To begin with, this is your president. This ought to be one of the most shameful things ever said by a sitting president.
"Do you have any words to the victims of the hurricane?"
BIDEN: "We've given everything that we have."
"Are there any more resources the federal government could be giving them?"
BIDEN: "No." pic.twitter.com/jDMNGhpjOz
— RNC Research (@RNCResearch) September 30, 2024
We must have spent too much money on Ukraine to help Americans in distress. I don't [read more]
Larson took after the good folks at The Truth About Guns, which she referred to as an ‘activist website’. “This boils down to a small, so-called gun-rights activist website that took the majority of things out of context, to make it sound like Rock River Arms and Springfield Armory were IFMA,” she said. “We did not have control over all actions. IFMA acted autonomously on our behalf.”
[ … ]
Larson then decried Illinois politics, which have almost become a blood sport.“I can’t get into all the details of the politics, as this is still a very real threat,” she told Mark. “Now, we are left with partial truth and fake news driving wedges between the different parts of our firearms community.”
Listen to me. This is the wrong response. The only wedge that has been driven is between RRA and your customer base. The gun community – at least as far as I can tell – is pretty much in full agreement on this issue.
I don’t particularly care for TTAG either. Their writers resolutely refuse to link anyone or exchange traffic, or frankly even debate issues within the gun community by their completely ignoring other gun web sites. I once sent Robert a link and he responded that he would be happy to publish me as a writer if he gets the first 24 hours before I post the article to my own site.
Um … no. That isn’t how this works. But in spite of the disagreements between me and TTAG, they followed this issue fairly well and published the full truth as far as I can tell. If not, then challenge the facts. Don’t call them “fake news,” or “activist website,” or a “so-called gun rights web site.”
“But I suppose we should thank Hill for reminding us, once again, that “Progressives” can — and will — reverse course and trade in all their “gains” at the drop of a hat once the logical conclusions start to apply to a right they don’t like.
If it weren’t for double standards, they wouldn’t have standards at all.”
What you are looking at is an SF A team commander who is wearing his body armor over a cut off tee shit. He is going into a village he doesn’t know searching for an alleged high value target (HVT) who is known to these soldiers as ‘Red Beard’. He is operating in Khost province where every village elder dies his beard with henna; which is red….are you getting the picture?
The only way you could offend Afghans more than showing up bare chested and forcing your way into their compounds is to walk around naked. The level of cultural tone deafness on display (from an SF guy who is supposed to understand the culture) in the linked video is beyond my ability to explain. If I had showed up in any Afghan village (especially a remote mountain village) without wearing a long sleeved shirt and long trousers I would have never returned. Failure to respect the local culture is the first step in mission failure and SOF guys like this one have a 16 year (and counting) run of mission failure.
[ … ]
Want to know something our ‘elite’ SF guys don’t seem to know? Afghans don’t cuss. To call an Afghan a motherfucker (a word used frequently in every conversation by the American military) is a grave insult that would, in the local context, need to be atoned by blood. I cannot stress this point enough and if, during my frequent forays into the tribal bad lands, I used that word even in jest I would have been killed long ago. One of the secrets that I and my fellow outside the wire expats use in the contested areas is respect for local culture coupled with big confident smiles; that’s why we are able to do what every USG expert contends cannot be done.
When I said these things it was just me saying these things. When Tim says these things it means that man who is the longest lasting English speaking man alive in Afghanistan (more than a decade) says these things. It means it comes with authority – authority I simply cannot give this subject.
After sending this link to a military reader who deployed in Afghanistan, he responded this way.
So imagine an unarmored SUV with a 40mm grenade launder mounted on Pedestal and the gunners chair was a red velvet arm chair, crewed by a bearded buffoon who looked like a bad extra from a Spaghetti western. Furthermore, their fearless leader refused to sync ECMs, so our more advanced systems would negate their “SOF” equipment, so no one had coverage.
After these many years, the U.S. still doesn’t have a clue how to wage small wars or counterinsurgency. Still. How sad. And after all of these years, SO and SF are still an entitled group who thinks that only they are capable of DA raids. So all of that bluster by gun controller Stanley McChrystal was just bull shit.
As for Tim, he has tried to raise the money to embed back in Afghanistan. He sent me a note and thought I didn’t know that, but I follow Tim religiously. I knew it but had not said anything because I don’t want him to go.
Considering his time in the Marine Corps along with his decade in Afghanistan, Tim knows enough to be a five star military reporter, security analyst or consultant to the military or security contractors (please don’t ever work for DynCorps, Tim) without ever going back to Afghanistan. I don’t want Tim to get killed because I care about him.
The pro-gun bill, H. 3429 sponsored by Republican Rep. Alan Clemmons, was passed last week by the South Carolina Senate on a 35-3 vote. The House unanimously concurred, sending the measure to Gov. Henry McMaster for consideration.
If signed by the governor, the bill will allow those filing for bankruptcy to retain up to three firearms, so long as the total value of those firearms does not exceed $3,000.
