HomeSafety Academy Archive

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HSA Classes are online!

** HomeSafety Academy is now online! ———————————————————— Survivalist Magazine has just published HomeSafety Academy teaching seminars! ———————————————————— MASTER SURVIVAL TRAINING COURSE All Firearm Training Armorer and more! 70 Teaching videos!...

** HomeSafety Academy is now online!

————————————————————
Survivalist Magazine has just published HomeSafety Academy teaching seminars!

————————————————————

MASTER SURVIVAL TRAINING COURSE
All Firearm Training
Armorer
and more!
70 Teaching videos!

You now have access to a comprehensive knowledge base of survival, preparedness and self-reliance information and interaction online.

PureSurvial

Click on photo to learn more

 

 

Note from David D’Eugenio, Co-Founder and Managing Partner

HomeSafety Academy began just a couple of years ago with our intention to provide the very best safety education.

Thanks to people like you, your referrals, and our friends and family, we have grown into the most comprehensive Academy offering personal protection and safety training.    And we’ve only just begun!

All of us at HomeSafety Academy thank you for your continued trust.  We hope that having our continuing education seminars online will provide you the convenience to continue to learn, get better and most importantly STAY SAFE.

This is what you have to look forward to:

  • HomeSafety Academy television
  • Complete kids programs featuring Eddie Eagle
  • Women on Target and Women’s Club and Social
  • Girls (under 18) Competitive Clay Shotgun Team
  • Weeknight Seminars

Our new Look for
“God and County”
HomeSafety Academy
Great America Tour

HSALogoStarsStripes

God Bless and enjoy your
Easter and Passover
We have so much to be thankful for

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How Does Removing My Right To Defend Myself From A Rapist Make You Any Safer?

Defend yourself







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Florida bill would require anger management courses for bullet buyers

Florida bill would require anger management courses for bullet buyers

  • floridaammo.jpg

    Florida State Sen. Audrey Gibson wants to require bullet buyers to undergo anger management courses. (Flsenate.gov, Reuters)

     

 

A Florida legislator wants anyone trying to buy ammunition to complete an anger management program first, in what critics say is the latest example of local lawmakers reaching for constitutionally-dubious solutions to the problem of gun violence.

The bill filed Saturday by state Sen. Audrey Gibson, D-Jacksonville, would require a three-day waiting period for the sale of any firearm and the sale of ammunition to anyone who has not completed anger management courses. The proposal would require ammo buyers to take the anger management courses every 10 years.

“This is not about guns,” Gibson said. “This is about ammunition and not only for the safety of the general community, but also for the safety of law enforcement.”

Gibson said she’s concerned with citizens stockpiling ammunition, potentially creating dangerous situations should those individuals ever come in contact with law enforcement agencies or criminals.

“It’s about getting people to think, really, about how much ammunition they need,” Gibson said. “It’s a step, I think, in a safer direction. It’s about getting people to think before they buy.”

 

“When I first saw it, I thought it had to be a joke.”

- Sean Caranna, executive director, Florida Carry

 

 

Gibson insisted the bill is not “accusatory” toward gun and ammunition owners, but rather an effort to improve the safety of her community. She recalled the death of a Jacksonville man, Jordan Davis, 17, who was fatally shot during a confrontation with another man in November. Michael David Dunn, 46, of Satellite Beach, has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the case.

Gibson first announced her intentions to introduce such legislation last month during a rally for Davis, saying “people are just not as patient as they used to be,” according to the Florida Times-Union.

“We see the rage on the road all the time,” she continued Wednesday. “People are just more impatient, I don’t know what it is.”

Gibson’s bill does not offer a threshold for the amount of ammunition needed to necessitate the need for anger management courses.

“It is unlawful to: A) Sell ammunition to another person who does not present certification that he or she has successfully completed an anger-management program consisting of at least 2 hours of online or face-to-face instruction in anger-management techniques,” the bill reads. “The certification must be renewed every 10 years. B) Purchase or otherwise obtain ammunition by fraud, false pretense, or false representation.”

