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  • 03/07/2023 11:48 AM | Anonymous

    Defensive Use of a Gun  by Tom Reynolds

    In the early 1990’s, the Department of Justice’s National Crime Victim Survey (NCVS) reported ‘only’ 68,000 annual Defensive Gun Uses in connection with assaults and robberies (about 80,000 to 82,000 if one adds in household burglaries.)  That number was low according to a later study.

    In the 1995 study: Armed Resistance to Crime: The Prevalence and Nature of Self-Defense with a Gun by Gary Kleck and Marc Gertz*, they took issue with NCVS and listed the estimated number of annual “Defensive Gun Uses” from numerous studies.  There were a lot more:

    3,609,000

    3,052,000

    2,141,000

    1,797,000

    1,621,000 (median number)

    1,414,000

    777,000

    771,000

    764,000

    Kleck and Gertz used these studies to prove that the NCVS report was drastically wrong. 

    Further, Kleck and Gertz gave reasons why the NCVS was so far off:

    First, the NCVS had not asked about self-protection unless the respondent first indicated that they had been a victim of a crime, so it was certainly underreported and underestimated. 

    Also, the respondent might be hesitant to admit to the use of a gun for self-protection because: 

    The defensive act itself might constitute an unlawful assault by the respondent or legal authorities could regard it that way.  (Remember the St. Louis couple who were arrested because they “brandished” weapons in front of a mob.  Also, Kyle Rittenhouse was charged with murder for defending himself against a mob.)

    Guns are highly regulated.  A victim's possession of the weapon might itself be unlawful, either in fact or in the mind of the person who used one. (Lay persons with a limited knowledge of the extremely complicated laws of self-defense or firearms are unlikely to know for sure whether their defensive actions or their gun possession was lawful.

    Kleck and Getz pointed out another interesting aspect, that the NCVS data indicated that even where the robber had a gun, victims who resist with guns are substantially less likely to be injured than those who resist in other ways and even slightly less likely to be hurt than those who do not resist at all.  (Remember Governor Cuomo rejected arming teachers to prevent collateral damage, in spite of this data to the contrary.)

    Sounds like a resounding endorsement of the 2nd Amendment.

    Then in 2018, Kleck's new paper—"What Do CDC's Surveys Say About the Frequency of Defensive Gun Uses?" found that the CDC had later asked about Defensive Gun Uses in its ‘Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey’ (BRFSS) in 1996, 1997, and 1998.  But never reported it.  Using the CDC’s data, Kleck summarized the CDC findings:

    In 1996, 1997, and 1998, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) conducted large-scale national surveys asking about defensive gun use (DGU). They never released the findings, or even acknowledged they had studied the topic. I obtained the unpublished raw data and computed the prevalence of DGU. CDC’s findings indicated that an average of 2.46 million U.S. adults used a gun for self-defense in each of the years from 1996 through 1998 – almost exactly confirming the estimate for 1992 of Kleck and Gertz (1995).

    Did the CDC read the Kleck-Gertz 1995 study, decided to challenge it, and then discovered their studies reflected the same conclusion?  Oops.

    Another resounding endorsement of the 2nd Amendment. 

    Almost…

    But then, a sharp-eyed reviewer pointed out a method error in Kleck’s latest work (not the 1995 original).  Kleck agreed and reworked the 1996, 1997 and 1998 data and came up with a lower estimate, but still over1 million Defensive Gun Uses.

    Gun control fans like to now refer to Keck as ‘discredited’ because of an error he admitted and corrected, while they never reference the corrected 1 million number.

    At some later date, the CDC published some statistics on Defensive Gun Use in its ‘Fast Facts’ web site.  It’s not clear what those statistics were since they are not there anymore.  However, in December 2022, while often quoting ‘The Reload’, multiple sources reported that the CDC quietly removed a range of gun statistics from its website after gun control advocates complained that the statistics made gun control laws harder to pass.

    Researchers with the time - and with a grant to pay for that time – can argue and nitpick about the validity of every study they do not agree with.  Of course, many grants come with the unspoken assumption that the results better be what the grantor hopes, if the researcher wants more funding.  But the sheer size of Kleck’s numbers should give everyone pause. 

