From: owner-utah-firearms-digest@lists.xmission.com (utah-firearms-digest) To: utah-firearms-digest@lists.xmission.com Subject: utah-firearms-digest V2 #199 Reply-To: utah-firearms-digest Sender: owner-utah-firearms-digest@lists.xmission.com Errors-To: owner-utah-firearms-digest@lists.xmission.com Precedence: bulk utah-firearms-digest Tuesday, December 5 2000 Volume 02 : Number 199 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 06 Nov 2000 08:10:41 -0700 From: Scott Bergeson Subject: RKBA Election Day Today if your polling place is a public school. Vote absentee at your county election clerk's office instead. Scott - - ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 6 Nov 2000 10:34:51 -0700 From: charles hardy Subject: Re: RKBA Election Day On Mon, 06 Nov 2000 08:10:41 -0700 Scott Bergeson writes: > Today if your polling place is a public school. > Vote absentee at your county election clerk's > office instead. Why? Unless you regularly carry an openly visible, and unloaded weapon around, I'm unaware of any stutory difference between a school and any other polling place. A CCW permit is as valid at a school as anywhere else under current statute--though if you are an employee of the school district there may be (IMHO, illegal) employment policies in place prohibiting you from possessing any weapon regardless of whether you have a permit or not. However, I know some States have laws specifically prohibiting ALL weapons (except govt controlled, of course) in polling places. I haven't searched Utah code yet to see if anything similar exists here. ================================================================== Charles C. Hardy Utah Email Coordinator--Women Against Gun Control ________________________________________________________________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. - - ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 9 Nov 2000 12:17:34 -0700 From: charles hardy Subject: FW: Utah Elections Election commentary from UTGOA ================================================================== Charles C. Hardy Utah Email Coordinator--Women Against Gun Control Utah election National races Presidential election UTGOA needs your help! Wow! What an election! Thanks to ALL of you for your hard work on behalf of liberty! As of now, we still don't know who our President will be, so we're focusing on Utah races. And as you might expect, there's good news and bad news. (Note: All election results are based on information from the Lt. Governor. It is possible that there will be recounts in close races.) Anti-gun Governor, Mike Leavitt will be back for four more years. And he's already talking about passing more gun control! Be prepared for lots more anti-gun legislation in January. Sen. Orrin Hatch will be returning for another 6 years. Although Hatch's record on guns has been abysmal recently, he is marginally better than Democratic opponent, Scott Howell, who is known for his extreme anti-gun views. Unfortunately, the two solidly pro-gun third party candidates didn't have much of a chance, but we applaud their efforts. UTGOA suggests contacting Sen. Hatch and urging him to OPPOSE all gun control bills and to kill his horrible Juvenile Justice bill unless ALL gun control language is removed - including mandatory gun show background checks, mandatory trigger locks, and restrictions on safe and legal firearms use by our children. Congressmen Jim Hansen (1st district) and Chris Cannon (3rd district) will also be returning for two more years. Please congratulate them and ask them to defend our gun rights, regardless of who becomes president. Jim Matheson, the new Congressman from the 2nd district, received a lot of money from Handgun Control, Inc. He claims that won't influence his vote, but we're a bit skeptical. Please contact Jim Matheson and ask him which it is: Does he support pro-gun Utah values, or anti-gun HCI values? Let all three know you'll be tracking their votes! Our new Attorney General, Mark Shurtleff, refused to complete our candidate survey. However, we're hopeful that he'll be an improvement over anti-gun Beagle Forum queen, Jan Graham. UTGOA suggests you contact Mr. Shurtleff, and politely ask him to be a strong defender of gun rights. The good news is that we have TEN new state legislators who have indicated their support for gun rights on the UTGOA candidate questionnaire. They are: Brent Parker, House 5 Glenn Donnelson, House 7 Morgan Philpot, House 45 Jim Ferrin, House 58 Mike Thompson, House 59 Max Young, House 71 Curtis Bramble, Senate 16 Bill Wright, Senate 17 (currently the Representative from House 67) Scott Jenkins, Senate 20 Dan Eastman, Senate 23 Full election results are available at: http://electionresults.state.ut.us/ Contact info is available at: http://governor.state.ut.us/lt_gover/a2000candidates.htm Of course politicians can and do lie. We don't know whether these candidates will really