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Cross Your Fingers

I just registered for the Lucky Gunner Memorial Day Blogshoot.   Apparently they got a heck of a lot more pre-registration than they expected, so there’s probably going to be a culling process of applicants.  I’m not strictly a gun blogger, and I’m certainly a small fish in a big pond of veteran gunbloggers.

But what the heck.  I put in my registration, and if I’m selected I’ll be heading to Knoxville for a weekend of shooty goodness, meeting people, and shooty goodness.  Wish me luck!  And don’t forget to register yourself!  I really want to start meeting more of the people I’ve met on-line.

Are you bloody kidding me? Part 64,927

A 4th grade teacher in Norfolk, Virginia, is going to have a good talking to over a recent history lesson.  Apparently the Norfolk Public Schools administration frowns on segregating 4th graders by race, then demonstrating a slave auction using the black students as chattel.  Go figure.  The principal of the school promises to have a discussion with the teacher about how inappropriate such a thing is.  From the reporting, you’d think she’d worn white before Memorial Day.  I mean, it’s not like she’d recreated a shameful, hurtful, and despicable part of our history or anything.

What’s next?  Is the German teacher going to have a blonde-haired, blue-eyed student sort the other students as they file past him after spending a couple hours locked in a closet together?   Maybe as another history lesson, the teacher could have the students with Native American ancestors give everything in their lockers to the other students and then spend the rest of the day being roughly moved from one classroom to another?

You know, I wonder why I’m shocked anymore..

Looking Good

Looks like it’s going to be a good year for cherries:

Each of those blooms is being picked over by bees.  If even half of them are successfully pollenated, then we’re going to have even more cherries than we did last year.

I can hear it now

“Honest honey!  I got it from a mosquito!”

A biologist who travelled to Africa and was infected with a mosquito-transmitted virus seems to have passed the disease on to his wife via intercourse.  Scientists report that, while rare, this kind of thing has been seen before.

Imagine if other diseases that are normally spread through intercourse were found to be transmittable via insect bite.  How many scumbags would look their wives in the eye and say “Hey, I got bit by a chigger while I was on that business trip.  Must have gotten it there.”?

Something tells me he’d still be a dead man walking.

I’m a betting man

So, what’s the over/under on how long the federal government will be shut down this time?

Update – Looks like someone blinked.  Excuse me, responsible statesmen were able to find a common middle ground where a mutually beneficial compromise could be found.

Book Review – Redliners

I just finished reading “Redliners” by David Drake.  In a nutshell, a company of human shock infantry that has been worn the heck out in an protracted interstellar war is tasked to guard a new human colony in an environment where every living thing is deadly.  I won’t discuss the plot beyond that, because I hate spoilers and I believe that this book deserves every reader it can get.

Drake served with the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment in Vietnam, and he has used the things he saw and did there to populate and enrich his fiction for over 30 years.  He’s most well known for his “Hammer’s Slammer’s” series of short stories and novels, but has branched out into other storylines and genres as he’s grown as a writer.  He’s one of the few people I don’t know that I would like to sit down and eat a meal with, just to have a conversation with them and hear their stories.

The central question of Redliners is “How do you re-integrate combat veterans, some of them damaged to a horrible extent both physically and psychologically, into a civilian populace who not only has no idea what those who protect them have gone through, but also has no interest in learning?”.  Redliners was published in 1997, but its theme is extremely timely after 10 years of war in Afghanistan and Iraq.  As a society, Americans have only a tenuous connection to its military sons and daughters, and we have a long way to go to not only thank our combat veterans, but also to bring them back in as part of our society without treating them as damaged goods.

I believe the critical scene in the book is where the civilians watch video footage of a recent battle and realize just how much the soldiers put on the line for them.  This is why I believe that embedded reporters are one of the best things to come out of the current conflicts.  Yes, a lot of the time the reporting can be tilted one way or the other, but it gives those of us who have sent our soldiers into harms way an idea of what they go through, how they maintain their sanity, and the price they pay for each and every one of us.  We are blessed that our citizens do not come under attack very often, so such things as Restrepo and Gunner Palace can give us some connection to what our soldiers are doing for us.

