NEWS ALERT – NEW MEXICO/TEXAS RECIPROCITY DROPPED

On April 27, 2012, the New Mexico DPS decided that the Texas CHL requirements were not “substantially similar” to the New Mexico Concealed Carry requirements. This decision is subject to review, but as of now, the Texas CHL is not recognized in New Mexico.

New Mexico does allow unlicensed carry of a firearm in a motor vehicle, subject to restrictions, and also allows open carry in some public locations, also subject to restrictions. However, a Texas CHL holder may not carry concealed at this time in New Mexico.

As with any other state, if you are taking a firearm into New Mexico, you need to make sure that you know and understand the rules of that state. Remember that once you leave the state of Texas, you are under somebody else’s rules, and the rules and regulations that you learned in your Texas CHL class may be different in several important ways — and that the Texas CHL instructors may not be familiar with those differences.

Here is a link to the New Mexico Concealed DPS page on Concealed Carry. From my quick reading of the reciprocity criteria that they list, the most probable cause of the decision to drop reciprocity appears to be that Texas will issue Concealed Carry Licenses to legal resident aliens, and New Mexico does not.

UPDATE: The NM DPS has announced that they are again recognizing the Texas CHL, as of today (May 2nd). However, you should carefully check the NM DPS website before carrying a firearm there. We have just seen that the situation could change overnight.

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Prepper TV Show — A Really Bad Idea

I got a call from a TV reporter last week wanting to know if I would be willing to do an interview on ‘prepping.’ I replied, “I am ABSOLUTELY NOT interested,” and hung up. Later, I learned that she had emailed my wife about the same thing. Of course, my wife simply ignored the email. Then this reporter tried getting some folks that we knew from the prepper community to email us to try to get us to do an interview.

TV Reporter

TV Reporter: "How much food and water do you have stored away, and where do you keep it?"

Why would I pass up an opportunity to be on TV? Well, for starters, I’m not stupid.

Apparently, my wife and I have a fairly high profile in the prepper community, which I consider a Bad Thing. Worse, we seem to be the most visible preppers in our geographical area. I’m not sure how we got that distinction, but it probably has something to do with my wife’s well-written prepper blog.

Now, you may be thinking that I’m blowing my OPSEC by even posting about this, but there is a BIG difference between a blog post and a mainstream TV show. Namely, the people who come here are actually looking for me and information that I might have that would be of interest to them. Even if the reporter from channel 33 doesn’t plan to do a hatchet-job to make ‘preppers’ look silly (or worse, dangerous), I would bet money that is what her manager has in mind. Then all it would take is for the government to appoint a ‘doctor’ to rule that I’m “mentally deficient” and deprive me of my firearms (and a good portion of my livelihood).

How do I know she would do a hatchet-job? Because that’s what reporters *do*. I have witnessed some really egregious hatchet-jobs done to organizations where I was a member, after verbal assurances that coverage would be ‘favorable’ and ‘balanced.’ Excuse me, but reporters lie. They are under pressure to get a ‘story’ and they will tell you whatever they think will get you to interview. If you get a call from a reporter wanting to interview you for any topic, your wisest course is to refuse. Especially if you own a gun. You see, gun ownership is not Politically correct.

I have noticed a few other prepper blogs reporting similar happenings. The Suburban Prepper, for instance, ran an excellent article explaining why prepper TV coverage is a Bad Thing, so I won’t belabor the point — just go over there and read it.

In the unlikely event that you are reading this blog, and don’t know what a prepper is, a prepper is a person who is taking steps to educate himself/herself and prepare for various types of disasters. Disasters come in several degrees of likelihood and severity. They include natural disasters, such as hurricanes, tornadoes, ice-storms, earthquakes, and tsunamis. And they include man-made disasters like the illegal gun confiscation that made the aftermath of hurricane Katrina even worse. Typical preparations include storing emergency food and water — which could be deemed ‘hoarding’ by unfriendly ‘authorities.’

