North Idaho Colleges reject Guns on Campus

 

North Idaho college trustees voted tonight to oppose a state bill to allow concealed firearms on Idaho public college campuses under certain circumstances. The trustees voted 4-1 to oppose the bill sponsored by Sen. Curt McKenzie, R-Nampa. The dissenting vote was from Trustee Todd Banducci, president of Falcon Investments & Insurance, Inc. in Coeur d’Alene and a major in the Air Force Reserves.Like most colleges, NIC bans firearms on campus, either concealed or open carry. The Senate State Affairs Committee, which has rejected similar bills in past years, voted Monday to introduce the legislation.

The bill seeks to override campus gun bans for retired law enforcement officers and people who have Idaho’s new enhanced concealed carry permit. That permit requires more rigorous training then the state’s regular concealed weapon permit. Concealed weapons still would be prohibited in dormitories or residence halls, and in large entertainment venues with seating for 1,000 or more. The bill also adds to an existing law that makes it a crime to carry a concealed weapon while under the influence of alcohol or an intoxicating drug. NIC officials plan to testify against the bill in Boise
Source: http://www.spokesman.com/blogs/hbo/2014/jan/28/nic-trustee-reject-guns-campus/

How interesting that the dissenting vote came form a major in the Air Force Reserve. Unlike Jason Bateman, some people take their constitutional oath seriously.

The 20-year-old child: How USA Today lied about gun injuries.

“Twenty young people a day hospitalized for gun injuries” screams the USA Today headline, right under it we see: “

“Six percent of 7,391 hospitalizations for firearm-related injuries to children and teens in 2009 proved fatal. Most of the hospitalizations resulted from assaults; the fewest from suicide attempts.”

Yet when you read the article you find this little tidbit.

Researchers analyzed a nationally representative sample of discharge data collected on children and adolescents (up to age 20) in 2009. The data, released in 2011, are the most recent available, Sege says.

Up to age 20? Are you freaking kidding me? At 20 you’re not even a teen, at 18 you’re no longer a child. Do an experiment, ask a 13-17 year old if he considers himself a child, guess what? They don’t. At that age some teenagers can be charged as adults if they commit certain crimes.

The study detailed a significant racial gap: Black children and adolescents comprised 47% of all hospitalizations, 54% of hospitalizations resulting from assaults, 36% from unintentional injuries and 54% from undetermined causes.

Oh how terrible, but then again, that’s part of the gang lifestyle Hip Hop loves to promote. The Bloods and the Cribs like them young, and the kids aren’t learning gun safety from the NRA, or going to the gun range. The streets are their gun range! This is why they hold their guns sideways which is a no-no among real gun owners as opposed to worthless punks.

The findings emphasize “the need for funding for public health research to find the best way to reduce children’s access to firearms,” he says.

Just like global warming, hungry liberals need Uncle Sugar to pay them for their “research.”

In the absence of such research, Sege says, the best advice is to follow the American Academy of Pediatrics’ recommendation that “the safest home for children and teens is one without guns,” and if there are guns in the home, they should be “stored unloaded and locked, with the ammunition locked away in a separate place.”

Of course, a bunch of lousy doctors that don’t know squat about self-defense has the gall to tell parents that their children should die during a home invasion because Daddy kept his guns away from them. Besides, good luck getting bangers to keep their guns away from their young recruits.

 

Elvin Daniel is Daniel Webster New Useful Idiot

Daniel Webster is a professor and the director of the Center for Gun Policy and Research at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, so you know he’s an enemy of our 2A, and what do enemies need? Useful idiots to do their dirty work:

Elvin Daniel joined a growing list of citizens demanding that Congress strengthen federal gun laws including background checks for all gun purchases. That Daniel is a card-carrying N.R.A. member should come as no surprise. National surveys show that 84 percent of gun owners and 74 percent of N.R.A. members support background check requirements for all gun sales.
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2014/01/26/who-should-be-invited-to-the-state-of-the-union/obama-should-invite-an-nra-member-who-supports-background-checks

#1. Elvin’s NRA membership should be revoked at once. I don’t care if Elvin’s sister was killed by an “illegal gun” as he wrote in “The gun that killed my sister,”   if his sister’s had died from a dropped a piano on her head, would he have written “The piano that killed my sister”? I doubt it. Elvin is nothing but a double agent, a stranger among us, a spy, and it’s time to remove him.

