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Thought for the Day II

Note to self – Yes, an iPhone, set on vibrate and leaned up against the glass in a kitchen window, does indeed sound like electricity arcing when someone calls you.

Note to self – Put the kitchen back together before Irish Woman wakes up from her nap.

Thought for the Day

Note to self – Frying pans full of browned meat and onion tend to be rather hot

Related note to self – Find out if silvadene is available over the counter.  Also, need to learn to crochet or knit so I can make a set of oven mitts that fit my over-sized paws.

It’s not about the guns

What is the motivation behind gun control?  It’s not about the guns.

Gun control was the proximate cause in the first battles of the American Revolution.  Would our revolution have happened in the way it did without the example of the minutemen at Concord and Lexington?  These fights started when British authorities decided that it was a good idea to take away weapons and ammunition that American patriots had cached in Concord.   Did they do this for the ‘safety’ of the Americans?  No, they did it because access to weapons constituted a challenge to their control of the colonies.

The first American gun control laws had their roots in slavery, racism, and opposition to the freeing of African slaves and their integration into our society.    Did they try to restrict gun ownership by those of African descent because they were worried that the former slaves would harm themselves with firearms?  No, they did it because those who want to oppress do not want the object of their oppression to be able to fight back.

Data from California, the state represented by anti-gun Senator Dianne Feinstein, indicates that the vast majority of crime guns are pistols.  Out of 147 guns examined in the report, only 8 were classified as ‘assault weapons’ by California’s draconian definition of such a gun.  As many .30-30 caliber rifles were reported as .223, the caliber fired by the AR-15 that Senator Feinstein wants to get rid of nationally.  In contrast, over seven times as many weapons in .22 Long Rifle were used in crimes in California in 2009.  Will taking my AR-15 or CZ-82 away from me change those statistics?  Do the gun control laws in states like California, New York, and Illinois do anything at all to reduce gun crime or crime overall?  Or do they just enhance the illusion of control that the states have over their populace?

Gun control is about control, not guns.  Modern gun control has been sold to promote “safety”, but hasn’t done much about the guns that criminals use.   A law-abiding population that has turned in its guns or submitted to oppressive regulation has no choice but to either depend solely on the state for security or to become criminals themselves when they violate the law to provide their own.  They also have no choice when the state forgets its duty to them and starts restricting other rights.

So what is the motivation behind the gun rights movement?

I enjoy shooting for a lot of reasons.  Target shooting and plinking are fun.  I carry a pistol and keep a shotgun in the house because there is a chance, however slight, that someone might decide that what is ours ought to be theirs.  I own hunting rifles because I like the taste of venison.  But these aren’t the reasons that I, and a lot of people like me, own guns.

The right to keep and bear arms is important to us because it is our method of last resort to protect all of our other rights.  Thankfully, it’s something our country has had to resort to on only a few occasions, but it is there.  So long as our government knows that there is a point at which bad conduct will gain them an armed rebellion, they will not cross the bright, clear boundaries that we have made around our other freedoms.  Protection and lawful exercise of that right makes it harder to take away.

I believe in gun rights.  I also believe in rights to speech, and religion, and fair courts, and being treated as equal to any other man, woman, or child in the eyes of the law.  In short, I believe in rights.  Gun rights are an important part of that mix for me,  but it is just an element in a rich tradition of respect for both my rights and the rights of others.  Our right to keep and bear arms is our way of making sure that our government never dares to decide that all of the other rights can be ignored.

Gun control is about control.  Gun rights are about rights.  Neither one is really about the guns, and we have to keep that in mind.

