Today’s Earworm
Posted by daddybear71 on January 14, 2013
https://daddybearsden.com/2013/01/14/todays-earworm-303/
Thoughts on the Day
- Am I the only Labrador Retriever owner that has to say the words “Go out in the yard! You’re a water dog!” on rainy days?
- Labrador Retrievers are actually capable of eating an apple. I stand corrected.
- However, I must point out that ingestion is not the same as digestion. We’ll see how this ends.
- Irish Woman’s sister came over to hem Girlie Bear’s dress and properly fit it to her. I was in the kitchen, silently chanting “She has to grow up. Do not freak her out. She has to grow up.”
- My job as a father is to teach her to be a good, self-sufficient individual who will tear off the genitals of any man who dares hurt her, make sure she has all the tools she needs to do so, keep her from getting pregnant before she’s ready for it, and keep her off the stripper pole.
- So far, so good, but the hard part is just beginning.
- Why did the price of guns and ammunition go up just as my daughter started going to dances with boys?
- Hmmm, a day or two of steady rain, followed by a cold front. Yeah, this can’t end well.
- The large creek / small river that runs about a mile behind our house is up out of its banks and getting deeper. If this keeps up, President Obama may come in for a photo-op before going to Valhalla to play a round or two.
- Come to think of it, the creek flows right up against the golf course, so he could kill two birds with one stone.
Posted by daddybear71 on January 13, 2013
https://daddybearsden.com/2013/01/13/thoughts-on-the-day-85/
Today’s Earworm
Not sure how much rain we’ve gotten in the past day or so, but I’m pretty sure I just saw an old man going door to door looking for two animals of each kind for some project he’s doing.
Posted by daddybear71 on January 13, 2013
https://daddybearsden.com/2013/01/13/todays-earworm-302/
Blogs Roundup
- Both SANS and CERT have advice on the latest Java vulnerabilities. It’s kind of tech-geeky, but you ought to disable Java on your browser. If you don’t know how to do that, there are plenty of how-to’s out there. You know how to do immediate corrective actions, field strip, and clean your guns, so why not learn to do the same thing to your computer?
- Tooldtowork has noticed something that I’ve been seeing: A lot of people who were uninterested in firearms and self-defense are beginning to think that maybe that Louisville Slugger under the bed might not be the best tool they could use to protect hearth and home.
- We have a twofer from Donald Sensing. First, he points out that few people care when 25 poor or non-alabaster people lose their lives over a weekend, but the whole world seems to fall in when it happens in their back yard to suburban kids. He also points out how a large proportion of our violent crime is done by criminals against criminals. He has a brilliant idea for a bit of civil disobedience. I’d suggest removing the spring and follower from the magazine before going to Washington and leaving them in Virginia. No need to give anti-rights authorities an excuse.
- Michael Z. Williamson rebuts some anti-gun platitudes in his unique style.
- I will point at Peter’s experience at a gun show recently as a reason I won’t be attending one until all this blows over.
- Kathy points out something important – A good instructor teaches a student what they already know but don’t know they know, and an excellent instructor learns as much from the student as they learn from the instructor.
Posted by daddybear71 on January 13, 2013
https://daddybearsden.com/2013/01/13/blogs-roundup-25/
Repost – Code of Conduct
The following was originally posted on September 17, 2011. I thought it might be a good thing to think about today.
The Code of Conduct was brought into military doctrine in the 1950’s. It is a reminder of what is expected of American servicemembers if they are captured. I’ve used it as a reminder of how to conduct myself in the bad times.
I am an American fighting in the forces that guard my country and our way of life, I am prepared to give my life in their defense.
This is what I am, not what I do, and the lengths to which I am willing to go to fulfill my mission. In the worst of times, this may be the only thing you’ve got to keep yourself going.
I will never surrender of my own free will. If in command, I will never surrender the members of my command while they still have the means to resist.
I will never give up so long as I have the ability to continue to strive towards my goal. If I am a leader, I will never give up on my people so long as they are still able to continue their missions. Knowing that your leader believes in you and will stay by your side means more than just about anything else in tough times.
If I am captured I will continue to resist by all means available. I will make every effort to escape and aid others to escape. I will accept neither parole nor special favors from the enemy.
Sometimes no matter how hard you try, the worst happens. Even then, never give up. Work with your people to either make the situation better or get out of the situation altogether. I will not make my life better at the expense of the lives of my people. Neither will I take comforts that are not available to them. Everyone benefits or no one benefits.
If I become prisoner of war, I will keep faith with my fellow prisoners. I will give no information or take part in any action which might be harmful to my comrades. If I am senior, I will take command. If not, I will obey the lawful orders of those appointed over me and will back them up in every way.
