Archive for March, 2017

Pennsylvania Court: Automatic Knives not Protected by Second Amendment – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News


AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
Pennsylvania Court: Automatic Knives not Protected by Second Amendment
AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
An appeal was filed shortly after the conviction, based solely on the Second Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. The appeal did not reference Pennsylvania's state Constitution. Pennsylvania has a strong right to bear arms provision in ...

Go here to read the rest:
Pennsylvania Court: Automatic Knives not Protected by Second Amendment - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

Second Amendment’s illogical conclusion | Letter – The Courier-Journal

Subscribe today for full access on your desktop, tablet, and mobile device.

Let friends in your social network know what you are reading about

Where do you draw the line on the spectrum of weapons between, say, rocks and any weapons of mass destruction?

Try Another

Audio CAPTCHA

Image CAPTCHA

Help

CancelSend

A link has been sent to your friend's email address.

A link has been posted to your Facebook feed.

CJ Letter 2:23 p.m. ET March 10, 2017

Nuclear explosion(Photo: RomoloTavani, Getty Images/iStockphoto)

I am curious if Mr. Milby - Reader's Forum "Weapons of war protected by Second Amendment" March 8, 2017- believes that Second Amendment rights extend to nuclear weapons. If not, where does he draw the line on the spectrum of weapons between, say,rocks and anyweapons of mass destruction?In addition tonuclear bombs, are chemical weapons covered by the Second Amendment? What about lasers from satellites? Ballistic missiles? As a private citizen, I just want to know what I and my fellow citizens have a right to own and use in order to defendourselves from tyranny, government or otherwise. Or, maybe the interpretation of the Second Amendment should be more nuanced than Mr. Milby proclaims.

Christopher Rife

Louisville40291

Read or Share this story: http://cjky.it/2mu9SES

3:45

3:13

3:46

3:46

3:28

4:00

1:53

2:18

6:56

7:28

3:15

3:05

3:51

3:38

3:12

2:41

3:38

2:31

3:22

3:45

1:33

1:56

3:24

3:03

3:39

3:14

3:37

3:56

3:01

2:19

0) { %>

0) { %>

See the rest here:
Second Amendment's illogical conclusion | Letter - The Courier-Journal

Your Help Urgently Needed to Protect the Second Amendment Rights of America’s Veterans! – NRA ILA

Americas veterans helped protect us. Now we can ensure they themselves are not arbitrarily denied the right of self-protection.

On Wednesday, the House Committee on Veterans Affairs marked up and favorably reported H.R. 1181, the Veterans 2nd Amendment Protection Act, sponsored by Committee Chairman Phil Roe, M.D. (R-TN). The bill now moves to the full U.S. House, where a vote could come as early as next week.

H.R. 1181 is meant to deal with a longstanding and shameful practice by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), which administers disability benefits for veterans and their families. Under this practice, anyone who the VA declares incompetent to manage his or her own benefits and assigns a fiduciary is automatically reported to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) as a prohibited mental defective. The person is then subject to a lifetime ban on the acquisition and possession of firearms, unless he or she successfully petitions for relief from disabilities.

As of Dec. 31, 2016, the NICS contained 167,815 active records submitted by the VA under this program.

The VAs program suffers from a number of legal and practical issues.

Above all, it does not attempt to identify which beneficiaries have mental illnesses that actually cause them to be a danger to themselves or others. Rather, it merely targets individuals who have been identified as needing help to manage their benefits. Yet there is no scientific or empirical evidence to support the idea that needing help managing money is the same thing as being too dangerous or irresponsible to safely handle a firearm.

Second, the statute on which the reporting is based prohibits firearm acquisition or possession by persons who have been adjudicated as a mental defective. While these terms are not defined in the statute, the purely bureaucratic process by which a fiduciary is assigned which in most cases does not involve a hearing, much less a judge is hardly the sort of procedure most would consider an adjudication. And the only issue at stake is whether the person needs help with his or her finances. It does not affect rights other than under the Second Amendment, including the right to form legally binding contracts, vote, hold office, serve on a jury, etc.

While the VA does theoretically make relief available after the fact, few of the beneficiaries affected by the program have the means to negotiate the highly bureaucratic process, which may also require expensive mental health evaluations and legal aid. The procedure also turns due process on its head by forcing the petitioner to prove by a high standard of evidence that he or she is not a risk to public safety, a premise the government was never required to establish in the original adjudication.

The VAs own records showed that as of April 2015, only 3% of relief petitions had been granted. And the decision makers considering the petitions are the same sorts of VA bureaucrats who made the original fiduciary determination, not an independent judge or magistrate.

