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April 3, 2024, 05:42 PM | #26 |
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In the news again today, apparently 13 state AG's (all from the same political party) have signed a letter expressing their interest in the lawsuit.
Also in the reporting of this is the statement that the Chicago lawsuit admits that the "Glock Switches" are coming from China. Get that point? From China, not from Glock. SO WHY is Chicago suing Glock and NOT SUING CHINA???? I realize the real world answer is probably "because they can" and "China won't care about our lawsuit", but in legal terms, why is CHINA not being sued for what they are DOING and Glock is being sued for something they DID NOT DO??? Is it a Chicago thing? or something else?? another point is that how is it ok for the Fed govt to approve something as legal and a city sue the maker because they feel differently?? I am past sick and tired of the govt (at any level) deciding a product is legal and then years later, with no change to the product, rule that it isn't. Bump stocks and pistol braces, and now, apparently Glock pistols come to mind...
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April 4, 2024, 08:32 AM | #27 | ||
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Quote:
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Like I said, Chicago politicians love nothing more than extorting money out of people and if they can do it to a gun maker and score some political points, all the better in their minds. I personally hope that Glock is smart enough to realize that spending the time and money to fight this will be worth it in the long run because I predict that if they roll over and pay the Chicago extortionists off, it will only cause elected extortionists in other jurisdictions to try the same stunt not only with Glock but with other gun makers too. |
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April 4, 2024, 11:54 AM | #28 | |
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Every time a gun-grabber uses the phrase 'common sense' I'd like to take them by the scruff of the neck and make them read a week's worth of posts on this site. There's more real 'common sense' here than you could shake a stick at. Seeing the real thing might just make them think. |
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April 4, 2024, 03:01 PM | #29 |
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I would like to point out that Chicago didn't try this suit while Gaston Glock was still alive.
I have no idea what the current management of Glock will consider their best option (fight it in court or settle) but I feel sure Herr Glock would have told them the Germanic equivalent of "bite me!"
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April 4, 2024, 04:39 PM | #30 |
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imaginary conversation
Webleymkv has hit the nail squarely on the head, with great force and accuracy but no rancor. I am awed by his lack of mean-spiritedness.
Here is an imaginary conversation between a Glock representative and someone from Cook County, regarding settling the lawsuit against Glock Glock guy: How can you sue us for making legal guns? Your PD uses our guns and seems happy with them. Cook: They like them a lot! Settle with us and we'll keep buying them... fight us, maybe we shop elsewhere and so do other agencies. Glock: Settling a frivolous suit does not sit well with us, and cuts into our bottom line. Cook: So, settle with us and then raise your prices to cover your losses. Glock: Then you pay more... Cook: We don't pay more, the taxpayers pay more. Settle, raise your prices 20%, use 10% to cover settlement costs, and then you and I split the other 10% between the two of us. Glock: But that's bribery! Cook: It looks good to the public. We sock it to the evil merchants of death, you still sell your product at a profit, and the public is happy to pay more taxes to get machine guns off the street. Glock: This gets no machine guns off the street... but it does pad our bottom line; maybe I can sell this to management. Of course, if he does sell it to management then Glock is guilty of bribery and Cook has a handle on them that they lacked previously. And although Cook is guilt of accepting a bribe, who is going to arrest/charge them? It is a game, and there is a reason that Capone finally went down, not for racketeering, extortion, or murder, but for tax evasion. The IRS got him for not paying income tax on his illegal profits, not for the laws he broke to get those profits. |
April 7, 2024, 11:53 AM | #31 |
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Windy City?
Bobcat45, are you a former resident of the windy city? That's not wind, it is the gaseous output of the local politicians.
I can recall once upon a time trying to claim a promised refund on an airport car service ride. Cost me 40 bucks for the last minute cab in addition to the airport ride I had prepaid. They just do not show up. I quickly learned that the car service was owned by a Mrs. Daley and the promised refund? No one has collected a refund, ever.