    Take only the median number of Kleck’s original study,1,621,000. That’s 1.6 million crimes prevented by a gun and if only 1% had ended in serious injury or death to the victim, that is 16,210 prevented.

    Reduce the estimate to the later study of 1 million and you still get 10,000 serious injuries or deaths prevented.

    In an average year, in the United States there are about 14,000 non suicide gun deaths from all other sources, legal and illegal. 

    And the numbers of Defensive Gun Uses keep going up, according to later studies. 

    A recent survey conducted by William English, from the McDonough School of Business at Georgetown University, found “...that guns are used defensively by firearms owners in approximately 1.67 million incidents per year.” The number is the product of an exhaustive effort in early 2021, when roughly 54 thousand U.S. residents over the age of 18 were polled.

    Clearly, possession of a gun by the average citizen is beneficial, not harmful, and the numbers clearly outweigh gun usage by criminals.

    Just as clearly, when gun control is advocated by the Left, Defensive Gun Uses is missing from the conversation.  But now you know the complete story, in context.

     

    *   Armed Resistance to Crime: The Prevalence and Nature of Self-Defense with a Gun (northwestern.edu)

  • 03/06/2023 1:42 PM | Anonymous

    Hateful Conduct  by Tom Reynolds

    Last Monday Scope wrote about a 1st Amendment challenge to Hochul’s Concealed Carry Improvement Act.  Any government body should tread lightly when infringing on a Constitutionally protected right, especially when that Right is specifically mentioned in the Constitution.  As evidenced by this law, apparently not if you are Kathy Hochul and the NY Legislature.  They will trample on 1st Amendment rights as gleefully as they will trample 2nd Amendment rights.

    In another of her never-ending attempts to trash the U S Constitution, in 2022 Hochul signed the “Hateful Conduct Law”, (Social media networks; hateful conduct prohibited).  It went into effect on December 3, 2022.

    The “Hateful Conduct Law” is  being challenged in the case, Volokh v. James.  The plaintiffs operate online platforms described as social media networks.  They asked for an injunction to stop the law from being enforced.  The crux of their reasoning was: “…the law regulates the content of their speech by compelling them to speak on an issue on which they would otherwise remain silent.”   

    United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Judge Andrew Carter Jr., granted an injunction.  He described the essence of Hochul’s law as: “The Hateful Conduct Law requires a social media network to endorse the state's message about ‘hateful conduct’".

    No freedom of choice as to how or what one speaks in Hochul’s world. 

    Judge Carter continued: “A social media network that devises its own definition of ‘hateful conduct’ would risk being in violation of the law and thus subject to its enforcement provision…each social media network's definition of ‘hateful conduct’ must be at least as inclusive as the definition set forth in the law itself.

    In granting the injunction, the judge wrote about the unconstitutionality of the state compelling someone to speak in a particular way, even if the person does not want to speak: “The law also requires that a social media network must make a ‘policy’ available on its website which details how the network will respond to a complaint of hateful content. In other words, the law requires that social media networks devise and implement a written policy—i.e., speech.”

    Like the ‘Concealed Carry Improvement Act’, the ‘Hateful Conduct Law’ leaves much undefined, giving bureaucrats the latitude to fill in essential definitions in ways that are to theirs and Hochul’s liking – the U S Constitution be damned.  Judge Carter wrote: “The potential chilling effect to social media users is exacerbated by the indefiniteness of some of the Hateful Conduct Law’s key terms…the law does not put social media users on notice of what kinds of speech or content is now the target of government regulation.”

    As with the Concealed Carry Improvement Act, in their zeal to outlaw anything they disagree with, Hochul and her minions can’t seem to write a law that is both clear and constitutional.  Instead of breathlessly legislating, they should consider stepping back, taking a deep breath and thinking before legislating.

    And as with the Concealed Carry Improvement Act, the state has again sought to violate the constitutional rights of citizens.

    Hochul and the Left should read the decision in Matal v. Tam (2017). “…the proudest boast of our free speech jurisprudence is that we protect the freedom to express ‘the thought that we hate.'” 

    Or to put it even more eloquently, as Voltaire may have said, “I disapprove of what you say but I will defend to the death your right to say it.”  Words that will never be spoken by Kathy Hochul or her friends on the Left.

