D.C. Court of Appeals Blocks Reckless Lawsuit

January 13, 2008

D.C. Court of Appeals Blocks Reckless Lawsuit On January 10, the District Columbia Court of Appeals found that the “Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act” (PLCAA) blocked lawsuits under D.C.’s “Strict Liability Act.”  

D.C. Files Brief in Heller Case:  On January 4, the District of Columbia filed its brief in District of Columbia v. Heller, now before the U.S. Supreme Court. The District is appealing the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit’s ruling that found D.C.’s bans on handguns, on having any gun assembled for use within the home, and on carrying a firearm within the home without a permit, violate the Second Amendment. 

NRA-ILA Investigating Citigroup Issues:  In late December, 2007, a large and well-known firearms dealer was informed by a company called First Data — which operates as Citi Merchant Services under license from Citigroup, Inc. — that it would no longer handle the dealer’s credit card processing business.   

California Appeals Court Strikes Down San Francisco Handgun Ban!  On January 9, the California Court of Appeals agreed with a lower court ruling that struck down San Francisco’s handgun ban as a violation of California’s state preemption law.  The ruling was in response to an NRA-led challenge to the ban.   

Outrage of the Week:  This week’s outrage comes courtesy of columnist Bernd Debusmann of Reuters News Service, and an article he recently penned.  This story, masquerading as a legitimate news article, might as well be an anti-gun organization’s press release.   

The battle for liberty is alive, and well.

VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES IN PUEBLO

January 13, 2008

Volunteers are needed to assist the Colorado Division of Wildlife (DOW) manage Colorado’s wildlife and perform a variety of duties that benefit wildlife.
 
The DOW will host a new volunteer orientation January 19 from 10 a.m. until noon in the auditorium at Lake Pueblo State Park.
 
This two-hour session will cover different volunteer opportunities throughout the year where people can get involved in local wildlife projects. 
 
DOW volunteers assist in a variety of ways.  A sample of the kinds of projects include: Eagle Day Feb. 2; wildlife transport (training is 2/16); hatchery tours (training in March); walleye spawn (3/15); ongoing projects at the Bosque del Oso and Pueblo State Wildlife Areas; and bluebird and osprey habitat improvement projects (March training). 
 
The orientation will highlight different volunteer opportunities available for 2007 and will give registered volunteers the chance to sign up for future projects.  For more information, contact Jena Sanchez at (719) 227-5204. 
 
The Colorado Division of Wildlife is the state agency responsible for managing wildlife and wildlife habitat, as well as providing wildlife related recreation and maintaining a balance between human activities and wildlife.  Funding for the Division of Wildlife comes from the sale of hunting and fishing licenses and the habitat fees collected in conjunction with those sales.  The Division does not receive tax dollars from the Colorado general fund.

For more information about Division of Wildlife go to: http://wildlife.state.co.us.

COLORADO RESIDENTS URGED NOT TO FEED DEER

January 13, 2008

muledeerbuck2.jpgThe Colorado Division of Wildlife urges state residents and visitors not to feed deer that are hanging around their yards or property.
 
“Deer require a very specific diet,” explained Don Masden, a biologist for the Colorado Division of Wildlife. “If they eat the wrong food they’ll just die with a full stomach.”
 
Deer digest very slowly and if they eat the wrong types of food and too much food they will not be able to digest or pass the material and they will die. So, deer should not be fed hay, pet food, fruits, vegetables or any type of table scraps.
 
If you have sage brush or other shrubs on your property, knock the snow off of those to expose some natural food for the animals.
 
“Feeding deer the wrong food will cause more harm than good,” Masden said.
 
Deer are most affected by the severe winter conditions that western Colorado is experiencing this year. But no food should be provided to any big game, officials emphasized.
 
Elk and bighorn sheep are better adapted to survive severe winters. Elk can eat a wider variety of material and because of their size can push and dig through deep snow to find food. Bighorn sheep live in steep areas that don’t hold snow, so they are not as affected by the snow depth.
 
The DOW will be conducting a winter feeding operation aimed at deer in the Gunnison Basin. A feed developed specifically for deer that has been formulated by DOW scientists will be used.
 
The DOW office will attempt to make some of that feed available to property owners. However, feed will not be delivered to the Gunnison office until sometime next week. Residents are asked to wait until mid-week to inquire about available feed. 
 
So far deer in the Gunnison Basin are in pretty good shape given the weather conditions. But based on past experience, wildlife managers know that the weather could soon start to take its toll on deer.
 
The DOW is looking for volunteers to help with the feeding effort. Those who can volunteer for several days should call Jennifer Kleffner, southwest volunteer coordinator, at (970)375-6704.

For more information about Division of Wildlife go to: http://wildlife.state.co.us.

Men and Abortion « Petunias

January 13, 2008

Men and Abortion « Petunias

Funny that one position that is, or could be held by men was not even mentioned. If a woman can elect to have an abortion or not to. Then why can’t a man demand an abortion, or not be held responsible for child support if she refuses it? I personally know of at least a dozen men that were seduced as it were into eighteen plus years of paying for a womans life of leisure.