Those in violation of the bill, if passed, would face a second-degree misdemeanor charge. Anyone found in violation a second time within a year of a prior conviction would face a first-degree misdemeanor charge.

Critics of the bill, however, derided the legislation as “absolutely ridiculous” and suggested that Gibson take a course on the U.S. Constitution.

“When I first saw it, I thought it had to be a joke,” said Sean Caranna, executive director of Florida Carry, a nonprofit group championing the right to bear arms. “They’re trying to say that anyone who owns a gun or shoots a gun or has ammunition for it needs counseling and obviously has some anger problems.”

Caranna said he was disappointed that Gibson wasted her time on the bill instead of focusing on other issues like jobs or the state’s rate of foreclosures, which is the highest in the nation.

“We’ve got a lot of issues that should be the focus of these bill slots with limited filing, but instead we put in something as ridiculous as this,” he said. “I don’t see a planet where this passes. This is an attempt to grab attention – it has to be. And that’s really disappointing.”

Jon Gutmacher, an Orlando attorney and author of “Florida Firearms: Law, Use & Ownership,” told FoxNews.com that the bill would almost certainly be found to be unconstitutional based on prior restraint.

“It has no reasonable relationship to anything,” he said. “There has to be a reasonable basis to believe that a person had a substantial anger problem that could cause public harm.”

Gutmacher said he found the bill to be an “insult” to any gun owner in the Sunshine State.

“It’s absurd on its face,” he continued. “And anyone who proposes that legislation is in my mind unfit for the legislature because it shows a basic problem with their thinking process, aside from their lack of understanding of what the Constitution is all about. That’s the kind of bill that doesn’t even get past committee.”

 

 

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/03/06/florida-lawmaker-wants-anger-management-courses-for-ammunition-buyers/#ixzz2MoeTvpzg

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Stand and Fight

by Wayne LaPierre Before I tell you how the NRA and our members are going to Stand And Fight politically and in the courts, let’s acknowledge that all over this...

by Wayne LaPierre

Before I tell you how the NRA and our members are going to Stand And Fight politically and in the courts, let’s acknowledge that all over this country, tens of millions of Americans are already preparing to Stand And Fight to protect their families and homes.

These good Americans are prudently getting ready to protect themselves.

It has always been sensible for good citizens to own and carry firearms for lawful protection against violent criminals who prey on decent people.

During the second Obama term, however, additional threats are growing. Latin American drug gangs have invaded every city of significant size in the United States. Phoenix is already one of the kidnapping capitals of the world, and though the states on the U.S./Mexico border may be the first places in the nation to suffer from cartel violence, by no means are they the last.

The president flagrantly defies the 2006 federal law ordering the construction of a secure border fence along the entire Mexican border. So the border today remains porous not only to people seeking jobs in the U.S., but to criminals whose jobs are murder, rape, robbery and kidnapping. Ominously, the border also remains open to agents of al Qaeda and other terrorist organizations. Numerous intelligence sources have confirmed that foreign terrorists have identified the southern U.S. border as their path of entry into the country.

When the next terrorist attack comes, the Obama administration won’t accept responsibility. Instead, it will do what it does every time: blame a scapegoat and count on Obama’s “mainstream” media enablers to go along.

A heinous act of mass murder—either by terrorists or by some psychotic who should have been locked up long ago—will be the pretext to unleash a tsunami of gun control.

No wonder Americans are buying guns in record numbers right now, while they still can and before their choice about which firearm is right for their family is taken away forever.

After Hurricane Sandy, we saw the hellish world that the gun prohibitionists see as their utopia. Looters ran wild in south Brooklyn. There was no food, water or electricity. And if you wanted to walk several miles to get supplies, you better get back before dark, or you might not get home at all.

Anti-gun New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg had already done everything he could to prevent law-abiding New Yorkers from owning guns, and he has made sure that no ordinary citizen will ever be allowed to carry a gun. He even refused to allow the National Guard into the city to restore civil order because Guardsmen carry guns!