I’d recommend that everyone read this book.  It’s available as a free download from Baen Books if you’re into e-readers, and a dead tree version is available from Amazon.  This one is definitely going on the “Have the kids read this when they’re old enough to understand it” shelf.

Are you bloody kidding me?

According to a recent poll of Mississippi Republicans, 46% of them felt that interracial marriage should be illegal.  I’m assuming that what they mean by interracial is a black person marrying a white person.

Wow.

I’m almost speechless.

OK, Sparky, let’s talk.  See that calendar on the wall?  It says 2011, not 1911, or 1961.  We’ve sent black people to war, to college, to the voting booth, and to the White House.  I personally have had black physicians, black professors, black commanding officers, and one very good black lawyer in my lifetime.  In the event that one of my kids decides to become involved with an American of African descent, as long as they’re a good person and treat my kid like the beautiful prize they are, then they do it with my blessing.

Look, if you want to have a problem with people who aren’t as lilly white as the driven snow, fine.  It’s a free country.  You want to raise your children to keep their gene pool monochromatic, as long as they don’t hurt people, have at it.  It’s your life.

But do us all a favor and stop with the “There oughta be a law” crap.  Choices in marriage are none of the government’s business.  If two adults, regardless of their race or whatever, want to try to spend the rest of their life putting up with each other, it’s none of your, or my, business.  As a nation, we have better things to worry about than who’s hooking up with whom.  I’m sure that at the local level, Mississippi has more pressing issues.  Stop acting like a Democrat and let the rest of the world live the way they want to.

Interesting

Israel claims that their new Iron Dome anti-missile defense shield has shot down a rocket fired by Hamas from the Gaza Strip.  This is pretty significant.  Israel has committed to better protecting its citizens from Palestinian rocket attacks, which have killed scores of Israelis in the past decade.  These attacks, primarily using locally made 17mm Qassam rockets supplemented with imported 122mm Grad rockets, are aimed at terrorizing the Israeli citizenry.  These weapons have no guidance other than the “If you point it up at x degrees of elevation at the launcher, it will probably hit x kilometers away” school of fire direction.

Basically, a few time-delayed single-shot rocket launchers are set up in a Palestinian settlement, and “aimed” at an Israeli city.  The terrorists leave, the rockets fire after a preset time, and the rockets fly in the general direction of Israel, with no real guidance system other than “over yonder”.  If Israel retaliates by hitting the location of the launchers, all they will normally hit is a Palestinian home, with the attendant CNN shot of wounded or dead Palestinian children that have been placed for the cameras.  Remember, when an American or Israeli rocket or bomb hits the wrong house and hurts someone, we’re evil imperialists.  When Hamas launches a couple dozen unguided rockets into an Israeli neighborhood, they’re freedom fighters.

The Iron Dome system appears to be roughly analogous to the American Patriot system, although the Tamir missile is designed to be used against artillery rockets instead of the Patriot’s anti-air and anti-ballistic missile roles.  There is a radar subsystem, a command and control subsystem, and a missile interceptor.   Its sophistication will probably allow it to discriminate between incoming rounds that are going to impact in a field and those that are going to actually hit a subdivision.  On launch, the Tamir interceptor closes with the target and destroys it.

One issue with the system appears to be cost.  Each interceptor costs as much as $50,000, and requires a modern factory to manufacture.  A Qassam rocket costs a few hundred dollars to make, and can be slapped together in any Gaza machine shop using scrap metal and a few pounds of smuggled explosives.  That’s quite a premium that Israel is willing to pay in order to knock cheap rockets out of the sky.

Another issue may be how the system handles an environment saturated with targets.  Obviously it can handle the normal attack with a few rockets, but how will it perform when Hamas changes tactics and starts launching a couple hundred small, inexpensive rockets at once?  Will the command and control system be able to pick out the targets that are most likely to impact in an Israeli neighborhood in order to conserve a finite number of interceptors?

