Victim Disarmament – The New VD

The Knox Update

From the Firearms Coalition

Time to Eradicate VD

By Jeff Knox

(Manassas, VA, November 12, 2009) There has been a close association between sexually transmitted diseases and the military for as long as the two have existed, but the focus of this article is not Venereal Disease, but a different kind of VD that has shocked the military community and the nation. The VD which currently plagues the military and puts our soldiers at grave risk is the policy of Victim Disarmament which has been increasingly prevalent even as laws in the civilian world have been moving in the opposite direction.

While some have pointed to regulation changes during the Clinton administration as the turning point, VD on military bases has been the trend since at least the 1960’s and to a lesser extent even before that. In military society, so heavily steeped in discipline and control, it is only natural that those in power would be inclined to drift in the direction of micro-management and centralized control. Commanders in the modern military seem to have gravitated toward a paternalistic role and that paternalism runs all through the chain of command and seems to apply to all subordinates regardless of their age, rank, or experience.

Continue reading Victim Disarmament – The New VD

Early Returns

The Knox Update

From the Firearms Coalition

Early Returns

 

By Chris Knox

 

(Phoenix, AZ, November 4, 2009)  It’s a Republican sweep in Virginia.  Bob McDonnell has the election locked up along with fellow Republicans winning the Lt. Governor and Attorney General offices.  The Republican victory in Virginia was overwhelming, with the GOP netting a combined 60 percent of the vote over Democrats in the three races.

In New Jersey, an unpopular (and Brady Bunch-endorsed) Democrat lost to what passes for a conservative Republican in that part of the world. Meanwhile in New York’s 23rd District, the Republican leadership had an opportunity to learn something about party discipline when their anointed candidate Dede Scozzafava, a genuinely liberal Republican, was pushed out of the race by an upstart conservative candidate who claimed Glenn Beck as his mentor.  Early returns show the Democrat with a solid lead, but with the upstart Hoffman making a splash.  The chin-stroking started immediately that the results are the harbinger of a gathering storm within the Republican Party.  Maybe.

Continue reading Early Returns

The latest “Devil’s Gun”

This column appeared in Shotgun News and elsewhere nearly five years ago.  I dredged it up when media reports surfaced that the Ft. Hood killer used a Five-seveN.  It should be noted that had he used the second gun he reportedly had during the rampage, a .357 Magnum, the death toll would very likely have been higher, but with fewer wounded.

–Chris Knox

Knox Report

The latest “Devil’s Gun”

By Chris Knox

 

(March 1, 2005) With the introduction to the civilian market of its “Five-seveN” pistol, FN Herstal has set the anti-gun world in a tizzy not seen since Gaston Glock’s polymer-framed pistol burst on the scene twenty years ago.  At that time the buzz was all about the “undetectable” plastic gun.  In similar fashion, the Brady Campaign (formerly Handgun Control Inc.) is circulating breathless reports that  “It [the Five-seveN] has the power of an assault rifle, yet it fits right in your pocket.”

 

Continue reading The latest “Devil’s Gun”

Ft. Hood Killer Used FN Pistol

ABC Taps Brady Bunch for Firearms Info

Just posted this as a comment to ABC and at Opposing Views.  My comment should be up soon.

http://www.opposingviews.com/articles/news-fort-hood-shooter-used-cop-killer-armor-piercing-handgun

ABC appears to have drawn most of the firearms knowledge displayed in their story from this press release.

http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/cop-killer-gun-thought-ft-hood-shooting/story?id=9019521

This report reads like a press release from the Brady Center, using their buzzword, and their exaggerated characterizations of the gun’s power.  The writers’ ignorance of firearms technology is obvious in calling the ammunition "5.7 caliber" (it’s 5.7mm) and calling the magazines "clips."