Meanwhile, President Obama is leading this country to financial ruin, borrowing over a trillion dollars a year for phony “stimulus” spending and other payoffs for his political cronies. Nobody knows if or when the fiscal collapse will come, but if the country is broke, there likely won’t be enough money to pay for police protection. And the American people know it.

Hurricanes. Tornadoes. Riots. Terrorists. Gangs. Lone criminals. These are perils we are sure to face—not just maybe. It’s not paranoia to buy a gun. It’s survival. It’s responsible behavior, and it’s time we encourage law-abiding Americans to do just that.

Since the election, millions of Americans have been lining up in front of gun stores, Cabela’s, [Gander Mountain] and Bass Pro Shops exercising their freedom while they still have it. They are demonstrating they have a mass determination to buy, own and use firearms. Millions of Americans are using market forces like never before to demonstrate their ardent support for our firearm freedoms. That’s one of the very best ways we can Stand and Fight.

Inevitably, the anti-gun media and the gun-ban lobbies are demonizing the purchase of firearms. They call us “extremists” because we wonder whether we will be able to buy a semi-auto in three years or, even in some states, later this year. That’s despite the fact that President Obama long ago made clear that he wants to ban them all!

The media try to make rank-and-file Americans feel guilty about buying a gun. The enemies of freedom demonize gun buyers and portray us as social lepers. But we know the truth. We know that responsible gun ownership exemplifies what is good and right about America.

Responsible Americans realize that the world as we know it has changed. We, the American people, clearly see the daunting forces we will undoubtedly face: terrorists, crime, drug gangs, the possibility of Euro-style debt riots, civil unrest or natural disaster.

Gun owners are not buying firearms because they anticipate a confrontation with the government. Rather, we anticipate confrontations where the government isn’t there—or simply doesn’t show up in time.

To preserve the inalienable, individual human right to keep and bear arms—to withstand the siege that is coming—the NRA is building a four-year communications and resistance movement. The enemies of the Second Amendment will be met with unprecedented defiance, commitment and determination. We will Stand And Fight.

First, we are going to devise legal capability like never before. I fervently hope that President Obama does not get to appoint another anti-gun Supreme Court justice like Sonia Sotomayor or Elena Kagan. But he probably will, and we must meet that challenge. His chances of appointing a replacement for one of the five pro-rights justices in the 5-4 Heller and McDonald majorities are high. And there’s no doubt he is going to appoint a huge number of new judges to lifetime positions in the lower federal courts.

That means the federal courts are going to get worse and worse. So some cases, on which we might have improved our chances of victory by waiting a while, are going to have to be brought now.

Besides bringing affirmative pro-rights cases, we will also have to litigate against the flood of new anti-gun federal regulations that are coming, and against anti-gun laws that are going to be enacted in some of the states.

Second, we must strengthen the NRA like never before. We are, and always have been, a genuine grassroots organization. And never has your membership been more important. Never has the nra been more in need of your support.

The national media, with its  slanted and inaccurate “news” coverage of the gun issue, has given the gun-ban groups the equivalent of hundreds of millions of dollars of free advertising.

Now, the threat is even greater. Michael Bloomberg and George Soros are each, individually, far wealthier than the entire National Rifle Association. When the NRA spends money on political advertising, we have to raise those funds from you—$20, $50, $250, or $1,000 at a time.  In the last election, Bloomberg alone spent $16 million and that doesn’t even count the indirect spending by groups funded by Soros and his fellow billionaires.

The hard truth is that due to Bloomberg, Soros, and the rest of their ilk, the dangers require that we increase our presence all across the country—in Congress, the state capitols, and in your city and towns.

As we Stand And Fight, the third, and most important, part of our action plan demands that we  organize like never before. That’s the most important part of all.

Every gun owner should be an active member of the NRA. Every gun owner should be sure that every member of his or her family is an active member.

For most of the last hundred years, a strong NRA has been the indispensable shield against the destruction of our nation’s Second Amendment rights. Now, an even stronger nra is the only chance gun owners have to withstand the coming siege.

This begins with remembering to keep your own membership active, or reactivate it if it has lapsed. It means reminding yourself, “I have a son and daughter who aren’t members and should be.” It means reaching out to your hunting and shooting friends and personally telling them why it’s so important that they join the NRA now, during this time of peril.

