
Monday, June 2, 2014
MORE GUNS = MORE GUN DEATHS

Sunday, June 1, 2014
5 MYTHS ABOUT GUNS EXPLAINED

THE VA SCANDAL

GUN CONTROL PREFERRED

There are four that have made guns unwelcome in their establishments: Starbucks, Chipotle, Chile's and Sonic Drive in.
Now where are we going to eat, have coffee and entertain ourselves?
LAUGH FOR THE DAY
When Donald Trump calls someone else a clown, in this case, President Obama, you have to wonder what planet this fuzzy headed moron is living on. He did it on the Tea Party site, but, then, he is certainly in good company.
Saturday, May 31, 2014
BBC SAYS U.S. WON'T CHANGE GUN LAWS AFTER RECENT VIOLENCE

TEA PARTY SAYS "MARTIAL LAW IS IMMINENT!"

Thursday, March 7, 2013
The latest in gun control
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What we need is big time gun control |
There’s a hitch in the passage of gun control laws in the
Senate with Republicans objecting to the Democrats who want some record keeping
when it comes to passing a law to require background checks. The Guardian reports that
Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) wants private sales made at gun shows and through the
internet, not only to be put through the FBI-maintained National Instant
Criminal Background Check System (NICS), but they also want such sales to be
recorded.” The GOP (and the NRA) says
no.
The National Rifle Assn. (NRA) led by head gun fanatic Wayne
LaPierre, has always been against any kind of registry of names on who owns
guns fearing that once that is in place, the government will come into gun
owning homes and take away their weapons.
"There absolutely will not be record-keeping on legitimate,
law-abiding gun owners," Sen. Tom Coburn, a Republican, said. This kind of thinking should illustrate to
the American public just what a group of gun worshipping maniacs LaPierre and
his NRA minions are.
And Chris Matthews,
progressive anchor for MSNBC’s Hardball,
said: “Support Gun Control or an American President Could Be Murdered,” in a
closing commentary in a show last week.
It is worth repeating, below:
CHRIS MATTHEWS: Let me finish
tonight with this: I was in a big city hospital recently and the issue of gun
control, gun safety came up. The doctor said if I wanted to know the impact of
guns, he could show me, take me down and show me. Look, gunshot wounds can be
truly horrible. The reality justifies the discussion, today, about the need to
try and do something about the proliferation of assault rifles, huge ammo
magazines and the loopholes in the requirement that there be background checks.
People have told us of the horrible sight of those young kids up in Newtown,
Connecticut. I personally don't want to be part of a movement to keep those
semi-automatics flying into the hands of all sorts of people as they are today,
the hoarders, the survivalists, the paranoid, the criminal and downright
politically nutty.
Why? Because the next mass shooter
could well emerge out of this pack. Check the shooters of John F. Kennedy and
Jerry Ford, who got shot at twice. Look at the men that shot Bobby Kennedy and
Martin Luther King and Malcolm X and George Wallace. They all had political
motives and they all had guns. Got them easy and put them easily to use. And if
you're not against this movement, you're with it. Write your congressman and
say what you think and what you feel. Do it tonight before you go to bed. The
address of Congress, for all the congressmen is Congress, U.S. Congress,
Washington, D.C., 20515. That's Washington, D.C. 20515. It will get there. And
that's Hardball for now. Thanks for being with us.
Well done!
Did you know that the United States, specifically Waikiki, Hawaii,
is a haven for tourists who just want to shoot guns, all kinds of guns, because
the gun laws in this country allow you to do pretty much anything you want with
a firearm? There are four shooting
ranges along Waikiki’s Kalakaua Avenue where they learn how to shoot assault
weapons. A large majority of these
tourists are Japanese, who are frequent visitors to Hawaii anyway, here because
they can get their hands on guns they are not allowed to own in Japan. There, only shotguns are legal.
USA Today says that, “…fewer
than 1% of Japan's population owns a gun and the death rate from gun-related
violence is extremely low.” There were
only 19 gun-related homicides in Japan in 2010 and in comparing that with gun
violence in the U.S., “47% of Americans own a gun, according to a 2011 Gallup
poll, and 8,583 Americans were killed in gun-related homicides, according to
the FBI's 2011 crime report.” It is
pretty pathetic to think that tourists coming to America do it because of loose
gun laws, which causes the gun carnage in the U.S.
But on a final note, at one of this country’s
largest firearms manufacturers, Beretta USA, one of its lunatic executives,
Jeffrey Reh, the company’s general counsel, is quoted in The Washington Free Beacon as saying, “Maryland
Democratic Gov. Martin O’Malley’s Firearm Safety Act of 2013 is ‘tantamount to
a legislative effort to ban certain books.’”
Just when you think you’ve heard it all.
Wacky Wayne would be proud of this sycophant of the gun rights
fruitcakes who probably, himself, has never read a book outside the law. Amen
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
Gene said…Bob said…White House wins this one
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Gene Sperling |
Gene Sperling is President Obama’s economic adviser and Bob
Woodward is an award winning journalist who works for the Washington Post and
along with Carl Bernstein exposed the Watergate conspiracy. There are sufficient credentials on either
side of this supposed “disagreement,” and frankly, from what I have read, the
whole thing was blown completely out of proportion. I believe even Woodward made this comment,
which was echoed by White House spokesman, Jay Carney.
