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This evening, along North Commercial in Harrisonville, Missouri.
15 Saturday Dec 2012
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This evening, along North Commercial in Harrisonville, Missouri.
15 Saturday Dec 2012
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A petition was started today at the White House site:
We petition the Obama Administration to:
Immediately address the issue of gun control through the introduction of legislation in Congress.
The goal of this petition is to force the Obama Administration to produce legislation that limits access to guns. While a national dialogue is critical, laws are the only means in which we can reduce the number of people murdered in gun related deaths.
Powerful lobbying groups allow the ownership of guns to reach beyond the Constitution’s intended purpose of the right to bear arms. Therefore, Congress must act on what is stated law, and face the reality that access to firearms reaches beyond what the Second Amendment intends to achieve.
The signatures on this petition represent a collective demand for a bipartisan discussion resulting in a set of laws that regulates how a citizen obtains a gun.
Created: Dec 14, 2012
Issues: Civil Rights and Liberties, FirearmsSignatures needed by January 13, 2013 to reach goal of 25,000 0
Total signatures on this petition 37,488
In one day.
Here is a sample today’s petitions:
We petition the Obama Administration to:
A gun in every classroom. Arm every teacher and principal to defend themselves and their students during an attack.
513 SignaturesSeriously, respectfully and quickly work to end the violence committed by assault weapons.
759 SignaturesToday IS the day: Sponsor strict gun control laws in the wake of the CT school massacre
5,830 SignaturesStart the process to enact Federal Gun control reforms.
3,022 SignaturesMake Mental Health a National Emergency
1,792 Signaturesbegin a national conversation on sensible gun control.
2,581 Signaturescreate a national commission to review our gun laws and recommend legislation to address the epidemic of gun violence.
1,972 SignaturesSet a date and time to have a conversation about gun policy in the United States.
10,520 SignaturesImmediately address the issue of gun control through the introduction of legislation in Congress.
38,591 Signatures
14 Friday Dec 2012
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By @BGinKC
About twenty years ago, when the NRA went ’round the bend and came down on the side of assault weapons instead of common sense, we pulled into the driveway of my in-laws place in the country and my father-in-law was in his pick-up with a razor blade, scraping the NRA sticker out of his window. He had already mailed his letter resigning his lifetime membership. He was a Marine in Korea. He knows what machine guns are for – killing people – and civilians don’t need them.
By the time we left that day, my husband and I had both written letters resigning our lifetime memberships and I used the same razor blade to scrape the decal out of the back window of my car.
This day has been twenty years in the making but the shooting in an elementary school today in Connecticut proved to be the straw that broke the camel’s back…I will never, let me repeat, NEVER cast a vote for any politician that has the blessing of the NRA. If a Democrat on my ballot has their endorsement or a high rating, I will not vote for anyone in that race, because if you have the support of the NRA, you can’t possibly represent me.
It is time for reasonable people to stand up to the authoritarian goons at the NRA who have been using fear and paranoia (to be blunt, terrorist tactics) for years to cow politicians.
No more. They don’t even represent a majority of gun owners, so their influence needs to be sharply curtailed.
Every week, it seems, there is a mass shooting – and this week there were two. The people who were killed in Oregon at the start of the week are barely cold, and on the other side of the country, we have 26 people dead, eighteen of them children who were in their elementary school classrooms.
Every time it happens, the gun nuts – and the White House – somberly intone that ‘now isn’t the time to talk about gun control with emotions running high.’
So when can we have that conversation?
Mass shootings happen so frequently that half the nation is in a perpetual state of mourning and the other half is inured to it and it doesn’t even register.
I don’t ever want to hear another brainless twit say “guns don’t kill people, people kill people,” because that is a bullshit argument made by gullible fools. Guns sure as hell do kill people, because they make it possible for a person to “run up the score” like the shooter in Connecticut did this morning when, after killing his father in New Jersey, he went to the kindergarten classroom where his mother was teaching and killed her and eighteen of her students.
Even before the death-toll was known, people were defending the poor innocent guns that were being maligned.
