JPFO ALERT:THE KIMBER KISS-UPby WAGCJPFO ALERT:THE KIMBER KISS-UP > > By L. Neil Smith <mailtto:lneil@netzero.com > > For Jews for the Preservation of Firearms Ownership > http://www.JPFO.org > > > For those of us who make the transition from gun owner and shooter > to Second Amendment activist, the most disillusioning phenomenon we > have to face is that not everyone we might expect to be an ally in the > fight for the right to own and carry weapons can actually be relied > on. > > When I first became involved in this historical struggle, Smith & > Wesson, that quintessentially American revolver manufacturer was > actually owned by a British holding company that didn't give a rap > about the Second Amendment, was much more concerned with the company's > sales to police departments across the country, and was inclined to go > along with any regulatory scheme politicians and bureaucrats came up > with. > > Similarly, the late Bill Ruger, the head Sturm Ruger & Company, > never seemed to understand the Second Amendment. Paternalist and > aristocrat that he appeared to fancy himself, he actually volunteered > advice to the government concerning what he believed ought to be legal > (whatever his company manufactured) and what should be outlawed. We > have Ruger mostly to thank for the ten-round limit that was imposed > during the ill-conceived Clinton-Dole Ugly Gun and Adequate Magazine > Ban. > > Some gun companies and their executives care only about the bottom > line. Hired away from soft drink or underwear manufacturers, the men > at the top don't really have any moral or sentimental attachment to > the product itself. They don't love what they do. They might as well > be manufacturing faucet washers. I don't suppose there's anything > wrong with that, as far as it goes -- I'm a big fan of capitalism, > myself -- but other companies are like the historic makers of fine > musical instruments -- violins and guitars. Money is important chiefly > in that it keeps the company and its employees going. What really > counts is the quality of their product and the satisfaction of their > customers. > > Wildey J. Moore, inventor of magnum automatic pistols comes to > mind. He actually ran for office in his home state as a libertarian > and Second Amendment advocate. Ronnie Barrett stoutly refuses to sell > his famous .50 caliber rifles to agencies of gun-banning governments, > and he won't service the ones they already have. STI International > won't sell their nifty 1911s to California police agencies because of > the bizarre, insane microstamping scheme passed by that state's > legislature. > > Regrettably, another famous maker of 1911s, Kimber Manufacturing, > seems to have trouble separating the goodguys from the badguys. > According to an article by Ken Hanson, Esq., circulated on the Web by > the Buckeye Firearms Association, and appearing on _U.S. Concealed > Carry Magazine_'s website, Kimber has acquired a bad habit: kissing up > disgustingly to the destroyers of individual liberty by creating > weapons especially dedicated to various California police agencies. In > Hanson's words, these guns were specifically "designed for a local > government committed to stripping civilians of the right to own _this > same gun_." > > Emphasis added. > > See: http://www.buckeyefirearms.org/node/5674 > > Hanson urges his readers to "educate" Kimber with regard to what a > terrible idea this is. It's exactly as if Jewish tailors in the 1930s > had taken pride in making uniforms for the Nazi S.S. There is no moral > distinction. The author suggests a number of actions that concerned > gun owners might take. chiefly calling or writing to the company at > 914-964-0771x324, or via US mail at Kimber, 2590 Hwy 35, Kalispell, MT > 59901. > > Although Hanson wants you to warn Kimber and its dealers of a > possible boycott of their products by shooters concerned with their > rights, he suggests your communication remain "polite, professional > yet firm". I would make no such suggestion. This is a major breach of > an implicit moral bond between a gunmaker and its clients, it is the > rankest, most repulsive kind of hypocrisy, and it must be dealt with > no less promptly and harshly than I urged in my 2000 essay "S&W Must > Die". > > See: http://www.jpfo.org/alerts/alert20000406.htm > > The worldwide boycott which that essay helped to start broke S&W > and sent them plunging -- repeatedly -- into bankruptcy. (Much the > same thing happened to K-Mart when they foolishly hired the slavering, > hysterical anti-gunner Rosie O'Donnell as their spokeswoman.) It is a > story of which no firearms manufacturer today can possibly still be > ignorant. > > In short, we must ask shooters to kick the Kimber habit. > > I agree with Hanson about the need for gun owners to react to > Kimber's suicidal stupidity, but I would suggest also dealing with > the problem at the other end. Why not a written pledge, to be taken > and signed by individual police officers, that they will never attempt > to confiscate weapons from civilians, whether it's during disasters > like Hurricane Katrina, or as a result of local, state, or federal > legislation. > > If it's unconstitutional, it's automatically null and void. > > That pledge can be archived by an organization like JPFO, and > openly displayed online, making it easier to see who the goodguys and > the badguys are. We could probably even design and make a nice little > embroidered patch -- it might say "BILL OF RIGHTS ENFORCER" -- for the > pledge-making police officers to sew on their uniforms. Until their > superiors, veins standing out on their foreheads and little gobbets of > spit blasting from their lips as they scream, order them to take it > off. > > Of course that, in itself, will teach cops everywhere a valuable > lesson, and even make them ask themselves an important question, > "Why am I helping to destroy The Bill of Rights", and the Kimber > Kiss-ups should ask themselves the same question. Goto Forum Home |
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