In an exclusive, Politico
obtained and released the following emails between Sperling and Woodward:
From Gene Sperling to Bob Woodward
on Feb. 22, 2013
Bob:
I apologize for raising my voice in
our conversation today. My bad. I do understand your problems with a couple of
our statements in the fall — but feel on the other hand that you focus on a few
specific trees that gives a very wrong perception of the forest. But perhaps we
will just not see eye to eye here.
But I do truly believe you should
rethink your comment about saying that Potus asking for revenues is moving the
goal post. I know you may not believe this, but as a friend, I think you will
regret staking out that claim. The idea that the sequester was to force both
sides to go back to try at a big or grand bargain with a mix of entitlements
and revenues (even if there were serious disagreements on composition) was part
of the DNA of the thing from the start. It was an accepted part of the
understanding — from the start. Really. It was assumed by the Rs on the
Supercommittee that came right after: it was assumed in the November-December
2012 negotiations. There may have been big disagreements over rates and ratios
— but that it was supposed to be replaced by entitlements and revenues of some
form is not controversial. (Indeed, the discretionary savings amount from the
Boehner-Obama negotiations were locked in in BCA: the sequester was just designed
to force all back to table on entitlements and revenues.)
I agree there are more than one
side to our first disagreement, but again think this latter issue is different.
Not out to argue and argue on this latter point. Just my sincere advice. Your
call obviously.
My apologies again for raising my
voice on the call with you. Feel bad about that and truly apologize.
Gene
From Woodward to Sperling on Feb.
23, 2013
Gene: You do not ever have to
apologize to me. You get wound up because you are making your points and you
believe them. This is all part of a serious discussion. I for one welcome a
little heat; there should more given the importance. I also welcome your personal
advice. I am listening. I know you lived all this. My partial advantage is that
I talked extensively with all involved. I am traveling and will try to reach
you after 3 pm today. Best, Bob
From there on it’s ‘he said,’ ‘he said’ with Woodward commenting at one point, "I never characterized it as a 'threat.' I think that was Politico's word." But Woodward at least implied that the “I think you will regret staking out that claim,” was a veiled threat and of course at that point it went viral. It wouldn’t mean diddly squat had it been said by some lesser known journalist than Bob Woodward, especially with his connections to Washington and insight into Beltway politics. It must have been a slow news day.
But the New Yorker had a different slant. John Cassidy said, “The real rap on Woodward isn’t that he makes things up. It’s that he takes what powerful people tell him at face value; that his accounts are shaped by who coöperates with him and who doesn’t; and that they lack context, critical awareness, and, ultimately, historic meaning.” Further, Joan Didion wrote:
“’…that “measurable cerebral activity is virtually absent’” from
Woodward’s post-Watergate books, which are notable mainly for “a scrupulous
passivity, an agreement to cover the story not as it is occurring but as it is
presented, which is to say as it is manufactured.”
Cassidy states that in one of Woodward’s books about the
Bush admin. he says that, “…President Obama bungled negotiations with
congressional Republicans, and portrays him as overconfident, underprepared,
and confrontational.” Yet Ryan Lizza in
a piece about Eric Cantor said, “…the House Republican virtually admits it was
he who torpedoed the debt-ceiling negotiations.” Cassidy confirms that Obama “was clear all
along that, when it came to replacing the sequester, it would demand a balanced
package of spending cuts and revenue increases.”
Cassidy added that Sperling’s history is a matter of record with “little to apologize for.” But Woodward’s background is basically untarnished in a business that requires near-perfection in what you are doing. Let’s just call it a draw and move on.
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
United Kingdom has right to criticize U.S. gun control laws
As far as I can see, gun control is going almost nowhere, at
least with the momentum that has been created by the increased gun violence
nationwide. Perhaps we have concentrated
too much on mass killings like Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, CT. Although this kind of carnage is horrific, it
still represents but a small amount of the gun deaths that take place
daily. Apparently statistics like ‘there
are some 300 million guns in American households’ or ‘88.8 per 100 households’
does not impress the public. Hard to
believe but true.
Or the fact that in a comparison of the rate of private gun
ownership in 179 countries, the United States ranked No. 1, and with 10.3 gun
deaths per 100,000 population they are much higher than the United Kingdom, Australia,
Denmark, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Poland, Spain, Sweden and the list
goes on and on. Could the fact that most
of these countries have measurably stronger gun control laws than the United
States have something to do with the results?
‘Absolutely not’ would be the answer from wacky Wayne LaPierre, head of
the NRA.
These are figures taken from GunPolicy.org,
a non-profit organization reporting on international firearm injury prevention
and policy. If you have any doubts about
my numbers I suggest you go to this site and do your own research. If you come away without the opinion that
America’s gun culture is completely out of control, then you are either a gun
worshipper, completely apathetic over the issue, or you have a terrible problem
with math. The truth is in the
statistics and in every case there is a monumental case for more gun control
laws in the U.S.