The NRA is launching a nationwide, full-court initiative to urge every gun owner, and every non-gun-owning lover of freedom, to join the NRA and fight this battle. I will personally be traveling all over America enlisting new members.

We must reach out to the tens of millions of gun owners who are not yet NRA members—to the gun owners who care about their own rights but who have been duped by Obama and the national media into believing that the Obama and Bloomberg gun controls will only affect other people. They are naively sitting on the sidelines, imagining themselves immune from the coming siege.

Yet no matter how much I travel, I can’t be everywhere. NRA members, though, can be everywhere. We already are. The 4 million of us belong to every community in the United States. We are the largest civil rights organization in the world, and we have been part of the fabric of America ever since 1871. So it is you, proud NRA members, who are the key to enlisting new members in the ranks of our army of freedom.

NRA grassroots has always been our Association’s greatest strength. To compete with Bloomberg and his gang, it must be much stronger still. Historically, we have always been able to rely on volunteers, and I’m going to ask you and need you to answer the call to help throughout the next four years.

Every year, shooting is becoming more and more popular, with more people engaging in the shooting sports for fun. More people are buying guns and trying new disciplines, such as 3-gun competitions, sporting clays, practical shooting and so on.

As we Stand And Fight, let’s continue to make the shooting sports one of the fastest-growing recreational activities in America. By doing so, and by telling others about it, we’ll popularize and make gun owning and shooting more mainstream than ever before. That will be even more effective if we remember to invite new people to participate and provide them with the responsible mentorship and guidance that the NRA has exemplified for over 140 years.

We can’t win the political war if we lose the cultural war. One of the great protectors of the Second Amendment is the popular, active, responsible use of firearms for shooting and hunting.

We don’t want America to become like England, where some of that nation’s outstanding rifle competitors keep their hobby a dark secret from their neighbors for fear of social disapproval. We’re not going to let the anti-gunners push us into that zone. As I remind people every day, we are the majority.

We have so much to be proud of as gun owners, shooters and freedom lovers. That pride, especially when it’s not hidden in the closet, is itself a form of protection for the Second Amendment.

We will not surrender. We will not appease. We will buy more guns than ever. We will use them for sport and lawful self-defense more than ever. We will grow the NRA more than ever. And we will be prouder than ever to be freedom-loving NRA patriots. And with your help, we will ensure that the Second Amendment remains America’s First Freedom.

We will Stand And Fight.

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Florida Sheriffs’ Association

Supports our 2nd Amendment, “.. right of the people to keep and bear Arms.”  

Supports our 2nd Amendment, “.. right of the people to keep and bear Arms.”

 




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Gun Show Dates

West Palm Beach Gun & Knife Show

Dates

Feb 16 – Feb 17, 2013
Apr 13 – Apr 14, 2013
May 11 – May 12, 2013
Jun 8 – Jun 9, 2013
Jul 6 – Jul 7, 2013
Aug 10 – Aug 11, 2013
Sep 7 – Sep 8, 2013
Oct 12 – Oct 13, 2013
Nov 9 – Nov 10, 2013
Dec 21 – Dec 22, 2013

Directions

South Florida Fairgrounds

City/State

West Palm Beach, FL

Hours

Saturday: 9:00am – 5:00pm
Sunday: 10:00am – 4:00pm

Admission

$8.00
Children Under 12 are Free
Uniformed LEO are Free
Free Parking for all

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Politically Potent Hollywood Escapes Heavy Scrutiny

By William La Jeunesse Published December 21, 2012 FoxNews.com In the wake of last week’s Connecticut school shooting, many in the media and on Capitol Hill blamed one powerful lobby,...