Also, this is a purpose built system.  If Hamas learns that rockets are no longer effective, will they switch over to mortars or even just setting up a couple worn out heavy machine guns and spraying a few thousand rounds of plain old bullets into the sky in the general direction of Haifa?  I hope that Israel is well into development of their next set of technology and tactics to deal with Hamas’s indiscriminate attacks against Israeli civilians.

Congratulations to Israel in demonstrating that they can provide protection to their citizens against the cowardly rocket attacks from Hamas.  I hope that their system scales well enough that they can continue to provide that protection once Hamas changes tactics and tries to saturate Israeli defenses.

Slaps on the wrist in 5…4….3….2…1

  • ACORN pleads guilty to voter fraud in Nevada.  Maximum fine – $5000
  • A close friend of President Obama got caught trying to pay an undercover officer to schlobben his knobben.  Want to bet this one gets swept under the rug?
  • An air traffic controller in Knoxville apparently took a deliberate 5 hour nap while on-duty.   He’ll probably be fired, but hey, he’s most likely in a  union.  He’ll be back on the government payroll in some other capacity as fast as you can say “grievance”.
  • CAIR got caught with their hands in the Libyan cookie jar.  
Sigh.  Something tells me that nothing will come of all of these incidents.

From my cold dead hands!

No, this isn’t a gun post.  But I feel almost as strongly on this subject as I do about my guns.

Borepatch threw a hand grenade into the hen house in his recent post about how the Command Line Interface (CLI) on computers was going the way of the dodo in favor of Graphical User Interfaces (GUI).  For you people who work in the real world, Microsoft Windows is a GUI.  You see a menu or a set of buttons, you select what you want the computer to do with the mouse or some other pointy-clicky device, and the computer does what the program tells it to do.  When you open the C: prompt, now called the Command Prompt, on your Windows computer, that is a CLI.

 I can see his point from the end user perspective.  Although in my day job, we still use a lot of CLI type applications on *nix, mainframe, and even some Micro$oft systems, even if they’re encapsulated within a Windows interface.  But on the whole, most non-tech people who use computers will almost never open a command line unless they’re on the phone with tech support.  So, Borepatch’s assertion is correct for most consumers.

However, for those of us who work with computers, as opposed to those who use computers to do their jobs, the CLI is our bread and butter. Even the Windows guys I work with eventually migrate from GUI-only perspectives to using the command shells on their systems for at least some of their work.

GUI’s, even for some admin work, are great for beginners who are following a script to accomplish a set of discreet tasks or to do something that should be simple but isn’t if done the old fashioned way.  I’ve been known to use a GUI to set up printer queues and such on my systems from time to time simply because the CLI way of doing it is arcane and easily messed up.  But using a GUI exclusively can give someone a false sense of security when it comes to working on a system.  Yes, you can set up almost anything on a Windows system and a  lot of things on a *nix box with graphical interfaces, but you may not know what to do when the GUI doesn’t do what you tell it to do.  Troubleshooting through a GUI, if it’s even written into the application, can be ugly.  If you have access to C:, #, or $ (Cthulhu forbid SYS$SYSTEM) you can quickly look through logs, enter diagnostic commands, and try different solutions that may or may not have been included in a GUI.  Knowing what goes on behind the buttons comes from doing these tasks on the CLI, and being able to troubleshoot when things go wrong is crucial.

And for those of us who take care of more than a couple systems, using the CLI to remotely administer them makes life a heck of a lot easier and more efficient.  It takes a heck of a lot less bandwidth to send CLI commands to a system at the end of a 56k modem line (don’t laugh, I do it all the time) than it would be to get GUI commands and output from a remote graphical service down the same pipe.  Even Microsoft appears to be remembering that not everyone has fat pipes to all of their systems, and has built a remote, secure CLI into Windows Server 2008.

Maybe I’m just showing my age here, but it will be a cold day in Cuba before I stop using CLI on my systems, and something tells me that CLI in some form will be used on computers long after I hang up my SSH keys.