Harry J. Enten writing in the UK Guardian says, “Americans want gun control, but not badly enough.” His point one, “Most Americans don't see gun
control as the most significant way to prevent mass shootings.” Once again, mass gun violence, but it is
obvious that Enten has zeroed in on where the American focus is. He quotes, “only 25% of Americans believe
that stricter gun control laws and enforcement would be the key to preventing
massacres.“ Further, CBS News found, only
21% feel stricter gun control would prevent gun violence by much.
In point two, he laments that the subject of guns just isn’t
a high priority for most Americans. A
tragedy when you consider the daily reporting of people shot and killed with
guns, others injured, some seriously. In
the latest CBS News poll, only 4% listed guns at the top of their list. 50% chose the economy, jobs or the budget
deficit. It will be interesting in the
future to learn what the impact of continued and escalating gun violence will
have on the country’s economy and its overall well-being. If as bad as it looks, then it will be too
late.
Point three, most in the U.S. doesn’t feel gun control
legislation is a priority in 2013, only 46% according to Pew Research. With all the shootings and mayhem nationwide
connected to guns on the street, the American public says, mañana. Go figure.
And in point four, the public’s obsession with gun violence will
eventually dwindle, meaning, if we don’t do this in 2013, we’ll never do
it. And as my headline indicated, the UK
can criticize the United States because they have done what we cannot seem to
accomplish due to the gun lobby. Gun
laws in the UK:
They have a gun registry
Firearms are restricted
Right to gun ownership not
guaranteed by law
Assault weapons are banned
Handguns are banned
Background checks required
Number of guns and amount of
ammunition owned is restricted
As a result of the above regulations, below are comparisons
between the United States and the United Kingdom in gun violence:
US UK
All gun deaths per 100,000 population 10.3 0.25
Gun homicides per 100,000 pop. 3.6 0.04
Handgun homicides per 100,000 pop. 2.0 0.01
Gun suicides per 100,000 pop. 6.3 0.18
I rest my case.
Monday, March 4, 2013
Concealed carry firearms not protected by 2nd Amendment…says Denver federal appeals court
What is more important right now? Whether we ban assault weapons and high
capacity magazines, make universal background checks the law, eliminate straw
purchases, concentrate on improving investigations into and sharing of mental
health data, create a registry of firearms or other gun control legislation being
proposed, there is an even more pressing problem to be reckoned with. It is what do we do with about 8 million
cowboys and cowgirls walking around American streets with either a concealed
weapon or one in a holster at their side?
I did a post in 2011 that
questioned whether or not these people should be allowed to openly take their
weapons all around town, even the whole country, if the National Rifle Assn.
(NRA) has its way. In Arizona, with the
country’s loosest gun laws, they can even take a gun into a bar, and the state
might soon be arming teachers in schools.
Right now I am fine with having a firearm at home for protection but
that is where it should stay. Many of
these carriers have no real weapons training and I don’t want them protecting
me anyway. Leave the gun at home.
When I wrote the earlier post, the U.S. House had OKed a
bill to allow concealed guns to cross state lines. That means someone from Arizona, where all
you basically need to buy a gun is a warm body, this person could carry his or
her weapon into states like California, New York and Illinois where they have
much tougher gun laws. Thankfully this
legislative idiocy has been tabled for the time being but always in the back of
the minds of the gun nuts. But there is
other news for changing the concealed carry laws in the future that might
involve the Supreme Court.
Although one year old, The Young Turks attack concealed carry laws:
Forbes did a recent piece
with concern over the fact that new verdicts from Federal Appeals courts could
be harmful to the gun industry. “In
Denver, the court decided that concealed-carry firearms aren’t protected by the
Second Amendment,” the magazine reported.
In opposition, “…in Chicago, the court reached a different decision. It
declined to reconsider a ruling that found that state’s ban on concealed carry
unconstitutional.” And in a New York federal
appeals court, the fact that concealed carry applicants must prove “proper
cause” to carry was upheld.
Two out of three sounds like momentum for gun control advocates
and although this issue isn’t on the White House’s agenda, there are many who
feel reevaluating this right, along with state laws re. self-defense use of
guns when challenged is ripe for the picking.
The question that is never asked in polls on gun violence is: “Do you
favor banning concealed weapons for anyone but law enforcement and authorized
users?” As an example, in a reaction to
teachers carrying guns, the New Yorker found the idea “confounding.”
Concealed carry weapons including small, compact pistols and
revolvers produce big money for gun manufacturers. And women have become a prime market for
these firearms in one of the industry’s fastest growing segments. Some even come with pink grips. So companies like Sturm, Ruger and Smith
& Wesson aren’t likely to give in to curtailment of the concealed carry
laws without a fight, no doubt led by wacky Wayne LaPierre and his NRA gun
worshippers. Of course those cowboys and
cowgirls will certainly have their say in the matter.
