

But do liberals still want to count to ten?
By Ted Eytan from Washington, DC, USA/Creative Commons
The more ambitious liberalism has become in its efforts to transform the United States, the more it has run up against one intransigent circumstance after another.
For eight years, the idol worship of Barack Obama gave liberals confidence that they could remediate society and reeducate the citizens. But reality isn’t political. It doesn’t obey the principles of progressives. Some facts aren’t pliable.
1. The economy is roaring under the Trump tenure. It’s no surprise that this fact lands on the list. GDP and the stock market are up and unemployment and food stamp claims are down.
If those trends happened under Hillary Clinton, journalists would gush and bow, but instead we get quibbles and warnings of what the future may hold.
Ezra Klein even argued that with such a low unemployment rate (3.8%), Trump’s economy should be performing much better than it is. In other words, even good news is bad news in the liberal mind.
2. People like walls. Progressives want open borders and limitless migration, and that may please the renowned professor who grew up in one city, went to school 1,000 miles away, took a job in yet another state, and lectures and does research in Europe each year.
But most people want a home and they want security. They believe that good fences make good neighbors, that a country without walls isn’t a country. Walls reinforce the pride of ownership, too. When liberals decry walls, they belittle the sense of place that people find comforting and meaningful.
3. Men and women are different. You wouldn’t think this obvious fact would be controversial, especially one backed by vast biological and social science findings. (See here and here.)
But liberals are now committed to the elimination of sexual difference. That’s why they have lionized the trans- individual. Difference leads to unequal outcomes, they believe, and so it must be attributed to patriarchy, not to nature.
They can’t accept scientific evidence that women tend to prefer working with people, men with things. They must, instead, insist that the population of engineers must be 50 percent female.
4. The LGBT population is tiny. This is an inconvenient fact in that liberals wish to remove any implication of abnormality from non-heterosexual individuals.
But the Centers for Disease Control count the LGBT group less than four percent. If we subtract bisexuals from the cohort (liberals rarely highlight them), the rate falls under three percent.
When 24 out of 25 people act in one way, we can’t help judging them normal and the other one abnormal.
5. Different groups have different abilities, on average. This proposition makes liberals very nervous, as shown in their response to IQ discussions.
We don’t have to enter the nature vs. nurture debate, however, to find evidence of average differences between racial groups. Whether they are biological or social/cultural, those differences are in some areas significant and steady, and the liberal demand that they disappear has been repeatedly frustrated.
On the crucial yardstick of academic achievement, for instance, gap between blacks and whites hasn’t closed for many years (see scores for 12th graders here), and the standard answer given by progressives (“systemic racism”) has no solid science to support it.
The more liberals refuse to consider other causes of achievement gaps such as single-parentage and cultural differences between races, the more obtuse and ideological they sound.
6. The traditional family is best. Just this week a study came out showing that being a child of divorce cuts in half the likelihood of that child earning a college degree. That’s just one of hundreds of studies demonstrating worse outcomes for children from broken homes.
The infamous “Life of Julia” ad for the Obama 2012 campaign peddled a feminist myth contrary to this mountain of evidence, showing that a woman needn’t worry about finding a man to help raise her child. She can do it just fine all by herself. See here, though, for a list of ills suffered by children in fatherless households.
7. Women are outdoing men. The “War-on-Women” motif worked well for Democrats for a time, but it collapses as soon as we look at educational trends. In 2015, women earned 55 percent of all bachelor’s degrees.
In 2016, more women went to law school than men, and one year later women surpassed men going to medical school. In nursing school, too, they still outnumber men nearly ten to one. Furthermore, at the doctoral level, women have earned more PhDs than men for many years now, and there are 135 of them for every 100 men in graduate programs.
8. The “deplorables” have good reason to mistrust their betters. It’s not just that politicians, economists and financiers, artists and entertainers, academics and intellectuals have failed so often in the 21st century to act as good stewards of their respective domains.
It’s also that the men and women of the street now know exactly what the elite think of them. You can’t trust people who despise you.
9. Religious people lead better lives. It’s been a long time since Hollywood presented faith in God and regular churchgoing as the basis of happiness.
But in measures of well-being, believers keep coming up stronger than non-believers. They are also more charitable. The findings run against the left’s determination to chase staunch believers out of the public square because, supposedly, they are nasty and biased.
10. Donald Trump is not racist. The charge won’t go away because it has intimidated conservatives and Republicans for so long.
But more Hispanics voted for Mr. Trump than for Mitt Romney, and a recent poll put the president’s approval rating among African Americans at an astounding 36 percent.
Trump has been in the public eye, too, for 30 years, and he’s worked with thousands of people of all different kinds in different ventures. Racists can’t hide under that kind of exposure. If Jim Brown doesn’t think Donald Trump is a racist, nobody else should, either.
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I posted this one just to piss some Folks off! Grumpy






















https://youtu.be/SWwxn4B62iQ
Looks like they had a fun day at the range. That is if it is at all possible to have a bad day at the range. Unless of course you get shot or something like wise irritating! Grumpy
Sorry folks but that is one butt ugly looking Pistol!![]()
http://www.patreon.com/ForgottenWeapons We have a monthly pistol c

