Posted on 07/22/2015 2:01:10 PM PDT by Kaslin
On September 16, 2013, civilian contractor Aaron Alexis entered a building at the Washington Navy Yard, where he walked to the fourth floor bathroom and loaded a shotgun. Within six minutes of the first shots fired, Alexis had murdered 10 people; and before police killed him more than an hour later, the death toll would rise to 12. It was the second deadliest shooting on a U.S. military base in American history; occurring only four years after Nidal Hasan, an Army psychiatrist turned radicalized Muslim terrorist, killed 13 service men and women in Ft. Hood, Texas.
When the news broke last week of another mass shooting at two Gun Free military sites in Chattanooga, Tennessee, the story was all-too-familiar. Gun Free Zones make absolutely no sense to begin with; but mandating them at locations we know to a virtual certainty are terrorist targets, including U.S. military sites, borders on criminally negligent.
The failure of two presidents and several congresses to reverse the Clinton-era ban on firearms on military bases, in spite of the horrific attacks over the last few years, only heightens the outrage all Americans should feel; but especially our military personnel.
Yet not a single high-ranking officer in any branch of the armed forces, has dared express doubt about the policy. In fact, a major roadblock to this latest response to yet another attack against a military target is the military itself. Top brass in the militarys current leadership have simply fallen in lock-step with the Obama Administrations politically correct world-view that firearms are too scary and dangerous to be trusted in the hands even of combat-trained military personnel.
Common sense steps such as removing the prohibition on military personnel carrying personal or military-issued firearms, or installing bulletproof glass at recruitment centers, are rebuffed by military leaders like Army recruiting spokesman Brian Lepley. In the immediate aftermath of last weeks shooting, Lepley defended the militarys Gun Free policy and blabbered about needing to maintain a connection to the American people. To these timid Obama bureaucrats, military recruitment centers should have the feel of a processing center for the Peace Corps, rather than displaying any signs of being actual military facilities.
This domestic pacification policy has not just prevented us from taking any meaningful action following recent terror attacks; it has stunted our ability to learn anything from them. For example, not a single page in the Ft. Hood post-mortem analysis contained any relevant or substantive policy recommendations to protect the force against future attacks. Instead, the 80-page report signed by then-Secretary of Defense Robert Gates contained page after page of politically-correct gobbledygook designed to appease the Administration and not ruffle any feathers.
The net effect of all this is that in the five-and-a-half years since the worst mass shooting at a U.S. military instillation in American history -- during which time two other major attacks and several smaller ones have been occurred -- government officials are still reacting to these tragedies as if each one is the first ever. This head-in-the-sand mentality, punctuated by statements like those from Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, who apparently still believes such attacks are unfathomable, has to end if we are to have any hope of keeping our military men and women safe.
Fortunately, some state governors are not waiting around for another vacuous Department of Defense report, and are actually leading the charge to protect at least some members of the military from the threat of domestic terror attacks. Governors in Florida, Indiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Louisiana and Texas have ordered personnel at National Guard facilities, which are controlled by the states, to arm themselves. As Texas Governor Greg Abbott explained, it has become clear that our military personnel must have the ability to defend themselves against these type of attacks on our own soil. This is precisely the point that Congress, the Department of Defense, and presidential administrations of both parties have yet to grasp.
In justifying its power to surreptitiously surveil American citizens on U.S. soil, the federal government routinely emphasizes that the fight against terrorism must be waged both domestically and abroad. Why, then, do we strip members of the U.S. military of their ability to defend themselves against terrorists, simply because they are on U.S. soil rather than in a warzone in the Middle East -- especially when these are becoming the preferred targets of terrorists?
That is the question Republicans must be forced to answer now that they are in control of both the House and Senate. The time for excuses and inaction is long past. With the 2016 election cycle in full swing, Republicans have an excellent opportunity to prove to members of the military that their right to defend themselves does not start at the waters edge.
Its time to defund and repeal military Gun Free Zones!
We PAY to get killed ?
Notice the way the left is quiet about this. We should remind them that it could very well be their children in those recruiting centers.
THAT tactic won't work
The open carry states will be the starting point of civilians in arms ... welcomed by the soccer moms and busy, busy shoppers ... and at least for a little more time, the news casters will cover them
The word 'militia' will become familiar
Every GI in every recruiting office or other “gun-free” zone should just show up with guns on their hips. Massive civil disobedience. An unjust law is no law at all. They won’t be able to prosecute them all.
Fixed it!
Gun Free Zone’s who in the hell came up with this concept?
Like saying no hunting at the zoo. duh?
At least don’t announce gun free zones.
Were flags set at half-mast?
Can any law be more tainted?
Politics is not the answer here, especially with Democrat Obama’s veto pen and Republican lollygagging.
I don’t think we ever really got a universal program of allowing airline pilots to be armed after 9/11 going with Republican GW Bush as President.
Armed citizens on the ground at recruiting centers is a great act of positive resistance to Obama policy and the GOP governors who have made noise about their National Guard people arming to protect NG facilities need to move NG and police to protect unarmed soldiers, too.
Defy Obama with actions, not funding votes and vetoes in Congress which will save no lives and protect no soldiers.
And Rick Perry sent his National Guard for a pre-election observation mission on the border with Mexico last year.
Why doesn’t the current Republican governor in TX sent armed Texans (NG or otherwise) to defend the border from the invasion Obama won’t stop if the GOP is serious about border security????????
Fat chance. Their children would probably be in the Peace Corpse Center, the Welfare Office, or a Media Matters hive.
Every entity, public or private, which prohibits lawful concealed carry permit holders from carrying weapons on specified premises should be strictly liable in tort for all deaths and injuries on those premises incurred from the intentional discharge of firearms. Then they wouldn't be able to get private insurance coverage.
Congress has jurisdiction to pass such a law because the 2nd Amendment expressly protects the right of individuals to own firearms. Whether or not it is politically possible that Congress would pass such a law is irrelevant for this discussion. My point is that it is legally possible, aka Congress has the Constitutional power to do so.
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