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The Federal Gun Control Law is Taking Shape

The bipartisan efforts to curb and limit gun violence, especially the extremist mass shooting events, is starting to take form and details are emerging. This will determine what efforts that we as gun owners and second amendment supports have to voice to change in our favor so that the time, efforts, and funding go to places where we can make a positive difference.

Given the political makeup in Washington though, it will be an uphill battle.

What’s in it?

  • Extreme Risk Protection Order – “Red Flag” Funding
  • Expanded NICS Criteria
  • School Security Funding
  • Mental Health Funding

What isn’t in it?

  • Change the age requirement to 21

The ERPO expansion.

Especially in the format of federal funds for state programs, this is an easy avenue that can be made to achieve broad support. By making funding available, but leaving the format to the states PPO and ERPO programs, the federal government keeps its efforts very hands off and lowers the chances of offending voters. If all Congress does is fund the states, they pass the buck while doing something at the same time.

The problem remains what it has always been, ERPOs only work sometimes, when conditions are right, and are an extreme risk for generating false positives and abusing rights. I’m seeing the headline today that California’s was used 58 times to prevent mass shootings. I would be very curious to see the case data on those 58 incidents and compare them to similar verbal or written events where ERPO was not invoked. Any ERPO abuse will be costly for the state and harm the people the laws are in place to help. Liken it to a false rape accusation, it is false accusation of violent actions or intentions. It significantly negatively impacts those it is leveled against, and “We’re doing it to protect people or to save kids.” doesn’t do much to offset the loss of a job, thousands of dollars in litigation and time recovery, or the reputation you previously had before being ERPO’d. The existence of overreach or perceived overreach will itself be a major friction point. ERPO “Red Flag” laws are the one of the lowest measures though, and to be fair to them there are avenues and methods where they can increase positive outcomes.

On that can generate a positive outcome thought track, most of these proceedings must have some evidentiary basis for initiating from law enforcement, a prosecutor, or a medical professional. The counter-point is, if the ERPO is needed why are they still free to act and not being placed into some status of state custody to monitor their actions? This evidence is in front of the law and behavior professionals so why isn’t a greater custody status warranted but disarming them is?

These positive outcomes come with negative outcomes, there will be negative consequences with ERPOs and lives will be negatively impacted. That is a consequence we are accepting with ERPO expansion. Without careful monitoring and course corrections these have the potential to vastly outweigh the theoretically prevented incidents of violence, and even trigger tangential events. We cannot utopia ourselves into believing that these well intentioned ERPO programs, like every government program, will not be the target of abusers looking to leverage it in their favor.

We equally must not delude ourselves that, no matter how many flags we hand to the monitors, even to the point of flagrant rights violations, we will stop all incidents of extreme violence. We won’t stop any incident that doesn’t have enough precursors, doesn’t stay engaged and followed up upon by officials, doesn’t get properly entered into denial systems like NICS, doesn’t hit any one of a number of failure points that could allow a violent actor the freedom to act.

We’ve seen these failures, repeatedly. We’ve seen the laws passed and fail to prevent the next incident, and the next, and the next. We’ve seen the stress and anger in the nation rise, and our response seems to be ‘make being angry against the law’, but only in certain specific and quasi-unenforceable manners.

Refresh NICS

Honestly, this has merit. Refreshing what we consider a prohibited person deserves looking at from a number of angles, to include petty situations like use of marijuana. Prohibited persons needs a modernization.

But, I know that isn’t what they are talking about. My guess is this will focus on having state and local agency reporting mandates updated. The system will still be only as good as its oldest and least accurate data. Remember that 77% of mass killers who used firearms passed their checks, this includes the worst offenders like Vegas, Pulse, and Virginia Tech.

I have yet to see a criteria update and a method of database verification that looks like it is going to catch these problematic persons and deny them at least the dealer avenue of buying a firearm. That denial is unlikely to mean much either, as denial follow ups are a small percentage of denials, most initial denials are false positives, and the number of cases brought to court of accurately caught prohibited persons being tried and convicted for attempting to acquire a firearm are a miniscule percentage of the total denials.

Why?

Law enforcement does not consider them a significant threat or high priority in the vast majority of cases. They aren’t worth the time. So when the new criteria again fails to stop someone, or when someone gets denied and not followed up on, we’re just going to see another headline proclaiming “Known to authorities.” next to the picture of a shooter.

School Security

Here is where we can make headway, significant headway. But here we also have a hard limit on efficacy with diminishing returns.

We have to handle school types differently, for elementary and middle schools the threats tend to be exterior and in high schools the threat is more often interior. For both types the most safety can come from controlling where people can go and how they can get there. Elementary and Middle schools are attacked by someone outside, High schools are often attacked by an enrolled student. Faculty can also, sometimes, become a threat and faculty tends to have increased access. There are a many school districts who do not trust their faculty. They will not openly admit this, but find a district where classroom doors do not lock and you have found one where they do not trust their faculty.

Bath, MI. and Fort Hood are relevant examples of faculty or staff attacking their own.

The best thing we can do for schools is control access and maintain that control. What was originally reported as a propped open exterior door in Uvalde seems now to have been a maintenance failure. Doors only keep people out if they can stay closed. Controlling access with entrance management, making sure students don’t open the doors for strangers if asked to, man trap access during hours of operation. Making sure parents know to use the main entrance and check in and out, making sure there are no exceptions to this and that gate jumping won’t be tolerated, getting staff, students, and parents on the same sheet of music. A challenge but not impossible.

And if you, like me, are thinking that people could still get through, you’re right. This isn’t a perfect solution. There is no perfect solution, especially if we don’t want to ‘imprison’ our kids inside a school building.

School security gets ‘benignly’ violated every day. It is done by parents, students, and teachers who can’t be bothered to wait, or who prop open a door for convenience, or who politely hold a door open for someone coming in behind them, or who are really super extra in a hurry. In most cases there is no negative intent, people are simply impatient. But someone with negative intent can exploit these same avenues that an impatient parent or careless student can.

Mental Health Funding

Especially in the pandemic era, mental health resources for teens and young adults need as much support as we can possibly leverage. Teens and young adults are not the medically vulnerable population to things like COVID, but they are the most susceptible to the depressions involved with massive debt and inflation leveraged against their low income brackets.

Young people are convinced, not without reason, that the world is going to slowly collapse around them and it is the older folks who set this dumpster fire up for them. They aren’t necessarily wrong either. Millennial and Zoomer humor is dark for many reasons.

But it isn’t all doom and gloom either, we have problems but they are decidedly first world problems. We just grew up in an era in which we were told, in the shortest of terms, that we wouldn’t have problems. That we wouldn’t have serious problems. That as long as we went to college we’d get a good job and that managing finances would be easy. The amount of ‘lied to’ resentment from the younger two generations towards the elder two is high.

All this leads back to mental health funding, having the medical staff and facilities to take care of the stressed generations that, after being called lazy good for nothings for the past couple decades, are about to shoulder the burden of carrying the world. I am well aware that each generation has its clashes with the previous and the follow on, but the resentment between Millenial/Zoomer and X/Boomer is deep. This is prior to splitting that into the political factions and the varieties of chaos that all brings as everyone seeks validation for their existence.

Federal Firearms Age Limit

This is honestly the item I expected in the bill that appears to not be within it, but may become its own bill. It has some developmental merits to stand on that both pro-gun and anti-gun people can acknowledge. The devil is in the details, as usual, and I wouldn’t expect them to write it in, especially initially, in a way that I would support but raising the age of ‘Adulthood’ in the nation to 21 is not off the table as a discussion item.

But that’s the real sticking point. We aren’t talking a restructure of adult privileges and responsibilities in this nation, to include voting age, age to serve in the military, age to start paying taxes, age where parental benefits and protections run out, and so forth. We are only discussing firearms and that is a fundamental problem. We keep telling these kids they are only partial adults. Quasi-adults. That they can be trusted with X but not Y, and not really with Y until Z. It’s a mess.

So could changing the age to 21 for semi-auto firearms in general, and not simply handguns, produce a positive change?

Yes. It could.

Could being the operative term. It doesn’t happen in a vacuum and it won’t by any stretch of the imagination eliminate, or significantly hinder, extreme events. But it will put regulated firearm sales further down the mental maturation arc as we understand it, and from that sole standpoint (combined with other benefits that young adults should have, like tax exemption prior to voting age), it should be on the table for discussion.

Would 18 year old me be sad I couldn’t get my rifle? Yes. I would, especially since I was a Marine and had a work rifle. But I didn’t end up buying my own rifle until 21. Why? I was terrible at financing. That whole ‘budget’ thing took a minute to figure out. I’m far from unique in that circumstance so while I very much appreciated my right to arms, what I lacked was ability.

The question gets more complicated than that though, we aren’t just talking about a barely out of highschool teenager doing something stupid with a gun, we are talking about radically curbing the right of everyone in the 18-21 bracket to protect themselves if they are living outside a typical home structure where an adult figure can be.

