Posted on 07/18/2003 7:45:20 AM PDT by heckler
Through a series of missteps, the Transportation Security Administration has run afoul of the world's leading gun manufacturers in an attempt to award a three-year, $5 million contract for the semiautomatic handguns it plans to give commercial airline pilots to defend their cockpits.
The agency drew the heaviest fire after it appeared to bow to pressure from the office of Rep. J. D. Hayworth, R-Ariz., to drop a possible deal with the Austrian gunmaker Glock and focus instead on buying guns from venerable Smith & Wesson, an American-owned firm based in Hayworth's district.
(Excerpt) Read more at govexec.com ...
Thanks. That makes sense. Then folks like Chicago's king richard can't hassle them.
Glock did not enter the trials because of production and legal issues specified in the contract if they won. It had nothing to do with the design. Nonetheless, some small early trials did highlight a number of design deficiencies in early production models. These problems have long since been dealt with to some extent or another, and the current versions are pretty good.
I carry Glocks and own Glocks, but the Glock legend is a bit larger than reality. They are nice pistols, particularly with the all the engineering changes over the years, but they probably wouldn't be my first choice as a serious combat weapon. Glock essentially represents a very nice mix-n-match of ideas taken from other companies and integrated into one platform, with a stiff dose of savvy marketing on top.
Then Bankrupt Tomkins plc. They are the ones that signed the agreement. As it stands, unless you have completely FAILED to read any of the links I posted, S&W is in the clear on both of them.
Even so, how can you blame the new owners for what the old owners did? If a future Dem administration decides to enforce the old agreement, that would not be the fault of the new owners. As far as I am concerned the new S&W is an entirely different company than the one which surrendered to the Clinton scum.
I wouldn't have bought a Smith while it was owned by the UK company. I will now buy from S&W if I happen to need something it makes. The first centerfire handgun I owned was a GI surplus S&W 1917 .45acp revolver I bought in 1961. I have several other Smith revolvers which I have owned for many years. There has never been a finer sidearm made than the K and N frame Smiths IMHO, and I don't see any point in punishing myself or the new owners for something neither of us had any part in doing.
They gave aid and comfort to the old owners.
The industry needs to know that giving aid and comfort to the gun-grabbers means that the company goes to Chapter 11, not that they can end the boycott just by cashing out.
SO FREAKIN WHAT??? Why should we punish the new ownership just because the old owners were cowardly fools? And don't refer me to Beezlebub's posts, his reasoning makes no sense either.
There is no sensible reason not to buy from S&W unless you just have a hard on for the brand name. I know some shooters who do, just like some Ford people hate Chevy no matter what, and vice versa. I suspect the people who are still advocating a boycott are locked into that same kind of mindset.
If the new owners make some stupid new deal with the devil, then I'll help you guys boycott them out of business. But not until then.
As I understand it, they won't be carrying them in holsters anyway. So big and slow is the way to go, especially on an aircraft.
Thompkins was buying red ink by the barrel before it sold the company, and it took a major bath when it did sell. Why would any other firearms maker want to get itself into a situation like that? I don't believe any manufacturer will ever make that mistake again after seeing what happened to Thompkins.
I generally respect your opinions based on several years of reading them here, but I happen to think you're off base on this one.
Not enough of one.
Why would any other firearms maker want to get itself into a situation like that?
Why is S&W leaving itself open to get into a situation like that?
Actually you were nearly correct the first time, although "pilots" is also correct. The pilots who undergo the training become federal flight deck officers, IOW, agents of the TSA, albeit "reserve" officers. We can't have mere civilians (even if they are also reserve military officers) having guns you know. Only federal agents can possibly be allowed to have them </bitterness
The Glock was developed to compete for a contract from the Austrian army. Says so on their website.
I've read it and it's just as bad as you say it is. But I still don't see what connection it has to the new owners. They disowned the entire mess Thompkins made of S&W. If they had thought there was any chance the agreement would have to be honored they would never have bought the company to begin with. Unless they are morons that is.
Or that S&W is lying to gun buyers and using weasel language to insinuate that the agreement is dead when it's just sleeping?
I don't see anything in the interview the new owner gave to American Rifleman that I would consider a lie. The guy said what I assumed he was told by his lawyers, and I'll take him at his word that he believes what he said about the agreement. If he was wrong that just makes him wrong, not a liar. Like I said before, if the new guys screw up I will be first in line to call for a boycott, but so far I don't see that having happened. But I admit I haven't kept up with that situation lately as well as I should. I've been a little taken up with my cardiologist for the past few months.
But I despise people making up facts or using faulty logic just because they're too cowardly to admit to their own true motivations
If you know more about it than has been shown so far, lay it on the table instead of calling people like me liars and cowards. I began fighting the antis with my time, my money, and my shoeleather back when the '68 GCA was being debated. I have spent considerable time, sweat, and money fighting the good fight for our gun rights for the last 35 years, so don't call me a liar or a coward unless you want to come out to my place and say it to my face.
In any case, I seriously doubt I'll ever buy another Smith or any other handgun. I'm 66 and I have far more guns than I need now, including a number of nice old Smiths. But if I do decide to buy one for some reason I will do it with a clear conscience unless something more comes to light about the deal than I know now.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.