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Today’s Earworm

News Roundup

  • From the “Flying Calamari Brothers” Department – Japanese scientists have created some fascinating video of a giant squid in the wild.  The tentacled beauty was followed down until it was impossible to follow anymore.  The scientists hope to repeat the feat again, although they plan to bring a lot more sticky rice, seaweed wrappers, and good beer with them next time.
  • From the “Leaning Liner of Leon” Department – A ceremony is being held this weekend in Italy to commemorate the wrecking of the Costa Concordia.  No word yet on whether or not President Obama will be there to expound on his opinion on whether or not this ship has a listing problem, that everything would be OK if more water was pumped aboard, and that it’s all the fault of George W. Bush, that criminal mastermind or incompetent, depending on the subject and who you ask.
  • From the “Insult to Cockroaches” Department – Congress is currently polling somewhere between whale scum and the bottom of the ocean.  Only 9% of Americans approve of Congress, which makes them slightly more popular than Ebola, but not as popular as cockroaches.   What’s the difference between a kitchen full of roaches and the floor of the Congress?  Roaches at least look guilty and run when someone shines the light of day on their activities.
  • From the “Bad Omen” Department – A couple in California were fortunate to not be hurt when the balloon they had just gotten married in crashed.  Everyone was able to go on to the reception, where such time-honored traditions as “let’s do a conga line under a ladder” and “black cat crossing contest” were held.
  • From the “Samsonite Strut” Department – Authorities in Florida are searching for a seven-foot long alligator which was spotted walking down the street.  Reports are that the creature wasn’t hurting anyone, and was just out to stretch its legs and/or jaws.  Residents are reminded to keep pets, children, and relatives whom they like indoors for the time being.
  • From the “Sweeps Week” Department – A TV station in Sweden is red in the face after a monitor in the background of an interview was showing adult content.  Fox has already announced that Cinemax will be shown behind all news programs featuring good-looking anchorwomen.  For those of you who don’t watch Fox, that means all of them.  Never to be outdone, ABC plans to be putting hardcore videos in the background of The View, although the influence of seeing Joy Behar and pornography on the same screen might just kill off the sex drive of every human being that sees it, causing a massive drop in the birth rate.
  • From the “Going to Hell on a Scholarship” Department – A man in Colorado must have had a lot of karma to burn, because he stole an ambulance that was parked outside of a home the other day.  The vehicle’s crew was in the home assisting an old lady who had fallen, and apparently Captain Cuervo was a bit cold and needed to drive an ambulance around to warm up.  Ambulance Driver was not available for comment.
  • From the “Inconvenient Profit” Department – Al Gore, former Vice-President and current huckster of green energy drinks, has made himself richer than Mitt Romney after selling his failing TV station to Al Jazeera.  I hope his rather liberal staff enjoy working for the oil-rich new owners.  I understand that the new name of the network will be “PetroNews”, with a slogan of “Globally warming your heart since 2013”.

Blogs Roundup

  • OldNFO tells the story of what goes through a pilots mind when his plane turns itself inside out.  My question is this:  How do they get those flight suits on over their balls?
  • BRM has some excellent thoughts on the current gun-control climate.
  • Michael Z. Williamson has an excellent idea.
  • Donald Sensing sums up my feelings on the perpetually poor.
  • Andrew over at LuckyGunner does an excellent write-up on brass versus steel cased ammunition.
  • New Jovian Thunderbolt does an excellent write-up on guns in homes with less than stable members.  Not to get too personal, but at one point since I got back into shooting, I was in that position.  A member of our home was unstable enough that not only the guns, but also the knives, both kitchen and otherwise, tools, and prescription medications were put under lock and key.  The deciding factor for me to buy an actual gun safe rather than a less expensive gun cabinet was that I wanted to do as much as I could to make sure this person had a hard time getting to my firearms.  I also made it a habit of checking the safe at least once a day to make sure it wasn’t being tampered with or heaven forbid, opened.  It’s a decision everyone has to make in those situations, and I believe that vigilance and prudence helped me make the right one.  That being said, I never want to be in that situation again, especially now that my gun collection is much larger.  Given the same set of circumstances, I would either thin out the guns to the point where it was easy to count them and make sure they were secure, or I would give all of them to someone to hold until the situation changed for the better.

 

Today’s Earworm

 

 

BP Richfield, my idol.

 

 

Thoughts on the Day

  • Got up at oh-my-Lord-thirty this morning.  Still going with no caffeine all day. 
    • Hide the breakables and easily offended.
  • Stopped by one of my gun stores on the way home.
    • They actually had 3 AR-15’s of one sort or another on the wall, along with several tacticool shotguns.
    • However, they were completely sold out of AK variants, as well as magazines for AR’s and AK’s.
    • Some AR accessories were to be had, but not much.
    • Glocks were nowhere to be found, but Beretta, S&W, and Ruger pistols were available.
    • Bolt action rifles and hunting shotguns were available with good numbers and selection.
      • People aren’t buying guns to go hunt wabbits.
    • Ammunition was available, but expensive.
      • Federal FMJ .223 was selling for more than twice what it was going for just prior to the election.
      • The half barrel that held 12,500 XM855 5.56 cartridges a few weeks was empty and being used to hold used gun cases.
      • Common pistol calibers, in both FMJ and hollowpoint, were available but had a price increase of about 30 to 40 percent from just prior to the election.
    • Pistol magazines were available, but not for all of the pistols I could think of while looking at the display.
    • A Chip McCormack 1911 magazine was priced at $40, about double what I paid for one last year.
    • The gentleman behind the counter said that things were busier than Black Friday every day for weeks, but that since Saturday things have slowed somewhat.
      • It’s not back to normal at this store yet, but they can at least keep stock on the shelves.
      • After work on a Monday, I observed about the same crowd in the store that I’m used to seeing in there on Saturday afternoons.
      • Does this jibe with what y’all are seeing elsewhere?
  • Dinner tonight was chicken fried rice made with left-overs.
    • Am I the only one who feels funny about scrambling eggs and putting them into a chicken-based dish?
    • Fried rice is one of those dishes that seems to be more than the sum of its parts.  I swear I only put in enough of the ingredients to make four or five servings.
      • I now have enough to feed the Mongol hordes and still have leftovers for lunch tomorrow.
    • Boo turned his nose up at it, but he at least tasted it.  Progress is progress.
    • Dinner conversation centered around the gun buying panic and gun control in general.
      • In 2005, Irish Woman came very close to putting her foot down and telling me I couldn’t have a gun in the house.
      • Now she intelligently discusses gun control and gun safety.
      • I’m so proud.

Today’s Earworm

 

Zydeco may be Cajun for polka, but I’ve never been able to listen to either without smiling.

Thought for the Day III

Note to self – A glass container of Carmex lip balm that goes through the laundry in the pocket of a pair of my work pants will make that entire load of laundry smell wonderful.

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.