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Friday, August 31, 2007
In Defense of Self-Defense
In Defense of Self-Defense
Gun owners are often asked: "Why do you own guns?" as though doing so were some kind of oddity or aberration. In fact, responsible gun ownership has been a part of this country from its inception, and the fact that every law-abiding citizen can own guns is an integral part of our heritage. Some countries may grudgingly allow certain people to own guns (under very restrictive conditions, of course); in America, it is our indisputable right to do so. It's the reason we never need fear tyranny. It's odd that the people who worry about America becoming a dictatorship are the same ones clamoring to remove our best way to prevent it.
Especially in today's world, the illusion of permanent safety having been ripped away by the events of 9/11, gun ownership is a right more people ought to practice. We now see that violent conflict is really the norm in the world, and only fools would pretend that the same bad things happening elsewhere can't happen here. We must face the fact that we cannot always depend on the government to defend our lives and property. The authorities can't always be there to protect us from harm, nor should they be. So how do we ensure our safety? There are only two possible answers. One is a pervasive police presence -- cops on every corner, guards in every building, monitors in every home. I don't think the remedy to a tough world is a police state. The other answer is a little of the old self-reliance for which America was once famous.
Unfortunately, the tendency of government is to become more invasive and stifling, encroaching on our rights and relieving us of our responsibilities. The response to any perceived problem is to create more laws -- along with more government agencies to oversee them, and more government bureaucrats to enforce them. Naturally, some criminal will always find a way around the new laws, even if it's something as simple as carrying a hidden gun into a "gun-free zone." The response? More laws, more bureaucracy, and more restrictions on the rights of law-abiding citizens, making them more dependent on the government. And just when you need help the most, the government is least likely to be there to hold your hand.
One never knows when local order might break down due to a natural or man-made disaster such as a terrorist attack, earthquake, flood, riot, mass blackout, disease outbreak, or the dead rising from their graves to seek the flesh of the living. As test after test of our emergency response systems (including actual emergencies, with the exception of a zombie apocalypse) has shown, emergency personnel will be overwhelmed by a real disaster. Rapid transportation is often impossible. Fire, police and ambulance services will likely be unable to get immediate help to all who need it. Criminals will sieze every opportunity to rob, rape, murder and terrorise innocent people. Don't say such things can't happen. They have happened, they are happening somewhere right now, and they will continue to happen in the future. So who's going to protect you, your family and your home until order is restored, however long that might take?
Well, you, of course. It's your responsibility, your duty, your right. Don't let anyone take it away from you.
Posted at Friday, August 31, 2007 by CavalierX
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Wednesday, July 04, 2007
America's Birth
 Declaration of Independence by John Trumbull, 1817
And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor. - The Declaration of Independence When the signers of the Declaration of Independence affixed their names to that document, those words meant exactly that. If their rebellion failed, they would indeed have lost all those things they pledged and more. How could they imagine that a squabbling group of semi-autonomous colonies could ever take on the full might of the British Empire? And how did they think they could convince their fellow colonists to commit what would amount to treason should they lose... an outcome which seemed all too likely, given the disparity between the two sides?
Simple. They knew it was the right thing to do. Therefore, they found a way, or made one where none could be found. And that is the difference between men and great men.
A mere two hundred and thirty-one years later, too many of us find it too difficult to do what's right, in the small things as well as large. If we had to fight the Revolutionary War today, how many of our fellow Americans would compromise with, appease and surrender to such a superior force? For that matter, how many people today want to give in to a band of fanatical 7th-century thugs because the task of standing up to them seems too hard to bear? Thomas Jefferson certainly refused to back down in the face of Islamic terrorism in the early 19th century... so why should we?
The United States was not created in a single day. The Fourth of July merely marks its beginning. If the rebellion had failed, if the separate states had been unable to reach a compromise after winning, or if the fledgling country had not established itself as a serious naval power in our earliest battles against Muslim piracy, we would not be celebrating the birth of this nation today.