Forbes predicts these contradictory appeal decisions (above)
would make it more likely that the Supreme Court would have to settle the
matter. Two earlier SCOTUS cases come to
mind immediately. In 2008 the “District
of Columbia v. Heller, upheld many 19th century prohibitions on concealed
weapons, but also acknowledged that the Second Amendment protects a right to
own guns.” Then in 2010, “McDonald v.
Chicago, established that state and local laws should also recognize the right
to own firearms.” But the Supremes also
put a fly in the ointment.
McDonald v. Chicago stated that there is a right
for gun owners to have a weapon in their home for protection, which leaves open
the premise that the high Court just might place restraints on the concealed
carry law. It is possible that
eventually concealed carry permits may be available in all states. To give you an idea of the popularity, the 8
million concealed carriers are almost twice the NRA membership which is 4.5
million. It would be interesting to know
what percent of these faux vigilantes are trained. Regardless, I want them all off the streets.
Friday, March 1, 2013
Congress…and the President now…are losing the American public’s trust
With two-thirds of the public disapproving of the way
Congress is handling the federal spending issue and only 26% on their side, you
might think the blame lies squarely on the backs of the congressional leaders
whose overall ratings are even worse.
Not so. 52% disapprove of the way
President Obama has managed the issue but with 43% that do approve. The latter is a lot better than Congress but
David Gergen says right now this country is “leaderless.” That is frightening when you consider the
major issues facing the United States today.
Other than the lately infamous term, “Sequester,” also on
the table is gun control legislation, immigration reform and taking the
leadership on improving the environment.
This country cannot remain as a world leader without tackling and
solving all four of these problems. The
typical Washington charade recently that is supposed to be governing is
considered farcical by many throughout the free world. In another poll,
“…Americans are divided over whether Obama is emphasizing unifying the country
or taking a partisan approach.” That’s
not good.
CNN Polling Director Keating Holland commented, "It
looks like this could turn into a "lose-lose" scenario for both
sides, although the Republicans appear to have more to lose than Obama." But the President’s advantage has been
diminishing over the last two months, according to CNN’s Political Editor, Paul
Steinhauser. DavidGergen on CNN was much blunter: “In times past, a president has usually
risen to the demands of leadership when a Congress has stubbornly resisted
tough choices…” Gergen added:
“That's what Lyndon Johnson did in persuading key Republicans to help
pass the civil rights bills of 1964 and 1965. And that's what Bill Clinton did
in working with a Republican House led by Newt Gingrich. People forget how
hostile House Republicans were to Clinton -- hell, they impeached him -- but he
nonetheless worked with them to pass four straight balanced budgets and an
overhaul of welfare.”
Excellent definition of sequester by The Young Turks:
It seems to me that it all boils down to the art of negotiation,
which I emphasized in a recent post. Sam Rayburn was a master, as was Lyndon
Johnson, both from Texas. Bill Clinton
had this knack and even Barack Obama has exhibited moments of proclivity in
bringing the two sides together as he did in passing the Affordable Care Act or
Obamacare. Negotiation is defined simply
as a “mutual discussion and arrangement of the terms of a transaction or
agreement.” It means that both sides must give a little
and take a little. Is that so hard?
Well, apparently it is, because David Gergen says that both
Congress and the White House are neglecting their responsibilities of bringing
this country together. And if there is
no real leadership on either side, the USS America is basically sailing without
a rudder. Gergen continues, “One of the
foremost duties of Congress is to pass a budget: It has failed for four
straight years. Republicans, especially in the House, have continually refused
to meet the White House halfway.” My
question is whether House Speaker John Boehner is still in control.
Americans have now become apathetic about the sequester with
only 18% of the U.S. who say they understand “very well” what happens when it
goes into effect. I am frankly not sure
whether or not enough of those in Congress and the White House honestly know
the outcome following today’s deadline.
The fact of the matter is that some feel the President should have more
power on deciding where the cuts should be made and Barbara Mikulski, D-MD, and
Jim Inhofe, R-OK, are working on a bill right now to address that issue.
Whatever happens today, this Congress, and partially Barack Obama, will have to shoulder the blame for the fact that the greatest nation in the free world could not bring together its two main political factions in an agreement to keep its democratic government functioning normally. Just the idea of the bickering that has been going on for the last 12 years is enough to turn your stomach. But the idea of putting ideology before your country is unforgivable. Enough is enough.
Thursday, February 28, 2013
It’s time to dump the Tea Party back in the harbor
Even as a committed progressive, I get an average of two or three emails from the Tea Party on a daily basis with some of the most bizarre headlines I have ever read. Like, America in danger: Stand and Fight, Prevent the Next Holocaust Right Here in America.” The organization is floundering fast and the last gasps are both dramatic and desperate. With supporters like Sarah Palin, Rand Paul and Michelle Bachmann, this leaves no doubt over the mentality of this group. Wikipedia says:
Obama Communist Coup Underway: America in Danger
The Tea Party took a beating in the Senate in 2012 when many of their supported candidates lost. The House did much better but the writing was on the wall when some key members were defeated and Michelle Bachmann won only with a slim margin. Big questions loom in 2014 for both the Tea Party and the NRA in relation to just how much impact they will have on the elections. The apathy of the American public has been making a dramatic change over the past year or so and with involved voters you get a much more educated class at the polls.
