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Musings

  • I was quite productive and helpful today.  Not sure where that came from.
  • It is always a good idea to actually power on a server before you try to configure its connection to the storage system.  Unless you’re a real badass, in which case feel free to do whatever you like with it.
  • I had my performance review this morning.  I still have a job, so things are going OK.
  • My head is a little stuffed up, my fingers and toes are stiff and sore, and it hurts to walk.  Either spring is here or I have the plague.
  • Friday night of the second weekend in March 1992 – I go with a bunch of buddies to the Starkbierfest in Augsburg.  I drink at least 12 liters of dark, rich, strong beer, eat a whole roast chicken with roasted potatoes, and end up hung over for three days and have no regrets.
  • Friday night of the second weekend in March 2014 – I’m at home, baking brownies for Girlie Bear to take to an air rifle competition tomorrow.  I’m drinking cherry herbal tea with honey and bourbon while I watch Bugs Bunny with Boo, and I have no regrets.

Movie Quotes – Day 66

A shepherd must tend his flock. And at times… fight off the wolves. — The Patriot

I’ve met two people in my life who were true pacifists. One was a Buddhist and the other was a Christian. Both could quote chapter and verse from their respective holy writings about why they felt it was necessary to live without causing harm to others, and they truly walked the walk. I’ve met a lot of the other type of pacifists in my life. These were the kind of person who could never imagine being violent themselves, but were OK with others doing rough work on their behalf. Don’t ask them to defend themselves, but don’t be surprised when they call men with guns to come over and force compliance when you do something against them. On the other hand, I’ve known a few people who hated violence, but understood that it is sometimes necessary. They live their lives trying to not bring harm to their fellow man, but are always prepared to defend that which they love. The best example of this I can think of was the Airborne Ranger Catholic chaplain we had in Germany. He was very quick to remind us how to act and what our faith demanded, but he was also quick to help out at the rifle range or to discuss the righteousness of defending our country. A good shepherd never forgets that there are wolves out there, and that it is his responsibility to not only watch over his flock, but also to be prepared to fight to protect them.

They Own The Sandbox

Over the past few weeks, we have learned that anti-gun rights groups have been pressuring Facebook to crack down on users who post about guns.  Specifically, a fuss has been made about the practice of selling firearms via Facebook and their subsidiary site, Instagram.  Personally, I’ve been bracing for the worst, in which Facebook would simply change their policy to not allow gun posts of any kind, or make it very easy for gun bigots to make life very difficult for lawful gun owners on Facebook and Instagram.

Instead, even though the list of groups that Facebook includes a rogues gallery of anti-gun pressure groups, Facebook took some mostly neutral steps.  To quote their blog post on the matter:

  • Any time we receive a report on Facebook about a post promoting the private sale of a commonly regulated item, we will send a message to that person reminding him or her to comply with relevant laws and regulations. We will also limit access to that post to people over the age of 18.
  • We will require Pages that are primarily used by people to promote the private sale of commonly regulated goods or services to include language that clearly reminds people of the importance of understanding and complying with relevant laws and regulations, and limit access to people over the age of 18 or older if required by applicable law.
  • We will provide special in-app education on Instagram for those who search for sales or promotions of firearms.
  • We will not permit people to post offers to sell regulated items that indicate a willingness to evade or help others evade the law. For example, private sellers of firearms in the U.S. will not be permitted to specify “no background check required,” nor can they offer to transact across state lines without a licensed firearms dealer.

Do I agree with all of these?  No.  Do I wish they had asked the NRA or SAF for input on this matter?   Yep.  Could it be a lot worse?  You betcha.

A few people I have talked with about this are outraged, and sputter about the First and Second Amendments.  Unfortunately for them, in this case, I don’t believe that the Bill of Rights comes into play.  The Constitution lays out our government and limits its powers, but it has little to nothing to say about how private parties relate to one another.

