Search found 9 matches

by mojo84
Thu Apr 23, 2015 10:51 am
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?
Replies: 85
Views: 11772

Re: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?

TXBO wrote:
mojo84 wrote:
TXBO wrote:
mojo84 wrote:
TXBO wrote:
Paragrouper wrote:
amtank wrote:Disclaimer: I am a former active member of OCTC. I was at the time of the 2014 state convention. I am a current regional co-coordinator for OCT. I hold a Texas CHL. I am a member of the TSRA If you missed that above. I am even a member of the Texas State Militia. I am a Constitutional Conservative who is involved in multiple causes beyond guns. I also have four legislators personal cell numbers in my phone and another three chiefs of staff. I have been known from time to time go for a walk with a rifle or shotgun.
For all your credentials, one thing you do not possess is my support.

Perhaps you should try working with other organizations to achieve our common goals. The antics your organization pulls does not help further the cause of 2A; they just create more enemies. There's enough divisiveness in our country as it is.

Why don't you guys try cooperating instead?
Cooperate with whom?
People that understand how to get things done and have a track record of doing so.
Are you suggesting that all 2nd Amendment grassroots efforts need to cooperate with NRA in this country?
I'm suggesting it would be much more productive than fighting with them, especially in the public eye.
In this case I'm sure you're right. However, there are many people that are frustrated with results out of Austin. I don't agree with OCT's approach but I understand a grassroots departure from status quo.
Just because it is a different approach doesn't mean it is effective. Cooperation, or at least not acting like extremist lunatics, would be better than throwing temper tantrums in public like a 5 year old wanting more ice cream and wanting it NOW.
by mojo84
Thu Apr 23, 2015 10:33 am
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?
Replies: 85
Views: 11772

Re: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?

TXBO wrote:
mojo84 wrote:
TXBO wrote:
Paragrouper wrote:
amtank wrote:Disclaimer: I am a former active member of OCTC. I was at the time of the 2014 state convention. I am a current regional co-coordinator for OCT. I hold a Texas CHL. I am a member of the TSRA If you missed that above. I am even a member of the Texas State Militia. I am a Constitutional Conservative who is involved in multiple causes beyond guns. I also have four legislators personal cell numbers in my phone and another three chiefs of staff. I have been known from time to time go for a walk with a rifle or shotgun.
For all your credentials, one thing you do not possess is my support.

Perhaps you should try working with other organizations to achieve our common goals. The antics your organization pulls does not help further the cause of 2A; they just create more enemies. There's enough divisiveness in our country as it is.

Why don't you guys try cooperating instead?
Cooperate with whom?
People that understand how to get things done and have a track record of doing so.
Are you suggesting that all 2nd Amendment grassroots efforts need to cooperate with NRA in this country?
I'm suggesting it would be much more productive than fighting with them, especially in the public eye. It would also be better than throwing temper tantrums in public like a 5 year old wanting more ice cream and wanting it NOW.
by mojo84
Thu Apr 23, 2015 10:32 am
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?
Replies: 85
Views: 11772

Re: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?

I've been reading some of the comments on the OCT facebook page and am astonished at what I see. It is like 5 year olds demanding what they want and that they want it NOW! Their version of revisionist history would make one believe our country won it's independence from England one day because a bunch of people woke up, decided they are going to separate from England, started a fight and it was all over in no time. They refuse to understand our independence was won after a long drawn out process of negotiation and diplomacy had failed and the British sent troops to fight those that were objecting to and wanting to get out from under the rule of the king.

Our independence is the result of Patriots doing what Patriots do,not what 5 year olds do when they want more ice cream.

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-hist ... ion-begins" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
American Revolution

1775
The American Revolution begins
At about 5 a.m., 700 British troops, on a mission to capture Patriot leaders and seize a Patriot arsenal, march into Lexington to find 77 armed minutemen under Captain John Parker waiting for them on the town’s common green. British Major John Pitcairn ordered the outnumbered Patriots to disperse, and after a moment’s hesitation the Americans began to drift off the green. Suddenly, the “shot heard around the world” was fired from an undetermined gun, and a cloud of musket smoke soon covered the green. When the brief Battle of Lexington ended, eight Americans lay dead or dying and 10 others were wounded. Only one British soldier was injured, but the American Revolution had begun.

By 1775, tensions between the American colonies and the British government approached the breaking point, especially in Massachusetts, where Patriot leaders formed a shadow revolutionary government and trained militias to prepare for armed conflict with the British troops occupying Boston. In the spring of 1775, General Thomas Gage, the British governor of Massachusetts, received instructions from England to seize all stores of weapons and gunpowder accessible to the American insurgents. On April 18, he ordered British troops to march against the Patriot arsenal at Concord and capture Patriot leaders Samuel Adams and John Hancock, known to be hiding at Lexington.
by mojo84
Thu Apr 23, 2015 10:17 am
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?
Replies: 85
Views: 11772

Re: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?

TXBO wrote:
Paragrouper wrote:
amtank wrote:Disclaimer: I am a former active member of OCTC. I was at the time of the 2014 state convention. I am a current regional co-coordinator for OCT. I hold a Texas CHL. I am a member of the TSRA If you missed that above. I am even a member of the Texas State Militia. I am a Constitutional Conservative who is involved in multiple causes beyond guns. I also have four legislators personal cell numbers in my phone and another three chiefs of staff. I have been known from time to time go for a walk with a rifle or shotgun.
For all your credentials, one thing you do not possess is my support.

Perhaps you should try working with other organizations to achieve our common goals. The antics your organization pulls does not help further the cause of 2A; they just create more enemies. There's enough divisiveness in our country as it is.