One person even tried to pass it off as inevitable and used the shooting in Norway to bolster their argument, because Norway has some of the toughest gun control laws in the world. The only problem with that argument is that Norway has had one mass shooting in years, while the United States has had two just this week.
That same person then switched gears and tried to say that drunk drivers kill people, too, and no one is trying to take away cars or alcohol.
There is no gentle way to say this…that is a bullshit argument. Ever heard of a little organization called MADD? They got drunk driving treated seriously and got laws passed that made the perpetrators pay dearly – financially if they are caught driving, and with years of their lives if they hurt or kill someone.
Let me be clear before I go on – I’m the resident gun nut in these parts, which we define as “someone who owns way more guns than they need but not nearly as many as they want.” When I was growing up, guns were part of our lives and we used them judiciously. No one hunted for sport. Everyone ate what they hunted, and I knew people who ate because they hunted. I knew people who filled their freezers with rabbit and quail and pheasant, but sat out deer season; but I also knew people who planned their entire year around deer season and never hunted birds or small game. No one threatened anyone else with them. They were respected for what they were – they were made to kill. Gun control may have meant that you could hit what you were shooting at, but it was also meant you could control your temper. It was simply understood in that culture that you just didn’t shoot at people. Period.
Then I grew up.
I took a career path that put that reality up against the one filled with the carnage that I dealt with every day when I put on my uniform and went to work saving the lives of people who, for the most part, ended up crossing paths with me because they were dumbasses, or at least lacked the good judgment to keep themselves out of danger. It really is that simple. When it comes to gunshot wounds, not that many are random, and the number of innocent victims is dwarfed by the number of people engaging in – ahem – high risk activity who end up catching a bullet.
When my realities collided, the tricorn hat got knocked off the Second Amendment, and I started putting firearms in their proper context.
Guns changed society in immeasurable ways. Guns changed geopolitics when a single shot from a handgun felled Archduke Franz Ferdinand and the end result was a world war.
A mail-order deer rifle killed an American president and yet another handgun killed that President’s brother just months before he would have been elected President himself.
When I say that guns changed everything, I am not exaggerating. They are the biggest god-damned deal mankind ever unleashed upon ourselves.
If you don’t think about the fact that you have in your hands an instrument that has the raw, unbridled power to change the course of history in the blink of an eye every time you touch one…you should not have access to a gun.
There is no question that we have a serious problem in this nation with gun crimes.
We all need a gut-check.
We need to start by fully enforcing the laws on the books, but we can do something more, and we ought to, even though it will be politically volatile and make the right wing freak out and buy even more guns and ammo in their never-ending preparation for the always-coming (when there is a Democrat in the White House) revolution.
We need to bring a basic framework of laws into standard compliance across all 50 states, with common sense adaptations. States need to share information. Thorough background checks for all firearms purchases should be mandatory, including psychiatric/psychological occurrences. I would go so far as to mandate that private sales, those currently unregulated, would have to take place through the county sheriffs office; and any unregistered sale proven in a court of law carry a stiff penalty, with mandatory prison time and the loss of the right to bear arms after a conviction.
I have been saying this for years: All the states need to have the same basic framework of gun laws because there are a few “donor states” with lax laws that flood the streets with cheap guns and that is why we have an epidemic of gun crimes clogging our ERs and our court dockets.
Just ten states supply most of the guns used in street crimes, and Mississippi, West Virginia and Kentucky at the top of that list.
We can’t make guns go away. And I don’t want them to. But we can – and should – make new ones harder to get, and we could control the ones that are out there by actually enforcing the laws that are on the books right now and getting serious about bringing the ones that are out there currently untraceable into the system one-by-one. It ain’t ideal, but it’s a start – until smarter people than me can get serious about this. Which will require standing up to the NRA and telling them to stop whining like whipped pups that the Second Amendment is under assault because the majority of people – who are not NRA members – want gun owners to have some rules they have to follow or they lose their right to carry weapons that were designed with one purpose – killing – in mind.
