Special/Attribute to L. Neil Smith's The Libertarian Enterprise
Before I start this rant (actually, as I finish this rant, but 
you'll see what I mean in a minute), I'd like to take a few moments 
to explain how I write these things, and why I missed last weeks, and 
why chronologically, Mama Liberty's SECOND contribution to this rant 
is at the beginning. I write these things using a certain blog-site's 
article writing section, then copy it, paste it, and send it off to 
various places for publication. Why? Because I like the format the 
site has. But it has one HUGE fault. The whole article stays on ONE 
page, so the more I write, the farther away from the Block-quote, 
italics, bold face, and other use-full shit I get. in addition, I 
start writing NEXT week's rant about 15 minutes after THIS week's 
goes out. So each time I write, I start it at the top of the page, to 
keep the toolbar closer to where I'm working. This means the LAST 
thing I write is the FIRST thing you see. Last week, three hours 
before I would normally wrap my rant up, my computer died. Soooo, I 
broke out my spare. It died. Thus, I had a complete rant, stored 
online, I couldn't access except with a computer that takes 23 
minutes just to open an e-mail. And that's why you got no rant last 
week. I got my computer back last night, and have been typing 
furiously for the last 24 hours (okay, probably for 2 hours IN the 
last 24, but you get the drift). Ennyhoo.... That's why the 
links get older the closer to the bottom you get, and that's why Mama 
Liberty's "FIRST" contribution references "last week", yet that 
contribution is the "second" in this rant.
With that taken care off, enjoy the rest of this labor of love.
Mama Liberty's first contribution to the rant for this week. 
[Link]
Last week I wrote about the 
priorities 
of training, with ongoing 
situational 
awareness and realistic analysis of your 
individual risk factors as potentially even more important than your 
gun handling skills, vital as those are. This week I'd like to start 
with one of the specific risk factors and some of the things that can 
be done to avoid problems and improve one's overall readiness to 
respond appropriately if and when the trouble you don't want comes 
along anyway.
Do you live alone, or spend a good part of your time at home 
alone? Do you travel alone, staying in motel or hotel rooms and 
eating out alone? Do you find yourself alone at night in strange 
neighborhoods and parking lots because of your work or other 
obligations? Do you ride a bus or take a commuter train, subway or 
other public transportation?
Follow the link. Read on.
My wife (and her mother, who lives with us) loves Chipotle's 
burritos. So I get them every time I drive to Rochester—100 miles 
away. When I visit my Mom, I get them (and Chik Fil A for me), put 
them in a cooler, and bring them home. I have been in Chipotlle's 
dozens of times, never leaving without spending at least 40 bucks. 
But no more will I give them money, because they have wet their 
pants, and kissed the asses of a bunch of whiney 
anti-Constitutionalists, and put up signs telling me not to shop 
there. And, as a restaurant in North Carolina just learned a few days 
ago, that does not work out well in the long run. 
[Link]
Yesterday a restaurant in North Carolina was robbed at gunpoint 
despite having a sign up prohibiting guns on the premises.
The armed robber paid no attention to the sign, or maybe he 
couldn't read it. Surely, if he had he would have promptly put his 
gun in his pants and just ordered a BBQ sandwich, averting disaster. 
That's what criminals do, right? Avert disaster? They oblige 
warnings, respect authority and comply with official policy. Yeah, uh 
huh. Dream on.
------------------------------------------------------------------
On May 19, Moms Demand pressured Chipotle [restaurants] 
because a group of customers openly—and legally—carried their 
rifles into a Dallas Chipotle restaurant over the weekend.
Twitchy published Chipotle's response to Moms Demand:
Recent participants from an "open carry" demonstration in 
Texas brought guns (including military-style assault rifles) into one 
of our restaurants, causing many of our customers anxiety and 
discomfort. Because of this we are respectfully asking that customers 
not bring guns into our restaurants, unless they are authorized law 
enforcement personnel.
This makes Chipotle the newest gun free zone in a long list of 
zones like Ft. Hood, the Aurora movie theater, Sandy Hook Elementary, 
the DC Navy Yard, Arapahoe High School, and on and on...