Facebook is not the government.  The Constitution provides them with no power, nor does it protect us from any abuses, real or perceived, that Facebook heaps upon us.  We always have the option of walking away from Facebook, or Starbucks, or any other business that makes it too difficult for us to enjoy or benefit from our relationship with them.  Facebook always has the option to throttle any activity that uses their service, especially if the user in question isn’t a paying customer.  It’s their sandbox, and they have the right and power to tell us which toys we can bring and what games we can play when we visit.

So what do we do now?  Some of the anti-gunners are dancing on tables over this, while others are crying in their beer.  I think we should be somewhere in between.  Facebook’s message wasn’t as condescending as the one that Starbucks put out about guns in their restaurants, and to be honest, their new policy is pretty toothless.  What I plan on doing is exactly what I’ve been doing:  posting what I want to, discussing what I want to, and reading what I want to.  I will continue to belong to gun related groups, including those that deal with the sale and trade of firearms.  If this new set of policies is used as a cudgel to hurt pro-gun pages and posts, then that will change, but we’re not there yet.

What should we not do?  Well a lot of “Screw you!” posts are probably not going to be helpful.  The key to our success in re-normalizing the responsible ownership of guns by law-abiding citizens relies to a huge extent on the opinions of neutrals.  We will never convince the hardcore anti-gun people to come over to our side.  We don’t need to convince the hardcore pro-gun people of the righteousness of our cause.  It’s the people in the middle, who have no connection to either side of the argument, that we need to at least not oppose us.  Going off like a bunch of jackasses will push more people away from us at a time when we have momentum on our side.

Remember, the first rule of open carry is “Don’t be a dick.”, and I think it should also be the first rule of talking about, showing, and selling firearms on a public website.  If you wouldn’t stand up in the middle of a restaurant that has a “Please don’t make guns a problem in our establishment” sticker on the door and scream “Shall not be infringed!”, you probably shouldn’t do it when the owners of a website make the same request.

Today’s Earworm

Movie Quotes – Day 65

My dear man, crowned heads are free to play a little game of courtesy, but nations owe one another none. — Becket

Like I’ve said before, all of the revelations from Edward Snowden about the government keeping watch on American citizens is fair game. There are moral, ethical, and legal reasons why the NSA and the rest of the alphabet soup shouldn’t be doing these things. But the moment the revelations start talking about what the U.S. government does to foreign governments and individuals, he crosses a line with me. Even when we’re talking about allies like Great Britain or Germany, it’s the job of our government to gather intelligence from foreign powers. I fully expect that the BND and GCHQ have a file open on Barack Obama, so why is it such a surprise that the NSA has files on Andrea Merkel and David Cameron?