H.R. 1181 would change all this by ensuring that the VA could only report a beneficiary to NICS as prohibited mental defective if a judicial authority had already made a finding that the person is a danger to self or others. This would ensure due process, as well protect those who simply need help managing their finances but are not at increased risk of committing a dangerous act with a firearm.

President Trump signed a measure into law last month that prevented the Social Security Administration from going through with a plan to implement a similar reporting system for certain of its Disability or Supplementary Security Income beneficiaries assigned representative payees.

And the House had passed a bill to halt VAs program in 2011, which eventually died in the Senate.

Action to stop this unconscionable infringement of veterans Second Amendment Rights is long overdue.

Please contact your congressional representative NOW and respectfully ask him or her to vote YES on H.R. 1181, the Veterans 2nd Amendment Protection Act. You can call the Congressional Switchboard at 202-224-3121 and ask to be connected to your representatives office, or you can send an email using our Take Action tool.

Americas veterans answered the call to serve for the good of all. Now is your chance to ensure their rights are protected. Dont delay. Please call or write your representative today.

Read more:
Your Help Urgently Needed to Protect the Second Amendment Rights of America's Veterans! - NRA ILA

COMMENT: Migrant crisis proves we are right to leave the EU – Express.co.uk

GETTY

As a measure of how serious this problem is a new report from Europol, the EUs law enforcement agency, also says that migrant smuggling is now comparable to the illegal drugs market.

Across the continent people are furious at the huge number of migrants who have arrived, the strain they have placed on resources and the deliberate reluctance of European leaders not least unelected Eurocrats to confront these issues.

It is no coincidence that in Holland, France and Germany anti-migrant parties are storming up the polls.

The European establishments attempt to dismantle national borders has been a major factor in exacerbating this problem.

The Schengen agreement which eradicates controls between member states has made it easy for migrants to dodge the authorities.

Meanwhile far too little has been done to protect the EUs external border.

Some European leaders have to their credit expressed concern at the failure to take border security seriously.

GETTY

But the unwieldy nature of the Brussels bureaucracy means tougher rhetoric has not been translated into action.

The EU is a flawed institution that has proved totally incapable of getting the migrant crisis under control.

However its most important figures continue to refuse to accept the need for fundamental reform. What a relief we will shortly be getting out.

AFP/Getty Images

1 of 23

A young boy cries at a makeshift camp for migrants and refugees at the Greek-Macedonian border near the village of Idomeni

In January more than 80,000 NHS patients were stuck on a trolley for at least four hours waiting for a hospital bed.

Labour will tell you this is all due to a lack of funding but the reality is that the health service faces a range of challenges.

Social care problems have caused elderly people to be stuck in hospital when they would be better off elsewhere.

GETTY

There are also too many people going to hospital when they only need to see a GP.

And then there are the demographic challenges: the extra burden placed on the health service by migration and our ageing population.

Just throwing more money at the NHS is not and never will be a proper solution to these issues.

GETTY

At Crufts the dogs of war have been let slip.

A rule that ribbons cannot be put in the dogs hair has sparked fury with one judge complaining that she has been harassed by a number of overseas exhibitors.

Lets hope their bark is worse than their bite.

Here is the original post:
COMMENT: Migrant crisis proves we are right to leave the EU - Express.co.uk

The Syrian Migrant Crisis You’ve Never Heard ofand Why It Matters Today – Pacific Standard

As millions of Syrians are forced to flee their home country, the descendants of earlier migrants enjoy a life of cultural and economic assimilation.

By Giulia Afiune and John Wihbey

The ongoing political and legal controversy over President Donald Trumps revised executive order banning visitors from six Muslim-majority countries is the latest flashpoint in what has become one of the great moral conundrums of our time: What to do about the refugees of the Syrian Civil War?

Since 2011, the Syrian Civil War has forced some five million Syrians out of the country. And as millions flee and risk their lives trying to find a stable land, surrounding countries, Europe, and the Americas have struggled to deal with the unprecedented inflow of people. Many have effectively closed their borders, with the new U.S. restrictions in some ways merely crystallizing a wider patternan iron immigration curtain now descending across much of the West. The United Nations calls the Syrian refugee crisis the single largest for almost a quarter of a century.

At the same time, nationalism and inward-looking policy ideas have taken hold in many Western societies, from the rise of Marine Le Pen in France to Brexit and the election of Theresa May in the United Kingdom. And while the United States did admit substantially more Muslim refugees in the final year of the Obama administration, that trend is sure to end.

