Second Amendment Sisters Are Most Recent RightHaven LLC Target

According to a story in the Las Vegas Sun, five more website owners were sued by RightHaven LLC including the Second Amendment Sisters. This brings to 100 the number of bloggers and websites sued by RightHaven LLC.

The Second Amendment Sisters describe their mission as:

We are a grassroots national organization with representation in all 50 states. Second Amendment Sisters, also known as SAS, was formed in response to the Million Mom March. It was our founders’ belief that the Million Moms should not and would not represent all American Women.

Founded by 5 women from across the country, SAS has now grown to thousands of members across our Great Nation. We have taken on many functions. We teach and advocate for women to have the right to life – that is, we work to protect our basic human right to self-defense. Our members span the ages from the very young to the mature.

With regard to the lawsuits the Sun reports that,

Court records indicate 18 of the suits have been settled under generally undisclosed terms — and that more settlements are in the works.

In many of the cases, “mom and pop”-type website owners and bloggers are defending themselves, finding it cheaper to settle than to hire an attorney to litigate the cases.

However, not all defendants are rolling over. A Canadian website, MajorWager.com, is fighting back as is the Nevada Democratic Party. In their story on this lawsuit, the Las Vegas Sun notes that the Democrats have brought in a heavy hitter Washington, DC law firm Perkins Coie LLP. Attorney Marc Elias is one of the attorneys representing the Nevada Democrats. He served as general counsel to the Kerry-Edwards presidential campaign in 2004.

H/T to Clayton Cramer and Sebastian

Glock, Nimbys, and Land Use Planning

Glock’s plans to expand in Smyrna, GA has made news in the metro Atlanta area. This in turn has been picked up by gun bloggers for example here and here.

Rather than just repeat what has been said, I’d like to examine their expansion and the opposition to it from a land use planning standpoint. I have served on my town’s Zoning Board of Adjustment for over 16 years. Boards of Adjustment in North Carolina are quasi-judicial in nature. We hear requests for variances and conditional use permits. We hold public meetings where we take sworn testimony from town staff, those requesting the variance or permit, and those opposed to it. After we render a decision, the applicant can take our decision or appeal it to Superior Court. Most variance requests are reasonable and usually approved.

The process in the City of Smyrna is very similar. The major differences seem to be that they call the Board of Adjustment a “license and variance board” and that they pass the more controversial variances up to the City Council. If an opponent makes a “Notice of Preservation of Constitutional Rights”, the request must be heard by the City Council and not the License and Variance Board (LVB).

Variance Request

Currently, Glock has two buildings where they assemble, test, and ship their pistols. Including an in-progress 17,975 square foot expansion, they have approximately 100,000 square feet of building space. This original plant was built in 1987 and is located in the Highlands Industrial Park. Both these buildings and the expansion are in an area zoned Light Industrial.

This zoning classification allows among other things:

Within any LI industrial district, the following uses shall be permitted:

(714.1) Any industrial use which involves manufacturing, processing, or assembly operations or the storage and sale of heavy materials, products or equipment; but not including those uses which emit obnoxious, injurious or offensive noise, vibrations, smoke, dust, gas fumes or odors or create fire or explosion hazards or other objectionable conditions.

(714.21) Within planned industrial parks, archery and gun ranges (indoor), provided they meet all federal regulations and the National Rifle Association standards governing such activities, as approved by the city building inspector and fire marshal.

Their expansion plans include adding another four buildings totaling 263,277 square feet of space. This will be about 2.6 times more than they have already. They plan to build this on an 18 acre tract of land adjoining their current plant. This area is mostly forested and has a small stream running down it.

The property owner, Consultinvest, Inc., made 3 requests for variances to the City of Smyrna License and Variance Board. While the property will be used by Glock, the actual property owner is the one who must make the request. The variances were required because of encroachments on a) the stream buffer with “no State Waters; b) a stream buffer with State Waters; and c) the 50 ft residential buffer. The last variance request was withdrawn at the June 9th LVB meeting.

The City of Smyrna applies the following standards to variance requests:

Sec. 1403. Variance review standards.
In rendering its decisions, the license and variance board or mayor and city council shall consider the following factors:
(1) Whether there are unique and special circumstances or extraordinary and exceptional conditions applying to the property in question, or to the intended use of the property, that do not apply generally to other properties in the same district.
(2) Whether any alleged hardship is self-created by any person having an interest in the property nor is the result of mere disregard for or ignorance of the provisions from which relief is sought.
(3) Whether strict application of the relevant provisions of the Zoning Code would deprive the applicant of reasonable use of the property for which the variance is sought.
(4) Whether the variance proposed is the minimum variance, which makes possible the reasonable use of the property.
(Ord. No. 2005-34, 8-1-05)

Translated into basic English, this means that if because of the topography or other physical features of your land you cannot make reasonable use of your property when following the absolute letter of the zoning law, you can ask for a variance. The variance can only be just enough to let you use the land reasonably.

