Grayling813 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 13, 2023 9:23 am Herschel’s take on the Illinois Sheriffs over at The Captain’s Journal
https://www.captainsjournal.com/2023/01 ... inois-awb/
Merely refusing to assist the state police isn’t doing anyone any good. For this to have teeth the Sheriffs would need to ensure that not only were they constitutional Sheriffs, but their deputies were constitutional deputies as well, and that the city and township PDs agreed with this stance. Those are the preconditions for success.
That would all lead to the next necessary step, which would be a threat to arrest any state police who came into their counties to enforce the new law, and the stomach to follow through with it. Finally, if those counties have militia to whom the Sheriff could go for assistance, that may prove to be necessary as well.
Do any of the Sheriffs have the stomach for this? I seriously doubt it. I’ve said before, nullification laws or threats are dangerous for the citizens if they aren’t serious and don’t carry both the threat and reality of force behind them. If they are weighty and enforced, they serve as a check on centralized power and authority to infringe on God-given rights.
So, how many semi-automatic rifles are in the State of Illinois? No one knows, that's why they want folks to register them. How many ISP officers are there? Enough to force compliance ON THEIR OWN without assistance of local law enforcement? I keep saying this thing is a matter of logistics. How long will the ISP have enough folks to do anything if they have to start "spending" officers going door-to-door trying to find out if people have semi-automatic rifles and shotguns? I get it, most people are "sheeple", they'll doff the cap, make obeisance, and all that. But if even some small percentage do not, and take serious umbrage, how long until enough ISP officers end up in a bad way before officers start calling in with the "blue flu" or find other employment? I know, I know, everyone thinks we're at the point of Stalin's Soviet Union, but I'm not among those folks. Things are bad, real bad, but I still don't think that state troopers, even in Illinois, are going to be able to go door-to-door and take away rifles. And taking them on random traffic stops or because one neighbor ratted out another isn't going to get the job done, either. LOGISTICS!
(ETA: There are about 3K ISP officers. Can they effectively disarm who knows how many folks in a state where the population is 12 million and spread over a lot of rural counties?
A reasonable definition of logistics: The aspect of military operations that deals with the procurement, distribution, maintenance, and replacement of materiel and personnel, or the management of the details of an operation. And make no mistake, disarming who knows how many tens of thousands of people would require at least a paramilitary operation.)