Stop the Presses: The New York Times’ Reporting on Guns and Gun Owners May Be Shifting…Slightly
If you look closely enough, squint really hard, and read under perfect lighting, you might be surprised to find that […]
If you look closely enough, squint really hard, and read under perfect lighting, you might be surprised to find that […]
You’re not supposed to notice the media’s hypocrisy in their reports lacking any mention of “knife violence,” indicating an appalling double-standard in how violent crime involving firearms is routinely portrayed.
The scheme the professors contemplate in their op-ed shifts that burden to the individual who was unconstitutionally deprived of his or her gun rights. That’s a violation of due process, something law professors used to believe was important.
The Trace and Sentient’s game plan isn’t new, but it’s still maddening. American hunters helping their communities should be praised and assisted in ways that help them do even more.
Every once in a while, culture shifts in America prompt America’s newspaper of record to commission one of their ink-stained wretches to kit up and venture west of the Hudson to see what’s going on.
When you hear on the news that a mass shooting has occurred, what’s the first thing that comes to mind?
Gun laws are a public signal about what is halal and what is haram, what is clean vs. unclean. But social media content policy is a much more powerful signal. Unlike law, it reaches into every person’s home every day.
It’s important to be precise in describing these issues. Defining the problem as simply “gun violence is the number one cause of death in children and teens” is at best vague, and at worst propagandistic and intentionally misleading.
“It’s the attitude behind the guns here in Kennesaw that keep the gun crimes down, not the guns,” Mr Weatherby said. “It doesn’t matter if it’s a gun or a fork or a fist or a high heel shoe. We protect ourselves and our neighbours.”
There’s only one gun store in Mexico. It’s located on a heavily guarded military base in Mexico City. Before customers