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All About Guns Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends" You have to be kidding, right!?!

25 Years Ago, Gun Control Advocates Wanted to Ban Everything But Flintlocks – Now They Want to Ban Those Too! by Mark Chesnut

In 2001, a Los Angeles Times op-ed laid out what the author believed was the definitive limit of Second Amendment protection. American citizens, the author wrote, had the constitutional right to own flintlock muskets and pistols — and nothing more.

“I believe that the framers of the Bill of Rights intended that the right of every American citizen to bear flintlock muskets and pistols should not be infringed,” the author wrote. “I believe that American citizens today — without fingerprinting, without a license, without a background check — ought to be able to own as many flintlock muskets and pistols as they want. If they want to fill up their garages with them, that should be nobody’s business but their own.”

The piece was satirical in framing but earnest in substance. The argument — that the Second Amendment’s “arms” should be limited to 18th-century weapons technology — was a serious gun-control position in 2001 and remained so for the next two decades. Variations on it appeared regularly in mainstream commentary, in academic legal arguments, and occasionally in judicial opinions.

Twenty-five years later, the position has reversed. The Associated Press published a piece on May 14 taking the opposite stance: that the lack of regulatory infrastructure around muzzleloading firearms is itself a problem requiring legislative attention.

TTAG covered the AP story and the underlying antique firearm regulatory framework at length last week. The piece you’re reading isn’t about that legal landscape — it’s about how dramatically the gun-control commentariat’s position has shifted on what the Second Amendment supposedly does and doesn’t protect.

The 2001 framing

The LA Times op-ed represented what was, at the time, an emerging strategic frame in gun-control commentary. The argument went: the Second Amendment was written in 1791, when “arms” meant flintlocks. The framers could not have anticipated cartridge firearms, semiautomatic weapons, or modern firearms technology. Therefore the Constitution’s protection should be limited to what existed in 1791, leaving all subsequent firearms technology — meaning effectively every firearm in commercial production today — outside Second Amendment protection and available for regulation or prohibition.

The argument has obvious legal problems. The First Amendment doesn’t apply only to quill-and-parchment newspapers. The Fourth Amendment doesn’t apply only to physical searches of 18th-century homes. The Constitution’s protections extend to modern technology in every other context. But the flintlock-only framing had rhetorical power, and gun-control advocates leaned on it heavily through the early 2000s.

It was also a frame that gun-rights advocates were happy to engage with — because the implicit concession was clear: even if we accept the absurd premise, flintlocks themselves were absolutely protected.

The 1968 Gun Control Act exempts antique firearms manufactured before 1898 from federal firearms regulation entirely, treating modern replicas of flintlocks and percussion-cap firearms similarly. The flintlock framing was rhetorical losing ground for gun-control advocates: even the maximally restrictive reading of “arms” still protected the flintlock.

The 2026 reversal

Fast-forward 25 years. The AP article from May 14 takes the position that flintlock and muzzleloader exemptions are themselves a problem.

“With 165 grains of black powder in the barrel, a .75-caliber Brown Bess flintlock musket like the ones the redcoats carried in 1776 can hurl a lead ball at a velocity of around 1,000 feet per second,” AP author Kevin Breed wrote. “Imagine what that can do to a human body. Now, imagine that it’s almost completely exempt from gun regulations.”

The piece walks through the federal antique firearm exemption, discusses state-level variation, and frames the regulatory gap as a problem requiring attention. Maryland’s Shadé’s Law — passed after a convicted offender killed his ex-girlfriend with a cap-and-ball revolver in 2017 — gets cited as the appropriate policy response that should be replicated elsewhere.

The contrast with the 2001 LA Times framing is stark. In 2001, the gun-control commentariat’s position was that the Second Amendment protected only flintlocks. In 2026, the position is that flintlocks too require regulation. The Second Amendment-protected category that gun-control advocates were willing to concede 25 years ago has now disappeared entirely.

