Posted on 12/21/2001 9:20:27 AM PST by DaveCooper
Using terror.
It was only a matter of time before the gun-ban lobby took advantage of Americans fears of terrorist attacks to scare them into giving up more of their rights. Gun banners are now rushing to demonize the latest politically incorrect sporting gun the .50-caliber target rifle. The Washington, D.C.-based Violence Policy Center (VPC) now equates .50-caliber hobbyists with gunrunners for the Taliban. The VPC has posted on its Web site a frantic report aimed at .50-caliber shooters.
The VPC report makes much of its evidence that al Qaeda bought 25 Barrett .50 caliber sniper rifles in the late 1980s. But not mentioned is the fact that at the time of the transfer, the United States was supporting Afghanistans mujahedeen against the Soviet puppet government. All the mujahedeen were Americas allies then.
The VPC states: Nor do we know whether the guns were sold directly from the factory or through a dealer or dealers. In fact, these rifles were paid for and shipped by the U.S. government. Explains Ronnie Barrett, president of Barrett Firearms (in Murfreesboro, Tenn.), Barrett rifles were picked up by U.S. government trucks, shipped to U.S. government bases, and shipped to those Afghan freedom fighters.
After the VPC report came out, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms visited Barretts plant and confirmed that the late-1980s sales were in full compliance with the law, as all of Barretts sales have been.
Arguably, the VPC could plead ignorance for the content of its October 2001 report, which insinuated that Barrett Firearms knowingly sent guns to al Qaeda. But now, the facts have come out showing beyond any doubt that Barretts sale was to the U.S. government, and that it was the U.S. government that took the guns to Afghanistan. Yet the VPC has failed to correct its original report, and so the initial charges against Barrett remain on the VPC Web site.
Even in the context of the often-acrimonious gun-control debate, the VPCs smear is astonishingly mean-spirited. Imagine if, in 1951, at the height of the Korean War, a pressure group claimed that The Jones Corporation sold rifles to the Soviet Communists! while omitting the fact that the sale was actually to the United States government, which then shipped the guns to the Soviet army in 1943, when the U.S. and U.S.S.R. were allies against Hitler.
Character assassination and deception are nothing new for the VPC, which takes much greater liberties with the truth than does, for example, the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence. The VPC spread the blatantly false rumor that Professor John Lotts research was in essence, funded by the firearms industry. Even The Washington Post reported that this charge was untrue.
A report by the General Accounting Office summarizes the 18 cases in which a .50-caliber firearm has ever been connected to a criminal, such as an illegal alien accumulating firearms. (Report no. OSI-99-15R, revised Oct. 21, 2001.) The VPC presents these cases in the most lurid manner possible though it would be possible to present similarly lurid stories for almost any other caliber of firearm, and there would be far more than 18 cases. Indeed, if the VPC hated swimmers as much as it hates gun owners, it could produce another report detailing each of the two dozen murders by drowning which take place every year.
The VPC has been trying to start a holy war against the .50-caliber shooting community since 1999. Their congressional allies Chicagos Rep. Rod Blagojevich and California Sen. Dianne Feinstein have sponsored the Military Sniper Weapon Regulation Act and have denounced .50-caliber target shooters as terrorists, doomsday cultists, and criminals (in the words of Sen. Feinstein).
In reality, the owners of these big guns are the exact opposite of the villains Feinstein and Blagojevich want us to believe they are. Most are like John Burtt, a retired police officer with the demeanor of a Sunday-school teacher. As spokesman for the Fifty Caliber Shooters Policy Institute, Burtt has the task of undoing the hatchet job of folks like Feinstein, Blagojevich, and the VPC on the sport of .50-caliber target shooting. In testimony before Congress, Burtt explained that the typical participant in the sport of .50-caliber target shooting has the demographic profile of ... a golfer.
The average .50-caliber enthusiast is a successful businessman with an annual income of $50,000 or more. Of the 3,200 members of the Fifty Caliber Shooters Association, at least 75 are physicians.