support our gun rights, or whether they were willing to "say anything" to get elected. So, UTGOA suggests you CALL your legislators, whether or not they're on this list. (This is especially important for those on the list, of course!) Congratulate them for winning, and ask them where they stand on gun rights. Ask them specifically if they are willing to sponsor or co-sponsor pro-gun legislation, and how they intend to vote on banning guns in schools and churches. Let them know that gun rights are extremely important to you, and that you (with help from UTGOA) will be watching their every move and vote. Please let UTGOA know what you find out! We need to get to work right away to craft some pro-gun bills for the 2001 session. Special kudos to the UTGOA supporters in Weber County. They put up some signs letting people know what a terrible record Sen. Joe Hull had on gun rights. Sen. Hull responded by having his attorney threaten to sue one of them! (Apparently he's not supportive of the First Amendment either!) So, UTGOA sent postcards to gun rights supporters in Sen. Hull's district, telling them the truth about his lack of support for gun rights, and letting them know that challenger Scott Jenkins had a perfect score on our candidate survey. We were told that Joe Hull's seat was safe, and that he couldn't be beaten, but we didn't back down. And thanks to pro-gun folks like you, Scott Jenkins squeaked by with 50.81% of the vote! So the next time a legislator tells you that he doesn't care what you think about gun rights, remind him of what happened to Joe Hull! National Races See the analysis by David Kopel at http://www.nationalreview.com/kopel/kopel110800.shtml One line summary: The Senate is now much more anti-gun. Not much change in the House. Gore vote fraud? Do you know someone on active military duty overseas? There are currently reports that overseas military personnel were denied absentee ballots. Since most military personnel would be likely to support Bush-Cheney, given the current administration's decimation of our military strength, these missing ballots could be critical! If you know a member of our military forces who may have been disenfranchised, we suggest you see http://www.keepandbeararms.com/newsarchives/XcNewsPlus.asp?cmd=view&artic leid=880 For more on this subject see: http://www.keepandbeararms.com/ and follow the links. Thanks again for all your hard work during caucuses, conventions, the primary election and the general election! Take a much-deserved rest, because the battle for our rights will begin anew in January when the legislature convenes! Utah Gun Owners Alliance needs YOUR help! Did you see the UTGOA yellow election postcards? UTGOA sent out a record number of postcards letting gun owners know how their candidates scored on our candidate survey and how they actually voted. Based on the results above, this was a very successful program! But postcards and stamps are EXPENSIVE! So are mailing, printing, and collating surveys. If you like what Utah Gun Owners Alliance is doing, PLEASE JOIN US or SEND A CONTRIBUTION! We need your help to preserve our gun rights! See http://www.utgoa.org/pages/join.html. THANKS! PLEASE SUPPORT UTAH GUN OWNERS ALLIANCE! JOIN US TODAY! UTGOA is written and distributed by, Utah Gun Owners Alliance, www.utgoa.org, and Sarah Thompson, M.D. All information contained in these alerts is the responsibility of the author, unless otherwise attributed. This is a one-way list. Please do NOT try to post to the list. It won't work, and repeat violations will result in your removal from the list. Comments may be sent to Director@utgoa.org. Thanks! Permission is granted for distribution of these alerts so long as no changes are made, UTGOA is clearly credited, and this message is left intact. To subscribe to the UTGOA list, send a blank email to utgoa-subscribe at egroups.com or use the form on our web site, http://www.utgoa.org. For more information, see http://www.egroups.com/group/UTGOA. Archives of the UTGOA alerts can be found at: http://www.egroups.com/messages/UTGOA To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: UTGOA-unsubscribe@egroups.com ________________________________________________________________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. - - ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 9 Nov 2000 15:58:41 -0700 From: charles hardy Subject: Fw:Electoral College Folks, especially if Bush ends up holding Florida and winning the election while Gore wins the popular vote, this article and any others in support of the Electoral College need to be spread far and wide. It's a long but wonderful read that provides one of the best and most simple defenses of the College in terms of a sports analogy I've ever seen. ================================================================== Charles C. Hardy Utah Email Coordinator--Women Against Gun Control - --------- Forwarded