We aren’t just telling a wild-with-new-freedoms 18 year old boy they can’t have an AR yet with their fast food job earnings. We’re also telling the boy who lives on their own they can’t have one. The young woman who lives on her own, is in a new space, a new city, a new situation, that she cannot have this means of protection. Maybe they don’t need it because they are still home, or in a safer and more monitored space like a campus. But what if they aren’t? We’re also telling the soldier, sailor, airmen, or Marine that they’re adult enough to go to war with these things but not adult enough to protect their home with it.

There are problems, lots of problems, with adjusting an age marker of adulthood. If we choose to change this age, we must do so while addressing all the problems in some mitigatory manner.

In short. The best case scenario for the law is that it funds school security and is otherwise fairly status quo on firearm regulation. Worst case, it makes a mess of firearm regulation for no gains whatsoever.

Hard Head Veterans: Micro Lattice Pads

HHV Micro Lattice Helmet Pad

Hard Head Veterans is excited to showcase their Micro Lattice Helmet Pads – an excellent and affordable ballistic head accessories for tactical or ballistic helmets.  Developed in association with Carbon, using their Digital Light Synthesis manufacturing process, the Micro Lattice assembly is a superb energy-absorbing structure.

Micro Lattice pad ballistic head accessory
Top-down photo of the Micro Lattice Helmet Pads.

This substantially improves the protective capabilities of a helmet by mitigating and even preventing head trauma.

The Micro Lattice Helmet Pads average single-digit deformation numbers when tested to 1400 fps with 9mm projectiles on our ATE ballistic helmet. Regardless of whether they are at -60 degrees or 160 degrees they still perform the same.

Micro Lattice Helmet System ballistic accessory
Side view of the Micro Lattice Helmet Pad System.

This cannot be said for standard foam pads or other ballistic head accessories.

HHV Micro Lattice Ballistic Helmet Accessory Pads 

Micro Lattice Helmet Pad system ballistic head accessory
Hard Head Veterans produces quality ballistic head accessories.
  • Up to a 66% decrease in ballistic transient deformation over standard foam helmet pads
  • Up to a 21.70% decrease in blunt impact accelerations over standard foam pads
  • Lattice construction allows unrestricted airflow keeping helmets an average of 14 degrees cooler
  • Pads do not absorb sweat or water making them quick drying, positively buoyant, and easily washable.
  • Comfort lattice conforms evenly to the user’s head
  • Available in 1” and ¾” sizes

Shock Absorption

The Carbon DLS process enables lattice structure helmet pads that absorb and dissipate energy through the precise tuning of strut thickness and cell size.

Micro Lattice Helmet Pad system on mannequin
Micro Lattice Helmet Pad System display.

This lattice structure facilitates the absorption and dissipation of energy by aligning internal damping struts against the directions of impact. With over 28,000 individual struts, the lattice is built so each strut is specially tuned at every point on the helmet. Increases or decreases in the stiffness of the lattice structure are enabled through precise adjustments to the thickness of each strut, allowing the lattice to absorb and disperse energy from various impacts.

Micro lattice helmet Pad System on a helmet
Micro Lattice Helmet Pads inside a helmet.

The Micro Lattice Helmet Pads are compatible with the following helmets, among others: ACH, MICH, LWH, ECH, Crye Precision, Ops-Core, MTEK, Revision/Galvion, Gentex, Team Wendy, United Shield, and most others that utilize Velcro attachment.

Micro Lattice Pad System ballistic head accessory
Another view of the inside of a helmet with Micro Lattice Helmet Pads attached.

You can find documentation of the ballistic testing online here; read a more in-depth explanation on the Hard Head Blog.

You can find the Micro Lattice Helmet Pad system on the Hard Head Veterans website.

Ian on the XM5 – Forgotten Weapons

Ian usually takes on the topic of older weapons, his conversational and matter-of-fact tone of voice taking us on a journey while we sip a drink and perhaps enjoy a cigar and hear the tale of whatever neat bit of firearm history he has for us this time.

While I go to Mike and Brandon for my more absurdist humor in the gun space, Ian along with Josh and Henry at 9-Hole Reviews are my stops for quiet contemplation on practical matters.

Now, I too have shot the XM5, an Army trial gun actually that SIG brought to Freedom Days. I shot the XM250/MG68 as well. Both with the higher pressure hybrid case ammunition.

These are going to be phenomenal rifles, even with the lower velocity practice ammunition. I didn’t discuss that facet of the program with Sig, but it aligns nicely with other training doctrine the military is pushing with other platforms. For example, 7.62x51mm is staying in sniper programs as a training round primarily as the new MSRs field. The deployed rounds will be .300NM and .338NM. Using the cost savings methodology the average soldier will still be fielding a more efficient 135gr ball round in its 6.8×51 brass cased configuration than in the 7.62×51 147gr.

For the civilian market, it will come down to cost. With 6.8 being loaded in quantity it could become popular, especially if the plinker ammo is around what M80 and M80 knock offs are running. Even the high performance hybrid rounds will be popular if they can price can be kept around what match ammo runs. It will come down to that though, SIG knows it too.

Anyway, enjoy the video and take a break from the politics on the internet for a moment.

Lentils – Another Survival Crop

Since we’ve been talking about the worsening economy and growing more of your own food lately, I thought I would discuss a new-to-me garden crop that I am trying this year. It’s lentils.

I know that lentils were mentioned by that tone deaf liberal opinion piece by Bloomberg awhile back about eating less meat and taking the bus, but I’ve been using them in my cooking for a few years now, and I rather like them.

Let them eat cake.

I like lentils mixed with split peas in pea n ham soup. I’ve found a recipe for a combo of wild rice and lentils as a side dish in the Instant pot, and I also tried a new recipe this year for an Indian curry inspired pumpkin and lentil soup. It’s all quite tasty and not worth ignoring this lovely food source just to spite snooty liberals.

Lentils are a good source of plant protein and dietary fiber and have been grown for thousands of years (8000 years per one source). Given my newfound taste for this hearty and healthy legume, I decided to try to grow them this year in my survival/pandemic/inflation garden. I know that they are still pretty cheap at the grocery store, but I wanted to try growing my own.

Lentils are apparently easy to grow. I guess if they’ve been around for 8000 years, it makes sense that they must be fairly low maintenance. But another advantage is that being legumes, lentils are nitrogen fixers which can help restore your garden soil after heavy feeders have been in that spot.

This is an important point to remember.  If things continue further south economically, chemical fertilizers will not be easy to get or inexpensive when you can. Any trick that you can use to keep up soil fertility without the use of purchased fertilizer will be a plus (and may even make or break your crop). So remember that in addition to being nutritious, legumes like lentils take nitrogen from the air and put it back into the soil. Let them work for you if you have the space.

I planted mine from a bag of store lentils that I had opened in my pantry. All my research says that it’s fine (and easy) to do that. I put them in tubs of soil that last year had grown peppers (crop rotation, remember?). I also added a low jury-rigged “trellis” for them to climb (made out of reused stuff I had leftover from previous years), as apparently though short, they do like support.

Grow, my little baby lentils!

My lentil plants are now about four inches tall. There’s fifteen or twenty of them between two tubs, but we’ll see how many survive to maturity. I’ll have to do an update in the fall when/if they make it to producing pods. I’m excited to see how this turns out. Yes, this is my life – I get excited about legumes. Get over it.

To balance out the snotty liberal piece about lentils I thought I’d leave you with a different take. It involves the Greek philosopher Diogenes and lentils – here ya go.

Hot Takes and Cold Facts

This particular hot take crossed my feed this morning and I am… just tired of it. Friends of mine of more liberal persuasions have been hot posting, understandably, on gun control since the recent violence in Buffalo and Uvalde. Those two incidents represent some of the worst excesses humanity is capable of, they were committed by teens who had barely reached adulthood, and they were against two vulnerable populations, a largely elderly African American shopper crowd and children.

Add to that the fact that Crime rose under the pandemic conditions and we are seeing the result unrest continue to manifest in daily events. I don’t think we’ve peaked yet from the point/counterpoint rise from the riots, January 6th, the economic shut down, and now inflation.

However righteous anger at an issue does not make you right in your analysis. Righteous anger does not make an ineffective effort effective. Regardless of how correct being upset is at a circumstance in our lives, it does nothing to improve the efficacy of a response.

There is an understable sentiment, but the premise is flawed.

Let’s tackle the suppositions in this hot take. The first is that Universal Background Checks and Red Flag laws do not have significant flaws in their implementation, execution, and enforcement. With UBC’s, its compliance. Not merely noncompliance by nefarious forces circumventing the law, which would remain absurdly easy person to person, but people who just can’t be bothered to. With Red Flag laws the premise is even murkier since Red Flag are guessing at future behavior that hasn’t risen to criminally violent yet. The false positive rate on Red Flags is going to be absurd, the people falsely accused and negatively affected by this are going to create light years of litigation, and all of this still might be an acceptable policy if it had a snowball’s chance in hell of having high efficacy against the violent outliers.

