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The end of one world, the beginning of another

At the moment that I am typing this, 69 years ago a world was dieing.

The United States had climbed back into its shell after World War I. We had sparred diplomatically with the Japanese for a few years, and had been almost a belligerent in the European war that sprang to life in 1939.  But for the most part we were insulated in our sea to shining sea fortress. 

At this moment 69 years ago, soldiers and sailors in and around Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, were preparing for another day in a peacetime military.  Maybe they were on duty, maybe they were on pass.  Either way, they were in paradise, and probably looked forward to a quiet Sunday.

Some, such as crewmen of the destroyer Ward, had an inkling that something was about to happen, as they dropped depth charges on a submarine that had been sighted earlier.  Radar operators had already seen a cloud of fighters and bombers on their way in to Pearl Harbor and alerted their superiors to the presence of what was the first wave of Japanese attackers.

But for the most part, Pearl Harbor and its environs are enjoying a peaceful, quiet Sunday morning.

Within an hour, all of that would be gone forever. 

By the end of the Japanese attack on the American fleet at Pearl Harbor, along with nearby Army and Navy installations, over 3000 Americans were dead or wounded. By the time the war was over, more than 16 million Americans had put on the uniform.  By the time the Japanese emperor signed the surrender documents in Tokyo Harbor in 1945, 416,000 Americans had been killed.  America was shocked out of her isolation, and has spent the intervening 69 years trying to be a liberator, protector, and provider to the rest of the world.

Today we stop to remember the soldiers, sailors, and Marines who fought during those morning hours 69 years ago.  We mourn those who fell defending that island paradise, and we honor both their memories and those who survived.  May we live up to the sacrifices they made.

Thought for the day

Remember that movie from the 1990’s called “Falling Down“? The one where a middle-class guy has one heck of a freak out because he’s had one too many gut shots in life in too short a time?

On bad days, I start to think it’s a documentary.

On really bad days, I start to believe it’s a comedy.

Good Advice

Chuck Zeigenfuss over at From My Position, On the Way! has some great advice on how to deal with the Zombie Apocalypse.  

Like they say over at the Zombie Squad:  If you’re ready for the Zombie Apocalypse, then a hurricane is just a stiff breeze.

Are you bloody kidding me?

In December of 2008, four teenagers took a ride with another teenager after a youth event in Louisville because the provided vans were all full.  As they drove, a policeman noticed that the car they were driving in was stolen, and attempted to pull the driver, Herbert Lee, over.  Rather than pulling over, Lee floored it, leading LMPD on a chase.  Eventually he crashed the car with enough force to break it in two pieces, sending half of it through a fence and wrapping the other half around a tree.

All four of his passengers died.

Prosecutors charged him with murder, but the jury decided to convict on manslaughter.  While I don’t agree with that finding, the jury was given that option, and the jury system is what it is.

It’s the sentence Lee received that I have a problem with.  He was given one year in juvenile detention.  Read that again.  This guy killed four young men by fleeing the police in a stolen car and he will serve one year in juvie.  For this, I blame the state legislature for putting weak sentences into the juvenile manslaughter laws.

Additionally, he’s supposed to do a year of probation after that, but his lawyers say the judge can’t do that to him, so they’re going to appeal.  They sincerely believe that their client doesn’t deserve the inconvenience of another year of supervision after the unbelievable light term of one year in jail.

Whiskey Tango Foxtrot, over!

Yeah, I know, I know, the judge should take into consideration this fine, upstanding pillar of the community’s upbringing in a rough home, or maybe how he was trying to turn his life around when he stole a car to go to a community event.  Look, I came from a pretty messed up home. My mother was a drug addict, my father disappeared, alcohol and drugs were a major factor in the home, we moved around a lot, and some would say it was an abusive home.  But as screwed up as I am, I didn’t grow up to steal cars and kill teenagers.  He’ll get no sympathy from me.

When I took an introductory law class in college, the instructor hammered in the concepts of legality and justice.  Normally that means that the state can take into account mitigating circumstances when applying the law. Someone can have broken the law, but in the name of justice, the state can choose to not prosecute.  This is the reverse situation, in my opinion.  Lee and his lawyers are complaining that the judge has exceeded his authority, even though Lee is basically walking away from causing the deaths of four teenagers.  A sense of shame should require that they look more at the justice of the additional year of probation they are planning to appeal rather than it’s strict legality.

Even if the probation isn’t specifically stated in the statutes, Lee should take the sentence as a godsend and live the next 24 months under state supervision.  The families of his victims will be under a cloud the rest of their lives; he can at least give up two years.

Fanboi-ness notched up a tad

A few weeks ago I realized I had the oldest computer in the house. My daily use computer was a first generation Mac Mini that I ordered the day they announced the line. It was speedy enough when I bought it in 2005, but it was really showing it’s age when I tried to use Open Office or open a lot of tabs in Firefox. Since it’s a G4 Mac, a lot of newer software flat won’t run on it.

Yesterday I rectified that situation. Girlie Bear and I went to the Apple store and walked out with a new MacBook. 2gb of RAM, 250gb hard drive.  It’s definitely got the horsepower to do the word processing, web surfing, and IRC chatting that I use a computer for 95% of the time, and should do just fine with the other 5% too.

So early Merry Christmas to me.

Thought for the day

No father hath love like he who braves a McDonalds Playland on a Friday night for the sake of his son.

Hell hath no wrath like a toddler who has been promised chicken nuggets when he sees the car passing a McDonalds.

– Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Where are my 72 Virgins?

