Going
for Gun Control’s 'Brass Ring'
by
Vin Suprynowicz
by Vin Suprynowicz
John Brownings
Model 1911 pistol, an engineering wonder for its day, still serves
as a design platform for much modern pistolsmithing. Old examples,
especially with military markings, are now highly valued on the
collector market, where they can bring hundreds or even thousands
of dollars each.
Yet 16 years
ago, early in the Clinton administration, the politicians declared
our government would no longer sell into the civilian after-market
pistols being retired from military armories.
Instead, Guns
& Ammo magazine reported in 1996 that since Bill Clinton
took office in 1992 the government had resumed for the first time
in 15 years the destruction by shredding of obsolete
firearms including 110,000 .45-caliber pistols and 30,000 M-1 Garands
the magnificent semi-auto battle rifle that defeated Adolf
Hitler.
Destruction
of the weapons some valued by collectors at up to $6,000 apiece
continues at a rate of about 3,000 guns per day, the
magazine reported. Even assuming an unrealistically low value
of $200 per gun, more than $60 million of historic collectibles
has been reduced to worthless scrap.
Despite ongoing
federal deficits, the Clintons and their cronies decided to turn
irreplaceable pieces of historic American engineering into a couple
of bucks worth of crushed or melted steel, useful only for manhole
covers.
Now its
2009. A new Democratic administration is finally back in power.
And guess what? This time they tried for the brass ring.
On March 16
less than 60 days into the Obama Era Jim
Shepherd at The Shooting Wire reported The Department
of Defense has issued a directive that bans the sale of military
brass to ammunition re-manufacturers. Without that brass, a very
large dent is put into civilian ammunition supplies.
New Defense
Reutilization and Marketing Service (DRMS) requirements call for
the mutilation of shell casings. Mutilation, incidentally,
is the destruction of the property to the extent that prevents
its reuse or reconstruction, Mr. Shepherd noted.
The first
word of this latest decision came over the weekend when Georgia
Arms Larry Haynie released a letter notifying him of the new
requirement.
Georgia Arms was remanufacturing more than one
million rounds of .223 ammunition monthly; selling that ammo on
the civilian market to resellers and to government agencies all
over the country.
Tomorrow,
Georgia Arms will start sending cancellation notices for .223 ammunition
to law enforcement agencies across the United States, Mr.
Shepherd reported on March 16. Haynie says he may have to
lay off half of his sixty-person workforce. The message is simple.
The implication is chilling.
Much squawking
ensued. And for now, at least, it appears those who believe Only
federal agents should have ammo have backed down.
Responding
to two Democratic senators representing outraged private gun owners,
the Department of Defense announced last night it has scrapped a
new policy that would deplete the supply of ammunition by requiring
destruction of fired military cartridge brass, World Net Daily
reported on March 31.
The policy
already had taken a bite out of the nations stressed ammunition
supply, leaving arms dealers scrambling to find ammo for private
gun owners.
Mark
Cunningham, a legislative affairs representative with the Defense
Logistics Agency, explained in an e-mail last night to the office
of Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., that the Department of Defense had
placed small arms cartridge cases on its list of sensitive munitions
items as part of an overall effort to ensure national security is
not jeopardized in the sale of any Defense property.
The small
arms cases were identified as a sensitive item and were held pending
review of policy, he said.
Upon
review, the Defense Logistics Agency has determined the cartridge
cases could be appropriately placed in a category of government
property allowing for their release for sale, Cunningham wrote.
The turnaround
followed a protest from Sen. Tester and fellow Montana Democrat
Sen. Max Baucus. The senators argued prohibiting the sale
of fired military brass would reduce the supply of ammunition
preventing individual gun owners from fully exercising their Second
Amendment right to keep and bear arms. We urge you to address this
situation promptly.
They
just reclassified brass to allow destruction of it, based on what?
Georgia Arms owner Larry Haynie asked WND. Weve been
going green for the last dozen years, and brass is one
of the most recyclable materials out there. A cartridge case can
be used over and over again. And now were going to destroy
it based on what? We dont want the civilian public to have
it?
