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30 Days of Dickens – Day 16

I don’t say half I mean. I can’t. I haven’t got the gift. There are talkers enough among us; I’ll be one of the doers. — Barnaby Rudge

My Take – I’ll admit, I’m a pretty skilled stand-up philosopher.  I can bloviate with the best of them.  But the time for talk, the time for the soapbox, is quickly ending.  The next few months will be a wicked fight.  I suggest that we all follow the advice of Robb, and start engaging with our legislators now, especially if they’re on the fence.  Be respectful, but be firm.

Blogs Roundup

  • Evyl Robot does an excellent job discussing the gun control programs that we’ve gone through in the last 80+ years.  It is an excellent companion to LawDog’s Parable of the Cake.
  • Wing gives advice on how to answer life’s most dangerous question.
  • Hal Pomeranz gives an excellent write-up on one of my favorite *Nix commands.
  • Carteach0 discusses .357 and .38 revolvers for self-defense.
  • I’ve never agreed with Michael Z. Williamson more. 
  • Flopping Aces recounts a truly inspiring story.
  • Drang is making my jealousy muscle cramp up.  I really need to take a real vacation.

Whoopty Doo

Time magazine has announced that President Obama will be its “Person of the Year” for 2012.  Here is a list of other people that august publication has designated in such a manner.

  • Charles Lindbergh – Nazi sympathizer and eugenics supporter
  • Adolf Hitler – Nazi dictator who ordered the murder of millions
  • Josef Stalin – Communist dictator who made Hitler look like Ghandi
  • Nikita Kruschev – Communist dictator who almost started a nuclear war and promised to bury us
  • Lyndon Johnson – Democrat president who brought us the Vietnam War and the modern welfare state
  • William Westmoreland – Army general who tried to defend the Fulda Gap in Southeast Asia
  • Richard Nixon – Republican president who looked at the constitution as an annoyance and resigned in disgrace
  • Jimmy Carter – Still holds the record for being the worst one term president in American history
  • Deng Xiaopeng – Chinese dictator who continued programs that led to millions of abortions and forced sterilizations
  • Ayotollah Khomeini – Theocratic dictator who created and led the government that violated our embassy and has been a state sponsor of terrorism ever since
  • Vladimir Putin – Russian quasi-dictator who has done a good job of dragging the Russian people back into the gulag

And the hits keep on coming.  Some of those people were chosen on more than one occasion.  This isn’t the first time Obama has been on that cover, and something tells me it’s not the last.

Hey, I’m just surprised that Time can afford ink.

30 Days of Dickens – Day 15

It is much easier to burn men than to burn their opinions. – A Child’s History of England

My Take – So long as I draw breath, I will have my mind.  I may be broken and humbled, but what happens between my ears belongs to me, and I will always use that to do the right thing.  Like the old saying goes, “You cannot conquer a free man.  The most you can do is kill him.”

Thoughts on the Day

  • I got through the first night of night shift OK.  One pot of coffee and a liter of Coke Zero seemed to do the trick.
  • Got about 4 hours of sleep this afternoon, and I hoped to catch a nap before I go to work.
    • Of course, hope is not a plan, so I am doing my shift tonight on a little less sleep than is considered optimal.
  • When did the Air Force start promoting teenagers to Lieutenant Colonel.
    • Seriously, the guy I talked to today had to be no more than half my age.
  • The ID card section had the picture from my 1996 ID card on file.  Unfortunately, they made me take another picture today.
    • Interestingly enough, I had more hair in 1996 with a white-sidewall high and tight than I do now.
  • It must be Christmas time.  Irish Woman is sick with a virus and it looks like it’s going to make a complete sweep of the family.
  • So far, I’ve dropped five daily reads, four podcasts, and a handful of people I read on Facebook.  Nothing like a crisis of conscience to get you to clean out your social media cupboard.
  • Is it jut me, or is the BOLO series of books generally depressing?
  • Nothing says “Merry Christmas!” like “Where Eagles Dare” and “Kelly’s Heroes”.
  • I don’t agree with Navarette on his position on civil rights, but I appreciate his sentiments on common decency and wholeheartedly agree.
  • I thought I’d have something healthy for dinner tonight, so I ordered a salad.  It’s still healthy if it’s got fried chicken, cheese, and ranch dressing on it, right?  I mean, it still had shaved carrots.