Smyrna adopted a stream buffer ordinance in 2005. It requires a 50 foot vegetative buffer from the banks of any stream that drains less than 5 square miles. It also requires an additional 25 foot buffer from there in which you can’t put have pavement or other impervious surfaces. The stream buffer ordinance does allow variances for properties such as this which were platted prior to 2005.

Consultinvest, Inc. and Glock worked with the Smyrna planning staff to come up with plans that would fly. The first site plan seen here was revised to include the building placement. The revised plan can be seen here.

It is obvious to me that they re-sited New Building B so as not to encroach on the 50 foot residential buffer. New Buildings D and E are fairly non-controversial as they adjoin other industrial buildings. Only New Building C which is sited in the triangle formed by Prince and Camp Highlands Roads appears to be the sticking point.

If you look at the Red teardrop on this topo map, the proposed expansion takes place in the flat area in front of it and up into the little valley formed by Prince and Camp Highland Roads. The key thing to me is that the drainage from this land goes AWAY from the residential areas.

Above you can see a satellite view of the area in question. If you were to put your left index finger horizontally across the satellite view starting at the smaller of the existing Glock buildings, you would cover the area for New Buildings B, D, and E.

Hearings and Opposition

The first hearing of the LVB was on June 9th. At that meeting, the Board accepted the withdrawal of the request by Consultinvest, Inc. to encroach upon the 50 foot residential buffer (V10-020). The other two variance requests were tabled until the LVB’s June 23rd meeting.

It is evident that the surrounding subdivisions began to mobilize in the interim. I should note that it is always standard procedure to inform neighbors within a 500 foot radius of the proposed variance of the hearings. Doing a Google search on opposition to the Glock expansion, I found a series of messages starting around June 19th trying to rally the opposition to the plans.

The Wetherbrooke Homeowners Association and other individuals in the subdivision hired an attorney to make their opposition known and to negotiate on their behalf. In the exhibits for the June 23rd meeting there is a letter from the law firm of Lazega & Johanson which makes the notice of “Preservation of Constitutional Rights.” The Wetherbrooke subdivision is just to the Northwest of the planned expansion on the satellite picture.

Prior to the June 23rd meeting, there was a meeting between the homeowners association, Smyrna city planners, and Glock to see if they could iron out the differences with regard to Glock’s expansion. It appears that the HOA had some demands that needed to be met or they would object. They were not totally met.

Glock’s attorney, Garvis Sams, Jr. of Sams, Larkin & Huff, outlined what Glock and Consultinvest, Inc. would do in a letter to the HOA’s attorneys. First, Glock agreed to limit construction traffic and to provide a flagman during the mornings and afternoons when school children are going to or arriving home from school. They did not agree to provide the home owner’s with their security plans due to the constraints imposed by being a DOD contractor.

Glock said it would paint the exterior walls of the new buildings in the same color scheme as the existing building and that they would make sure security lighting was not aimed towards the subdivision. Here is where it gets interesting. It seems that the HOA wanted a park or playground built for the residents of the Wetherbrooke Subdivision and that they were demanding a $150,000 payment be made to the HOA’s “reserve fund” in case of any damages. While saying that they would pay for any inadvertent damages caused in construction, Glock told the HOA that they would not build a playground nor put $150,000 in the reserve fund. Finally, Glock said it was keeping its ammo storage at the old buildings and that their new (indoor) shooting range would be in one of the existing buildings – not the new construction.

The LVB held their June 23rd meeting and passed both variance requests to the Smyrna City Council due to the state opposition.

City Council

The variance requests were on the agenda for the City Council for both July 6th and July 19th. However, the Council tabled it at both meetings and the hearing (and vote) on the variances was held on August 2nd.

Unfortunately, the minutes from the August 2nd meeting have not been published yet. I was informed by the City Clerk today that they were in draft form and they were still being worked on. As a result, what I know about the council meeting comes from the Marietta Daily Journal.

The opposition seems to have been vocal – if not well informed. Reports had more than a hundred people attending the meeting holding signs saying “Save our Neighborhood”. The following comments by a Kimberly Childs seems typical:

“You just heard tonight one of the Glock representatives saying they were planning to move some of their manufacturing here. I’m not at all opposed to gun rights or anything like that, but maybe if they were making vacuum cleaners it’d be another thing; they’re making handguns right by our properties and our children,” said Childs, a mother of two children ages 6 and 4, said.

Mrs. Childs was later quoted as saying:

“That’s our mayor and city council up there, degrading us,” Childs said. “I was surprised the vote was unanimous, and they obviously had more faith in their pro- GLOCK city staffers than they did in their own residents who’ve devoted so much time to proving our concerns.