But it doesn’t. Red Flag is a shot in the dark where we would need to be willing to accept a variable consequence of inconvenience to active harm against a large group ‘flagged’ persons, who will be mostly false positives, in order to try and catch the miniscule percentage of them who would transcend the Red Flag behavior into active violence. We must also recognize that there will be circumstances without warning signs and that current ‘Red Flag’ laws that are in place, like New York with friendly legislatures towards these policies, the laws failed. We have a long list of individuals who were ‘known’ to authorities but nobody asks how many people are ‘known’ to authorities in some manner.

So, in the raw, the hot take is narrowly correct. If you wouldn’t pass a UBC (which is just a regular background check, nothing magical there and 77% of mass killers passed theirs) or be put onto a red flag list (which in jurisdictions with them are rarely used because of the glaringly obvious civil rights issues of overuse) we do not want you purchasing a gun. That is correct.

The problem is that isn’t the criticism. The assumption in this post is that pro-gun folks believe it will create an “insurmountable barrier” to gun ownership. That isn’t it at all. The problem is it makes literally no practical barrier at all. It’s only effect is to inconvenience or actively harm the already reasonably compliant while hoping and praying you snag up any active killer who will be actively trying to circumvent these prohibitive steps.

You might, if you’re lucky and they are a particular brand of dumb, get them to tattle on themselves. However that begins running into other civil rights problems, particularly entrapment and agencies justifying there existence.

Remember the Michigan Militia that was going to kidnap the Governor? And there grand alleged plan was to take her to the non-extradition territory of… Wisconsin… Remember when that whole thing fell apart because it turned out that all the people actively encouraging the plot worked for the government? That’s entrapment, the government can’t encourage you to do crime and then arrest you for it. They can only pretend to be someone you need to do the crime, like a weapons dealer or someone who owns a property. They. Can’t. Encourage you.

But they do. So they can get big arrests and make big headlines for stopping big plots.

So on this one, it isn’t that UBC’s and Red Flag create insurmountable barriers. It’s that they create no barrier to the events you are trying to prevent. None at all. There are a myriad of easy and immediate workarounds for anyone so motivated towards violence.

Now let’s break down the title photo hot take. It is critically flawed also.

1967 – DOT Bars Truck.

Excellent. That is a small design change that can be universally implemented across a fleet of similar commercial vehicles that can improve fatality/injury stats for trucking. How is that working out?

  • Of the approximately 510,000 police-reported crashes involving large trucks in 2019, there were 4,479 (1 percent) fatal crashes and 114,000 (29 percent) injury crashes.
  • Single-vehicle crashes (including crashes that involved a bicyclist, pedestrian, nonmotorized vehicle, etc.) made up 21 percent of all fatal crashes, 14 percent of all injury crashes, and 22 percent of all property damage only crashes involving large trucks in 2019. The majority (62 percent) of fatal large truck crashes involved two vehicles.
  • Fatal crashes involving large trucks often occur in rural areas and on Interstate highways. Approximately 57 percent of all fatal crashes involving large trucks occurred in rural areas, 25 percent occurred on Interstate highways, and 13 percent fell into both categories by occurring on rural Interstate highways.
  • Thirty-six percent of all fatal crashes, 22 percent of all injury crashes, and 20 percent of all property damage only crashes involving large trucks occurred at night (6:00 pm to 6:00 am).
  • The vast majority of fatal crashes (83 percent) and nonfatal crashes (86 percent) involving large trucks occurred on weekdays (Monday through Friday).
  • Collision with a vehicle in transport was the first harmful event (the first event during a crash that resulted in injury or property damage) in 73 percent of fatal crashes involving large trucks, 84 percent of injury crashes involving large trucks, and 77 percent of property damage only crashes involving large trucks.
  • Overturn (rollover) was the first harmful event in 4 percent of all fatal crashes involving large trucks and 2 percent of all nonfatal crashes involving large trucks.
  • In 2019, 33 percent of work zone fatal crashes and 14 percent of work zone injury crashes involved at least one large truck.
  • There were 13.65 fatal large truck crashes per million people in the United States in 2019, a 29-percent increase from 10.6 in 2010.
  • In 2019, on average, there were 1.12 fatalities in fatal crashes involving large trucks. In 91 percent of those crashes, there was only one fatality. The majority, 82 percent, of fatalities were not occupants of the large truck.

Huh, trucks still kill people. Addressing one method of collision death and injury may have curbed a single avenue, and in the context of the number of things we can control in public shipping because it is standardized and on the highway system, it did not stop fatalities. It probably didn’t even impact fatalities enough to move outside year over year variances due to other causes.

1982 – Drug packaging. Increase tamper proofing and quality sealing.

Putting aside the hyperbole, we are again within a easily regulatable space, producible to a standard, and to a prevent or indicate deliberate tampering with an over the counter medicine, we were able to make a positive change and lower the risks of children getting into medicine packages and have an easily identifiable way to see if a medicine shouldn’t be trusted due to tamper seals. We have them on the majority of consumables now.

Easy change, demonstrable positive benefits. It isn’t even claiming that it alone is preventing someone else from tampering with medicine in the future, but instead making it more obvious to a consumer if someone did.

1995 – Oklahoma City Bombing.

Here is where the analogy falls off the rails. The Oklahoma City Bombing is a deliberate event with a complex motive. It is an outlier event. It remains the second deadliest terrorist incident in US history, second only to 9/11.

The false presumption in the post is that because of the new regulations on fertilizer, no bombings have taken place since. This false attribution, that because we monitor fertilizer nobody could build effective HME (Homemade Explosives), is asinine. What we haven’t manifested again, thankfully, is the proper combination of motivations and ability to employ HME in effectively. HME is stupid easy to make, it was the number one casualty causer in the Middle East and made by illiterate third worlders. If you believe that because we have a rule about fertilizer bombings are rare, I am sorry. Bombings are rare because they are rare, the motivation to kill and destroy on that scale manifests in extremely rare circumstances and usually for extreme grievances, perceived or otherwise.

In the case of Timothy McVeigh, it was Waco and Ruby Ridge. The stated motive was retaliation against the Federal government, whose actions had killed 76 people in Waco over an alleged firearm law violation. McVeigh visited Waco during and after the siege, it was his final catalyst.

Now, how do you put a crash bar or a tamper proof seal on outrage? How do you curb the motives for a complex attack with a narrow rule monitoring a commercial product, one of many, that can be turned into an explosive?

2001 – Shoe Bomber.

Okay, that was straight forward. It prevented bombing attempts after that on planes, right?

Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab (Arabic: عمر فاروق عبد المطلب ; also known as Umar Abdul Mutallab and Omar Farooq al-Nigeri; born December 22, 1986)[3][4] popularly referred to as the “Underwear Bomber” or “Christmas Bomber“,[5] is a Nigerian-born terrorist who, at the age of 23, attempted to detonate plastic explosives hidden in his underwear while on board Northwest Airlines Flight 253, en route from Amsterdam to Detroit, Michigan, on December 25, 2009.[1][4][6]

Nope. Dumb luck saved the day here, 8 years post 9/11 too.

Also what is the plan, in a TSA check line full of people if someone does have a shoe bomb inside the scanner machine? What if they attack the checkpoint instead of the plane? So again, false positive attribution. We did a thing and because nobody has been motivated enough to attack with a bomb in this specific manner again we assume instead that we’re “preventing” it. Meanwhile, active “preventions” are through the efforts of agencies monitoring traffic of high risk individuals and groups and hoping they catch the right message posted at the right time about an event to intercede. Sometimes it works. Sometimes it doesn’t.

But don’t tell me the TSA is ‘preventing’ anything. Best case scenario is that checkpoint is a speedbump. Worst case scenario, an intelligent enough and motivated enough individual just uses one of the numerous ways to go around them. Lucky for us, most criminals want the easiest pathway to money for the least risk and angry extremists have a tendency to be dimmer bulbs than average. We can’t rely on it though. But that’s what this post line is doing, relying on the rule because of lack of repeat event while ignoring comparative events.

So now that we’ve torn apart the relevancy of the analogies and shown the glaring error in trusting the TSA and a rule on fertilizer purchases to stop extremists with plenty of other avenues to cause havoc, why should I care about the thoughts and prayers line? The hot take falls apart under critical analysis and we come to realize that a lot of our security measures are just that… its thoughts and prayers. It’s the thought, that under ideal circumstances and low amounts of human error, we could detect an event and the prayer that all perpetrators are too stupid or unmotivated to circumvent them.

Gun control is just thoughts and prayers.

“Many gun owners are hesitant to express support for stricter gun control measures” – NPR

Hmm, I wonder why? I am certain NPR, the fair, balanced, and unbiased network that published this

on their official accounts will find educated, articulate, enlightened modern gun owners who can speak clearly on their concerns for this piece.