And if we weaken and waver now, if we surrender at this point after fighting and winning against so many enemies over the years, how long will we be able to keep "our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor?"
Posted at Wednesday, July 04, 2007 by CavalierX
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Monday, June 25, 2007
Return of the Amnesty Bill Horror
Return of the Amnesty Bill Horror
Like some shambling undead Thing from a horror movie, the amnesty bill we all thought buried with a stake in its heart has been resurrected. Once again, it's headed for the Senate floor to wreak havoc. But this is the kind of summer sequel most people don't want to see. Neither Democrats nor Republicans in Washington seem to understand -- or care -- how unhappy the American people are about this bill.
And we are unhappy about it. Many Americans are outraged by the idea of rewarding criminals by allowing them to keep what they took. While hundreds of thousands of people around the world patiently await permission to come to this country, or go home when their visas expire, illegals decided the rules didn't apply to them. Allowing them to become permanent residents violates our sense of fair play almost as much as it violates our laws. We're assured that they will be at the "back of the line" for citizenship... but that line is supposed to form on the other side of the border.
We're unhappy about rewarding criminal behavior. We're told that these illegals should be honored because they wanted to become Americans so badly that many of them risked death to come here. (We'll just ignore the fact that money was probably the real motivation for most of them.) But becoming American must include showing some regard for American sovereignty, and American laws. Those who deliberately crossed our borders illegally or overstayed their visas did not show that respect. Many illegal immigrants falsify records and documents on a daily basis, supply false Social Security numbers to employers, and lie to obtain drivers' licenses, credit cards and other documents. Moreover, those hundreds of thousands who marched protesting law enforcement waving Mexican flags and holding signs saying "This is our continent, not yours" didn't appear to want to become Americans, did they? Why should we reward them for that?
We don't like the idea of creating a huge permanent underclass of low-level workers, either. Once granted legal status, all those people doing "jobs Americans won't do" won't want to do them either -- not at the low wages they're currently paid. They'll want better jobs, with better pay. Prices for agricultural products and construction will rise as employers are forced to pay minimum wage, but that's not the worst effect of a mass legalisation. Competition for available jobs in other areas will rise sharply. Competition for many blue-collar jobs will force wages to dip towards minimum wage level, creating a sharper division between blue-collar and white-collar workers, or lower class and middle class. Unemployment and entitlements will rise, and taxes will follow. Class warfare and envy politics fueled by racial divisions -- the staples of Democratic campaigns -- will escalate, granting the Democrats a huge vote windfall for many years to come. The fact that so many Republicans (including the President himself) are willing to sign the death warrant of their own party is amazing.
Many people are unhappy about this bill because of the way members of Congress and the President tried to shove it through the Senate quickly, without time for the bill to be amended before debate. The bill was introduced on Thursday 17 May, and a vote to open debate on the final version was scheduled for Monday 21 June. The bill was not even written in final form until that Sunday, and most Senators hadn't even seen it by the time they were expected to vote, much less had time to draft amendments. Public outcry pushed back the vote to give Senators time to propose amendments and gauge public opinion. After the move for cloture -- an attempt to bring the bill up for a vote -- failed, the bill was removed from the floor. But President Bush, when attacking opponents of the bill didn't work, pushed his supporters in the Senate to bring it back after adding some money for border security -- the security that was mandated in a bill last year, and about which nothing much was done.
But it's still the same terrible bill, which grants a de facto amnesty to millions of criminal trespassers (no matter what its proponents want to call it), allowing them to stay as permanent residents and bring tens of millions of new immigrants into the country. Thanks to Liberal "multiculturalism," many of those people will never integrate into American society. It's like a home invasion on a massive scale, while the government's response is to tell us we just have to live with our new housemates. And the border fence that was mandated in the Secure Fence Act of 2006 is still not built, which means that in another decade or so, we'll have to go through all of this again. Before we decide what to do about the estimated 12-20 million illegal immigrants in this country, we have got to ensure that it's the last time we have to deal with the problem.
