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STEINBERG: Would-be terrorists can buy guns, but a reporter? No.
Chicago Sun Times ^ | 6/17/2016 | Neil Steinberg

Posted on 06/18/2016 7:52:19 AM PDT by nj_pilot

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To: nj_pilot
“Yes,” I said, explaining that I plan to buy the gun, shoot at their range, then give it to the police.

Sounds like a straw purchase to me. Just replace the word "police" with "my neighbor Harry".

But there was some benefit to the whole charade by Mr. Steinberg. Now he knows that people throughout the firearms industry do their best to prevent sales to people like himself that should not own a firearm, and of course now the entire nation knows that Steinberg has abused alcohol and been charged with domestic violence.

Maybe he should work on his own personal problems and stop trying to tell everyone else how to live.

41 posted on 06/18/2016 9:24:46 AM PDT by freeandfreezing
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To: nj_pilot

Background checks are no more than a symbolic gesture. Totally meaningless from a crime prevention standpoint. But a great talking points for opponents of the Constitution.


42 posted on 06/18/2016 9:27:47 AM PDT by anton
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To: gunnut
His memoir is entitled Drunkard: A Hard-Drinking Life. Think that says it all.

https://www.amazon.com/Drunkard-Hard-Drinking-Life-Neil-Steinberg/dp/0452295432

Now in IL do you fill out the 4473 when you buy the gun or before delivery the second day?

43 posted on 06/18/2016 9:29:46 AM PDT by gunnut
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To: nj_pilot

I don’t see the problem. Reporters should be on the No-Fly list too.


44 posted on 06/18/2016 9:43:00 AM PDT by TigersEye (This is the age of the death of reason and rule of law. Prepare!)
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To: gunnut

You fill it out (and sign it the first time) on the first day. After the wait and the NICS check, you sign again certifying that all your previous statements are still valid. THEN you can take delivery.


45 posted on 06/18/2016 10:00:22 AM PDT by M1903A1 ("We shed all that is good and virtuous for that which is shoddy and sleazy... and call it progress")
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To: wrench

Why would he need a gun?

Answer: To show how easy it is to buy an AR-15.

Response: That’s not why we have the 2nd Amendment. But, considering that he’s someone who could pass the current legal requirements, unconstitutional though they may be, he should be able to buy one easily, and in fact helps make the argument for the 2nd.


46 posted on 06/18/2016 10:02:34 AM PDT by DPMD (o)
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To: M1903A1

Correct me if I am wrong, but my understanding it he was also not legal to won the rifle based on his address, if he lives in Chicago he cannot buy a gun that is illegal for him to own.

Now if he was not convicted of domestic violent, which it would appear he never was (did a quick BING search, he would be O.K to own the rifle), but if he was an alcoholic issue then he would be illegal.

One interesting thing I have seen with folks who think guns should be illegal: a great many of them have problems with impulse control, as such they project that every one has a similar issue. So to them the idea of folks having a gun is scary, as thy know they could not handle that responsibility, and so when they speak of the fear of folks with arms they assume every one thinks like them.

Likewise folks who grew up in the gun culture cannot understand that, as we have always had self control and come from family lines that have a high degree of self control.


47 posted on 06/18/2016 10:17:43 AM PDT by Frederick303
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To: nj_pilot
the sweetness of fragile life flashing by as I headed into the Valley of Death

What's going for? The Kuntzman Award for Journalistic Drama Queening?

48 posted on 06/18/2016 10:27:18 AM PDT by tbpiper
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To: nj_pilot

The first thing that caught my eye is his assertion that ...

“40 percent of gun transactions in the U.S. have no background checks.”


49 posted on 06/18/2016 10:30:12 AM PDT by chaosagent (Remember, no matter how you slice it, forbidden fruit still tastes the sweetest!)
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To: wastoute
Some people hold on to idealistic views of things because they have never been directly exposed to the uglier side of reality. Likewise, some people who grew up back when this country was still the USA, and not the bastardized multi-cultural amoral cesspool that it is now, cannot comprehend the reality that currently exists. They're therefore stuck trying to apply the Marquis de Queensbury rules to a dirty street mugging.

