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The Other Side of the Coin

Yesterday, a man in Wisconsin was convicted of murder in the killing of his 13-year-old neighbor.  The man, who from all reports is pretty much a life-long scumbag who abused his family and had ‘anger issues’, argued at trial that he believed that the boy had been breaking into his home and stealing things, and that he didn’t mean to kill him.  So, rather than calling the police, he confronted the boy and his mother, pointed a gun at both of them, and fired two shots, hitting the boy in the chest with one.  The child died in his mother’s arms moments later.

To his excuse of not wanting to kill the boy, I say, and I hope that you all will excuse my language, horseshit.

If you use a firearm against another human being, you meant to kill them.  Period. Dot.  The use of deadly force to stop a threat must come with the understanding that it is quite likely that whomever you are shooting is going to die because of it.  Sometimes this use of deadly force is justified, such as in defense of yourself or an innocent.   But it is never justified because you say you wanted to warn someone, or scare someone, or whatever you have in your mind except “If I don’t try to kill this person, they are going to harm or continue to harm me or someone else RIGHT NOW, and I can’t let that happen.”.

This filth admits that he shot a 13-year-old child in front of his mother, and tried to do so again when he fired the second shot.  I’m glad the jury saw through his transparent excuse of “I didn’t mean to kill him.” and I hope his excuse of “I have anger issues” is disregarded as well.

Look, I inherited an Irish and Norwegian temper, and I have, at times, had a lot of trouble controlling it.  Guess what?  I never beat my wife or shot a kid because I was pissed off.  There are definitely times when I can buy the “not guilty due to insanity” defense, such as the deranged piece of crap that shot up the movie theater in Colorado, but this isn’t one of those times.  This isn’t a person whose psyche is so damaged that he can’t control himself.  Rather, this is an individual who chooses to not control himself, and who finally crossed that line where his ‘issues’ irrevocably hurt someone else.

Wisconsin doesn’t have a death penalty, so the most this jerk is facing is the rest of his life in a small room with someone making sure he has food and medical care.  I have issues with the death penalty, but if any case deserves it, it’s this one.

For the sake of the argument, let’s say that his issues went beyond just being unable to control his temper, and that they extended to periods where he lost track of what was and was not real.  If he was, in fact, in that condition, why didn’t he seek help?  Why did he continue to own firearms when he had such a condition?  If he knew he had times when he was dangerous, yet did nothing to mitigate that danger, then he should be held responsible for what he did during one of his less lucid periods.  By the way, I feel the same way about people who are under a doctor’s care for psychiatric issues, choose to stop that treatment, and then hurt someone during the inevitable swing back into mental illness.

People, I’m begging here.  If you have problems to the point where you can’t take a rational look at yourself and say that you’re sure you won’t do something horrible with your guns, quit owning them, even if it’s only for the time you need to get help.  If you have loved ones who have these issues, get them help, even if it means forcing them to do it.  The impact on gun rights when a mentally ill person uses a gun to harm others is beside the point.  Our love of human life needs to be greater than our love of not making waves and our love for not hurting the feelings of someone we care about.  One person harmed because someone didn’t seek or get the help they needed, even if that help would not be welcomed, is too many.