Lessons to be learned? Keep it in your pants men.

Report: 121 Veterans Linked to Killings « Noor’s List#comment-4

January 13, 2008

schumer-weasel.jpgReport: 121 Veterans Linked to Killings « Noor’s List#comment-4

Looks an awful lot like the utter hogwash that was so widely distributed by the media about Viet Nam Veterans during the seventies. Same people, same warped ideology, and probably the very same lies.

McCain …

January 12, 2008
Mark Levin does a fair job, but only fair when reporting on McCain. What about his assaults on RKBA for example? check www.goa.org to get the real picture.

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The Real McCain Record
Obstacles in the way of conservative support.

By Mark R. Levin

There’s a reason some of John McCain’s conservative supporters avoid discussing his record. They want to talk about his personal story, his position on the surge, his supposed electability. But whenever the rest of his career comes up, the knee-jerk reply is to characterize the inquiries as attacks.

The McCain domestic record is a disaster. To say he fought spending, most particularly earmarks, is to nibble around the edges and miss the heart of the matter. For starters, consider:

McCain-Feingold — the most brazen frontal assault on political speech since Buckley v. Valeo.

McCain-Kennedy — the most far-reaching amnesty program in American history.

McCain-Lieberman — the most onerous and intrusive attack on American industry — through reporting, regulating, and taxing authority of greenhouse gases — in American history.

McCain-Kennedy-Edwards — the biggest boon to the trial bar since the tobacco settlement, under the rubric of a patients’ bill of rights.

McCain-Reimportantion of Drugs — a significant blow to pharmaceutical research and development, not to mention consumer safety (hey Rudy, pay attention, see link).

And McCain’s stated opposition to the Bush 2001 and 2003 tax cuts was largely based on socialist, class-warfare rhetoric — tax cuts for the rich, not for the middle class. The public record is full of these statements. Today, he recalls only his insistence on accompanying spending cuts.

As chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, McCain was consistently hostile to American enterprise, from media and pharmaceutical companies to technology and energy companies.

McCain also led the Gang of 14, which prevented the Republican leadership in the Senate from mounting a rule change that would have ended the systematic use (actual and threatened) of the filibuster to prevent majority approval of judicial nominees.

And then there’s the McCain defense record.

His supporters point to essentially one policy strength, McCain’s early support for a surge and counterinsurgency. It has now evolved into McCain taking credit for forcing the president to adopt General David Petreaus’s strategy. Where’s the evidence to support such a claim?

Moreover, Iraq is an important battle in our war against the Islamo-fascist threat. But the war is a global war, and it most certainly includes the continental United States, which, after all, was struck on 9/11. How does McCain fare in that regard?

McCain-ACLU — the unprecedented granting of due-process rights to unlawful enemy combatants (terrorists).

McCain has repeatedly called for the immediate closing of Guantanamo Bay and the introduction of al-Qaeda terrorists into our own prisons — despite the legal rights they would immediately gain and the burdens of managing such a dangerous population.

While McCain proudly and repeatedly points to his battles with Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, who had to rebuild the U.S. military and fight a complex war, where was McCain in the lead-up to the war — when the military was being dangerously downsized by the Clinton administration and McCain’s friend, former Secretary of Defense Bill Cohen? Where was McCain when the CIA was in desperate need of attention? Also, McCain was apparently in the dark about al-Qaeda like most of Washington, despite a decade of warnings.

My fingers are crossed that at the next debate, either Fred Thompson or Mitt Romney will find a way to address McCain’s record. (Mike Huckabee won’t, as he is apparently in the tank for him.)

Mark R. Levin served as chief of staff to Attorney General Edwin Meese in the Reagan administration, and he is a nationally syndicated radio talk show host.

Musharraf: Keep U.S. troops out of Pakistan

January 12, 2008

The Pakastani strong man appears to be grasping at straws to maintain any popular support for his continued existence in this world.

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan – Despite the growing threat from Islamic extremists, President Pervez Musharraf said U.S. troops are not welcome to join the fight against al-Qaida on Pakistani soil.

Musharraf warned in an interview published Friday that Pakistan would resist any unilateral military action by the United States against militants sheltering in its lawless, tribal regions close to the Afghan border.

“I challenge anybody coming into our mountains,” he told Singapore’s The Straits Times in the interview, notable for its unusually strident language. “They would regret that day.”

source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22613874/

Get a clue fearless leader. Without western support, you are just another piece of infidel meat. Your nation is factionalized beyond belief, and that’s not even counting the Tali-ban / al Qaeda coalition that want your head on a stick. You should be begging for American and British Empire Special Forces to come to Pakistan, and do what they do best. Personally, I hope that they do stay out of your hell hole, at least until you have been removed from the Chessboard of life. After that? Then they will have no reason at all not to hunt down the terrorist’s.

HOW TO CATCH WILD PIGS « D=S

January 12, 2008

HOW TO CATCH WILD PIGS « D=S

I stumbled across this while web surfing today. It is a take off from something that I was told as a child and the message is still important today, if not more so. All to often, men simply act in what they perceive to be in their best interest for the moment. Never bothering to look past what is directly in front of their noses.