Today’s Earworm

Thoughts on the Day

  • That head cold I’ve been fighting since the day after Christmas seems to have migrated into my chest.  On a positive note, my sea lion impression is coming along wonderfully.  
  • My regular doctor was able to squeeze me in tomorrow morning.
    • The good side of that is that I will probably start feeling better sometime tomorrow night.
    • The bad side of that is that she loves to prescribe shots of steroids, which are injected with much malice and glee into my rump.
  • Recipe for surviving the night:
    • Sudafed
    • Mucinex
    • Hot lemon, honey, and bourbon toddy
    • Hot shower
    • Cough drops
    • Warm bed
  • Irish Woman has been cooped up at home for two days with a four year old boy, a fourteen year old girl, and a 4 month old black lab puppy with a tummy ache.
    • She’s working from home and the kids are still off for Christmas break.
    • I’m going to cut her loose tomorrow night so I don’t wake up to see her standing over me with an axe.
  • Girlie Bear has purchased her gown for the JROTC formal.  It’s not too modest, but not too slinky.  She’s also wearing low heels with it, and wants to get her hair and nails done for the event.
    • What happened to my tomboy?  I distinctly remember having a tomboy who would fight me when I tried to get her into a dress.
    • I’m fine.  No really, I’m fine.  My eye always twitches like this.
  • During a meeting today, I remarked that I was “all about being compassionate”.  My co-workers asked if DaddyBear was home and if they could talk to him.
  • Dear electronics manufacturers – “Up to 8 hours of use on one battery charge” means 7.5 hours, not 5
  • Our experiment in canning meat now includes ham, chicken, and barbecue pulled pork.  We’ll see how this turns out in a couple of months.
  • Apparently my salsa, japaleno dill pickles, and Thai chili dill pickles are a hit.  I’ll have to make more of them next year.

News Roundup

  • From the “And One For the Horse You Rode In On” Department – Michael Moore, the hero who has been responsible for the survival of the American fast food and corn chip industries in these hard economic times, has published his list of New Year’s resolutions.  One of them is to stop saying “I support the troops.”  Apparently, those of us who were either suckered into the military because of patriotism or hard economic times should have known better.  Basically, because he disagrees with the political decisions that have led to us invading Iraq and continuing our work in Afghanistan, he thinks that people who sign up to wear the uniform are part of the problem.  Personally, after looking up what Michael Moore has done to contribute to any solution to any problem in his life and being greatly underwhelmed, I hope that Mr. Moore has a change of heart and goes back to his hobbies of trying to destroy corporations and governments, glorifying communism, and pulling the wings off of rare Amazonian butterflies to season his evening meal.
  • From the “Oopsie!” Department – Police in Florida are looking for the source of several training grenades that have been found in a trashcan at DisneyWorld.  I agree with the police in that they are probably left over from some training or other.  Of course, why grenades are being used in military/police training at DisneyWorld is another question.  Next time I visit the Magic Kingdom, I’ll keep my nose open for the smell of burnt gunpowder, flash-bangs, and riot gas.
  • From the “Back in the USSR” Department – Russian President Putin has declared that Girard Depardeau, French actor and tax refugee, is now a Russian citizen.  Russia has a flat 13% income tax, while France is looking to seize 75% of the income of anyone making more than 1 million euros.  Depardeau recently surrendered his French passport and moved to Belgium.  You know, it’s kind of sad when Russia has a more sane tax structure than liberal western democracies.
  • From the “Sharper Than A Serpent’s Tooth” Department – Two girls in California are in hot water after it was discovered that they drugged one of the girls’ parents so that they could be on the Internet after curfew. In the realm of temper tantrums, this one will go down as about an 8 out of 10.  It’s above getting a tattoo to piss off your father but below the Menendez brothers.  Here’s hoping these young ladies get sent to the judicial woodshed and don’t come back for a long time.
  • From the “Insult to Injury” Department – The state of Delaware, which provided millions of dollars in grants and loans to Fisker to open an auto factory in the state, has spent several hundred thousand dollars in additional funds over the past few months to keep the lights on for Fisker.  If you believe that this money will be repaid, as well as the $21 million in loans previously made by the state, then I have beachside property in Kentucky for you. Apparently, when the Obama administration was picking winners and losers in the green energy market, they picked a lot of losers.  This isn’t schadenfreude, ladies and gentlemen.   The federal government promised Fisker over half a billion dollars, which we’re all on the hook for.  Thankfully, Fisker seems to have crumbled before getting all of that money, so thank the Lord for small favors.
  • From the “Oddities” Department – Doctors in Iran are reporting that a man in Tabriz has grown a benign tumor on the surface of one of his eyes that is apparently sprouting hair.  It is reported that this condition is not uncommon, and I have to agree.  Every father of the girls I used to date gave me the hairy eyeball, so I’m guessing that most of the people so afflicted are middle-aged fathers of teenage daughters.  I expect mine to start emerging any time now.

30 Days of Dickens – Day 30

It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done; it is a far, far better rest that I go to than I have ever known. — A Tale of Two Cities

My Take – Sydney Carton knew his fate, and went to it with his head high.  Few of us deliberately die for others as he did, but we all do things that are unpleasant or painful for our own good or for the good of others.  The worst moments of my life happened after I looked at myself in the mirror, admitted that what I was about to do would be painful, would last for a very long time, and would stay with me to my grave, but were necessary and I had to get on with it.  Yes, they sucked, and yes I still wince when I think of them, but I’m better off because of them, and I’m glad I went through them.  When those moments come to you, I hope you make the right decision.