News Roundup

  • From the “Really?” Department – Consumer Reports is speculating that, in the event that it actually happens,  insurance would cover damage, both personal and property, caused by a sharknado.  If you’re looking for another reason I don’t subscribe to Consumer Reports anymore, this is a pretty good one.  That’s a lot of ink, paper, and electrons to waste on speculating on how insurance companies would react to a farcical event from a made-for-TV movie.
  • From the “Pet Deposit” Department – A historical site in France has decided to get rid of its baboon population due to the damage the primates are causing.   The baboons are housed in the zoo that is part of the Citadel of Besancon, and have been removing stones that are part of the buildings.  I look forward to the first time I can use the phrase “ejected like a French baboon”.  No word yet on where the baboons will end up, but I hear that Detroit is looking for cheap labor to dismantle abandoned houses.
  • From the “No Leach Left Behind” Department – The state of California has continued to drag its heels on implementing a system of grading the performance of public school teachers.  Tools like that are useful for parents evaluating whether or not to send their children to a particular school or for administrators to reward good performance and ease poor performers either into positions where they can do better or out of the profession altogether.  I’m shocked to find that the teacher’s union is thought to be one of the main forces blocking it.  I guess having only the best people educating our children and finding things for those who just aren’t that good at it to do isn’t a priority.
  • From the “Step In The Right Direction” Department – While the city of Detroit is flailing around in hopes of finding a way of not drowning under a tide of debt and mismanagement, some of its citizens have taken the chaos as an opportunity.  Some are running businesses that try to provide services such as transportation or maintenance in the cities parks that were previously provided by the city.  Here’s to realizing that you’re in charge of your own life and responsible for yourself and your community, not some nebulous “government”.
  • From the “Chilling” Department – The IRS Inspector General has disclosed that on up to 8 occasions since 2006, members of the agency have improperly accessed and/or divulged tax information about political candidates or donors.  In all but 1 of those cases, evidence was either not good enough to refer prosecution or was shown to be inadvertent.  However, the Department of Justice refused to prosecute in that one instance, prompting requests for information from the House of Representatives.  Folks, like I said about the NSA thing, this isn’t a Republican or Democrat issue.  If members of the government are targeting anyone because of their beliefs, values, or political leanings, then we are all at risk.  The IRS needs a thorough house cleaning, pretty much on the scale of the Augean stables.
  • From the “Oopsie!” Department – A wrecking crew in Fort Worth dropped the ball the other day when they demolished the wrong house.  The house in question was down the street from the correct structure, and thankfully no-one lived there at the time. The family that did own it says that it housed family momentos and valuable antiques. In related news, a building contractor in the DFW area was roused out of his bed the other day by public works officials, who are looking to have a house built paco tiempo.
  • From the “WTF?” Department – The California penal system and doctors who worked for it are under fire after it was revealed that almost 150 women were pressured in to getting tubal ligations while incarcerated.  It appears that doctors were using pressure tactics to get the women to sign consent forms or were getting them signed while the women were under sedation for some other procedure.  One of the doctors is alleged to have suggested that doing this was good for reducing the welfare roles.  If these allegations are proven to be true, I hope that those responsible end up on the other side of the bars.  I’m all for people taking control of their reproductive choices, but “choice” is the operative word here.  A prisoner is very susceptible to pressure from authority figures, and if these doctors abused their positions to get more women to get their tubes tied, then they deserve punishment.  Even when incarcerated, citizens are supposed to be treated with at least a little respect for their rights.
  • From the “Going to Hell On a Scholarship” Department – Authorities in Michigan are looking for $18,000 worth of hunting gear, including a large ATV, used by a charity that works to get disabled veterans out into the field to hunt.  Apparently the stolen goods were taken along with their trailers, and the charity is hoping that someone who knows something will either turn in the goods or turn in the perpetrators.  You know, there’s low, and then there’s “stealing from disabled veterans” low.  I hope they find these guys and sentence them to a lifetime of cleaning out septic tanks on the Upper Peninsula with a toothbrush for this.
  • From the “FacePalm” Department – A doctor in Tennessee is in trouble after he tried to ‘de-technicalize” a diagnosis for a woman and explained that her lower back pain was due to her ‘ghetto booty’.  The doctor, who is apparently not in the running for the 2013 Bedside Manner Award, doesn’t seem to see the problem with his phraseology.  Personally, I will need to see high-definition pictures of the posterior in question before I make a judgement call.  I understand that the good doctor is moving into orthidonture, where he will describe why someone needs braces by saying they have “summer teeth” (Summer here, summer there).
  • From the “SPAM in the Can” Department – Elon Musk, the entrepreneur in charge of the Tesla brand of automobiles, has an idea for speeding up travel between San Fransisco and Los Angeles.  It appears that his idea will resemble the old pneumatic tube systems that were popular in department stores, banks, and office buildings in the 1940’s and 1950’s.  Except in this iteration, the capsules will contain not bank candy, but rather they will be filled with people and luggage, then sent hurtling down an almost frictionless tube at over 600 miles per hour.  Nothing can go wrong here, folks.  When asked if the new system was safe, Mr. Musk was reported to have replied “Who knows?  But it sure will be fun to watch from my private jet!”.
  • From the “Спасибо, Бабушка!” Department – Imagine that you’re a 19 year old girl.  Your country has been invaded, and your world is falling apart around you.  What would you do to help the war effort?  Would you work in a factory, or tend a farm to make sure there are beans and bullets for the army?  Maybe you work in a non-combat role to support the defenders of your nation.  If you’re Nadezhda Popova, you join a group of other women, who climb into obsolete aircraft with bombs strapped to the fuselage and wings, then conduct gliding night-time attacks on German lines.  Popova completed 852 combat missions in 4 years, and got shot down several times.  As one of the “Nachthexen” (Night Witches), she helped to slow, stop, and reverse the tide of Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union.  Mrs. Popova passed away recently, joining the millions of World War II veterans that we have lost in the past few years.  I hope that for the sake of history that she told her stories to someone who had the presence of mind to record them or write them down.