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April 7, 2024, 03:16 PM | #32 |
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Rickklin, I am. Which is why I take the "unfairness" of this lawsuit personally; growing up, not understanding that "the rules" as written bore only the most tenuous connection to the rules by which people lived and got along is a good way to collect some lumps and bruises.
Two things interest me. The first is how Glock will respond to the suit and how the issue eventually plays out. The chess game, move by move (or the boxing match, blow by blow). The second is whether or not Glock's striker fired design is so different from other striker fired designs that Glock, and only Glock, is 'responsible' for selling a pistol that is 'easily converted' to automatic fire. To me this is pivotal - if Glocks are, by design, significantly more subject to conversion to full auto than other popular pistols, then the suit is sort of understandable...sort of I guess. You can purchase an M16 auto sear on the web. I will not post the link but it is easily found. As far as I know it is legal to purchase, to replace a worn-out part in a legally-owned M16. Aside: the M16 / AR-15 was introduced in the 1963-1965 period, which was more than 20 years before the Registry was effectively closed in 1986, so there are probably a number of registered, legal, M16s in private hands. No idea of the number; never wanted full-auto, the thought of my carefully prepared brass being scattered around like broadcasting seeds in the garden makes me shudder. OTOH if the brass would take root and grow into brass bushes, to provide new unfired SAMMI spec brass to pick next year, I'd not be so reluctant. Sorry. My (admittedly imperfect) understanding is that if you have a semi-automatic AR-15 you are legal (Federal, not necessarily state) but as soon as you take delivery of that M16 auto sear you have an illegal, unregistered machine gun. No idea of the situation where you have an AR-15 as well as a registered M16 with a worn-out sear, and buy a replacement...are you only 'in violation' until the old sear is replaced and disposed of? Does this mean that, not owning a Glock, I could go on Amazon and buy a Glock switch, and still be legal? But if I threw it in my parts box and forgot about it, and in a year or two bought a Glock, I'd be guilty of 'constructive possession' of a machine gun and ATF could come and get me? Chicago has some wonderful things. The Museum of Science and Industry https://www.msichicago.org/ is one. Some of the 'street food' - Italian Beef sanwhiches, Vienna Beef hot dogs, and so forth - just great! Overall, the interpersonal good will and a kind of "Can Do!" attitude that were prevalent in those days went a long way toward taking some of the sting out of the blatant corruption and casual illegality of daily life. But I'm a simple person, I like to know the rules and fear unintentionally breaking some obscure law. So the city, on the one hand buys Glocks for their PD, but on the other hand sues Glock for making and selling those same pistols - no thanks, not a place I'd be comfortable visiting again even though I spent the first 35 years of my life there. To me this is a shakedown; the county has no intention of "beating" Glock, only beating them into submission and reaping financial benefit. This is like putting a knife to someone's throat and demanding their wallet; but it is being done by Cook County, not some scurrilous criminal... or is that my mistake? |
April 7, 2024, 09:54 PM | #33 | |
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There are several points to consider here, one being that the people buying Glocks for the city's cops and the people suing Glock are likely not the same people, even though they both work for the city, and its possible neither one knows anything about what the other is doing until they read about it in the papers and online.
Another point is that every semi auto design gets reviewed by the subject matter experts at the ATF who determine if the design is "easily converted" and if so, do not approve it for sale to the public. So, here's a question, say some 40 years down the road, after the design was approved, some bright fellow in some foreign land figures out a new "widgit" replacing one part of the original design, and makes it "easy to convert". does that make the manufacturer of the original design liable for criminal conduct in your city, where the maker does no business, other than with a branch of the city govt?? And you demand the maker change their design as a result of criminal actions by a 3rd party?? (I'm slightly surprised that the city of Chicago isn't demanding direct cast payment from Glock, or is that in the fine print somewhere and just not being reported on, at this time??) The AR 15/M16 is not a good analogy, as the M16 requires several "FA" parts in order to fire full auto, just the auto sear alone will not do it. Quote:
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April 7, 2024, 11:02 PM | #34 |
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Sounds like Glock needs to stop selling to every agency in Illinois.
