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Armed Defense

Preprayered

On Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2015, Terry Gillenwater, 25, entered Good Family Pharmacy in Pinch, W. Va. wearing a bandana and carrying a gun. Eight people were inside the pharmacy when the suspect came through the door about 9:45 a.m. 

Don Radcliff, one of the pharmacists on staff, had just joked about how Gillenwater must have been there to rob the store when the suspect attempted to do just that.

Surveillance video released by the Kanahwa County sheriff’s department shows Gillenwater reaching into his jacket and pulling out a gun. Radcliff did not hesitate to do the same. As Gillenwater raised his weapon to fire, Radcliff beat him to the punch and fired his own, hitting the suspect square in the chest. When Gillenwater attempted again to shoot, Radcliff shot once more, hitting the suspect’s gun.


Without hesitation!

/fl

Law

The Meaning of 18 U.S.C. 921(a)(17)(C)

When you can't change the law, change the definition of the words... 

The BATFE is now trying to say that the .223/5.56 is an "armor piercing" round, with no "sporting" purpose. Where I come from, competition is considered "sport." Organized rifle and pistol matches are considered "sporting events", and .223 is widely used in competition.

If this kind of nonsense is allowed to go on, for the first time in the history of this nation, (law-abiding) American citizens would be prohibited from practicing with their nation's service rifle.

/fl

Law & Order

Another Mayors Against Illegal Guns Mayor Sentenced in Federal Court

This 'MAIG' outfit is racking up quite a record for itself.

“Mount Vernon Mayor Ernest Davis was sentenced in White Plains federal court on Friday to one year of probation and a $10,000 fine,” midhudsonnewscom. “Davis, 76, pled guilty last October to two counts of willfully failing to file federal income tax returns.” Mayor Davis was a member of now-former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s first foray into gun control politics: the Mayors Against Illegal Guns. He’s hardly the first MAIG Mayor to come a cropper ’cause of criminality. Davis’s wrist-slap gave TTAG reader PetitionForRedress a moment of clarity. “Now I get it! MAIG is a union of like-minded elected officials whose mission is to protect criminals … you know, as a professional courtesy.”

Obvious pattern!

/fl

Civil Rights

Hoplophobia Run Amok

It's a well-established fact that Michael Bloomberg has an inflated ego, but not even Michael Bloomberg can produce enough hot air to float a lead balloon. But, he keeps trying.

Speaking to the Aspen Institute on February 6, Michael Bloomberg said cities should ban young minority males from owning guns, both as an effort to reduce crime and to keep those minority males “alive.”

Notice that he says the cities should be the ones to restrict the civil rights of its citizens. What if one of those minority males is a law-abiding citizen that needs a gun to protect themselves from those outlaws that Michael Bloomberg scorns?

“It’s always the poor that get screwed,” said the founder of Bloomberg L.P.

Yup!

/fl

USCG Rescue

Cirrus Splash

HONOLULU – The pilot of a single engine Cirrus SR-22 aircraft that ran out of fuel is safe after ditching his aircraft 253 miles northeast of Maui, Hawaii Sunday.

The flight originated in Tracy, California and was destined for Kahului Maui.

At 12:30 p.m. the pilot contacted the Hawaii National Guard and reported his aircraft had approximately three hours of fuel remaining and he would be ditching 230 miles north east of Maui.

At approximately 4:44 p.m. the pilot was able to deploy the aircraft’s airframe parachute system and safely exit the aircraft into a life raft.

Watchstanders at the Coast Guard Joint Rescue Coordination Center Honolulu identified the cruise ship Veendam, en route to Lahaina, Maui, and coordinated the pilot’s ditch near their location.

At 5:21 p.m. the crew of the Veendam rescued the pilot. The pilot was reported to be in good condition. The plane was last observed partially submerged. 

Weather conditions at the time of the rescue were seas of 9 to 12 feet and winds of 25 to 28 mph.

The Coast Guard HC-130 Hercules airplane from Air Station Barbers Point assisted the pilot during the process of ditching his aircraft and maintained communications throughout the ditching process. The Hercules crew remained on scene until the pilot was safely aboard the Veendam.

NICS

Second Highest January On Record

The January 2015 NSSF-adjusted National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) figure of 1,052,441 is now the second highest January on record for the 16-year-old system, with an increase of 8.4 percent compared to the January 2014 NSSF-adjusted NICS figure of 970,510. For comparison, the unadjusted January 2015 NICS figure of 1,763,233 reflects a 6.8 percent increase from the unadjusted NICS figure of 1,650,565 in January 2014.

USCG Rescue

Belay the martini, and grab that cable!

In in the September 29, 2014 issue of Forbes Life, Brian Cohen extolled the virtues of "Rainmaker", his then new $2.5 million Gunboat 55 catamaran, describing it as "an island of calm."

“What I love about this boat is it’s so disruptive, in so many ways,” says Cohen, a 59-year-old Boston University-trained journalist who made his money on the personal computer revolution in the ’80s and ’90s, then doubled down as an angel investor–famously, he was the first to invest in Pinterest.

From its marina slip across the Hudson River from Manhattan, Rainmaker was, no doubt, "an island of calm." But, out in the North Atlantic ocean, things can get "disruptive" in a hurry.

The Coast Guard rescued all five people aboard Rainmaker on Friday, Jan. 30, 2015, after the sailboat's mast broke approximately 200 miles off the coast of North Carolina. An MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter crew and a C-130 Hercules crew, both from Coast Guard Air Station Elizabeth City, North Carolina, launched to respond:


Bravo Zulu Charlie Golf; Semper Paratus!