Today’s Earworm

Dear Dr. Hook,

Apparently what it takes is the willful murder of civilians, including women, children, and old people, the ambush attack of a police officer, a shootout with police, running over your own brother to get away from said shootout, and ruining some poor guy’s boat with blood stains.  That is what will get you on the cover of the Rolling Stone.

Well, what do you know, 85+% of respondents to a Boston news site think this is inappropriate.  Who could have predicted that?

Sincerely,

 

DB

 

Rest in Peace

We lost a good man today.

Kentucky bourbon legend Elmer T. Lee, the man behind the single-barrel bourbon that sparked the industry’s revival, died Tuesday at age 93.

If you enjoy a good glass of bourbon, it’s probably because of Mr. Lee.  He came up with the idea of “single barrel” bourbon, and helped to promote Kentucky’s finest export worldwide. He even kept coming into work every week to ‘taste’ the latest batch of bourbon coming down the line after he retired.  Of course, if my job entailed tasting whiskey every so often, I’d voluntarily come in every week or so after retirement, too.
He was also a veteran of World War II, where he served as a crewmember on B-29 bombers over Japan. Like a lot of his generation, he did his duty, then came home and became a success without fanfare or privilege.
So, please join me in raising a glass to a legend and gentleman.  We won’t be seeing many like him ’round these parts.

Review – Ice Mountain 20 Ounce Spring Water

The following is a copy of a review I posted to the BIGBOXGRAYANDBLUEHARDWARESTORE website after receiving a “Please review the product you purchased” email.  No, I did not go into BIGBOXGRAYANDBLUEHARDWARESTORE to purchase a bottle of water.  It was bought as an afterthought after I’d paid for my main purchase.  By the way, I didn’t receive an email from BIGBOXGRAYANDBLUEHARDWARESTORE asking me to review the main thing I bought.

 

DaddyBear71
Location:Louisville, KY
Gender:Male
Age:35-44
Time of Purchase:within last month
Place of Purchase:in store
Level of Expertise:Expert
Date:July 16, 2013
Features: 
5 / 5
5 / 5
Value: 
5 / 5
5 / 5
Design: 
5 / 5
5 / 5
Quality: 
5 / 5
5 / 5
Ease of use: 
5 / 5
5 / 5
For some reason, BIGBOXGRAYANDBLUEHARDWARESTORE felt the need to send me an email asking me to write a review of the bottle of water I purchased from them when I was in the store recently, so here goes:
The bottle contained the amount of water advertised. The water was wet. The bottle contained no leaks, and water came out of the top of the bottle quite easily after I removed the cap. It quenched my thirst and didn’t poison me. I would recommend water to any of my friends who are thirsty and in BIGBOXGRAYANDBLUEHARDWARESTORE.
Pros High quality, Durable
I would recommend this to a friend
Here’s a hint – I really dislike spam from people I just gave money to. 