message ---------- You all may want to check out this spectacular article on the Electoral College. It goes over the easily understood mathematics of the EC and also contains some surprising arguments for federalism (localizing control)! http://www.avagara.com/e_c/reference/00012001.htm - - ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 09 Nov 2000 18:59:03 -0700 From: Scott Bergeson Subject: Re: Fw:Electoral College charles hardy provided: >You all may want to check out this spectacular article on the Electoral >College. It goes over the easily understood mathematics of the EC and also >contains some surprising arguments for federalism (localizing control)! >http://www.avagara.com/e_c/reference/00012001.htm This analysis neglects the most important aspect of the Electoral College in checking vote fraud. A State's vote is limited by its census enumeration, and even then is districted so 100% of Florida's vote reported for Gore helps him no more than a bare plurality. Scott - - ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2000 23:37:14 -0700 From: Scott Bergeson Subject: Sensible Media Control Measures http://www.sierratimes.com/edjwb111500.htm - - ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 16 Nov 2000 11:37:32 -0700 From: charles hardy Subject: More Olympic hypocrisy A[ologies to any who don't like forwards from the newspaper but this is too choice not to share. I wonder how the bi-athelon shooters feel about this mentality. From today's SLTrib at ================================================================== Charles C. Hardy Utah Email Coordinator--Women Against Gun Control Utah's 'Oly Guns' Idea Fails to Amuse IOC Thursday, November 16, 2000 BY CHRISTOPHER SMITH (c) 2000, THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE What may be the most valuable souvenirs of the 2002 Winter Olympics are secreted away in a vault at the Salt Lake County Sheriff's Department, probably never to be viewed by the public. The pair of sleek, black .40-caliber semiautomatic pistols are engraved in 24-karat gold with the Salt Lake 2002 Winter Games logo and the five Olympic rings. The guns are rare not only because there has never been an official Olympics handgun, but because there never will be, according to the International Olympic Committee. The prototype pistols are all that remains of a failed sponsorship deal to outfit Utah law enforcement officers conducting 2002 Games security with special "Olympic edition" SIG Sauer firearms. After Salt Lake County Sheriff Aaron Kennard and his staff spent more than two years winning the approval of the Salt Lake Organizing Committee and the U.S. Olympic Committee, the merchandise licensing contract was killed by the IOC in May, only hours before it was to have been signed. "I felt it was a good thing for law enforcement to have everybody with the same weapons. I had Sen. [Orrin] Hatch helping us and Mitt [Romney] approved it, but the IOC was very queasy and put the kabosh on it," said Kennard. "I was quite disappointed. Heaven forbid we do anything for law enforcement to thank these men and women for putting their lives on the line." Although Kennard figured the licensing deal could yield as much as $500,000 to SLOC, IOC Director of Marketing Michael Payne rejected it. SLOC asked IOC Vice President Dick Pound to intercede, but he "dismissed it outright," according to an IOC spokesman. "Please understand that the U.S. is unique in its relationship with firearms," said Franklin Servan-Schreiber, director of IOC communications in Lausanne, Switzerland. "The rest of the world would not understand, nor accept, the idea of a firearm with the Olympic rings on it." The Olympic movement has licensed almost any product, from champagne to condoms, as the "official" nonesuch of the games. Yet firearms, along with tobacco and hard liquor, remain taboo with the European-based IOC. "It's an excellent gun, a work of art, that would only be carried by the trained men and women protecting these Games," said Salt Lake County Sheriff's Range Master and Firearms Unit Director Nick Roberts, the catalyst for the proposal. "SIG wanted to help the cops, to do something good for law enforcement, just to be able to say in their brochures in 2001 that they were an official licensee." Roberts was boarding a plane May 17 to deliver the completed agreement to SIG Arms President Dieter Strich when he got the call that the IOC had abruptly nixed the deal. He and Kennard reworked the contract -- including removing the Olympic rings and just allowing a Salt Lake 2002 logo to be engraved -- and offered to go to Switzerland at their own expense to plead the case of law enforcement. But SLOC withdrew its support for the gun deal and never broached the subject with the IOC again. Through a spokeswoman, SLOC President Mitt Romney declined comment. The plan would have allowed SIG Arms, the North American subsidiary of