#2. Only the NRA has access to the membership rooster, so only they can survey NRA members. It’s the same reason that it’s easier for the AARP to survey their members than for me to call a bunch of old people and hope they’re members of the AARP.

Here’s the truth about so-called background checks:

It’s a weekly occurrence in Akron, several shootings for police to solve, all despite the police department’s best efforts to get the guns off Akron streets.

The problem is frustrating for Akron Police Chief James Nice who says teens and young adults just break into homes and keep stealing more guns to shoot each other with. He doesn’t think the justice system is doing enough to stop them.

Nice tells AkronNewsNow ” Unfortunately nobody is putting these kids in jail, and right now if you’re being arrested in Summit County for weapons under disability, or concealed carry, they’re doing zero days in jail. I’ve been screaming about this. This is the problem.”

Nice says Summit County judges are not always sentencing those convicted of weapons violations so they fear no consequences when they attempt to settle disputes with bullets
Source: http://www.buckeyefirearms.org/node/9148

Before some liberals says “well, if people didn’t keep guns at home, guns wouldn’t get stolen” which is kinda like saying that if women gained 200 pounds, they wouldn’t get raped.

Here’s a fact: “our own Federal Government noted that nearly 40 percent of all crime guns are acquired from street level dealers, who are criminals in the black market business of peddling stolen and recycled guns”
Source: http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/judicial/294213-why-universal-background-checks-wont-work#ixzz2rYZGdEK1

   

 

 

Gun Haters use Babies Holding Guns in their propaganda

 

Yesterday I was reading a book about blogging and Facebook marketing that mentioned how people respond more to a story or newsfeed updates if you show a cute baby or animal.

Well, John Aravosis, the gun hater of AmericaBlog (should be called Un-AmericanBlog) is using the same technique in his blog: Dems kill assault weapons ban

Check out the cute armed babies he got from Shutterstock.

 

kid with gun

boy with gun kid child

child gun control

Yet here in the gun community, we don’t need to use stock photography because we have real kids with guns.

Shyanne Roberts

New Jersey - -(Ammoland.com)-  Shyanne Roberts, an unassuming and precocious nine year old Honor Student from Franklinville NJ is quickly building a reputation as the next rising shooter in the competitive shooting world.
Source: http://www.ammoland.com/2013/10/kids-guns-dont-mix-someone-forgot-to-tell-9-year-old-shyanne-roberts/#ixzz2rYHC4tEl 
 

Not to mention 5 documented stories of kids shooting home invaders. Not that the liberals care, they would rather see parents murdered and children rape than give law-abiding Americans a fighting chance against crime.

Gun banner attacks the marketing strategies of the Firearms Industry

Marketing often gets a bad name from the people that don’t work in the industry, that goes double when it comes to liberals decrying the marketing of firearms, let’s see what John Thomas Dydymus wrote:

The “frontier thesis” first proposed by Frederick Jackson Turner(1893) argues that major aspects of American “exceptionalism” consists in the influence of the frontier shaping the American national character conceived in terms of positive traits such as optimism, boldness, innovation, equality, individualism, future orientation and self-reliance.
Source: http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/16412618-gun-culture-in-contemporary-america-product-of-the-frontier-or-marketing-efforts-of-firearms-industry-part-1

True, although I don’t see why he write “exceptionalism” in quotes, perhaps it’s evidence that he like Obama, thinks American exceptionalism is no different than Greek exceptionalism. Yet that is not the case, for the Greeks are only celebrated for their glorious past since they don’t have a glorious present worth talking about.

We may also list the not-so positive traits such as violence and what some have termed”shedding of restraints,” a euphemism for “Wild Wild West” mentality.

The not-so positive traits of violence and the “Wild Wild West” mentality, in the context of the subject of this essay, are linked to the uncritically accepted view that what is termed “gun culture” in contemporary American society flows from the role of the “frontier” in US history.

Criminal violence has nothing to do with culture but the actions of individuals who did not want to be miners, farmers, but simply wanted an easy score. The cowboy is not a criminal, but a self-reliant man who wishes to make his own money doing things his own way. As for the “Wild Wild West,” it wasn’t that wild. Yes, there were Saloons and Whorehouses yet the murder rate was much lower than it is today, and we didn’t have as much human trafficking and pimps as we do today.

I shall argue that contemporary America’s gun culture is sustained primarily by the marketing and sales promotional strategies of firearms manufactures and that the frontier in US history plays only a convenient adjunct role.