Hannah Hill, a policy analyst for the South Carolina Policy Council, a conservative think tank, argued in The Nerve that guns should not be exempted from bankruptcy.
“There is no reason to exempt guns from bankruptcy except for the fact that they’re, you know, guns,” Hill said. “And here’s where Second Amendment rights activists often go off the rails: government may not stand in the way of the free exercise of a right, but it is under no obligation to ensure that you DO exercise that right or that you have the wherewithal to do so. If chronic laryngitis kept you from exercising your First Amendment rights, the government wouldn’t be obligated to pay for your treatment.”
The National Rifle Association has supported the bill all the way, with its Institute for Legislative Action describing the legislation as a measure meant to “recognize the fundamental right to personal protection by ensuring citizens who have fallen on hard times, financially, will not be required to sell all of their firearms maintained for personal protection in order to satisfy their debts.”
And here’s where Hill goes off the rails. Let’s suppose that a woman goes off the deep end, starts running around with another man and then files for divorce, essentially taking the man for just about all he’s worth and forcing him to start over in life in middle age.
Think it can’t happen? I know two men whom I love very deeply to whom that has happened. Bankruptcy was in store for one of them, and he had to liquidate his entire gun collection for her. This bill prevents that from happening.
But here is my disappointment. The South Carolina senate has proven that it can actually pass a pro-gun bill and send it to the governor’s desk. They can also do that with open carry and constitutional carry, but chose to lock it down in committee until it died for this session.
For this reason the S.C. state senators have a bulls eye painted on their backs. I won’t forget. Gun owners won’t forget. This bill is a weak installment for gun rights, and doesn’t even come close to making up for not passing constitutional carry. Weak tea won’t suffice, gentlemen.
“Like it or not,” Gottlieb observed, “the Courts have the final say whether you have gun rights or not.”
You can also read a related discussion thread at reddit/r/firearms. Here is the problem. The courts don’t have the final say on whether we have gun rights. I appreciate that we need good judges in position, but only because we want to be peaceable men if possible.
Even if my rights aren’t observed by society, they still exist. This is Alan’s moral malfunction. He reflexively turns to the state for disposition of God-given rights, which I’m sure is why he has shown himself so willing to compromise in the past.
It’s pagan and statist thinking that turns to the state for cradle to grave security and for a delineation and protection of our rights. I’ve explained this before – our rights come from God Himself, the Almighty king of heaven and earth, the maker of the universe, the one who determines what He will do with the clay vessels he creates, the only potentate and sovereign.
The constitution is a covenant by which men have agreed to live together. We derive our authority to bear arms from God, in whose image we are made, and who Himself made war when necessary, and thus we are to protect that image. This is His immutable law. If the covenant within which we live does not reflect God’s laws, it is an abomination and dishonors God. It is null and void. Second, to the extent that it does, when we fail to live within the framework of that covenant it is null and void. Therefore, if the government breaks covenant with the people, the government has declared itself null and void before God.
A man-made document can never … never … establish rights. It can only recognize what has already been established by the almighty. God grants men the right to self defense, as well as the right to enter into covenant with a government, that covenant having blessings as well as curses, just like the covenant of marriage comes with blessings and curses (e.g., divorce in the case of infidelity, which recognizes that the covenant has been broken and is null and void, cursing the one who broke it). Self defense properly interpreted means not only personal defense from evildoers who would cause him or his family harm, but self defense from a tyrannical government.
Gottlieb couldn’t have been more wrong. Judges are important for the opposite reason he boasts. They are important in that they have a duty before God almighty and His laws and to honor the covenant we have made. They don’t get to make decisions concerning whether such rights exist. Their purview comes with duties and responsibilities, not the freedom to be cavalier, insolent or capricious. Theirs is a terrible responsibility and they should justly fear God. When it comes to the rights of men to defend themselves, there is only one decision of which God approves.
Psalm 2 says “The kings of the earth shall take their stand, and the rulers take counsel together against the Lord and against His anointed … He who sits in the heavens laughs, the Lord scoffs at them” (2-3). Isaiah 6 describes what happens when men meet God face to face.
In the year of King Uzziah’s death I saw the Lord sitting on a throne, lofty and exalted, with the train of His robe filling the temple. 2 Seraphim stood above Him, each having six wings: with two he covered his face, and with two he covered his feet, and with two he flew.3 And one called out to another and said,“Holy, Holy, Holy, is the Lord of hosts, The whole earth is full of His glory.” And the foundations of the thresholds trembled at the voice of him who called out, while the temple was filling with smoke. 5 Then I said “Woe is me, for I am ruined!
The position of judge and ruler is a terrible position because they will answer before God for what they do, and if they push it far enough, they may answer before men in time and space before they ever get to God. But always remember, if you are a ruler or judge who happens to be reading this. The King of Kings and Lord of Lords is watching you and will judge with a righteous judgment. There is no escape from His laws or the day of judgment, and no fealty to a document, interpretation, or political bias will be allowed as excuse or justification for your high handed sin against God.