Swiss gunmaker SIG Sauer, to manufacture at its New Hampshire plant between 5,000 and 6,000 commemorative sidearms of various calibers and models as specified by officers. Each would be engraved with Olympic logos and serial numbers identifying the particular law enforcement agency and limited-edition issue. The handguns were to be sold only to certified law enforcement personnel or agencies at a discounted price. For every gun sold, SIG Arms would pay a $30 royalty to SLOC, with a minimum guarantee of $150,000 for licensing rights to use the Salt Lake logo and Olympic rings on the weapons. Additionally, SIG Sauer was to donate 120 model 551 and 552 automatic tactical rifles, similar to AR-15 assault rifles, to be divvied up among SWAT teams of Salt Lake County, Salt Lake City, West Valley City, Ogden, Provo, Park City and the state Department of Public Safety. The company would also pay for training the SWAT teams in use of the rifles, and training a Salt Lake County Sheriff's employee as a factory armorer. "Every agency would get the training and rifles for free, and that way no matter what happens during the Olympics, the people protecting these Games would be working from the same sheet of music," said Roberts. "It was an administrator's dream." Kennard also saw the sidearms as a way of rewarding law enforcement officers who will be working long hours in potentially dangerous situations without leave or vacation during the Olympics. "These guns would have been probably framed or put in lock boxes after the Games, to be passed down to future generations as keepsakes," said the sheriff. "But the IOC didn't want the Olympics being associated in any way with weapons." Licensing a gunmaker may conflict with the IOC's mission of "Olympism," to promote peace through education and sports. However, guns are used in events such as biathlon and skeet, with several manufacturers boasting in advertisements and Web sites how many gold medals their weapons have won in Olympic competitions. And guns came to symbolize the Salt Lake bribery scandal. IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch noted last year that "Utah, Salt Lake City, is a state where guns are very popular. I have been to Salt Lake City twice and I got a gun both times." Those specially engraved firearms -- a pistol, a rifle and a shotgun -- were among 10 Browning Arms Co. guns purchased by the Salt Lake bid committee as gifts for IOC members. IOC members are barred from accepting gifts valued at more than $150, although Samaranch said he was immune from that limit. Today, the Browning guns given to Samaranch remain in their velvet-lined cases, piled beneath hundreds of other gifts in a storeroom at IOC headquarters in Switzerland. Kennard finds the IOC ruling baffling and frustrating. "It's a little silly because we already have our own guns and there will be armed security personnel and highly trained SWAT teams at the Olympics," he said. "Weapons will certainly be there, they just don't want to recognize it." ________________________________________________________________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. - - ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 16 Nov 2000 16:57:41 -0700 From: charles hardy Subject: OFF TOPIC--Seamstress reccomendation This is completely off-topic, but I think some here will find it useful. Besides that, good service is getting so rare that when I find it I like to reward it if possible. If anyone is in need of a good seamstress capable of doing leather repair, I can happily reccommend "Susan" who does business as "The Leather Surgeon." She works out of her home in Utah County, but at the present time has a weekly pick up / drop off at a location in Midvale. Her phone number is (801) 423-6410. I have no relation nor connection to her other than as a satisfied customer. She put a new nylon full liner and new elastic cuffs and waistband in my leather naval aviator style jacket. I found her prices, schedule, and quality of work to all be very good. ================================================================== Charles C. Hardy Utah Email Coordinator--Women Against Gun Control ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. - - ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 28 Nov 2000 16:36:20 -0700 From: charles hardy Subject: Workplace firearms policy Friends, It would seem that some time ago, with no fanfare and no input from employees, my employer changed and enlarged some of its official employment policies. One of those changed was the security policy. This policy--as required by certain federal regulations--has and does allow for the searching of employees' personal effects as they enter, leave, or are at the workplace. No problem there, we are talking about valuable proprietary information or even government classified documents. However, a new section has been added to this portion of the policy which