Public domain photo of Dear Leader

Resource-Allocator-in-Chief

Especially one that recently issued an Executive Order that allows him to personally take charge of “resource allocation” (including food) even without having to declare an emergency.

Photos in this article are in the Public Domain.
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The DPS 90-Day Administrative Rule

One of the nastier surprises to come out of DPS in the last year or so has been the unannounced 90-day rule.

At the last DPS CHL instructor renewal I attended, we were all told that the CHL-100 was good for two years from the earliest date on the form. While I personally think that is a bit long (IMO, you shouldn’t take the CHL course unless you intend to follow up with your application immediately), there are cases in which gathering all the information required with your application is time-consuming (and expensive!). For instance, I had one student with 6 arrests, all of which resulted in no-bills, but the student still had to get the certified court documents for the outcome of each arrest, which took over a month, and cost $50 each! So having a reasonable amount of time between completing the CHL course and making your application is a good thing.

But, while you have two years after the CHL course to make your application, once you have started the process and paid your state application fee, you only have 90 days to complete all requirements for the application.

I have heard from other instructors that they have had students who had made their applications, and either fingerprints or photos were rejected, and the notice from DPS never arrived, so when they inquired about why they did not get their concealed handgun license after 90 days, they were told 1) they didn’t respond within the 90-day period to remedy the deficiency, so the application had been terminated, 2) they would have to pay another $140 and start over with the application, and 3) the DPS takes no responsibility for undelivered mail (even if it is their fault).

I have looked through the instructor’s materials and DPS website, and I have found no announcement of this policy anywhere, although I expect that if enough people complain, they may put it in a newsletter, or post it on the site.

Meanwhile, in order to avoid getting caught in this surprise trap, you need to carefully follow these steps:

  1. Don’t make your online application and pay your state application fee until after you have taken the CHL course. The course will cover all of the application procedures and requirements. You can use this information to make sure you have all your ducks in a row prior to paying your nonrefundable state application fee.
  2. If you have not heard from DPS within 30 days of submitting a new application or renewing your application, call the DPS.
  3. If you have received a notice in the mail about missing items and DPS has given you 90 days to submit the item(s), do not ignore the 90-day deadline.
  4. If after submitting a requested item(s), you have not heard back from DPS within 30 days of submitting the missing item(s), call the DPS.

I will be emphasizing this in all of my future classes, so that my students will not confuse the 2-year deadline for applying for the license after taking the CHL course with the 90-day limit for completing the application.

The 90-day rule is purely for the convenience of the DPS, and there is no obvious incentive for the DPS to be diligent in sending notices in a timely manner — or even sending notices at all (there is no requirement for providing proof that a notice has been sent). It is not something that is required by law, or even covered in any of the statutes concerning CHL application. It is purely an administrative rule imposed by the DPS on its own authority, and complaining to them will get no results. Complaining to your elected representatives might.

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Bing is the new Google?

Captive Audience

Since I have a long-standing interest in Internet marketing, I have learned to dance to Google’s tune. I view most of Google’s various recent search algorithm changes favorably, since they did appear to improve the quality of the search results. Like many others out there, I get peeved when I’m seriously searching for something and see that the entire first page of results is from low-quality sites that have learned to game the search-engine-optimization process. When the now-notorious ‘Panda’ came out, I noticed that things got substantially better from my point of view as a searcher, even though some of my own sites suffered a bit (but are recovering). Most of the folks who cried “Foul!” richly deserved what Panda did to them.

But lately, there has been a disturbing new trend. More and more searches, especially for keyword phrases that have been in the news recently, put so many paid ads and Google-affiliated sites into the search results that you have to scroll down to find what you are actually looking for in the ‘organic’ results. The #1 organic site for many keywords is now “below the fold.” I’m not the only one who has noticed this.

