Threats against the President are not covered by the First Amendment.
And it is against the law as per 18 U.S. Code § 871 to boot.
And while other administrations may simply pay you a visit ahead of time and strongly recommend you stay at home while POTUS is in the area, other politicos will have no problems creating a deadly force confrontation even if you are a fat 75-year-old man.
Be prepared to kill a kid, Pt. 2
This is from about 30 seconds on Google.
Boy, 13, charged with carjacking woman at Chicago gas station
13-year-old boy arrested in fatal attempted carjacking of St. Louis mom
15-year-old boys arrested in ‘random, senseless murder’ in Loveland
Boys, 12 and 17, charged in murders of 3 teens in Marion County; 16-year-old sought
You get the point.
Anyone, of any age, that points a loaded gun at you isn’t your friend.
You can be killed by a kid as easily as an adult.
You need to be prepared to do what has to be done to survive a violent encounter.
If I’m alive, I can Go Fund Me the best defense lawyers in the country.
If I’m dead, who will make my children French toast in the morning?
Be prepared to kill a little kid
This story is a window into pure evil.
A six-year-old boasted ‘I shot that b**** dead,’ after firing at his first-grade teacher inside a Virginia elementary school in January, recently unsealed redacted search warrants revealed.
Documents obtained by WTKR show that the unnamed boy told a school official how he brought his mother’s gun into the Richneck Elementary School in Newport News, Virginia, on January 6 and shot his teacher Abigail Zwerner, 25. She survived the shooting that drew national headlines.
The docs also reveal the same boy nearly choked his kindergarten teacher a year before ‘until she couldn’t breathe’ and had to be removed from the classroom.
She described how the boy drew his weapon from his pocket after the class got back from recess, pointed it directly at her, at which point she asked, ‘What are you doing with that?’
The boy paused for a moment ‘then fired one shot that struck Zwerner in her left hand and upper torso,’ the court documents said. She fled the classroom to the school office, where first responders found her bleeding from the wound.
Zwerner also allegedly told police of other incidents in which the student threatened violence and physically assaulted others — all of which, she said, were reported to school administrators.
In one of those incidents, the child allegedly choked his kindergarten teacher.
Authorities noted in their affidavits they spoke to the teacher, who described how the child ‘walked behind her while she was sitting in her chair and placed both of his arms around her neck, pulling down, choking her to the point she could not breathe.’
That child is pure evil.
I don’t know of he was born bad or made bad, but either way it doesn’t matter.
A child with a history of violence pointing a gun at you intends to do you harm.
A bullet fired by a little kid is just as lethal as one fired by an adult.
I have a wife and two kids, one a little younger than this boy.
My wife needs me, my kids need me.
I will feel bad having to defend myself against a six-year-old, right until I get home and my kids hug me and tell me they love me, then I will be assured I did the right thing.
The scenario you have in your head of who is going to try and shoot you might not be accurate.
Be prepared for when it’s not.
Tennessee: Red Flag Law and other Gun Control issues apparently off the table for the Special Legislative Session.
The proclamation issued by the Governor addresses several items that do not include Red Flags, Universal Background Checks and Mandatory Storage which were the top three items that Gun Controllers were badgering for.
Now, I am not naive enough to believe that some of these proposals cannot suddenly be transformed (especially item 12) into something else while everybody is looking elsewhere, so a constant state of observation will be required till the session is over. Still, I like the idea of committing resources to mental health care and I mean real care, no bullshit holistic kumbaya hormone and crystal therapy “care.”
( 1) Mental health resources, providers, commitments, or services;
(2) School safety plans or policies;
(3) Health care providers’ duty to warn about potential violent offenses;
( 4) Offenses of committing acts of mass violence or threatening to commit acts of mass
violence;
(5) Reports from the Tennessee Bureau oflnvestigation regarding human trafficking;
(6) Identification of individuals arrested for felonies;
(7) Law enforcement’s access to criminal and juvenile records;
(8) Law enforcement’s access to information about individuals who are subject to mental
health commitment;
(9) Information about victims of violent offenses;
( 10) Stalking offenses;
(11) Measures encouraging the safe storage of firearms, which do not include the creation
of penalties for failing to safely store firearms;
(12) Temporary mental health orders of protection, which must be initiated by law
enforcement, must require a due process hearing, must require the respondent to undergo
an assessment for suicidal or homicidal ideation, must require law enforcement to prove
its case by clear and convincing evidence, must require that an order of protection be
reevaluated at least every one-hundred eighty (180) days, and must not permit ex parte
orders;
(13) The transfer of juvenile defendants aged sixteen (16) and older to courts with criminal
jurisdiction, which must include appeal rights for the juveniles and the prosecuting
authorities;
(14) Limiting the circumstances in which juvenile records may be expunged;
( 15) Blended sentencing for juveniles;
(16) Offenses related to inducing or coercing a minor to commit an offense;
(17) The structure or operations of state or local courts; and
(18) Making appropriations sufficient to provide funding for any legislation that receives
final passage during the extraordinary session; making appropriations sufficient to pay the
expenses of the extraordinary session, including the expenses of carrying out any actions
taken pursuant to this proclamation; making appropriations sufficient to support mental
health initiatives; making appropriations for school safety grants, as described on page B90 of the 2023-2024 Budget Document and in Section 54, Item 1-41, Section 60, Item 25,
and Section 60, Item 26 of Chapter 418, Public Acts of 2023; and making appropriations
to support school safety at institutions of higher education.
