New Member of the Blogroll

I just added ProtestWarrior to my blogroll – at the top. These guys are taking the fight right into the protests and assemblies of the loony left, and confusing them with empirical reality.

Somehow I’ve got to come up with some scratch for a few of their T-shirts, such as this one:

And this one:

and, my favorite:

These are the posters they carry at A.N.S.W.E.R. protests and the like.

Go spend some time (and money) over there, and be sure to view some of their excellently produced videos.

And wonder, as I do, how the morons they’re exposing have acquired as much power as they have.

As Only Steven Den Beste Can…

His latest essay on philosophy puts a brilliant light on the “S Factor” response of the Left. Read the whole thing, but in relation to the “the People are Idiots” meme, this was the pertinent part:

They believe that they’re producing material (or ideas) which is somehow inherently better, more refined, more sophisticated than the common fare, but the populist decision inherent in capitalism usually rewards what these intellectuals see as “trash”.

Which means the lunatics are controlling the asylum. It’s supposed to be the elite that lead, and the swarms who follow. Instead, the swarms are doing whatever they want, and it isn’t what the elite think they should be doing.

Part of the attraction of philosophical idealism to the Greeks was that it permitted them to argue that it was right and proper for there to be a class society and for there to be a small group of people who largely ruled the majority. Philosophical idealism permitted them to believe that they (the upper classes) were wiser and more virtuous than the masses.

Cultural products are luxuries, and historically only the rich could afford “culture”, which usually meant the aristocracy, the powerful, and social-climbing bourgeois. It had snob-appeal; being a patron of the arts was a way of getting bragging rights in some cases. So historically speaking, such cultural products were seen as sophisticated, and their creators were thought of as being adjunct to the elite.

But after the industrial revolution, when the benefits and wealth created by capitalism began to move downward, more and more people had money and leisure time to spend on luxuries, such as culture. Initially they often bought the same culture that the upper classes had, but eventually they developed their own sensibility, which I wrote about in an article titled “The Culture of the Commons”. It now dominates the world culturally, and traditional “high-brow” culture, which used to have such snob appeal, is now broadly viewed as pretentious and boring. And its practitioners are no longer given the kind of respect they once got.

And they are pissed off about that. In a populist society there’s no room for an elite. And when winners and losers are determined by the extremely democratic process of individuals deciding where to spend their money, (or whom to vote for) the sensibilities of the elite have little influence.

You bet they’re pissed.

Especially when people they consider morons get results in a few months that their ideas wouldn’t generate in a century.

Another Friday Five

What one thing are you most looking forward to . . .

1. …today? Going home.

2. …over the next week? Getting paid next Friday.

3. …this year? Getting further out of debt.

4. …over the next five years? Being happy.

5. …for the rest of your life? Ditto.

Dang! Arizona Only Got a “D”

I was hoping for an “F.”

Handgun Elimination Control (which is apparently the overall body encompassing the Brady Campaign and the (somewhat less than) Million Moms) has issued its annual report card of how well states are doing in their effort to eradicate gun ownership reduce gun violence. Arizona got a “D.” My favorite quotes:

Gun violence in the state could increase because the federal assault weapon ban will expire this year if Congress does not reauthorize it and Arizona has no state law restricting assault weapons or high-capacity ammunition magazines.

Sure it could. Like the assault weapon “ban” has had any effect, even in California where the state restrictions are tighter than the Federal ones.

Since the Brady Campaign began grading state gun laws seven years ago, the number of young people killed by guns nationwide has dropped from an average of 16 per day to eight (based on the most recent available data). During the same period, the Centers for Disease Control reported a 48% reduction in the firearms death rate per 100,000 children and teens.

Implication? We’re responsible for the drop. But you note they don’t come right out and say it.

In 2001, the most recent year for which data is available, 81 children and teenagers in Arizona died from gunfire, resulting in a youth firearm death rate approximately 48% higher than the national average.

Really? According to the CDC’s WISQARS tool, if you include “children and teens” up to the (legally adult) age of 19 (still teens, you understand), they are correct – there were 81 deaths. If you limit the range to 17, however, the number drops to 41. Nearly half that number is legal adults. Further, the number of accidental deaths was FOUR. The number of suicides was nine. The rest were homicides.