The Tea Party “is an American political movement that advocates strict
adherence to the United States Constitution, reducing U.S. government spending
and taxes, and reduction of the U.S. national debt and federal budget deficit.”
The “Party” took off in 2009 supporting several conservative
candidates and labeled itself from the beginning as a crowd of conservative
fanatics, many of which sported double-digit IQs. Back in 2011 even Glenn Beck accused the
membership of being racist, which was confirmed in several of their
rallies. They have been and still are in
the radical camp with the National Rifle Assn. (NRA) on gun rights, with signs
like, “Dictators want you disarmed” in a recent demonstration in Monterey,
California, for gun rights.
Their opposition to immigration reform is legend. From Day one the Tea Party movement has supported hardline policies toward illegal
immigrants and for border control. As
far as the group is concerned, we could deport all 11 million+ undocumented. On Tuesday, Judson Phillips of the Tea Party
Nation said in the Washington Times that Republicans
are committing “political suicide” and “paying Democrats for the privilege of
killing themselves, re. immigration reform.”
It is this kind of right-wing conservative rhetoric that is bringing the
U.S. to its knees.
But time and public opinion have not been on the side of the
TPers with a recent conservative Rasmussen poll released in the Huff Post finding that only 30% of the country has a
favorable view of the Tea Party. A compelling
50% view the party unfavorably.
Rasmussen also reports that only 8% of Americans claim to be Tea Party
affiliated. This is clout? This paltry bunch of bigots can have the sway
on Congress it does to push the GOP ideological agenda and get what they
want? It reminds me of the NRA’s hold on
Congress, also highly overrated.
Here’s an example of more headlines from the Tea Party
rubbish I receive by email:
Obama Communist Coup Underway: America in Danger
(Pic of Obama with Swastika on his arm)
Supporting a group to give away shotguns in high crime area
Sheriff warns of 2nd American Revolution if gun laws are enforced
Don’t let Obama get away with murder and treason
We’re rude, crude, impolite, and we wouldn’t have it any other way
Civil War 2: Why the banking elite want riots in America
Shock claim: Obama picks Muslim for CIA chief
Resistance to new gun laws builds in USA
Foreign agent Piers Morgan talks about repealing 2nd Amendment
Sheriff warns of 2nd American Revolution if gun laws are enforced
Don’t let Obama get away with murder and treason
We’re rude, crude, impolite, and we wouldn’t have it any other way
Civil War 2: Why the banking elite want riots in America
Shock claim: Obama picks Muslim for CIA chief
Resistance to new gun laws builds in USA
Foreign agent Piers Morgan talks about repealing 2nd Amendment
But let me leave you with the most hilarious statement made
yet in 2013. This is Michelle Bachmann,
the U.S. Representative from Minnesota who barely held on to her seat in 2012: “I
was very proud of the fact that I didn’t get anything wrong that I said during
the course of the debates," she said, according to Salon. "I didn’t
get anything wrong, and that’s a huge arena." She, of course refers to the 2012 GOP
presidential debates. According to the Huff Post:
“…there is a long list of statements Bachmann made during debates
showing she actually got a number of things ‘wrong.’”
Who is it these people appeal to??? Thank God their numbers are diminishing fast.
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Gun nuts claim Obama Helter Skelter…the amassing of forces to annihilate White Americans
Although Taylor Marsh is a well-known political analyst,
writer and strategist, I still might have discounted someone I never heard of
like Stan Solomon whose Talk to Solomon
Show recently had conservative blogger Greg W. Howard on his show. I have also not heard of Howard but being new
to the game of critical politics, just figure I may not yet be up to speed. However, when Larry Pratt’s name came up I
not only took notice but became very interested. As a gun fanatic, Pratt is only topped by
Wayne LaPierre, head of the National Rifle Assn. (NRA).
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Charles Manson |
There’s more. “I believe they will put together a racial force to go against an opposite race resistance, basically a black force to go against a white resistance, and then they will claim anyone resisting the black force they are doing it because they are racist,” commented Solomon and seconded by Howard. Can you believe this idiot Howard accuses Obama of sowing the seeds of racial hatred when it has been clear from the President’s first inauguration that many in this country dislike, even hate, Barack Obama simply because he is black?
Clip from the Helter Skelter movie:
There is a comparison between Obama’s gun control legislation and the incidents at Waco and Ruby Ridge where government force was used to quell an illegal uprising, resulting in lives lost. Each of those episodes was carried out due to a defiance of the law and the people involved decided to fight rather than surrender peacefully. Arnold asks the question which is no doubt uppermost in the mind of anyone who reads her article:
“I don’t know how many people take this kind of ‘thinking’ seriously,
but it’s happening in the context of the ongoing national debates about gun and
ammunition controls.” It is gun hugger
scare tactics at their worst…my words.
