Bryan Malinowski, executive director of Bill and Hillary Clinton National Airport in Little Rock, was fatally wounded in a shootout as ATF agents tried to serve a search warrant at his home.

An executive for the Little Rock, Arkansas, airport who was killed in a shootout with federal agents this week had been under investigation over gun sales, search warrant records unsealed Thursday show.

Bryan Malinowski, 53, who was executive director of Bill and Hillary Clinton National Airport, was shot after he opened fire at federal agents who arrived to serve a warrant Tuesday morning, officials said.

Malinowski died Thursday, his family said. His brother has said he was shot in the head.

  • Maple Engineer
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    519 months ago

    They is an important lesson in this. Taking up arms against the government has two possible outcomes.

    1. You end up in prison.

    2. You and up dead.

    You are one person with a small number of consumer firearms. The government can show up with a virtually unlimited number of people, with bigger guns, and weapons up to and including tanks, helicopters, and precision guided bombs.

    Whatever collective fantasy you have about you and a group of friends overthrowing the government with your AR15s end up with you in prison or dead.

    • @SupraMario
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      329 months ago

      That’s not how revolutions work…a large chunk of people will need to be basically homeless, hungry and jobless for everything to kick off. So long as people can still get their chicken nuggets and iPhones and they have a place to sleep, there will be no revolution. It’s ignorant to say that small arms can’t do anything, it’s how we lost Vietnam/Iraq/Afghanistan. All small arms, because bombs cannot patrol street corners, and if you start killing Americans, you’re going to just feed a revolution, remember you probably live right next to one of these so called gun nuts …and bombs don’t give a shit if his house explodes and showers yours with flaming debris.

      • @[email protected]
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        189 months ago

        It’s also not what the revolutionaries need. A revolution in America would need to target power actors (owner class, politicians would just get you more politicians paid for by the same billionaires), precisely and relatively quickly.

        Bombs and heavy or indiscriminate weapons would only harm that cause by turning the people against you. Honestly small fire arms and poisons would probably be the most effective weapon in a revolution that could actually lead to any real change.

        • @SupraMario
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          99 months ago

          Yep, we the USA, literally created the terrorism we know today, via blowing up people there indiscriminately. How no one here gets that is beyond me.

        • @SupraMario
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          99 months ago

          Yep. Keep the people fed, happy and you starve revolutions. It’s why China continues to give their population crumbs, it keeps them from uprising.

      • @UnderpantsWeevil
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        -19 months ago

        a large chunk of people will need to be basically homeless, hungry and jobless for everything to kick off.

        Nah, you just need enough people armed, angry, and overconfident

        • @SupraMario
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          19 months ago

          I can’t tell if you’re joking or not, but no you absolutely do need people with nothing left to live for, we already have armed angry and overconfident people…

    • SeaJ
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      119 months ago

      You say that but Clive Bundy, who had a stand off with the federal government because he didn’t feel like paying grazing fees on land that was not his, had his trial dismissed. His son, anarchist Ammon Bundy, who had an armed standoff against the federal government in Malheur Wildlife Refuge which resulted in a death, was acquitted.

      • @[email protected]
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        79 months ago

        And the people at Waco had their children burned to death.

        Almost as if the government can pick and choose when to unleash full force.

        • SeaJ
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          29 months ago

          Yeah, I was going to make that point after I posted but got side tracked. I would have mentioned Rugby Ridge though.

      • Maple Engineer
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        69 months ago

        If the government had wanted him and his people dead they would have been dead. The only reason they weren’t was that the government showed restraint. If you think they could have won had the government decided to end them you are delusional.

        • SeaJ
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          49 months ago

          Given that Clive Bundy has 14 kids, there is a good chance that one of them is named Al and maybe even Ted.

      • @thesporkeffect
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        19 months ago

        I think “terrorist warlord” is a better epithet for the Bundys than anarchist

      • @cybervseas
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        9 months ago

        Yeah but they’re white so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @[email protected]
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      79 months ago

      Taking up arms against the government has two possible outcomes.

      Dunno, my grand-grandparents ended up old Bolsheviks with party membership since 1919.

      You are one person with a small number of consumer firearms. The government can show up with a virtually unlimited number of people, with bigger guns, and weapons up to and including tanks, helicopters, and precision guided bombs.

      Which is why taking up arms against the government should be approached like an engineering task and not like some impulsive action from Hollywood movies. But it sometimes happens.

      And what you are saying wasn’t very different even in 14xx-s, to be frank.

      • Maple Engineer
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        -19 months ago

        In the 14xxs the balance of power was fairly even. They didn’t have B52s dropping ninja bombs or A10s or helicopters with mini guns. Gravy Seals will die if they take on the government.