A good place to start would be with passing a basic federal gun control law that established purchase limits (who the hell needs 25 handguns at once that isn’t a licensed dealer? I’ll tell you who…an unlicensed dealer.) But the odds of something common sense like that happening are nil in this political climate, with teabillies in high dudgeon and an islamofascistcommunistsocialistnazipaganmooslimkenyanusurper in the White House.
So hold the states hostage and point their own guns at them to do so. If they take in more money than they send to Washington, limit the amount of money that flows back to them to dollar-for-dollar until they toughen up their gun laws at the state level. That ought to get the attention of states like Mississippi, West Virginia and Kentucky in a right-quick hurry.
Don’t try to tell me that “now isn’t the time” to have a serious conversation about guns and gun control because it’s too soon. If we don’t start it now, when can we? It’s always going to be “too soon” because there is always another one of these vile, reprehensible acts.
If eighteen dead children, most of them kindergarteners, isn’t enough to start the conversation, we’re officially pathological as a nation.
As for me, I will never again cast a vote for any politician that seeks the endorsement of, or even has a high rating from, the NRA.
The NRA doesn’t even represent the majority of gun owners, but they have disproportionate influence on our elections. They trade in fear and paranoia – and so far as I am concerned, they are a domestic terrorist organization and should be treated as such.
14 Friday Dec 2012
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A few days ago, via Twitter:
Rep. Vicky Hartzler @RepHartzler
The ‘fiscal cliff’ is the President’s own making for political gain. The House passed bills last summer stopping the tax hikes & cuts! 7:12 AM – 11 Dec 12
Today, the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press released a poll with a sample of 1,503 adults taken December 5-9, 2012. The margin of error is 2.9%.
Released: December 13, 2012
As Fiscal Cliff Nears, Democrats Have Public Opinion on Their Side[….]
When it comes to the reaching an agreement to avoid the fiscal cliff, 55% say Obama is making a serious effort to work with Republicans. But just 32% say Republican leaders are making a serious effort to work with Obama on a deficit deal….
….By a 53% to 33% margin, the public sees the Republican Party, rather than the Democratic Party, as “more extreme in its positions.” Democrats, on the other hand, are seen as “more willing to work with leaders from the other party” by roughly two-to-one (53% vs. 27%)….
….And there has been no improvement in the Republican Party’s image over the past year. The job approval rating of Republican congressional leaders, which fell to just 22% in August of 2011 after the debt ceiling debate, stands virtually unchanged at 25% today. Meanwhile, the job rating for both Democratic leaders in Congress (now 40% up from 29% in August 2011) and Obama (55% up from 43%) have rebounded by double-digits….
What color is the sky in right wingnut land?
12 Wednesday Dec 2012
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We must guard against being fooled by false slogans, such as ‘right to work.’ It is a law to rob us of our civil rights and job rights. Its purpose is to destroy labor unions and the freedom of collective bargaining by which unions have improved wages and working conditions of everyone…Wherever these laws have been passed, wages are lower, job opportunities are fewer and there are no civil rights. We do not intend to let them do this to us. We demand this fraud be stopped. Our weapon is our vote.
— Martin Luther King, Jr.
12 Wednesday Dec 2012
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2012, Attorney General, campaign finance, Chris Koster, Ed Martin, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission
For the republican candidate in the 2012 Attorney General race.
Follow the money.

The distribution of contributions to Ed Martin’s (r) campaign as indicated to the Missouri Ethics Commission in his 30 Day After General Election-11/6/2012 report [pdf] filed on December 6, 2012. The report covers the period from October 26, 2012 through December 1, 2012.
Missouri Ethics Commission
REPORT SUMMARY
MISSOURIANS FOR ED MARTIN [pdf] 12/6/2012[….]
2. All Monetary Contributions Received This Period $296,147.12
[….]
