OBAMA IS TRYING TO TAKE DOWN OUR GUN RIGHTS

tommy949

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WASHINGTON — Supporters of tighter federal gun restrictions moved quickly Thursday, the first day of the new Congress, introducing bills in the wake of last month's deadly mass shooting in Newtown, Conn., that will set up a long and contentious fight over the shape of the nation's gun laws. Democratic Reps. Carolyn McCarthy of New York and Diana DeGette of Colorado refiled the bill they had promoted in earlier Congresses and said they hoped the environment for gun laws would improve in the wake of the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School that killed 20 students and six adults Dec. 14. The bill would ban high-capacity ammunition magazines. FULL COVERAGE: Aftermath of Conn. school shooting MORE: 113th Congress convenes "These devices are used to kill as many people as possible in the shortest amount of time possible, and we owe it to innocent Americans everywhere to keep them out of the hands of dangerous people," McCarthy said. "We don't even allow hunters to use them – something's deeply wrong if we're protecting game more than we're protecting innocent human beings." Despite a series of highly visible mass shootings in malls, on college campuses, at a movie theater and at workplaces, Congress has not passed any significant gun-related regulations since 2007. Since Newtown, several pro-gun legislators, such as Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., have called for greater restrictions. The National Rifle Association, which has fought off many attempts to increase gun regulation, said Thursday it expected the gun control advocates to come "full force" at the NRA. FULL COVERAGE: Debate over guns in America "This is something we are prepared to address with facts," said Andrew Arulanandam, an NRA spokesman. "I think it's really put a lot of people over the edge," DeGette said of the violence in Newtown and a mass shooting in July at a theater in Aurora, Colo., her home state. "Now is the time to take a tough, principled look at what we need to do." In addition to the magazine ban, McCarthy and DeGette reintroduced a bill that would stop the sale of ammunition online. The measure was introduced last year after the Aurora shooting. More bills are expected soon in the Senate that will have House counterparts, said Shams Tarek, a McCarthy spokesman. They include the Fix Gun Checks Act by Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., which would close loopholes that allow gun sales at shows without background checks and strengthen those checks. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., has said she will reintroduce a ban on the ownership on assault weapons. Feinstein sponsored the first ban, which was passed in 1994 and expired in 2004. The White House, which has been quiet on gun-related legislation until Newtown, is likely to issue its plan Jan. 15. Last month, President Obama asked Vice President Biden, who helped pass the 1994 assault weapons ban while a senator, to lead the administration's effort to send proposals to Congress. Dan Gross, president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, said the group is focused on keeping the momentum for this debate going while lawmakers sort out the details of what can be done. "The administration has shown tremendous leadership on this issue, there are a number of Congress people that have come out in the same way," he said. "While we're applauding every well-intentioned effort, we're looking at the issue holistically. We are not investing entirely yet in every one single solution until we really analyze all the (proposals)." Getting these measures to the floor in both chambers could be extremely difficult. No Republican has expressed support for specific gun control measures, and the NRA has made it clear it will vehemently oppose any effort to curb gun rights. In response to the Newtown shooting, the NRA has proposed that the government pay for armed guards in schools to prevent school shootings. Support for stricter gun laws has risen since the Sandy Hook shooting, according to a recent USA TODAY/Gallup Poll. Fifty-eight percent of those surveyed said they backed tougher restrictions, an increase from 43% in October 2011. The poll also showed a split, as 47% said new laws were necessary while 46% said they preferred enforcing current laws.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2013/01/03/new-congress-gun-bills/1806533/
 
Apparently this is a good book. Just ordered it and look forward to reading it.

Resistance to Tyranny: A Primer, Joseph P Martino
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1450574289/

Reading this now, and it is indeed a great book btw, well worth the 20 FRN's.

Matthew Bracken's review of the book said:
Resistance to Tyranny begins with a chapter entitled "Why Armed Resistance?" Martino explains that international warfare was not the 20th Century's greatest killer, but rather that official government tyranny holds that position of dishonor by a very wide margin. He then explores the link between gun control and state genocide, going through the historical cases of Turkey, the Soviet Union, Germany, China and other countries. Then, brick by brick, Martino builds the case for the morality of armed resistance to tyranny, postulating a "just insurgency doctrine" similar to the more familiar "just war" doctrine.