Why don't you guys try cooperating instead?
Cooperate with whom?
People that understand how to get things done and have a track record of doing so.
by mojo84
Tue Apr 21, 2015 12:01 pm
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?
Replies: 85
Views: 11772

Re: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?

TXBO wrote:
mojo84 wrote:
TXBO wrote:
Charles L. Cotton wrote: ... We've passed many great bills and have made great strides in expanding Second Amendment rights, but I believe that HB308 should have been the cornerstone of the 2015 Texas Legislative Session -- but it wasn't. I'm mad and I'm sick that HB308 went nowhere; it is no better off than HB195 or SB342 and I'm not happy. However, I understand why neither the NRA nor TSRA put their political muscle behind HB308. To say it was a controversial bill would be an understatement. The media would have had a field day with "guns everywhere, guns everywhere!" It's right up there with "the British are coming, the British are coming!" The primary reason HB308 was not a priority bill is NRA and TSRA were using huge amounts of political capitol to pass open-carry and to a lesser degree, campus-carry. I still believe we should pass campus-carry because it is the right thing to do even though it differs from our standard procedure of supporting bills that provide the most benefits to most people. At this point in time, HB308 would have worked to the extreme benefit of 846,000+ Texas CHLs and this number will continue to grow. That's how strongly I feel about removing off-limits areas for CHLs, but you haven't heard me lash out at NRA/TSRA for not making MY priority their priority. That's not how you bill strong and effective relationships; you don't abandon friends who share your goals but not your priority list. Contrast this approach with the OCT approach of attacking, condemning and lying about anyone and everyone who does not share both their goals and there tactics.

Chas.
I believe your philosophy of "supporting bills that provide the most benefit to most people" is an admirable approach. I would personally benefit from being able to carry more places but I would argue that only having 846k+ people in Texas that can legally carry is disappointing. I'd like it to be a priority to see that number multiply.



I suspect that is the ultimate goal for many. However, we have to work with the process available and that involves making incremental improvements as we can. Trying for the whole enchilada this go around would have killed the deal all together.

I certainly understand the political hazards. Increasing accessibility does not need to be the "whole enchilada" any more than decreasing restrictions on current CHL. I have not seen one bill this session that I believe has a viable chance of increasing accessibility in the slightest.

Probably because there isn't the political support yet.
by mojo84
Tue Apr 21, 2015 11:38 am
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?
Replies: 85
Views: 11772

Re: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?

TXBO wrote:
Charles L. Cotton wrote: ... We've passed many great bills and have made great strides in expanding Second Amendment rights, but I believe that HB308 should have been the cornerstone of the 2015 Texas Legislative Session -- but it wasn't. I'm mad and I'm sick that HB308 went nowhere; it is no better off than HB195 or SB342 and I'm not happy. However, I understand why neither the NRA nor TSRA put their political muscle behind HB308. To say it was a controversial bill would be an understatement. The media would have had a field day with "guns everywhere, guns everywhere!" It's right up there with "the British are coming, the British are coming!" The primary reason HB308 was not a priority bill is NRA and TSRA were using huge amounts of political capitol to pass open-carry and to a lesser degree, campus-carry. I still believe we should pass campus-carry because it is the right thing to do even though it differs from our standard procedure of supporting bills that provide the most benefits to most people. At this point in time, HB308 would have worked to the extreme benefit of 846,000+ Texas CHLs and this number will continue to grow. That's how strongly I feel about removing off-limits areas for CHLs, but you haven't heard me lash out at NRA/TSRA for not making MY priority their priority. That's not how you bill strong and effective relationships; you don't abandon friends who share your goals but not your priority list. Contrast this approach with the OCT approach of attacking, condemning and lying about anyone and everyone who does not share both their goals and there tactics.

Chas.
I believe your philosophy of "supporting bills that provide the most benefit to most people" is an admirable approach. I would personally benefit from being able to carry more places but I would argue that only having 846k+ people in Texas that can legally carry is disappointing. I'd like it to be a priority to see that number multiply.

I suspect that is the ultimate goal for many. However, we have to work with the process available and that involves making incremental improvements as we can. Trying for the whole enchilada this go around would have killed the deal all together.
by mojo84
Tue Apr 21, 2015 11:20 am
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?
Replies: 85
Views: 11772

Re: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?

I second what TAM said.

There are some valuable life lessons in what Charles wrote. It's easy and most unproductive to get mad and throw a temper tantrum when one doesn't get one's way. It takes a sensible mature person to properly promote ones cause and deal with the results in an a productive adult like manner without burning bridges. I believe some have burned their bridges while standing on them when it comes to gun rights and other liberty oriented issues.

It is also beneficial to know there have been very strong debates behind the scenes between Charles, Alice and Tara and then a united front put forth in the public eye. That's the effective way and the way I hope the Republicans will handle themselves when it comes to defeating the liberal progressives in the upcoming presidential election.
by mojo84
Thu Apr 16, 2015 2:18 pm
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?
Replies: 85
Views: 11772

Re: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?

I'm thinking more of bulls in a china shop.
by mojo84
Thu Apr 16, 2015 8:45 am
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?
Replies: 85
Views: 11772

Re: OCT Pro-Gun or Pro-Gun Control?

Seems to me like they are foolish enough to think they can pull the wool over the legislators eyes by telling him they'll support his bill if he'll remove penalty because they are the types that will just ignore the signs if there is no penalty.

However, what they are inadvertently doing is helping the other side take incremental steps to more gun control. They are too ignorant and pig headed to realize small incremental steps is how legislature gets passed and goals accomplished.

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