If they were actually interested in “gun SAFETY” they’d report on the accidental deaths, don’t you think?

Defend Yourself? How DARE You!

I am not at all surprised to hear (via Spoons) that the Wilmette, IL man, Hale DeMar, who shot a home intruder has been charged for violating Wilmette’s “no handgun” ordinance. Also, he let his “Firearm Owner’s ID” expire, so now he faces the possibility of a year in jail and/or a $2500 fine for that violation.

“I regret the intrusion on this family’s privacy,” (Police Chief John) Carpenter said of DeMar. “He strikes us as being a good man with a good heart who did something that apparently came naturally to him. That’s why it’s important the Wilmette police speak out now.”

Right. It’s important to ensure that the rest of the proles understand that this kind of behavior is not acceptable.

I’m with you, Spoons. This shit makes me tired.

UPDATE: There’s a much more detailed story here. (Via Say Uncle.)

Let’s Talk About Homosexuality

Everybody else seems to be. (Trolling for traffic? Me?)

I’ve done it once before myself, but it’s apparently the topic of choice at the moment. For instance, Maureen Dowd has written a rambling, almost incomprehensible piece (I know, what’s different?) that somehow morphed from Bush-bashing to lesbianism that showed up in today’s NYT. In it, she refers to this Washington Post piece about teen girls being “partway gay.” (That stirred up a pretty long thread over at AR15.com, too, as you might imagine.) On top of that we have, oh for example: Ellen, Will and Grace, Bravo’s Boy Meets Boy and Queer Eye for the Straight Guy, innumerable films, Madonna’s lesbian kisses at the Grammys, the gay marriage controversy, the “Defense of Marriage” act, and – my personal favorite – South Park episode 708: South Park is Gay. (I DARE you to watch that episode and not laugh.)

That’s just a short list off the top of my head.

Clayton Cramer is right about this: America, at least the popular culture portion of it, celebrates homosexuality rather than denigrates it.

On my way home this evening I was listening to the Hugh Hewitt show, (yes, being an agnostic does not prevent me from listening to evangelical Christian radio talk shows – I’m quite secure in my lack of faith) and Hugh was discussing homosexuality and Howard Dean. At issue was Dean’s assertion (also in the Washington Post) that:

“The overwhelming evidence is that there is very significant, substantial genetic component to it. From a religious point of view, if God had thought homosexuality is a sin, he would not have created gay people.”

Uh, right Doc.

Not that I disagree with the idea that homosexuality is in some part genetic. I actually think that’s probably the case, but the bit about it not being sin because God was responsible for it I find… well “laughable” doesn’t quite cover it. The Bible (you know, the revealed Word of God?) is pretty explicit on the topic:

“Thou shalt not lie with mankind as with womankind: it is abomination”. Leviticus 18:22

“If a man also lie with mankind, as he lieth with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination: they shall surely be put to death. Their blood shall be upon them.” Leviticus 20:12

(Both from the King James version.) Interestingly enough, there appears to be no similar prohibition (or penalty) for women “laying together.” At any rate, it would appear that the Christian God has a bit of a problem with at least male homosexuality, and, as a result, so do His devoted followers – understandably so. As I mentioned before, Clayton Cramer seems to have a pretty serious problem with homosexuality across the board, as he seems to favor “denigrating” it. Nor do I think this religious aversion is limited to Christians. I believe both the other Abrahamic faiths have the same or similar prohibitions, and I’ll admit ignorance when it comes to other faiths.

But there’s a major argument going on about just what constitutes homosexuality, and that argument isn’t limited to the Christians and the doctors. Even the gay community has a bit of a split over it.

The burning question is, of course, “Is homosexuality a choice?” I say no, but homosexual activity IS.

Please, put down the torches! Let me explain. There is homosexuality, and then there is homosexual activity – and there’s an important distinction between the two.

Homosexuality is, as far as I am concerned, the mental disposition (ignoring whatever cause) that makes one exclusively physically attracted to the same sex, even if the person in question never engages in a homosexual act.

Homosexual activity is sexual activity between two (or more) people of the same sex regardless of their physical attraction. Homosexual activity ranges from the physical act between a lifelong monogamous couple to homosexual gang-rape. (As Den Beste puts it, DON’T WRITE LETTERS – I’m not equating the two, I’m setting a definition. There is no assumed, implied, or stated value here.)