Back in 1986, we were told that we would have real border security, in exchange for a one-time amnesty. Well, the politicians got their one-time amnesty. Now, we want our security.
Posted at Monday, June 25, 2007 by CavalierX
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Friday, June 01, 2007
The Ill Effects of Amnesty
The Ill Effects of Amnesty
Yes, I know: it's not amnesty because we're using a different word now. However, any time the penalty proscribed by law for an offense is waived for all offenders, it's amnesty no matter what you may call it. Do they get to stay here? (Hint: Yes.) Well, that's amnesty. And the effects will be far-reaching and devastating to the country.
What sort of message does it send when people are allowed to violate a variety of laws repeatedly with relative impunity? Not only did illegal immigrants deliberately cross the border without permission, or knowingly overstay their visas, but they break other laws every day they remain here. Even the so-called "hard-working, law-abiding" illegals we keep hearing about use false Social Security numbers to get jobs and bank accounts, lie on applications and other forms, and falsify records and documents on a daily basis. Why should anyone obey the law, when millions of criminals are to be forgiven en masse?
And what will happen after they are given instant legal status? Has anyone bothered to think that through? One of the main reasons we are given for letting them stay in the country is that no one else will do the jobs they do for so little pay... but once they are legal, neither will they! Why would anyone perform hard labor for below minimum wage if they are legally able to look for better work, or demand more money for the work they currently do?
We've been told we can't deport illegal aliens without a steep rise in prices for agricultural products, domestic services and construction. But wages -- and thus prices -- in those areas will rise anyway. Of course, hordes of illegal immigrants will continue to flow across the borders to work for lower than legal wages. According to the Heritage Foundation, legalising between 12 and 20 million illegal immigrants will cost the US economy trillions of dollars, and that includes huge numbers of uneducated, ignorant, and unproductive immigrants -- the kind the mainstream media pretend don't exist. And after all that, we will still have illegal immigrants coming into the country. In other words, we will have gained absolutely nothing from the passage of this bill.
The bill contains provisions that would, we are told, ensure that workers holding the new Z-Visa remain employed and out of trouble with the law, or else they will be deported. Does anyone actually believe that the mere passing of laws ensures compliance? We're talking about relying on swift and accurate responses from the same agency that approved student visas for Mohammed Atta and Marwan Al-Shehhi six months after they flew jetliners into the World Trade Center.
As soon as the illegals gain legal status, the first thing a hungry government will do is make them pay taxes. Hasn't anyone considered the implications of that? The ACLU and various "immigrants rights" groups will file a flurry of lawsuits charging that expecting permanent residents to pay taxes without giving them the right to vote violates their civil liberties. The more brazen among them will undoubtedly use the phrase, "no taxation without representation." What American can possibly argue with that?
The Democrat-controlled Congress will rush a voting rights bill through (no doubt just in time for the 2008 elections). Instant millions of new Democratic voters -- just add legalisation. Congratulations are due the Democratic party for ensuring that the Republicans will be maginalised for at least a generation... with the eager help of many Republicans, including the President.
And what of this persistent meme that we can't deport between 12 and 20 million people? I have never heard anyone arguing that we should. It's a strawman argument, designed to conjure mental images of stormtroopers kicking down doors in the night and hauling screaming people away. The amnesty crowd likes to pretend there are only two possible solutions to the problem of illegal immigrants -- rewarding them with full legal status or rounding them up for cattle-car deportations. The truth is that there's a middle ground that involves neither amnesty nor mass deportation: enforcing the law.
The only thing on which everyone seems to agree is that millions of people living in the US without papers, permission or rights is a huge problem. The first thing we need to do, logically, is stop the problem from becoming any worse. When President Bush signed Congressman Duncan Hunter's Secure Fence Act of 2006, he made building 854 miles of double-layer fencing at the most common people-smuggling routes across our southern border the law. It's not rocket science. When you have a leak, you have to stop the inflow before you can pump out the water. We've already got the law on our side. All we have to do is enforce it -- and that's all so many Americans really ask. Yet that fence has not yet been built.
