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And so they ought. May I mention again that this is not 1776?
Quote:
Jim Morrison: "They got the guns but we got the numbers."
Sadly, Jim Morrison turned out to be wrong about that. Additionally, in his day, they had incalculably greater numbers than we have in the present, plus it was a boom economy. The mass-media environment was more favorable, too. Nevertheless, they that had got the guns didn't have to do much more than knock in some heads on television in Chicago in 1968 to send the number into a steady decline, then shoot four dead in Ohio in 1970 to make that decline precipitous.
"They are coming for our freedom, for our money, for our kids, for our property. They are coming for everything because they are a bunch of socialists."
"I'm not real happy with the direction the government's going in right now, and I believe that our Second Amendment rights are in trouble, with the political atmosphere that's in Washington right now," said Alan Addington of North Carolina.
"My rights come from God, not from the government."
In Virginia, it is legal to openly carry certain weapons. But it is illegal to openly carry a weapon in the District of Columbia.
Opponents say that gun rights advocates' worries are unfounded; that there are no proposals coming from the White House or Democratic leaders in Congress for new major gun control laws.
April 19 also is the 15th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing. It's a connection one speaker was adamant to get away from.
"They want to make this about [convicted Oklahoma City bomber] Timothy McVeigh, which really pissed me off," radio personality Erich "Mancow" Muller said at the Washington rally. "How about mentioning that this is patriot's day?"
The anger at the government -- and specifically the Obama administration -- has been rising over the past year, and has been visible in the rise of the Tea Party movement, at health care reform rallies and with other protesters.
"Our role is not to be obedient to who happens to be the leader," he said. "Our role is to defend the Constitution and the republic."
The Oath Keepers call on members to disobey any orders, as they put it, "to disarm the American people" or "to force citizens into detention camps."
Mark Potok of the Southern Poverty Law Center said the Oath Keepers are exploiting false rumors found on fringe Web sites.
"Many of the Oath Keepers are people who believe that martial law is about to be imposed at any moment. It is right around the corner," he said.
apologydue wrote:MSNBC has a McVeigh documentary on tonight. Cross brushing. There is a segment on the evening news about it now. McVeigh = people unhappy with gov. = terrorist. This is the take home message I just got from the segment.
"They are coming for our freedom, for our money, for our kids, for our property. They are coming for everything because they are a bunch of socialists."
freedom- the war on drugs, take the wrong medicine for what ails you and you're done...check
money- the bailout...check
our kids- parents harassed for refusing public education and certain medical procedures or vaccinations...check
our property- the mortage scam...check
"I'm not real happy with the direction the government's going in right now, and I believe that our Second Amendment rights are in trouble, with the political atmosphere that's in Washington right now," said Alan Addington of North Carolina.
Seems to be a popular notion.
"My rights come from God, not from the government."
I'm not sure who his God is. My God isn't an angry old man in the sky getting ready to zap me at any moment, but it also isn't other men with a ton of cash. (unless they send their angels to my house and demand that they are my Gods, then I guess they are right?)
In Virginia, it is legal to openly carry certain weapons. But it is illegal to openly carry a weapon in the District of Columbia.
The benevolent Gods are worried that the children of God don't like God's crumbs.
"Our role is not to be obedient to who happens to be the leader," he said. "Our role is to defend the Constitution and the republic."
Unreasonable?
JackRiddler wrote:No. To most of us who live in modern society, which for 90 percent of people in the US does not mean in the Grizzly Adams shack....
Iamwhomiam wrote:23 wrote:
"Me thinks you may be oversimplifying the equation. The equation is not always a firearm plus fear. It can also be a firearm plus a strong sense of personal responsibility to protect the wellbeing of your family."
Not at all am I oversimplifying the equation. On the contrary, I believe you are.
Even those policemen with the best tactical skills training who encounter, confront and engage criminals with guns experience fear. A homeowner with no such training or experience is scared beyond belief in such a confrontation, as the article I posted demonstrates perfectly. Perhaps you also feel soldiers experience no fear in battle?