lists "items normally prohibited" from company premises and property. You guessed it, "firearms, hunting weapons," and even "alchoholic beverages" are listed in this section along with the usual assortment of "illicit drugs, stolen property, explosives, cameras and other recording devices," etc. There is no exemption to the firearms restriction for holders of State issued Concealed Weapons Permits--only for sworn peace officers on official business. Further, the restrictions on such items includes not only the buildings themselves, but extend to the company owned (but completely open and uncontrolled) parking lots AND personal vehicles parked therein. Thus, my employer now has a policy in place which, officially, as currently written, allows for termination for the same reason as those 3 AOL employees: simply having an otherwise perfectly legal firearm in the trunk of your car in the company's parking lot. Or, similarly, to terminate an employee who runs down to a State Liquar Store on his lunch hour and buys some wine for dinner and leaves the unopened bottles in his car in the parking lot. Our buildings do require magnetic badges to open the doors, but these doors are, with few exceptions, sheet glass and most are unattended even during business hours, let alone after hours. We have no armed security of any kind, only unarmed "rent-a-cops" with radios, and certainly no metal detectors or other means to physically prevent someone with ill-intent from bringing weapons into our buildings. I've spoken to my HR department already and they've agreed to review the policy since the parking lot restriction on weapons in cars was apparantly not intended but just got lumped in since cars are subject to search for classified or other documents. Which is fine, I have no problem if they ever feel a need to search my car. I just don't want to get fired when they find a legal firearm in it. I may be able to make good ground on that front but have serious doubts as to my ability to persuade them to just go ahead and exempt permit holders outright, buildings and all. Without generating a lot of discussion on whether or not a company *should* be able to prohibit legally carried weapons or not--(Because, with all due respect, quite frankly at this point I don't care whether anyone else thinks they should or not; I've made up my mind on that point and I simply want to know whether I have a legal leg to stand on under current State law.)--has anyone out there faced a similar situation at their workplace? If so, were you able to reverse the policy or obtain an exeption? What reasons/arguments/tactics were most (or least) effective in persuading the employer? My best reading of current law leaves me to conclude that the law is ambigious on this point. Obviously, private home owners and churches can prohibit whatever they want. Clearly, anyplace of "public accommodation" like grocery stores or malls cannot prohibit legally carried weapons. But the position of offices not generally open to the public, but not really secure in any real sense of that word, seems a bit vague. IOW, I can probably find an attorney to interpret it my way, but their company attorney's will have no problem interpreting it their way. Can anyone reccommend an attorney who is knowledgable in these matters and friendly to the gun owner's point of view? Honestly, I don't care to use an attorney unless push-comes-to-shove and I am actually terminated for refusal to promise to comply with the policy as written, at which point I'd want to pursue a wrongful termination suit. But I recognize that good legal advice may well prevent it from ever coming to that, so I am open. Finally, if anyone knows of any employers in the SL valley or Northern Utah County area who are in need of digital ASIC designers (Masters Degree and 5 years experience) and who have competitive compensation/benefits plans AND are either silent about or friendly to legal gun possession in their company policies, please let me know, just in case. Thanks for any info. Feel free to reply privately to me at if you want to for any reason. ================================================================== Charles C. Hardy Utah Email Coordinator--Women Against Gun Control ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. - - ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 28 Nov 2000 19:38:19 -0500 From: "Chad Leigh, Pengar Enterprises, Inc. and Shire.Net LLC" Subject: Re: Workplace firearms policy - --On Tuesday, November 28, 2000 4:36 PM -0700 charles hardy wrote: > My best reading of current law leaves me to conclude that the law is > ambigious on this point. Obviously, private home owners and churches can > prohibit whatever they want. Clearly, anyplace of "public accommodation" > like grocery stores or malls cannot prohibit legally carried weapons. > But the position of offices not generally open to the public, but not > really