After building the border fence to stop the inrush, we need to enforce the laws regarding those who hire illegal workers who are already here. No one seems capable of checking the Social Security numbers that illegals write on their job applications. If the immigration bureaucracy is so disordered and crippled that Mohammed Atta got a visa six months after 9/11, why would anyone imagine it can handle the mass legalisation of up to 20 million people plus all their relatives? To make matters worse, all background checks for these new Z-Visas must be performed within 24 hours of the application. It's a bureaucratic disaster of Biblical proportions waiting to happen. If only Cecil B. DeMille were still alive to film it all.
There's still time to stop this gross injustice from taking place. President Bush himself has come out blasting opponents of his amnesty-that's-not-amnesty plan. (Funny... he finally lashes out hard, and it's against those who have supported him all these years.) He would not have done so if he were not fighting a growing backlash. And just what form is that backlash taking? The kind that carries the most weight in Washington DC... money.
According to the Washington Times, the Republican National Committee, "hit by a grass-roots donors' rebellion over President Bush's immigration policy, has fired all 65 of its telephone solicitors" after a huge dropoff in donations. "Every donor in 50 states we reached has been angry, especially in the last month and a half, and for 99 percent of them immigration is the No. 1 issue," said one fired phone bank employee.
Even if the bill passes the Senate, it can still be stopped by any Representative who happens to remember the Constitutional stipulation that revenue-generating bills must come from the House. Even so, that would just leave us right where we are now -- with open, undefended borders and growing numbers of criminal trespassers in our streets. Further illegal immigration must be stopped and our laws enforced before we can even consider what to do with the illegals already living among us.
Posted at Friday, June 01, 2007 by CavalierX
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Monday, May 28, 2007
Remembering Memorial Day
 Arlington National Cemetery There are few feelings as poignant as when we remember that our freedom and peace are only protected by the lives of our best and bravest, from those who fell during the Revolution to those who have recently fallen in Iraq and Afghanistan. Sleep well, with our thanks.
Posted at Monday, May 28, 2007 by CavalierX
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Friday, May 18, 2007
The Betrayal of America
Just before the 2006 election, I predicted (among other things) that without the slim Republican majority in the House of Representatives, amnesty for illegal immigrants would soon become a reality. "If Democrats take control of the House," I wrote, "that barrier will vanish like mist, and the Democrats will have a flood of uneducated, largely ignorant new low-class workers to turn into good little Democrat voters, all demanding a piece of the government pie."
Six months later, here comes the amnesty. Although the remaining Republicans managed to write increased border security measures into the bill, no one is naive enough to think they won't be simply ignored, just as they were in 1986. The "one-time" amnesty Ronald Reagan signed was also supposed to result in tighter border controls... which the Democrat-controlled Congress simply "forgot" to fund. So twenty-one years later, here we are again: facing another "one-time" amnesty, with promises of more border security we know will not be honored.
This compromise will cut the 850-mile border fence the President signed into law just before the 2006 elections -- of which only two miles have yet been built -- to 370 or so miles. Anyone care to place bets on how much of even that shortened fence will ever exist in reality? With the Iranian terrorist group Hizballah building a massive base in South America from which to attack the US, how can we afford not to build that fence?
The main point of the bill (much of which has not yet even been written) is to grant every single illegal alien currently in America a visa, allowing them to stay despite the fact that they broke the law to get here and violate numerous laws every day that they remain. I wonder when Congress will do the same for other categories of criminal. For instance, will car thieves be granted a "path to ownership" which allows them to keep their unlawfully-obtained vehicles? If so, I'm going to feel awfully stupid for saving up money to put down on a new car... the same way millions of people who are patiently waiting for permission to emigrate to the United States must feel as though they just received a boot to the face for respecting our laws. If lawbreakers are allowed to keep what they obtained by criminal means, then no matter what you may call it, it's an amnesty. Period.