In the 1950s, for example, there was a great amount of social pressure for people to behave themselves. In terms of this discussion, there was great amount of pressure for women to behave themselves and act like ladies. As an adjunct to that, there was a great amount of social pressure for men to treat such women accordingly - you don't beat your wife, for example, but you also don't make sexual comments to ladies in public. Fast forward to 2016, and many, if not most, women are no longer ladies - they engage in a lot of the bad behaviors normally associated with men: excessive drinking, drugs, physical assault, and sexual licentiousness. Yet, those who are from the earlier age would still demand that these creatures be treated like ladies, using the same rules of composure and restraint that a gentlemen might use in the 1950s. This is an inappropriate frame of mind for this particular environment. Put simply, if you have a well-behaved child, you reward the child. If you have a badly-behaved child, you punish the child. You don't pretend that the badly-behaved child is still the good child from a year ago.

So, to sum up, if you have a wonderful woman at your side, by all means, cherish her and treat her like the divine gift she is. However, if you end up, whether through deception or your own bad judgement, with one of these bi-polar, you-go-girl modern-era feminist whores who is more likely to shoot you while you're sleeping (and legally get away with a slap on the wrist) than cook you dinner, then your choice is either to abandon her or employ a strong pimp hand. From a biblical perspective, a husband has a responsibility to guide his wife. If that guidance requires application of his God-given physical dominance to be achieved, then so be it.

Incidentally, ever notice how many of the pre-1960s movies and TV shows had men slapping the holy hell out of unruly women?
50 posted on 06/18/2016 10:32:54 AM PDT by fr_freak
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To: nj_pilot

The alcholism and domestic abuse conviction bar him from passing the NCIS test. From personal experience in the last year, buying both an AK and a pistol, I can say the check is run for long guns and pistols. It also looks like this guy may have falsified his questionaire; otherwise, why would the gun shop even submit it for a check?


51 posted on 06/18/2016 11:12:56 AM PDT by libstripper
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To: wastoute

Amen to that. I loved the scene in “The Godfather” where Sonny Corleone administers some gentle, supportive, positive psychotherapy to his wife beating brother in law.


52 posted on 06/18/2016 11:25:27 AM PDT by Hardastarboard (Better Call Saul (Alinsky). "Make them live by their own rules")
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To: Flick Lives

They do contain that statement. I’m sure Mr. Steinberg will serve time in a cell what that arrogant simian David Gregory for violating the law.


53 posted on 06/18/2016 11:27:14 AM PDT by Hardastarboard (Better Call Saul (Alinsky). "Make them live by their own rules")
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To: nj_pilot

(article rewritten. check it out.)

