EMNofSeattle
Regular Member
So the genesis of this idea came from a conversation with a canadian shooter awhile back, he was complaining that in Canada they never issue ATC (authorization to carry, equivelant of a CPL/CHL/ etc) licenses. Apparently in Canada each province has a CFO or "Chief Firearms Officer" who's an employee of the RCMP and is in charge of issuing licenses. so he was saying he didn't think CC was ever going to be possible. So I suggested, "who chooses the CFO?" he looks at me and asks what I mean.
Me: Well this CFO has a boss, and his boss has a boss, eventually it gets to an elected official or group of elected officials
Canadian: Ok....
Me: So find a qualified candidate who's sympathetic to your views but not obviously connected to any gun rights groups if you have any in canada
Canadian: Ok
Me: Then have your cronies at this group be groomed out as appointees, if you need one or two Mounties to appoint get some people applying and into being mounties for long enough to be considered for such an office
Candadian: and if our guys gets elected he's going to appoint one guy who will appoint the next until they get into the CFO position?
Me: Bingo and then he'll issue the permits cause he's your plant. This of course will take time and patience.
Well After explaining this underhanded idea to him I though "can this be done easier in the United States since in most anti-rights states it's one elected official (a sheriff) who's responsible for issuing the licenses?
And of course it is. So for a state like california, has anyone in a gun rights group ever thought of finding a sympathetic, experienced cop to run for sheriff on a completely non-gun related platform so that he could be inserted into the position to issue licenses in states with may issue schemes?
I think this can be done, and probably easier as long as the candidate(s) you're propping up are not making guns a public issue of the campaign. make sure your sheriff candidate speaks all the feel-good obamalama stuff that everyone in an anti-gun county wants to hear (diversity, social justice, change, or any combination of those words) if asked about the 2A he just says "uhh I believe in the 2nd amendment with reasonable restrictions (same one-liner all politicians give) The idea though is to prop up a "stealth candidate" to effect the change you want seen.
Has anyone ever heard of this being done for any issue?
And is it a worthy idea to bring quicker change to states that are anti-rights and elect their sheriffs (like Cali)
Me: Well this CFO has a boss, and his boss has a boss, eventually it gets to an elected official or group of elected officials
Canadian: Ok....
Me: So find a qualified candidate who's sympathetic to your views but not obviously connected to any gun rights groups if you have any in canada
Canadian: Ok
Me: Then have your cronies at this group be groomed out as appointees, if you need one or two Mounties to appoint get some people applying and into being mounties for long enough to be considered for such an office
Candadian: and if our guys gets elected he's going to appoint one guy who will appoint the next until they get into the CFO position?
Me: Bingo and then he'll issue the permits cause he's your plant. This of course will take time and patience.
Well After explaining this underhanded idea to him I though "can this be done easier in the United States since in most anti-rights states it's one elected official (a sheriff) who's responsible for issuing the licenses?
And of course it is. So for a state like california, has anyone in a gun rights group ever thought of finding a sympathetic, experienced cop to run for sheriff on a completely non-gun related platform so that he could be inserted into the position to issue licenses in states with may issue schemes?
I think this can be done, and probably easier as long as the candidate(s) you're propping up are not making guns a public issue of the campaign. make sure your sheriff candidate speaks all the feel-good obamalama stuff that everyone in an anti-gun county wants to hear (diversity, social justice, change, or any combination of those words) if asked about the 2A he just says "uhh I believe in the 2nd amendment with reasonable restrictions (same one-liner all politicians give) The idea though is to prop up a "stealth candidate" to effect the change you want seen.
Has anyone ever heard of this being done for any issue?
And is it a worthy idea to bring quicker change to states that are anti-rights and elect their sheriffs (like Cali)