What this signals

The reversal isn’t an accident, and it’s not an inconsistency the gun-control commentariat is going to publicly acknowledge. It reflects two strategic developments over the past quarter century.

First, the post-Heller and post-Bruen legal landscape made the “flintlock-only” framing untenable as a serious legal argument. The Supreme Court in Heller (2008) explicitly rejected the framing, noting that the Second Amendment protects “arms” in common civilian use, including modern firearms. Bruen (2022) reinforced this with the historical-tradition test. The flintlock-only position had to be abandoned not because gun-control advocates changed their minds, but because the Court closed the door on the legal theory.

Second, with the flintlock-only fallback closed off, gun-control advocates needed a new framework for regulating firearms. The current approach — accepting that Bruen requires historical analogs while pushing back the perimeter of what’s protected — naturally extends to argue that even the formerly-protected flintlocks should be regulated where state legislators can manage it.

In other words: the position 25 years ago was “the Second Amendment only protects flintlocks.” The position today is “even flintlocks should be regulated.” The constitutional carve-out the gun-control commentariat was willing to concede in 2001 has been quietly eliminated from their public framing.

Whether anyone in gun-control commentary will publicly engage with this reversal remains to be seen. Charlton Heston’s famous “from my cold, dead hands” flintlock moment at the 2000 NRA convention drew mockery in the AP article — Breed concluded that Heston “needn’t have worried” because the flintlock was never threatened.

The 2001 LA Times op-ed and the 2026 AP article, read together, suggest Heston was reading the trajectory more accurately than his critics realized.

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This great Nation & Its People War

THE LAST PHOTOGRAPH OF THE ENOLA GAY BY WILL DABBS, MD

On 6 August 1945, Colonel Paul Tibbets piloted the B-29 Superfortress Enola Gay
to drop the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan. Col. Tibbets had his mother’s name painted on the plane on the morning of the mission.

Part of medical training involves away rotations at rural clinics so you can get a feel for the practice of medicine someplace other than the huge teaching hospital. The student spends about a month working with a local family physician just to see what real doctors do day-to-day. Mine was a simply magnificent experience.

I was in a really small town under the tutelage of the nicest guy in the world. My time there was one of the reasons I gravitated toward something professionally similar myself. Meeting people was one of the greatest aspects of my experience in that little community. Small-town America is simply rife with characters.

One older gentleman was just eaten up with skin cancers. He was covered in them. When I inquired regarding his history, he said he had developed cancer in the Army Air Corps during World War II. That sounded like an interesting story. Wow, I had no idea.

The B-29 Superfortress was actually the most expensive weapons project of World War II.

This guy was an engine mechanic assigned to the 509th Composite Bomb Group under Colonel Paul Tibbets in the latter parts of World War II. He was responsible for maintaining the four big Wright R-3350-23 Duplex-Cyclone engines that powered the Enola Gay, the B-29 Superfortress that dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima. That job changed his life.

The recent Christopher Nolan movie, “Oppenheimer” orbited around the Manhattan Project and the development of the atomic bomb. My new friend said he and his buddies had been invited out to watch the Trinity detonation. They stood in a line in the desert and were told to focus on a certain point off in the distance. By way of protective gear, he was issued a pair of tinted goggles.

He said when the bomb went off, the flash was unimaginably bright. He said they had time to laugh a bit about it before the blast wave hit them. The pressure front threw them all back bodily off their feet, though no one was hurt … at the time. He said in the aftermath of the detonation, the air smelled strongly of ozone, like you had been in the presence of a powerful electrical arc.

Here we see Little Boy, the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima, Japan, in the arming trench
on the island of Tinian prior to its being loaded aboard the Enola Gay.

They all picked themselves up, brushed off the dust and dirt, and reveled in the amazing thing they had just seen. He said the first kid in his unit to develop cancer got sick six months later. It would have been sometime in 2000 when I met him. He said he was the only one of those presently left alive.

Staging the bomb into the combat theater was a herculean task. Components of the weapon were delivered to the island of Tinian aboard the cruiser USS Indianapolis. Anyone who has seen the movie “JAWS” knows that story.