The Syrian refugee crisis can seem a catastrophic historical anomaly, one wholly without precedent or hint of a solution. But virtually unknown todayburied in the historical annalsis a parallel event that furnishes an alternative path. In the late 19th century, a massive wave of Arabic-speaking peasants left greater Syria, in search of opportunities elsewhere. Even though they found obstacles in destination countries, many migrants were eventually integrated to the host societies, making expressive contributions to their new economy and culture.

Decades later, the descendants of the Syrian-Lebanese migrantsnow working in law, medicine, politics, and business across societies in the Americasstill see this lost chapter in history come to life in the form of family tales shared over feasts of falafels, hummus, kafta, and other Arab delicacies.

Between 1890 and 1920, an estimated 360,000 migrants spilled from the area that now includes Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Israel, and Jordan. (It wasnt until after 1890 that missionaries and intellectuals popularized the existence of a specific region called greater Syria.)

In the early migration outflow, about a third of the regions population left, motivated by a number of factors: the debt-ridden Ottoman Empire was falling apart; economic recession, drought, and eventually famine hit the region hard; and the world was lurching toward World War I.

At that time, people were moving because they were poor, and they were looking for good life conditions, says Kazim Baycar, of Yildiz Technical University in Istanbul, whose research has focused on Ottoman history.

In contrast with today, these migrants went primarily to the Americas: The United States, Brazil, and Argentina, among others, saw tens of thousands of Syrians come to their shores. They spread out across major cities and small towns in the New World.

Weve been here a long time, and in fact we are very much part of the fabric of what makes this country what it is today, says Akram Khater, a history professor at North Carolina State University.

The experience of peoples from lands in the Arabic-speaking world has long been characterized, he says, both by cultural acceptance and assimilation, as well as suspicion and challenge. The Syrian refugees of today, of course, are another episode in this long narrative arc.

Many in the earlier Syrian migration came with the idea of making money and returning, but about two-thirds of them wound up staying in the U.S. Once pioneer family members got established, they began bringing over other kin. It was the beginning of a classic chain migration pattern.

An estimated 129,000 persons of Syrian-Lebanese-Palestinian origin were in the United States by 1920, according to researchers at the Moise A. Khayrallah Center for Lebanese Diaspora Studies at North Carolina State. Arab-Americans settled in northeastern states such as New York, Massachusetts, and Pennsylvania, as well as in Ohio, Michigan, and even Texas.

Migration at the time was destined to countries that had flourishing economiesthe U.S., Canada, Brazil, and the likethat needed labor, says Guita Hourani, director of the Lebanese Emigration Research Center at the University of Notre Dame in Kesrwan, Lebanon. The migration of the Lebanese and Syrians was part of a world phenomenon that was taking place at the time. The so-called New World was offering opportunities not found at the time in Europe. According to experts, the Arabs joined a large flow of Europeans who themselves were escaping adverse economic conditions.

The Arabs were the free riders of this immigration because those routes were already well establishedboats were already going to those very important harbors, like Buenos Aires, Santos [harbor near So Paulo] and New York. They were just taking the same boats as the Europeans, says Cecilia Baeza, a professor at PUC-SP and FGV in Brazil, who studies the Arab diaspora in South America.

In the Americas, many went on to work in factories, others started peddling or opened small businesses, a mercantile tradition that still distinguishes some Syrian-Lebanese families across the Americas today. It seemed like they gravitated towards certain places that had lots of people who had to buy stuff, says Tylor Band, assistant professor at the American University of Sharjah, in the United Arab Emirates. So the Lebanese and Syrians made a lot of their money through these merchant activities.

Subsequent generations have gone into the professions and climbed the social ladder. While evidence of social mobility across the Americas may be largely anecdotal, Syrian immigrants and persons of Lebanese origin in the United States are generally better educated and have lower unemployment rates, as compared with both other foreign born and native born populations.

Syrian and Lebanese had larger economic and social mobility in Brazil than in the U.S., says Oswaldo Truzzi, a professor at UFSCAR-Federal University of So Carlos, Brazil. In the United States, the migrants from Ottoman Syria joined huge waves of European immigrants, perhaps diluting their overall impact and visibility.

In Brazil, you can see how they shaped our commercial practices, our food, our culture, Truzzi adds. Theres a reciprocal influence.

In both our current and past migration flows, war and climate change played a major role. Cecilia Baeza notes that modernization policies in the Ottoman Empire around 1908 included new conscription rules, prompting many families to accelerate the ongoing exodus. The Ottomans became involved in violent internal and regional conflict, for which they needed soldiers.

