The Washington Times
Emily Gets Her Gun

GUNS

A blog covering our Second Amendment freedoms featuring Opinion Page Senior Editor Emily Miller. Follow her on Twitter @EmilyMiller

  • Emily Miller training with Rob Pincus at Wincheter Ammunition

    MILLER: D.C.'s mace control, part 2

    By Emily Miller | Published September 27, 2012 Comments

    The city clearly takes possession of mace seriously because the penalty is the same for illegal possession of a firearm -- a whopping year in jail and $1,000 fine. Now I understand why Detective Kim assured me the cops wouldn’t arrest me if I used it. Read part two in the series as D.C. residents plead with politicians for the right to defend themselves with guns and mace.

  • D.C. City Council Chairman, Phil Mendelson, calls to order the 42nd legislative meeting of City Council period 19 after summer recess. Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012, in Washington, DC. (Craig Bisacre/The Washington Times)

    MILLER: Washington warms to gun-toting tourists

    by Emily Miller | Published September 27, 2012 Comments

    Under pressure from Congress and the public, D.C. officials are moving to ease one of the least defensible of their anti-gun ordinances. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson, also the Judiciary Committee’s chairman, held a hearing Monday on his proposal to decriminalize possession of a gun or ammunition for nonresidents.

  • Washington DC Metropolitan Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier is joined by Washington DC Mayor Vincent C. Gray (not in photo) during their press conference to announce a drop in the number of homicides and a plan to improve police services, in Washington DC, Friday, December 30, 2011. As of December 30, 2011 there have been 108 murders in the District, putting the nation's capital on pace to have it's lowest number of homicides in nearly 50 years. (Rod Lamkey Jr/ The Washington Times)

    MILLER: D.C. stands for District of Crime

    by Emily Miller | Published September 27, 2012 Comments

    When the Founders chose the swampy marshland along the Potomac River to serve as the home for the federal government, they couldn’t have envisioned it would one day become a cesspool of violence. While crime rates have steadily declined in the rest of the country, the trajectory in the District is up. Or maybe it’s down. It depends on whom you ask.

  • TWT's Emily Miller

    MILLER: D.C.'s mace control

    by Emily Miller | Published September 25, 2012 Comments

    Now that I've registered a gun in Washington, I've realized how limiting it is for self defense since I can’t legally take it out of my home. Since the District do not recognize the constitutional right to bear arms, so residents are just sitting ducks on D.C. streets. Criminals know that they can rob, assault, rape or murder anyone without fear. D.C. politicians do everything in their power to keep people defenseless.

  • The Rev. Jesse Jackson

    MILLER: Hide your guns

    by Emily Miller | Published September 11, 2012 Comments

    You didn’t hear the word “guns” voluntarily pass the lips of any Democratic speaker at this week’s convention in Charlotte, N.C. Liberals may be smart enough to avoid alienating the almost half of all Americans who have guns in their homes, but the same can’t be said for their party platform. That's because Democrats vow to pursue more gun-control laws.

  • MILLER: Gun training

    MILLER: Gun training

    by Emily Miller | Published August 22, 2012 Comments

    Illinois is the only state in the country that denies all rights to carry arms. When I arrived there this week, however, I felt like I was free compared to the District. To get better at shooting, I took a ladies self-defense training course taught by Rob Pincus at the Winchester Company in the Prairie State.

  • MILLER: Flying with a gun

    by Emily Miller | Published August 19, 2012 Comments

    I took my gun on a airplane for the first time, and it was much easier than getting it across town in Washington, D.C. The most difficult part of the process on Sunday was figuring out how to legally transport my firearm from my home in the District to Reagan National Airport in Virginia. The rest was -- surprisingly -- a breeze.

  • Family Research Council President Tony Perkins exits the Family Research Council headquarters on Thursday to accuse ideological opponents of using language that inspires the type of violence that occurred in his building lobby. (Rod Lamkey Jr./The Washington Times)

    MILLER: Body blocking bullets

    by Emily Miller | Published August 17, 2012 Comments

    An unarmed security guard thwarted a gunman in Washington on Wednesday using nothing but his body - and that’s just what D.C. officials want. Mayor Vincent C. Gray cited Leonardo Johnson’s being shot in the arm while protecting coworkers at the Family Research Council as proof the capital city’s restrictive gun laws are effective. It’s dangerous to think unarmed guards are always going to be able to protect the innocent from determined criminals.

  • Dick Anthony Heller

    MILLER: Dick Heller on the Family Research Council shooting

    by Emily Miller | Published August 17, 2012 Comments

    The Wednesday shooting of an unarmed security guard at the Family Research Council put the debate over the right to bear arms in the District of Columbia into the spotlight.I was interested to hear what D.C.’s most famous security guard, Dick Heller, thought of how the event could have been prevented and his take on the mayor’s comments about the city’s gun laws.

  • Emily Miller

    MILLER: Q&A on D.C.'s gun laws

    by Emily Miller | Published August 15, 2012 Comments

    The shooting at the Family Research Council in Washington on Wednesday raised many questions about the guns laws in the District of Columbia. As people continued to tweet me questions, I decided to answer them all in one post.

  • MILLER: Exploiting gun tragedies

    by Emily Miller | Published August 13, 2012 Comments

    Gun-control advocates have no shame. Before the bodies are buried or families have grieved, political opportunists exploit the tragic murder of innocent people to advance their cases. New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg uses his taxpayer-funded staff to jump all over a shooting anywhere in the country as a hook to call for more restrictions on Second Amendment rights.

  • D.C. Mayor Vincent C. Gray, here speaking at the reopening of renovated New York Avenue Recreation Center and Playground, is said to be planning to offer a bill to reform the way political donations are made to city candidates for political office. (Ryan M.L. Young/The Washington Times)

    MILLER: DC mayor protests billboard for gun-safety class

    by Emily Miller | Published August 9, 2012 Comments

    Washington politicians are so anti-gun that they oppose a mere photo of a paper target. With D.C.’s gun-grabber laws under fire and pressure rising to allow concealed carry, the city’s liberal political establishment is panicking.

  • D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson, a Democrat, says the city has gone through a detailed, science-based review  of its breath-testing program since it "fell apart" two years ago. On Tuesday, the council will vote on reviving the program as part  of "a fairly busy" agenda before the summer recess. (Rod Lamkey Jr./The Washington Times)

    MILLER: When only criminals have guns

    by Emily Miller | Published August 9, 2012 Comments

    In the nation’s capital, it’s a fair question to ask: Who gets the better deal, innocent citizens who want to own a gun, or dangerous criminals? The District’s deliberate policy of releasing criminals back onto the streets shows the liberal city council’s answer has little to do with public safety.

  • President Obama speaks July 20, 2012, about the Aurora, Colo., shooting at an campaign event at the Harborside Event Center in Ft. Myers, Fla. (Associated Press)

    MILLER: Second Amendment at risk in second term

    by Emily Miller | Published August 9, 2012 Comments

    Democrats just couldn’t hold it together. With less than 100 days to go before the election, the left let slip its vision of a second term for President Obama that will be the end for the Second Amendment.

  • Bloomberg

    MILLER: Banning "high-capacity" magazines

    by Emily Miller | Published July 30, 2012 Comments

    Gun grabbers wasted no time exploiting Friday’s shooting in Aurora, Colo., by calling for more restrictive firearm laws. Their liberal agenda is off target because, with U.S. gun ownership at its highest level ever, the public sees crime is way down. This blows a hole in the left’s argument, but it doesn’t stop it.

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