They delivered the bomb in complete secrecy. However, the ship was subsequently torpedoed by a Japanese submarine and sunk, leaving 890 of the original crew complement of 1,195 floating alone in the water. Over the next four days, a further 574 sailors succumbed to exposure and shark predation. Only 316 survived.

On the airfield at Tinian, the Air Corps had constructed a trench in the parking apron. This was the most sensitive weapons project of the war, so security was unbelievably tight.

The plan had technicians assembling the bomb in the trench before towing the Enola Gay in place above it. The weapon was then winched into the bomb bay. My buddy said there were MPs with submachine guns posted all around the plane with orders to shoot on sight anyone who seemed even remotely threatening.

The 15-kiloton atomic blast that leveled Hiroshima was undeniably horrible.
However, the two atomic bomb attacks ultimately saved countless lives.

Early in the morning on 6 August 1945, my friend needed to go over the Enola Gay’s engines one last time. He made his way out in the darkness, serviced each of the big radials in sequence, and then moved away from the big bomber.

Unbeknownst to the security troops posted around the plane, he had tucked a little Brownie camera into the pocket of his flight jacket. As he walked away from the aircraft, he surreptitiously tucked the camera under his arm and snapped a picture of the plane. No one was the wiser. He told me in all seriousness that the MPs likely would have shot him dead had he been seen taking the photograph.

The image captured the big silver bomber at a crazy angle. He later mislaid the original negative. That picture sat in a frame atop his television in his home in rural Mississippi. It is the only photograph on the planet of the Enola Gay with the bomb on board.

On the morning of 6 August, Colonel Tibbets and his crew delivered Little Boy, the first operational atomic bomb, to its target over Hiroshima, Japan. The 15-kiloton blast ultimately claimed around 75,000 lives.

However, the nuclear attacks saved countless more by negating the need for an amphibious invasion of the Japanese home islands. And I got to touch just a little bit of all that in a tiny little medical clinic in rural Mississippi.

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Well I thought it was funny!

9 Insults From The Bible You Should Start Using Right Away BabylonBee.com

Are you on the lookout for some new sick burns to unleash on your friends and enemies? Believe it or not, the Bible is actually a great source of insults. If you’re looking to slam someone with something that hasn’t been heard in thousands of years, God’s Word is the place to turn.

The Babylon Bee did the hard work for you and put together the following list of crushing insults drawn straight from the Bible that you should start using today:

  1. “Go on up, you bald head!”: Perfect for the next time you see a follically challenged prophet walking nearby. You might want to bring your bear spray, just in case.
  2. “My little finger is thicker than my father’s loins!”: Maybe more of an insult aimed at your dad, but a wicked insult nonetheless. Plus, it makes you sound pretty impressive.
  3. “You brood of vipers!”: Used by Jesus Himself, this one can be used for just about anyone — especially legalistic religious leaders.
  4. “You son of a perverted and rebellious woman!”: This one serves as a double-barreled insult to not only inflict sick burns on your target but his mom as well.
  5. “Circumcize yoself!”: Even if it isn’t taken literally (ouch), This is the perfect response to anyone criticizing the legitimacy of your faith.
  6. “Cashmeouside howbowdat?”: This can only be found in The Message version.
  7. “You who are doomed to eat your own dung and drink your own urine!”: Gross.
  8. “You blind fools! You can’t even see, AND you’re a fool!”: Another good one from Jesus, this one lets someone know they are a total idiot who has no eyesight.
  9. “Perhaps your god is droppin’ a deuce?”: Haha! Get REKT, false prophets!

Don’t wait too long, go and start tossing ruthless burns on everyone around — while quoting scripture at the same time!

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This great Nation & Its People

VINTAGE HISTORICAL PHOTOGRAPHS PAST

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Being a Stranger in a very Strange Land Blessed with some of the worst luck Born again Cynic!

