Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Kansas nullifies federal gun laws – period

"Any act, law, treaty, order, rule or regulation of the government of the United States which violates the second amendment to the constitution of the United States is null, void and unenforceable in the state of Kansas"


Topeka – The struggle over states rights has returned to the plains of the free state that spawned violence, leading to the War Between the States.

This time, it's all about the right to keep and bear arms, and it's serious as a heart attack - or a government raid.

Kansans will return to an understanding of the right to keep and bear arms that dates from its entry into the United States of America in the first year of the Civil War, 1861.

Governor Sam Brownback signed a new law that renders federal gun law null and void if it conflicts with the Second Amendment.

The main factor of the new legislation is that the definition of the Second Amendment is not keyed to any Supreme Court opinion or ruling, according to its sponsors and authors.

“The second amendment to the constitution of the United States reserves to the people, individually, the right to keep and bear arms as that right was understood at the time that Kansas was admitted to statehood in 1861, and the guaranty of that right is a matter of contract between the state and people of Kansas and the United States as of the time that the compact with the United States was agreed upon and adopted by Kansas in 1859 and the United States in 1861,” a section of the law states.

Constitutional experts reason that such an interpretation of a state statute will cause enough widespread noncompliance that it will render any enforcement of federal gun controls impossible to enforce in that state.

A similar law, the 2nd Amendment Protection Act, has passed the Federalism Committee in the Texas Legislature, and is standing in line to be placed in the hopper of the all-important Calendars Committee, a step essential to put it in line for a floor vote in the House of Representatives, according to the Tenth Amendment Center.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

DOD Chief rules out cyber flight medal as a first act


Washington - The new boss at the Pentagon has chosen to scrap plans for a medial that would have honored warriors who fight from cyber space and never set foot in a battle zone.
According to the Pentagon's news agency, "Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has eliminated the Distinguished Warfare Medal, DOD officials announced today.
"Instead, the military will recognize service members who directly affect combat operations without being present through distinguishing devices that will be affixed to already existing awards.
"Soon after being sworn in as defense secretary Feb. 27, 2013, Hagel asked Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to lead a review of the medal.
“The Joint Chiefs of Staff, with the concurrence of the service secretaries, have recommended the creation of a new distinguishing device that can be affixed to existing medals to recognize the extraordinary actions of this small number of men and women,” Hagel said in a written release.
“I agree with the Joint Chiefs’ findings, and have directed the creation of a distinguishing device instead of a separate medal,” Hagel said in the release.
"Hagel added: “The servicemen and women who operate and support our remotely piloted aircraft, operate in cyber, and others are critical to our military’s mission of safeguarding the nation.”

Monday, April 15, 2013

Bombs mar photo finish at venerable marathon


Bulletin: Two persons are dead, and police officials peg the number of those injured by a pair of bombs at 22...so far. Authorities reportedly found two more bombs near the scene and are dismantling them. A competitor told newsmen that he saw people with limbs completely ripped off their torsos and many bloodied by flying shrapnel...

Boston – Authorities can't say exactly how many runners and spectators are injured after two bomb blasts rocked the finish line of the Boston Marathon.

Witnesses said the first explosion seemed to come from the base of a photo bridge near the finish line. Seconds later, as people rushed forward to help, another blast rocked the scene.

Medical workers rushed to the aid of many injured persons as newsmen and women snapped pictures of the carnage on blood-spattered sidewalks and police officers cleared the grandstands.

Within minutes, the area was virtually deserted, the victorious achievements of many who bested the grueling 26-mile endurance test up and down hills and through this city's streets, suddenly rendered meaningless in a moment of horror as terror showed its face in an attack that rocked the nation.

- The Legendary
Boston Marathon Finish Line

Army readies epic soldier-on-soldier murder trial



I had seen nothing sacred, and the things that were glorious had no glory and the sacrifices were like the stockyards at Chicago if nothing was done with the meat except to bury it... - Ernest Hemingway, A Farewell To Arms

Killeen – Old hands at the world's largest military installation are also old hands at waging war in the world's largest theater of operations – the Global War On Terrorism.