AUBREY: Well, let me tell you about two gun owners, in particular. They’re neighbors, Richard Small and Gerardo Marquez. They both live on small ranches south of San Antonio, not far from Uvalde. They have a lot in common. They’re both in their 60s, both retired school teachers and administrators. And both told me they grew up with guns. Here’s Small and then Marquez.

Oh yay… Fudds.

They found two boomers, not Millennials or Zoomers (who are statistically more pro-gun and more likely to own modern firearms) to ask about why they are concerned about speaking out in favor of firearm legislation. Could it be that, like on many other topics, the younger gun owners who buy the modern firearms are blaming the older generations for screwing things up in this first place? Could it be that their ill-informed opinions on old our outdated modes of thinking are just not nuanced enough for meaningful participation in a modern discussion?

Nah, I’m sure it’s just the extreme NRA, who we will be reminded over and over again supported the National Firearms Act back in the day. They supported other unsuccessful legislative actions to curb the violent impulses of man too, because they were assured there was a limit and they wanted to be ‘reasonable’ and not cast in the light they were then cast in anyway.

It’s nice you found two elder BoomerFudds in Texas who hold the most sympathetic viewpoint towards gun control gun that gun owners tend to in order to represent all gun owner concerns everywhere.

RICHARD SMALL: I have a rifle that I use with my grandson for plinking. They call it plinking, you know, shooting at a steel target.

Okay, so Small is a super casual.

GERARDO MARQUEZ: We duck hunt, turkey hunt. So that’s what it is for me. We’re both in a country where people regularly shoot.

Another casual, but this one hunts. Did he hear Biden’s Kevlar wearing deer line?

Yep, bonafides established as gun owners so they can speak for everyone.

AUBREY: Guns are just part of their everyday lives. They go to gun shows. They read hunting magazines. They’re both very upset about the spate of mass shootings.

Can we stop with this false expertise game? Just because someone tangentially participates in something does not qualify someone to speak on its nuances and cause and effect. I wouldn’t trust these two to talk about vehicle safety designs and protocols either or roadway designs or safe traffic flow. I would trust my father to have an intelligent conversation on those topics, but in just a mild difference between himself and these two gentlemen of the same rough age he happens to be a traffic safety engineer. I would probably take great stock in these two’s opinions on teaching, since they are retired teachers. But even there, I would have to temper that with how long they have been retired and how recent their experiences in the classroom are. Additionally, where did they teach and what was the culture like there must also be considered. I would still however value their opinions in their field, they are likely much better informed by experience than mine on that topic.

AUBREY: And they’re troubled, they say, by the easy access to assault-style rifles. And they want change, they say.

Ah, classic 2nd Amendment buttism. They can likely not articulate why their firearms are different than the scary ones accurately.

SMALL: I had an epiphany of, I’m done. I don’t need it. It’s a bad, deadly combination in the wrong hands. (Small turned in his AR.)

You can choose not to need something. You can choose to give it up. These are your choices. These are your opinions. We are not required to give them any weight in our decisions or opinions and we would be unwise to do so if they are ill-informed opinions. One wonders if Small believed he, at 60+, was the wrong hands? What if his other firearms fall into the wrong hands, what makes them safer?

MARQUEZ: It’s so obvious that we need to do something. The last two shootings, the one in Buffalo, the one here in Uvalde – 18-year-olds. I mean, golly, when are we going to wake up?

Why are you assuming we’re asleep, Mr. Marquez? Why are you assuming that security professionals and those educated on the topics of violence haven’t been trying? They have been. Vast resources were poured into school security programs, and that trend is being repeated again in places like Michigan and Ohio, but then schools didn’t change… because security wasn’t trendy. It wasn’t fashionable to harden the school. It was damaging to egos and psychies to admit that the only thing truly protecting our children in schools was how good the buildings, and people in them, are at keeping people out and the goodwill of society. We’ve spent decades, decades where those at ages 60, 70, and 80 years of age were the adults and in charge, eroding our good will.

AUBREY: Marquez is a Democrat. Small is a Republican.

Ah, ye olde bi-partisan coverage too. More false expertise plays by assuming these two again speak for all gun owners on both sides.

They both still own multiple guns.

Cool. I own multiple books. Multiple lawn mowers too. Even multiple cats. I am not a publication house resource, a landscaping expert, or a veterinarian.

But both support stricter background checks, more licensing requirements and red flag laws.

Ask them how those work. I’ll wait.

That is, basically, taking guns away from people who are deemed dangerous by the courts.

They’ve never gotten that wrong before.

EXONERATIONS. The Registry recorded 161 exonerations in 2021. YEARS LOST TO WRONGFUL IMPRISONMENT. In 2021, exonerees lost an average of 11.5 years to wrongful imprisonment for crimes they did not commit — 1,849 years in total for 161 exonerations.

Oh, nevermind.

Marquez says he’s long been in favor of more gun control. The recent tragedies add to the urgency, he says. But neither of them has spoken up so publicly about their views until now.

Maybe because it still, even in the age of social media (maybe especially in this age), is unwise to comment on topics you know little about and expect to be taken more seriously than what an ignoramus should be taken.

AUBREY: Well, one reason is that as a longtime member of the NRA – the National Rifle Association – Small says he’s been around a lot of people who he says have fallen for the gun lobby’s propaganda.

This gun lobby?

How about other lobby’s propaganda?

Lobbyists’ own propaganda?

SMALL: They’ve almost become so defensive and paranoid that government wants to seize their weapons.

They do.

And they’re so indoctrinated with that concept.

Yep. So far fetched.

The government won’t murder you and take your guns over the rumor of you doing something illegal, they promise.

I mean, we’ve got people, these guys – I’m so embarrassed, you know? They’re walking around with these ARs, you know, flamboyantly, you know, downtown, protesting.

I think they’re goofy too, but that is there right. I support that right even if I believe they could spend their time better. The VA rally was a sight to behold.

And, you know – and I’m just like, this has gotten out of hand, you know? It’s so crazy.

You believe it has gotten out of hand. That’s your opinion. An opinion of an old Fudd who helped vote in and set the conditions that these largely younger and better informed folks are now protesting. But sure, it has gotten out of hand when the protests have been far more peaceful than comparative examples of ‘mostly peaceful’ events.

AUBREY: And Small told me, from the outside, it may seem like these people represent the majority of gun owners. They certainly are the most vocal and getting the most attention.

Because that works. The future is now.

FADEL: So he thinks more gun owners are like him, share his views?

AUBREY: Yeah. He’s starting to think that he might be part of a silent majority of gun owners who want what he Marquez call commonsense gun law reform. Here’s Marquez.

Seems suspiciously Fudd-y.

MARQUEZ: I think the majority of gun owners would like for an 18-year-old not to have an AR.

I disagree.

We’ll hand them an AR, put them in a tank, and send him or her to war but they can’t defend themselves at home with that same basic individual weapon? Our generation has followed the trend of the previous ones and our service rifle became the popular one. Weird.

AUBREY: And Small says he’d like to see a new movement of people in the middle instead of an agenda driven by minority or what he would call the extreme within the NRA.

Why? We let every other angry opinion block minority drive the narrative. Why not guns? You realize there is a massive group of gun owners who think the NRA is too soft, right? Too dated and out of touch with the younger modern firearm owner.

SMALL: I’m hoping that gun owners, you know, sensible people are going to rise up and just – you know what, guys? Enough is enough.

Why do you assume that’s not what is happening when they won’t budge on gun control?

FADEL: So is there any evidence that the views of these two neighbors are actually reflective of most gun owners?

AUBREY: Well, of course, there’s a range of views. But, yeah, there is some evidence. I spoke to Dr. Michael Siegel. He’s a public health researcher at Tufts University. He’s published research based on surveys of thousands of gun owners.

I would love to see where the survey landed on the scale of gun control studies. Did it make it the cut for relevant data? Or is it like most survey data and can be structured so that the ignorant answer how you would prefer them to without trying too hard?

Let’s see.

MICHAEL SIEGEL: You know, our study found that the overwhelming majority of gun owners are just like him,

Ignorant, got it.

that they support these types of basic laws that aim, simply, to keep guns out of the hands of people who are high risk for violence.

Again, ask them how they work. Make them explain it. They cannot.

But they’re afraid to speak out publicly.

AUBREY: His study was published in 2020. After a mass shooting like Buffalo or Uvalde, support for gun control tends to go up.

Oh? An emotive response to a culturally shocking act of extreme violence? People tend to connect with things that are touted as cures for the bad thing, whether they are or not? Shocking. You know how many people got rich on bullshit during COVID because people were afraid? But we wouldn’t do that with guns right?

But he thinks the voices of gun owners who support tougher laws are still not being heard.