    Will any of that matter to voters?  Hochul and state legislators believe that there will be no political costs for passing laws that violate the First or Second Amendments. Will social media users show up at the polls to protest Hochul’s and the Left’s ham-handed approach?  Will gun owners show up at the polls to protest Hochul’s and the Left’s attempt to eliminate civilian gun ownership?

    Until gun owners start voting in big numbers, expect more reprehensible laws like these.  This is even more frustrating since gun owners have the numbers to put a stop to this nonsense. 

    Free speech is a threat to Hochul’s definition of a democracy.  Civilian gun ownership is as much or more of a threat to Hochul and the downstate Democrats in the legislature.

    Expect NY Attorney General Letitia James to again dip deeply into the taxpayer’s pockets and appeal this decision.

  • 03/02/2023 1:27 PM | Anonymous

    Clean Slate Bill  (S211 / A1029)  by Tom Reynolds

    State Senator Zellnor Myrie and Assembly Member Catalina Cruz are sponsoring a bill that would seal the criminal records of many people convicted of certain felonies or misdemeanors: three years after the imposed sentencing for misdemeanor crimes and seven years for felonies.

    It was first introduced in 2020, it has never passed both chambers.

    Concessions to help pass the bill:

    • the bill won’t include sex offenders, and
    • the criminal can’t commit additional crimes, and  
    • certain entities, such as some levels of law enforcement and the state Department of Education will have access to a person's sealed criminal records. Records would remain sealed from private employers. 

    Last year, Kathy Hochul explicitly mentioned the bill in her State of the State address. (Of course, she never met a leftist proposal that was too extreme.) 

    Hochul did not mention Clean Slate in this year’s State of the State address.  (A concession to the visuals of crime running amok in NY State and the Left being soft-on-crime?)

    Last year the state Senate passed the bill, but in the Assembly, it never made it out of the Codes Committee – the committee responsible for reviewing all legislation focused on the state’s criminal justice system.

    Chair of the Codes Committee, Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz, who is also a co-sponsor of Clean Slate, said that “The devil is in the details in terms of which crimes are included and the timetables that are involved.”

    After Democrats lost a few Assembly seats in the last election, the Republican conference gained a seat on the Codes Committee.  Last year, the committee was made up of 16 Democrats and six Republicans. This year, there are 15 and seven respectively.  Will that have some small impact? 

    Supporters say the bill will allow people who have served their time to be better able to access job and housing opportunities.  The bill’s sponsor Cruz, a Democrat from Queens said: “If you're concerned with public safety, the way to keep the community safe is to get people back to work…Statistics show recidivism is completely tied to someone's ability to sustain their family to actually earn a living."  (She better reexamine those statistics.  I doubt if absentee fathers who commit crimes do so to support their families.)

     Cruz expressed optimism that support for the bill will increase this year. “We had significant support last year, that will only increase once we finalize amendments to the bill.

    When asked whether allowing certain entities to unseal records would compromise the integrity of the legislation, Cruz said the sponsors of the bill are actively working with the Department of Education, business and law enforcement to ensure the bill supports economic development and communities.  (So, it’s important that some government people have access to these records but not you and I, who will be the ones most likely threatened by ex-convicts.)

    Assembly Minority Leader William Barclay said he believes in second chances, but he also echoed our concerns about the need for thorough background checks. “There are any number of occupations where a background check is important: in personal care settings, positions around children, jobs that handle finances. People have the right to make informed decisions,”

    Remember the debate over who’s job was “essential” during the Covid close down?  Now it’s who is essential enough to get access to these records.  I’ll bet ordinary citizens won’t qualify as essential.

    Former Democratic Assembly Member Tom Abinanti, wrote a memo about the language of the bill. “Our society depends on having background checks, in sensitive positions…We have to carefully go through that bill and make sure that everywhere there’s common agreement that background checks should be conducted, they're going to be allowed and not prohibited.”

    As usual, the Left is deeply concerned about criminals.  Those that obey the law…not so much.

  • 03/01/2023 8:36 PM | Anonymous

    The Truth Shall Set You Free  by Tom Reynolds

    It’s often said that whatever the Liberal Left is accusing others of doing, they are probably already doing it themselves.  For instance, the January 6th Committee.