MISSOURI ETHICS COMMISSION
CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED – SUPPLEMENTALDavid Barklage 2427 Brookwood Dr Cape Girardeau MO 63701 Self — Consultant 11/2/2012 $2,500.00
Lawrence Collett PO Box 410 Saint Albans MO 63073 CEO — Cass Commercial 10/30/2012 $2,000.00
David Humphreys PO Box 4050 Joplin MO 64803 Tamko Building Products — Executive 11/2/2012 $100,000.00
William Landers 9 Cotswald Ln Princeton NJ 8540 Blackrock — Portfolio manager 11/6/2012 $5,000.00
Joan Langenberg 49 Conway Close Rd Saint Louis MO 63124 none — writer 10/30/2012 $7,000.00
Deanie Reis 7 Greenbriar Dr Saint Louis MO 63124-1819 retired — mother 11/3/2012 $2,500.00
Charles Willey 23 Summerhill Ln Chesterfield MO 63017 Self — Physician 10/31/2012 $5,000.00
Missouri Soybean Association PO Box 104778 Jefferson City MO 65110 10/27/2012 $5,000.00
Ann Wagner For Congress 14551 Manchester Road Manchester MO 63011 10/31/2012 $5,000.00
Eagle Forum Pac PO Box 618 Alton IL 62002 11/1/2012 $5,000.00
Friends of Tom Schweich 3220 W Edgewood Jefferson City MO 65109 11/1/2012 $2,500.00
CJW Enterprises Inc. 1134 Richland Meadows Dr Ballwin MO 63021 11/2/2012 $10,000.00
Forest Hills Properties LLC 1 Oak Ridge Dr Washington MO 63090 11/3/2012 $5,000.00
Citizens for Timothy Jones PO Box 434 Eureka MO 63025 11/5/2012 $5,005.00
Republican State Committee 204 E Dunklin Jefferson City MO 65102 11/6/2012 $5,000.00
Republican State Committee 204 E Dunklin Jefferson City MO 65102 11/16/2012 $1,800.00
David Humphreys PO Box 4050 Joplin MO 64803 Tamko Building Products — Executive 10/27/2012 $100,000.00
[emphasis added]
David Humphreys contributed a total of $350,000.00 to Ed Martin’s campaign. The Republican State Committee contributed a total of $321,800.00. Other individuals and campaign committees contributed total amounts from $11,000.00 to $25,000.00.
That doesn’t appear to be particularly grassrootsie.
Previously: Campaign Finance: propping up Shane Schoeller (r) (December 9, 2012)
11 Tuesday Dec 2012
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11 Tuesday Dec 2012
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From The Action.
11 Tuesday Dec 2012
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Last month, voters in Maine, Maryland and Washington endorsed same-sex marriage, the first time marriage equality has ever been expanded by a popular vote. This has prompted many conservatives to wonder whether their opposition to equality might be a long-term electoral liability. Conservative columnist George Will was on "This Week" this week when the topic came up:
Quite literally, the opposition to gay marriage is dying.
During a major shift of public opinion like this, it must be hard for a politician to know whether to stand by their increasingly unpopular positions or to abandon their previous views. It remains to be seen whether Missouri's Vicky Hartzler will grudgingly accept marriage equality or soldier on in the culture war that she started in 2004. She led the effort to pass a constitutional ban on gay marriage and she has continued to say cruel and insensitive things about her fellow citizens since coming to Congress in 2010. These charts show the changes in approval rates over time for interracial marriage and for same-sex marriage. Draw your own conclusions about long Vicky can keep getting elected if she sticks to her homophobic guns.

10 Monday Dec 2012
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At the White House petition site:
We petition the Obama Administration to:
Secure resources and funding, and begin construction of a Death Star by 2016.
Those who sign here petition the United States government to secure funding and resources, and begin construction on a Death Star by 2016.
By focusing our defense resources into a space-superiority platform and weapon system such as a Death Star, the government can spur job creation in the fields of construction, engineering, space exploration, and more, and strengthen our national defense.
Created: Nov 14, 2012
Issues: Defense, Job Creation, Science and Space PolicySignatures needed by December 14, 2012 to reach goal of 25,000 10,331
Total signatures on this petition 14,669
Meh. A Starship would be more fun.