secure in any real sense of that word, seems a bit vague. IOW, I > can probably find an attorney to interpret it my way, but their company > attorney's will have no problem interpreting it their way. I don't know what the laws really say and I am not a lawyer but a case could probably be made that companies are "places of public accomodation" since they have to comply with all the other inane laws about discrimination etc. Chad Pengar Enterprises, Inc. and Shire.Net LLC Web and Macintosh Consulting -- full service web hosting Chad Leigh chad@pengar.com chad@shire.net - - ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 28 Nov 2000 18:36:40 -0800 From: Joe Waldron Subject: Re: Workplace firearms policy charles hardy wrote: > > > My best reading of current law leaves me to conclude that the law is > ambigious on this point. Obviously, private home owners and churches can > prohibit whatever they want. Clearly, anyplace of "public accommodation" > like grocery stores or malls cannot prohibit legally carried weapons. > But the position of offices not generally open to the public, but not > really secure in any real sense of that word, seems a bit vague. IOW, I > can probably find an attorney to interpret it my way, but their company > attorney's will have no problem interpreting it their way. > I can't speak for Utah, nor am I an attorney. The issue is (unfortunately) settled in Washington (state) courts. The issue is one of conflicting rights: the individual RKBA versus the (property) rights of the employer to establish conditions of the workplace. Case law here comes down on the side of the employer. The employee has the option of choosing other employment, but for a variety of reasons, the employer is given preference here. You can talk about the employer assuming liability for your safety should he prevent you from providing your own, but that only works AFTER you are injured in an incident and IF the civil trial jury agrees with you. I know of several companies with similar policies, but who choose to ignore it when it comes to parking areas. More or less a "don't ask, don't tell" solution. The problem here is that if some nutcase (employee) with a gun in the parking lot goes off the deep end, the company will be sued for failure to enforce a stated policy. Joe W - - ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 28 Nov 2000 18:36:40 -0800 From: Joe Waldron Subject: Re: Workplace firearms policy charles hardy wrote: > > > My best reading of current law leaves me to conclude that the law is > ambigious on this point. Obviously, private home owners and churches can > prohibit whatever they want. Clearly, anyplace of "public accommodation" > like grocery stores or malls cannot prohibit legally carried weapons. > But the position of offices not generally open to the public, but not > really secure in any real sense of that word, seems a bit vague. IOW, I > can probably find an attorney to interpret it my way, but their company > attorney's will have no problem interpreting it their way. > I can't speak for Utah, nor am I an attorney. The issue is (unfortunately) settled in Washington (state) courts. The issue is one of conflicting rights: the individual RKBA versus the (property) rights of the employer to establish conditions of the workplace. Case law here comes down on the side of the employer. The employee has the option of choosing other employment, but for a variety of reasons, the employer is given preference here. You can talk about the employer assuming liability for your safety should he prevent you from providing your own, but that only works AFTER you are injured in an incident and IF the civil trial jury agrees with you. I know of several companies with similar policies, but who choose to ignore it when it comes to parking areas. More or less a "don't ask, don't tell" solution. The problem here is that if some nutcase (employee) with a gun in the parking lot goes off the deep end, the company will be sued for failure to enforce a stated policy. Joe W - - ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 30 Nov 2000 13:28:06 -0700 From: Scott Bergeson Subject: FW: "Give It to Them Straight" by John Ross, Author, Unintended Consequences "Give It to Them Straight" by John Ross, Author, Unintended Consequences The biggest mistake we make is failing to take the moral high ground on our issue, and letting our enemies define the terms. - ------------------ THEY SAY: "We'd be better off if no one had guns." WE SAY: "You can never succeed at that, criminals will always get guns." (FLAW: The implication here is that if you COULD succeed, it would be a reasonable plan.) WE SHOULD SAY: "So, you want to institute a system where the weak and elderly are at the mercy of the strong, the lone are at the mercy of the gang. You want to give violent criminals a government guarantee that citizens are disarmed. Sorry, that's unacceptable. Better