I shall argue that marketing responds to the market, it does not define them. I can try to sell you a T-Shirt with the words “Celebrate the Second Amendment,” I can’t force you to buy it. I would also like to remind the writer that when Smith & Wesson was owned by the British, they tried to cut a deal with Bill Clinton and promote smart guns. The backlash was so strong that Smith & Wesson went back to American hands. This is what liberals don’t get, the firearm industry doesn’t control us, we control them, our purchasing decisions and desires control their marketing. Just like the Food Network fired Paula Deen after liberals complained, we to can cause major changes in the gun industry when we boycott a manufacturer or even post negative things about him on Facebook.

I shall argue that independent of a politically influential firearms industry promoting the perpetuation of the American gun culture, urbanization since the end of the frontier would have eroded the culture to extinction.

But given the fact of a product designed with lethal ends in mind, it is understandable that US firearms manufacturers have sought to promote the mistaken perception of a primary link between the gun culture in contemporary America and the historical frontier as a way of diverting attention from the real problem: That gun manufacturers have, since the end of the frontier, nurtured the gun culture as part of a demand generation marketing strategy to sustain profits.

#1. There are plenty of people in urban areas that own guns and are attracted to guns. In Las Vegas people line up to shoot fully-automatic weapons at the Tropicana Gun Range, in Miami there are several gun ranges, outside of Dallas there’s even a luxury gun range with membership fees I can’t afford.

#2. It’s gun-owning families that promotes the correct perception of Americanism and guns.

The experiences of Australia and Canada are particularly relevant because these nations share similar ethmic-cultural roots with the United States.

The Australian frontier was strikingly similar to the American. In the case of Australia, the frontier district as the boundary between the known civilized and the unknown uncivilized world, and the use of the term in connection with lawlessness and violence was common.

That’s a complete lie. First of all, neither Australia nor Canada had a Second Amendment, which is why they have suffered under the boot of gun control. Also, Australia was initially settled by criminals, the British used that country as a dumping ground for their worst offenders, so whatever violence they experience is perfectly logical. Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez also freed a lot of criminals which resulted in huge rises in crime which ended up with more gun control. This is the irony of liberals, they are more afraid of a gun than of a criminal, they’re the kind of people that would put Phil Robertson in jail for killing ducks while praising Mumia even if he killed a cop (which they deny in spite of several trials that prove otherwise).

Besides, the marketing strategies of the gun industry are as numerous as those of any industry. Here’s how marketing works, Colt creates a new gun, based on the price and features a target market may be chosen. Usually it’s men, but sometimes they target women as well. Selections of the target market are made based on age, annual income, magazines they read, etc. Will they advertise with Facebook ads or expensive back covers in the most popular magazines?  Will they target gun dealers? Send junk mail to gun owners? That depends on the budget.

Then a Brand Manager or Account Executive is asked to write a creative brief, some of them are absolutely terrible by the way, which tells the copywriter and/or art director what the ad needs to communicate, what are the attributes of the gun, whether humor is allowed or not, etc. Then the copywriter brainstorms ideas by himself or with an art director. Afterwards a selected number of ideas will be shown to a senior copywriter or art director or the creative director. If the ideas are liked, few or no revisions will be asked and a polished version of the work will be prepared for the account executive(s) who will either like the work or criticize it. Assuming no revisions need to be made, the work will be presented to the client. If it’s a radio commercial, the copywriter might read it. If it’s a web banner or TV commercial, the work will be sent on a PDF (assuming the presentation is remote, which is usually the case).

If the client approves it, then the final version is produced, media buyers purchase the media, and eventually marketing analysts will be seeing what results they get. Ever seen “Enter ‘QRTF” to save 10%”? That’s little code is how we measure which ads are working, which ones aren’t.

Yet in spite of all that science, of all the focus groups bitching that they don’t like that red background or that actor is ugly, the consumer still has a choice. Think of all the times you throw away that junk mail without even opening, that’s the reality of marketing, it’s often ignored and often ineffective, yet we do it because nothing sells itself. Nobody will know you exist unless you advertise, and up to 3% of the people that got that junk mail ended up buying the product. Maybe that’s the reason Comcast keeps mailing me their damn letters even though I already get Internet and Cable with them, they hope that someday I’m gonna realize I need their phone service or their sports package.