Gun control activists who previously worked for Watts in various state organizations are said to be frustrated and feeling burned by her, according to one source.
“Staff who worked for Shannon quit or are fired faster than the organization can replace them. She’s a nightmare,” the source told TheDC.
Another source close to the organization said in a written statement, “Two beliefs unite nearly all gun control supporters: background checks save lives, and Shannon Watts is a self-promoting tyrant.”
Well congratulations! That’s just how all sincere, thinking gun owners feel about you gun controllers. You’re a bunch of self-promoting, tyrannical control freaks. See how it feels?
My oldest son Josh, who is the web developer and programmer, says this.
We can all thank the NSA, again, for today.
The next time you hear horse shit about how the NSA is protecting you, remember today.
Congress needs to stop wasting our time doing NOTHING AT ALL, find their balls again, and summon the NSA head and whoever the hell reports to him and the guys who reports to that guy and make them answer for what they’ve done.
Their actions were already crippling our IT industry in foreign markets because no one wants to buy shit from us. Now their actions are literally crippling banks and hospitals.
The republicans are a joke. They have all three branches of government, a majority of state governors, and a favorable Supreme Court. They still aren’t doing anything. Nothing.
Oh, I think they’re doing what comes natural. It’s full steam ahead for the spy state. It doesn’t matter that it all violates the constitution, that covenant by which we are all supposed to be bound. No, the only thing that matters is stability operations, and this is a big part of it.
The NSA is conducting warfare, and this is part of it. That warfare is designed to be applied across the board, regardless of whether the target is a U.S. citizen. The system is designed to conduct warfare on U.S. citizens. You understand that, right?
For instance, in Haynes v. U.S., the Supreme Court ruled a felon could not be required to register a gun because that would violate the Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination. Is requiring a person to submit to the background check and then prosecuting him if he fails equivalent? Especially if he doesn’t realize he’s “prohibited”? (Hey, it’s happened, and Neil Gorsuch said knowledge was necessary.)
And what about “false positives”?
[ … ]
Noting NRA’s penchant for the “law and order/enforce existing gun laws” mantra, what about this reporting bill did they craft and/or signal a green light for …
Good questions all around, but I’m not sure that the state cares, nor the NRA, frankly. As for false positives, I work in an industry where I am randomly drug tested under the “fitness for duty” policy. False positives happen. I’ve seen them before among coworkers. I feel certain that a plan like David describes is even much more susceptible than the one I’m under.
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — The sheriff in a rural southeastern Utah county was charged Friday with threatening an employee in 2015 with a rifle, failing to properly carry out an investigation of the incident and then firing the staffer in retaliation. Two of his deputies were also charged.
San Juan County Sheriff Richard Eldredge was charged with one count of felony witness retaliation and three misdemeanors: official misconduct, reckless endangerment and obstruction of justice, the Utah Attorney General’s Office said in a news release.
Chief Deputy Alan Freestone, who ran an internal investigation state prosecutors allege was fraught with missteps, is charged with one count of felony witness retaliation and two misdemeanors: obstruction of justice and official misconduct.
Deputy Richard Wilcox, who is accused of being with Eldredge the day the sheriff pointed the assault rifle at the employee, is charged with three misdemeanors: official misconduct, reckless endangerment and obstruction of justice.
[ … ]
The alleged events occurred at a shooting range parking lot on May 26, 2015, according to a narrative from state prosecutors in charging documents.
An unnamed sheriff’s office employee said he heard a click and the sound of a trigger pull and turned around to see Sheriff Eldredge pointing an assault rifle at him. He said he heard deputy Wilcox chuckling. The employee said he had been previously confronted by the sheriff.
After the employee lodged a complaint, Eldredge assigned Freestone to investigate the incident despite previously assigned cases involving his department to be reviewed by outside agencies.
Freestone didn’t’ record his interview with Eldredge and Wilcox but recorded the employee’s interview and then allowed Eldredge and Wilcox to listen to it. His investigative report contained incorrect dates and paperwork and was missing audio interviews, prosecutor say.
Freestone closed the investigation in May 2016 concluding it didn’t happen.
Eldredge then used that finding to against the employee, eventually firing him in February of this year.
Gosh, I hate it when that happens to me. I like to point rifles at people all the time and pull the trigger just to see the reaction on their faces. Most of the time the rifle is unloaded and not cocked.
Hahahahaha … it’s really funny. Just being boys, they were. Too bad the dude had to take it so seriously, losing his job over something silly like this. Hey, just be cool and let boys be boys. Why do you have a problem with rifles being pointed at you, dude?
At reddit/r/firearms there is an interesting discussion thread about the single worst firearm you’ve ever owned, and why?
Remington, Hi Point and Taurus play big in this thread. What firearm would you put in that category? What is the single worst firearm you’ve ever owned, and why?