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Musings

  • I really need to try to not dislike people who smile and can talk when they exercise.
  • I’ve taken to calling exercise “gom jabar”, because there’s nothing in there but pain.
  • I have a great idea for a business – The ammunition man.  Works like our milkman:  Consumer goes up to the website, selects what they want for weekly deliver, and then every week a couple of boxes of 9mm and .22 or whatever is left on your doorstep.
  • Installing a ceiling fan was the high point of my day.  It was followed by trying a new brand of coffee.  I need to get out more.
  • It is not good for my reputation with the wife when we mutually decide that I will wait a month or so to replace my long-in-the-tooth iPhone 4 with a new Android phone, and less than a week later my iPhone stops working.
    • I resuscitated it.  If I hadn’t, I would have had to convince her that it really did break all on its own.
  • When you wake up from a nightmare at 3:30 AM and don’t get back to sleep, 8 PM feels really late.

Today’s Earworm

Musings

  • It occurs to me that my shooting club is where I go to watch other people shoot better than I do.
  • For once, I went shooting, and it wasn’t hot, cold, wet, or nasty out.
  • September is that wonderful time of year when you can shiver, sweat, and sunburn all in the same day.
  • Nobody told me blackberry canes were so aggressive.  I felt like I was wrestling with a triffid when I was trying to get them organized and tacked up to the back of the woodshed today.
  • As much work as the rough draft was, the editing is even worse.
    • I swear, I know how to spell and punctuate.
    • My English teacher from 9th grade is up in heaven right now, crying.  She’s going to be waiting on me with a few choice sentences for me to diagram.
  • I took Boo to the doctor the other day.  He told his mother today that it didn’t go well because the doctor “put his hand around my throat and tried to choke me out”.

Movie Quotes – Day 256

Some people are just born with tragedy in their blood. — Donnie Darko

There are people I know who always seem to be going through some trouble or tribulation.  Sometimes it’s pure bad luck.  Occasionally it’s others who are truly out to get someone.  But mostly, in my experience, it’s bad choices coming home to roost.  Bad things happen to good people all the time, but when it’s a way of life, you can usually find the root of the problem in decisions that were made years ago.  You make your own luck, but if you’re setting yourself up for failure, that’s what you will usually get.

100 Years On – The Anvil

After finding and exploiting a gap in the German lines at the Marne, the British and French armies pursued their adversaries as quickly as the armies could march.  The Germans fell back to close the gap and keep the Entente forces from being able to either turn into the flank of their troops or get loose in their rear areas.

The Germans stopped retreating when they reached the Aisne River.  There, the ground rises into steep cliffs at the Chemin des Dames, with good fields of observation and fire.  The Germans took advantage of this terrain to create a belt of trenches and strongpoints.  This is where they would stand and fight to keep what they had gained in Belgium and France.

The British and French threw themselves at these emplacements, but no matter how motivated and courageous the troops were, they could not overcome concentrated machine guns and artillery on higher ground and behind entrenched infantry.  The lesson the Germans learned at Liege was taught to the Entente forces, and they were unable to dislodge the Germans.

After losing thousands of men with nothing to show for it, the Entente dug in opposite the Germans.  This began the hardening of the Western Front into a continuous line of trenches that would eventually run from the Belgian seacoast to the Swiss border.  In a battle of movement, there are times when the combatants cannot get at each other, and casualty rates will drop for a time. In trench warfare, the combatants are always within range of one another, and no such reprieve is possible.

In order to not repeat the mistake of frontal attacks against entrenched enemy troops, both the Germans and the Entente powers tried fruitlessly to turn the flank of the other.  In this “Race to the Sea”, a German move would be thwarted by a British or French maneuver, or vice verse, with both armies slipping continuously to the northeast until they finally ran out of land.  Once their sleeves were brushing the sea, the war of movement ended, and the stalemate of trench warfare, and the daily grinding down of armies, began.

The resulting line of siege works kept the belligerents at each others throats for years, and left no alternative but frontal assault for commanders.  This was a style of war that neither side was trained or equipped for, and the on-the-job training that both troops and commanders went through took a horrendous toll in blood.

Anniversary

10 years ago today, the Clinton Assault Weapons Ban lapsed, much to the anguish of those who thought it was just a hunky dory law.  It took weeks to wash all the blood off the streets of America in the aftermath of Congress deciding to not touch the third rail again.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to go have some fun with a rifle that holds more than a few bullets and has a flash hider. I may even carry and use a semi-automatic handgun that holds more than 8 bullets in it and has a magazine manufactured in the past couple of years while I’m at it.

Movie Quotes – Day 255

I’d say the odds against a successful escape are about 100 to one. But may I add another word, Colonel? The odds against survival in this camp are even worse. — The Bridge on the River Kwai

Sometimes there is no good solution.  In fact, in my experience, it’s more often the case that you have to pick the least worst solution to any given problem.  The trick is to be able to tell which choice leads to the frying pan, and which leads to the fire.

Musings

  • The hand specialist took a look at my arthritic fingers, pronounced that I do have hands with bones in them, and to continue what I’ve been doing.  That cost me an hour of my life and $30.
  • How to know you’re a geek:  Flatbed truck is in front of me on the way home from work last night.  The tarp covering its cargo is gone.  Its cargo is a mock-up of a SovietZSU-23-4 anti-aircraft gun.  As we drive along, I’m reciting to myself every fact I know about the system, its capabilities, its faults, and the countries that have fielded it.  That one-sided conversation lasts 15+ minutes before the truck and I part ways.  I then go home and read up on everything I can find on the Internet about Soviet air defense.
    • I’m not sure, but I may need a sponsor.
  • How do I know I have a great wife?  Well, yesterday evening she presented me with three six-packs of good beer, and tonight I came home to homemade buttermilk pie.
    • Boys, I got me a good Southern woman this time.
  • Quizzed Girlie Bear on physics and U.S. history tonight in preparation for tests.  She seems to have quickly learned that I’d rather hear “I don’t know” than a scientific wild ass guess.
  • There’s nothing more romantic than your wife asking you to go on a date so you can go see the new baby hippo at the zoo.

Today’s Earworm III

This is the song that Rick Rescorla is said to have been singing while he got people out of the World Trade Center in 9/11/01.  He perished trying to help others live, something that from his biographies and the many other things I’ve read about him, was what he had been preparing for his entire life.

It is one of my hopes that I meet him in the next world, so that I may shake the hand of one of the bravest men I ever heard of.

Today’s Earworm II

Today is Little Bear’s 18th birthday.  This was one of the first movies I took him to, and it’s my song for him.