As civilian experts on .50-caliber technology, the association freely shares its research findings with law-enforcement and military authorities. Knowledge developed through the civilian sport of .50-caliber long-range target shooting has played an important role in the development of .50-caliber rifles for military use. This is part of the broader pattern of the historical development of American firearms, in which the civilians and military users of firearms have worked together constructively, with important benefits to both the military and to sport shooting.
The VPC, though, claims these are men in states of arrested adolescence.
Are .50-caliber target rifles lethal weapons? Certainly. But so is a .458-caliber rifle, and so is a .475-caliber rifle both of which are very powerful hunting rounds. If gun prohibitionists want to argue that rifles which have barrels .50 inches in diameter are too big, but rifles which have barrels .475 inches in diameter are great sporting guns, let them make that argument. If they want to argue for banning .50-caliber guns as a first step towards banning .475, .458, and any other calibers they can ban, let them make that argument too but not with hysterical claims that .50-caliber weapons are somehow utterly different from other guns.
Mary Blek, President of the Million Mom March, asserts that the Founding Fathers would have had no use for a .50-caliber rifle (Nov. 28, 2001, McKendree College debate). Actually, the common guns of the early American republic were larger than .50 caliber. The Queen Anne Colonial Musket (manufactured around 1670-1700) was .812. That gun was supplanted by various versions of the English Brown Bess musket, which was .75 caliber. Americas French allies supplied the Patriots with the .70 Charleville Musket. The Dutch muskets bought by the Americans were .65 caliber.
Domestic production of the French-pattern .70-caliber musket began in 1795, with the American Springfield Musket. The famous Kentucky Rifle (a name eventually given to most rifles made by German immigrants) was usually .60 to .75 caliber before 1780, and .50 caliber after that. American rifles and muskets in the period from the Revolution to the Civil War tended to run in the .54 or .69 range.
As for pistols, the standard British service pistol after 1760 carried by cavalry and by officers was .69 caliber. French pistols were standardized in 1777, at .67. Many American pistols manufactured for militia, self-defense, and other uses in the first decades of the 19th century ranged from .50 to .69 caliber. Deringer made very compact pistols in .52 and .54 pocket rockets indeed.
In other words, a great many of the guns which were most commonly owned and known in early America were at least .50 caliber.
Nor did large-caliber guns become uncommon later. In the latter half of the 19th century, classic American manufacturers such as Winchester, Remington, Sharps, and Maynard produced many rifles in the .50-caliber size or larger including the Winchester Spencer Carbine, the Remington Model 1871, and the Sharps Side-Hammer Rifle. Harold Williamsons book Winchester (1952) lists 19 types of ammunition manufactured by Winchester, in calibers of .50 and above, between 1876 and 1939.
Teddy Roosevelts memoir Hunting Trips of a Ranchman tells of discarding his 50-caliber, double-barreled English express in favor of a .50-115 6-shot Ballard express.
Like modern .50-caliber rifles, the 19th century models had long-range power. Marksmen used the .50-90 Sharps rifle to kill Indians a mile away. And these guns could be quite powerful, since some were designed for buffalo hunting. (The Indians, of course, had .50-caliber firearms of their own; Geronimos collection included a Springfield .50-70 M1868 and, possibly, a Spencer .56-46.)
Nineteenth-century antique guns are, understandably, treasured by their owners, who tend to be loath to fire them. While such guns may well have been used in frontier crimes long ago, they are in very peaceful hands today. Yet Sen. Feinsteins Military Sniper Weapon Regulation Act (S. .505) would impose severe restrictions on these .50-caliber collectors, under the claim that they pose a serious and substantial threat to the national security. Targeted by the Feinstein bill would be antiques such as Remington, Springfield, Spencer, and Sharps firearms dating back to the 19th century, since they are centerfire guns firing .50-caliber cartridges.
