Notes From HPS
BY Herschel Smith10 years, 6 months ago
That’s the culmination of a series of “musical chairs” personnel moves involving Zapor that, per a whistleblower source, have been unwarranted, needlessly expensive, and ultimately, politically protective of management.
The relationship at this level of politics is incestuous. None of this is surprising, but it’s a good read nonetheless. And no wonder ATF morale is in the toilet.
But back to the original question of bazookas. Why shouldn’t their possession by private citizens be protected? It’s not as if governments never use tanks against private citizens (see attached video), and nor can it be denied that enormous, heavily armored vehicles are becoming more and more routinely part of civilian police agencies’ equipment in the U.S.
We should. And I should be able to own and M1A1 tank if I can afford it.
Via Mike Vanderboegh, this from The Salt Lake Tribune:
With anti-government sentiments roiling in the aftermath of Cliven Bundy’s Nevada standoff, government workers in western Utah are stripping BLM logos from their vehicles after two motorists brandished a gun and displayed a threatening sign at a federal wrangler who was driving Tuesday in Juab County.
The wrangler was driving a load of horses and burros north on Interstate 15 about 11 a.m. near Mills when a dark blue Dodge 1500 extended-cab pickup pulled up alongside the wrangler. The two occupants “told him he was No. 1 with that certain gesture,” said Eric Reid, the wrangler’s supervisor at the U.S. Bureau of Land Management’s Fillmore Field Office.
It’s insulting to wranglers everywhere to call anyone who works for the BLM a “wrangler.” As a former wrangler I’d kick the crap out of anyone with the BLM taking such a title.
WRSA has more on the Miami-Dade shooting frenzy by cops. For the best analysis of what should be done about this, see my commenter Archer.
I’d charge all of them with first-degree murder (one count for each of the two people in the car) with the included lesser offenses of second-degree murder and manslaughter, conspiracy to commit the same (one count for each of the two people in the car), willful negligence/disregard for safety (one count for every bullet fired and another for the chase), endangering the public (one count for every bullet fired and another for the chase), assaulting a police officer (one count for each of the two officers hit by friendly fire), assault with a deadly weapon (one count for each of the two officers hit by friendly fire)…. I could go on. Under Florida’s “10/20/Life” statute, they’d all get 20 years, minimum, EVEN IF the shooting of the two in the car is ruled justified – which would be a stretch given the totally disproportionate amount of force present/used. Watch the media clamor to find a “Stand Your Ground” defense for the “public safety” officers.
After this event, it’s apparent once again that we need controls on assault hammers.
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL
Leave a comment