When Barack Obama reaches out, it's safe to assume he intends to grab something.
When Barack Obama reaches out, it’s safe to assume he intends to grab something.
Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

With the new Senate majority set to take their seats in January, the potential to repeal Obamacare is now within reach. The key to making that happen is the National Rifle Association.

Why should they? Association management only pursues what it calls the “single issue,” political votes directly impacting the right to keep and bear arms, and steers clear of other issues, even those important to a largely conservative membership. And there are many members who find that approach not only defensible, but desirable.

Besides, NRA made a point of claiming responsibility for putting the pressure on to amend the legislation to prevent “disclosure or collection of any information relating to” firearms and ammunition. With that concern sidelined, what’s left for gun owners to worry about?

Plenty, as NRA itself admits, alerting members to “Watch your guns around Obamacare,” which in turn links to a Townhall article by Intellectual Conservative editor Rachel Alexander that in turn cited an Executive Order that clarifies doctors are not prohibited from asking patients about guns.

“If doctors have a patient with PTSD or mental illness, and they fail to ask the patient about their firearms, or report them to law enforcement, they could be on the hook later,” Alexander explains. “It encourages them to err on the side of snooping into their patients’ guns. This is especially troubling considered the definition of mental illness keeps expanding.

“Under Obamacare, federal agencies like the ATF can still pore over health records and determine who has mental issues or PTSD,” Alexander warns. “There is nothing in Obamacare that prohibits another federal agency from compiling a database of gun owners.”

A group already caught in the net is one the political establishment pays “thank you for your service” lip service to, but actually repays by stripping rights without due process: Veterans. Using “justifications” such as “PTSD,” tens of thousands have been added to the “prohibited persons” National Instant Check System database without adjudication, and that in itself raises further concerns.

Even if laws require going beyond a doctor’s say-so and bringing persons suspected of mental disorders before a judge, they are still being denied due process if they can have fundamental rights denied them and be incarcerated without a jury trial. That they may not have committed a “crime” is not the issue. Civil rights and a proper application of Constitutional principles should demand a presumption of “innocence” with all protections in place. And those protections must include an equally-accessible and navigable pathway to restoration of rights when evidence shows disabilities no longer exist.

Having established that, even with supposed “protections” in place, Obamacare is still “anti-gun” and a proper concern for gun rights groups to seek repeal of, the question becomes “How?” Even with the new majority, Republicans will still find themselves 13 votes short of the two-thirds majority needed to override a presidential veto.

That’s where NRA could come in – if Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre and ILA Executive Director Chris Cox wanted it to, or could be persuaded to follow through on. NRA political grades are a powerful tool the politicians in all but incontestable “blue states” vie for, and there are so-called “pro-gun Democrats” in states like Montana who are dependent on them to retain their seats. Even those currently rated lower than an “A” would have powerful incentives not to go into their next election with a markedly lower rating than their challenger. It may even take only one or two “defections” to act like a crack in the dam, convincing balkers that their political fortunes are best served by opposing an administration centerpiece that Americans are increasingly rejecting, with approval at “a new numerical low” providing additional cover for crossing party lines.

The question now becomes whether gun owners in general and NRA members in particular want this to happen. Because unless a sufficient number are informed and insistent to the point of taking real action to demand repeal of the anti-gun Obamacare mandate, nothing will change.

But it might not work? Does that mean America’s gun owners should make failure a certainty by not even lifting a finger to try?

http://www.examiner.com/article/if-gun-owners-demanded-it-nra-could-lead-repeal-of-obamacare?CID=examiner_alerts_article

Quote Of The Century

Posted: December 6, 2014 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

Only a sub-human POS could toss a flashbang into a baby’s crib-after avoiding tripping over all the kid’s toys in the driveway-these douchenozzles claimed they “did not know any children were present”
10 foot tree-6 foot piece of rope would be the proper punishment for such an offense prior to the formation of the police state and the USSA/FUSA…

Sultan Knish: Black Lives Don’t Matter

Posted: December 6, 2014 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

ACEVEDO: TURN IN GUN ENTHUSIASTS

Posted: December 6, 2014 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

Oh Yeah

Posted: December 6, 2014 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane is leaving it to the governor’s office to defend a lawsuit challenging a law backed by the National Rifle Association that was designed to dismantle illegal municipal firearms ordinances, officials said Friday.

A spokesman for Gov. Tom Corbett said the governor’s legal office will defend the law against the challenge led by Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Lancaster. Kane’s office sent word earlier in the week that she would not take the case.

