Posts Tagged gun laws

Weapons in National Parks

Lookout Boo Boo!

Lookout Boo Boo!

That’s right Yogi, gun rights activists are lined up to win a huge victory, allowing concealed weapons into national parks and refuges.

Something they were unable to do with a republican president. But it looks like president Obama will sign the bill into law later this week.

Here’s a clip from the article at the NYT

The White House is lukewarm at best on the gun provision, which was added to a popular measure imposing new rules on credit card companies. But the Democrats who now control both Congress and the White House appear ready to allow it to survive rather than derail a consumer-friendly credit card measure that Mr. Obama is eager to sign as Congress heads off for a Memorial Day recess.

“Timing is everything in politics,” said Senator Tom Coburn, Republican of Oklahoma and the champion of the gun proposal.

A majority of Democrats in the House and Senate still typically come down on the side of gun control. But the fact that they have been outmaneuvered by Republicans on gun issues is rooted in the fact that recently swollen Democratic ranks include senators and House members who represent Western states and more rural areas where gun ownership is popular and deemed sacrosanct.

Looks like the NRA is going to get a few in the win column for a while. It’s about time!

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State Gun Rights, the next Battle

Hand Guns in a Dallas Gun Store

Hand Guns in a Dallas Gun Store

It’s the next battlefield according to Time, and it’s not going to be based on 2nd amendment rights, no sir, it’s going to be riding on the 10th amendment.

Here’s the out take:

Montana has passed a law allowing local gun manufacturers to sidestep federal regulations as long as the weapons they make are sold within the territory of the state. “It’s a gun bill, but it’s another way of demonstrating the sovereignty of the state of Montana,” Democratic Governor Brian Schweitzer said, according to the AP, as he signed the bill into law in mid-April. “I like big guns, I like little guns, I like pistols, I like rifles, and I would like to buy a gun that’s made in Montana.”

In a nutshell, the 10th amendment is what Mr. Schweitzer and Montana lawmakers are leaning on. Which is sure to launch a battle like we’ve never seen before. It’s not about the right to bear arms, it’s about state rights and how far they really go.

What are your thoughts?

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Gun Maker Protected from Civil Suit

liberty-gun-freedom Lady liberty wins again this week when the U.S. court of appeals in San Francisco sent the victims of a 1999 gun crime packing (no pun intended) when they tried to sue the actual manufacturer.

Amen and Amen! It’s like fat people suing McDonalds or smokers suing Phillip Morris. It’s become the ‘in’ thing to sue everyone and everything you can. Not important if the company was acting legally and only made the weapon. They wanted them to be held accountable. For something they didn’t do.

Here’s some more from the article:

The case stemmed from a rampage in which white supremacist Buford Furrow wounded five people, including three children, at a Jewish Community Center in Granada Hills and then killed a Filipino-American postal worker, Joseph Ileto, in Chatsworth on Aug. 10, 1999.

Furrow later pleaded guilty to 16 federal charges including committing a hate crime and was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Meanwhile, the surviving victims and Ileto’s mother sought to sue Georgia-based Glock Inc., RSR Wholesale Guns Seattle Inc. and Norinco for allegedly marketing the guns in a way that encouraged illegal purchasers to buy them.

In an earlier ruling in 2003, the appeals court said the plaintiffs could sue the companies on the common-law claims of creation of a public nuisance and marketing negligence.

I’m sorry boys and girls, and you can correct me if I’m wrong here, but this smells an awful lot like “victims” looking for deep pockets rather than out and out justice. It looks an awful lot like some people want to to turn a tragedy into a payday.

Sorry if that ticks you off, I just call em’ like I see em’.

Discuss.

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CIFTA Treaty - Gun Control is Alive and Well

obama-gun-control1

I came across a very interesting article today over at gunlaws.com regarding the new CIFTA Treaty, which you can read the full version here.

At either rate, gun rights advocate, Alan Korwin, has gone over the new treaty with a fine tooth comb and given us his interpretation, which I find pretty damn accurate.

Here are some of the finer points:

CIFTA Gun Treaty Removes Congressional Oversight

(Note: How this treaty can overrule U.S. law or the Constitution itself
is discussed at the end, after the treaty analysis below.)

I’ve completed my review of the South America gun-control treaty that Mr. Obama wants to get ratified.

It is known as CIFTA, the Inter-American Convention Against The Illicit Manufacturing Of And Trafficking In Firearms, Ammunition, Explosives, And Other Related Materials.

– EVERY aspect of the treaty introduces major required gun controls, most of which will affect average citizens (as well as the targeted criminal syndicates, dictators and other bad actors).

– The controls go way past anything EVER attempted by gun-control groups in the United States.

– NONE of the proposed gun controls are likely to pass by themselves through Congress. If the treaty is enacted they don’t have to — they become law when the treaty is ratified.

– Virtually NO PROTECTIONS FOR RKBA are to be found, and the wordings are loose enough to allow all sorts of attacks on gun rights American enjoy today.

– The U.S. government under this treaty GAINS POWER to manage firearms almost any way it would like to, without checks and balances.

– Once signed, many of the restrictions and government intrusions become MANDATORY, and the full Congress, already cut out of ratification (only the Senate approves treaties) would be cut out of the implementation process entirely.

Ya like apples?

How do you like them apples???

Ready to discuss CIFTA? Come on over to the firearm forums and let’s get it on!

You can read the whole review at gunlaws.com by clicking here.

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