Shocking news – except to Africans, Africa wins again! From Bayou Renaissance Man

A South African hotelier is believed to have been eaten by a 15ft crocodile after human remains were found inside the swollen reptile.

 

The animal was shot from a helicopter and airlifted from the crocodile-infested Komati River in a daring police operation before a post-mortem examination was carried out.

A ring was found inside the belly of the 500kg apex predator and is thought to have belonged to Gabriel Batista, 59.

 

The businessman was swept away in floodwaters while trying to drive across the Komati River in the north-east of the country a week ago.

Investigators will carry out DNA tests on the bones and flesh found inside the crocodile.

 

. . .

 As well as the body parts, six different types of shoes were found, according to Capt Potgieter.

 

There’s more at the link, including images.

The comments from friends and acquaintances in the USA have been amusing.  A surprising number are absolutely horrified that a man who’d just escaped drowning had promptly been eaten by a wild animal.  It’s almost as if it was unfair, somehow.

They weren’t comforted by my assurance that in large parts of Africa, that sort of thing happens on an almost daily basis.  As for the “six different types of shoes” . . . yeah, I’d say Mr. Batista was far from the only human meal that croc had enjoyed.  Local tribespeople were doubtless greatly relieved by the news that it had been caught.

Rural Africa remains a very dark continent, filled with very deadly animals.  Actual examples:

  • A man visits a neighboring village, gets drunk, and decides to walk back to his village along a deserted path at night.  Halfway there, a passing leopard finds him and decides that he’ll make a satisfactory supper.
  • A man goes looking for a lost cow along a river bank.  A hippo, grazing on long grass a short distance away, decides that she doesn’t want him (or anyone else) getting between her and the water, which is her security blanket.  She bites him in half.
  • A hunter gets too close to an elephant, which promptly tramples him into pink slush in the mud.  He isn’t able to shoot her in time to save himself, and in the stress of the moment, only wounds her.
  • While she’s recovering from the bullet wound, she kills several local villagers who get too close to her, on the general principle that if a man did this to her, she’s going to presume that any man she sees is going to try to do likewise.
  • An armored personnel carrier is driving through thick brush and trees.  The vehicle commander is standing with his head and shoulders outside the turret, trying to see through the thick growth to plot his course. boomslang (tree snake) is jarred off its branch by the APC as it brushes against the tree.  It falls onto the vehicle commander, bites him (injecting a full dose of poison, which proves fatal) and then falls through the turret hatch into the interior of the vehicle, biting two other soldiers before it’s killed by a rain of rifle butts.
  • The two survive, but only because it had already injected much of its venom into the vehicle commander.  They’re sick for several weeks.
All those incidents were personally known to me.  I was nearby when they all happened.  That’s the norm in wild rural Africa.
The cities can be a lot tamer, but not always.  A few decades ago, I remember two leopards who set up house in the concrete basement and utility spaces of the biggest soccer stadium in Soweto, surrounded by hundreds of thousands of people.
They lived off local cats and dogs.  When their presence was deduced (due to the rapid decline in other local pets and wildlife, and the presence of their tracks after rain) the local police were asked to hunt them down and shoot them.
Freely translated and interpreted, the local cops’ reply was along the lines of, “You want us to go into a concrete labyrinth, with no light at all, to hunt two big cats that can see in the dark?  Oh, hell, no!  Here, take our rifles and show us how it’s done.  We’ll watch.  In fact, we’ll sell tickets on pay-per-view!”

 

I’m very sorry for Mr. Batista, and for his family, of course . . . but that’s Africa:  and in Africa, the good guys don’t always win.  It goes with the territory.

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EVIL MF The Horror! War You have to be kidding, right!?!

Germany’s Forgotten Genocide: The Early Atrocity that Provided a Blueprint For the Nazis

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War

TRUTH about the Gulf of Tonkin Incident – Forgotten History

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All About Guns

Italian Breda M30 LMG

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All About Guns

From the Vault: Smith & Wesson Triple Lock Revolver

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Some Red Hot Gospel there! This great Nation & Its People

So true