Saturday, June 16, 2012

    
Defending one’s own home and one’s own family is a principle that leaders, military tacticians, contingency planners and soldiers have understood for millennia. Confronted with an indefensible city wall, an enemy taking up offensive positions on the hills not far from the broken gates, Nehemiah assigned men to work refortifying the walls immediately in front of their own homes first. Jerusalem in the sixth century B.C. was under the command of a wise leader. Hundreds of years later, Jesus taught a corollary. The hireling takes off when trouble comes, but the owners of the sheep stay to fight and protect what is theirs. Mercenaries find it much more palatable to concede today in hope of a better tomorrow than stand firm no matter the end. 

Those who guard their own know that without victory today, there may be no hope for tomorrow.
Americans enjoy the fruits of wisdom of our forefathers who understood the need for a strong national defense. A strong presence with a global reach protects our homeland keeping those who want to strike us leery of that awesome power. Our nation’s planners knew, however, that there were other risks that required a local presence with an equal ability, known today as the National Guard; augmenting the federal military. As well trained yet, ‘locally owned and operated’ and available to each state’s governor.

But, they did not stop there. Wise leaders in the Constitutional Convention of the 18th century, even before the formal establishment of the divisions of the armed services; enumerated ten amendments to the new Constitution to assure its ratification. Of course, these  amendments are the Bill of Rights. Second only to the right of free speech was, and is, the right of states to have a “well regulated militia” and for each citizen the right to “keep and bear arms.”

Two quick points of logic are necessary here. First, there is a clear distinction by the common reading that there are two groups, or entities, here whose rights are affirmed. One is each state of the union; the second is each individual citizen. The former has the right to keep a militia. The latter has two inter-dependent rights described.They are two specific and individual rights. The first is “To keep… arms.” It is the right of ownership.

It doesn’t say ‘keep registered’ or ‘keep and register…’ it reads “keep.” The second right within this Amendment for the citizen reads, “bear arms.” The clear and common reading in 1787 and today did not mean that the owner of arms had the limited right of carrying it around his property only, or in some cities today, only allowed to carry it inside his home. To bear it simply meant, and means, to carry it wherever one chooses to go. This was clearly understood then as both open and  concealed carry. There was no distinction.

A caveat is necessary. The old adage, my right to swing my fist ends where your nose begins is in play here.  A citizen, who owns private property, has the right to regulate if, when, and how another may carry a firearm onto it.

Any U.S. citizen who attempts to undermine or weaken the security of this country by depriving citizens of their Constitutional rights, in this case without a legally ratified new amendment, but rather by malfeasance and color of law should be charged with treason. This is particularly true of those who would conspire with our enemies to promulgate such an act as in the U.N. Small Arms Treaty.

To permit the open meeting of co-conspirators within the boundaries of the U.S., particularly within blocks of 9-11 Ground Zero, is a slap in the face of all Americans. At what point will we cordially invite the U.N. and every other group or individual here in the country who can only denigrate the nation and seek to find ways to hurt and disrespect it to go elsewhere? It is ludicrous for the American taxpayer to host the U(nfriendly) N(ations) at a cost of $20 million annually, over $2 billion for the new office, 22% of the entire annual budget and the costs keep adding up…[i]  The Small Arms Treaty should be the final straw. That building would make a nice Holocaust museum and a Hebrew University campus for international studies as well as an American University center for Constitutional law.

 “I see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and cause me to tremble for safety of my country; corporations have been enthroned, an era of corruption in High Places will follow, and the Money Power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the People, until the wealth is aggregated in a few hands, and the Republic destroyed.”[ii]
[Dr. Ross L. Riggs ~ Security Consulting Investigations & Global Security Consulting

[i] http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,553720,00.html
[ii] Lincoln, Abraham, letter to Col. William F. Elkins, Nov. 21, 1864

Saturday, June 2, 2012

A Routine Day

 
A routine day, Friday, June 1, 2012, it is the first day of the ‘weekend’ in Israel. A 21 year old Staff-Sergeant in the IDF is working as a Medic doing a “normal patrol” along the southern border area of Israel along the Gaza Strip. The security fence is up and working properly. It is, for all intents and purposes, a beautifully routine day. And then the unexpected happens… surreal almost in the action, that I am certain the IDF units on scene had to shake their heads for a collective second. Could someone actually be stupid enough to scale that fence and come across right in front of us? But that is exactly what this terrorist did and the 21 year old soldier, a native of Ashkelon was buried hours later. The terrorist was also killed in the firefight with the Sergeant’s patrol team.[i]
 
“Yes,” you say, “but that is Israel. The Sergeant, he was IDF and was on patrol along the Gaza Strip. They are at war. Even today rockets were fired from Gaza into Israel. That wouldn’t happen to me.”
 Just today I drove past a large billboard that was advertising for some insurance company. The sign read, ‘The: that will never happen to me – just happened to me.’

Not too terribly long ago a local police officer in a rural area near where I live was on patrol and approached a man wanted for writing bad checks while the man was getting items from his vehicle in a well-known and occupied ‘Re-Po’  lot.  The officer, a ten year veteran of the village police department, was somewhat aware of the situation into which he was driving and had called another jurisdiction for a back-up car to respond. However, the bad-check warrant is a very low degree crime and seldom gets jail time, so the officer had little reason to imagine that in seconds he would be shot four times, nearly fatally by the suspect for no apparent reason. The officer survived by taking cover under a truck awaiting help. The suspect had no hesitation, gave no warning signs, no verbal or physical cues to let you know there was something extremely violent about to happen; he simply refused to exit his vehicle. When a struggle ensued, the cop had his gun taken from him and barely lived to tell about it.

You are right, that guy in the ‘Re-Po’ lot was not a terrorist. No, he was a potential murderer who wanted to kill a cop. The terrorist who crossed that fence on Friday in Israel had one objective minimum. Sure, he wanted over that fence; but the way he was armed and ready to fire, he wanted to kill someone, preferably an IDF soldier. That he was killed as a result, for him he thought, was a plus. Perhaps the bad guy in the ‘Re-Po’ lot wasn’t hoping to die for some sensual eternal reward; maybe he just didn’t have anything for which he felt it was worth staying alive. He did stay alive though, and in 2008, only thirteen years after being sentenced to a “minimum 15 to 50 years”, he was up for parole. The officer, although back to work; in 2008 was still undergoing surgeries to repair damages done by the four shots he sustained. A newspaper article telling the story of the shooting of the police officer ran the headline, “A Routine Day.”[ii]

Can you see the connection? It can happen to you and since 9-11 here in the United States, we are at war. If you are in law enforcement, you are at war every day; because every day may be the routine day you have to fight for your life.

[Dr. Ross L. Riggs, Chief of Police Retired]

[i] http://www.policeone.com/legal/articles/1704436-Man-who-shot-Ohio-cop-up-for-parole/
[ii] http://www.jerusalemonline.com/dhome.asp