Its
an end-run around Congress, wrote firearm instructor and author
Gordon Hutchinson on his The Shootist blog. They dont
need to try to ban guns they dont need to fight a massive
battle to attempt gun registration, or limit assault
weapon sales. Nope. All they have to do is limit the amount of ammunition
available to the civilian market, and when bullets dry up, guns
will be useless.
What did the
two actions have in common scrapping the wonderful 1911 Colt
.45s, and the (apparently reversed, for now) decision to crush,
shred, and/or melt all that once-used military brass, mostly in
.223 and .308, to keep civilians from buying and reloading it?
First, since
crushed or shredded brass is worth only 20 percent the value of
reloadable spent cases, both moves violate the federal governments
fiduciary duty as a steward of the nations resources, the
duty to get as good a return as possible on surplus stuff already
paid for with hard-earned taxpayer dollars.
But in addition
to that, in each of these two examples those in power in Washington
of both parties, though non-Montana Democrats often display
the worst cases of the disease proved willing and eager to
abandon that fiduciary responsibility because of what they see as
a more important goal.
Its tempting
to identify that goal as getting rid of all the guns.
But that would not be accurate. Just ask one of our big-government
friends whether they believe DEA agents, BATF agents, even your
local cop on the beat should be disarmed.
What?!
theyll shriek. The bad guys have them outgunned already!
Only because
of unconstitutional, unenforceable prohibitions, of course. Those
who distribute Budweiser and Miller Lite dont have to wield
assault rifles, because their trade was re-legalized in 1933. Re-legalizing
the trades in all firearms and in all plant extracts would have
the same violence-reducing impact, though thats a topic for
another day.
What the Washington
weasels actually favor and are willing to throw away millions
in potential new government revenue to achieve is a government
MONOPOLY on armed might. They hate the idea of common citizens
having access to effective firearms even spent military brass
and 60-year-old collector pistols that are far too valuable ever
to be re-sold to street gangs or stickup artists.
Meantime, as
evidence that this campaign proceeds on several parallel tracks,
Mr. Shepherd reports the administration recently proposed a ban
on rifle-caliber ammo exports to Canada, and that Last Friday,
anglers and hunters were notified that the National Park Service
planned to make all lands under their control totally lead-free
by 2010. No lead in ammo or fishing tackle.
Predictably,
given this full-court press, my sources report ammo demand at U.S.
gun shows has not flagged. Rings of customers surround the ammo
dealers from the opening bell, buying up and hauling off truckloads
of .223, especially.
The consensus,
it would appear, is They may have gotten caught red-handed
this time, but the sneaky Petes will surely try again.
I heartily
approve except that I still believe .30 caliber does a better
job.
The color photo,
published on page A-10 of the March 18 Wall Street Journal,
focuses over the shoulders of two camouflage-attired African troopers
in red berets, watching as two corn-shuck stacks of perhaps 200
rifles each go up in roaring orange flame.
Kenyan
police watch a pyre of confiscated weapons in Nairobi on Tuesday,
reads the Journal editors caption. Thousands
of weapons that were used in criminal activities across the country
have been rounded up and burned by the police since 2007.
Not alleged
by the corrupt and tyrannical government of election-rigging President-for-Life
Mwai Kibaki to have been used in criminal activities, mind
you.
The weapons
being burned in the photo are rifles, not handguns. Do most criminals
of your acquaintance use long arms? Who says those weapons werent
seized from freedom fighters? If someone were to submit
to the Wall Street Journal an old photo of Nazi storm troopers,
back in 1936, identified by the source as showing German police
burning confiscated weapons that were used by Jews and Gypsies in
criminal activities across the country, do you suppose that
photo and caption would be published verbatim, without any editorial
attention?
How about if
the caption-writer celebrated a bonfire of dangerous and subversive
books and newspapers? Also no problem?
Or is someones
hoplophobia showing?
May
19, 2009
Vin
Suprynowicz [send
him mail] is assistant editorial page editor of the daily Las
Vegas Review-Journal and author of The
Black Arrow. Visit his
blog.
Copyright
© 2009 Vin Suprynowicz
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