• Archives

  • Topics

  • Meta

  • The Boogeyman - Working Vacation
  • Coming Home
  • Via Serica

Daily Snark

Can’t remember how I found this little gem, but it made me gigglesnort.

My Take – Carry what works for you.  I refuse to get embroiled in the revolver versus automatic, Glock versus 1911, 9mm versus .45 debates.  If you can comfortably carry and shoot it, accurately make more than one hit with it, and it’s not prone to true accidental discharges, go for it.

30 Days of Twain – Day 11

A round man cannot be expected to fit in a square hole right away. He must have time to modify his shape.

Today’s Earworm

Warning – Listening to this song over and over while sitting in a barracks room alone with a bottle of Southern Comfort is not a good idea.

30 Days of Twain – Day 10

I haven’t a particle of confidence in a man who has no redeeming petty vices whatsoever.

Today’s Earworm

Quote of the Day

San Fransisco….
The only place where you can buy medicinal marijuana…
But you can’t buy a Happy Meal…

Officer Smith

News Roundup

  • From the “Progress” Department – The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has approved the first license to construct a nuclear reactor in the United States since 1978.  Two new reactors will be added to an existing nuclear power plant in Georgia.  I feel a great disturbance in the Force, as if millions of hippies cried out in terror, then were silenced.  The new reactors are scheduled to come online in 2017, but to be honest, I don’t expect to see them in this decade.  Beyond the normal overruns in time and money, I’m sure that massive amounts of time and money will be spent in court over this.
  • From the “Parents Behaving Badly” Department – A father in Ohio has been arrested for child abuse after putting his three year old son in a running dryer.  Apparently he thought a little time on the permanent press cycle would teach the boy a lesson.  I suggest he be locked inside a dryer for a few hours until he’s a nice medium rare.  In related news, a Louisville woman has been arrested after punching her 10 year old child during anger management counselling.  Yeah, because nothing says “I love you” like a black eye.   At least now we know why she needs the counselling. 
  • From the “Drug War” Department – Authorities in Mexico have seized 15 tons of methamphetamine in a raid near Guadalajara.  That’s mind boggling.  I wonder how many people they had to hire to pop enough Sudafed out of those little cards to make that much meth.  Someone at the Walgreens in Guadalajara has a bit of explaining to do.  It’s not like people outside the reach of our drug warriors could get hold of tons of pharmaceutical grade ingredients and then smuggle the finished product across our southern border.
  • From the “Valentine’s Surprise” Department – A restaurant in Oregon is offering to deliver a “Salamigram” to sweethearts for St. Valentine’s Day.  I think this is a good idea, because nothing says “I love you” like smoked meat.  The last time I sent a salamigram to a young lady she….. never mind.

Shaking in their Boots

News reports in the past few months have shown forces loyal to the Assad regime using tanks, APC’s, and artillery as tools to suppress dissent.  Mixed up in the fighting between government troops and opposition fighters are the normal group of non-combatants.  No-one should be surprised that a tyrant like Assad has no qualms about erasing entire city blocks to destroy opposition, no matter the collateral damage to civilians.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights has suggested that leaders of the Syrian government and military should be referred to the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity. 

I’m sure the threat of being drug into a courtroom at the Hague is making Assad consider pulling back his T-72’s and unloading his BM-21’s.  He must be up to all hours of the night staring off into the distance in fear over the possibility that he might have to get a lawyer.

The war crimes trials in Nuremberg and elsewhere after World War II set a precedent that those who do not follow the law of war when dealing with civilians and non-combatants can expect punishment after the war is over.  The hope seemed to be that the example of watching war criminals go to prison or the gallows would encourage future combatants to make sure they don’t slaughter civilians or be overly harsh to POW’s.

So, how’s that worked for us?

In my lifetime alone, we’ve seen mass extermination of civilians in Cambodia, man-made mass starvation in Africa and North Korea, the use of chemical weapons against civilians in Iraq, the massacre of combatants and non-combatants during uprisings in Iraq, Iran, Libya, Syria, and other Mid-East countries, use of rape and concentration camps to ethnically cleanse civilian populations in the Balkans, and the slaughter of thousands of peaceful protesters in China.

Does anyone actually think that the possibility of being drug into court even occurred to the politicians and soldiers who carried out these attrocities?  I doubt it.

What went through their minds was probably something along the lines of “These people are an obstacle to me.  I need them to stop being an obstacle.  What is the easiest way for me to remove that obstacle?”.  They didn’t consider the humanity or value of the people they were hurting.  They sometimes tried to cover up their crimes, but that was done more to avoid publicity, not prosecution.

So what deters criminals?  In my humble opinion, the only thing that successfully convinces people who want to rape and pillage their way to power or to keep power is force. Naked, brutal, swift, and accurate application of massive force administered in the most public and sticky way available.

We kept Saddam Hussein from bombing Kurds and Shiite Arab civilians by flying CAP over his country for a decade.  We stopped the war in the Balkans by putting tanks and soldiers between the combatants and promising to kick the first bastard who raised a hand directly in the teeth.  When we sat on the sidelines and moaned about the injustice of it all, millions of people in North Korea starved to death because their political masters refuse to change their methods and Tiananmin Square got depopulated with tanks and machine guns.

Yes, dictators who kill their own people can end up in court, either at the hands of their own people like Hussein or at the Hague like Milosevic, but that happened years after the crimes. People like that really don’t care about what happens in a decade.  They concentrate on keeping power until next year, and they’re willing to do what’s necessary, no matter the cost, to keep it.

If you want to either prevent or stop the unjust killing of civilians and other non-combatants, you have to apply force, and be willing to keep applying it until the offender stops and gives up the means to start back up.

The same is true for any criminal.  When was the last time you heard about someone saying “I stopped robbing liquor stores because I was worried about going back to prison?” or “I was going to break into that house and rape the woman who lives there, but that’s a long stretch in the big house, and I don’t want to do that.”?

No, you don’t.    What you hear is “I don’t go to Virginia to rob people, they have guns.”, or “I saw the group of guys coming at me, so I put my hand on my gun and made eye contact with them and they changed direction and left.”.

Thugs, either those in charge of armies or those walking our streets, don’t respect or fear being brought into court.  Thugs respect and fear force, and if you want to make them stop, you have to be willing to apply it.

30 Days of Twain – Day 9

A baby is an inestimable blessing and bother.

My Take – Babies are cute and sweet so that you forgive them for all of the cost and trouble.  

Today’s Earworm