But GLOCK has a long way to go before these buildings can be built, and we’re looking at our options to appeal this to the Supreme Court, so this issue certainly isn’t over.”

However, there were some pro-Glock expansion comments. Cobb County Chamber of Commerce Chairman Rob Garcia noted that Glock had been a model corporate citizen for 24 years and would be bring up to 100 new jobs to the area over the next few years. He urged Council to approve the variance.

It seems some of the anger was not so much with Glock as with City Council. One lady noted that Glock had provided much more information than Council. She said they would have still opposed it but wouldn’t have been so mad about it.

The City Council voted 7-0 to approve the variance requests. However, it appears that the residents of Wetherbrooke subdivision and their HOA will probably try to hold it up.

Final Comments

If I had been on either the LVB or the Council I would have voted to approve the variances. I say this not because  I am a gun blogger but because it would have been the right thing to do. Glock and Consultinvest, Inc. met the standard for granting a variance due to the topography of their land. The use of the land was consistent with the Light Industrial standards including the firing range. Furthermore, Glock appeared willing to work with City staff to make sure their expansion was done correctly and with minimal disruption to its neighbors. As the letter from their attorney in June attests, they were open to changes and willing to work with the homeowners. However, Glock was not willing to be bullied or blackmailed.

Checking the tax listings for both Glock and those named as testifying against the expansion was interesting. Glock had been in their location since 1987. The oldest house built in the adjoining subdivisions was built in 2001. If you buy or build a house next to an industrial area, you should have done your homework. If you didn’t like what was there, don’t buy next to it and expect the industrial companies to change.

The hyperbole from the opposition was all too typical. They didn’t pay attention early on in the process when they could have made constructive suggestions and then got all hyped up towards the end. They based much of their testimony on myth and legend. I found the comments by Kimberly Childs of going to the Supreme Court especially amusing since she is a lawyer in Atlanta  and is considered an up-and-coming litigator in Georgia.

I will post an update when I get a chance to read the minutes from the City Council meeting. I’m sure there will be some gems in there!

Billionaires Giving Away Wealth

The evening news shows were all abuzz with the story that 40 billionaires had signed a pledge to give away the majority of their wealth to charity. What they do with that money is, of course, entirely their business.

One of the billionaires is NY City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Bloomberg is quoted as saying,

“If you want to do something for your children and show how much you love them, the single best thing — by far — is to support organizations that will create a better world for them and their children,” Bloomberg said in his pledge letter, which was posted on the Giving Pledge’s website.

“A better world for them and their children.” Hmm. That sounds suspiciously like “do it for the children” which seems to be one of the more prevalent rallying cries of the gun banners. I would not be surprised to see Bloomberg to use some of his donations to push as much gun control as the courts will let him get away with.

After all, he accused Obama of dragging his feet on gun control earlier this year.

Kagan Confirmed By Senate

In a 63-37 vote, Elena Kagan was confirmed by the Senate as the newest Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. The only Democrat to vote against her was Ben Nelson of Nebraska while five Republicans (in name only) voted for her.

The five Republicans voting to confirm Kagan were Lindsey Graham of SC, Richard Lugar of Indiana, Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe of Maine, and Judd Gregg of New Hampshire. Scott Brown of Massachusetts voted against her citing her lack of judicial and courtroom experience.

Posts about Kagan can be found here, here, and here. Speculation that Harry Reid would scuttle Kagan to preserve his seat are obviously erroneous. I still wonder if the NRA will endorse Reid given that made this a “recorded” vote.

UPDATE: Statement from the NRA which opposed Kagan can be found here.

Iowahawk Resurrects Column on Bellesiles

With all the attempts to resurrect the reputation of Michael Bellesiles by the New York Times and the Chronicle of Higher Education, the Iowahawk did some resurrections of his own. He republished a column on academic miscreants like Bellesiles from 2002. It still makes for great reading.

Bellesiles, for those that don’t remember, was the Emory University historian who published a book called The Arming of America which said that people in Colonial America really didn’t have many firearms. Of course, he depended on documents that couldn’t be found such as probates records that were destroyed in the 1906 Great San Francisco earthquake. He eventually had his Bancroft Prize taken back and lost his job at Emory. Lately, he has been teaching as an adjunct instructor at Central Connecticut State University where, once again, he lapsed into his habit of academic fraud.

From Iowahawk comes this wonderful assortment of quotes:

“It now appears that few, if any, 18th or 19th century Americans owned guns,” says Bellesiles in the book’s conclusion. “To the contrary, it is clear that most Colonial Americans abhorred firearms, and spent most of their incomes on espresso machines, yoga classes and Eames chairs.”

And this,

In Bellesiles’ thesis, the current proliferation of guns in American society is a relatively recent phenomenon, which he traces to a secret 1963 marketing agreement between weapon conglomerates Daisy and Red Ryder and Boy’s Life magazine.