By William La Jeunesse
Published December 21, 2012
FoxNews.com

In the wake of last week’s Connecticut school shooting, many in the media and on Capitol Hill blamed one powerful lobby, the gun industry, and suggested banning assault weapons would lead to safer streets.
“On the first day of the new Congress, I intend to introduce a bill stopping the sale, transfer, importation and manufacturing of assault weapons,” Sen. Dianne Feinstein D-Calif., said.
On MSNBC, Chris Matthews said “people on the far-right, on the NRA front … they go to bed at night … afraid somebody’s going to take that gun away from them. Normal people have other interests.”
On CNN, host Piers Morgan called Gun Owners of America’s Larry Pratt “an unbelievably stupid man.”

Yet, there’s another powerful lobby in Washington that few scrutinize, let alone criticize: Hollywood, though many argue the movie and video game industry also bears responsibility for incidents of adolescent violence.
“Hollywood is very touchy about the idea of taking responsibility for the stuff it actually does,” Parents Television Council’s Dan Isett said. “What happened in Newton is absolutely heartbreaking. It shouldn’t take an instance like that to have 20 dead children that just went to school that morning, to have a real discussion about why this happened. To have a real discussion about what media does to our kids.”

Not unlike the NRA, lawmakers fear the Motion Picture Association of America and their political allies. Consider the clout and fundraising acumen of producer Harvey Weinstein, a major heavyweight in Democratic politics, along with actors George Clooney, Brad Pitt, and Leonardo DiCaprio, all of whom have acted in or produced violent films.
In the wake of the Newtown tragedy, MPAA CEO Chris Dodd released this statement Thursday: “Those of us in the motion picture and television industry want to do our part to help America heal. We stand ready to be part of the national conversation.”
But the industry in the past has defended its First Amendment right to publish without fear of government interference as aggressively as the NRA has defended members’ Second Amendment right to bear arms.

“Obviously gun control is part of the debate. Mental health is part of the debate. The fact that movie violence is not part of the debate is a big problem,” said Noah Gittell, a former Democratic campaign staffer who now writes about Hollywood for Reelchange.net.
Though numerous studies link violence on the screen to violent behavior, an interview with director Quentin Tarantino last week typifies Hollywood’s position on the issue — minimizing the role films play in the violent incidents carried out by young male gunmen in Newton, Conn.; Aurora and Littleton, Colo.; and other cities.

“I just think, you know, there’s violence in the world, tragedies happen, (so society) blame(s) the playmakers,” Tarantino said when asked about Hollywood’s impact on behavior during a screening of his latest violent movie, “Django Unchained”.

“Is that a question you’re tired of?” asked a reporter.
“Yeah, I’m really tired. It’s a western. Give me a break.”

Others disagree, arguing that content matters. The depiction of violence as a means of resolving conflict on the screen can cause viewers to act out in a similar way, they say. Yet, the movie and video game industry spends millions so Congress does not change the current system of self regulation that labels content violent or not.
“Big media companies spend literally tens of millions of dollars virtually every month, lobbying in Washington and around the country to make sure that they maintain the status quo,” Isett said.

Since 1998, America’s five largest film studios contributed $41 million dollars to political candidates, compared with $16 million from the NRA, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
On lobbying, the watchdog group said the MPAA spent $25 million since 1990 compared with $29 million by the NRA. The Entertainment Software Association, representing the video game industry, spent $4.4 million last year alone. That money has largely kept Congress off their backs, despite pressure from parental groups to fight the increasing violence their children are exposed to.

“There’s a fear of confronting, taking on a controversial subject which is so profoundly important to get done and get done right. It baffles me,” said Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va. “It’s urgent and it is not being responded to by the membership of the Congress appropriately.”
Some advocacy groups have proposed a mandated ratings system that requires any movie with a murder scene get an R rating. Consider the violent Batman movie “Dark Knight.” Dozens died in the movie, often graphically, but it got a PG-13 rating. Others tried to end the voluntary rating system for video games — a $11 billion a year business. That, too, was shot down.

“It’s pretty clear the MPAA does have an influence,” Gittell said. “If Congress wants the MPAA to do something, they can give them a nudge in the right direction. But I do think the massive contributions members of Congress get from Hollywood would pre-empt them from ever taking full regulatory authority.”







