Mike S
NES Member
Very interesting.. Full Story Here.
The International Association of Chiefs of Police, a major beneficiary of the notoriously anti-gun Joyce Foundation...
From Chris Cox:
The IACP report, called “Taking a Stand: Reducing Gun Violence in Our Communities,” is nothing more than a rubber stamp, bought and paid for, of the pre-existing agenda for gun ban groups.
Granted consulting status by the United Nations, the IACP has its own constitution. The U.S. chiefs would do well to remember that they've already sworn an oath to support another one, but that they would work to subvert that in favor of their own career advancement and political ambition should come as no surprise.
Here's the deal, and I'm addressing this directly to the chiefs:
We've already exposed the fraud that says you and yours are the "Only Ones" who can be trusted with guns--extensively on The War on Guns, and more recently here at Gun Rights Examiner. Yet you presume to champion citizen disarmament and then have the gall to issue a "guide" titled "Building Trust Between the Police and the Citizens they Serve."
I don't trust anyone who demands I be disarmed. I automatically think they're up to no good. Especially if they insist that they be armed. As an aside, I note the Department of Justice logo on your guide--did U.S. tax money go into your promo piece?
And here's something else: I truly don't give a damn about international police chiefs. If we're looking at UN membership as a criterion, that is, if being an official state repression authority for any number of dictatorships, kleptocracies, monarchies, sheikdoms, theocracies, politburos and tyrannies is what it takes to join your club, we're talking about a wretched hive of scum and villainy that rivals the Mos Eisley cantina. And you can pass that on to Rajiv and Darwin and Sir Ken and Saad and Julian and Luiz and whoever the hell you ultimately get to run your Sub-Saharan Africa branch office.
Here's a phrase I rarely use any more, since so many seem to over-use it, but in this case it seems appropriate.
Molon labe.
Keep your stinking globalist paws off our guns.
Tomorrow, barring a more pressing issue coming to the fore, we're going to look at the third group that signed HCI's briefs, I mean, brief. In the mean time, just to get in the mood, you might want to start humming "Look for the union label."
The International Association of Chiefs of Police, a major beneficiary of the notoriously anti-gun Joyce Foundation...
From Chris Cox:
The IACP report, called “Taking a Stand: Reducing Gun Violence in Our Communities,” is nothing more than a rubber stamp, bought and paid for, of the pre-existing agenda for gun ban groups.
Granted consulting status by the United Nations, the IACP has its own constitution. The U.S. chiefs would do well to remember that they've already sworn an oath to support another one, but that they would work to subvert that in favor of their own career advancement and political ambition should come as no surprise.
Here's the deal, and I'm addressing this directly to the chiefs:
We've already exposed the fraud that says you and yours are the "Only Ones" who can be trusted with guns--extensively on The War on Guns, and more recently here at Gun Rights Examiner. Yet you presume to champion citizen disarmament and then have the gall to issue a "guide" titled "Building Trust Between the Police and the Citizens they Serve."
I don't trust anyone who demands I be disarmed. I automatically think they're up to no good. Especially if they insist that they be armed. As an aside, I note the Department of Justice logo on your guide--did U.S. tax money go into your promo piece?
And here's something else: I truly don't give a damn about international police chiefs. If we're looking at UN membership as a criterion, that is, if being an official state repression authority for any number of dictatorships, kleptocracies, monarchies, sheikdoms, theocracies, politburos and tyrannies is what it takes to join your club, we're talking about a wretched hive of scum and villainy that rivals the Mos Eisley cantina. And you can pass that on to Rajiv and Darwin and Sir Ken and Saad and Julian and Luiz and whoever the hell you ultimately get to run your Sub-Saharan Africa branch office.
Here's a phrase I rarely use any more, since so many seem to over-use it, but in this case it seems appropriate.
Molon labe.
Keep your stinking globalist paws off our guns.
Tomorrow, barring a more pressing issue coming to the fore, we're going to look at the third group that signed HCI's briefs, I mean, brief. In the mean time, just to get in the mood, you might want to start humming "Look for the union label."