Today’s Earworm

Dinner Tonight

DaddyBear’s Beef Stew

Ingredients

Butter, bacon grease, or olive oil, whichever you prefer
1 pound stew meat, cut into 1/2 inch cubes
Seasoned flour (flour, garlic powder, salt, chili powder, black pepper, whatever you prefer)
2 cloves of garlic, minced
2 large onions
6 to 8 large potatoes, washed and cut into 1/2 inch cubes
4 to 6 carrots, washed, peeled, and cut into 1/4 to 3/8 inch coins
1 bottle of beer
3 cans of beef broth

Put potatoes in a pan with water and bring to a boil.  Shut off heat and drain when they are almost fork tender.

Steam carrots until almost fork tender.

In a large pan, heat your fat.  Use enough to thickly coat the bottom, but use a bit more than you think you’ll need.  Add onions and saute.  Run stew meat through the flour, shaking lightly to remove excess.  Put meat into pan with onions and mix thoroughly.  Dispose of excess flour.  Some of the flour from the meat will stick to the bottom of the pan, and all of the fat will be absorbed.  Stir occasionally, scraping the bottom of the pan.  Once the meat is browned on all sides, pour in the bottle of beer and deglaze the flour from the bottom of the pan.  Add beef broth.  Bring to a boil uncovered, then reduce heat and simmer for 20 minutes.  Add potatoes and carrots and continue simmering for another 10 to 15 minutes.  Stew is ready when the broth thickens and the potatoes and carrots are tender.  Serve with fresh bread or biscuits.

Thought for the Day

Question:  What do the following things have in common:

  1. A book
  2. A church
  3. A gun
  4. A lawyer

Answer:  A government that you allow to take one away from you will have the power to take them all away from you.

30 Days of Charles Dickens – Day 14

There is a wisdom of the head, and a wisdom of the heart. — Pickwick Papers

My Take – When confronted with a problem, I have to learn to control both the emotional and logical aspects of my personality.  My heart wants to do the right thing morally, and do it quickly.  It wants to comfort the afflicted, punish the bad guy, and cry out at the heavens for an answer as to “Why?”.  My head tells me to look at the problem, apply aid as it is needed, find a cause for the problem, and then apply solutions that correct the immediate issue and prevent it from reoccurring. 

Problem is, both are right, and sometimes what either of them wants is impossible.  We must aid those harmed by horrific circumstances, but we must also use common sense to allocate our finite resources in the most effective way.  We must indeed punish those who harm others, but we have to dispassionately figure out who that is instead of just lynching the first easy target that comes along.  As to figuring out root cause, sometimes you can, and a lot of times you can’t. 

What we’re running into today and in the near future is that a lot of people are running with their hearts too much, and running with their heads on the wrong things.  They are lashing out emotionally in an effort to punish someone, anyone, for the horror which was perpetrated in Newton, possibly because the person who is actually responsible for what happened is dead and beyond their reach.   We also see emotions running away from those of us on the side that is being assailed.  We begin spewing slogans and snark in response to the keening from the anti-gun side of the argument.  Neither is helpful.

On the logical side, the anti-gun crowd is focused like a laser on exploiting this tragedy to further their agenda.  Some of them do it with the best of intentions, while some do it in the most cynical manner possible.  On our side, we risk being seen as as insensitive as the anti’s by telling the hard truths, but telling them in a way that makes it sound as if the shooting at Newton was regrettable, but inevitable and unavoidable.  We must also guard against using this tragedy to advance our agenda.

What we must do is follow our heart when it comes to comforting those hurt by a madman, but use our head when analyzing what happened and what we can do to try to either prevent or mitigate a reoccurrence of this tragedy.  Swinging to extremes on either side is counterproductive, and will only cause us to go off on tangents that help no one.

Today’s Earworm