Finally this,

Bellisiles later hypothesized that the records were in the courthouse in Nacho Burrito County, which researchers were also unable to find. Last week Emory administrators sent a letter to Bellisiles asking for a response to the growing criticism, but this time the professor was himself missing. When last seen he was in a secluded river wilderness outside Atlanta, paddling a canoe with Jon Voight, Burt Reynolds and a strange looking mountain boy with a banjo.

Andrew Breitbart has also covered the media’s resurrection of Bellesiles here on his Big Journalism website.

Frankly, I think Bellesiles ought to just hang it up and jump that freight train that he is shown with in the New York Times piece.

H/T Snowflakes in Hell for the Big Journalism piece.

On Cosmoline

Chris Byrne at The Anarchangel Blog talks about what he calls the most hated substance on earth – cosmoline.

Any long-time Cruffler (collector of curios and relics firearms) will understand his angst in dealing with cosmoline as we’ve all done it in the past. Personally, I’ve used the boiling water method, the Simple Green method, the steam method, and the hot car method. They all work – somewhat.

Read his whole blog post to get more tips on how to deal with it.

Stephen Hunter’s Ode to the .38 Super

Stephen Hunter has just written what I would term an ode to the .38 Super cartridge. His novels featuring the Swaggers have, in their own way, helped to build the mystique of the round. Whether it was the father Earl carrying one in “Havana” or the son Bob Lee using it in “Days of Thunder”,  you knew that Hunter had a soft spot for it.

the .38 Super represented one allure of gun culture that only occasionally gets acknowledged, and yet one that is absolutely fascinating and all but impenetrable to those who don’t feel the pull. That is, it has charisma; it has personality, pizzazz, and vividness. It’s out of the ordinary, beloved by some, aggressively non-generic and it carries information with it. It says—and we love to say this—“I have thought hard about these issues and come to a logical conclusion and made these sound decisions. I am not passive; I am active in deciding about my own defense.”

So it was ideally suited to a novelist’s purposes; it’s what we call a resonant fact, and it’s why my characters never just carry “a gun” but instead have thought about, chosen and most importantly express themselves in their world by virtue of the gun and caliber they chose. Someone once said, “Beware the man who owns only one gun; he probably knows how to use it.” I would append to that: “Beware the man who carries a .38 Super; he knows what he’s doing.”

He notes that two factors that have kept the .38 Super in production are pistol competitions and the vagaries of Mexican gun laws. The latter is the result of Mexican gun laws which forbid “military” calibers such as 9mm and .45 ACP from civilian use and the former was the result of how Col. Jeff Cooper wrote the rules defining a “major” caliber for competition.

Hunter examines the pluses and minuses of the cartridge. In the end it works for him.

Which leads me to what the gun represents today and for whom it’s good. There is one person in the world for whom it’s a best choice: me. That is because I love the M1911 platform for its reliability and its heritage. It’s like shaking hands with John Moses Browning, with Sam Colt looking on fondly.

He concludes his ode to the .38 Super by saying,

Understand and love it for what it is: a cult cartridge with a whiff of romantic history to it, as launched from the most American of platforms. It has a place on the shelf of the safe that began as a place on the shelf of the memory and the imagination. As Pike said to Dutch, “I wouldn’t have it any other way.”

So if you want to read about an interesting cartridge with a cult following and, as Hunter call its, “a whiff of romantic history”, go read this article. And while you are at it, go back and read his whole string of novels featuring Earl and Bob Lee Swagger. But be careful, you might end up like me and buy a 1911 in .38 Super.

They Are Shocked, Shocked I Say!

The British newspaper The Sunnot generally considered one of the “serious” newspapers – is running a feature on how their readers are shocked (!) about two teen-aged girls posing with their hunting trophies.

TWO teenage girls have shocked MY Sun by hunting down wild animals and posing with the corpses.

Sara-Rose and Katey Brandenburg are snapped smiling next to their kills which include a grizzly bear, zebra and giant eland antelope.

The gruesome snaps leave an unpleasant taste in Ishane’s mouth: “So many people put so much effort into keeping animals safe, well and protected – only to be killed by spoilt girls who use these kinds of pictures for their MySpace page.

“I cannot see how some parts of the USA still allow this.”

Fortunately, there are still some newspapers who take a more realistic approach to this. Her hometown newspaper, the Longmont (CO) Ledger, has a story about how the younger of the two – Sara-Rose, 15- may just become the youngest woman to take a North American sheep grand slam. She only needs to get a Stone sheep to round out the grand slam.

According the paper, Sara-Rose takes off tomorrow for a 12-day hunt in the Canadian Yukon in her quest to get the Stone sheep.

If she successfully kills a stone sheep, she will shatter the record for the youngest female winner of a grand slam. The current record-holder was 32 when she achieved the title.

You go girl!

H/T Say Uncle