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Mass Murder and Psychiatry

There has been increasing publicity about the imminent end of the world on December 21, 2012, as possibly posited in the Mayan Calendar. What we do know for sure, is...
There has been increasing publicity about the imminent end of the world on December 21, 2012, as possibly posited in the Mayan Calendar. What we do know for sure, is that for all the young children and adults who were killed in Newtown, Connecticut, their world ended a week earlier, on December 14th.
As the play of the same name by Thornton Wilder, Newtown Is Our Town.
 
The perpetrator must be, in some way, everyman. We must be our brother’s keepers. Any field that can contribute to the understanding and prevention of the increasing numbers of attempted and successful mass murders in the United States must work on this for the next weeks, months, and years. Psychiatry is surely one of these.
 
Diagnosis

Amidst all the initial speculation on the reasons for the tragedy, an e-mail from a psychiatrist that struck us as possibly revealing deeper issues, some perhaps indirectly relevant. The subject was “Autism not a Mental Illness.” Autism was one of the initial diagnoses associated with this killer. Beyond such premature diagnostic speculations, the e-mail was reacting to a CNN coverage in which a physician and a reporter discussed that autism may not be an illness, since NIMH was considering autism and other mental conditions as “neurogenerative.” Perhaps, the e-mailer suggested, if autism was not considered to be a mental illness, would that be better because then, if the murderer did not have a mental illness, mental illness could not be blamed for the mass murder.

 

This argument, though cumbersome, leads us to take a step back and take a bit of a detour. First of all, there are no mental illnesses, at least so far as the terminology goes for the DSM and ICD classifications of mental conditions. This is more important than mere semantics. These conditions are called disorders, not illnesses or diseases. The prime definition of disorders, in my Webster’s dictionary, is “confusion.”

However “disorder” is defined, it causes mental conditions to appear to be different from medical illnesses. It implies that clinicians other than psychiatrists can be expert in the diagnosis and treatment of those disorders. Indeed, that is one of the issues that I was concerned about in the March 2010 blog, “The DSM Process: More Questions Than Answers.” The cautionary statement as to who can make a diagnosis reads: “It can be used by a wide range of health and mental health professionals, including psychiatrists and other physicians, psychologists, social workers, nurses occupational and rehabilitation therapists and counselors.”
So much for the medical expertise of psychiatrists in making a diagnosis. As far as I know, that consideration will not change in the upcoming DSM-5.
 
This is a scenario that is more likely to lead to an inadequate diagnosis or missed diagnosis. Moreover, diagnosis, though necessary for reimbursement, research, and a general sense of what is wrong, should only be the necessary, but not sufficient, step in understanding an individual. Adequate time and analysis is required. As the bio-psycho-social model implies, we have to look far and wide to try to understand anyone. If indeed the perpetrator of the Newtown tragedy fell on the Autism spectrum, how often does a mass murderer have that diagnosis?
 
Guns
As so many have commented, the ease of obtaining automatic weapons can indeed contribute to mass destruction. If someone has untreated mental problems, the risk also increases. Adding guns and knowing how to use them, to someone with apparent mental problems, surely increases the odds of something bad happening.
Any positive reinforcement of gun use, outside of controlled situations such as hunting, may cause more unnecessary harm than benefit. Certainly, we have a lot of positive reinforcement and modeling of a gun culture in our Constitution, our seemingly endless war, and violence in the media. The more impersonal ways of relating on the internet may veer us more toward the social deficits and lack of empathy that is characteristic of the Autism spectrum.
 
Evil
I never used the term evil professionally or personally until I worked in prison part time at the end of my clinical career. For many of the inmates I saw, mental disorders, including substance abuse, seemed to play a significant role in their crimes. Gang involvement, where self-esteem and identity, was enhanced through group process, was another significant factor for many. On a rare occasion, neither a mental disorder, including antisocial personality disorder, nor gang behavior, seemed to be enough of an explanation.1 That is when I began to think more seriously of evil, as did many in the aftermath of this recent tragedy. The Governor of Connecticut claimed that “evil visited this community . . . .” Later he expanded that to mental illness dressed in evil. Perhaps that can be further expanded to mental illness dressed in evil and a holster.
 