Some of the types of ammunition whose firearms would be treated like modern machine guns under the Feinstein bill include:
.50 Remington. Introduced 1867.
.50 Maynard. Introduced 1865.
.50 U.S. Carbine. Introduced 1870.
.50-50 Maynard. Introduced 1882.
.50-70 Maynard. Introduced 1873.
.50-70 Musket. Introduced 1866.
.50-90 Sharps, .50-100 Sharps, .50-110 Sharps. All introduced 1875.
.50-95 Winchester Express. Introduced 1876.
.50-100 Winchester, .50-105 Winchester, .50-110 Winchester. All introduced 1899.
.50-115 Bullard. Introduced 1886.
.50-140 Sharps. Introduced 1860.
.50-140 Winchester. Introduced about 1860.
Ironically, in 1994, Sen. Feinstein pushed into law her ban on so-called assault weapons. Her law was titled the Public Safety and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act, and contained a list of several hundred models of recreational firearms. Included in her list of benign guns is the Barrett Model 90 Bolt Action Rifle a .50-caliber target rifle. Yet Sen. Feinsteins new bill claims that these firearms are neither designed nor used in any significant number for legitimate sporting or hunting purposes and are clearly distinguishable from rifles intended for sporting and hunting use.
So the very same guns that Sen. Feinstein lauded in her Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act, in 1994, are now said to be clearly distinguishable from rifles intended for sporting and hunting use. One suspects that firearms stay on her personal list of good guns only so long as there is no political opportunity to urge their prohibition.
Gun-prohibition advocates are free to make the case for The Incredible Shrinking Second Amendment to argue that that the Second Amendment today must not be allowed to protect guns which fire bullets in sizes that were ubiquitous when the Second Amendment was written, as well as in the century that followed.
But what gun-prohibition groups should not do is to make outrageous and vicious smears against the hobbyists who shoot .50-caliber rifles, or against the companies that supply these target guns. Such tactics are reprehensible any time, but in wartime, false accusations of near-treason are as unacceptable as anthrax hoaxes.
We have repeatedly told gun-rights activists that it is their responsibility to rein in those who use improper tactics (such as telephoning pro-control politicians at home late at night). It is now time for the responsible elements in Americas gun-control community to insist that the gun-control battle be fought with legitimate arguments and not with the character assassination of innocent Americans.
By Dave Kopel research director, Independence Institute and Timothy Wheeler, Doctors for Responsible Gun Ownership, a Project of the Claremont Institute.
/john
This is libel, big time! Why isn't Barrett bringing suit against VPC?
A MESSAGE FROM BARRETT FIREARMS MANUFACTURING INC. IN RESPONSE TO RECENT NEWS ARTICLES ACCUSING BARRETT OF SELLING GUNS TO BIN LADEN
Mr. Tom Diaz of the Violence Policy Center (VPC) has obtained information from the recent trial of a suspected terrorist and has taken several facts out of context to suit his anti-gun agenda. Mr. Diaz would have you believe that the U.S. gun industry is so greedy, evil and un-American that it can and would sell guns to terrorists. Based on Mr. Diaz misleading information, news articles are appearing stating that Barrett Firearms Manufacturing Inc. sold guns to Bin Laden and that now our troops will face these weapons.
What is the truth? Well, during the 1980s it must be remembered that the U.S. was supporting the Afghanistan freedom fighters or Mujahedeen in their fight against the Russian invaders. As part of the U.S. initiative, various types of small arms, ammunition and even anti-aircraft Stinger missiles were given to these freedom fighters in support of their cause. In retrospect we can say that we learned too late that our former friends would become our enemies, and yes, our troops now face the very weapons our government supplied the opposition.