Because they shouldn’t be heard beyond the point that there idea is a bad one. That’s it. That’s the end of considering an opinion. You said it. It’s a terrible idea. It won’t work. Here is why. The end.

FADEL: So what does he think the reason is for that?

Clearly not their ignorance on the topics relevant to the discussion.

AUBREY: Well, they’re kind of stuck in the middle.

No, they are stuck outside having valuable input.

They reject the gun lobby’s positions.

K.

But when they look at the other side, they’re also leery of gun control advocates who say things like, get rid of all guns.

So any of the serious ones. That is the only serious argument to be heard is prohibition, which would be impossible to work, but it is the only serious counter-position to the 2nd Amendment. There is no middle ground except that occupied by the uninformed, the ignorant, or the wishfully naive.

Or, you know, they don’t want to be seen as part of the problem just because they own a firearm, Dr. Siegel says.

Oh, they don’t like being told that they want dead kids because they support the 2nd Amendment. Despite their background as school teachers they’re still going to be lumped into a group by an extreme vocal minority of opposed opinionated groups based on a single characteristic? Maybe that’s why the ‘Gun Lobby’ is so ‘extreme’ in their stance on regulations.

SIEGEL: It alienates them because they feel like they’re being blamed.

No, they are being blamed. It isn’t a feeling. Anti-gunners, anti-NRA, anti-gun lobby, anti-2A groups all blame all gun owners with the rare exception of those they can use as political leverage for a moment to try and push their agenda. Like Marquez and Small here.

And so we really need gun owners to be part of the solution. And to do that, we have to respect gun culture. We have to respect the fact that they have a legitimate reason for owning a gun. We don’t have to agree with it, but we have to respect it.

That sounds wonderful. Mutual respect over a point of disagreement. Validating my viewpoint, even while disagreeing with it. What about AR owners? What about the ‘All gun laws are an infringement!’ types?

AUBREY: And he says that will help elevate the voices of gun owners who support gun control.

Oh, nevermind.

FADEL: So he’s arguing that gun control advocates would make progress if they embrace gun owners.

But only the nice ones, right? Only the ‘good’ gun owners as picked out by people who do not support or validate the need to own a firearm. I’m sure that’ll work out fairly.

AUBREY: That’s basically it. I mean, the views of Richard Small and Gerardo Marquez fit with the research.

Neat. Please validate the research based upon their understanding of the topics involved.

Gun owners believe in the right to own weapons. But they see plenty of room for compromise and lots of common ground.

If the common ground is great actual safety, yes. The problem is, and that no one on the anti side is willing to entertain, nobody will hear a solution that doesn’t fit within their worldview. Gun owners are tired of it. Security experts are tired of it. Gun owners are tired of being the forever-scapegoat for the criminally deranged and unspeakably evil.

Compromise? On what? What is the compromise? What are you willing to give gun owners back? All gun owners, not just the ones you agree with because they have a surface level understanding of any of the topics involved, at best.

And if recent tragedies motivated more to speak out, Dr. Siegel says he thinks it would make a big difference.

SIEGEL: I think it’s a game changer. I think that when gun owners are willing to come out and express their support for these laws, that’s when things will really start to change.

Change. Not improve. Just change.

AUBREY: I mean, it’s a lot of people. About a third of adults in the U.S. own a gun.

FADEL: Any evidence to show public opinion on gun control is shifting overall, even as legislation is stuck?

AUBREY: Well, a recent poll from Ipsos finds two-thirds of Americans believe there should be at least moderate regulations or restrictions on gun ownership.

Yay! Vague wording wins another poll saying what you want it to! Amazing! Now, ask them what ‘moderate regulations’ means, and be specific. Once again, I bet they cannot articulate it in a way that makes sense for a public policy. I also bet they say a lot of things that are already the law.

And though there is a partisan difference, 53% of Republicans agree with moderate to strong regulations.

Again, a vague ‘moderate to strong’ means literally nothing unless you can articulate that into policy.

I spoke to Chris Jackson of Ipsos about their results.

CHRIS JACKSON: We found that even among Republicans, we saw a majority, 78%, said that they would be more likely to support a candidate who supports passing background checks and red flag laws for all new gun purchases.

How many remotely understand what that process would look like, how it would be enforced, or would the expected compliance rates or resultant outcomes would be? Do they realize that both of these policies will overwhelming result in minority, especially black, criminal prosecutions going up? Did they even think about that? Did that make it into your poll?

Or did you, as is usual in polls, just use language favorable to your result and let people fill in the blanks in their own heads on what ‘moderate’ or ‘background check’ or ‘red flag’ means? Did you give any examples of positive and negative use cases for any of these? Did you point out background checks inherent limitations or that both 18 year old recent killers, the racist and the baby killer, passed theirs?

Are we addressing actual failure points or using buzzwords to garner the support we want to see. Polls are terrible for policy, great for general opinion and feelings.

AUBREY: And researchers say if polls continue to show that most Americans, including many gun owners, support new gun control measures, it would be harder for politicians to say they’re representing the interests of their people by voting against them.

But those numbers will decline again, they always do once cool heads prevail again. If you have to rely on emotion and stats manipulation to get your policy to pass, it sucks. If your policy easy work arounds, it sucks. And if you keep supporting these positions and relying on the objectively ignorant to support these positions, you suck. You are the problem.

New York – Ban Body Armor, More Red Flags, License and 21+ for Rifles

Image via Spectrum News 1. Governor Hochul signs more gun control.

Governor Hochul of New York has signed a veritable dearth, in efficacy, of new firearms laws into effect for the Empire State.

“It just keeps happening. Shots ring out, flags come down and nothing ever changes — except here in New York,” Hochul said. 

Apparently items like Cuomo’s SAFE Act, which failed to stop the Buffalo shooter despite being touted as the model for firearm safety legislation, are the changes they mean? Is she saying legislation in other states hasn’t changed? I’m not sure what she is casing dispersions at, but in any manner that we look at it she seems to have extremely short term memory. Forgetful of the rash of failed policies that haven’t stopped attacks in her state or other states with constrictive rule formats.

A law meant to keep guns away from people who are deemed to be a danger to themselves or others will expand to make health care professionals who have examined a person within the last six months eligible to file extreme risk protection orders. So the Red Flag law that failed will now be expanded to people who have little to no background in legal protections for their clients, because they are doctors and not lawyers, opening them up to a rash of new complex liabilities for either acting or failing to act. I see no problems here at all. Law enforcement and local prosecutors in New York will also be able to file risk protection orders based on credible information that a person is likely to engage in dangerous behavior.

What methodology they use to attribute credible, what liabilities the state is taking on for getting it wrong, and what the restitution for aggrieved parties will be is entirely unknown. But I doubt the state has put much thought into falsely flagging someone. Better to do something wrong that sounds well intentioned than admit harsh realities, right?

They’ve banned ‘body vests’ too, except for the typical LEO exceptions. I have no notion of how they intend to enforce this provision other than make companies stop shipping new orders to New York.

Officials at the state Division of Criminal Justice Services will also study the feasibility of microstamping of bullets when fired from a gun, a long-sought measure that has sat on a shelf in Albany for years. No one is going to bring up that it is long sought after because it is a pipe dream and that California’s rule is slowing closing their handgun market, by design, because the technology only works in science fiction.

Why New York is eager to continue to emulate the state with the most mass killings and most school shootings in the nation is beyond me.

Taken together, the measures approved in the final days of the legislative session are meant to address the shootings in Buffalo and Texas. The alleged 18-year-old gunman in Buffalo is said to have used an AR-15-style rifle. And, despite the existence of a red flag law on the books for the last several years in New York, was able to obtain firearms despite allegedly threatening his high school. So the law didn’t work. The change in the law will make the red flag work better. The change in the age limitations are a paper tiger provision, we have a myriad examples where this rule has already been circumvented in some manner and yet Hochul and crew are like…

How anti-gunners believe their gun laws will work… this time.

” Suck it, poors!” Rep. Donald Beyer – 1000% Firearm Tax? NFA 2.0?

Via screencap Fox Business

Virginia’s Congressman Donald Beyer hates the poor and only believes “assault weapons” should only be a purview of the financially privileged.

At least, that is what a 1,000% excise tax on the firearms would mean as it propels America’s most popular rifle into a price bracket with most NFA transferable machine guns. Remember those, legal machine guns? They are still around, but only for those with more disposable income than a solid used car costs. Ah, classicism. It’s wonderful that Donald is likely both in a financial class where he could still get these if he wanted and that he has the protections provided, via taxpayer dollars of those now prohibited due to price, provided to our elected.

Guns for me but not for thee, for the children.

Now, this is unlikely to pass. Just as an assault weapon ban is unlikely to pass and instead simply be used as a political wedge that it always is. I’ve already seen several headlines about, “If only the age had been 21, ______ wouldn’t have happened.” as gun controllers exploit victims and survivors to pass rules that would only have ‘saved’ them if there weren’t alternative methods of injury.