I do not give my business to businesses that don't want me on 
their premises. I'm an American, I'm armed, and I'm not going to take 
it any more. The funny thing is, I carry concealed. They'd never know 
I was carrying there UNLESS I needed to defend myself (and, 
coincidentally, their customers and restaurant). But unlike them, I 
respect private property rights, so I will NEVER carry on private 
property where I am not wanted. Of course, as the story points out, 
criminals will obey these signs, too. NOT!!
I guess I must be a terrorist, because I've played hangman for 
decades, and I homeschooled my kids, using variation of it to aid in 
getting them interested in reading and spelling. But now, that's the 
action of a terrorist. 
[Link] 
SERIOUSLY???
However, anyone participating in Hangman in school these days will 
find themselves suspended and grilled by the local police department 
as possible criminals or terrorists. At least that's what happened to 
a 
13 
year old in Beaverton, Oregon last year.
According to a lawsuit filed by the student's father, Robert 
Bernard Keller, his son was doodling in class and drew the Hangman 
game. When the teacher saw what he was doing, Keller's son was taken 
to the principal's office where he was suspended and then grilled by 
Beaverton police officers. It seems the teacher interpreted the 
Hangman game as threat.
A comment made by 
Mike 
Miller with Independent Journal Review concerning this 
dangerous 13 year old:
"Kudos to the Beaverton School District and Police Dept. for 
apprehending this potential criminal before it was too late. Who 
knows? His next move might have been to chew a Pop-Tart into a gun—
just like that dangerous 7-year-old boy did in Maryland last 
year."
Where are the brains of the creatures we call teachers? It seems 
to me that they are located in their rectal cavities these days....
Ve haff vays to make you zink correctly, Ja! Ve are ze Thought 
Police! 
[Link]
sending an 8 year old to the office for THINKING about a gun!
The thought police are at it again, and this time the victim is an 
8-year-old boy. As part of a school "imagination" project, the boy 
drew a picture of a gun. Of course, the school freaked out and 
claimed the boy's action demonstrated "bad behavior." What is going 
on in this country?
What is going on indeed?
We pause in the middle of the rant a nice piece by Mama Liberty, 
because computer problems prevented a rant last week. 
[Link]
I read quite a few shooting and personal defense type blogs, and 
occasionally participate in such forums as well. Most, of course, 
reflect the interests of men, and young men seem to be fairly 
dominant. Even the blogs that showcase shooting and self defense for 
women seem geared toward the young and physically active. The 
training usually encouraged, then, is most often the vigorous and 
intensive sort, usually in a formal shooting school such as "Front 
Sight"—or at least fashioned after that level of experience. I can 
always tell that when the first sentence starts with: "I trained with 
three Navy Seals" over the weekend..."
Now, I don't know about you, but I'm not ever going to be able to 
"train with Navy Seals." My 68 year old body has received a good 
number of insults and injuries over those years, and all that 
running, crouching and crawling around on the ground is simply not 
something I can do.
But older folks, and those of any age with limited physical 
abilities, have as much—or more—need to defend themselves than 
the young and fit. I think that goes without saying—but I said it 
anyway.
Follow the link to see where this leads. It's worth it.
I've bitched about this before, but hearing a cop admit WHY they 
want them makes it far more scary....
[Link]
Armed to fight our returning veterans who are now considered to be 
"terrorist threats" for doing the jobs asked of them (and being a 
group that over 90% of whom oppose the actions of the sitting 
government).
Sgt. Dan Downing of the Morgan County Sheriff's Department states, 
"When I first started we really didn't have the violence that we see 
today," adding, "The weaponry is totally different now that it was in 
the beginning of my career, plus, you have a lot of people who are 
coming out of the military that have the ability and knowledge to 
build IEDs and to defeat law enforcement techniques."
Downing goes on to relate how citizens approach the vehicle when 
it stops at gas stations to express their concerns that the 
militarization of police is about arming cops with the tools required 
for mass gun confiscation programs.
"We were actually approached when we'd stop to get fuel by people 
wanting to know why we needed this...what were we going to use it 
for? 'Are you coming to take our guns away?'" said Downing. "To come 
and take away their firearms...that absolutely is not the reason why 
we go this vehicle. We got this vehicle because of the need and 
because of increased violence that we have been facing over the last 
few years.... I'll be the last person to come and take anybody's 
guns."