Corbett, a Republican who opposes new forms of gun control, signed the law last month. The law widens the ability of the NRA or gun owners to successfully sue over municipal firearms ordinances.

“We can find no legitimate reason for the attorney general to decline to defend the commonwealth in this case,” said Corbett’s spokesman, Jay Pagni.

Kane’s office said only that it was more efficient and in the best interest of Pennsylvania for the governor’s lawyers to defend the law. Last year, Kane, a Democrat, refused to defend Pennsylvania’s law banning the recognition of same-sex marriage against a federal lawsuit. Corbett’s office unsuccessfully defended the law, and it was struck down in May.

The firearms law takes effect in early January, and opponents fear it will unleash a wave of expensive lawsuits against dozens of cities and towns that have sought to curb gun violence but bumped up against a Legislature that has resisted new gun control measures.

Corbett leaves office Jan. 20 after losing last month’s election, and he will be replaced by Democrat Tom Wolf, whose campaign said in October that Wolf opposed the idea of allowing “outside organizations to sue towns and cities that enact local ordinances.”

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/kane-wont-defend-nra-backed-195336844.html

Phoenix police officer shoots dead unarmed black man during scuffle

Who writes this garbage? better yet-Why didn’t an editor edit it? 5 year olds could write better

(Reuters) – A Phoenix police officer shot to death an unarmed black man during a struggle and authorities said the officer believed the individual had a gun, in the latest fatal incident amid national turmoil over the policing of black communities.

On Thursday night, some 200 demonstrators protested against the killing of 34-year-old Rumain Brisbon, marching to Phoenix police headquarters and blocking streets, broadcaster CBS5 reported.

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The Phoenix Police Department said Brisbon was sitting in a SUV outside a convenience store on Tuesday evening, and two witnesses told the officer the occupants of the vehicle were selling drugs.

With police forces across the country under increased scrutiny over killing unarmed black men, Phoenix police said in a statement that its officer called for backup, and then saw Brisbon appear to remove something from the car’s back seat.

It said the officer, a seven-year veteran of the department, gave him several commands to show his hands, before Brisbon “placed one or both hands in his waistband area” and fled.

The officer chased and caught up with him, it said, and during a struggle the policeman believed he felt the handle of a gun while holding Brisbon’s hand in his pocket.

“The officer gave the suspect several commands to get on the ground but he refused to comply, yelling profanities at the officer,” the police department said in a statement issued on Wednesday.

At that point, both men stumbled into an opened apartment unit, it said, adding that the officer was unable to keep a grip on the suspect’s hand.

“Fearing Brisbon had a gun in his pocket the officer fired two rounds striking Brisbon in the torso,” it said.

The police department said back-up officers arrived after the shooting, and while they and members of the fire department treated Brisbon, he was pronounced dead at the scene.

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Police said Brisbon was carrying oxycodone pills, and that a semi-automatic handgun and a jar of what is believed to be marijuana were found in the SUV. The 30-year-old officer was not injured, police added in the statement.

The shooting in Phoenix comes at a time of tension between law enforcement officers and the communities in which they operate. Two grand jury decisions not to indict officers who killed unarmed black men in Ferguson, Missouri, and in New York City have triggered protests throughout the United States.

http://news.yahoo.com/phoenix-police-officer-shoots-dead-unarmed-black-man-054343212.html

Posting schedule…

Posted: December 5, 2014 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

Posting will be sporadic and at various times until 12/8 due to Ohio deer hunting season which started 12/1 and ends 12/7-unless I tag a buck prior to 12/7.

h/t The Grey Enigma

The cops really gotta stop with the puppycide-I’ve read articles where they shot a 5# puppy because the cop said it was “acting aggressive”.

Keith Preston's avatarAttack the System

Inquistr.Com

Austin Police Dog Car
Police officers in Austin, Texas, will soon undergo training to help decrease the number of dogs shot by officers. The training will focus on teaching officers how to spot the difference between a dog that is attacking and a playful or curious dog. The department is hoping the training will help curb the number of dogs shot by police officers on their force.

According to KSAT, the training is the result of public outcry following a few high-profile dog shootings by police officers. One of the high-profile cases being the Cisco the Dog case which garnered national attention when police officer shot Cisco the dog point-blank after responding to a call at the wrong address. Another case involved the shooting of a pit bull when officers responded to an auto theft call. In the case, the dog was shot in the head and then shot a second time…

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