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April 8, 2024, 02:03 AM | #35 | |
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Quote:
For the people pushing gun control, any and everything that even has a possibility of reducing the ability of private citizens to own guns is a win.
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April 8, 2024, 08:10 AM | #36 |
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Local TV news last night had a pearl clutching "Viewed with alarm, reported with concern" feature on The Switch. How easy it is to buy or make, how common on Da Street, how wild the fire - with appearance by victims and heirs of spray shooting - how even an expert AGE cannot control it, etc. Only as an afterthought did a Fed state that it was already against the law.
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April 8, 2024, 11:59 AM | #37 | |
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Note: I'd like to, but I cannot take credit for 'illegaler'. I don't know who made it up but I really like it. I am constantly just totally gobsmaked/dumbfounded at how we have reached a point where real, honest-to-Gosh 'common sense' is getting so rare as to be considered a super power. I realize there have always been whack jobs among us but now they're in positions of power in government and the media. |
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April 8, 2024, 12:44 PM | #38 | |
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How big it is, or isn't, how many shots it holds, how fast it shoots, NONE of this matters to the people who get shot. But its important to the political types. Making something that is already a crime more of a crime makes it look like they are doing something and possibly even give a snit about the problem. (they don't, they just want to look like they do) Got a problem with thugs shooting people in your city?? Don't blame the thugs, don't allow the police to catch them, don't have the courts lock them away for long periods of time, just sue the gunmakers, that will surely fix things.... Neat, slick, CHEAP, and entirely wrong....
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April 8, 2024, 03:15 PM | #39 | |
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April 8, 2024, 03:17 PM | #40 | |
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NRA Life Member / Certified Instructor NRA Chief RSO / CMP RSO 1911 Certified Armorer Jeepaholic |
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April 8, 2024, 05:43 PM | #41 | |
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April 8, 2024, 05:48 PM | #42 | |
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I would point out that NO other gun maker took the Clinton "deal" and that it wasn't exactly S&W who took the deal, it was Thomkins LTD, the British holding company that owned S&W at the time who took the deal and made S&W go along with it. Not sure exactly what Herr Glock might have said, but I suspect something beginning with "F" and ending with the word "auf!" might have been in his response.
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April 8, 2024, 06:23 PM | #43 |
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Thank you Aguila Blanca.
That made my day. I've downloaded it and will enjoy it when things get exceptionally frustrating. I'd recommend it without reservation to everyone. |
April 9, 2024, 02:44 AM | #44 | |
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April 9, 2024, 11:01 AM | #45 |
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The Genie
The genie has been out of the bottle for years now. A simple waste of the taxpayers dollars going after Glock.
Metal 3d printers are becoming attainable, tho I can't see them ever being really inexpensive they will continue to decrease in cost. The parts or the entire machine gun can be created easily from raw materials in the comfort of your home. Now tell me again why Chicago is suing Glock? Manufacturer's?? We don't need no stinkin manufacturer's. I'm of course speaking of the collective we, not TFL and TFL members specifically.
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April 9, 2024, 06:20 PM | #46 | |
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"I believe that people have a right to decide their own destinies; people own themselves. I also believe that, in a democracy, government exists because (and only so long as) individual citizens give it a 'temporary license to exist'—in exchange for a promise that it will behave itself. In a democracy, you own the government—it doesn't own you."- Frank Zappa |
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April 9, 2024, 11:35 PM | #47 |
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March 21st Chicago cops fired 96 rounds in 41 seconds, killing a 26 year old driver of an SUV who (officers said) was initially stopped for not wearing a seatbelt.
