welcome, my little monkeys!

December 13, 2006

We’re all good to go now, so let’s start with some amazing news out of the Lone Star state:

New bill for blind Texas hunters

Blind hunters would be able to use laser-sighted rifles to hunt animals in Texas, if a bill introduced in the state’s legislature is successful.

Republican Edmund Kuempel proposed an amendment to existing law that would permit “legally blind” people to use a laser-sighting device when hunting.

Current Texas law prohibits the use of laser sights, spotlights and headlights for hunting purposes.

A sighted person would be legally required to accompany the blind hunter.

“This opens up the fun of hunting to additional people, and I think that’s great,” said Mr Kuempel.


Sighted guide

Blind hunters are not a new phenomenon in Texas.

Under current procedures, a sighted guide can assist a visually-impaired hunter by peering over the hunter’s shoulders and advising where to aim the gun and when to pull the trigger.

However, hunters say that without a laser pointer it is difficult to time the shot.

Laser sights, spotlights and headlights are banned in hunting in Texas, because they can make the animals freeze in their tracks.

If the bill is passed in when the state legislature reconvenes in January, it will probably not become law until 2008.

Mr Kuempel’s bill would give the state until 1 January 2008, to come up with a definition of legally blind so the law could be enforced.

Source: BBC News

5 Responses to “welcome, my little monkeys!”

  1. monkeynumber3 Says:

    i’m all for the rights of the differently abled… but this is really too much.

    the definition of ‘legally blind’ interests me….
    so the legally blind will be able to hunt, and the non-legally blind won’t be able to. but presumably if you’re not legally blind (only a little bit poor of sight) you’re still better off holding a gun than somebody isn’t supposed to be driving…
    texas is full of assy minds

  2. funkeemonkey Says:

    Is this to help Dick Cheney next time he’s out? Obviously bright orange doesn’t work for him…

  3. monkeynumber3 Says:

    as a person who has actually hunted before, i can’t stress enough how much sight is truly necessary. not for accuracy (the guide thing would totally work - and does work i believe for special olympians who do the biathalon) but for safety. as in not shooting at the last minute because it’s not a deer/moose/duck

  4. monkeynumber3 Says:

    and oh - dear god…. I was right about the blind biathletes… check out the gear they can buy…

    http://www.eko-aims.com/bss_e.htm

  5. missmaple Says:

    I am seriously perturbed by the fact that legislators may actually think that sight is unimportant when it comes to hunting. I can understand letting the legally blind frolic merrily at gun clubs, where the likelihood of accidental (Cheney-style or otherwise) shootings are minimized, but out in a forest? Isn’t it already sometimes difficult for a sighted hunter to make a mistake?

    What’s next, letting the legally blind drive or join the Army?

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