        • @[email protected]
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          59 months ago

          No, it was absolutely the same. Professional soldiers and knights with good gear and lifetime experience would easily massacre any amateur force and they regularly did.

          It was less about technology (though a piece of that gear would cost a few villages with serfs, so technology too) and more about experience, but that’s the case now as well.

          • Maple Engineer
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            -39 months ago

            So you think that the difference between a farm implement and a sword and armour is the same as the difference between an AR15 and a B52 wirh a ninja bombs, an A10, and a helicopter with side mounted mini guns?

            Well then, by all means, have at 'er.

            • @[email protected]
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              59 months ago

              Doesn’t have to be the same. The distance from Earth to the Moon is not the same order of magnitude as the distance from the Moon to the Sun, but for many purposes could as well be.

              • Maple Engineer
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                9 months ago

                That is utterly ridiculous. Literally worthy of ridicule.

                The peasant and knight could see each other. They had to be within a few yards of each other. The US government could take you out from an airplane 10 miles up and you would just end without knowing it was coming.

                But, as I say, by all means, bring it. The rest of us would like to have it over and get on with our lives.

                • @nomous
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                  59 months ago

                  Does the government just bombing poor farmers ever work though? Recent history indicates a handful of determined fighters stand a really good chance against the U.S. military. Actually, has a conventional force ever won against a local insurgency?

                  • @[email protected]
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                    19 months ago

                    It depends on what victory is and what defeat is. You can’t dictate terms of your victory to people who don’t understand them and don’t coordinate with each other as a whole entity. You also sometimes are not prepared to engage in full-blown genocide. And getting the bombs to the place may cost you much more than for those people to get their AKs. And bombs don’t control territory. And you may be willing to spend some amount of lives, and they may be willing to spend a different amount of lives.

                  • Maple Engineer
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                    -19 months ago

                    We’re not taking about our farmers. We’re taking about christofascist Gravy Seals. The vast majority of the population don’t want the US to become a fascist theocratic dictatorship.

                • @[email protected]
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                  29 months ago

                  That is utterly ridiculous. Literally worthy of ridicule.

                  I think you’re the only thing here worth of ridicule.

                  The pleasant and knight could see each other. They had to be within a few yards of each other. The US government could take you out from an airplane 10 miles up and you would just end without knowing it was coming.

                  A cat and a mouse too, but I haven’t head of a mouse killing a cat.

                  The rest of us would like to have it over and get on with our lives.

                  That’s a good point, wasted enough of my time on a modern equivalent of that peasant.

                  • Maple Engineer
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                    19 months ago

                    It’s scary outside the collective fantasy of your echo chamber.

    • rustydomino
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      39 months ago

      Beyond your point, I always felt that the Second Amendment, ostensibly for the purpose of overthrowing the government, is completely redundant. That is to say, if you’re plotting to overthrow the government by force of arms, whether your firearm is constitutionally protected is kind of moot by that point. Ergo, the 2A should have no relevance with regards to holding government tyranny in check.

      • @[email protected]
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        139 months ago

        2A for overthrow purposes means you and your militia buddies can build up an armory that the government can’t take away. Pre-overthrow you’re lawful citizens doing perfectly fine civilian stuff. It’s a just in case, probably not even going to be used. Once you’re rebels, sure, laws don’t matter, but if they make preparing yourself to be credible rebels illegal, then the rebellion never gets off the ground.

        • rustydomino
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          -59 months ago

          There is literally zero evidence for that. In armed insurrections around the world where firearms are supposedly illegal for civilians to hold, rebels have never had trouble getting a hold of guns.

      • @[email protected]
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        -29 months ago

        2A is all about government tyranny - it was a concession to the slave states so they could have local organizations (militias) to prevent/eliminate slave uprisings and to pursue runaway slaves.

      • Maple Engineer
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        29 months ago

        The balance of power is dramatically different now.

        Then the people had long sticks with sharp points, the government had long sticks with sharp points.

        Now the people have AR15s, the government had B52s that can drop Ninja bombs from 40,000 feet and kill you while you’re having a cigarette on your balcony.

        But by all means, get out your AR15s and give it a go.

      • @[email protected]
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        -29 months ago

        You’re not even comparing apples and oranges here; it’s more like apples and Apple computers.

        He wasn’t part of a revolutionary army, he was an untrained lone gunman who was seriously outnumbered.

        Also, pretty much every successful revolution has had some outside force bearing down on the Establishment. Washington had the French Navy; the Viet Cong had Russia and China; Lenin had WW1 chaos on his side.

    • @John_McMurray
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      29 months ago

      This is relevant to a suicide by cop event how?