I’ve also become a bit perturbed at Google for other reasons. The company is run by a bunch of decidedly anti-gun bigots, and “do no evil” appears to mean “unless we think we can get away with it.” I’ve used Gmail for years, but I’ve started to reduce my dependence on it as much as possible, mainly using it to consolidate, spam-filter, and store email from my more than a dozen accounts. I have started to use Thunderbird to archive my email locally so that I won’t lose years of correspondence if and when Google decides it doesn’t like me.

One of the catalysts that changed my perception of Google was that they made a number of changes to Gmail and GReader, most of which I really don’t care for. I used the ‘old’ UI for as long as I could before they forced the new one on me. The latest round of changes to Gmail seemed to me gratuitous at best, and the integration with G+ and other Google properties hints of a future where Google owns and runs absolutely everything — and sites that Google doesn’t like will simply disappear. That just might include anybody supporting the 2nd Amendment.

Microsoft Bing

When Bing first came out, I pretty much dismissed it as an attempt by the “Evil Empire” (Microsoft) to do a Google imitation, and didn’t really check it out all that closely. But in response to a suggestion by another blogger who was complaining about the apparent ethical lapses of Google in promoting their own sites over ‘organic’ search, I took a fresh look at Bing.

Bing has changed, and and gotten much better — or at least that is how it seems to me. Maybe it’s only because the “Folgerization” (*) of Google has finally lowered the quality of their search to the point that lots of folks are starting to notice. Bing is now very much like Google used to be, except maybe their main search page is a little more interesting. The organic search results are, well, more organic, and not overwhelmed with ads for “Evil Empire” sites. At least, not yet. Much as I like to hate Microsoft, I think they have bested Google here, and I will be exploring the possibility of shifting more of my usage to Bing, HotMail, and LiveID.

I wonder if “Bing it” will ever replace “Google it” in the techie vernacular. Or better yet, maybe “google” will become a generic term like “kleenex,” “escalator,” or “xerox.”

I think that unless Google reverses its current course, they may find themselves wondering why they are playing catch-up with Bing fairly soon. Even if they do wake up and smell the coffee in time to avoid that fate, Bing will still have done us all the tremendous favor of subjecting Google to some meaningful competition. I just hope that if Bing does become the dominant search engine, that they don’t go the same route as Google has.

I will just do my best not to become completely dependent on any one virtual monopoly.

Update: Turns out that it’s possible to revert to the “old look” in Gmail, at least for now. It’s just a lot harder to find than the nag button for switching to the “new look.”

(*) Folgerization: A term I heard a local barista use to describe the process by which quality of a product is gradually reduced in small increments with the hope that nobody notices.

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SOPA — What is it, and why should you care?

I generally hesitate to post a political comment, but this is one that I feel is very important.

SOPA stands for Stop Online Piracy Act. It’s a bill coming up for a vote on Wednesday (tomorrow, as I write this). It’s one of those last-minute, let’s-rush-this-through-while-folks-are-busy-Christmas-shopping pieces of legislation that the entertainment-industry sponsors of this bill hope you won’t notice until it’s too late. By the way, this would not be the first time a bill has been rushed through Congress just before Christmas.

Innocent-sounding title, no? Pardon my cynicism, but congressional bills always have titles that obscure their real purpose. This one is no different. It’s an internet censorship bill, with a new twist: It will allow for-profit corporations to interpret and enforce it, in addition to the government. It’s bad enough that the government has this sort of power.

The question is not whether a for-profit corporation will abuse this sort of enforcement power, but how long it will take for them to get started.

If this bill passes, it will be only a matter of days (if that long) before you start seeing corporations taking down any website with a negative review. And, only a matter of time before any politically-incorrect website, like this one, gets taken down, without recourse. If you think that is something that only happens in places like China or Thailand, think again.

This is not the first time this sort of thing has been tried, nor will it be the last.

For more information on the implications of this, see this TechDirt Article on SOPA.

Update: It appears that Congress has caught enough flak over this to postpone the discussion of the bill until sometime next year, although I have not seen a confirmation of that.

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