I will stand by my people, no matter what. I will do nothing that will hurt my organization, no matter what personal benefit I may gain. I will not be afraid to take charge in a difficult situation, even if that exposes me to ridicule, deprivation, or worse. If someone else takes charge, I will follow their leadership wholly.
Should I become a prisoner of war, I am required to give name, rank, service number, and date of birth. I will evade answering questions to the utmost of my ability. I will make no oral or written statements disloyal to my country and its allies.
There are some things you have to do when you’re in a bad situation. Other than that, don’t do anything to make it worse. Don’t trade the lives of your comrades for your own personal gain. Remember that there are some things more important than your own personal comfort or survival.
I will never forget that I am an American fighting for freedom, responsible for my actions, and dedicated to the principles which made my country free. I will trust in my God and in the United States of America.
Again, this is who I am, not what I do. I will take responsibility for what I say and do, and will remember why I should do the right thing in a bad situation. I will remember that even though I may be isolated, I am never alone.
Posted by daddybear71 on January 13, 2013
https://daddybearsden.com/2013/01/13/repost-code-of-conduct/
Thoughts on the Day
- Girlie Bear’s ski trip was cancelled at the last minute. The fact that it was in the 60’s at 7 this morning probably had a lot to do with it.
- Winter is coming back. There’s a violent storm to the west of us. Looks like we’ll only catch the edge of it, but there’s snow behind it.
- Moonshine weighed in at just over 26 pounds at the vet today.
- He was born in September.
- I think I may let him take up smoking to stunt his growth.
- I noticed this morning that the hippie dippie grocery store in my neighborhood has moved across the street and someone is turning their old storefront into a Dunkin Donuts.
- I may have lost my taste for sweets, but I have not lost my taste for huge honking cups of coffee with cream and sugar.
- Freiheit was nice enough to invite me out to the KDPL match this morning.
- They were already shooting when I got there, so I just wandered around and watched the different stages.
- I think I’m going to try it out next month. It was fun to watch, and when is shooting not fun?
- Of course, Freiheit and I have no idea what the other looks like, so we never connected.
- Hopefully we will finally get to meet at the Friends of the NRA meeting in a couple of weeks.
- After a while, I wandered back up to the main range and met a friend from Jihadistan.
- She and her husband were trying out their new-to-them Mossberg shotgun and practicing with their revolver.
- Remind me to bring both of them to a gun fight. They ate up their target.
- They graciously let me take their position on the firing line after they were done.
- Today, Knob Creek was the busiest I’ve ever seen it without a machine gun shoot going on.
- I saw men and women shooting today of all ages and apparent backgrounds, and it looked like a lot of them were first time shooters.
- KCR still has a lot of guns up on the shelves, and their ammunition stocks seem pretty full up.
- I did hear someone mention that the range was limiting customers to 200 cartridges per purchase, so that may be how they’re keeping from being cleaned out.
- Their prices weren’t too bad compared to normal, but their prices are usually a tad higher than the dealers in Louisville.
- Then again, if you can’t find your ammunition at Knob Creek, it’s probably not available on the market.
- I confirmed the zero on the AR-15, practiced with the CZ-82 and Mark III pistols, and zero’ed the Mosin’s new Mojo sights in at 100 yards.
- I’m dead on at 25 paces with the Mark III, but the CZ-82 is grouping about an inch high and three inches to the left of POA. Have to look up what I’m doing that might be causing that.
- The AR is good to go at 100 yards.
- The Mosin is even more fun to shoot now with a Timney trigger and Mojo sights.
- Yes, I’ve put more money than I paid for the rifle into improving some aspects of it, but it’s a lot of fun to shoot and the ammunition for it is still cheap when compared to .308 or .30-06.
- I guess it’s good that I didn’t rush out and buy a bunch of stuff with the rest of the herd, because my gun fund is going to have to go toward a new washer.
- 22 years on the same machine isn’t too bad. It stood up to over two decades of hard, everyday use.
- Wish they still built them like that.
- Guess I’ll be adding my own private stimulation to the durable consumer goods market in the next few days.
- Good gosh, what are they making washers out of these days? $1200 for a machine that turns dirty clothes into wet, clean ones?
Posted by daddybear71 on January 12, 2013
https://daddybearsden.com/2013/01/12/thoughts-on-the-day-84/
Quote of the Day
Dad, it takes a good Jedi to fight a bad Jedi – Boo
Posted by daddybear71 on January 12, 2013
https://daddybearsden.com/2013/01/12/quote-of-the-day-98/
Today’s Earworm
If this doesn’t get your blood flowing, you’re ill and need to get back into bed for a day or so.
Posted by daddybear71 on January 12, 2013
https://daddybearsden.com/2013/01/12/todays-earworm-301/
Thoughts on the Day
- A friend of mine, who was lukewarm at best on the subject of guns the last time we talked about it, now owns a pistol, likes shooting it, and has taken his concealed carry class.