Or, “DaddyBear gladly gives his life to defend Jihadistan, a little known region of Kentucky just to the southwest of Louisville”.

Last night, I made my way back down to Fort Knox and spent the evening and early morning as a role player at the Military Operations in Urban Terrain (MOUT) site.  I was one of the aggressors against a group of U.S. soldiers who are preparing to deploy overseas.  While I did MOUT exercises when I was on active duty, I’ve never done it as a role player, and it’s a totally different experience when you’re the one who’s being attacked.

I was garbed up in a daishiki, keffiyah, hearing protection, paintball helmet, and a paintball gun. After a safety briefing we were bussed out to one of several ‘villages’ that have been set up for units to train on several different missions.  Due to OPSEC considerations, I won’t go into too many details on the scenarios or the layouts of the training areas, but here are a few of my thoughts on the experience:

  • The soldiers I fought against were highly trained, extremely professional, and very good at expending ordnance in a very focused and efficient manner.
  • When sitting in a conex in 28 degree weather for an hour, you cannot wear too many layers.
  • Flashbang grenades, when thrown into said conex in multiples, are extremely loud and will definitely get your attention.
  • Up-Armored Humvees with turrets are cool enough to make this cynical veteran geek out.  Also, green paintballs will not penetrate the windshield, but will mess up the driver’s visibility.
  • A vehicle that’s been used as an IED will burn for quite a while and makes a good place to warm up in between training scenarios.
  • Being captured, flex-cuffed, and placed on your knees facing the wall for 45 minutes sucks.
  • 60 rounds of 5.56mm wax bullets, when fired into ones head, torso, and extremities hurts like a mother.  

My one war story from last night deals with that last thought.  In one of the scenarios, we defended a building and the soldiers trained in assaulting and clearing a building.  Everyone in my group but me went upstairs, while I was the lone defender of the first floor, or as the old hands called it “Flash Bang Central”.  Remember, I was the dumbass newbie, so I cheerfully ensconced myself in one of the rooms.  The room had a main area and a closet/bathroom just off of the door.  I set myself up in the closet, and waited for the soldiers to make their way down the hallway to me.  As the pair of soldiers made their way down the hallway, I could hear them kicking doors and slinging grenades.  My hope was that they would be running low on flash-bangs by the time they got to me.  NO SUCH LUCK.  When they got to my room, their grenade flew past the closet and into the main room.  Two soldiers came behind the explosion to check the room, and I opened up with my paintball gun.  I must have startled them, because they turned and unloaded on me from about 3 feet away.  I’m pretty sure they both went through a 30 round magazine because I was hit everywhere they could hit me and they both had to reload after I put my hands up and dropped the gun.  I did manage to get a few shots off and hit them in the legs, but I’m pretty sure they got me.  My multiple layers of clothing helped to make most of the hits to just stinging, but this morning, I have several bruises the size of a dime on my arm and thigh.  If those had been real bullets, it would have been very messy.

This morning, I’m tired, sore, bruised in a couple of places, and fired up to go back.  I hope that being shot, grenaded, and cuffed last night gave these soldiers experience that will help them complete their missions and come home safe.

Go. Read. This.

AD has put up one of the most powerful things I’ve read in a long time. 

Go read it. 

Sometimes there just isn’t enough hot water and soap.

We Shoot Mad Dogs, Don’t We?

Apparently the sick bastard that kidnapped, drugged and raped 14 year old Elizabeth Smart is suffering from psychotic episodes and seizures.  This is the nutball that took her from her family at knifepoint in the dead of night, hid her appearance when she was in public with him, and kept her on drugs and alcohol while he raped her so he could breed a new race. His family is reporting that he’s had mental issues his entire life.

And my compassionate response is “So what?”.

Full disclosure – I’m a father of four, including a 12 year old daughter.  I have a visceral desire to see this scum torn limb from limb and the parts nailed to the fence outside of a prison as a reminder to its residents.

Look, I understand that people who have psychiatric problems can do things that they believe are right and the rest of think are horrific.  I know they don’t know they’re doing wrong, and punishing them does nothing to either correct their behavior or heal the victims.

But this waste of protoplasm clearly knew that he had to hide what he was doing.  He came as a thief in the night to steal a little girl from her family.  He covered her up while in public so that others wouldn’t recognize her.  He doped her up to make her pliable and to keep her from running away or talking to anyone else.  If he truly didn’t think that what he did was despicable, then why take these precautions?  Why not grab her in broad daylight where the world could see?  Why change her appearance in public?  Why control her with drugs? If he truly believed that he was doing as the Lord wanted him to, he would have had no reason to cover up his crimes.

This piece of filth needs to be punished quickly, publicly, and savagely.  Any other hairball who thinks it might be a good idea to grab a child to use as their own self-warming sex doll might think twice if this ignorant bastard was forced to dance a jig at the end of a rope.

Couple of changes

I tried to add a few new entries to the blog roll this morning, and that was made of fail. Yes, I know, my blogroll is huge.  Yes, I look at all of the updates to all of those blogs.  Thank Cthulhu for aggregators.

I tried for a long time to sort out the Fun, Gun, Politics, Tech, and whatever kind of blogs I felt they belonged to. Problem was, a lot of my gun blogs talked about politics, the political blogs were a heck of a lot of fun, and everyone mentions technology every so often.

So I give up.  I’m lumping y’all into one long mother of a blogroll.  Makes it simpler to make sure everyone I read gets listed, and stops me from pigeon-holing y’all.