An Open Letter to Piers Morgan

Dear Mr. Morgan,

I have seen in the news that a petition has been circulated on the White House website asking that you be deported for your rather vociferous commentary about the right to keep and bear arms, a right which is protected by the 2nd Amendment to our Constitution.  Please do not think that all people who live here believe that those who disagree with us deserve to be punished or sent away.  To me, the 1st Amendment to the Constitution is as necessary and important as the 2nd.  While I disagree with what you say, I truly do believe in your right, citizen or not, to say it.

Of course, I have also seen your article stating that if stringent gun control and curtailment of the right to keep and bear arms are not enacted by our government, that you will ‘self deport’.  Again, this is your right, and if you truly feel that you should not continue to be a guest in our country, I wish you success wherever you end up.

But before you go, let me point out a few things:

  • I won’t assume presume to lecture you on the history of the rights of Englishmen, including the right to arms and self defense.  I will, however, remind you that the founding fathers, including Washington, Jefferson, and Franklin, were born Englishmen, and believed that they had the same  God-given rights as other Englishmen.  The issue that split our country from Great Britain was overwhelmingly the violation of these rights by the British government.  Up until the final split in 1776, they tried to find a way to stay Englishmen.  Paradoxically, they decided that the only way to keep their rights as Englishmen was to declare that they were no longer Englishmen, but were instead Americans.
  • The rights to speak your mind, worship, keep and bear arms, and be treated equally under the law did not originate in Philadelphia in the 18th century.  They have existed in English law and political philosophy since the middle ages.
  • I believe the difference between the way you look at the issue and how I do is fundamentally a difference in where we believe that all rights are created.  To you, a subject of the British realm, all laws and rights flow from the Crown, for good or ill.  Your government may restrict your rights whenever it feels it is necessary to do so.  As a citizen of the United States, all of my rights have always existed and will always exist, with or without my government approving of them.  My government does not have the power to dictate what my rights are, rather it is restricted by the Constitution from abridging them.
  • The fact that British subjects have allowed their rights to be eroded over the past century does not matter to us.  It gives me no pleasure to point this out, but those who have surrendered their rights have no place criticizing those who are willing to fight for theirs.
  • You point out your horror at seeing images from Dunblane and Sandy Hook, and of how seeing pictures of dead children and grieving families has moved you to believe that firearms are the problem.  Allow me, a former soldier who has participated in the exhuming of human remains, including those of small children, from mass graves in Bosnia, and who has visited Dachau and other concentration camps, to disagree.  At numerous places across Europe, Africa, and Asia, there are piles of bone and ash that might not exist had the victims of attrocities had the means and will to resist their captors.  Yes, mass shootings in the United States are attrocities perpetrated by evil men against the innocent and helpless, but disarming potential victims leads almost always to even bigger attrocities.
  • Yes, our Constitution has flaws.  That is why we have gone through the trouble of amending it 27 times.  We recognize that we need to continue to improve our system of government, and have built in mechanisms to do so.  However, this means that if there are those who do not care for the fact that a large portion of Americans believe it is their God-given right to keep and bear arms, then they must amend the Constitution to remove the protections of that right in that document.  Executive whims, legislative bills, and judicial fiat will not do that.  Instead of exhorting anti-rights zealots to try to violate the Constitution, might I suggest that you try to get them to amend the Constitution?

Again, I wish you luck and happiness in whatever country you decide to settle.  I will close with this quote from Samuel Adams, another Englishman who realized that the only way to keep his rights as an Englishman was to become something else:

“If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, go home from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or your arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains set lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen.”

Sincerely,

Daddy J. Bear

Louisville, Kentucky

30 Days of Dickens – Day 29

Once a gentleman, and always a gentleman. — Little Dorrit

My Take – This one is a tough one to get a handle on.  I tend to disagree with it.  While past performance may be an indicator of future activities, you can never tell with human beings.  We are a hard bunch to predict.  That guy who has it all under control with a great wife and kids might throw it all away on a girl half his age and a bad coke habit.  The person you see on the street every day on your walk to your office might be all smiles and “Good Morning!” for years, then one day you get mugged.  The best advice I can give is to always be prepared for the worst, even as you hope for the best.

Today’s Earworm