So how did the Mujahedeen buy this equipment from U.S. companies? Did they walk up to the manufacturer of the Stinger missile, say they were from Afghanistan, hated Russians, and needed a few Stinger missiles to knock some of their planes out of the sky? Certainly not. Officials of the US government either sent them missiles from their own stock or arranged the sale through the current manufacturer. The latter was the case for the Barrett rifles, but Mr Diaz omitted these facts. If cognizant U.S. Government officials request the support of an arms manufacturer in such cases, should we to dispute their judgment?
Mr. Diaz has painted an inaccurate picture for the American people allowing them to believe that there is a gun free-for-all bazaar going on in the U.S. where there are no restrictions to prevent foreign governments or terrorists from buying guns. Mr. Diaz ignores the fact that many laws are in place to govern every one of these sales, and they are strictly enforced. For the export of munitions, the U.S. State Department conducts a lengthy and thorough review of every case, studying the need for the materiel, verifying the credentials of those signing the import documents, and even examining the human rights record of the receiving country. No gun manufacturer would be foolish enough to risk being closed down for violating these laws.
Barrett Firearms Manufacturing Inc., like other gun manufacturers in the U.S., has been a law-abiding supplier of firearms to the U.S. government and other friendly governments approved by the U.S. State Department. The agency that regulates us, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, was sent to visit our factory after Mr. Diaz accusations and concluded that Barrett is now and has been in full compliance with the law.
Mr. Diaz comments have been detrimental to the reputation of Barrett Firearms. Many of our customers, vendors, families, and friends have read these headlines and now have a negative opinion of our company. Some of our subcontractors have now refused to supply us. This is bad for Barrett and bad for our country. Since the September 11th attack, Barrett and every other supplier of guns to the U.S. military have been contacted to support the anti-terrorist cause. And once again Barrett Manufacturing will answer our governments call. Were all struggling to respond quickly while at the same time fighting the false accusations of Tom Diaz or the frivolous lawsuits of municipalities and others that seek to blame the gun industry for the ills of society.
Unfortunately, Mr. Diaz has recently published a 100+ page diatribe against .50 caliber weapons and the gun industry in general, and in this he has produced a very useful document for terrorist use which points out likely terrorist targets and even gives the actual locations of certain key targets. He seems to want his readers to believe that .50 caliber rifles, and only .50 caliber rifles, would be needed by terrorists to attack America. We now know this is not true. This new information which could benefit terrorists comes as no surprise as it follows VPCs now-famous map showing where terrorist gunmen should stand to hit targets in Washington DC. Someone needs to ask Mr. Diaz: Are you with us, or with the terrorists?
The Management of Barrett Firearms Manufacturing, Inc.
"Only" $2700 - LOL! I rest my case...so how do you like the AR? I might have to come up with "only" $2700 meself...
I like all of the Armalite designed weapons I own. The AR-50 is well engineered, and well executed. Trigger is pretty heavy, and creeps some though. I really like the adjustable butt-plate and cheekpiece. The bolt itself weighs a little less than my complete AR-15. GRIN!
Be aware that you can't shoot saboted ammo through it because of the muzzle brake.
/john
The Right Of The People To Keep And Bear Arms Shall Not Be Infringed !!
An Armed Citizen, Is A Safe Citizen !!
No Guns, No Rights !!
Molon Labe !!
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year...
Freedom isn't a right. It's a need.
FMCDH
Good catch! Perfect example of malicious legal intent.
They are.
A question which must be very pointedly and publicly asked of these nuts is "state the latest terrorist event which involved firearms." Answer: none.
What a dork.
Thanks for the bump, Mr. Cooper.
Planning to pick up a .50 cal after Christmas. I'll let you know what kind I get. Probably going to get the Leupold Scope I want too.
Where in the 2nd Amendment is there a mention of "sporting and hunting" arms?
The dumb broad needs a brain implant...sigh...
Freedom Is Worth Fighting For !!
The Right Of The People To Keep And Bear Arms Shall Not Be Infringed !!
An Armed Citizen, Is A Safe Citizen !!
No Guns, No Rights !!
Molon Labe !!
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year...
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