Thursday, January 24, 2013

"Unintended" Consequence?

     Some Indiana police departments are finding they can't buy as much ammunition as they want -- and yes, it's us mean, nasty horrible gun-owners who are to blame (dwindling minority that we are; I read that in HuffPo, so it must be true).

     With all due respect to the boys and girls in blue, I've got two words for 'em: Boo. Hoo.  When the .gov starts talking about severely restricting the rights of citizens to keep and bear arms, that causes a reaction and not just from the entrenched few.  There are a lot more new gun owners, in addition to the folks who already own firearms and decided to lay in a few hundred (or thousand, or...) extra rounds while they still could.  (Anecdote is not data but you can find two new gun owners and one new shotgun owner in this blog post from sunny California and it's not quite the bitter clinger demographic the pundits tell me is buyin' all the guns.)  Police armories are well-stocked and no one (outside of the New York legislature, where El Supremo Cuomo assures us police will still be carrying deadly high-capacity assault magazines designed only to kill, kill, kill despite the law limiting them to seven rounds max just like the hapless citizenry of that misgoverned state) is talking about limiting the access of police to arms and ammunition.

     Nope.  But it's first come, first serve at the ammo sales counter and the price is directly related to the ratio of demand to supply.  If the police don't like it, they can right* write their legislators and remember their friends and foes at election time, just like the rest of us.

     "Preparing for war?" the Left is musing.  No, dears, we are already at war; it's just the nicer, non-shooting kind.  Most folks prefer working these things out at the soap box/letterbox/inbox/ballot box level -- even those of us with plenty of cartridge boxes.

     The news story calls this shortage an "unintended consequence."  Nope, at least I intended it; my last name is not .gov or .mil and if things get clamped down, all I'll have is what's already in my possession.  Also, isn't it cute that The Media dimly remember that "Unintended Consequences" has something to do with firearms and governmental overreach?  (But the Feds sound more from Bracken these days.)
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* Dr. Freud? Dr. Freud?

8 comments:

  1. The same situation breeds here in this stretch of PA, but they are not speaking to the media about it. I know of only anecdotally, from conversations with friendly ossifers at the range.

    Seems they didn't get their multi-million round orders in on time, unlike some Federal agencies. A suspicious man might surmise the Feddies knew something the locals didn't.

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  2. See folks, that is how you argue a point. Nice one Roberta.

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  3. Talking with a Dealer friend of mine, it's not just Completed Portable Cartridges of Mass Destruction that the Police can't get, it's down to the Component Level. Primers are now on the "BackOrder Bus."

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  4. Talking with a Dealer friend of mine, it's not just Completed Portable Cartridges of Mass Destruction that the Police can't get, it's down to the Component Level. Primers are now on the "BackOrder Bus."

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  5. Good job Roberta! We must fight them at every opportunity and through every venue available.

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  6. Les is right, small pistol primers are unavailable and the other sizes are in short supply. Groan, and of course small pistol is what I'm lowest on since the smaller pistol calibers are what I shoot and reload the most (.32 ACP, .380 auto, .38 Special, and 9mm).

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  7. This is the 2nd Cold War, fought at home...

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  8. Judging by the price at Amazon, maybe I should swap my copy of "Unintended Consequences" for reloading components.

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