Most of them say not much has changed at Ft. Hood since the day when an Army psychiatrist the Jewish Defense Organization called “the all-American Palestinian” gunned down and murdered 13 unarmed people right outside his office door at the Soldier Readiness Center.

Located in a sprawling complex once used as a sports complex, the center is an assembly line operation that clears combatants for takeoff, making sure their inoculations are up to date, their wills are up to date and on file, their group life insurance beneficiary information forms are accurate, and their pay records are in order.


Major Abu Nidal Malik Hasan is also charged with the attempted murder of 32 other people as they worked or waited in line at the Soldier Readiness Center to be deployed, or re-deployed, to the war in Afghanistan – or Iraq.

One thing to which everyone you talk to has long ago agreed is that it's taking far too long for justice to reach out and touch Major Hasan. Most cannot contain themselves; they blurt out murderous intentions toward him as casually as they would express a fond desire for the Rangers to make it all the way to the World Series this season.

It's a given.

Tomorrow morning, Tuesday, April 16, a new judge will rule on a battery of defense pre-trial motions, including the hair on the shrink's chinny chin chin, a personal grooming choice he says he adopted for religious purposes – or preferences.

Whatever.

The former judge said it is disruptive for a soldier to break Army regulations by wearing a beard. He got overruled, finally, after many months during which the case languished in the Army Court of Appeals, and the new judge, Col. Tara Osborn, has decided it's not that big a deal.

Colonel Osborn turned down defense motions for special sentencing due to Major Hasan's religious proclivities.

Murder by religious fatwa is no affirmative defense in the American military's law books.

She will also hear arguments from defense counsel regarding suppression of evidence after ruling that not only is the Army appeals court's stricture against the forcible shaving of the beard a matter of constitutional law, but the military law that allows either a death sentence, or life imprisonment without possibility of parole is up to constitutional scrutiny, as well.

She has scheduled seating a jury in the General Court Martial by May 29, and a beginning of testimony in the case in chief on July 1 as the government examines some 300 witnesses, many of whom testified in pretrial hearings that they locked eyes with the accused murderer as he mowed people down with one of the world's most powerful semiautomatic handguns.

So, what's really on trial?

From a power point presentation Hasan made on Jihad
America's ability to defend herself against a gnawing, insidious onslaught of terror.

This is the war that not only saddled up and came riding roughshod into your living room on a daily basis; it also invaded your kids' consciousness in a myriad of video games designed to reduce the novelty of anything rare or unique, startling, or in the slightest way unusual about the kind of nerve-shattering, mind-blowing violence with which the war of terror and counter terror is fought.

Operant conditioning on the grand scale is an art and science aimed at reducing the incidence of mind-numbing, reflex-destroying post traumatic stress disorder that can render a battle-hardened trooper useless after repeated deployments.

After all, there are few among us who have not boarded a jetliner for a jaunt or junket to home, school, grandma's house, or a stint at fighting in some war or the other. Almost no one in our nation has never boarded an express elevator for a quick trip to the lofty perches that top our cities' skyscrapers.

After you sat there on your couch and watched the twin towers topple and the people leaping into space to escape the flames, there is nothing all that surprising about what comes afterward.

There you have it. Major Hasan's access to means and opportunity to commit the crimes for which he is accused are foregone conclusions.

His motives, on the other hand, are the stuff of Kipling's day, the one in which east is east and west is west and never the twain shall meet - minus the romance.

In this story, no noble war lord of the Islamic jihad will come forward to detail his son to fight alongside the noble young westerners bent on revenge.

They are diametrically opposed, no doubt. The Army is calling it violence in the work place.

Raised in a Palestinian family from the West Bank town of Ramallah, Major Hasan spent his entire adult life in the U.S. Army. He went to school most of the time following his enlistment in 1988, when he served as a Private First Class at The National Training Center at Ft. Irwin, California, a desert outpost located in a Mojave hell hole between Vegas and Barstow.
The National Training Center at Ft. Irwin

He studied science at an on-post community college while he served his time there.