But we have to "bring millions of people out of the shadows," we are told by people such as Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA). What shadows? Remember those huge illegal immigration rallies last year, in which hundreds of thousands of criminals -- along with their supporters and enablers -- marched through the streets of major US cities protesting the audacity of people who thought we should enforce our own laws? The only "shadows" I saw were cast by all the Mexican flags and "This is OUR continent, not YOURS" signs. There were other signs as well, but many of them were in Spanish, so I couldn't read them.
This amnesty proposal will result in a huge influx of uneducated and unskilled immigrants over the next decade, too fast for our culture to absorb them. Food and services will increase in price, as the artificially-depressed wages paid under the table to those who had no choice but to accept them will have to rise. It will also bring in millions of new illegal immigrants, expecting yet another "one-time" amnesty a few years down the road. Many of these people will demand free medical care, welfare, and other government services. And which party will promise them all the freebies they could want? By agreeing to this compromise, the Republicans will doom their own party and marginalise Conservatives for years, ensuring a one-party Socialist state for at least a generation.
The only slim chance to stop this abomination of a bill is for every person who cares about America's future to write, call, email and send smoke signals to our Senators and our Representatives, demanding that they vote against this amnesty proposal. Let them know that you will not support or vote for any politician who betrays America in this way. It's the only power we have, and if we don't use it... we will lose it.
UPDATE: Watch Congressman Duncan Hunter's reaction to the amnesty bill. His campaign website is http://www.gohunter08.com
Posted at Friday, May 18, 2007 by CavalierX
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Friday, May 11, 2007
Jihad Comes to New Jersey
Jihad Comes to New Jersey
It sounds like a long bad joke, the kind that never seems to reach the punchline. A group of Muslims living the good life in America -- some of whom came here illegally, and lived in "sanctuary cities" -- decide the country's so bad, they ought to buy some AK-47s and grenades and take on the US military base at Fort Dix, NJ. To get into the killing mood, they film themselves running around waving guns and screaming for jihad. Then they take the film to be transferred to DVD. Luckily, an alert Circuit City employee tells the cops, who tell the FBI, whose agents infiltrate the group. A proper punchline would have been to sell them weapons designed to malfunction, let them launch their attack, and film them getting slaughtered by the men they were trying to kill. It'd make a good training exercise.
Unfortunately, this is no joke, but an example of what we're up against. Liberals try to tell us that there are no terrorists, or that 9/11 -- if not a government conspiracy -- was some kind of one-time fluke we should all just ignore. (What 1993 World Trade Center bombing?) We're lucky that some people in this country take the threat of terrorism seriously enough to report suspicious behavior to the authorities. People like the Circuit City clerk who helped stop these would-be killers should be rewarded. Instead, it will be a surprise if he's not sued and branded a "racist." Sooner or later, the New York Times will publish his name, and the lawsuits will begin.
Concerned passengers on board an airliner in November 2006 complained about a group of imams who were praying loudly, changing seats to cover all the exits, and asking for seatbelt extenders although none of them were particularly overweight. We still don't know whether that was merely a "dry run" or an actual terrorist attack in progress. The six imams are currently suing not only US Airways, but the unnamed passengers who questioned their decidely questionable behavior. That's the latest way our enemies have discovered to frighten people into ignoring them as they plot and plan. Who needs the hassle of a lawsuit? Don't make waves. It's probably not what you think, anyway.
On 9 May 2007, a woman called a flight attendant when she realised that the seat-back pocket in front of her contained a box cutter such as the terrorists used on 9/11. The passengers were taken off the plane and re-screened before the flight was allowed to take off. Because no Muslims were directly offended, the media barely reported the story. If she'd said nothing, would another flight from that airport have contained more hidden weapons along with hijackers prepared to use them, having walked through screening without being stopped?