In the first five chapters Martino studies past rebellions and insurgencies from the American Revolution to the present day, to draw out and explore their timeless lessons. He also examines the government reactions to these insurgencies, starting with the crushing of dissent via state propaganda and the creation of enemy classes, use of economic leverage, deliberately nurturing crime waves for the purpose of installing police-state controls, through the full spectrum of violent repression by a gangster state. Martino's analysis is consistently well thought out, lucid and downright fascinating in this overview of the eternal struggle between the forces of repression and freedom.

It would not be possible to examine the remaining contents of the book in any meaningful detail in a short review. In the interest of brevity, here is a partial listing of the remaining chapter titles, to give you an idea of the ground that is covered:

- Overt and Covert Resistance,
- Personal Weapons,
- Personal Equipment,
- Survival Skills,
- Camouflage and Concealment,
- Boobytraps,
- Weapons Caching,
- Logistics,
- Training,
- Secure Base Camps,
- Safe Houses,
- Communications,
- Encryption and Codes,
- Ambushes,
- Sniping,
- Sabotage,
- Raids,
- Strategic Intelligence,
- Tactical Intelligence, and
- Counterintelligence.

The information is current; for example, taking into account the use of UAV for covert population surveillance, internet data-mining, and other evolving technological frontiers.

This book is meant to be a primer, and not a collection of nuts-and-bolts tips to be employed in the field. For example, the chapter on boobytraps does not include details on how to build them, but rather lays out the general types of devices and the principles of their employment, as well as their pros and cons. For those who wish to study the subject matter in greater depth, at the end of each chapter there is a bibliography.

If Resistance to Tyranny is a primer for successful insurgency, then the entire reading list included would constitute a post-graduate education. The content that was mastered and then synthesized by Martino in order to produce this work is staggering. For that effort alone he deserves our hearty salute.

Here is just one of the hundreds of titles cited in the book, in this case with Martino's comments following: "U.S. Army and Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Field Manual (U.S. Army Field Manual No. 3-24), University of Chicago Press. Undoubtedly the finest manual ever written on the subject. It will almost certainly be used by tyrannical governments faced with freedom-oriented resistance forces, as well as by democratic governments faced with communist or fascist insurgencies. Resistance forces should study it carefully, to prepare for government counter-operations. (Also available as a download at [...])."

That is just one of the countless nuggets and gems contained in Resistance to Tyranny.

Martino's examination of likely government counterinsurgency tactics could be particularly helpful to those who may be at personal risk during a future time of official state repression. If cruel history is a guide, today's patriotic and freedom-oriented opinion leaders will likely be considered tomorrow's potential dissident leaders by a state gradually turned tyrant. Punishment for resisting tyranny may range from the loss of employment all the way to the gulags or worse.

Martino points out that the period while a nascent insurgency is attempting to emerge is particularly dangerous. He even cites historical examples of the establishment of bogus resistance organizations created for the covert purpose of identifying enemies of the state through false-flag recruitment. This is certainly something to consider in the internet era, with anonymous government-sponsored provocateurs busily typing away.

`Keyboard commandos', indeed.

If you believe in your heart that your homeland could never be dragged down into a dictatorship, Resistance to Tyranny will be of no interest to you.

But perhaps you are not so sanguine about your country's future, and you observe your government in action with growing trepidation. If you would rather shape your own future and influence events in the ongoing struggle for human freedom, and not merely allow yourself to be buffeted by the storm winds of possible coming strife, you should not only read this book but study it. If and when the conditions are met for a "just insurgency," books like this may be banned and will certainly not be as easily obtainable as they are today, during freedom's long eclipse. (Of special note to those who prefer reading on electronic tablets: e-books may disappear into the ether with the same alacrity with which they appeared on your screen. Consider what is truly saved, and what is not. You might consider purchasing a dead-trees copy of this and similar titles.)

Resistance to Tyranny is an up-to-date study of insurgency methods, tactics and strategies. I recommend it most highly. If you believe that at this juncture it is critical to be a student of civil conflict throughout history, you should give Joseph Martino's outstanding contribution to the cause of freedom a place of honor on your patriot's bookshelf. While always hoping, of course, that the information it contains is never needed ... except to entertain your unceasingly inquisitive mind on all matters of the gloriously messy and commonly unjust human condition.
 
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