    The House recently released all the video footage of January 6th to Tucker Carlson of Fox News.

    Other liberal news agencies (CBS News, CNN, Politico, ProPublica ABC, Axios, Advance, Scripps, the Los Angeles Times, and Gannett) complained, perhaps legitimately, that they should also get the tapes. 

    Fair enough.  But their letter requesting the tapes warns of dire consequences if they don’t get the tapes to publicize.  Their attorney, Charles Tobin wrote:

    Without full public access to the complete historical record, there is concern that an ideologically-based narrative of an already polarizing event will take hold in the public consciousness, with destabilizing risks to the legitimacy of Congress, the Capitol Police, and the various federal investigations and prosecutions of January 6 crimes.”

    Can anyone deny that Nancy Pelosi’s January 6th committee produced “an ideologically-based narrative” that was intended to further polarize the public? 

    Can anyone doubt that the politically motivated actions of the Department of Justice and its FBI (as to the January 6th participants) have undermined confidence in the impartiality and legitimacy of the government and, especially, the Department of Justice?

    ___________________________________

    The Biden Administration, and in particular Transportation Secretary Petey Buttigieg, were quick to blame the Trump administration for the train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.

    However, even the far left Washington Post‘s fact-checker Glenn Kessler admitted that Trump’s regulation changes didn’t cause the derailment.  Kessler relied on the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) preliminary report.

    Here are the accusations and the facts from the preliminary report.

    In 2017, the Trump administration repealed a rule requiring Electronically Controlled Pneumatic Brakes (ECP brakes) on ‘high hazard’ trains that carry flammable hazardous materials.”

    Biden’s administration, which took control in January 2021, hasn’t reinstated the rule.

    The train was not equipped with ECP brakes.

    The facts are that when the train’s crew received an alarm and initially applied the train’s main air brakes, the train had already derailed before the brakes were applied.  So, it did not derail due to the absence of ECP Brakes.

    Note: Why didn’t Biden and Buttigieg repeal Trumps’ order in the two years of their administration?  Petey too busy?

    The Obama administration had a rule requiring a two-person train crew. 

    Trump’s administration repealed the rule in 2019.

    The fact is that the Ohio train had a two-person crew.

    Trump’s administration “revised minimum safety requirements for railroad track.”

    The fact is that the NTSB found no problems with the track in its investigation.

    Trump’s administration “adopted weaker standards for regulating emissions of ethylene oxide,” which is one of the toxic chemicals spilled in the crash.

    The fact is that the rule is all about emissionsnot spills.

    I wonder if those news agencies that were worried about an ideologically-based narrative were quick to alert their viewers that their earlier reporting, which blamed Trump, was wrong and Trump had been illegitimately maligned.

    Keep this in mind the next time the Democrats say they are not going to take away your guns.

  • 02/28/2023 1:19 PM | Anonymous

    Rights Defined  by Tom Reynolds

    A “right” is defined as: a moral or legal entitlement to have or obtain something or to act in a certain way.  It means you have the freedom to act but not that anyone will provide you with the means, particularly not the government at the expense of taxpayers, 

    Owning a firearm and healthcare are both often defined as “rights” in different ways by different groups. What if the traditional “right” to own a gun was changed and redefined in the same way as healthcare is defined in Obamacare; it is a “right” and Obamacare mandated that from a mere domestic restraining order everyone must have health insurance.  And if you can’t afford it, the government will pay for it. 

    If owning a gun is a “right” in the same way that the Left defined Obamacare, then the government should mandate that everyone must have a gun and if you can’t afford one the government will pay for it.  The “right” to keep and bear arms would mean that you have the “right” to have someone (the government) provide you with a firearm.    

    Put another way, does the 1st Amendment right to free speech mean the government has to provide you with the means of speaking or writing?

     Let’s flip it and define the “right” to health care in the same way that the 2nd Amendment is traditionally defined.  The 2nd Amendment traditionally means that you are allowed to own and carry any firearm you can legally acquire. You can buy one, receive it as a gift, or build one yourself. Once acquired, it is like any other property; it cannot be taken from you without the due process of law. (At least that’s how Amendments 4, 5 6, and 14 are supposed to work.)