For these reasons, especially the Christian families, to avoid the military conscription, started to send their sons where they already had relatives, Baeza says. They were already living in the Americas.

Adding to the chaos were naturally shifting climate conditions around the time of World War I. What seems to have happened is that there was an El Nio event around the time of the war, says Band of the American University of Sharjah. Adverse conditions and a literal plague of locusts, combined with military blockades and an Ottoman policy of neglect, created area-wide famine, particularly in Mount Lebanon, where the so-called Great Famine claimed tens of thousands of lives.

Sources say that the amount of crops lost was equal to 40 to 60 percent of the Syrian crop in 1915, Band notes. While migration largely halted during World War I, the horrific regional conditions prompted further waves of immigrants at the conflicts end.

All of that echoes today. As researchers have documented, climate change also likely helped foster the conditions that led to the contemporary Syrian civil war. Rural Syrians were displaced by historic drought beginning in 2007 and migrated to cities in massive numbers, contributing to political unrest.

Around 98 percent of current Syrian refugees admitted to the United States are Suni Muslims. The proportion is similar among the two million Syrian refugees registered with UNHCR: Ninety-nine percent are Suni Muslims and only 1 percent, Christians. Shiites are a very small part of this population. This distribution does not include the 2.9 million Syrian refugees living in Turkey, because the country is responsible for registering them, not UNHCR.

In contrast, many earlier migrants were Christian, although there were a fair number of both Shiite and Sunni Muslims. There is anecdotal evidence that Muslims represented between 8 and 17 percent of all greater Syria migrants, although the numbers are highly imprecise, scholars say. Roughly one-third of Argentinas estimated 105,000 to 136,000 immigrants may have been Muslim, according to Khater.

While the modern-day states would only be established later in the region, the original notion of being Syrian emerged to distinguish locals from the Ottoman population, which carried with it traditional and highly prejudiced stereotypes of the terrible Turk, Khater says. They wanted to escape, for example, being mistakenly called Turcos, as they frequently were in Latin America.

In some ironic way, it carries with it the same pejorative and threatening and othering, if you will, notion as Muslim does today, he notes. Thats exactly what a Turk was [at that time]a Muslim.

These stereotypes were Western, scholars note, and some Christians in greater Syria had relatively good relations with Ottoman authorities during that period.

According to the Department of State, almost 20,000 Syrian refugees from the current conflict have been accepted by the United Statesthe majority admitted in the final year of the Obama administration. Canada, by contrast, has recently become a welcoming havenit took in more than 40,000 Syrian refugees to date, having resettled around 25,000while most nations in the Americas have seen only a trickle of Syrian refugees this time. Meanwhile, more than 90 percent of Syrian refugees remain in a semi-permanent holding pattern in Turkey, Lebanon, and Jordan, with little hope of asylum there.

The European Union as a whole has a very mixed record: With the exception of Germany (as of the end of 2015, it had accepted more than 115,600 Syrian refugees) and Sweden (more than 52,700), the remaining 26 countries in the E.U. have pledged a tiny number of resettlement placesaround 0.7 percent of the Syrian refugee population in the main host countries such as Turkey and Jordan, according to Amnesty International.

Some Latin American countries have pledged greater open door policies, as Lilly Ballofet of the Khayrallah Center at North Carolina State has noted. Still, the overall numbers of migrants taken in are not huge measured against the enormity of the problem. Through 2015, Brazil had taken in 2,300 Syrian refugees, while Argentina had taken in about 300, according to UNHCR data.

If there is any positive news on the horizon, it may be the potential of the current generation of Syrian migrants arriving in the West. People who are ending up in Europe and the United States now are highly educated, Khater says. They are coming in with a major advantage in some ways in the sense of their ability to work and to integrate. The disadvantage is that they are not coming into ethnic enclaves. Meanwhile, its worth mentioning that there have been no fatal terrorist attacks post-9/11 by persons from any of the countries covered under President Trumps executive order.

In any case, this largely unknown history remains poignant and relevant across many societies. It is deeply rooted in the experience of millions of persons with Arab and Greater Syrian roots across the New World whose families have been here for generations.

As a consequence of their integration in the Americas a century ago, Arab immigrants became entrepreneurs, professionals and even politiciansso why couldnt the same happen with todays Syrian refugees?

I think it would be good, not only drawing upon the history of the Syrian immigration itself, says Baeza, the researcher in Brazil, but in general, of having been an immigration country, to revive this narrative to be even more welcoming to the immigrants and refugees.

See the article here:
The Syrian Migrant Crisis You've Never Heard ofand Why It Matters Today - Pacific Standard