The media and those on the Left like to downplay stories like the planned Fort Dix attack, as they have every terrorism-related incident in this country since 9/11. Because these men were caught, we are told they never posed a serious danger. Some have used this incident to question our involvement in Iraq, since fighting them "over there" obviously has not prevented terrorism "over here." But Iraq and Fort Dix are all part of the same worldwide terror movement, as were London, Madrid, Bali, Beslan and thousands of Islamofascist terror attacks that have taken place since 9/11. The men and women these terrorists intended to kill were probably headed to Iraq as part of the "surge," which all Americans should hope will secure Baghdad and help stabilise the Iraqi government. Attacking them at Fort Dix might have delayed or prevented their deployment... which could only help our enemies.
The New York Times is already laying the groundwork for an entrapment defense, claiming that the men involved in the New Jersey jihad would never really have carried out their plan without the encouragement of the FBI informer. One article stresses that "informers in terror cases have become the focus of efforts by defense lawyers and others to call into question the legitimacy of the investigations." The Washington Post referred to the group as a "leaderless, homegrown cell of immigrants" with no ties to al-Qaeda -- as though al-Qaeda's the only terrorist group in the world. One member of this cell, it turns out, was a sniper in the Kosovo Liberation Army -- a group that received assistance from Osama bin Laden. As for the dangers of "homegrown" Islamist terror groups, ask the survivors of London's 7/7 bombings.
While it appears true that this group was an independent cell, they certainly drew inspiration from al-Qaeda. And why is al-Qaeda so inspirational? Because -- according to Democratic politicians, Liberal activists and members of the mainstream media -- al-Qaeda has already won the battle for Iraq. If the Democrats have their way, if they force America to surrender Iraq to al-Qaeda and Iran, we can expect to see many more of these "homegrown" terror cells in the future.
After all, everyone loves a winner.
Posted at Friday, May 11, 2007 by CavalierX
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Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Invasion of the Gun Snatchers
Invasion of the Gun Snatchers
One of the worst aspects of the aftermath of a national tragedy like the school shootings at Virginia Tech is watching the rush by many on the Left to politicise it. Most Americans are spending the first few shocked days mourning those who died, recognising the heroes and offering what comfort we can to those who survived and all their families. Opponents of the Second Amendment have been busy dusting off the same old arguments, giving them a new coat of paint and deploying them in their misguided attempt to bring totalitarianism to America.
Law-abiding gun ownership has long been considered a mark of maturity and responsible citizenship, and is an integral part of our national character. The first thing a tyranny or dictatorship must do is deprive the people of a means to resist. For this reason and many others, the government was forbidden from interfering with "the right of the people to keep and bear Arms" by the Constitution. It's ironic that Liberals -- the same people who scream about the destruction of the First Amendment because someone's chats with known terrorists might be tapped -- are stepping right up to demand we surrender a right they don't like quite so much.
Many Liberals feel that the reason for the tragedy at Virginia Tech was that a person had a gun in that building. On the contrary, the reason for the tragedy was that only one person had a gun in that building. Trapped by chained doors, with campus police focused on the building in which the first two killings took place, the students and teachers had no way to defend themselves. A single person with a weapon could have saved dozens of lives.
School shootings have been thwarted by private gun owners before they reached the notoriety of a Columbine or the death toll of a Virginia Tech. In 2002, for instance, armed students at Appalachian Law School confronted and subdued Peter Odighizuwa, who had begun a killing spree by shooting the Dean, a professor and a student. In 1997, Pearl High School's Assistant Principal Joel Myrick retrieved his handgun from his truck as Luke Woodham killed two fellow students and wounded seven others with a rifle. Myrick stopped Woodham as he left to continue his attacks at the nearby junior high school, holding his gun to Woodham's head until police arrived. The media downplays or flat-out ignores the fact that guns can save lives, too -- they're just a tool.