And then Arnold quotes Evan McMorris-Santoro of Talking Points Memo who exclaims the war over gun
control has gone to the “ground;” in other words as the media decide it is
yesterday’s news, both sides will depend on grass-roots action to get the job
done. McMorris-Santoro points out that
the NRA is already running ads against weak Democrat and Republican moderates in
states like Arkansas, Louisiana, Maine, North Carolina and West Virginia. At the same time we can expect more on gun
control through groups like Gabby Giffords new PAC.
Those moderate Democrats, above, are not as afraid this go-around because of the rash of firearm deaths across the country, particularly mass incidents like the Newtown, CT massacre. The Senate is working on a plan re, universal background checks but McMorris-Santoro comments, “there’s the usual GOP House members who oppose most everything that isn’t their idea. Some of them probably think it’s possible ‘Obama is Raising a Private Black Army to Massacre White Americans.’” Shades of Charles Manson and his HelterSkelter.
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Hard to understand how anyone could believe the NRA’s Wayne LaPierre
But they do. These
die-hard gun bubbas who strut around with their weapons either at their side or
concealed completely from the public, are the real believers who do it because
they have to have some way to prove their manhood. And they would follow the head fanatic, wacky
Wayne, to the end of the world if he said so.
It is amazing to me just how easily he can arouse these double-digit IQs
to do his bidding and then force them to come back again and again to feed from
the same fount spewing this propaganda. But
such is the mentality of these wackos.
Wayne LaPierre is head of the NRA and since assuming this
post in 1991 the organization has prospered dramatically in increased
membership and donations flowing in.
This is all due to one single factor; LaPierre zeroed in on the 2nd
Amendment right to bear arms exclaiming it is an “absolutist” right of the
people and the gun control advocates want to take it away. And then along came a Democratic President,
Barack Obama, and the screed switched to “Obama wants to take away your guns.” Same crusade, just a different target.
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Wacky Wayne laPierre |
In each national incidence of guns killing innocent Americans,
wacky Wayne used the situation to fire up his fellow gun worshippers by saying,
as an example, they want to take away assault weapons today but tomorrow they
will come for your handguns, then your hunting rifles. The latest was delivered in a tirade from Salt
Lake City during a speech at the Western Hunting and Conservation Expo. He once again picked up on President Obama
and other Democrats re. the drive for universal background checks. This is what he saidon CNN:
"This so-called universal background check that you're hearing
about all over the media ... is aimed at one thing: It's aimed at registering
your guns. And when another tragic
opportunity presents itself, that registry will be used to confiscate your
guns."
Actually, this registry of guns is a great idea for everyone
but gun owners, and that raises a question within itself. Why are you afraid to have your gun
registered; got something to hide? And
it is absurd to think the feds would use any registry of firearms to confiscate
legal guns. It is the bad guys that they
are after and if you gun huggers are a little bit inconvenienced, blame it on
your head wacko LaPierre who has suppressed reasonable gun control legislation
for years, putting 300 million guns on the streets of America, a record
throughout the world.
![]() |
Mark Kelly with wife Gabby Giffords |
“The Tucson shooter was an admitted drug user. He was rejected from the
U.S. Army because of his drug use. He was clearly mentally ill. And when he
purchased that gun in November, his plan was to assassinate my wife and commit
mass murder at that Safeway in Tucson. He was a criminal. Because of his drug
use, and because of what he was planning on doing. But because of these gaps in
the mental health system, in this case, those 121,000 records, I admit did not
include a record on him. But it could have.
“And if it did, he would have failed that background check. He would
have likely gone to a gun show, or a private seller, and avoided that
background check. But if we close that gun show loophole, if we require private
sellers to complete a background check, and we get those 121,000 records and
others into the systems, we will prevent gun crime. That is an absolute truth.
It would have happened in Tucson. My wife would not have been sitting here
today if we had stronger background checks.”
LaPierre’s claims that background checks don’t work is
obviously just another of his false statements since 1.5 million guns were
prevented from going to those prohibited from having them in 2010. In the hearing, after gun rights grunts pointed
to Chicago’s tough gun laws, yet high volume of gun violence, Sen. Dick Durbin from
Illinois commented:
When you take a look at where these guns come from, 25 percent plus are
sold in the surrounding towns around the city of Chicago, not in the city. Look
over the last 10 or 12 years. Of the 50,000 guns confiscated in crimes, almost
one out of 10 crime guns in Chicago came to that city from Mississippi. Why?
Because the background checks there, the gun dealers there, are a lot easier
than in other places. And they end up selling these guns in volume.
It is easy enough to shoot holes in most claims made by Wayne LaPierre and his NRA minions, but what isn’t easy is having the equal time to advertise the gun control side of the issue. Organizations like the Brady Campaign and the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence try but have limited budgets. Just the opposite of the NRA, which is well funded in its advertising campaigns with the support of U.S. gun manufacturers. The gun nuts are preparing to launch a new onslaught of major propaganda that will cause many more innocent people to be killed by guns.
Monday, February 25, 2013
Will the US Senate fix the Washington mess?