It is my belief that homosexuality is a relatively rare thing, but that it is, in fact, “natural” since it has been mentioned in the historical record about as far back as our written history goes. Here’s where it gets controversial, though: I think there’s most probably more than one “cause” of homosexuality. I have absolutely no doubt that some homosexuals are “born that way.” I’m a great believer in the bell curve, and find it improbable to the point of ridicule that this would not be the case. I also believe that homosexuality can be the result of or at least influenced by such environmental factors as child abuse and public acceptance of homosexual behavior. Homosexuality was, for decades, treated as a mental illness. Then, the American Psychiatric Association declared in 1973 that homosexuality “does not necessarily constitute a psychiatric disorder.” I think they’re right, it doesn’t, necessarily. There are people still today who work to “cure” homosexuals – with varying “success,” but now people get treated for homophobia, too.

Like I said, I’m a firm believer in the bell curve, and I think, therefore that there is a broad potential for sexual behavior in the human species. Let’s face it, after self-preservation, reproduction is the most powerful urge in life. As Robert Heinlein put it, “A zygote is a gamete’s way of making another gamete.” Without assigning a moral value to it, homosexuality does nothing to accomplish that. Homosexuality would appear to be an evolutionary dead-end, but it keeps recurring in our species. Then again, so do other things detrimental to possible reproduction. This doesn’t make homosexuality or any other reproduction-preventing condition “wrong” or “immoral.” It’s just another condition of humanity.

But homosexual activity, I think, is far more common that the specific condition of homosexuality, and the amount of that activity is strongly affected by environment. Broadly: culture, but specifically the immediate environment of any population. Ancient Greece is held up as a society in which homosexual activity was not denigrated, (nor, so far as I can tell, celebrated) but accepted. As a result, homosexual activity was not uncommon. Then again, even in tightly controlled populations where it might result in severe punishment or even death, homosexual activity still occurs.

My point is that people who engage in homosexual acts do so for a wide variety of reasons. There is no simple “nature or nurture” answer. Some people engage in homosexual acts due to mental aberration that ought to be treated (and for that matter, the same holds true for some people who engage in strictly heterosexual acts.) Some people may engage in homosexual acts because they find emotional comfort in someone who happens to be of the same sex. (Anne Heche comes immediately to mind.) But overall, I think that as we come out of the womb we have place in the bell curve of human sexuality, and where we end up is strongly affected by our immediate environment (family, friends) and more subtly by our society. I think the bell curve tends us strongly towards heterosexuality because that way lays reproduction, but the pleasure circuitry that goes along with our sexual urge affects us too. If homosexuality is not strongly denigrated by the society in which you live, then as more than one wag has put it, your chances of getting lucky might be doubled.

Personally, I’m a product of the 70’s and 80’s. Male homosexuality was strongly denigrated during that period, but female homosexuality was not. That, I think, is responsible for what the Washington Post was reporting in female teen populations today – increasing social acceptance has lead to an increased incidence in the activity, even though there is probably no higher a percentage of women who identify themselves as homosexual than there was twenty years ago. Our society now largely accepts, even encourages, acts of female homosexuality (e.g.: Madonna, Britney, and Christina), and is grudgingly beginning to accept acts of male homosexuality. (You’ll note, however, that in any episode of Queer Eye for the Straight Guy the most the audience is going to be exposed to is a hug. Well, maybe a kiss on the cheek, but absolutely no tongue.) Is this a sign of the moral collapse of America? Well, if you’re an Evangelical Christian, I’d imagine you’re wondering if you should drop your car insurance because Rapture must be right around the corner, but no, I don’t really think so. On the other hand, the Mepham High School hazing incident(s) tell us that there are major problems to be found, and however much I disagree with Clayton Cramer on the overall topic of homosexuality, he does have a point that behavior that is acceptable in San Francisco would be considered pathology anywhere else.

But I don’t think it signals the end of America. We’ve got much bigger problems than that.

Something Else You Don’t See in England

Via Instapundit comes this story of {tongue-in-cheek}”vigilantism”{/tongue-in-cheek}:

Teenager’s action wins praise

A 14-year-old Miamisburg girl is being commended by Miami Twp. police for her quick thinking and bravery in helping a group of residents make a citizens arrest.