    Applying this to health care, it would mean that we have the right to see a doctor and pay for his services. It would give you the right to contract with anyone who might provide you with health care. Someone else might voluntarily pay for it out of charity or you might contract with an insurance company to pay for it. If you can obtain health care by any such legal means, government may not stop you or take it away from you.

    Under either definition of a “right”, the Left loses the debate when both “rights” are defined in the same way.  But consistency was never a goal of the left.

    __________________________________

    Courts have ruled that police do not have an obligation to protect us.  The primary responsibility of the federal government is to protect our liberty and our individual rights as guaranteed by our Constitution; its primary responsibility is NOT to keep us safe.  The oath that Presidents and other government officials take would seem to give some support to that idea since the oath requires them to preserve and protect the Constitution - and says nothing about keeping us safe. 

    If the government’s job is to keep our rights safe, there is no basis for taking away our guns since to “keep and bear arms” is one of our rights that the government must protect.

    And since the government’s job is not to keep us safe, that is further justification that we need to “keep and bear arms“ in order to keep ourselves safe.

    _______________________________

    The United States District Court, Eastern District of Kentucky, Central Division (at Lexington), has held that a domestic restraining order’s ban on Second Amendment rights is unconstitutional.

    A Family Court in Kentucky issued a Domestic Violence Order (DVO) - a restraining order - against Sherman Kelvin Combs. Kentucky’s DVO procedures do not require an attorney to be appointed or a jury to resolve factual issues.  Combs and his lawyers successfully argued that a ban on receiving a firearm while under a restraining order, is unconstitutional because of those issues.

    This is at least the third case where a court has held that a ban from a domestic restraining order on exercising the Second Amendment right is unconstitutional. A Texas District court has also held the restraining order ban is unconstitutional and a three-judge panel in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals has also held the ban to be unconstitutional.

    We may sympathize with the idea of someone under a restraining order not having a gun but it must and can be done in accordance with the Constitution.  Like Red Flag laws, these restraining orders run afoul of the 4th, 5th, 6th and 14th Amendments.  When crafting legislation, the Left should focus on those needing protection and not on their real / hidden agenda of more gun control.

    Remember when liberals were all for criminals going free if their Constitutional Rights were violated, even if the criminal had committed a murder?  They’re not so rabid about preserving Constitution Rights when gun owners are involved.


  • 02/27/2023 2:22 PM | Anonymous

    SCOPE often points out that the people going after the 2nd Amendment are also going after the rest of the Constitution and especially the 1st Amendment.

    The Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University says on its web site, “Conversations that once took place in parks, sidewalks, and public squares now take place largely online, and often on privately owned social media platforms. As a society, we are just beginning to grapple with the question of how the First Amendment and free speech principles should apply in these digital spaces.”

    “Knight” has just, along with five other gun rights organizations, filed an amicus brief in the Second Circuit in the case Antonyuk v. Hochul.  (The big lawsuit challenging many aspects of Hochul’s Concealed carry Improvement Act.)  “Knight” argues, in the brief, that the part of New York’s Concealed Carry Improvement Act that requires applicants to register their social media in order to get a pistol permit…is unconstitutional.  New York’s regulations must conform to the First Amendment and this particular provision of New York’s new gun law does not.

    Anna Diakun, staff attorney at the Knight Institute argues, ‘Not only has the state failed to demonstrate that the social media registration requirement will actually further its goals, but it has also failed to acknowledge its costs: It will have a profound impact on the right to speak anonymously and associate privately online, and it will invite discrimination by licensing officials.

    The brief further states that “the statute compels applicants to direct the State to a record of their online speech and associations. The natural and predictable result of this requirement is that applicants will refrain from speech or associations online that they fear may be held against them in the application process or that they do not believe should be subject to government inspection.’

    Katie Fallow, senior counsel at the Knight Institute said: ‘The state’s dragnet social media registration requirement goes far beyond what is necessary, and will set a dangerous precedent for broad intrusions on individuals First Amendment rights…If the New York law is allowed to stand, one can easily imagine the government imposing these requirements in any number of other situations.’

    What an accurate description, labelling the law as a “Dragnet.”