that we should require every citizen to carry a gun." - ------------------ THEY SAY: "Those assault rifles have no sporting purpose. You don't need a 30-round magazine fro hunting deer -- they're only for killing people." WE SAY: "I compete in DCM High Power with my AR-15. You need a large-capacity magazine for their course of fire. My SKS is a fine deer rifle, and I've never done anything to give my government reason not to trust me, blah, blah, blah." (FLAW: You have implicitly conceded that it is OK to ban any gun with no sporting use. And eventually they can replace your sporting arms with arcade-game substitutes.) WE SHOULD SAY: "Your claim that 'they're only for killing people' is imprecise. A gas chamber or electric chair is designed for killing people, and these devices obviously serve different functions than guns. To be precise, a high capacity military-type rifle or handgun is designed for CONFLICT. When I need to protect myself and my freedom, I want the most reliable, most durable, highest capacity weapon possible. The only thing hunting and target shooting have to do with freedom is that they're good practice." - ------------------ THEY SAY: "If we pass this CCW law, it will be like the Wild West, with shoot-outs all the time for fender-benders, in bars, etc. We need to keep guns off the streets. If doing so saves just one life, it will be worth it." WE SAY: "Studies have shown blah blah blah." (flaw: You have implied that if studies showed CCW laws equaled more heat-of-passion shooting, CCW should be illegal. WE SHOULD SAY: "Although no state has experienced what you are describing, that's not important. What is important is our freedom. If saving lives is more important that anything else, why don't we throw out the Fifth amendment? We have the technology to administer an annual truth serum session to the entire population. We'd catch the criminals and mistaken arrest would be a thing of the past. How does that sound?" - ------------------ THEY SAY: "I don't see what the big deal is about a five day waiting period." WE SAY: "It doesn't do any good, criminals don't wait five days, it's a waste of resources blah blah blah." (FLAW: You have implied that if waiting periods DID reduce crime, they would be a good idea.) WE SHOULD SAY: "How about a 24-hour cooling-off period with a government review board before the news is reported? Wouldn't that prevent lives from being ruined, e.g. Richard Jewell? And the fact that this law applies to people who ALREADY own a handgun tells me that it's not about crime prevention, it's about harassment. Personally, I want to live in a free society, not a 'safe' one with the government as chief nanny." - ------------------ THEY SAY: "In 1776, citizens had muskets. No one ever envisioned these deadly AK-47s. I suppose you think we should all have atomic bombs." WE SAY: "Uh, well, uh . . ." WE SHOULD SAY: "Actually, the Founders discussed this very issue - it's in the Federalist Papers. They wanted the citizens to have the same guns as were the issue weapons of soldiers in a modern infantry. Soldiers in 1776 were each issued muskets, but not the large field pieces with exploding shells. In 1996, soldiers are issued M16s, M249s, etc. but not howitzers and atomic bombs. Furthermore, according to your logic, the laws governing freedom of the press are only valid for newspapers whose presses are hand-operated and use fixed type. After all, no one in 1776 foresaw offset printing or electricity, let alone TV and satellite transmission." - ------------------ THEY SAY: "We require licenses on cars, but the powerful NRA screams bloody murder if anyone ever suggests licensing these weapons of mass destruction." WE SAY: Nothing, usually, and just sit there looking dumb. WE SHOULD SAY: "You know, driving is a luxury, where firearms ownership is a right secured by the Constitution. But let's put that aside for a moment. It's interesting you compared guns and vehicles. Here in the U.S. you can AT ANY AGE go into any state and buy as many motorcycles, cars, or trucks of any size as you want, and you don't need to do anything if you don't use them on public property. If you DO want to use them on public property, you can get a license at age 16. This license is good in all 50 states. NO waiting periods, no background checks, nothing. If we treated guns like cars, a fourteen-year-old could go into any state and legally buy handguns, machine guns, cannons, whatever, cash and carry, and shoot them all with complete legality on private property. And at age 16 he could get a state license good anywhere in the country to shoot these guns on public property." - ------------------ Final comment, useful with most all arguments: YOU SAY: "You know, I'm amazed at how little you care about your grandchildren. I would have thought they meant more to you than anything." THEY SAY: "Huh?" YOU SAY: "Well, passing this proposal won't