Categories
All About Guns Cops

Why Do Democrats Think They Can ‘Win’ the Crime Issue? Media bias misinforms the public about “gun violence.” by ROBERT STACY MCCAIN

A possible New York gun crime scene (Steve Sanchez Photos/Shutterstock.com)

Crime is a people problem. If you understand nothing else about crime, you must understand this — crime is committed by people. It is not committed by inanimate objects, and while data on criminal activity can be charted as a trend over time, trends don’t commit crimes, people do. There is a word for people who commit crimes; we call these people “criminals” and, if anyone is interested in investigating trends, one trend is fairly consistent — most violent criminals are repeat offenders, and will not stop this behavioral pattern unless they are locked up in prison.

Keep all these facts in mind the next time you hear Democrats or the news media (but I repeat myself) discussing “gun violence” as an issue. Democrats do not want to discuss crime as a people problem, but rather as a gun problem, because (a) most gun owners are Republicans and (b) most criminals are Democrats. Or, that is to say, the violent crime problem in America is largely concentrated in urban areas where Democrats get the majority of the vote.

If Democrats don’t want to prosecute actual convicted felons for illegally possessing firearms, why do they expect their demands to ban “assault weapons” to be taken seriously?

Research by John R. Lott Jr. highlights just how geographically concentrated the murder problem is in the United States. Of the more than 3,000 counties in the country, 52 percent had zero murders in 2020, while the 31 counties with the highest murder rates (the worst 1 percent) had 42 percent of the nation’s murders. Expand the focus to the worst 2 percent (62 counties), and these accounted for more than half (56 percent) of U.S. murders in 2020. Lott concluded: “Murder isn’t a nationwide problem. It’s a problem in a small set of urban areas …”

Yes, but what about “gun violence”? What about the inflammatory rhetoric of Democrats demonizing the National Rifle Association (NRA) as somehow to blame for America’s crime problem? Among other things, Lott took into account rates of firearm ownership, and found an inverse relationship between the prevalence of murder and rates of gun ownership: “According to a 2021 Pew Research Center survey, the household gun ownership rate in rural areas was 79% higher than in urban areas. Suburban households are 37.9% more likely to own guns than urban households. Despite lower gun ownership, urban areas experience much higher murder rates.”

So much for the correlation between gun ownership and crime. What do we know about the correlation between politics and crime? The five U.S. cities with the highest per capita murder rates are St. Louis (69.4 per 100,000 population), Baltimore (51.1), New Orleans (40.6), Detroit (39.7), and Cleveland (33.7). In the 2020 presidential election, Joe Biden got 82 percent of the vote in St. Louis, 87 percent in Baltimore, 83 percent in New Orleans, 94 percent in Detroit and 80 percent in Cleveland. In other words, the most dangerous cities in America are all Democratic Party strongholds.

These facts are not difficult to discover, if anyone is willing to do a few Google searches, but you would probably have no idea about any of this if your source for news was ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, PBS, the New York Times, the Washington Post or the Associated Press. The so-called “mainstream media” seem to operate as a cartel, doing everything in their power to prevent the public from learning the truth about crime in America. Consider the simple matter of what counts as a crime story of national interest. The cartel media love to go into 24/7 coverage mode on “mass shootings,” but are notably selective in their choices as to which ones deserve such attention.

For example, did you hear about the mass shooting in Philadelphia last week? One person was killed and four others were wounded in an incident in which more than 50 shots were fired in a garage in the city’s Kensington neighborhood. According to WPVI-TV, this was the 84th mass shooting in Philadelphia since 2020, but how many of those mass shootings got so much as one word of coverage on CNN? Pretty close to zero, I’m sure. The fact that Philadelphia has had more than 500 homicides in each of the past two years? CNN and other members of the media cartel ignore it, for the simple reason that the bloody carnage which has earned the city the nickname “Killadelphia” doesn’t help advance the preferred political narrative.

Most of the facts about crime in America don’t fit that narrative. According to the FBI, in 2021 there were about 23,000 homicides in the country and, based on data from 2019, about 54 percent of U.S. murder victims are black people, most of whom are killed by other black people. It is impossible to discuss violent crime in America without acknowledging that at least half of it involves black people, both as victims and perpetrators, despite the fact that blacks are only 14 percent of the U.S. population. The national media clearly doesn’t want to discuss this — for reasons that are fundamentally political — and so the picture of crime in America conveyed by the media is distorted beyond recognition. This political distortion produces a yawning chasm between the reality of crime and its portrayal in the news media.