Details, at this point are, of course, sketchy. but body cam footage has been released. Five (5) undercover cops in an unmarked car stopped a young black male driving a white SUV in a residential neighborhood. The report says police said he fired first. (who actually did is unconfirmed at this time). What is, apparently confirmed is that the cops fired 96 rounds in 41 seconds. DO THE MATH... Don't know why Chicago is so worried about "machineguns" on their streets, when they have cops like that....
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April 10, 2024, 08:43 AM | #48 | |
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too much data and no clarity
The news stories https://chicago.suntimes.com/police-...100-shots-copa and https://cwbchicago.com/2024/04/city-...xter-reed.html on this event contain enough information to make it quite clear that neither side is blameless.
Apparently his car had dark tinted windows so the seatbelt story does not hold water, he was parked in a crosswalk (so of course he needed to be shot multiple times), he reportedly fired first (11 rounds) in response to plainclothes officers aggressively approaching his vehicle with guns drawn, shouting profanity-laced orders to roll down the window; and when he exited the vehicle he left his gun on the passenger seat. In the Sun-Times story is says Quote:
You mentioned it was a residential neighborhood - but it is also a dangerous neighborhood - see https://crimegrade.org/safest-places...rk-chicago-il/ - so no surprise that the cops were on edge, expecting trouble, assumed the worst, and acted out their fears. Not excusing their behavior, just pointing out no choirboys in this story. Maybe the real reason for the lawsuit against Glock is to force Glock to provide full-auto model 18s to CPD so the cops don't have to get carpel tunnel syndrome practicing mag dumps. Beats me. Glad I'm here, not there, and chagrined I took the bait. |
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April 10, 2024, 03:10 PM | #49 | ||
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But more to the point, while I don't live in a "dangerous neighborhood" if five people NOT IN UNIFORM and not in a marked police car approached my car, with drawn guns and yelling obscenities, I would think it was a carjacking (at the least) and they are NOT COPS. Don't think I would engage in a shootout with such an adverse correlation of forces, I think I'd go pedal to the metal for the nearest actual police station, calling 911 on the way in....hoping to survive to get there... Quote:
OF course, that wouldn't make the news supporting gun control and earning points for the politicians...rather the opposite I think...
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April 10, 2024, 08:02 PM | #50 |
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44 AMP, first I have to apologize for making light of this young man's demise. A wise person once told me that "if you can laugh, you can survive" - but I think he meant something quite different; like trying to find humor in irony - not joking about someone else's ill fortune. The image of Dexter Reed lying dead on the ground really got to me... just sayin'.
Your point about "five people NOT IN Uniform...guns drawn...carjacking" is well taken, but whereas you or I might speed off to the police station for 'help' I think Dexter's mindset was that the police are not on his side, and he needs to rely on himself and his own marksmanship skills / magazine depth. And.. were I able to "put the pedal to the metal" and drive away, I might just keep going as fast and far as I could, rather than seek out the police. Your question about why undercover cops were doing a 'traffic stop' goes to the heart of the matter. The seatbelt is a red herring, the traffic stop is an excuse, and if someone came up with evidence that this was a targeted 'hit' I would be the last to cast doubt on their claim - as long as the evidence was halfway credible. It may be that the police believed he was dealing drugs or guns from the car parked in the crosswalk and wanted to 'take him down' for legitimate law-enforcement reasons. It is also possible that Dexter knew something detrimental - e.g. the name of one of their informers, or particulars of some graft/scheme that would hurt if it became public, and he needed to be silenced. We just don't know... but 'traffic stop' is just too weak and transparent. And my wisecrack about carpel tunnel was just that, a stupid wisecrack. The County is suing for their own reasons, unknowable to us at this time, but likely to at least include posturing and appearing to be 'doing something' about the chaos. And if the suit wins a settlement from Glock, all the better; "money talks". Interesting Chicago statistics: https://heyjackass.com/ |
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