That is where these emotive arguments all fall flat of building coherent policy, we are never actually addressing motive or curbing method of injury. We’re looking at a gallon of water, declaring part of the water dangerously wet.

“There’s nothing magical about that thousand percent number. It’s severe enough to actually inhibit and restrict sales. But also successful enough that it’s not seen as an absolute ban.” – Beyer, to Business Insider.

So as long as it isn’t an absolute ban, just only accessible by the wealthy elites, it is a-ok. No Second Amendment violation at all. Very cool, Congressman. Propelling a good’s cost, one that is a natural human and constitutionally protected right to own, from $1,000 of material and labor costs to $10,000 of sin tax to the government certainly doesn’t stink of theft, oppression, or elitism at all. Oh, and I bet they promise not to use this new found leverage on any other good or service.

Again, this is not all that likely to get a serious vote. It is the the type of item they are throwing in as a smokescreen for legislation they know does have a chance. Red Flag legislation, Universal Background Check for transfers legislation, raising the age on all semi-autos to 21…

Jack and I discussed that this weekend.

The short of it is, as usual, the legislature is using the more extreme proposals as cover for the proposals that look more reasonable in contrast. This means that if they pass these ‘more reasonable’ measures, they get to claim a win for their gun control constituents while simultaneously setting up the next argument when their rule inevitably doesn’t work. If they see a positive shift in their homicide numbers they can claim it is all due to their hard work on the rule, if they don’t see a change or it gets worse it will because of those obstructionist Republicans and their love of dead school kids and massacres, right?

Any win for anti-gunners just sets up the leverage for the next horrific crime to be used. Nobody ask why the thousands of rules we have in place aren’t working, just make more rules! Nobody even critically analyzes whether a rule could have a positive effect in broad context, just point out the narrow perfect world situation where it would have worked if a perpetrator didn’t put any effort into a work around.

We’ll see what actually hits the full floors out of committee.

The Tax would be a repeat of the National Firearms Act Tax, but at a far greater margin. The Thompson, in 1934, was $200 and the tax on it was $200, making it a 100% tax. We’ve upped that factor by 10 since incomes are far greater and pricing is far different. But the effect is the same, price the item out of access but make it technically accessible so as not to run afoul of he 2A… technically. Taxation is truly theft.

Gun Facts 101: An Epidemic Of Murder?

(from LNN-GettyImages.com)

[Ed: This was first published by James Fite on Liberty Nation News May 21. Used with permission. I’d probably have said “progressives” rather than “Democrats” because some Democrats still think rationally about guns. ]

The political left loves to paint gun violence as a public health crisis – an epidemic, according to the Biden administration – but is that justified? A look at the numbers as they relate to the rest of America’s problems shows the “epidemic” label might be just a tad dramatic.

Firearm Deaths By The Numbers

According to the CDC, there were 45,222 “firearm-related deaths” in the US in 2020. On the CDC’s FastStats pages, a more revealing breakdown is available, however. There were 24,576 homicides in 2020, of which 19,384 involved guns. So why the first, much higher, number? Well, that includes accidents, justified defensive shootings, homicides, and the biggest chunk of all, suicides. In 2020, 45,979 people took their own lives – and 24,292 of them used firearms. Approximately 3,358,814 deaths occurred in the US in 2020, according to the CDC’s Provisional Mortality Data published in 2021. The 19,384 firearm homicides account for just 0.58% of the nation’s deaths that year. If we define “gun violence deaths” as murders, suicides, defensive-shootings, and accidents, as the CDC and the rest of the Biden administration clearly does, then firearms still only accounted for about 1.3% of the deaths that year.

Kidneys More Likely To Kill Than Guns

Even being generous enough to the left’s narrative to pretend that 100% of those who used a gun to kill either themselves or someone else in 2020 would have chosen life rather than death if only firearms weren’t available – as if there weren’t thousands of other homicides and suicides already – guns don’t even come close to ranking in the top causes of mortality. The top ten for that year include, in order: heart disease, cancer, COVID-19, unintentional injury, stroke, chronic lower respiratory disease Alzheimer disease, diabetes, influenza and pneumonia, and kidney disease. The last accounted for 52,547, or 1.56% of the year’s deaths. That’s three times the share of lives claimed by actual firearm violence – but if gun violence were only mentioned as often as kidney disease, never mind a third as often, it wouldn’t even be a part of the national discussion.

As for deadly potential, the 2020 population of the US was an estimated 329.5 million. That means 329.5 million pairs of kidneys, of which 52,547, or 0.016%, killed their owners. Pretending for a moment that there are no multiple murders, and again, that 100% of the suicides and homicides wouldn’t have happened without firearms, then just 45,222 firearms, or 0.011% of the estimated 413 million in America, would have taken lives in 2020.

Who’s Fired Up Over Fentanyl?

Another actual epidemic that the left-wing media refuses to pay much attention, if any at all, is the skyrocketing number of fentanyl overdose deaths – and that’s something the government could actually do something about. As Liberty Nation’s Sarah Cowgill reported, there were 107,000 fentanyl overdose deaths in 2021. In 2020, there were an estimated 70,029.

Just 150 micrograms of fentanyl is considered a “significant risk” of overdose, according to the anesthesiologist and two Ph.D. chemists working with Harm Reduction Ohio, a non-profit dedicated to reducing the harm associated with drug use and drug policy. “High risk” is 250, “extreme risk” is 400, “death likely” is 700, and “death near certain” is 1,000 micrograms. The 250-1,000 range can kill most non-tolerant users, including veteran heroin users who have been abstinent for a while – but 2,000 micrograms will kill anyone. There are 1,000,000 micrograms in a single gram, meaning that each gram of fentanyl that makes its way over the border is enough to potentially mean certain death for 500 of the most tolerant heroin users – and that doesn’t account for the vast majority of people, who are at significant risk of overdose with less than one tenth of that 2,000 microgram dose.

A single pound – 453.592 grams – of fentanyl is 229,796 “certain death” doses, and a whopping 4,776 pounds of the drug were seized by authorities at the border in 2020. That’s enough to deliver 2,000 microgram doses to 1,097,505,696 people – more than three times the entire US population that year. Now imagine how much made it across … and realize that 2021’s numbers blew 2020 out of the water.

As we can calculate simply enough by subtracting firearm suicides from the total firearm deaths number above, the CDC’s number of non-suicide firearm-related deaths for 2020 was 20,930 – meaning guns became slightly less deadly as time went on. One must wonder how much that has to do with the growing number of states climbing aboard the constitutional carry bandwagon.

So, in 2020, fentanyl killed 3.35 times more people than firearms, when excluding suicide, and 5.16 times as many in 2021. And firearms became slightly less deadly as time went on while fentanyl became a much more severe problem – one which seems likely to continue to worsen over time. Despite this, while the folks in the Biden administration seem to be laser focused on “curing the gun violence epidemic,” even to the point of circumventing Congress whenever they think they can get away with it, they seem to almost ignore this far deadlier crisis. Why? Well, it’s likely a matter of narrative.

An Epidemic Of Gun Violence – Or Political Posturing?

“Guns kill, and therefore we should outlaw them – or, at the very least, restrict them heavily.” That line sells votes for the Democratic Party. “Enough Fentanyl is crossing our porous southern border because of lax security and immigration policies to wipe out the entire population, so maybe we should tighten up a bit down there and stop saying things that inspire massive caravans out of South and Central America to head north” isn’t something any Democrat would want to tell the voting base. Therefore, it isn’t something the complicit left-biased media acting as the party’s public relations arm would willingly cover – at least not until it can’t be avoided anymore.

As LN’s Graham J. Noble explained back in 2019, Democrats have always pushed firearm restrictions under the guise of “common sense gun control.” Despite the inevitable claims that they respect the Second Amendment and gaslighting of opponents as paranoid conspiracy theorists, Democrats have dedicated at least some effort to restricting the right to keep and bear arms even in the best of times. In times of crisis, however, they leap from to the forefront of the national news with some new anti-gun measure at the ready. And don’t be fooled by the calming efforts; Democrats do want an unarmed populace, and they always have. They don’t always get their way, but when they do, the damage tends to be permanent. The successes of this method stretches back to the National Firearms Act of 1934, a reaction to the crisis of crime created by Prohibition, and it continues through today and will continue on into the future. As Mr. Noble put it: “Democrats have never come across a gun restriction they didn’t like.”

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Robert B Young, MD

— DRGO Editor Robert B. Young, MD is a psychiatrist practicing in Pittsford, NY, an associate clinical professor at the University of Rochester School of Medicine, and a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association.

All DRGO articles by Robert B. Young, MD

Smallbore Match

The neglected safe queen.

Back in the beforetimes – pre-pandemic – which I can hardly remember these days, I was getting interested in the smaller calibers. I found myself a cute turquoise Ruger 10/22 Takedown and was considering trying some metallic silhouettes at my gun club.