The Liberal answer to criminal use of guns is to get rid of guns. Well, that sounds simple. After all, getting rid of alcohol with the 18th Amendment worked all through the 1920's, didn't it? One is forced to wonder how they plan to implement this new Prohibition. House-to-house searches? Random pat-downs on the street? Checking every American's credit card records for "suspicious" purchases? Metal detectors and x-ray machines on every street corner? Too obvious. Instead, some Leftists plan to remove our Second Amendment rights by making them too difficult and expensive to exercise.
Democrats in Pennsylvania, for instance, are trying to push legislation that will force law-abiding gun owners to pay a fee for each gun they own every year, as well as submit to full background checks and fingerprinting. A registration card will be issued for each gun that is approved, and its owner must carry the card with the gun at all times. Guns must be completely disassembled or locked up when not in use, reducing their self-defense value to zero. Annual registration renewal applications will require the owner's name, age, gender, Social Security number, business address, home address, telephone number, date of birth, citizenship status, and any other information that "the Pennsylvania State Police may deem necessary to process the application."
PA House Bill 760, introduced a month ago, also specifies that anyone who sells a gun must notify the State 48 hours in advance of the sale, and the State must be notified within 48 hours of any change in one's registration information. If this bill becomes law, it's hard to imagine the size of the bureaucracy that will be needed to enforce it. And criminals, of course, will simply fail to register their guns. Law-abiding citizens will be utterly reliant on the police for protection from gun-owning criminals. But police cannot be everywhere at once, nor would most of us want to live in a country with that kind of pervasive government presence.
In neighboring New Jersey, already a near police state for gun owners, the Democrats plan to "crack down" on ammunition sales. A recent state commission recommended that every gun owner should have to obtain an ID card that would contain a list of his or her guns with serial numbers. The gun owner must show this card in order to purchase ammunition, and it would become illegal to possess ammunition for a gun one does not own. Stores would have to record the amount of ammo sold for each gun. Criminals would simply drive to another state to purchase ammunition for their unregistered guns. Of course, if the Left tries to take this sort of legislation country-wide, black-market reloading will be as big a business as bootlegging in the 1920's.
Virginia Tech, like many colleges and all lower schools across the country, was as close as possible to the Liberal dream of an unarmed populace completely dependent on the authorities for protection. No one was allowed to have a gun on campus except for the police. The last attempt to change the law that allowed the school to restrict Second Amendment rights was killed in subcommittee more than a year ago. All those who obeyed the law were rendered defenseless by it. The one man who chose to break the law was able to kill with impunity. Let's make that universal, say the Liberals. Does that make sense?
We don't ban cars when bad drivers take lives. We don't ban medicine when abused drugs take lives. We don't even ban government when bad laws cost lives. Let's not react to a terrible crime by punishing the law-abiding citizens among us... people who might be able to prevent similar tragedies in the future.
Posted at Wednesday, April 18, 2007 by CavalierX
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Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Nancy Pelosi: Fool or Felon?
Nancy Pelosi: Fool or Felon?
By the late 1790's, America was fighting an undeclared "Quasi-War" with France on the high seas. France's Revolutionary government, at war with England, began allowing its navy to seize American ships trading with that country. England began interfering with American ships trading with France. Congress authorised the War Department to build six frigates (primarily intended to fight Barbary pirates, no longer confined to the Mediterranean by Portugal) in 1794, but by 1797 only three had been built.
Meanwhile, the French were further incensed by a trade agreement between America and Great Britain. In 1796, France refused to receive American diplomats, and would not restore diplomatic relations until America paid "a large bribe." In April 1798, Congress authorised President John Adams to acquire a dozen ships of war, drastically increasing the size of America's fledgling Navy, and granted those ships the authority to capture armed French vessels found off the American coast. Later that year, Congress increased the authorisation to allow American ships to capture any French ship in international waters.
In the midst of all this tension, pacifist George Logan took it upon himself to "treat unofficially for a better understanding between the two Governments." In June 1798, Dr. Logan went to France to assure that government that the American people wanted peace despite the belligerence of President Adams. His words emboldened the French to continue their seizure of American vessels, undermined US foreign policy and no doubt prolonged hostilities (which lasted two more years) by revealing tensions within the US government, which the French could exploit.