    The brief quotes Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s concurrence from a 2012 Supreme Court case called United States v. Jones, in which she stated that “Awareness that the government may be watching chills associational and expressive freedoms. And the government’s unrestrained power to assemble data that reveal private aspects of identity is susceptible to abuse.”

    Ya think! 

    How about the government’s power to assemble data on gun owners – or anyone else that opposes the government’s actions?

    Who are the other organizations joining in the brief?  The brief explains, “This is of urgent concern to amici gun owners’ associations, which represent Asian Pacific Americans, African Americans, women, LGBTQ individuals, and politically active individuals—some of whom have particular reasons to distrust law enforcement and to fear the government’s scrutiny of their online lives.”

    Those other gun rights organizations are:

    The Liberal Gun Club, (gun-owning liberals and moderates), and

    The DC Project Foundation, (female gun owners), and

    The Asian Pacific American Gun Owners Association (Asian Pacific Americans who own guns), and

    The National African American Gun Association (members of the African American community), and

    The Operation Blazing Sword–Pink Pistols lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (“LGBTQ”) firearm owners.

    The enemy of my enemy is my friend.

    Hochul may have kicked a hornet’s nest in her wild desire to deny us our 2nd Amendment rights.  Perhaps, she should have followed NY law and not declared a non-existent emergency and, instead, thought about what she was doing.

    Of course, if she thought about what she was doing she wouldn’t be doing what she is doing.

  • 02/25/2023 3:31 PM | Anonymous

    All members should have received the Jan/Feb 2023 Firing Lines issue in the mail

    For At-Large Director; take the time and VOTE!
    *Ballot must have your addess label on the back  if you did not receive your issue in the mail - contact Susan
    Annual SCOPE Member Meeting
    Join us in Montour Falls on April 29th!

    We have Robert Young, MD from Doctors for Responsible Gun Ownership

    Assemblyman Phil Palmesano (District 132)

    Congressman Nick Langworthy (District 23)

    Coming to speak to you!~~

    SCOPE Ballot -or- SCOPE Member Meeting
    PO Box 165
    East Aurora, NY 14052
    (Postmarked by April 14th, 2023)

    Page 23 has your Official SCOPE 2023 Ballot 

    Page 21 has the information about your 2023

    *Both the ballot & RSVP for the Member Meeting must be mailed separately to

    Click the link below to download
    January/February 2023 Firing Lines


  • 02/24/2023 7:45 PM | Anonymous

    NY A4271 and S803  by Tom Reynolds

    Two bills (Assembly Bill 4271 and Senate bill 803) have been introduced in the NY Legislature.  They say:

    NO PERSON, FIRM, LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY OR CORPORATION ENGAGED IN THE RETAIL BUSINESS OF SELLING RIFLES, SHOTGUNS OR FIREARMS SHALL SELL, DELIVER OR TRANSFER ANY CHILD OPERATED FIREARM TO ANOTHER PERSON.

    No one can sell deliver or transfer a Child Operated Firearm.  But, young children aren’t allowed to operate firearms.  Does this mean toys?

    The bills explain what is a Child Operated Firearm:

    CHILD  OPERATED  FIREARM  MEANS  A PISTOL  OR  REVOLVER…WHICH DOES NOT CONTAIN A CHILDPROOFING  DEVICE OR  MECHANISM INCORPORATED INTO THE DESIGN OF SUCH PISTOL OR REVOLVER TO  EFFECTIVELY PRECLUDE AN AVERAGE FIVE YEAR OLD CHILD FROM  OPERATING  THE PISTOL OR REVOLVER.

    So, gun locks are not enough.  The child proofing needs to be built in as a part of the firearm.  Won’t that eliminate virtually every firearm currently sold?  Does a bear…

    My kids are all above average.  But for those of you with average 5 year olds, remember, in just one year they will be six and will be able to bypass these new mechanisms.  Wouldn’t it be better to just keep the gun unloaded?  Oh wait, that is already the law when children are present in the household.

    My above average kids are grown and out on their own.  Why would I want to buy a gun with these impediments?  