Recommendations
Soon after the tragedy, one of the fathers of a child killed tearfully pleaded for society to learn from what happened in order to prevent future mass murders. Here’s what I think psychiatry can contribute:
  • Autism, Asperger, and most every other mental condition worthy of our prime focus should be called diseases, not disorders
  • All such diagnoses should be made or certified by a psychiatrist to qualify for medical insurance coverage
  • Do not make public diagnoses of anyone not personally examined, per our Goldwater Rule
  • This tragedy, following too many others, should spur further study of where criminal behavior ends and psychiatric disease begins, if indeed there is even such a line
  • All psychiatrists should spend some clinical time in a correctional institution, either during residency or later for continuing education
  • Find better ways to educate the public about the early signs of homicidal risk
  • Advocate for a system of safe reporting of those felt to be at- risk for homicidal behavior
  • Provide better resources in order to improve early treatment of homicidal ideation
  • Convene a representative body of those injured by public violence and loved ones of those murdered, to work on a national Task Force to reduce mass murder
  • Advocate for a special anniversary date or holiday, December 14th, to not only remember the Connecticut tragedy or others like it, but also as a way to monitor how we are doing as a nation and a profession in trying to prevent more such tragedies.
Reference
1. Moffic HS. Better Off in Prison; 2011. Psychiatric Times.http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/blog/couchincrisis/content/article/10168/1850954. Accessed December 17, 2012.
APA Reference 
Martin, L. (2012). Mass Murder and Psychiatry. Psych Central. Retrieved on December 19, 2012, from http://pro.psychcentral.com/2012/mass-murder-and-psychiatry/001176.html
 
Last reviewed: By John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on 18 Dec 2012










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Record Number of Firearm Sales on ‘Black Friday’ 2012

On November 23, 2012 (Black Friday), Americans purchased more guns than on any other day in history. Gun sales (based on NICS background check data) set a new single-day record....

On November 23, 2012 (Black Friday), Americans purchased more guns than on any other day in history. Gun sales (based on NICS background check data) set a new single-day record. This year, the FBI logged 154,873 Black Friday background checks, up 20% from the 129,166 back-ground checks done on Black Friday 2011. And, since a NICS check may authorize purchase of multiple guns, the 154,873 number may “under-count” the actual number of firearms purchased on Black Friday this year.

Recent election outcomes may have influenced the spike in gun sales. People are concerned that more restrictive gun control laws may be enacted during President Obama’s second term. Writing in Ammoland.com, AWR Hawkins declared: “The bottom line: Americans want their guns. And it appears they’re getting them before Obama has the chance to do anything about it.” Hawkins adds: “As in 2011, women were increasingly among those buying guns on Black Friday. And first time buyers, whether male or female, were also well represented.”

 

 

AccurateShooter.com







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Californians buying guns at record rate

Californians buying guns at record rate As of November, the FBI has run 981,798 background checks related to guns in California for 2012, already beating out totals for other years....

Californians buying guns at record rate

As of November, the FBI has run 981,798 background checks
related to guns in California for 2012,
already beating out totals for other years.

 

Ade’s Gun Shop in Orange where business is booming.

ade-gun-shopAt Ade's Gun Shop & Em & M Guns in Orange, Emily Atkinson shows shows the safety features of a Springfield Armory XD compact pistol to a female client.

Californians are buying more guns than ever.

 

Those who keep the statistics don’t speculate on why the numbers are spiking, but to enthusiasts on the ground, it’s clear. Times are tough, and the future is uncertain, leaving people looking for an extra layer of security, said gun sellers and experts in the field. November’s election brought heightened fears of impending regulation, spurring some buyers to bite the bullet and make purchases they might otherwise have put off.

As of November, the FBI’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System had run 981,798 background checks related to guns in California, beating out totals for previous years before 2012 is even over. The numbers jumped about 8 percent from last year, part of a steady increase since 2008.

At the state Department of Justice, officials said they expect sales to easily outpace last year’s, part of several years of steady increases in their counts of dealers’ records of sale. That would put this year on track to surpass an all-time high set in 1993 – the year after the Los Angeles riots.