Once again, Item 12 is the one that has the best chance to be fucked with into a Red Flag. I still would love to see a legislator add the mandatory minimum felony charges and hefty personal fines for anybody misusing a health order against any citizen. There will be no true cure for abuse unless there is a harsh punishment attached to it.
We are all Kitty Genovese
Woman screams for help as her bike is stolen in broad daylight. A bunch of people stand around watching. Nobody moves.
Welcome to California https://t.co/2lwBo3VP9m
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) August 8, 2023
Welcome to what the Left has created.
I guarantee you that people were more afraid of what would happen to them for confronting a black criminal than doing nothing as a white woman is attacked and robbed.
This sort of thing didn’t have to happen. It was done on purpose.
The failure of law enforcement, social media and mainstream media that publicly shame and stoke internet hate mobs against people, this destruction of polite society was deliberate and malicious.
Society is suffering and it will get worse before it gets better.
9th Circus makes a great ruling
File this away under Things I Didn’t See Coming.
The 9th Circus Court of Appeals made a good decision.
Ninth Circuit overturns butterfly knife ban, citing Supreme Court guns ruling
Citing the Supreme Court’s ruling that severely limited states’ authority to regulate guns, a federal appeals court on Monday struck down Hawaii’s ban on butterfly knives, pocket knives with folding blades that can be quickly joined into a single blade and used as a weapon.
The ruling, if it stands, could also be used to overturn California’s prohibition on carrying butterfly knives in public that have blades longer than 2 inches.
When the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 last year that Americans have a constitutional right to carry concealed firearms in public — a decision that struck down laws in New York, California and other states — the court also declared, in the words of Justice Clarence Thomas, that any restriction on gun possession was unconstitutional unless the government could show it was “consistent with this nation’s historical tradition of firearms regulation,” dating back to the country’s founding.
On Monday, a conservative panel of the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco said the same standard applies to restrictions on knives, including butterfly knives.
Although those cases have involved guns, the same standard should apply to restrictions on other types of weapons, the appeals court said Monday.
“Like firearms, bladed weapons fit the general definition of ‘arms’” under the Constitution’s Second Amendment, Judge Carlos Bea said in the 3-0 ruling, citing a dictionary published in 1774.
And while Hawaii contends butterfly knives are commonly used by criminals, Bea wrote, evidence shows they are “commonly owned for lawful purposes. … Hawaii has submitted no evidence that butterfly knives are not typically possessed by law-abiding citizens for self-defense.”
Seeking to satisfy the Supreme Court’s “historical tradition” standard, Hawaii said that as far back as the 1830s, states had restricted or banned weapons like the Bowie knife, which has a single-edged blade longer than 9 inches. But Bea said those laws were “outliers,” not shared by most states, and were nowhere near as restrictive as Hawaii’s current law.
In the nation’s early history and tradition, there are “no analogues in which Congress or any state legislature imposed an outright ban on the possession of pocket knives to remedy this (crime) problem,” Bea wrote. He was joined by Judges Daniel Collins and Kenneth Lee.
Hot damn!
My biggest complaint about the way the Second Amendment is enforced, when it is enforced, is limited to guns.
I’m a big believer that the Second Amendment applies to all weapons.
I’ve posted a myriad of videos of assaults from inside train cars and other close packed situations where a gun and pepper spray are both bad ideas. Either over penetration of bullets or gassing yourself in an enclosed area.
Collapsible batons, blackjacks, brass knuckles, all are effective intermediate weapons for extreme CQB.
Some asshole gets in your face and starts manhandling you on the subway, a quarter of a pound of brass to the forehead will generally change his tune without breaking your hand.
I often carry an ASP Protector concealable baton. During the summer of love it went with me everywhere in case of protesters. Pepper spray and a baton were a good combo.
But there are many places that put restrictions on non-firearm weapons.
Tennessee for example, has permitless firearm carry but requires training and a license for a baton.
I want to see this decision used to challenge all weapon laws everywhere in America.
I’m a law abiding citizen, I should be able to carry any weapon I want to defend myself.