    Some examples of these devices or mechanisms to be incorporated into the firearm that are cited in the bill:

    1-THE CAPACITY TO ADJUST THE TRIGGER RESISTANCE TO AT LEAST A TEN POUND PULL.

    Ten pound pull - the force need to pull the trigger to fire the weapon.  Put into perspective, per the American Gun Association on trigger pulls:

    1-5 pounds: most single-action revolvers and semiautomatic weapons, some hunting rifles, most target rifles, some shotguns

    5-8 pounds: some other hunting rifles, some shotguns, many striker-fired semiautomatic weapons

    Over 8 pounds: double-action weapons

    What happens with heavier trigger pulls?  (You jerk the weapon and miss the target.)  Doesn’t missing the target defeat the purpose of the weapon? Does a bear…

    Aren’t women generally less strong than men and will have to make greater effort to pull the trigger?  What about the handicapped or elderly?  Too bad…you die if you need a gun for emergency self defense.

    2-THE CAPACITY TO ALTER THE FIRING MECHANISM SO THAT AN AVERAGE FIVE YEAR OLD CHILD'S HANDS ARE TOO SMALL TO OPERATE THE PISTOL OR REVOLVER.

    Will only big guns be legal?

    3-THE CAPACITY TO REQUIRE A SERIES OF MULTIPLE MOTIONS IN ORDER TO FIRE THE PISTOL OR REVOLVER.

    The often-cited reason why many people, (women, black, jews, Asians, LGBTQ, and even straight white men) cite as the reason for buying a gun is self-defense.  Using a gun in self-defense is usually an emergency and requires a fast response.  (At least that’s what experts in the field say.  But what do they know compared to Hochul and the NY Legislature.)  Won’t all these mechanisms slow down the response and make it less effective?  Does a bear…

    Will those that illegally possess guns – some or many of them living with 5 years old or younger children and are responsible for most gun homicides – follow these regulations? 

    These rules need some “fleshing out”.  How will that be done?  The law says:

    THE SUPERINTENDENT OF THE STATE POLICE SHALL, IN CONSULTATION WITH SUCH GUN MANUFACTURERS AS SUCH SUPERINTENDENT DEEMS APPROPRIATE, ADOPT RULES AND REGULATIONS ESTABLISHING MINIMUM STANDARDS FOR CHILDPROOFING DEVICES OR MECHANISMS TO ENSURE THAT SUCH CHILDPROOFING DEVICES OR MECHANISMS ARE SAFE AND EFFECTIVE.

    Steven Nigrelli is the Acting Superintendent of the NY State Police.  Yes, that same Nigrelli who is being sued by Antonyuk as he is in charge of enforcing Hochul’s Concealed Carry Improvement Act and reports to Kathy Hochul.  Well, I’m sure we can count on him to “deem appropriate” in consulting with gun manufacturers and people in Hochul’s administration and not abuse his unfettered authority when developing these rules and regulations.  And, of course, he will not fall into the bureaucratic tendency to overregulate so no one can accuse him of underregulating. 

    What’s the penalty for breaking the law?

                  CLASS A MISDEMEANOR.  (Up to a year in jail.)

    When would it take effect:

    This act shall take effect on the first of November next, succeeding the date on which it shall have become a law.

    Rough guess: there are 20 million guns already in NY State.  What about them? Nothing mentioned…yet.  Unless of course, you want to trade your current gun in for a new one.  It will be covered and will now have considerably less trade in value.

    I know we often say this but you might want to contact your Senator or Assemblyperson and tell them how you feel about these laws. 

    And as to those gun owners who don’t vote because these laws are not affecting you…keep living in your dream world.

  • 02/23/2023 7:58 PM | Anonymous

    USA Clay Target League  by Jim Griffin (Steuben County SCOPE)

    In Minnesota in 2007, the USA Clay Target League was formed.  The leading reason for the league was to get young people to participate in shooting activities and to help offset declining membership in shooting clubs.  From its onset the league has promoted safety while having fun and improving the individuals’ shooting skills.