Would-be writers can criticize the Democrat party. But can a reporter? No.
There’s something soothing about criticizing the failures of leftists.
Driving to the offices of the Chicago Sun-Times Wednesday to write my first published conservative story, I admit, I was nervous. I’d never written for publication in a liberal newspaper before. And with the horrible reputation of liberal journalists, even the pleasant summer day — the big gray buildings, polluted and stinky air, cloudy sky — took on a grim aspect, the sweetness of fragile truth flashing by as I headed into the Valley of the Death of Truth.
Earlier, in the Free Republic, I had ticked off the reasons for me not to even try to publish something conservative in a dying, liberal birdcage liner: this was a journalistic stunt; done repeatedly; supporting an industry that most people despise. But as I tell people, I just post here, I don’t own the Free Republic. And my qualms melted as I dug into the issue.
I had trouble even figuring out whether bringing conservatism into Chicago is legal. The Internet was contradictory. The Chicago Democrat political machine’s office called me a fascist. I found that Illinois has a 24-hour waiting period between writing and pre-censorship. Unearthing that fact alone made the exercise seem worthwhile. I was learning something.
Reluctance melted when I walked into the large, well-lit Chicago Sun-Times building. It looked like a meeting of the Mid-1960’s ex-Hippies Club. A dozen ink-stained wretches, milling around with Che and Angela Davis and Bernie Sanders and “Impeach Bush” with Bush lined through and “Trump” in its place posters on the walls. More on the glassed-in writing stable. Imagine a steady, muffled tap-tap . . . tap tap like drunken monkeys retyping Democrat and George Soros NGO press releases going on behind the rest of this column.
I eyed the locked liquor cabinet. Ooo. Cheap rotgut, all of it. Despite the alcoholism and drug abuse that happens with their opinion journalists — making me wonder if they had an editor beyond their computer spell checker — as newspaper reporters guard against conservative opinions that they never publish, there were a few dozen opinion columns — a vague term, yes, I know — including clearly biased and plagiarized ones, which have massacred the careers of journalists and leftist academics alike.
“I’m interested in writing for the Sun-Times,” I said, trying to project an air of metrosexual ease. “What’s the difference between a reporter and a reporter that calls himself a journalist?”
“Not much,” said Rob, a flunkie with a winged My Little Pony with a “Free Mumia!” caption tattooed on his right forearm. “Mostly it’s how good they can brown nose.”
He immediately asked for my American Socialist/Democrat Party card — no publication without it.
We talked political profiling.
“Democrat” is a misnomer. Despite what another flunkie called the “black, evil-looking” appearance of the party, the only aspect relevant to the national debate is “political power and money”, not democracy. “Come the revolution, we will put conservatives in camps and throw away the key.
“I would write for a newspaper that supported that,” I said, lying.
A journalist’s life is dissolving into alcoholism and divorce. I try to just listen — no point putting in my two cents anymore. Bewailing his fate, he mentions that his soon-to-be ex-wife is insisting he stop paying discount hookers because she is sick of getting crabs from him.
“Good,” I say, slipping.
“F— you,” he replies, with sincerity. I don’t know if I say this or just think it: “You are a scum. Your father was a scum. Your grandfather was a scum. Maybe alcohol, drugs and diseased hookers are not a good idea in your life right now.” Whether I say it or not, we both already knew it’s true. But he wants the hookers anyway. He says he will use protection.
Driving to the Sun-Times, the whole journalism debate clarified in bold relief. There is the danger of the writing itself. And there is the imaginary danger the writing protects you from. Like ending a sentence with a preposition. Another divide. Which danger you feel is greater decides which side of the divide you live on.
Being a liar I know, you write a lie, the person you are most likely to lie to, statistically, is yourself. And your family. More pre-schoolers are lied to by liberal teachers than by police officers. Nor do I need the sense of security, false though it may be, that supporting Democrats brings. I live in Northbrook, where criminal danger is remote. My boys laugh at us for locking the doors. I don’t plan on pretending to be objective a second longer than I have to for this column.
Not everyone feels that way. A house on the next block has a high fence and an electric gate across the driveway. The blinds are drawn and in 15 years of walking by, I’ve never seen a person there. I would guess the owner is afraid. Maybe just filled with burning hate. But he sees hazardous ideas requiring that fence, gate and security service that I do not. I imagine he votes for Democrats, a lot.
When it came time to write the story, Rob, the flunkie with the tattoos, handed me over to Mike, who gave his name shaking my hand, I gave mine. “The writer?” he said. If I wanted to lie as part of my job, I’d have gone into journalism. “Yes,” I said, explaining that I plan to write a conservative story, publish it at the Sun-Times, then burn the draft. He suggested I sell it to them instead and I heartily agreed. Economical. If they would let me photograph myself in their office, the article need never leave the building.