have a big immediate effect. I mean, in the next couple of years, neither Bill Clinton nor Newt Gingrich is going to open up internment camps like Roosevelt did fifty-odd years ago. But think of your worst nightmare of a political leader. Isn't it POSSIBLE that a person like that MIGHT be in control here some time in the next 30, 40, or 50 years, with 51% of the Congress and 51% of the Senate behind him? If that does happen, do you REALLY what your grandchildren to have been stripped of their final guarantee of freedom? And do you really want them to have been stripped of it BY YOU?" - - ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 5 Dec 2000 15:07:40 -0700 From: charles hardy Subject: Anti-self-defense Editorial in Today's SL Tribune Well, I knew the well reasoned, pro-freedom editorials from the SLTrib couldn't last forever. The following editorial appeared in today's (Tuesday, 5 December) SL Tribune. While I know there are those who believe an employer's property rights trump an employee's RKBA, I also know there are many who believe otherwise. Bear in mind that most of us who work full time are currently spending upwards of one-third of our time in the workplace. This represents nearly half of all waking hours and easily the VAST majority of all time away from home. How much does your RKBA and your right to defend yourself REALLY mean if it can so easily be abrogated for the majority of time you are away from your house? Now, if you happen to use mass transit, or if your employer happens to extend their anti-gun policy to the parking lot, you are not only unarmed and defenseless while actually at work, but also while commuting to/from work. Also bear in mind that current Workers' Comp law places major restrictions on an employee's (or his/her survivors') ability to sue an employer for injuries in the workplace. Letters to the editor of the SLTrib may be emailed to . Opinion pieces may be submitted to . In both cases, emails with attachements will be deleted. Material must be submitted as plain text in the body of the message. Also, postal address, name, and phone number are required. Only name and city and State are published. Full guidelines available at Editorial at . Guns at Work Employers should be able to ban firearms in the workplace, even when such a prohibition conflicts with the state's concealed-carry law. A lawsuit now under way could settle the issue in employers' favor, but the circumstances of the case may not lend themselves to a clearcut resolution, or the verdict could go the other way. Ultimately, the Legislature should amend the concealed-carry law to give employers unambiguous authority to ban firearms on their premises. America Online fired three workers at its Ogden call center for having firearms in their cars at a company-leased parking lot. Two of the plaintiffs are former AOL employees who hold state permits allowing them to a carry concealed weapon. They contend that the state's concealed-weapons law allows permit holders to carry their firearms "without restriction," including at work, except in secure areas of airports, mental-health facilities, jails and courthouses. AOL contends that the former employees agreed to the company's no-guns policy when they were hired. The company also argues that under the state's at-will employment law, the company can fire employees arbitrarily, so long as the termination is not contrary to the public interest, such as in whistle-blower cases. The problem with this case, however, is that it may not be the best vehicle to settle the scope of the state's concealed-weapons law. The three plaintiffs were not fired for carrying concealed weapons into AOL's buildings. Rather, they were fired for possessing unloaded firearms in their vehicles, which is legal, in a parking lot AOL does not own, but leases, and which is used to access other businesses as well, a fact that makes it hardly exclusive to AOL. In this case, the three plaintiffs had unloaded firearms in their vehicles because they were going target shooting after work. This is an innocuous and perfectly legitimate pastime, and the situation was little different than employees having golf clubs or skis in the trunk. There are many Utah employers that have policies prohibiting employees and others from bringing lethal weapons onto their premises. This newspaper has such a policy, but it is silent about employees' private vehicles or where they choose to park. This case may help to clarify the reach of Utah's concealed-carry law in the workplace. But depending on the outcome, the Legislature may need to take another look at the law. ================================================================== Charles C. Hardy Utah Email Coordinator--Women Against Gun Control ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. - - ------------------------------ End of utah-firearms-digest V2 #199 ***********************************