Logan's high-handed activities caused Congress to pass the Logan Act the following year, which prohibits American citizens from attempting to conduct their own private foreign policy initiatives on behalf of the United States. Only the President may speak for the country as a whole when dealing with other governments. The Logan Act (US Code 18, Part I, Chapter 45, Section 953) reads:
Any citizen of the United States, wherever he may be, who, without authority of the United States, directly or indirectly commences or carries on any correspondence or intercourse with any foreign government or any officer or agent thereof, in relation to any disputes or controversies with the United States, or to defeat the measures of the United States, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than three years, or both.
This section shall not abridge the right of a citizen to apply, himself or his agent, to any foreign government or the agents thereof for redress of any injury which he may have sustained from such government or any of its agents or subjects.In April 2007, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) took it upon herself to visit Syria while that country is involved in disputes with the United States throughout the Middle East -- not the least of which is terrorists using that country as a conduit through which to infiltrate Iraq. The White House specifically asked her not to do so, as it might undermine US policy towards Syria and embolden dictator Bashir Assad. Other politicians have visited Syria, but none have done so with the purpose of opening dialogue with that country against the express foreign policy dictates of the President. Representative Tom Lantos (D-CA), who accompanied Pelosi, said of the trip, "We have an alternative Democratic foreign policy. I view my job as beginning with restoring overseas credibility and respect for the United States."
However, Lantos' job -- and Pelosi's -- is to create laws. Foreign policy falls under the purview of the Executive branch of government, not the Legislative. Congress has as much power to conduct foreign policy as the President has to write laws -- namely, none at all. Nancy Pelosi's attempt to conduct her own private foreign policy is a clear violation of the Logan Act, for which she should be charged by the Attorney General... if he has time before the Democrats hound him out of office on yet another trumped-up non-scandal, that is.
Some have said that Pelosi, being a member of Congress, does indeed have the "authority of the United States" mentioned in the Logan Act, and was representing America on her trip. If that's true, then she did it badly. She appeared as a supplicant to Assad, and walked about wearing a headscarf and black abaya, showing her deference -- and America's, as our representative -- to overblown fundamentalist Islamic sensibilities. Pelosi allowed herself to be photographed smiling and showing friendship to a man who is the subject of a US campaign designed to isolate and embarrass him for the part his government played in the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri in 2005. She badly botched a message from Israel's prime minister Ehud Olmert, telling Assad that Israel was prepared to resume peace talks with Syria. Olmert's actual message was that "Syria should first stop supporting terrorism and 'act like a normal country,' and only then would Israel be willing to hold discussions." It's hard to imagine how Pelosi's blundering Syrian junket could have been any more of a foreign policy disaster for the United States.
Since assuming her position as Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi has been leading the power-drunk Democrats in an attempt to reduce the Presidency to the purely ceremonial position it often occupies in other nations. True power in those countries usually resides in a prime minister -- a position to be filled here, no doubt, by Madame Pelosi herself. The recent condition-laden military funding bill was a blatant attempt to usurp the President's authority as Commander-in-Chief, and now the Democrats are trying to take over as arbiters of US foreign policy... and it remains to be seen whether anyone will do anything to stop them.
Posted at Tuesday, April 10, 2007 by CavalierX
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Sunday, April 08, 2007
Easter Greeting
 Resurrection of Christ (1475-79) by Giovanni Bellini
Although we've almost completely secularised Easter with rabbits, eggs and baby chicks, it is probably the most important holiday in the entire Christian calendar... even more so than Christmas, which gets all the attention these days. Resurrection -- life after death -- is the heart of that religion, not just birth. Take a moment to remember that Bellini painted no bunny rabbits (unless one is hiding among those bushes in the background) and have a happy Easter.
Posted at Sunday, April 08, 2007 by CavalierX
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