Morgan Ruppert spotted a purse snatch suspect running in her direction, being chased by a group of residents, when she instinctively ran toward him. She reached out and grabbed at the purse strings of the stolen purse, and gave the running man a hefty kick in the shins.

It caused him to trip, and he fell to the ground, where the men chasing him pinned him down and held him until police arrived.

Outstanding. And there’s more!

(Maj. John DiPietro, deputy police chief of Miami Township) said he recognizes the action of the residents involved as a “result of the terrible tragedy of Sept. 11, 2001.

“When those folks took over in that airplane and stopped the hijackers, I think it triggered something in a lot of good people,” DiPietro said. “I think there is a feeling now that criminals are not going to be tolerated. People are fed up and feel they are not going to let this happen.”

But…

DiPietro said residents should never put themselves in danger.

“It is an individual choice — how active you want to respond,” he said. “But you are also of help when you are a good witness. When you call 911 to report suspicious activity and when you provide us with a good description, then you are helping a lot.”

In other words, “Don’t defend yourself or others. You’re not qualified.” It IS an individual choice, and putting one’s self in danger to stop crime is one of those choices. Why do law enforcement representatives constantly tell us not to resist?

Contrast this to the responses to this Joyce Lee Malcom article advising England that they need more guns. (Hat tip to the Geek with a .45) For example:

I find this notion ludicrous. We do not need a nation of armed vigilantes (potential or otherwise) to ensure the peace, but rather active citizens who are willing to stand together against crime in their neighborhoods and cooperate with local authorities to apprehend criminals. This is the way to reduce crime. To draw a link between gun ownership and an overall drop in crime in the US is spurious and the article does not have enough evidence to point to a causative relationship between the two. – Sean Aaron

And why doesn’t England have “active citizens who are willing to stand together against crime”? Because doing so runs the risk of prosecution for the use of excessive force, maybe? Because the Brits have been told for so long that they’re not qualified or authorized to?

Maj. DiPietro might be correct that 9/11 has inspired more people to actively resist crime, but this kind of thing wasn’t unheard of even prior. And while Ms. Malcolm’s prescription is not without serious side-effects, I think she’s right when it comes to violent crime. And I think this guy has his head up his posterior:

I have no problem with responsible gun ownership, but lets face it, most people are not responsible enough to own and operate a gun in safety. Gun ownership is not necessary in a society that informs on criminals and helps the police to root out crime in the neighbourhoods. – Greg, Canada

Really, most people?

One of the problems in England is that people who “inform on criminals” and “help the police root out crime” tend to be seriously victimized by said criminals, and the cops are pretty much powerless to stop it. On top of that, defending yourself from the thugs can get you in deep water there, as in the case of Martin James. If I recall correctly, Mr. James killed himself the day before he was to appear in court.

Here, at least, we’re still allowed to defend ourselves.

UPDATE:  As of August 6, 2013, due to the herculean efforts of reader John Hardin, the original JS-Kit/Echo comment thread for this post (read-only) is available here.

More on the Stupidity of Americans

From Jonathan David Morris’s latest:

What McCain-Feingold does, exactly, is it limits the freedom of speech. There’s no better way to explain it. Beyond its restriction on soft money, it prohibits the airing of issue ads — such as those sponsored by the ACLU or NRA — in the weeks before an election. So in other words, after hearing politicians tell us “the American people aren’t stupid” all these years, it turns out we are. Indeed, having watched us fall victim to cigarette-smoking cartoon characters and Super Value meals, Washington has finally decided it’s best if they simply protect us from the dissemination of ideas.

Yup. The Anointed must protect us from ourselves.

The money quote, though, is this one:

We’ve come to a point in this country where bipartisanship is seen as some grand, noble thing. It’s nothing of the sort. To suggest America’s better off when Republicans and Democrats work together ignores the fact that we’re better off when they don’t. We’re not talking about kids in a sandbox here. So what if they’re playing nicely together? They’re playing with our rights and our money.

And it’s the lack of loyal opposition that comes with bipartisanship that’s leading our country to a “two”-party tyranny.

Amen!!

Read the whole thing, and pay careful attention to the last paragraphs.