Today’s Earworm

Things That Get Under My Skin, But Shouldn’t

  • Someone trying to phonetically spell something, not knowing how to do it properly, but knowing how to do a few letters properly.
    • Bonus points for using multiple words for the same letter.
    • “That’s F as in Finger, B as in Bravo, M as in Moby, F as in Foxtrot, and C as in Cupcake.
    • Either learn to do it properly, or just be a total goofball with it.
  • People who use Harry Potter jargon to describe personal relationships and other people.
    • You are not a wizard. I am not a muggle.
    • You did not snog your significant other.  You gave her a peck on the cheek.
    • I don’t care what you solemnly swear to, you’re still a twit.
  • Being told I’m immature because I still feel joy in things I liked 30 years ago.
    • Bonus points for being told this by someone who lives on a diet of office drama and romance novels.
  • Puritans and purists.
    • Leave me alone to do what I want to do as long as I’m not harming you.
    • If I wanted to hear about how I should be living my life, I’d get a psychic and contact my mother.
    • I’m so glad you live in a black and white world where you have the freedom and means to be politically or religiously or whateverly pure in thought, word and deed.  I live in my world, which is as messed up as a football bat and I’m doing what’s right for me and my family.
  • Being told that if someone had been in the military, they’d have been a 4 star Airborne Ranger Green Beret Delta Force SEAL rescue jumper, and I should treat them with the respect that earns.
    • Bonus points for the goober who tries to tell me about how the old Soviet Union ran, that we should have gotten involved in Bosnia sooner, why we should start a war with North Korea, and why their opinion is more valid than mine because they knew this one guy once who knew stuff and junk and all I ever did was be a dumb Army guy.
  • Being told how hard freshman year in the dorm was and how easy I had it going to basic training and AIT at the same age.
    • Really, Captain Crotchfire?  You had to live on ramen and potted meat from the convenience store at the end of the month and it was a few days until the next check from Mom and Dad arrived?  You had to get a roommate that summer to make ends meet?  You actually had to consider getting a job before you took out another student loan?  Must have really sucked.
  • People who try to impose today’s political correctness on entertainment from decades ago.
    • Yes, Virginia, cartoonists used to put smoking into their work for children.  I’m sorry you’re offended.
    • I’m sure Walt Disney and Friz Freling would be offended by the abject sexuality and bloody-minded violence of your cartoon of choice.

Quote of the Day

Tomorrow, July 16, 2016, on the The View: A Mother’s Loss, A Mother’s Courage.

We’ll speak with four moms who lost children in the inexplicable epidemics of diphtheria, measles, and whooping cough that began sweeping America three years ago. What can we learn from their stories?

Popehat, on Facebook, commenting on a mass murderer being selected to be on some vapid day-time television dreck.

Today’s Earworm

This is good “Wake up and pay attention!” music.

 

Thoughts on the Day

  • Dear Neighbor – Do not use 1 AM on the evening of the Zimmerman verdict, when everyone is on edge waiting for riots to break out, to take the opportunity to shoot something with your shotgun unless it’s really important.  It makes the rest of us jumpy.
  • Put in 12 hours yesterday trimming out the porch I built for Irish Woman last fall.  Yeah, I’m a bit of a procrastinator in making things pretty.
    • All that’s left now is to build and install the railings, a task which Irish Woman has claimed as her own, put a covering on the cement side of the porch, and paint the darned thing.
  • ZOMG, have you looked at the price of pressure treated lumber and paint lately?
  • No matter how good I feel, how much weight I lose, or how much of my waistline I no longer have, someone takes a photo of me, and I realize just how much further I have to go.
  • Today was a beautiful day to take Irish Woman and the kids to a baseball game.
    • Boo got a souvenir baseball on the way in.  Now he wants a Louisville Slugger.
    • Baseball stadium popcorn is apparently dusted with an addictive euphoric.  I’ve never seen Boo happier to eat something.
  • There was some kind of hippie / hipster jamfest happening down in Louisville today.
    • Bud and Bud Light at the stadium, Pabst Blue Ribbon out on the street.
    • Maybe I’m wrong, but it seemed weird to see people wearing clothes that would probably have fit in at Woodstock walking into a festival that seemed to only play rap music.
  • It’s nights like this that I remember why I walked away from being in charge of people long, long ago.
  • Not that it was a probable candidate, but I have announced that I will not support my children in a decision to go to the University of California.  Anything run by Janet Napolitano is verboten in Casa de Oso.