- He got it at Christmastime.
- That was a great thing to hear as the day began.
- “Wow, I didn’t know it could do that!” is not something you want running through your mind when you’re troubleshooting a problem.
- Girlie Bear and I stacked a cord of firewood last night.
- Tonight, she’s excited to be going on a field trip with her JROTC class tomorrow.
- Tonight, I’m reminded of all those mornings I haven’t been up exercising.
- However, I have decided that I need a truck with a lifting bed. The gentlemen who delivered the firewood had one and it took them all of 3 minutes to drop it all in the driveway, get paid, and be on their way.
- Girlie Bear is going skiing in Indiana tomorrow.
- Not sure how that works, but apparently you can ski in Indiana.
- It was almost 70 degrees here today.
- No amount of man-made snow and grooming is going to prevent her trip from being a slushy mess.
- You know how when you bathe a dog wet they usually look like a drowned rat?
- Moonshine doesn’t have that problem; it’s all muscle under that double coat.
- The National Guard must be doing something this weekend. Our neighborhood had helicopters and transport aircraft flying over it all day.
- If they fly much lower, they’re going to scrape off our new roof, and Irish Woman will hunt them down.
- I don’t know who’s more excited about Girlie Bear’s first formal dance next weekend, her or her aunts and Irish Woman.
- It’s a sad state of affairs when you look at an ammo can full of cartridges and have to say “I can only take 60 of these to the range tomorrow because I don’t know when I’ll be able to get more”.
- Oh well, there’s always .22.
Posted by daddybear71 on January 12, 2013
https://daddybearsden.com/2013/01/12/thoughts-on-the-day-83/
Laws are for little people
David Gregory, host of NBC’s Meet the Press program, used a 30 round AR-15 magazine as a prop while ‘interviewing’* Wayne LaPierre of the NRA several weeks ago. Unfortunately for him, he did it in Washington D.C. You see, the city fathers of Washington consider a piece of folded steel with a spring and a piece of plastic inserted into it to be anathema to public safety. In any part of unoccupied America, it would just be a prop. In D.C., it’s a crime.
Now, Mr. Gregory did this will full knowledge of the law. Someone from his staff had contacted the D.C. police, who informed them that such an object was illegal and that it was likely to explode and kill everyone within 1/4 of a mile of ground zero once it crossed the Potomac from Virginia. OK, maybe I made that last part up, but they did tell them that possession of a 30 round magazine was illegal in the nation’s capital.
But NBC and Mr. Gregory did it anyway. To make a point with Mr. LaPierre, this brave practitioner of civil disobedience proudly waved the magazine in front of the cameras, almost daring The Man to come down on him and make him a martyr in the cause of civil rights.
Of course, that’s not what happened, and if you were surprised that the D.C. Office of Attorney General decided to not prosecute him, you really ought not try crossing the street without adult supervision. Apparently it was a hard decision to make, but in the end, the OAG decided that no-one was hurt in this incident and it wasn’t in the best interest of the District to prosecute anyone, so Mr. Gregory is a free man.
Of course, last year, the OAG prosecuted 15 other people for precisely the same crime, including an Army veteran who had two empty 15 round magazines for his legally transported pistol in the trunk of his car. Apparently something is different here.
I tried to come up with a whole bunch of snark laden ways that this situation is different, but I’m trying hard to keep this a PG blog, so I’ll just say it flat-out:
Gregory got away with breaking the law, as stupid as that law may be, because of who he is, the people he knows, and the politics he practices. Just for the sake of the argument, let’s say that a conservative from Fox or Breitbart had waved around a 30 round magazine on national TV. Do you think they wouldn’t at least be arrested and given a public shaming and hand slapping for it? Heaven forbid that one of us, exercising the First Amendment rights that the OAG cites in its letter, holds up a USGI AR-15 magazine in front of a camera beside the Reflecting Pool to protest the gun control laws of Washington D.C. We’d be clapped in irons, hustled to a government building, interrogated, and put before a judge faster than I can load my guns in the truck for a trip to the range.
Selective prosecution of draconian laws is one of the ways I define tyranny. Shame on the District of Columbia. Our system utterly fails when the law is only enforced against people who are not doing the bidding of the government or don’t have the right connections. The thin line that separates us from every two-bit third world dictatorship is the rule of law, and things like this thin and blur that line a little more every time they occur.
Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have some AR-15 magazines that need loading.
*When you use a prop during an interview, it becomes a debate or an harangue, depending on your manners. Edward R. Murrow, who wasn’t exactly a conservative and would probably agree with a lot of what Mr. Gregory believes, never had to wave objects around to make his point. Apparently David Gregory is no Edward R. Murrow.
Posted by daddybear71 on January 11, 2013
https://daddybearsden.com/2013/01/11/laws-are-for-little-people/