Democrats are the intended beneficiaries of this warped coverage, and it is obvious that they never expect to be held accountable for their rhetoric about crime. Exhibit A is Joe Biden who, whenever any mass shooting attracts national attention, predictably repeats his call for banning so-called “assault weapons.” No reporter ever seems to question this response, as if it were self-evident that such a ban would eliminate mass shootings or, at least, reduce violent crime. However, this belief is not borne out by the data. According to the FBI, there were only 403 murders in 2017 in which the weapon used was a rifle of any kind, compared to 7,032 committed with handguns. In fact, more people were murdered with “blunt objects” (clubs, hammers, etc., accounting for 467 victims) and “personal weapons” (hands, fists, feet, etc., with 692 victims) than were killed by rifles. But because there is no simple legislative “solution” to such crimes, Biden has no pat response, and nobody in the press corps raises questions about the president’s formulaic demands for banning “assault weapons.”

We live in a nation where more than a thousand people a year are beaten to death with fists, hammers, etc., and you might imagine that at least one of these blunt-force murders would merit attention from the national media, but instead they are ignored, just like the 1,500 or so people stabbed to death in America every year. And why are these brutal crimes ignored? Because the media wish their audience to think of the crime problem as a gun problem, for which the solution is to elect Democrats who will enact stricter gun-control laws.

This simplistic attitude ignores the obvious question of why Democrats are against enforcing the gun-control laws already on the books. In New York City, where Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg has been busy ginning up charges against former President Trump, his chief prosecutor sings the praises of her office’s “gun diversion” program that avoids sending criminals to prison on weapons charges. New York City saw a 22 percent increase in major crime last year, yet putting criminals behind bars is not a priority for Meg Reiss, Chief Assistant District Attorney in Bragg’s office, who has flatly asserted, “We know incarceration doesn’t really solve any problems.”

Joe Biden could order his Attorney General Merrick Garland to stop this turn-’em-loose approach to gun crimes in New York City. Under federal law (Section 922g), it is a felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison “for a person convicted of a felony to ship, transport, receive, or possess a firearm or ammunition.” Yet neither Biden nor Garland has shown any inclination to interfere in New York’s “gun diversion” program that sets such offenders free to commit further crimes, preferring instead to demonize law-abiding citizens for owning “assault weapons” — by which they mean, for example, AR-15 type rifles, of which an estimated 20 million are legally owned by Americans. If Democrats don’t want to prosecute actual convicted felons for illegally possessing firearms, why do they expect their demands to ban “assault weapons” to be taken seriously?

Rhetorical questions aside, however, America’s crime problem is not just the fault of Democratic politicians, but also of Democratic voters. In Chicago, where crime has risen nearly 50 percent since 2019, voters recently had the opportunity to replace their soft-on-crime mayor, who placed third in the election, but in the subsequent runoff, they chose an even softer-on-crime candidate, Brandon Johnson. In an interview with CBS News last week, Mayor-elect Johnson said addressing Chicago’s crime problem requires “more money toward the areas of needs”:

“What we’re going to have to do is to find the revenue from individuals who have the means to actually contribute to a safer city,” he said.

“Look, the bottom line is this: We have large corporations, 70 percent of large corporations in … the State of Illinois did not pay a corporate tax. …

“And it’s that type of restraint on our budget that has caused the type of disinvestment that has led to poverty, of course, that has led to violence.”

Got that? “Large corporations” are to blame for Chicago’s crime problem, which is the craziest excuse we’ve heard out of Chicago since Jussie Smollett claimed he was attacked by Trump supporters shouting, “This is MAGA country!”

Democrats, and the people who elect Democrats, have no interest in doing what is necessary to reduce violent crime in America, namely sending criminals to prison. Yet because the news media are so completely in the tank for Democrats, the truth about America’s crime problem is being suppressed.

Categories
All About Guns Ammo

Matt D. 2020 yards 7mm Dakota

The 7mm Dakota

By Chuck Hawks

7mm Dakota
Illustration courtesy of Dakota Arms
Dakota Arms offers a line of proprietary magnum hunting cartridges designed by Don Allen and based on the .404 Jeffery case shortened to function in standard (.30-06) length actions. These come in a variety of calibers including 7mm. Factory loaded ammunition is supplied only by Dakota.

The 7mm Dakota uses standard .284″ diameter bullets. It is based on a rimless, bottleneck case with a rim diameter of .545″. This case is 2.50″ long and has a sharp 30-degree shoulder. The cartridge overall length is 3.33″.

Because the 7mm Dakota has a larger rim diameter than the standard belted magnum cartridges, it requires a bolt specially manufactured or modified to match. No doubt this will continue to limit the cartridge’s popularity.

7mm Dakota factory loads are offered with a 140 grain and two 160 grain bullets. Dakota also offers unfired 7mm brass to reloaders, priced at $175/100 cases.