They trained the Rangers who routed Saddam Hussein's Army at Baghdad in mock-up cities complete with mosques and outdoor markets at Ft. Irwin. Here they proved out unmanned aerial vehicle strike capabilities in real time and under actual combat conditions.

When he finished his hitch in California, he kept at his education at a community college back in his home town, the District of Columbia and its suburbs. Then he split for Roanoke and got a B.S. with honors in biochemistry at Virginia Tech's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences before getting a medical degree at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences at Silver Spring, Maryland. He did a residency in psychiatry at Walter Reed.

During that 10-year odyssey, he attended local mosques as a devout follower of the Islamic faith. According to a fatwa issued by the Islamic Graduate School of Social Sciences, “We abide by every law of this country except those laws that are contradictory to Islamic law.”

During the six months prior to his attack, Maj. Hasan posted numerous articles on-line in which he constantly affirmed his jihadist belief that a suicide bomber is like a soldier who throws himself on a grenade to save his comrades' lives.

It's a doctrine readily taught and absorbed by Al Qaeda's fighters.

Maj. Hasan sent numerous e-mails to Anwar al-Awlaki, the former Imam of the Dar al Hijal Mosque at Falls Church, Virginia, with whom he studied in 2001, a time when al-Awlaki similarly preached to and taught three of the Arabic suicide jockeys who piloted the jetliners into the twin towers of New York and the Pentagon of D.C.

He wrote an impassioned e-mail to al-Awlaki, saying that he could hardly wait to join him in eternity. The gum shoes concluded it was code for something much deeper, that perhaps he had already crossed some dividing line in his mind.


It's a valid point in the social psychology on the subject, in which most researchers believe the primary Islamic resentment is directed against puppet dictator governments enabled by American interests, and that Muslims' rage is only secondarily aimed at Americans.

At any rate, Maj. Hasan was conducting research into a Master's thesis in public health on “Disaster and Preventive Psychiatry.”

The Army, seeing no sinister plot, failed to investigate. In the aftermath, nearly a dozen top officers faced disciplinary hearings over the matter.

Command and Control Vehicle tested at Ft. Irwin
Following Maj. Hasan's attack, al-Awlaki wrote on his website, “Nidal Hassan is a hero.... The U.S. is leading the war against terrorism, which in reality is a war against Islam..... Nidal opened fire on soldiers who were on their way to be deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. How can there be any dispute about the virtue of what he has done? In fact the only way a Muslim could Islamically justify serving as a soldier in the U.S. army is if his intention is to follow the footsteps of men like Nidal.”

The CIA targeted al-Awlaki, a native American citizen, in a drone attack last September. They killed him with rockets as he rode in a convoy of pickup trucks. Two weeks later, they got his 16-year-old son Abdulrahman in a similar desert attack in their native Yemen.

Maj. Hasan had a job to do at the Soldier Readiness Center. He certified those who complained of PTSD from their combat experiences to be ready to go back into battle, regardless of their complaints of shot nerves and fits of rage, sleepless nights, chronic alcoholism and drug abuse, and a growing dependence on serotonin reuptake inhibitors, muscle relaxers, and other psychotropic cocktails he and other Army doctors prescribe to keep the front line fit and fighting.

But he was on his way to a deployment in Afghanistan, something against which he protested – to no avail – when he drove to his office and opened up with the pistol.

He would have been one of 1.64 million deployed since 9/11 – a group among whom those who enlisted prior to age 25 are seven times more likely to develop PTSD and in whom 97% who suffered childhood trauma and violence against civilians and prisoners are likely to succumb to the lifelong affliction, according to studies by the Rand Corporation(click) and psychological journals(click).


So it goes.

Friday, April 12, 2013

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Key Senate vote readies gun control showdown

Think nationally, nullify locally...
The United Sates Senate
Washington – Congressional gun control measures will likely focus on firearms, generally, rather than assault weapons, definitively.

Sixteen GOP Senators crossed party lines to vote 68-31 for a procedural vote that will bring debate to the Senate floor on a gun control bill highly touted by the President.