I did a post on Wednesday of last week, “How to fix a broken U.S. Government,” which
emphasized the importance of negotiating, a lost art from the days of Sam
Rayburn and Lyndon Johnson. During those
periods, an old hand at the job, and Johnson and Rayburn were not only
well-entrenched but also well respected, could talk to his or her fellow
legislators and somehow come to a reconciliation that was favorable for both
side. This mastery of politics has been
gone for, let me see, at least as far back to when George W. Bush became
president.
![]() |
Mitch McConnell |
So far the GOP hasn’t recovered from an election they
thought they would win, and Sen. McConnell has never retreated from his
statement to make Obama a one-term President, which obviously failed. Joe Palermo said following the 2012 election, “McConnell now promises the next best thing: Continue
to abuse the filibuster as no Senate minority in American history has and gum
up the works while demanding total capitulation on Obama's part before any bill
can escape the clutches of his icy, deadening hand.” In Washington things never seem to change.
So with McConnell as the Senate Minority Leader, how is it
that Ira Shapiro thinks this dysfunctional body can fix Washington? He says the consensus
is already formed and that politics under president Obama’s second term will
continue to be polarized. But he wants a
“rejuvenated” Senate to be the nation’s mediator. Somehow I can’t see Harry Reid, Senate
Majority Leader and Mitch McConnell coming together on any major issues, except
maybe gun control. Reid has refused to
back Obama on the assault weapons ban.
Democrats do have control of the Senate and won 25 out of 33
elections in 2012, which Shapiro reads as a reaction to GOP extremism and
obstructionism. The question is whether
this trend can continue with momentum leading through the 2014 elections where
the incumbent President’s party traditionally loses seats in Congress. Palermo’s article was over three months ago
but now Shapiro says the country is in need of responsible adult leadership,
something sorely lacking in both houses of Congress.
![]() |
Harry Reid |
Shapiro the optimist thinks, “The Senate is the only
realistic partner to the president in seeking constructive solutions to the
nation's challenges on guns, climate change and immigration.” I hope he is right because, aside from the
economy and jobs, these are the three most important issues facing the United
States. And in continued optimism he
believes the majority of the Senate is serious about facing the challenges of
the country. On the other hand we are
just four days away from the $1.2 trillion in budget cuts that many say will
paralyze the U.S.
Lyndon Johnson, along with Mike Mansfield, Everett Dirksen and
Howard Baker are cited in Shapiro’s article illustrating a quality of
leadership lost on today’s Senate.
Although Harry Reid and Mitch McConnell didn’t create the current political
barricades in the Senate, it has certainly flourished under their watch. Will they eventually retire having failed to
accomplish the demands facing Congress today, or will they emerge finally as
leaders who figure out that it is necessary to negotiate, not constantly call
checkmate? The ball is clearly in their
court.
Friday, February 22, 2013
Arizona gun huggers and other stupid Wild West stories
Arizona is a state in which someone with absolutely no
training can go out and buy a gun, carry it as a concealed weapon without a
permit, and even take it into a bar.
That is the kind of rhetoric that has made the Grand Canyon State the
laughing stock of the country. The GOP-controlled
legislature prides itself in passing the most asinine and loose gun control
laws in the U.S. and then flaunts it to those hysterical over this obsession
with guns. And then you must add to that
a foggy headed Governor, Jan Brewer, with shifting desert sand for a brain.
What more could the media ask for, particularly progressive
bloggers like myself. What is most
disheartening about living in a state like Arizona is these fruitcakes are
serious. Their worship of guns
transcends any reasonable approach to gun control and approaches the level of
placing their weapons on a pedestal to be considered a divine entity. I did a blog back in January, “Religious leaders say the worship of guns is a form of idolatry,“ that examines just how gun fanatics feel about their
firearms. The findings are pathetic.
But the religious community is reacting in force. Rev. Gary Hall, dean of the Washington Nat’l
Cathedral, said, “Everyone in this city {Washington} seems to be in terror of
the gun lobby. But I believe the gun lobby is no match for the cross lobby.” Rabbi Saperstein, dir. of the Religious
Action Center of Reform Judaism, said: “Is the need for sensible gun control a
religious issue? Indeed, it is, for our
worship of guns is a form of idolatry, the random distribution of guns is
offense against God, and the only appropriate response is sustained moral
outrage.”
Spoof on Arizona gun laws:
So where do these Arizona gun nuts come off pushing all
these ridiculous gun laws to put even more guns on the street in the hands of
completely unqualified owners when the state ranks eighth nationally in firearm
deaths, with 15.1 deaths per 100,000?
They don’t care because they choose their celestial guns over human
life. Another source shows that in Arizona
65% of all murders are committed using firearms. And yet another survey reports that there are
232 Arizona gun murders a year, or about 4.5 per week.
Even considering all of the above, which really only
scratches the surface, an Arizona legislature of Republican lunatics continues
to propose and pass more bizarre gun legislation. And it is all but guaranteed that the
discombobulated Governor will sign the trash.
As an example, the gun bubbas got all up tight when a Tucson city
Councilman did a gun “buyback” offering $50 gift cards for unwanted guns. But the obsessed firearms crowd would have
none of it and proposed a law to bar any destruction of guns in Arizona. There’s lots more.