The 140 grain bullet has an advertised muzzle velocity (MV) of 3400 fps and muzzle energy (ME) of 3593 ft. lbs. The 160 grain bullets have an advertised MV of 3200 fps and ME of 3637 ft. lbs.

The handloader has many more bullet choices, of course. Projectiles from 100 to 175 grains are commonly available, but for a case the size of the 7mm Dakota the 139-140, 150-160 and 175 grain bullets probably make the most sense. Slow burning powders work best with these bullets in the 7mm Dakota.

The Sixth Edition of the Hornady Handbook of Cartridge Reloading shows 7mm Dakota loads for their various 154 grain bullets at MV’s from 2700 fps to 3200 fps with a number of powders. IMR 7828 seems like a reasonable choice for the 7mm Dakota. 66.7 grains of IMR 7828 behind a 154 grain Hornady Spire Point Interlock bullet gives a MV of 2700 fps. A maximum charge of 76.7 grains of the same powder gives a MV of 3200 fps and a ME of 3501 ft. lbs. with the 154 grain bullet.

The trajectory of that load looks like this: +2.4″ at 100 yards, +3″ at 150 yards, +2.4″ at 200 yards, +0.7″ at 250 yards, -2.1″ at 300 yards, and -6.3″ at 350 yards. The MPBR (+/- 3″) of that load is 311 yards. These Hornady loads used Dakota cases and Federal 215 primers and were chronographed in the 25″ barrel of a Dakota 76 rifle

Categories
All About Guns

We Fired the Martini-Henry | Rifle of the Zulu War

Categories
All About Guns War

The last thing a lot of folks will ever see on this Planet

May be an image of 1 person, aircraft and outdoors

Categories
All About Guns

A Smith & Wesson S&W Model 15-4 K-38 Masterpiece 4″barrel Revolver in .38 Spl

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Categories
All About Guns

CZ Makes a 45 for the Americans: the CZ-97B

Categories
All About Guns

The US Adopts A Maxim: The Colt Model 1904

Categories
All About Guns

Restoring 1937 Ceskoslovenska Mauser Mountain Carbine, (with firing test)

Categories
All About Guns

Considering the 9mm Revolver By Kevin McPherson

When choosing a small to medium-sized defensive revolver caliber, most people automatically default to the .38 Special or .357 Magnum chambering. There are good reasons to take a hard look at the 9mm Luger for this role. One of the biggest positives is the efficiency of the cartridge in short-barreled revolvers. The 9mm can be loaded to significantly higher pressures than the .38 Special cartridge (SAAMI max pressure- 9mm: 35,000 PSI, .38+P: 20,000 PSI). It sends similar weight bullets much faster than the .38 in equal barrel lengths. The 9mm approaches mid-range .357 Magnum velocities in some loadings.

9mm defensive loads thoroughly outclass .38 Special loads in short-barreled revolvers.

 

.38 Special Round S&W Model 65 3” 9mm Round S&W 547 3”
CORBON 110 +P DPX 957 fps CORBON 115 DPX 1228 fps
Remington 125 +P GS 966 fps Speer 124 GDHP 1131 fps
Federal 147 +P+ H/S 938 fps Federal 147 H/S 946 fps
Speer 135 +P GDHP 920 fps Hornady 135 +P C/D 1087 fps
.357 Mag Round 9mm Round
Remington 125 Golden Saber 1221 fps Winchester Ranger 124 +P Bonded JHP 1243 fps
CORBON 125 DPX 1319 fps AL 9.0 3”
Remington 125 JHP 1473 fps 1277 fps

 

The author worked with this 547 extensively and became sold on 9mm performance in a compact service revolver.

It is a reasonable assumption that revolvers lose velocity because of the barrel cylinder gap. It’s counterintuitive, but the proof is in the chronograph. 9mm revolvers with long (.357 Magnum length) cylinders achieve equal or even higher velocity than semiautos with similar length barrels. The long cylinder allows the cartridge to burn powder and develop velocity in the “free bore” portion of the cylinder before encountering the resistance of the rifling.

9mm Round AL 9.0 Rev. 3” S&W Shield 3.1” S&W 547 Rev. 3” S&W 6946 3.5”
Federal 115 JHP 1098 fps 1096 fps 1111 fps 1103 fps
Speer 124 GDHP 1119 fps 1049 fps 1155 fps 1084 fps
Hornady 135 +P C/D 1082 fps 1022 fps 1087 fps 1065 fps
Federal 147 H/S 1001 fps 912 fps 946 fps 942 fps

 

+P 9mm equals mid-range .357 Magnum performance like Remington’s Golden Saber out of a 3” revolver. The original Federal 125 JHP on the left gives velocity (and fierce blast and recoil) that the 9mm cannot touch.