Today’s Earworm

News Roundup

  • From the “What Goes Up” Department – A man in Philadelphia has been sentenced to 20 years in prison after he fired shots into the air at a party.  It would appear that the gentleman is a previous resident of state custodial organizations, so it should be no surprise that he is not being commended for his intellect when it comes to guns.  My guess is that the words “habitual offender” were used to replace the word “dumbass” in his indictment.
  • From the “Get A Rope” Department – It would appear that the Central Intelligence Agency used its intelligence gathering skills against the wrong people.  Democratic Senator Udall of Colorado has reported that the CIA may have put the Senate Intelligence committee staff under surveillance after the committee refuted a CIA assertion.  The theory is that the CIA figured that the only way that the committee could have known what it knew was through a leak at the CIA, so they took the logical step of investigating the committee that has oversight over them.  You know, I want to send a message to my brothers and sisters in the CIA, and it is this:  STOP IT!  Now, assuming that someone did actually leak some documents to Congress, so what?  Congress, in doing its job of overseeing the intelligence function of the government, automatically has need to know.  The documents in question should have been given freely.  But if you all did indeed feel that a crime had been committed, why didn’t you go to, you know, law enforcement?  We have these people called FBI and Secret Service agents.  Their whole reason for being is to look into possible crimes and investigate them.  Putting Congress under surveillance was a stupid thing to do, and I hope that whoever ordered it, did it, knew about it and did nothing, or should about it but remained willfully ignorant is called on the carpet and prosecuted.
  • From the “Veruca Salt” Department – A young woman in New Jersey got a crushing blow to her ego and self image yesterday when a judge threw out her petition to force her parents to continue to support her and pay for her schooling after she had left their home.  Her bid to force her parents to pay for her college education will get a hearing later this month.  The 18 year old woman claims she was thrown out, while her parents say she left voluntarily.  To me, that means nothing.  Once you’re 18, you’re legally an adult.  If your parents continue to make sure that you eat and have a place to live, much less pay to send you to a good school, they do so because they want to, not because they have to.   Hopefully the family is able to work something out privately, but dragging a lawyer in was probably counterproductive.
  • From the “Rule Four” Department – A 9 year old child in Dallas is in critical condition when his jackass neighbor negligently shot him while doing target practice in the back yard.  Again, it would appear that the jackass in question has a history with the police.  You know, it’s almost as if criminals tend to be on the stupid side of the gene pool, and that they are more likely than the rest of us to commit crimes and hurt people.  If he’s convicted, I hope this guy spends a very long time in a very bad place doing very hard, very dirty labor.
  • From the “Legal Beagle” Department – The government of Grand Rapids, Michigan, is working to remove a law that criminalizes willfully irritating another person.  Personally, I’d like to see the law strengthened, with first offense earning a public flogging and second offense earning tar and feathers.  Irritating twits aren’t going to need a third offense, because they’re going to get their minds right.
  • From the “My People” Department – The Dairy Queen in Moorhead, Minnesota, opened on schedule this weekend.  The walk-up ice cream restaurant, which conducts all of its business outdoors, has been opening on the first of March since 1949.  It is reported that a group of sturdy Northern folk lined up to get Dilly Bars and Peanut Buster Parfaits in subzero temperatures.  This just goes to show how much you need to get out and do something different after a long winter.

Movie Quotes – Day 64

You stood up to be counted with the enemies of everything the Grail stands for! Who gives a *damn* what you believe? — Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade

When you pick a side, you get to own the positions and actions of that side. That means that, as a capitalist, I can expect to take heat for imperialism, banana republics, and African slavery. If you identify as a socialist or communist, expect that I am going to throw Auschwitz, the Gulag, and the Cultural Revolution at you. The best defense is to be as educated as you can be about not only the skeletons in your own political closet, but also about the good that your side does.

 

Today’s Earworm

Musings

  • I think I’m going to rename Crash to “Little Satan’s Handwarmer In Training”.
    • It’s a good thing he’s cute and cuddly.
  • Today was one of those days when I miss having my world defined by land mines and engineer’s tape.
  • We got about 3-4 inches of snow on top of ice Sunday night.  Irish Woman has been wondering aloud how much it would cost to telecommute from Belize.
  • To no-one’s surprise, school was cancelled yesterday due to the weather and road conditions.
    • To everyone’s surprise, school was cancelled today due to the weather and road conditions.
    • However, the roads were clear and it was sunny all day.  Girlie Bear has been raging at the stupidity all day.
    • So far, school is open tomorrow.  But a butterfly may stretch his wings a bit in Tegucigalpa tonight, and that would just wreck everything.
  • Irish Woman has announced that she wants to get her concealed carry license.
    • She’s come a long way.  She was very nervous when I bought my first gun in 2005.
    • Now to get her some good training.
    • Of course, when she starts shooting, she will learn just what is and is not in the safe, and how many boxes of ammunition we have.
  • Speaking of ammunition, I got a good feeling this weekend when I was looking for a lost glove and found a previously unknown box of brass-cased .45.
  • Our Friends of the NRA meeting was held at Cabella’s last night.  It’s a good thing I didn’t take a credit card with me.  There was a sporterized Eddystone .30-06 in the used gun section whispering sweet nothings to me all night.