Morphy’s To Auction Wyatt Earp’s Gun, Chief Rain-In-The-Face’s Winchester Oct. 30

DENVER, Pa. – -(AmmoLand.com)- While Morphy Auctions strives to make each of its sales a special occasion, some just naturally rise to superstar status within the collecting community. That would be the case with Morphy’s Oct. 30-Nov. 2 Premier Firearms, Militaria & Sporting Auction, which has been on the minds of antique and vintage gun enthusiasts since the dates were first announced. The big four-day event spans 350 years of firearms production, starting with a 1675 Dutch flintlock pistol and progressing through our nation’s history at war.
Of special note are two well-documented guns of the Old West whose importance cannot be overstated: an 1890s Colt single-action Army revolver that belonged to Dodge City’s fabled sheriff Wyatt Earp, and an 1873 Winchester rifle used by the legendary Chief Rain-In-The-Face. The Earp gun, which has extensive family provenance and documentation, is expected to make $75,000-$100,000; while the rifle belonging to the feared Lakota-Sioux Chief who claimed responsibility for killing General George Custer at Little Big Horn is estimated at $200,000-$250,000.
The auction will open with one of the largest offerings of fully automatic weapons ever to come to public auction. “This category is the hottest part of the gun market at the moment,” said Morphy’s Class III firearms expert John Keene.
Automatic weapons were once legal to purchase.
“Anyone could go into a hardware store and buy a Thompson machine gun for $200, but with the rise of Prohibition, law enforcement discovered that criminals had better firearms than they did, so from then on, Class III weapons had to be registered,” Keene said. He also noted that a wave of machine guns entered the ranks of private ownership after each of the 20th-century wars, when soldiers returned home with them. Over many decades and for a variety of reasons, the number of Class III weapons legally available for purchase and registration has dwindled dramatically. “On the other hand, collector interest has only increased, so they’ve become very desirable. That’s why we think the machine guns in this auction will bring outstanding prices,” Keene said.
Among the top highlights is an exceedingly rare US Westinghouse Browning .30-caliber World War I tank machine gun on 1918 tripod. It is one of the very first American-made machine guns designed specifically to go on a tank and is one of only two in the original configuration with proper registration for private ownership known to exist. Its estimate is $30,000-$50,000. A rare Colt Model of 1919 water-cooled machine gun, accompanied by a correct Colt commercial tripod and accessories is entered with a $30,000-$50,000 estimate, while a 1944 German World War II Mauser MG42 machine gun with Nazi proof marks, built to fire 1,200 rounds per minute, could reach $35,000-$55,000.

A grim history accompanies the Colt Model 1924 automatic machine gun whose serial number confirms it was used by prison guards at the notorious maximum-security Sing Sing prison. “The guards would test-fire their guns every month to discourage prisoners from trying to escape,” Keene said. Estimate: $30,000-$50,000. A new, unfired Maremont M60E3 machine gun is also estimated at $30,000-$50,000.
Around 80% of the sale consists of exceptionally high-quality factory-embellished and/or historically significant Colt revolvers and early Winchester lever-action rifles. “All of the guns are from private collections, and there are many unusual examples, like the only known consecutively-numbered pair of Winchester Model 1893 riot shotguns,” said Tony Wilcox, Morphy’s expert on Colt Winchester and 19th-century militaria.

A number of top lots are from the collection of the late Jason Roselius, an Oklahoma attorney described by Wilcox as “an outstanding individual, highly regarded in his community and profession, who collected the best-quality antique Colt and Winchester firearms and important Western items.”
In the antiquarian-book world, nothing trumps a first edition, and it’s no different with rare firearms.
“Number one is hard to beat,” said Wilcox, pointing out two irresistible auction entries. Lot 362, a Volcanic pistol carbine, was technically the first cartridge gun ever produced by Winchester. Bearing Serial No. 1, it is estimated at $17,500-$27,500. Lot 337, a lavishly engraved Colt Berdan trapdoor rifle, Serial No. 1, was the first cartridge rifle made by Colt. Estimate: $50,000-$75,000. “The phone calls on both of these guns have been nonstop,” Wilcox noted.
Also worthy of special mention, an extraordinary Colt 1849 pocket percussion revolver encased inside a book was a presentation item bestowed by Samuel Colt himself. “It is the absolute rarest of all Colt presentation items,” said Wilcox. Estimate: $100,000-$150,000.
It is unusual to encounter even one German-made Borchardt semi-automatic pistol at an auction. Morphy’s will offer four examples in its Oct. 30-Nov. 2 sale. 4. Many other exquisite rarities are waiting to be discovered, as well, such as an 1862 New Haven Arms ‘Iron Frame Henry’ rifle, Serial No. 262 and one of fewer than 90 believed to exist, $85,000-$100,000.
The Oct. 30-Nov. 2, 2018 Premier Firearms Auction will start at 9 a.m. Eastern Time at Morphy’s gallery in Denver, Pa. All forms of bidding will be available, including live via the Internet through Morphy Live. Questions: call 877-968-8880, email dan.morphy@morphyauctions.comOnline: www.morphyauctions.com.