Another advantage is the availability of 9mm ammunition. A check on Midway USA shows 101 choices for 9mm ammo available right now. In .38 Special there are 18 options but none in .357 Magnum. The 9mm is also more affordable due to its popularity. Midway listed Winchester white box 9mm 115 gr FMJ at 34 cents a round when purchased in quantity- the same brand .38 130 gr FMJ was 63 cents. Proven 9mm defensive rounds ranged from $1.13 to $1.75 per round. Equivalent .38 and .357 loads were unavailable and would cost 2.10 to 2.90 a round if you could buy them. The commonality of ammunition between the semiauto you are likely carrying and a 9mm revolver isn’t bad, either.

Moon clips give bulletproof ejection and make for fast reloads. Factory supplied clip on left, TK Custom’s excellent replacement clip on the right.

Most of the guns available today are designed to be used with moon-clips. Moon-clipped empties in a revolver eject as a group which eliminates the chance of having a failure to extract malfunction. That’s the one where a cartridge rim becomes lodged under the extractor star and renders the gun temporarily inert. This stoppage gave nightmares to revolver folk and prompted the universal reload method (incorporating the palm slap on the extractor rod to ensure empties are jettisoned). Shooting an Armscor AL 9.0 revolver allowed returning to the FBI method because empties ejected every time with only the pressure of the support thumb. The cases jump out of the cylinder so easily it feels like cheating. Moonclips also make for fast reloads, particularly with short cartridges like the 9mm.

Moon clips allow the user to utilize the “FBI method” of ejecting spent rounds with the support thumb while shooting hand reaches for fresh ammo.

Most factory clips are constructed to allow easy loading and unloading by hand. While convenient for practice, they’re susceptible to rounds falling out if dropped or stored in pockets, and they bend easily. Bent moon clips prevent cartridges from fully seating and cause drag in cylinder movement. This results in a love/hate feeling from those that use them. Enter TK Custom; they specialize in high-end moon clips for most brands and calibers of quality revolvers. Their clips typically require tools to load and unload because they hold cartridges much tighter. The snug fit reduces droop and wobble and allows even faster reloads. TK’s clips resist bending and are a “must have” item for defensive use. Check out the awesome things they’re doing at TK Custom; their website is revolver guy “drool worthy.”

The Czech Republic made AL 9.0 3” 9mm revolver imported by Armscor. It’s a well-built gun and makes a superior carry revolver. The all-steel construction keeps recoil controllable.

Armscor’s AL9.0 and other steel guns like Taurus’ 905 and Ruger’s SP101 handle the recoil of the high pressure 9mm well. Choose Ruger’s excellent LCR if you need the concealability of a J frame-sized gun. The LCR is light enough that its snappy recoil impulse can cause heavy bullets to break crimp and pull loose from the case. Stick with lighter bullets and shoot enough of them to rule out bullet pull before you carry them for serious work. It is best to use brass cases in all these guns, too. Steel and aluminum cases are more prone to swelling and sticking in revolver chambers.

The original LCR (front) was chambered in .38 Special with an alloy frame. Ruger chose steel for high-pressure rounds like the .327 and .357 Magnums and the 9mm. This model weighs 17.2 ounces, which is about as light as possible and remains controllable with 9mm ammunition.

The pros outweigh these few cons. 9 mm revolvers are worth a look.

Reference:

https://tkcustom.com

Categories
All About Guns

A Blue Steel Colt Trooper MKIII with a 4in barrel in caliber 357mg

Colt Trooper MKIII 357mg, 4in Blue, MFG 1972, NO RESERVE .357 Magnum - Picture 1

Colt Trooper MKIII 357mg, 4in Blue, MFG 1972, NO RESERVE .357 Magnum - Picture 2
Colt Trooper MKIII 357mg, 4in Blue, MFG 1972, NO RESERVE .357 Magnum - Picture 3
Colt Trooper MKIII 357mg, 4in Blue, MFG 1972, NO RESERVE .357 Magnum - Picture 4
Colt Trooper MKIII 357mg, 4in Blue, MFG 1972, NO RESERVE .357 Magnum - Picture 5
Colt Trooper MKIII 357mg, 4in Blue, MFG 1972, NO RESERVE .357 Magnum - Picture 6
Colt Trooper MKIII 357mg, 4in Blue, MFG 1972, NO RESERVE .357 Magnum - Picture 7
Colt Trooper MKIII 357mg, 4in Blue, MFG 1972, NO RESERVE .357 Magnum - Picture 8
Colt Trooper MKIII 357mg, 4in Blue, MFG 1972, NO RESERVE .357 Magnum - Picture 9
Colt Trooper MKIII 357mg, 4in Blue, MFG 1972, NO RESERVE .357 Magnum - Picture 10