Sorry, pal, but you do NOT have a need for military vehicles to 
fight "growing violence" when overall, violent crime is down 70% 
since 1993. Try another lie. You want them to use in the fight 
against the Bill of Rights, and the American citizen.
I really want to see gun companies say "none of your business" and 
simply refuse to supply cities who demand such irrelevant 
information. 
[Link]
The very title of the article shows the bias of the authors.
Jersey City has begun requiring gun companies that supply its police 
department with weapons to disclose more about their business 
practices, an effort that is being watched by law-enforcement 
agencies in other cities.
Gun-control advocates and firearms industry representatives said 
Jersey City is the first municipality in the nation to demand such 
information. 
Questions include how firms dispose of old weapons and comply with 
background-check laws, and whether they make semiautomatic rifles—often 
called assault weapons—for sale to civilians, according to 
bid documents viewed by The Wall Street Journal.
Intimidation of businesses IS business as usual for New Jersey, 
though. And even the article admits the city law is a deliberate 
attempt to intimidate the companies into thinking they cannot get 
contracts without caving in to their demands.
The requirement went into effect earlier this year for gun and 
ammunition contracts worth at least $500,000 for Jersey City's 
800-member police force. The purpose: to try to change the firearms 
industry through the power of the city purse.
"It shows municipalities and police departments have the ability 
to shape the dialogue," said Steve Fulop, the Democratic mayor of New 
Jersey's second-largest city, about gun buying.
The effort is setting up a fight with gun makers and supporters of 
Second Amendment rights.
"These politicians are politicizing the purchase of firearms for 
law enforcement, when law enforcement should be able to buy whatever 
best suits their needs," said Andrew Arulanandam, managing director 
of public affairs for the National Rifle Association.
As the article points out,
There is skepticism that law-enforcement agencies could have much 
impact on the nation's $15 billion market for guns and ammunition. 
Jersey City typically purchases about $250,000 in ammunition and guns 
each year—more this year because more police officers are being 
hired—a tiny piece of the market.
Even if other police departments demanded such information, a 
survey of large firearms manufacturers found that law enforcement 
accounted for up to 10 percent of their total sales, said Maksim 
Soshkin, guns and ammunition industry analyst for IBISWorld, a 
market-research firm. Mr. Soshkin was skeptical that the industry 
would change in response to the wishes of a small segment of the 
market.
Let's hope the companies stand strong.
Hasn't the Ft Collins PD ever heard of gun shops? Most gun shops 
run an FFL NICS check for about 25 to 50 bucks. Their excuse for 
keeping the gun sounds fishy to me. 
[Link]
Sara Warren
of Fort Collins works as a maid, 
cleaning the homes of numerous strangers. She has a conceal carry 
permit for her Ruger compact SR9 handgun that she carries for 
protection. On March 28, Warren was involved in an auto accident 
which resulted in her being taken to the hospital for treatment of 
her injuries. When police checked out her car, they found her gun and 
took it into their possession.
Upon checking her out, they discovered that she legally owns the 
gun and she was not in violation of any firearm laws. However, they 
say that they are not legally able to return her gun to her.
According to the new state anti-gun laws, Sara Warren has to have 
a Federal Firearms License check run on her and the Fort Collins 
police say that they have no procedure for running such a background 
check. Fort Collins Deputy Police Chief Jim Szakmeister told the 
local media that the city attorney met with the district attorney and 
they concurred that Warren's gun cannot be returned to her without 
the FFL background check. Therefore, they cannot return her gun to 
her even though she is the legal owner and already has a conceal 
carry permit.
One must hope that the Ft Collins Police Chief is deliberately 
doing this to spark a lawsuit that will end with the revocation of 
the anti-Constitutional law Colorado has rammed down the throats of 
the People.
Quote(s) of the Week.
"Both the oligarch and Tyrant mistrust the people, and 
therefore deprive them of arms."
—Aristotle
"No law ever written has stopped any robber, rapist or killer, 
like cold blue steel in the hands of their last intended victim."
—W. Emerson Wright
"The sheer immorality of victim disarmament aside, one would 
hope every law enforcement officer out there would stop to consider 
all the possible ramifications of kicking in several million doors 
because the occupants are well armed."
—Carl Bussjaeger
This concludes this exercise of the 1st Amendment in celebration 
of the 2nd Amendment.