Now, one might believe that this is simply a function of youth and inexperience. If that were so then people like John McCain and Fred Thompson wouldn’t say or do some of the stupid things that they do. Rather, they are the ones that are subtly building the fence.

Front Sight, simply the best that there is!

January 12, 2008

front-sight-logo.jpgJanuary 11, 2008

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DIVISION OF WILDLIFE TO CONDUCT EMERGENCY BIG GAME FEEDING OPERATION IN GUNNISON AREA

January 11, 2008

bull-elk1.jpgDIVISION OF WILDLIFE TO CONDUCT EMERGENCY BIG GAME FEEDING OPERATION IN GUNNISON AREA


The Colorado Division of Wildlife is planning to start emergency feeding operations for big game animals in the Gunnison Basin as soon as possible.
 
Deer will be targeted primarily because they are most affected by adverse weather conditions. Feed and hay will also be provided to bighorn sheep, pronghorn and elk.
 
Providing feed to wildlife requires a major effort and the DOW is seeking volunteers to help. DOW wildlife managers are now working on the logistics of the operation. While some feeding will start as soon as material is available, the effort will increase as feed – specially formulated for deer – becomes available from a mill next week.
 
Wildlife officials are concerned that deep snow and extremely cold temperatures in the Gunnison basin are causing deer to deplete their energy reserves too early this winter. Without supplemental food, mortality could reach unacceptable levels. The snowpack in the Gunnison Basin is now at 143 percent of average. It is difficult for deer to push through deep, crusted snow to get to natural food sources. Big game animals lose 30 percent of their body weight during a normal winter. When they lose more than that their survival can be severely compromised.
 
In the Gunnison area, there are about 260 bighorn sheep in several herds where feed could effectively be delivered. Bighorns winter in steep terrain that doesn’t usually hold snow, so they are not as affected by the snow depth.
 
About 600 pronghorn also live in the area and efforts will be made to feed them. Unfortunately, the DOW has had limited success in getting pronghorn to take supplemental feed. The DOW will attempt to feed them with smaller wafers that have worked previously. 
 
“So far, deer appear to be in pretty good condition for this time of year given the current weather and snow depth,” explained J Wenum, area wildlife manager in Gunnison.
“We haven’t seen any weather-related mortality to speak of yet. But from experience we know that the snow conditions could soon start to take a toll on deer.”
 
Officials from the Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Forest Service and Gunnison County are helping the DOW develop strategies for the emergency feeding plan. The DOW would also like to work with private landowners to establish feeding sites.
 
Deer have more specific nutritional needs than elk and cannot survive on hay. The feed formulation that will be used was developed after extensive nutritional research by DOW years ago.  Ingredients include wheat and other grains, dehydrated alfalfa and cottonseed meal. The feed is formulated into wafers so that it will stay on top of the snow. Deer will receive about 3 pounds of the feed per day.
 
“We will not be trying to feed every deer in the Gunnison Basin. We will be looking for areas where the animals are most concentrated and where we can derive the most benefit,” Wenum said.
 
Wildlife managers will work to keep deer and elk separated. The DOW plans to provide hay to elk – but not because they need it to survive. Elk are aggressive and will quickly displace deer if easy food is available. Placing hay in specific areas will help keep them away from deer feeding areas. Hay may also be placed to move elk away from ranchers’ hay stacks or highways.
 
Because deer derive very little nutritional value from hay, homeowners and landowners are urged not to feed hay to deer that gather on their property.
 
The feeding operation will probably continue through February or until conditions moderate. By early March officials hope the weather will be getting warmer and that natural forage areas will open up. Big game animals prefer natural forage and will move to those areas as soon as they become available.
 
Previous winter feeding operations were conducted in the Gunnison area in 1984 and 1997.
 
Volunteers will be needed for a variety of jobs. To haul feed the DOW needs trailers and a substantial number of vehicles that can handle snowy conditions, especially snowmobiles, snowcats and four-wheel drive vehicles. Volunteers also are needed who can travel through deep snow on cross-country skis and snowshoes.
 
Volunteers who want to help in the Gunnison area should contact Jennifer Kleffner, southwest region volunteer coordinator at (970)375-6704.
 
Wildlife managers are also monitoring weather and snow conditions in other areas of western Colorado, including the Eagle Valley, the Aspen area, the Meeker/Craig area and the lower Yampa Valley. 
 
Throughout western Colorado travelers are urged to watch carefully for wildlife along roads. As snow accumulates animals will move toward open areas. The DOW also requests that people avoid disturbing wildlife at this time of year. Do not attempt to get close to animals; observe them at a distance using binoculars or a spotting scope. If they are forced to move they will expend energy unnecessarily.
 
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The Colorado Division of Wildlife is the state agency responsible for managing wildlife and its habitat, as well as providing wildlife related recreation. The Division is funded through hunting and fishing license fees, federal grants and Colorado Lottery proceeds through Great Outdoors Colorado.
 

For more information about Division of Wildlife go to: http://wildlife.state.co.us.