![]() |
Sheriff Joe Arpaio |
Another bill would allow people to carry guns into public
buildings, unless secure gun lockers are provided which are expensive to
construct. Not a law, but another
pitiable fact; Arizona ranked third in the nation for guns confiscated at the Phoenix
airport checkpoints in 2012. And
Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio is arming his 3,000 member “volunteer” posse
with 400 military-style assault rifles.
That’s right, at least 400 scantily trained part-time upholders of
Arpaio’s style of Arizona law on the streets with lethal weapons. Hard to believe but true.
And now House Bill 2326 forbids state and local government agencies
and federally licensed gun dealers from maintaining a database of people who
own or sell guns. State Attorney General
Tom Horne, who himself has lawsuits filed against him for acting illegally as a
candidate for office and leaving the site of a hit and run accident, wants to
arm the teachers in Arizona schools. And
finally, a local pediatric cardiologist by the name of Dr. Scott Schnee responded
to Denver reporter Adrian Dater re. something he wrote about the Phoenix
Coyotes:
The Twitter user BabyDocScott tweeted "Go catch a movie in
Aurora" and said Dater could "join Jessica for all I care."
Dater was friends with Jessica Ghawi, who was killed in the Aurora movie
theater shootings July 20. Beyond pathetic.
So that’s the latest on a gun culture out of
control from the Wild West state of Arizona, which for many of us is a
beautiful and pleasant place to live.
But for those of us who want sane gun laws in our state, and throughout
the country, the day is definitely on the horizon to get this accomplished, and
the gun huggers will just have to go to the movies to get their violence.
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Gun deaths escalate while an impotent Congress of deadbeats just hovers in limbo
![]() |
Mindy McCready |
I am not a country music fan but it was tragic to hear that
singer Mindy McCready had taken her life…with a gun. On Monday, 4 people were shot in Spokane, 2 at
a night club, 2 more nearby. And then on
Tuesday a gunman went on a shooting spree in Southern California that left 4
people dead, including the shooter. Does
the question, “What does it take?” come to mind? Abby Rogers in Business Insider says, “A History Of Gun Control Laws Shows US Citizens Don't HaveAn Absolute Right To Bear Arms.”
Something I have blogged about for months.
Rogers tracks the history of gun control laws from 1860
through 2010. There were the early laws
in the 1930s covering the manufacture and transfer of firearms along with
another that regulated interstate commerce in firearms. Then came the 1968 Gun Control Act following
the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King. There were others like California’s law
restricting the use of assault rifles, the Brady Act of 1993 imposing
background checks and then the federal assault weapons ban in 1994 which was
allowed to expire in 2004.
Most recently New York passed one
of the toughest gun control laws ever and they did it with a GOP controlled
Senate along with a Democrat-dominated assembly. Are the Republican politicians more
intelligent in New York, or do they simply favor human life over worshipful gun
ownership? And then on Monday, the Colorado House voted in a package of gun control
measures that included a ban on concealed weapons on college campuses. Also included is a fee for state background
checks. It now goes to the Senate.
Adam Winkler on gun control:
Former U.S. Rep. from Arizona, Gabby Giffords and her
husband Mark Kelly have formed a gun control group called Americans for
Responsible Solutions. Giffords was
seriously wounded in the 2011 Tucson massacre by Jared Loughner where 18 others
were shot and 6 died including a nine-year-old girl. And then less than a week ago, MoveOn.org announced it will spend six-figures on a TV
spot titled, “The NRA doesn’t speak for me.”
Jerry Thompson, a gun owner and defender of the 2nd Amendment
is the spokesperson who says in disgust:
“For years I’ve watched Congress take money from the NRA and then
oppose any kind of reform that helps keep us safe.” Further, "I've had enough. So here's my
message to Congress. You take money from the NRA and then continue to do their
bidding, we're going to remember that come election time. The NRA doesn't speak
for me, and they don't speak for the vast majority of Americans so stop taking their
money"
81% of gun owners support background checks which would
close the gun show loophole. 40% of gun
buyers purchase their weapons at gun shows where private sellers are not
required to make background checks. Seem
like a no-brainer? Not for Wayne
LaPierre and his gang of gun bubbas at the National Rifle Assn. (NRA). These gun nuts are fighting background checks
as well as any other meaningful gun control legislation. Other gun rights advocates say:
“Our
backs are against the wall,” “We are in
for the fight of our lives. I have never seen anything like it.” This is a statement by Scott Wilson,
president of the Connecticut Citizens Defense League, a pro-gun rights group
following the Sandy Hook Elementary carnage.
The CCDL also conceded that the assault weapons and high-capacity
magazine bans just might make it through Congress.
What is it about New York, Illinois, Colorado
and California gun control reasoning that the rest of us don’t seem to
assimilate? New York Mayor Michael
Bloomberg credits the state’s tough gun laws for decreasing his city’s gun
violence significantly. If it can work
in the largest metropolitan area in the country, it should be able to work anywhere. Contact your congressional leaders, U.S. House, here, U.S. Senate here.
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