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
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
July 2006
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  Another odd search
Someone came here after using Compuserve's search engine to look for the phrase, "how lethal are black powder revolvers."

Heh.

Just as lethal as cartridge revolvers, sir.  They are only slower to reload.

The famous Walker Colt was the .44 magnum of its day, and according to some reports, with the right load could beat some .44 magnum rounds of today.
View Article  Texas State Senator Jeff Wentworth to introduce Castle Doctrine Bill
The Texas State Senate - Jeff Wentworth: SD 25 - News Release:
It is a long-held belief that a man's home is his castle.

The principle of the "Castle Doctrine" began in the 16th century with English common law which held that citizens had the right to protect themselves inside their homes.

When the 80th Legislature convenes in January, Texas legislators will have the opportunity to turn the concept of the "Castle Doctrine" into state law. I intend to file a bill which would ensure that Texans have the right to forcefully protect themselves and their families from criminals who invade their homes.

Under current Texas law, residents must first seek a means of escape before using force against an intruder. Homeowners who do not attempt to escape before using force may be criminally prosecuted for protecting themselves, their homes, and their families. And I believe that this is wrong.

I believe Texans should have the right to defend themselves and their families from criminals who break into their homes. My bill would not only protect victims of home invasions from criminal prosecution by the state, but also from possible civil litigation brought by criminals and/or their relatives.

Texans should not have to prove in court that their lives were directly threatened. The reasonable assumption that a home intruder naturally threatens the lives of a home's residents should become law.

Public opinion supports this legislation. A questionnaire in the newsletter I sent to voters of Senate District 25 in January asked if they supported the right of home residents to use deadly force against intruders, without first having to try to escape. Eighty-eight percent of the more than 16,000 respondents said they did.

My bill to ensure Texans' right to defend themselves in their own homes should make men and women feel safer in their own "castles."

Texas homeowners may also be interested in a bill that I intend to file to help rectify the lack of fairness in sales price disclosure. Currently, all taxable property must be appraised at its market value unless the law provides for a different value.

Because the law does not require a purchase price to be disclosed, appraisal districts rely on the multiple listing service (MLS) and other sources of information to assess property values.

The purchase price of commercial property, such as apartment buildings and high-end residential property, is not normally listed in MLS or otherwise disclosed. This prevents the property from being accurately valued and taxed, shifting the tax burden to most of the owners of residential property.

My bill would require that the actual sales price of the property be included in the deed conveying title to the property.

Full sales price disclosure would take the burden off owners of most homes in Texas and slow the appraisal creep that is resulting in some Texans selling their homes.

These bills recognize the importance of the home in the lives of Texans and reaffirm my commitment to guard the safety and property rights of Texas families.
Texas is already fairly friendly toward lethal force when used in one's own home.  Still, some extra legal protection couldn't hurt.  I would prefer something more along the lines of the "Stand Your Ground" type of law, but I suppose this is a start.  I especially like the protection against civil lawsuits.

I should also mention that Texas has an odd "night-time" provision in the law.  Although this press release is partly correct, the duty to retreat only applies during daylight.  After dark, according to Texas law, you have no duty to retreat [updated to add:  that is, while on your own property].  Although I can't cite the case, there was an instance several years ago when a San Antonio area farmer used the night-time provision to legally protect himself when he used lethal force after dark against someone who was stealing his property but who had not entered his house (they were stealing farm equipment).  I mentioned the "night-time" quirk before in this post.

Crossposted to The Gun Blogs.
View Article  Wednesday Vintage Gun Ad: Remington Rifles


Exact year unknown, but the reference to the "new" .244 Remington is a good clue.  The .244 was introduced in 1955 and was the precursor to the now better-known 6mm Remington.  I think that the .244 is no longer manufactured.
View Article  Dallas Youth Summit urging kids to turn in toy guns
Not making this up.

Dallas Morning News:
A toy gun can be just as deadly as a real one.

People who believe that statement are concerned that toy guns give youths a dangerous and wrong message.

So they are urging youths and their families to turn in toy guns sold by some ice cream vendors recently. Children and their families are invited to drop off the fake guns during the second annual Youth Summit on Non-Violence this weekend.
Dallas:  the new Austin.

Bonus joke:  Why is Austin like a bowl of dry cereal?

Answer:  Nothing but nuts, fruits, and flakes.
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