I would also suggest that there would not be a need to shoot an intruder to death, but merely to subdue them with the threat of deadly force (of your choice) until the authorities arrived, but I see you're one who would rather shoot first and ask questions later. But then, that would tend to lead to a rather one-sided conversation, wouldn't it?
I pray you never stumble home drunk and walk in one of your so-prepared neighbor's homes by mistake, or similarly, they into yours.
I'm sure your wife and kids would call you an asshole for being so stupid and getting yourself killed and would get along just fine without you, almost like you never really existed. Maybe she'd even shack up with the brave soul who blew your stupid ass away, so enamored with his bravery she'd be.
Cops: Lawyer shoots at Census worker
9th time Barnes booked into Williamson County jail
Updated: Wednesday, 12 May 2010, 11:48 PM CDT
Carolyn Barnes
Erin Cargile
Sigfrid Rydquist
LEANDER (KXAN) - A Leander attorney faces charges after police say she fired a weapon at a Census worker who was stopping by her house over the weekend.
Carolyn Barnes, 53, is charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.
Travis County has filed a motion to revoke her $50,000 bond due to a previous assault on a public servant charge from January.
Police say on May 8, Kathleen Gittel, an employee of the U.S. Census Bureau, stopped by Barnes' Leander home to "make contact with the resident," presumably as part of the bureau's effort to complete a Census count with residents who had not turned in their forms .
Barnes reportedly pointed her gun at Gittel, and then fired the weapon five times as Gittel tried to run. Williamson County Sheriff's Office spokesperson John Foster said none of the bullets hit the census worker.
Gittel positively identified Barnes in a photo lineup as the person who fired the weapon. Barnes is a medical mapractice attorney who has been practicing in Texas more than 25 years.
According to Williamson County jail records, Barnes has been booked into the WIlliamson County jail eight times before for charges ranging from contempt of court to making a terroristic threat. In 2002, a Williamson County jury found Barnes guilty of interfering with a routine traffic stop.
"She kept digging under her seat which the officer asked her not to do. She kept inching her truck forward which the officer asked her not to do," said Dee Hobbs, Williamson County Attorney's Criminal Division Chief. "They had to spike her tires, and eventually they had break the window and remove her from the vehicle."
Hobbs said Barnes had to be forcibly removed from her car in 1997 as well during a routine traffic stop in Williamson County.
More recent problems have also been mounting while she has been representing clients.
"She is becoming more and more aggressive in the courtroom, ignoring orders of visiting judges to sit down to let them finish talking, she becomes physically aggressive in her postures," said Hobbs.
Barnes typed up a document a friend, Michael Kearns, emailed to KXAN Tuesday titled "Probable Cause Affidavit for Warrant of Arrest and Detention." The four page statement calls for the arrest of Williamson County prosecutors, Williamson County Sheriff’s deputies and Round Rock police officers. Barnes dubs the group a “criminal street gang” who has "retaliated" against her.
"We learned a long time ago this is not humorous, this is not funny, this is a disturbed individual that has for some reason found it in her mind to see us as the enemy," said Hobbs.
In the document, Barnes zeroed in on a visit Williamson County Attorney Dale Rye made to her home May 3. Hobbs said a visiting judge issued a court order for Rye to go by her house to drop off evidence for a case, after Barnes refused to pick it up from the courthouse.
Kearns said he emailed Barnes "arrest warrant" to the Texas Department of Public Safety and the U.S. Marshals.
Barnes arrest history does not stop in Williamson County. In January Barnes was arrested at the Travis County Courthouse after allegedly hit a Travis County deputy at the security checkpoint after he found a knife in her possession and asked her to leave it in her car.
Violence against Census workers is nothing new.
In March, a man in Idaho shot at a worker who was trying to deliver a census form, police said. Richard L. Powell, 54, of St. Maries faces up to six months in jail and a $1,000 fine on charges of exhibiting a deadly weapon. Authorities said Powell told the worker to get off his property and then fired a shotgun into the air.
http://www.kxan.com/dpp/news/crime/cops ... sus-worker
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