I got as far as mounting a scope on her, but never got sighted-in. Then Ms Rona came to town. 

Over the ensuing  two and a half years I was pretty pre-occupied with practicing medicine, survival gardening, and trying not to catch the plague. You may laugh now, but I’m in primary care with snotty nosed children breathing right in my face on a daily basis. It wasn’t as high risk as say ER or ICU, but I was directly exposed nearly weekly there for awhile. It was stressful.

All gun club matches were cancelled because many members were retirement age and above, and thus high risk. Even if the matches weren’t cancelled I wasn’t going to go. I constantly worried that my exposure at the office would result in me getting someone else deathly sick. I didn’t have the leftover energy to go to the range by myself, so except for a ladies shotgun gig last summer when things were looking hopeful pre-delta, I mostly haven’t picked up a firearm in 2 1/2 years. (I did hunt with crossbow though) With all the other stressors I kind of lost interest. Don’t judge me. We have all coped in whatever ways we could, myself included.

But since the clouds are parting now I was looking for ways to pry myself out of my malaise. Lo and Behold, an email arrived from my club, announcing the restart of smallbore silhouette matches! These are non-sanctioned matches just for fun and the next one is happening in about a week.

Well, I scuttled down to the basement to find my 10/22 because it had been so long that I honestly couldn’t remember if I had mounted a scope on it or not. I had, and then the “oh yeah” came back to me. I had put it on, but that’s as far as I got.

The email said that ammo needed to be “standard velocity” only, so 1100 fps or less. All I had were high velocity “Bucket O’Bullets” type which were also purchased in the beforetimes. I previously used those for steel matches with my CMMG AR adapter set-up. 

Given that, now that the ammo shortage is easing a bit, I went shopping and found myself some Norma which I knew was a reliable brand. They came in right at the cutoff of 1100 fps. Score! I was worried that much lower than that and my semi-auto wouldn’t cycle. I know that a lot of smallbore match people use bolt actions, but the email said to bring whatcha got, so that’s what I’m doing.

Right at the cut-off!

I happen to be on staycation this week, so I’m hoping to get to the range to get sighted in and shake off the cobwebs before the match. I’ve at least got a small goal now, though I have zero expectations for how I will perform at the match. I honestly want to just go plink and get back into the shooting routine. Hopefully this will help me find my lost mojo again. Fingers Crossed.

The Nightstick SFL — A New Shotgun Forend Light

Nightstick is a little light company that’s slowly making a bigger and bigger splash in the world of affordable lights. In a world of Olights, more companies should try to be Nightstick. While I’m a Cloud Defensive man, the Nightstick SFL caught my attention. I’m always on the lookout for shotgun lights. I’ve experimented with the Streamlight TL Racker and the Surefire DSF and found both to be quite nice. 

The Nightstick SFL, or Shotgun Forend Light, replaces your pump with a dedicated light system. That’s nothing new. Streamlight and Surefire did it, but the Nightstick SFL offered a few features and changes that caught my attention. First, the 120-dollar price point makes it fairly affordable. Second, 1,200 lumens of light outperform the DSF and TL Racker. The 1,200 lumens are backed by 10,315 candela, and Surefire and Streamlight both beat the Nightstick in candela. 

Another feature is the option of a laser. Visible lasers on long guns are a little silly, but on guns like the Shockwave and TAC14, they provide hours of enjoyment and make instinctively shooting the gun fairly easy. Nightstick also designed the grip of the SFL to be incredibly ergonomic and highly textured for a sure and easy grip. I tried it out at SHOT, and Nightstick happily agreed to send me a model, and they did just that. 

The Nightstick SFL – Lights It Up 

Nightstick created the SFL for the Remington 870 and the Mossberg 500 series. This includes the 590 and Shockwave series. I went with the 590 model, and it ships with a spacer so it can function with both the standard length action tubes and shorter tubes. The Nightstick SFL packs a punch with an IP-X7 rating and a 2-meter drop rating. 

Nightstick includes the tube wrench and batteries, too, making it easy to install. Unscrew the old pump, reinstall the new light, screw it back on, and boom, you’re done. Once installed, the light looks somewhat bulky but handles well. The palm swell fits the hand nicely, and the aggressive texturing allows you to get a rock-solid grip on the light and pump. 

The thing with these shotgun forend lights is that they have to double as both a good light and a good pump. If it half-asses either route, you get a crap design. The palm swell of the Nightstick SFL helps make it a very effective pump and allows you to get a good, tight grip on the light. If you use the push/pull method of recoil mitigation, you’ll appreciate the SFL. 

You can shove that dang thing forward with ease and push it forward to help control the gun as you pull rearward on the stock. I use a good stiff push, and my hand doesn’t slide off the pump or slide forward. Even if it did, you could install the optional pump strap that comes with the Nightstick SFL. 

Shiny and Bright 

The Nightstick SFL casts a big wide beam made of bright white light that sits more on the cool spectrum. It is a light designed to fill a room, and to do so, and you get a big wide light head. That big head casts a wide beam with a fairly focused hot spot. While the light will fill your peripheral vision with white light, and that hot spot will blind a threat, chew through a photonic barrier, and give you a little extra range if you need it. 

The beam has a fairly effective range when you take the light outside. It stays well within shotgun range, and at 50 yards, I can tell you the colors of my various gongs. Out to 100 hundred yards, I can see a man-shaped target, but I couldn’t tell you much more than that. 

For buckshot tasks, the Nightstick SFL does a fairly good job of giving you the light necessary to identify and deal with a threat. I set up a fairly standard handheld light and aimed it at myself. This created a photonic barrier and the SFL shined right through it. It beat back the light and allowed me to see clearly what was shining alight at me. 

I turned on my barn lights and placed a target on the dark side of the barn. I stood on the other dark side and blasted the light through the overhead photonic barrier, and the Nightstick chewed through it. Spotting the target wasn’t a problem.  

Laser Life 

Admittedly lasers on pumps don’t offer the most stable, easily zeroed platform. The laser moves a fair bit because the pump moves. It isn’t much of a problem for close range, and on a PGO firearm, you’ll have more problems than pump slop. Even so, I can bust a clay pigeon at 15 yards from the hip every time I try. 

On a PGO, it would be a fair bit of fun, much like the Crimson Trace Laser Saddle. The laser on the SFL is fairly bright and very easy to see, even in bright daytime situations. At 20 yards, the little light shines bright. If lasers aren’t your thing, the SLF comes with a light-only option that’ll save you a few bucks. 

Fit For Defense? 

While the Surefire series will likely rule the duty market for many years to come, the Nightstick SFL offers a very bright and capable light that works well as both a pump and a weapon light. It’s perfect for home defense and perfectly suitable for your nightstand gun, and it is priced well for its potential. 

Gunday Brunch 55: 21 to buy a gun?

Keith and Jack are flying without Caleb today, and they take on the tough question of why the idea that you should be 21 to buy a gun is a ridiculous idea.

Gavin Newsom’s Office Brags About California Gun Policy- California Leads the Nation in Mass Shootings and School Shootings

California Governor Gavin Newsom shares his reaction to two mass shootings over the weekend in Texas and Ohio during a press conference, Monday, August 5, 2019, at the California State Capitol in Sacramento. On his left is Mark Ghilarducci, the director of Cal OES and on his right is Xavier Becerra, Attorney General of California. Image via Sacramento Bee, SacBee.com

I’m going to just leave this here…

From the Office of the Governor,

SACRAMENTO – With the country still reeling from the mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas that left 19 children and two teachers dead last week, California’s nation-leading record on gun safety provides a pathway for states seeking to rein in gun violence.

Statistic: Number of mass shootings in the United States between 1982 and June 2022, by state | Statista
Find more statistics at Statista Statistic: Number of K-12 school shootings in the United States from 1970 to June 16, 2020, by state | Statista
Find more statistics at Statista

Wow. Really leading the way there, California. Literally just using your population to pad that death toll per capita of violent incidents. If your policies worked so well, I’d expect better results. Like, at least have fewer incidents than Texas if you are going to throw Texas under the bus as the bad example.

From the Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC): “Compared to citizens of other states, Californians are about 25% less likely to die in mass shootings. Between 2019 and 2021, the state’s annual mass shooting homicide rate of 1.4 per one million people was lower than the national average of 1.9.”

Really, you only sampled three years?

Would Thousand Oaks in 2018 throw your rate off?

How about San Bernardino, 2015?

According to this list, sorted by dates. You picked three years where you didn’t have a mass shooting with 10 or more deaths. Convenient since you’ve had 23 with four or more deaths, nearly double that of any other state. When I look at the deadliest shootings too, same list at the link, I see a lot of California right next to Texas. So are we arguing some policy that California put into place rendered shootings less dangerous in California? Texas has seven 10+ deadly casualty incidents to California’s three, true. But Texas only has 13 total 4+ deadly casualty incidents (the chart doesn’t include 1966, University of Texas) to California’s 23.