It’s not uncommon for current events to affect sales.

This year, dealers reported more customers after the election and numbers grew in the shopping frenzy of Black Friday. Nationally, the FBI’s background check system received its highest number of transactions since the system went into place in 1998, said Steve Fischer of the FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services.

“Generally, Black Friday has been one of our busiest days,” he said.

This year, however, the system broke records, with 154,873 calls on Nov. 23, up about 20 percent from Black Friday last year. With the high volume of calls, officials shut down call centers briefly to allow the system to catch up, Fischer said.

Among California gun buyers, the spike was even more pronounced.

Michelle Gregory of the state’s Department of Justice reported a 59 percent increase in submitted dealer’s records of sale on Black Friday from last year. A dealer’s record of sale is filed with the state for each transaction, which may include one handgun as well as multiple long guns. Buyers must generally wait 30 days before buying another handgun.

Overall, November records showed a 49 percent increase from last year, Gregory said.

 

Reasons for increase

For those watching trends in gun ownership and regulation, the numbers shift with social movements.

“I think it’s a direct outgrowth of the strategies employed in the recent election,” said John Eastman, a professor and former dean of the Chapman University School of Law who in 2010 sought the Republican nomination for state attorney general.

Eastman pointed to the discord brought by groups like Occupy Wall Street, which in some cases clashed with police. The breakdown in public order inspired more people to think about self-defense, he said.

Across all levels of government, officials have made moves to regulate gun ownership, he added. While the most restrictive regulations would likely be overturned by courts under the Second Amendment’s right to bear arms, Eastman said a risk of control was enough to encourage prospective gun owners to buy while they can.

Outside of political strife, economic uncertainty has also inspired people to look for more protection, he said. Violent crimes have steadily declined in recent years, according to FBI statistics, but Eastman said concerns remain that those in desperate financial straits could be a threat to safety. With talk among politicians about cutting social benefits, financial hardships could become worse for many, creating an even more volatile situation, he said. Concerns are also high about preparedness in case of disasters, such as Hurricane Sandy.

“It’s like a perfect storm,” he said.

Supporters of gun control laws also expected the recent spikes in gun ownership. Charlie Blek, president of the Orange County chapter of advocacy group the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, said the recent shift of convicted felons from state prison to local jails under realignment might have had an impact on gun sales. The election definitely had an effect.

“The National Rifle Association has done a wonderful job of demonizing President Obama,” he said.

In fact, Blek said, Obama’s gun policies have either been nonexistent or a step backward in the eyes of safety advocates. Closer to home, California has done an excellent job screening gun owners, he said. The safeguards aren’t trying to keep qualified buyers from purchasing guns, he added.

“As long as they understand and appreciate the risk, they certainly have the right.”

 

All walks of life

At Ade’s Gun Shop, Emily Atkinson and father Mike Hein, who run the business as Em & M Guns, typically see more customers in the winter, with Christmas shopping and hunting season.

“We’ve been seeing bigger crowds than normal probably for three months,” said Atkinson, whose daughter also works in the shop.

At the cozy Orange location, they see customers from all walks of life: families, teachers, small-business owners and elderly women as well as serious hobbyists. Their customers are most likely to take their guns to a shooting range for target practice, or perhaps keep them on hand for self-defense, Atkinson said.

With the re-election of Obama, she sees the passage of stricter gun laws as only a matter of time.

“There is a big scare that guns are going to begin to get scarce,” she said.

Sales have been up since the 2008 election, said Steve Converse, who has worked at the business for about four years.

“That’s when we saw a lot of people buy their first guns,” Steve Converse said. “Now they’re coming back to expand their collection.”

At Straightline Tactical in Anaheim, owner Don Zappone said he’s seeing more first-time buyers.

With the bad economy, election and more awareness of disasters, he said there’s a climate of uncertainty. People who might not have thought much about gun ownership before are starting to seriously consider it, he said.

“A lot of people are just recently learning about what the Constitution says and the rights that we have and starting to exercise them now.”





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