Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Constitutional Carry Passed in Wyoming

Governor Mead signed the Jennings-Jaggi bill into law today.  As with Alaska, Vermont, and recently, Arizona, Wyoming residents no longer need to apply for a permit to carry a concealed weapon.  Congratulations and gratitude are due for the efforts of Wyoming Gun Owners.

Some will predict that blood will run in the streets.  We've heard it before, and it never happens.  Since passage of Alaska's law in 2003, crime rates have remained largely static.  Arizona's law just passed last April, so crime statistics are not yet available.  However, I don't expect to see any fallout.

Wyoming isn't alone.  Support is rapidly gathering in both houses of South Carolina.

For a long time, Vermont was considered an anomaly.  Alaska could also have been written off as a bit eccentric, but adding two (possibly three or four) states to the rolls may very well constitute a trend.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

H.R. 822

John Richardson has the scoop on this one.  Introduced by Cliff Stearns of Florida and co-sponsored by Heath Shuler of North Carolina, the bill seeks to enforce national reciprocity for carry permits.

Two years ago, Senators Thune and Coburn attempted to pass a similar bill by amending it to the Defense Department budget.  It failed by only two votes then, and the landscape is much more amenable to it now.

That is, if the Tea Party still believes all that stuff they did last November.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Ailera

Ailera

After everything runs down, the wind still blows through.

Ailera (01:57)

Friday, February 18, 2011

Luna, 1993-2011

Luna

Luna was a good friend for 17 years.  She'd been through a lot with me, but her health began to fail as of late.

Towards the end, she could scarcely walk, and I wasn't sure if she could recognize me.  It was time.

Monday, February 14, 2011

Leather for the XO

Saguaro Gunleather

I love the unique contour of the slide on the Sig Sauer 1911, but it makes holster selection tricky.  Blade-Tech makes their Stingray model for the gun, but most other makers aren't supporting it yet.

That means custom work, so I contacted Tom Dyer, and as usual, he came up with an elegant setup.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

The Morning After

While CNN frets, Cairo rejoices.

When Hosni Mubarak announced his resignation, Egypt exploded.  Not in strife or anger, but in triumph and elation.  My sister and her husband were present at the celebrations in Tahrir Square, and they sent a few pictures.

I've rarely seen the spirit of hope and optimism so eloquently conveyed.



Friday, February 11, 2011

Seefeel

Last fall, Seefeel showed up out of the blue to perform new material at Warp's 20th Anniversary concert. An EP titled Faults was released shortly thereafter.

This came as something of a surprise, as I hadn't heard anything from them since 1996. It's hard to grasp that it's been 17 years since I first heard them on the astounding Pure, Impure EP.

Lots of things from that period sound pretty dated. Surprisingly, Seefeel's output doesn't.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Cairo

I have a bit of personal perspective on this.  My sister and her husband teach at the American University in Cairo.  They were with me for the holidays, and they returned last Tuesday.

The day they left, we had been hearing about a few student protests.  That was the extent of it.  We were heartened by the departure of the Ali government in Tunisia, and while we suspected this to be the spark of the rallies in Cairo, nobody expected the situation to erupt with such swiftness or power.

By Thursday, the internet was shut down, as were the cellular phone networks.  We had communicated by VoIP, and that link was now severed.  I was left to wonder and worry as activism turned to unrest, then to violence.  Historical patterns like this never bode well.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

The Usual Suspects

None of this is anything new, novel, or unexpected.

Carolyn McCarthy will be presenting a bill [pdf] on Tuesday, as yet un-numbered, to "prohibit the transfer or possession of large capacity ammunition feeding devices, and for other purposes."  Yes, she's capitalizing on Saturday's tragedy in Tuscon.  Yes, it's revolting.  No, I really don't expect any better out of her.

Before anyone panics, let's remember that Ms. McCarthy has attempted to reintroduce the Assault Weapons Ban every single session since 2003.  It has never made it out of committee.  Tuesday's bill will be met with the same crushing apathy.  It will not pass.

Next, consider Peter King's proposed bill to ban the carry of firearms within 1000 feet of a federal official.  Such a thing is utterly unfeasible to implement.  Would police have to pat down every WalMart customer when a local politician goes shopping?  What happens when your Senator wants to go to the range?  Must everyone else clear out?  That seems pretty lonely for the guy.

It's silly, it's unworkable, and our new Speaker of the House is hearing none of it, so take a deep breath and go do something interesting with the rest of your day.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Snow Day

Heck of a snowfall today, and not something Dante gets to see as often as he'd like.

Dante Covered in Snow

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Rhetoric Has Consequences

As the news came in about the shootings of Gabrielle Giffords and Judge John Roll, I was sadly reminded that her office was one of those targeted by the so-called window war following her vote in favor of the health-care bill.  I'm not saying that any group or political stripe bears the sole blame, but we all need to step back and take a look at the rhetoric we're tolerating from elected officials, the media, and from some in our own ranks.

In the months following the 2008 election, I lost count of how many times I heard some seemingly normal person blurt something like, "I wouldn't pull the trigger, but I wouldn't cry over ______'s grave, either."  There was talk from armchair revolutionaries about it being "time to vote from the rooftops."

There was more of it after the health-care vote.  In the 2010 mid-terms, we were treated to Sharron Angle's drivel about "2nd Amendment remedies," and Sarah Palin's PAC ran an advertisement (now removed) portraying literal targets on the names of Democrats they hoped to unseat.

Words often have unpredictable effects.  Tact and diplomacy have been thrown to the wind the last few years, and the whole landscape has gone from uncivil to bewildering and disturbing. I'm well aware that nobody put the gun in this guy's hand and forced him to do this, but at some point, the atmosphere has an effect on the suggestible and unbalanced.

Politicians and commentators on both sides of the aisle will no doubt use today's tragedy to claim that it justifies their respective agendas.  If it must be used for anything, it should be as a call to reason and civility.

(It should also be mentioned that Giffords was a supporter of the 2nd Amendment, and that she signed on to the congressional brief in support of the Heller case.)

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Sig Sauer 1911 XO

Sig 1911 XO

To this day, the steel-frame Government model remains the apotheosis of the 1911 platform.  Everyone has their own take on the design, some successful, some not so much.

After a few false starts, Sig has gotten it right.