Posted on 10/11/2002 9:43:59 AM PDT by Joe Brower
Sniper puts heat on gun lobby
Clarence Page
Jewish World Review
Oct. 11, 2002
While President Bush was addressing the nation from Cincinnati about the potential threat Saddam Hussein poses for our nation, folks in and around the nation's capital were grappling with a very real and present terrorist close to home.
They call him "the Sniper."
I am presuming that the Sniper is a "he" because of the knowledge we already have gathered from the similar sickos who came before him. Sure, women kill sometimes, but seldom in such an impersonal way. Serial sniping is, for the most part, a guy thing.
As the president spoke, the Sniper had killed six and injured two other Washington-area victims. One of the critically injured was a 13-year-old boy who had just been dropped off at school by his aunt.
In the Sniper's wake, street life in the nation's capital has turned unusually quiet. Hardly any joggers, bicyclists or kids appear on the streets. Area Starbucks coffeehouses closed their outdoor seating until further notice.
Click HERE for the rest of the hit piece, er, article.
Lloyd Wright (1868-1959)
I encourage others to use my letter as boilerplate to write their own rebuttals. We are indeed engaged in an argument with those who "buy ink by the barrelfull"...
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October 11, 2002
Letters Editor, [your_local_fishwrap_name_here]
Re: "Sniper puts heat on gun lobby"
Predictably, the series of shootings in the Washington, D.C. area have brought the anti-gun forces back out of hiding. The editorial by Mr. Clarence Page in your 10/11/02 edition, "Sniper puts heat on gun lobby", sadly attempts to capitalize on the cowardly and inhuman acts of one depraved individual.
Mr. Page's absurd hyperbole in referring to a rifle as a "weapon of mass destruction" make it apparent he has received his information from the usual sources at the gun-ban lobby. The "next logical step" of "ballistic fingerprinting" is standard fare from those who repeatedly claim that "just one more law" will somehow make a difference. 20,000-plus laws later, we're still waiting. All that is being advocated here are violations of individual freedoms based on false promises of safety.
"Ballistic fingerprinting" is useless for a few reasons. First, altering the mechanical characteristics of any firearm is indeed a simple matter, and you can be sure that criminals are indeed smart enough to know this. Second, fragments are all that have been recovered of the bullets found, and no worthwhile "fingerprints" can be gathered from mere pieces. Third, in regards to the spent casing found at one scene, this could easily have been picked up at any local shooting range and used to throw law enforcement completely off the trail.
Note also that these shootings have occurred in an area that is subject to some of the most severe firearms restrictions in the country. If simply passing laws were all that is required to ward off criminals, the Washington, D.C. area would be one of the most crime-free places in our nation. Instead, the exact opposite is true. All that has accomplished is to give the shooter a large selection of defenseless victims. The "sniper" knows this. And so does Mr. Page.
[your_name_here]
So-called ballistic fingerprinting is the Trojan Horse for universal firearm registration. What would be the purpose of keeping these records for each and every gun, unless the purchaser and holder for the gun is also registered?
Assuming that the system works (it doesn't), what is the law enforcement utility of knowing the the serial number of a gun used in a certain crime, unless they also know the whereabouts of the gun?
And of course, the system does not work. Perfect bullets are almost never recovered from crime scenes. The "fingerprint" of a gun begins to change with the first round that is fired, and can be altered by anybody, even accidentally. Have you noticed that the State of Maryland had not yet stated that the gun used in these sniper attacks is not one of the guns in their database?
OK, truth time: What is the law enforcement utility of a system that maintains information on the whereabouts of every gun, but is useless for tracking down guns used in specific crimes?
Confiscation.
Right. A couple of days ago I posted here that if a .223 is "high-power", "high calibre", then a .308 or a .30-06 must be rated as a WMD.
Never try for satiric hyperbole in a world that has lost its sense of proportion.
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