    The Target League is the fastest growing high school sport in the United States:

    • In 2007 the league was limited to Minnesota with 3 teams with 30 participants. 
    • In 2013 the league expanded to 2 states with 191 teams and 7,046 participants.
    • In 2022 the league is in 34 states with 1,466 teams with 43,009 participants.
    • It started in the spring of 2016 with 5 teams and 128 participants
    • In the Spring of 2022, it had 122 teams with 2,142 participants
    • New teams are being added for the spring 2023 season, and it looks like it will be another record year
    • 12,347 first year student athletes joined the league
    • 35% of the athletes earned firearm safety certification specifically to participate in the league
    • 70% learned about the league through their school
    • There was a 99% team retention rate with 95% athlete retention
    • 63% of teams have a lettering program
    • 80% were included in the school yearbook
    • 81% of shooting ranges reported increases in non-youth participation as a result of hosting a USA Clay Target League Teams
    • 26% of head coaches expect their shooting ranges will expand participant capacity within the next 2 years
    • 43% of league parents reported an increase in hunting and shooting sports participation since their child become active in the league.
    • The league has expanded to include Home schooled students, a skeet discipline and a new college league.
    • 230 Teams
    • 2,950 Registered Athletes
    • 375, 000 targets were thrown
    • 7,500 Total Attendees
    • 100,000 participants by 2025
    • 20,000 Team Coaches and Staff Members
    • 3,000 High Schools-Approved Teams
    • 1,800 Shooting Ranges Hosting Teams across the Country
    • 65,000 Tournament Participants

    This is the fastest growing sport in New York State,

    The league is creating the next generation of outdoor enthusiasts as it is open to all Students from 6th to 12th grade.

    All shooters must take safety instruction before they can participate in the league, which creates a new generation of safer gun enthusiasts.  The league has a pristine safety record with well over 120 million rounds of shotgun shells shot since the beginning.  77 million rounds were shot in 2022 with NO incidents.  (The league is safer than Band.)  

    The league is open to anyone, no matter what race or sex and those who are physically challenged are all welcome.

    The League is empowering young people and boosting their self-confidence. 

    Experienced shooters and novices can participate and help each other to improve as they compete against themselves.

    You don’t need to buy expensive equipment, a Remington 870 works as well as a $20,000 Krieghoff.

    One of the hidden benefits that the league has generated are the contributions to the Pittman Robinson Act, which is a tax on sporting goods that we pay when we purchase sporting equipment.  The act was passed in 1937 to let state’s wildlife agencies to use certain funds allocated from the Wildlife Restoration Account to build and maintain shooting ranges and bolster marketing and communications efforts to recruit, retain, and re-activate hunters and recreational shooters.  The league in 2022 added $97.5 million in sports related expenditures which generated an estimated $4.5 million added to the Pittman Robinson fund.

    In 2022:

    At the 2022 High School National Championship in Mason, Michigan:

    What is the vision for the future of the League at a National Level?

    With all the bad publicity when it comes to guns, this is a bright spot that we need to talk about.  The High School league benefits all shooting enthusiasts in New York. Anyone who knows of a High School that wants to start a team, have them go to the web site nyclaytarget.com to get the information on how to get started.

    With everyone’s help, continued growth is not just attainable but likely.  This is a great way to offset the media’s anti-2A bias.  Let’s do our part in New York!

  • 02/20/2023 9:52 PM | Anonymous

    President’s Day  by Tom Reynolds

    A year ago, SCOPE sent this as an email.  It is as current now as it was then…or when Thomas Jefferson wrote them.

    Miscellaneous Thoughts on President’s Day by Thomas Jefferson, Founder of the Democrat Party

    No free man shall ever be disbarred the use of arms.

    The strongest reason for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government.

    The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.

    I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people, under the pretense of taking care of them.

    The democracy will cease to exist when we take away from those that are willing to work and give to those who would not.

    To compel a man to subsidize with his taxes, the propagation of ideas which he disbelieves and abhors, is sinful and tyrannical.

    It is incumbent on every generation to pay its own debt’s as it goes. A principle which if acted upon would save one-half the wars of the world.

    My reading of history convinces me that most bad government results from too much government.

    When we get piled on one another in large cities, as in Europe, we shall become as corrupt as Europe.

A 2nd Amendment Defense Organization, defending the rights of New York State gun owners to keep and bear arms!

PO Box 165
East Aurora, NY 14052

SCOPE is a 501(c)4 non-profit organization.

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