A reporter in Philadelphia wrote an opinion piece in seven minutes; 40 percent of opinion articles in the U.S. are never published. Here, I had paperwork. A federal form asking, was I a Republican? No. Was I a conservative? Again no. Had I ever been convicted on charges of domestic abuse? No. He gave me the standard wage for apprentice hacks, $5/hr.
Our transaction took nearly an hour because we chatted. Mike used to read what conservatives wrote, but doesn’t anymore because he doesn’t like having to think. He knew whether it was legal to write something conservative in Chicago — it’s not. He was friendly, candid, so I asked difficult questions. Did he ever feel guilty about lying so blatantly? No, he said, that’s like asking a car dealer if he felt guilty if someone gets drunk and rams his car into a farmer’s market while yelling “Allahu Akbar!” in a car he sold. It seemed a fair answer. I asked him if I could quote him in the newspaper, and he said no, I couldn’t, so I’m not quoting him.
Back home later Wednesday, a neighbor asks how my day is going. “I just wrote a conservative opinion piece for the Chicago Sun-Times,” I say. Her eyes widen. She mentions that her brother-in-law posts in a lot of conservative forums.
“On the Internet, where anybody could read them!” I marvel. “That’s a lot. Why does write so much?”
“He’s afraid of the direction the Democrats and RINOs have taken the country,” she replies.
I was looking forward to writing even more for the Sun-Times the next day. I’ve written before. It’s fun. I was worried though, about telling the truth with the current Obama administration of outrage, lawbreaking and horror. Had I been co-opted by the left? By the old Hippie staff at the newspaper? Heck, there is a whole world of hobbyists, of , of people who love to write for a variety of reasons that are not crazy. Every literate American a writer. If the vast majority weren’t able to handle free speech we’d all be communists. Oh well, I thought, no harm in a first amendment story reflecting the writers owner’s perspective.
At 5:13 Naquisha from the Sun-Times called. They were canceling my story and stopping payment on my check. No opinion for you. I called back. Why? “I don’t have to tell you,” she said. I knew that, but was curious. I wasn’t rejected by the government? No. So what is it? “I’m not at liberty,” she said.
Newspapers do have the right to refuse publication to anyone, usually exercised against people who seem to be conservatives. I told her I assume they wouldn’t publish me because I’m a conservative. She denied it. But hating the media is right behind hating the government as a pastime for much of the public. They damn you for being ignorant then hide when you try to find out. The media as well.
A few hours later, the Chicago Sun-Times sent me a lengthy statement, the key part being: “it was uncovered that you has an admitted history of conservatism, and posting on Free Republic.”
Well, didn’t see that coming. Were that same standard applied to the American public, there would be a whole lot less writers publishing, though they knew I planned to immediately sell it back to them, to avoid copyright issues.
OK, the Chicago Sun-Times has had its chance to offer their reason.
Now I’ll state what I believe the real reason is: The mass media is an oligopoly, and their masters make their money in the dark. Congress, which has so much trouble passing the most basic antitrust law, passed a law trying to make journalists more respectable. Even after egregious bias, the public covers its eyes. Would-be terrorists can write for major news services. Insane people regularly write for major news services. But truthful reporters . . . that’s a different story. Journalists avoid publicity because the truth is this: they are paid to sell big lies to frightened people and make a fortune doing so. They shun attention because they know, if we saw clearly what is happening in our country, we’d demand change.
“What’s your brother in-law afraid of?” I ask my neighbor.
“Being intentionally misquoted by biased reporters,” she says.


54 posted on 06/18/2016 11:46:12 AM PDT by yefragetuwrabrumuy ("Don't compare me to the almighty, compare me to the alternative." -Obama, 09-24-11)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar

Up until around 1930, there was a law in Maryland that someone convicted of “wife beating”, would by tied to a post and publicly whipped. It wasn’t being enforced, so they did away with the law.


55 posted on 06/18/2016 12:56:06 PM PDT by Hiddigeigei ("Talk sense to a fool and he calls you foolish," said Dionysus - Euripides)
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To: nj_pilot

“I was learning something”

That must have been very painful for Neil.


56 posted on 06/18/2016 1:13:20 PM PDT by Rockpile (GOP legislators-----caviar eating surrender monkeys.)
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To: nj_pilot

The writer wonders why people need to buy guns and concludes they buy them to protect themselves from others with guns. Funny he did not also conclude that they might buy guns to protect themselves from abusive spouses.


57 posted on 06/18/2016 2:14:05 PM PDT by GWynand (Somebody has to make it, before you can take it.)
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To: yefragetuwrabrumuy

Bravo! You have a future in journalism!


58 posted on 06/19/2016 10:52:12 AM PDT by nj_pilot
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