/fl

Culture

Painkilling The Truth

As a Christian and a military veteran, I am very much interested in the disposition of the "Bergdahl affair", and like thousands of other veterans, am waiting for the other shoe to drop; although, the 'one shoe only drop' seems to be the art form de jour in today's political culture.

It was the fact that every sin had an euphemism that, years ago, prompted my interest in the study of cultural pathology as an avocation. The circumlocution of truth is a definite indicator of cultural decay. It's always encouraging to see someone else picking up on, and articulating, this fact. 

In his Daily Briefing last Friday, Albert Mohler had this to say about the subject of applying a painkiller to the truth:

Transcript:

...Christians understand that words matter. Even as being made in the image of God includes, at least in part, that we are linguistic creatures; we are able to form words, to say words, to write words, and understand words, indeed to be addressed by a divinely revealed word. We also understand that language matters in ways that are deeply revealing, deeply revealing in moral terms. After all, as many have pointed out, one of the things we have to note is the substitution in terms of moral language for a euphemism. As has been pointed out during the 20th century for instance, you can trace a moral revolution in the language that is used to describe the same thing. Something for instance that was first called ‘adultery’ then became known as an ‘affair’ and then later simply ‘extramarital sex.’

What we’re talking about here is the fact that sin is often rationalized by the process of using a euphemism, by euphemizing it. If we call it something else we can sometimes even trick ourselves into thinking it is something else. Of course we’re not just talking about sexual sins, this can be done with the sin of pride or the sin of gluttony or any other sin – frankly it can be done with almost any aspect of human living. But when it comes to defining evil that’s where euphemisms become most dangerous and most revealing and that’s where we better pay the most attention.

That’s why an article that appeared in yesterday’s edition of the Wall Street Journal is urgent from the Christian worldview even though most of the people who might be first immediately concerned with the article will be foreign-policy experts and politicians. Here’s the headline, White House Labels Taliban and Armed Insurgency Not Terrorists, it’s by Byron Tau, again writing yesterday at the Wall Street Journal. As Tau writes,

“The White House is drawing a sharp distinction between Afghanistan’s Taliban and the Islamic State — describing the Taliban as an ‘armed insurgency.’”

When the White House spokesman was asked yesterday about a plan by the nation of Jordan to swap a would-be suicide bomber for a Jordanian pilot being held by Islamic state militants, the White House reiterated the long-standing policy, says Tau, of the United States to refuse negotiations with terrorists. Eric Schultz, White House spokesman, said yesterday,

“Our policy is that we don’t pay ransom, that we don’t give concessions to terrorist organizations,”

He went on to say,

“This is a longstanding policy that predates this administration and it’s also one that we communicated to our friends and allies across the world,”

Well that’s one of those statements that means less than first meets the eye because the whole point of the Wall Street Journal article – and the whole point of world attention now to the White House spokesman’s statement – is not so much the statement which was indeed communicated – that the United States does not negotiate nor pay ransom to terrorist – but the fact that it all comes down to how the White House defines a group as a terrorist organization or, as the White House spokesman revealed yesterday when referencing the Taliban, merely an “armed insurgency.”

Now as I said, this gets to be very interesting because last year the White House was involved in a prisoner swap with the Taliban in Afghanistan – you’ll remember that that included US Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl. The White House spokesman said yesterday, we do not negotiate with terrorist organizations nor pay ransom to terrorist organizations, but the Taliban isn’t a terrorist organization. The problem is the United States government still says that it is. As a matter fact, even as the US does not list the Taliban on the foreign terrorist organization list run by the State Department, it does list the Taliban as a terrorist organization on its separate “specially designated global terrorism list.” It has done so since 2002. And the National Counterterrorism Center – remember, that’s also the same government otherwise known as the United States government – also lists the Taliban  presence in Afghanistan on a map of global terrorism.

Furthermore, and horrifyingly, let me just remind you that it was the Taliban in Pakistan that murdered 145 people, including mostly young teenage students most of them boys involved in a private high school in the nation of Pakistan just before Christmas of last year. It was universally recognized as one of the worst acts of terrorism in the year 2014. But the White House now says the Taliban isn’t the terrorist group; if it were a terrorist group we couldn’t negotiate with them. Since we are negotiating with them, they must not be a terrorist group.

Now my point in this case is not to suggest that the Obama administration is doing something new when it comes to national politics, national defense, and foreign relations. We can almost be assured that there has been a bipartisan tradition of this kind of labeling and relabeling largely due to the fact that every administration is having to be rather nimble in terms of dealing with a lot of these issues. But there is a deep question of principle here and that deep question of principle is a lot deeper than a partisan question. Is indeed the United States violating our own sense of morality by a selective identification of some groups as terrorist and others as not when they are engaged in the very same horrifying behaviors?

But here we simply return where we began, with the process of euphemization and a classic example. We began with adultery that’s now considered by many just an extramarital affair or a fling, and then we compare that to the statement made by the White House spokesman yesterday when he said when it comes to the Taliban, they’re not actually a terrorist group – merely “an armed insurgency.” Let me point out the obvious moral lesson, if you were killed by an armed insurgency or a terrorist organization it doesn’t matter what someone calls it, it matters what is done; it matters what they do and what they believe and who they are.

And one of the principles of the Christian worldview, regardless of its partisan application, is that we ought to call things what they are. We have to call things by their real name. And that’s especially true for Christians the closer we get to the question of evil; we dare not call evil anything other than what it is.

Every sin has an euphemism!

/fl

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