Category: Guns

Where to Get News You Can Use

I tend to get most of my RKBA news from blogs and podcasts. They tend to find the stories that most of the big news outfits don’t/won’t print.

Kenn Blanchard has put up a list of blogs that he’s found useful over the years. The only reason I don’t read all of these is purely time.

I’m going to poke a little bit of fun that he didn’t include this blog, but I have to face reality about how my currently minuscule readership stacks up to the ones on the list.

H/t Robb, whose blog deservedly made the list

Check Your Ammunition

Saturday I went to the gun range with my mom and my friend Rush. When we got to the range, Rush showed me this:

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Looks like a normal .45 JHP bullet, right? Then he tipped it on it’s side, and we saw this:

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No primer and all of the powder had come out. Out of a factory box.

So, before you load that bullet into a magazine, do a quick inspection to make sure everything is good.

Friday Quote – Gregg Gutfield

A Smith & Wesson does more for empowering women than feminism ever could.

Gregg Gutfield, host of Fox’s “Red Eye”

Firearms are called “equalizers” for a reason. A woman armed with a gun does not have to belong to a man simply for protection against other men.

I swear Red Eye is the only program worth watching on Fox News.

ArsTechnica Puts a “Bulletproof” iPhone Case to the Test

ArsTechnica did a review of Sir Lancelot’s Armor’s Holy Grail iPhone case.

This was the company’s pitch to the reviewer:

Subject: Preview the bulletproof iPhone?
On March 18, Sir Lancelot’s Armor will announce the first reusable screen protectors for iPhones and iPads made of bulletproof glass….If interested in getting a sample to use or test, please let me know the model and color of your iPhone.

So, the guys over at ArsTechnica tested the claim. At the range. With a 9mm. Claim was busted quite vigorously.

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Florida Carry Sues St. Pete College

St. Petersburg College decided that it didn’t need to change it’s guns-in-cars policy, even in light of the UNF decision. So, Florida Carry has decided to enlighten them by legal means. From the press release:

On Friday, February 28th, 2014 Florida Carry received a member complaint that St. Petersburg College was still refusing to allow students and employees to lawfully store firearms in their personal vehicles while parked on campus despite a widely reported December 2013 ruling of the Florida 1st District Court of Appeal. Our Campus Policy Director contacted the college and was also told that firearms could not be stored in student’s cars on campus. Such illegal policies adversely affect the rights of many of our members, and others, who attend the St. Petersburg College and live in the local community.

In December the 1st District Court of Appeal sided with Florida Carry in our lawsuit against the University of North Florida. The court ruled that college policies prohibiting the otherwise lawful possession of firearms, and other arms, on campus are preempted by both statute and by the Florida Constitution. In Florida Carry v. UNF the First District Court of Appeal ruled that “The legislature’s primacy in firearms regulation derives directly from the Florida Constitution… Indeed, the legislature has reserved for itself the whole field of firearms regulation in section 790.33(1)…” No public college or university has any authority to prevent students and the public from having a functional firearm in places that are constitutionally protected or permitted under state law. In short, colleges with such policies are breaking the law and violating the rights of students, employees, and campus visitors.

On December 23, 2013 Florida Carry issued a warning to public colleges and universities statewide.
“Any Florida public college or university that fails to notify all students and the public that prohibitive policies regarding the storage of firearms, or other defensive arms, in the personal vehicles of its students and visitors are void and unenforceable by the first day of Spring semester classes will be subject to being sued by Florida Carry for violations of 790.33 Florida Statutes and/or Article I, Section 8 of the Florida Constitution.”

On Monday March 3rd, 2014 Florida Carry, Inc. filed a lawsuit against St. Petersburg College, it’s board of trustees, president, and the campus security official enforcing the college’s illegal firearm and non-lethal electronic defensive weapons policies. This is the fourth Florida College or University that Florida Carry has been forced to file a case against for refusing to follow state law. Florida Carry will not sit idly by and watch the civil rights of Floridians be violated.

Even Our Own Narratives May Be Flawed

How many of us have heard the story of Kitty Genovese, who was raped and murdered outside her apartment building while thirty-eight of her neighbors just watched and did nothing? I know I’ve heard it repeated by bloggers and authors. Yeah, not so much.

Across the street, a man named Robert Mozer heard Genovese from his apartment. Looking out his seventh-floor window, he saw a man and a woman, sensed an ­altercation — he couldn’t see exactly what was happening — and yelled out his window, “Leave that girl alone!”

Moseley [the man convicted of Genovese’s rape and murder] later testified that Mozer’s action “frightened” him, sending him back to his car. At this point, Genovese was still alive, her wounds nonfatal.
Fourteen-year-old Michael Hoffman, who lived in the same building as Mozer, also heard the commotion. He looked out his window and told his father, Samuel, what he saw. Samuel called the police, and after three or four minutes on hold, he reached a police dispatcher. He related that a woman “got beat up and was staggering around,” and gave them the location.

Other neighbors heard something as well, but it wasn’t always clear what. Some looked out the window to see Moseley scurrying away, or Genovese, having stood up, now walking slowly down the block, leaning against a building. From their vantage point, it wasn’t obvious that she was wounded. Others who looked didn’t see her at all, as Genovese walked around a corner, trying to make her way home at 82-70 Austin St.

But the police did not respond to Samuel Hoffman’s call, and Moseley, seeing no help was imminent, returned. He hunted down Genovese — who had made it to a vestibule in her building before collapsing — stabbed her several more times, then raped her.

Word of the attack spread though the building. A woman named Sophie Farrar, all of 4-foot-11, rushed to the vestibule, risking her life in the process. For all she knew, the attacker might have still been there. As luck would have it, he was not, and Farrar hugged and cradled the bloodied Genovese, who was struggling for breath.

Despite the attempts of various neighbors to help, Moseley’s final stab wounds proved fatal, and Farrar did her best to comfort Genovese in the nightmarish ­final minutes of her life.

So, some people did try to help, some were unsure of what was going on, and some were the scumbags we’ve always thought when hearing the story. Also, the police didn’t respond.

What are the lessons we can learn?

1. Some people will always be willing to help (a little like yelling down to a lot like rushing into a dangerous situation to help)

2. Most people need some convincing or directing to help. These are your bystanders that if you give them direction will help in a situation.

3. There are always some scumbags who will not help or will try to take advantage of a bad situation. I will never forget Michael Bane talking about friends of his who returned to their NY apartments after evacuating due to the attack on the WTC and finding their homes looted. All we can do is limit these people’s influence on events (although I wouldn’t shed many tears if they were pounded into the ground).

4. Official help may not be coming. They may be dealing with other emergencies, be hamstrung by bureaucratic rules, or just not give a damn about your emergency. This comes back to the first question of preparedness – What’s Your Plan?

Narratives are rarely as simple as they are made to be. Nothing with humans ever is. Just believing in the bystander effect will ignore the good people trying to help, not stop the bad trying to interfere, and forget that sometimes help isn’t coming. We are much better served by basing our plans on reality than stories that conform to our biases.

Friday Quote – Gerald Vernon

Black people have been programmed to think self-defense, our defense, is someone else’s responsibility – that good, honest, decent black people have nothing to do with guns, because guns are for white folks, police, and black criminals. I find it to be an absurd notion. The vast majority of gun laws in America have been aimed at disarming black people.

Gerald Vernon, Chicago native and veteran firearms instructor

This quote made the rounds on the Book of Face. I think it’s powerful enough to be restated.

It’s not about guns, it’s about control.