Majority leader Harry Reid (D-Nv) told reporters after the vote that the key to the new legislation will be an amendment to the bill requiring background checks of customers in all gun sales, be they conducted at gun shows, or on the internet, and appropriate records to prove to officials that the background checks actually took place.

As drafted, the bill will require a crackdown on straw purchases and beef up security in schools.

The background checks issue has been described by noted liberal Democrat Chuck Schumer (D-Ny) as the “sweet spot” in the measure, requiring increased gun control following the December attack at a Connecticut elementary school that left 20 children and 6 educators dead.

The proposed legislation contains no mention of “military style” assault weapons, so demonized by President Obama and Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Ca).

Relatives of the victims gathered in the Senate gallery to observe, and delivered a message to the Senators saying all who would contemplate a filibuster of the legislation should be “ashamed of their attempt to silence efforts to prevent the next American tragedy...”

The chamber caved in on a filibuster attempt accordingly.

He and Senator Reid said they expect the compromise amendment requiring background checks be worked out between Senators Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Pat Toomey (R-Pa). An agreement on the amendment will require a 60-vote majority, as will passage of the bill to send it to the House in its final Senate form.

Democrats say they will need at least 5 Republican votes to send S. 649, the Safe Communities, Safe Schools Act, to the House of Representatives.

“The Hill” congressional newspaper described the Senators as “a centrist Democrat who has an 'A' rating from the NRA,” and a “conservative Republican.”
Psychiatric patients examined for Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome and other combat-related problems today, Thursday, April 11, reported being asked if they have guns, or have plans to obtain them during interviews with staff psychiatrists at the Waco VA Medical Center.


Said Michael Boldin, “Joe Biden (vice president) wants to scare us all, telling us this is just the beginning on gun control. Well, I've got a message, too. Hey, Joe, let me say this as clearly as I can. Whatever you've got, we're going to nullify it.”

Mr. Boldin sent subscribers an emotional update today, saying it's best to forget there is a 202 area code, to “think nationally, nullify locally.”

Senator Manchin and Senator Toomey unveiled plans for a national commission on violence to study the problem of gun assaults. They announced it in a joint televised press conference.


Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Veteran lawman displays expert gun handling form


Six Shooter Junction – Photos snapped of Sheriff Parnell McNamara at a recent Republican gabfest display the footwork, form and function of an experienced pistol-toter behind the badge.

Seasoned lawmen and pistoleros alike recognize the stance and posture instantly.

Notice that the Sheriff's stance is open – bladed - as the men of his profession call it, feet placed in an oblique position and favoring the gun hand. It's the stance used by Michelangelo in his statue of David contemplating a sling throw at Goliath, the right eye ready to track the path of the projectile.


The right hand is near the holster, trigger finger extended and kept out of the trigger guard until the final commitment to shoot is made.

There is a reason for that. Should an aggressor attempt to disarm the lawman, he could wind up with a finger bent back to the breaking point – thus becoming easily controllable – and losing possession of the firearm.

If and when the firearm is withdrawn from the holster, the feet are in position to take a step back and leave the firearm in the same position, if possible. If not possible, a triggerman can shoot from the hip, in close quarters, with deadly effect.

Coming to a combat stance, the gun hand pushes, the off hand pulls against the gun hand, and the weapon is brought on target at the end of an extended right fist, front sight first, rear sight adjusted, as needed, later.

Naturally, in these pictures, the Sheriff is talking with his closest partner in prosecution of crime, DA Abel Reyna. 

Nevertheless, he is in position to defend himself, his firearm, and take control of the situation.

After 40 years on the job, it's become conditioned in his routine, handgun combat skills proven by the men who live and operate by the gun, knocking on doors, bracing known criminals and facing
down threats from unknown actors acting in perilous ways.

It's a style you won't see in a John Wayne movie, but it's called the Jack Weaver combat stance, and it's taught in the type of defensive handgun courses former Deputy U.S. Marshal Parnell McNamara has been teaching since his retirement from federal service at age 57.