It’s not hard to see where the claims of bias come from when your reporters run unedited press releases without knowing or understanding what’s in them.  We at The Firearms Coalition would be happy to provide technical assistance.  There are numerous other organizations and groups in the firearms community, including the National Shooting Sports Foundation, the National Rifle Association, and Gun Owners of America who would be equally willing to help you improve the quality of your reporting.

Chris Knox
Communications Director
The Firearms Coalition

The No-Guns Insult

The Knox Update

From the Firearms Coalition

The “No Guns” Insult

By Jeff Knox

 

(Manassas, VA, October 29, 2009) How does it make you feel when you start to walk into a business and see a “No Guns” sign prominently posted? Are you angry? Offended? Indifferent? How do you react? Do you just turn around and take your business elsewhere? Complain to the management? Just ignore it and go on with your business? The members of the Virginia Citizens Defense League take “No Guns” signs as personally offensive and they let their offense be known – to the business, to fellow VCDL members, and anyone else who’ll listen – or read a web page. VCDL maintains a list of anti-rights Virginia businesses on their web site, www.VCDL.org, and encourages gun owners and rights supporters to avoid these businesses except to let them know that their policy is offensive. VCDL has actively pursued this position for several years while they have simultaneously grown to become the most politically active and effective rights organization in the state.

Continue reading The No-Guns Insult

Merchant Education Cards

The Firearms Coalition Merchant Education Card

Leave this card with your local merchants who post “No Firearms” signs instead of your money!

 

It informs!

It educates!

It’s courteous!

It lets unfriendly merchants see money leave their pocket! 

Merchant Card Front Merchant Card Back

(actual design may vary)

As more and larger areas are posted “No Firearms” our rights are being hedged, hemmed, maybe infringed? Here‘s a way to fight back. Let the pizza joint know that robbers probably won‘t read that sign anyway. Clue the dry cleaners in about creating a safe work environment for criminals. Let Costco know that you have bought a Sam‘s Club membership because of that sign on the door!

 

Pack of 100 is yours with a $10 donation!

Prosecution as Punishment

The Knox Update

From the Firearms Coalition

Prosecution as Punishment

The Troubling Case of Albert Kwan

By Jeff Knox

(October 8, 2009) People who “have nothing to hide” are often quite happy to answer any questions and consent to any intrusion a police officer might ask of them. They may even invite officers to “look around” if they want to. If you ask a good defense attorney how much you should cooperate with police, particularly when they are conducting an investigation in which you could possibly be a suspect, he will tell you “Not at all.” Don’t give them one word more than you must and never give them permission to search your car, look through your home, or examine any of your guns.

Continue reading Prosecution as Punishment

Training: Yes & No

The Knox Update

From the Firearms Coalition

 

Training, Yes – Mandatory, No 

By Jeff Knox 

(October 9, 2009) At the recent Gun Rights Policy Conference in Saint Louis, Missouri I had the privilege of introducing a couple of resolutions that were adopted by the assembly.  The first dealt with the recent attempt by Customs and Border Protection to classify certain "easy open" pocket knives as "switchblades," and subsequent efforts to amend the Federal Switchblade Act.  My resolution suggested that since the problem of switchblades and switchblade crime was primarily a figment of Hollywood and Broadway, and since regulating tools is never a reasonable response to bad behavior, that the rights community should support the outright repeal of the Federal Switchblade Act and any other such laws which are intended to modify behavior by restricting tools.  This resolution passed resoundingly with no real discussion.

My second resolution was a bit more controversial.  In it I suggested that, while training in the safe, legal, and appropriate use of firearms is strongly supported and should continue to be encouraged, government mandated training is anathema to liberty.  I pointed out that there is no statistical evidence that firearms accidents, mistakes, or abuses are any more likely in states requiring little or no training than they are in states with extensive training requirements.  The resolution put on the record the GRPC delegates’ opposition to government-mandated firearms training and their support for rolling back existing requirements where feasible.

Continue reading Training: Yes & No

Ammunition for the grassroots gun rights movement