California banned ‘Assault Weapons’ in 1989 but two of its three worst mass shootings happened after the ban. California’s deadliest shooting was with two 9mm weapons and a pump action shotgun, so much for 5.56 rifles being the problem we need to solve.

New York also has three 10+ deadly casualty incidents. Two of those occurred with handguns.

The deadliest school shooting in the history of the country, the third deadliest mass shooting, occurred with a pair of handguns, a 9mm and a .22.

So where is the consistency in logic? Is California or New York actually better off, or is Newsom just lying with statistics again? By mischaracterizing outlier extreme violent events in a certain way, and selective timelining, it can certainly look like your policies are working instead of it being blind dumb luck that nobody got that angry again in your state.

So congratulations again to Gavin and California. Ranked #1 in Gun Safety, with the most mass shootings and the most school shootings in history.

Biden Rambles About Doing Something IE: Assault Weapons Ban

Hey kids!

Do you want to see the President of the United State claim he isn’t targeting law abiding gun owners, but then do exactly that?

Do you want hear him use the “Do something.” excuse and then claim nothing was done when states enacted all kinds of rules, like the S.A.F.E Act, that didn’t work?

Do you want to hear the President wax poetic about an assault weapon ban that will stop mass shootings, like in California where it hasn’t stopped mass shootings?

Do you want to hear him claim that there have always been limitations on weapons and then drag out the National Firearms Act? Because 1791 and 1934 are pretty much the same year obviously. Also that just taxed machine guns to get gangsters for tax evasion, not exactly the hallmark of safety legislation.

“We regulated machine guns 90 years ago and its still a free county.” – Joe making something he believes is a point, I guess. Not commenting on the fact Machine Guns didn’t become new production illegal until 1986, just taxed. Or that the posterchild school mass shooting, Columbine, happened during the Assault Weapon Ban he wants back.

“This isn’t about taking away anyone’s rights, its about protecting children.”

Okay, then do that. Put physical security experts on the ground at schools and cut them a check to make upgrades. Put them in contact with the local LEs to see what the problematic regional concerns are. Build out a plan.

Dammit, Joe.

You cannot be free of the consequences of another’s actions. It is literally impossible. So no, we do not have that “freedom” because it isn’t a freedom. It may be a reasonable expectation in society, and it is. But it isn’t a right. Freedom from consequence is not a right. The right to “feel safe” is not a right. It cannot be secured by the actions or restraint of governments.

“Guns are the number one killer of children.” Nope. Accidental injury is. Rolling in the teens to age 17, 19, or even 21 into “children” and both homicide and suicide rates shift that rate. But the motivations and free agency of an 8 year old and 18 year old are entirely different.

But use kids as your political prop I guess, not like decency and honesty has stopped you before…

More “school age kids” died from guns than police or military combined, he states next. Hmm. Where Joe? Where? In school? What where these school age kids doing when they died? Who killed them? Bet most of those deaths were in the 15+ age range and tied to criminal activities instead of a more “school” related event, am I right?

I am.

Go ahead, Joe. Keep oversimplifying and misidentifying the problem with politically charged information bracketing that has nothing to do with motive. I’m sure that’ll work this time since it has literally never worked.

New York Legislature Raises Semi-Auto Age to 21, Armor Ban and Micro-Stamping to come

NPR hasn’t been my favorite news source for awhile, but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be paying attention to them. They have an aggressive anti-gun bent but that just means they are going to be a very loud source of information on anti-gun legislation. That is a topic I do want to know about. Yesterday New York passed a bill to raise the legal age to purchase semi-automatics, because their assault weapon ban failed them, to 21. The Governor, Kathy Hochul, has indicated she will sign the bill and make it law and has supported its passage.

New York, California, and Illinois love their marathon to infringement. They’ve never seen a gun control measure they hate, regardless of how absurd. It is a sad state (or three) for the nation that we are looking at alarmist solutions.

Raising the Age

I will give some credit here. Of the bad ideas that won’t actively hinder a motivated outlier, this one at least has a few points of factual merit.

From the psychological and reasoning developmental aspects of humanity, 21 is more mature than 18. The age of 25 has been posited as the pinnacle developmental point for modern humanity where our social learning, cognitive strengths, and reasoning powers top off their final major growth spurt. We can obviously keep learning as adults, experiencing new things, new ideas, and adapting to new changes in our environment. But biologically are body is out of its tutorial phase where we are absorbing all the information to build or social responsibility structure and have, in theory, a pretty good grasp on things.

Most people’s late 20’s are where they end up in serious “getting my shit together” mode while the early 20’s and late teens tend to be far more awkward puppy with too big of paws, but in a societal setting. We dump adulthood (most of it) right into the middle of this cognitive growth period, actually the early third, and tell a ton of kids their on their own.

So, from a stratospheric analysis of the concept, making the age for adulting 21 has merits. Notice I say adulting, and not just firearm purchases. If we’re serious and want to do this, do it for everything.

Voting, 21.

Military, 21.

Unrestricted Driving, 21.

Smoking, 21.

Fill the time gap with community or trade education so that at 21 we have a crop of well educated burgeoning professionals who can support themselves with skilled labors. Associates degrees and all manner of trades can be covered in that timeframe with some room to get started working.

But no, New York is not doing that. New York isn’t changing how they see the adult developmental arc, they are trying to remove a method of injury for outlier events. They are doing so poorly. For the specific events they are trying to defend against, motivated killer, the rule won’t do anything. The two of the last three high profile mass killings were by 18 year old perpetrators, but the third was a 45 year old. A man who was actually outside the majority arc for all violent activities. He killed his surgeon, some other staff in the office, a bystander, and then himself. How does this law prevent that event? Those deaths?

The reason the law fails to achieve its goals, and why it should therefore be crafted differently or discarded, is because it addresses the wrong issues. We don’t have a problem with AR-15’s. We have a problem with an on edge society finding the most convenient method of injury to get their violence on, and outliers who believe doing so solves their problems. Changing the age neither solves the problems nor treats a symptom. It just looks like it does on paper. Its a placebo. It is public safety theater even more than the TSA.

Banning semi-autos to those under 21, or requiring a license, or any other inane method of window dressing public safety efforts will fall flat again the next time the next person chooses a remotely convenient method of injury to get their mad on. Like, hooray we made it more illegal to murder a bunch or people. Go us.

Banning Body Armor

So you want to yank back all of the protective panels parents bought for their children since the state has proven time, and time, and time again that they can’t stop these events? You want to ban the one piece of genuine extra protection a parent can give their student?

Why? Body Armor panels aren’t magic. They are an extra few seconds of safety and injury avoidance. Yes, that can be used by an evil person just as well as a good person. Body armor is just as inanimate as a firearm.

However, like firearms, body armor is already out of the bag. It isn’t serialized or trackable. How do you propose making it illegal to be armored is going to be any more effective than making it slightly differently illegal to be armed is? Are we hoping the motivated killer is going to listen to that part of the law? Are we actually just hoping that the next determined individual just magically, through the grace of raw chance, was prevented from buying armor or a repeating firearm, didn’t acquire them any other way, and is able to be interdicted by the police effectively?

That’s a bunch of very perfectly aligned stars, my lawmaker dudes…

Microstamping

Another state looking at this pipedream technology that will slowly squeeze legal firearms out of existence. That’s it, that’s its trick and gun controllers aren’t shy about admitting they will settle for a slow ban. A slow ban that they can put more pressure into every time it fails to do the thing it can never do, stop the free agency of a killer.

Microstamping doesn’t work, that’s why the approved handgun list keeps dwindling in California. What is microstamping going to do anyway? Oh yay, a partial and illegible imprint of the serial number on the brass case. It isn’t GPS coordinates to a killer. California’s last 10 years of violence still hover at about a 45% clearance rate on cases, up and down a point or two. Did microstamping move the needle at all? Doesn’t appear to have, it simply banned handguns slowly to make it more palatable. The violent portions of California are still violent and the peaceable are still peaceable. Meanwhile people flee the state because you can’t afford to stay.

New York already requires people to be 21 to possess a handgun. Younger people would still be allowed to have other types of rifles and shotguns under the new law, but would be unable to buy the type of fast-firing rifles used by the 18-year-old gunmen in the mass shootings in Buffalo and at a Texas elementary school. -NPR

Look, a repeating firearm that 18 year old’s will still be able to buy.

It took precisely zero seconds of effort to find a lethally effective and legal workaround for this rule. We don’t even need to discuss the illegal ones. We act like we are damming a river, when in reality its about as effective as shutting a screen door underwater to try and keep out a little bit of bad water. It’ll matter less than a fart in a windstorm to the next motivated bad actor. We are focusing our time and efforts in the wrong places. We aren’t tackling the motivations for violence by encouraging good living. Instead we continue to politically profit off cheap divisions and wonder why kids have more stress and less hope today.