an increasing number of murders by domestic abusers who ignore restraining orders,' Valone said.

Price disagreed with that change in the law, saying she didn't think it was a good thing to introduce guns into domestic violence situations.

'For them (gun advocates) the gun is the solution to most problems,' she said. 'For us, we feel like the gun makes the problem worse and often creates the problem.
Yes, if a woman decides to protect herself from an abusive other, and chooses a gun for protection, it's her own fault she got beaten up in the past because now she has a gun. Did I get it right?

Price also said she likes the restrictions that the law places on permit holders.

'When I go to the Y to exercise, I see a sign that says don't carry concealed weapons here,' she said. 'We like those restrictions.'
They must have some incredible signs, if it only takes a sign to prevent unlawful violent attack at the Y. Amazing. Can I get some of those signs here? I'd put them up everywhere, if they work that well.
View Article  Handgun Carrier Discrimination in New Hampshire
The Union Leader and New Hampshire Sunday News reports:
'The bottom line is that this type of thing shouldn't be happening in a state where (carrying a pistol) is perfectly allowed,' said [Peggy S.] Dean, a lawyer and consulting counsel to Gun Owners of New Hampshire, the gun-rights advocacy organization.

Dean, in a routine followed often in the 10 years she has lived on Warren Street in Concord, was taking a late-night walk on June 16. She was on Pleasant Street out by St. Paul School when state trooper Abbott Presby stopped his cruiser.

'He must have asked me six times for a driver's license. Then he proceeded to ask what I was doing there and I kept asking him, 'Are you detaining me?' Dean said.

She didn't have her driver's license. She had a cellular phone, a credit card, her license to carry a concealed pistol and her Glock 23 in a nylon, neon-pink fanny pack.

Dean wrote a letter to state police Col. Frederick H. Booth citing her constitutional rights and complaining of her 'detention' by Presby.

'Had I not vigorously, repeatedly and firmly asserted that I wanted to (be) released from this detention I could have been illegally held there indefinitely. I firmly believe that it was only after I explained to trooper Presby that I was an attorney that the impetus to release me awakened,' Dean wrote.

Three months later, state police Lt. Mark J. Myrdek responded, writing that a review of the incident had found Presby's 'actions and conduct were justified, lawful and proper.'
Of course they were. I would have stopped her too, for openly carrying a neon-pink fanny pack.

More...
On March 27, 2004, at about 9:15 p.m., three police officers in uniform and two detectives in plain clothes converged on Michael Pelletier as he thumbed through a book at Barnes & Noble store in Manchester. Pelletier and his wife had marked their 11th anniversary with dinner, then gone to the bookstore, where his coat stayed in the car. He had forgotten the change in attire left visible the holstered Glock 30 pistol tucked into his belt at his back.

A shopper telephoned police.

Pelletier said the officers 'basically grabbed me by the shoulder, disarmed me and took me out of the store. They ran my license and registration and the serial number on the gun and stood around lecturing me for 20 minutes. It was irritating, but at least I wasn't arrested.'

'What boggled my mind was that out of at least seven officers and dispatchers involved not one seemed to know that open carry is legal in New Hampshire and they basically treated this like they would a felony stop. . . . I wasn't doing anything illegal. I was minding my own business and I think they could muster the ability to treat me with courtesy and respect in that situation,' said Pelletier, who lives in Merrimack and is a West Coast transplant drawn here by the Free State Project's pick of New Hampshire in 2003 as the place to promote its minimal-government agenda.
Yes, they're professionals, after all, they should have been able to treat you that way. They should have known their own state laws.

Here's a good one:
Like Pelletier, David Ridley's move to New Hampshire was inspired by the Free State Project. He came from Texas, which he described as having restrictive gun licensing laws.
Compared to California/New York, no. Compared to New Hampshire/Vermont, yes. Compared to the U.S. Constitution, yes. If I were to leave Texas for that reason, I personally think I'd pick Vermont.

Furthermore...
'When you come to a place where the right is recognized by government and you've never had it before, it's a right you want to celebrate. At the same time, if you don't exercise the right, I think you will eventually lose it. So for me, open-carry is primarily a political thing,' said Ridley, who lives in Keene.

Ridley had changed jackets and was engrossed in lettering a placard on the hood of his car in a supermarket parking lot in Salem on March 21 when five police officers, responding to a citizen's call, asked about the holstered Glock 19 on his hip.

"They said, 'You alarmed a person who saw the gun.'"

'When that is the situation, they have to respond to the call. I understand that, but what was wrong was when they started talking about arresting me when I hadn't done anything illegal,' Ridley said.

In responding to a letter from Ridley, Salem Police Chief Paul T. Donovan wrote that his officers would continue to respond 'with an open mind' when a complaint comes in about someone carrying a firearm.
If I lived in New Hampshire, I would prefer that they respond with a thorough knowledge of their own state laws, rather than an open mind.

Lastly...
'In this day and age where people have committed some very violent attacks using firearms, it is understandable that people who do not understand the values of law-abiding firearms owners run scared. We need to work at improving our image with those who don't understand,' Donovan wrote.
This sounds like it was written by just a gun owner, but it was actually written by the police chief. I completely agree with his statement about improving "our" image, but I also must keep in mind that this was written in a lame attempt to excuse the incompetence of his own officers.
View Article  They didn't like being dogcatchers
Two Wilson County constables forced from office because they didn't bother getting their peace officer licenses within 270 days of getting elected:
Both men were being paid less than $200 a year to be constables in Wilson County - a role that traditionally carries little duties in the county, according to Wilson County Judge Marvin Quinney.

Quinney said sheriff's deputies handle most of the constable's work in Wilson County.
I don't know why the position of "constable" was ever created in this county. I think it must have just been so someone's cousin could wear a badge and look tough. Would you put yourself at risk by actually taking part in law-enforcement-type activities for only $200 a year? I wouldn't.
View Article  StatCounter seems to be broken
I know it's free, but this is the first time I've had any problems with it. It hasn't recorded any activity since about 6:30 AM yesterday. Am I talking to myself? Heh.
Welcome to...
Congratulations
For leaving comment #1,001!
Login
User name:
Password:
Remember me 
Search
Search all blogs
Write Your Representative

Write your representative about H.B. 1022!
Some sample letters are here.

Click here to sign the petition against H.R. 1022.
In Search of the Second Amendment

The TRUE story of the American right to arms is told by some of the greatest names in American constitutional law -- professors at Yale, UCLA, Fordham, George Washington University, George Mason University, and other institutions, as well as by lifelong scholars of the Second Amendment, such as Steve Halbrook, Dave Kopel, and Don Kates.

Free Wayne Webring


Free Wayne Webring

Home/Join | List | Next | Previous | Random

alt-webring.com

The Anti-PC League
Anti-PC League

Screw the U.N.

The Alliance of Free Blogs

"As you value your health and your reason, keep away from this blog."
--Glenn Reynolds

Miscellaneous


Blogroll Me!
Subscribe with Bloglines

PageRank Checking Icon
B-List Blogger
Get Firefox!



Blogonomicon

Grab this Headline Animator








I'm a Proud Citizen in
Technorati Cosmos

How about you?
Link Buttons