Quote of the Day

Once you decide that most soldiers are upstanding, decent, intelligent people, and every soldier you’ve met nicely supports that assumption, how do you go back to thinking they are children who can’t think for themselves and are being exploited by the neocons?

Once you decide that the bigger government is, the more inefficient and greedy it becomes, how do you go back to thinking that all social problems would be fixed if we properly funded them?

Once you decide that the problem with education isn’t lack of funding — see the schools in DC — but a screwed-up union and an ossified system which disregards merit, how do you go back to “It will be a great day when our schools have all the money they need and the Air Force has to hold a bake sale to buy a bomber”?

Once you decide that affirmative action is generally not a good idea because race preferences are generally not a good idea, no matter what the context, how do you go back to supporting ethnic preference in government contracts? (Clarence Thomas is the uber-perfect example here; I railed at him for decrying affirmative action when the only reason he had gotten on the Supreme Court was to be The Black Justice. It NEVER crossed my mind that perhaps he was QUALIFIED for the job. Witness my soft bigotry.)

Once you decide that some people — NOT ALL PEOPLE, NOT MOST PEOPLE, but some very small percentage of people — are poor because they won’t work hard enough to get un-poor, how do you go back to believing that, because there are poor and hungry in our country, our nation has failed?

(Note: These aren’t strawmen. The ideas to “go back to” are ones that I believed, truly.) – Lissa in A “mindset” continued at lookingforlissa

(h/t to Tam for the pointer – and read Part 1 of Lissa’s conversion story as well.)

Freedom, Hope, Outrage, Bright Lines, Revolution and End Times

Or: Cheese Dicks and Patriots

Settle in for another überpost.

Background: Apparently I’m a relative newbie to all of this “rights” stuff. I’ve only been blogging for about five years, though I was on the internet in mosh pits like talk.politics.guns and DemocraticUnderground’s gun dungeon for a bit before that. Over the last thirteen or fourteen years I’ve spent my copious (*cough*) spare time educating myself on history, government, law, philosophy, politics, firearms, reloading, ballistics, media and psychology, just to name a few subjects. I’ve read case law, textbooks and more titles with colons in them than you can shake a stick at;

For the Defense of Themselves and the State: The Original Intent and Judicial Interpretation of the Right to Keep and Bear Arms

Under the Gun: Weapons, Crime, and Violence in America

Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies

Honor: A History

Revolutionary Characters: What Made the Founders Different

Born Fighting: How the Scots-Irish Shaped America

The National Rifle Association and the Media: The Motivating Force of Negative Coverage

Restoring the Lost Constitution: The Presumption of Liberty

Shooters: Myths and Realities of America’s Gun Cultures

On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society

Just to name a (damned) few, along with a bunch more without the colons. I’ve read newspaper editorials and “straight news” that ought to have been on editorial pages. I’ve read blogs, Livejournals, and Bulletin Boards.

And I’ve thought. A lot.

And I’ve written. A lot.

I grew up the son of parents from Virginia coal country, Appalachian Scots-Irish whose families knew the meaning of “poor.” But they got out, spent at least some time in college, my father joined the Air Force and received electronics training, and they built the American Dream – a home, two cars, three kids. They put two of us through college and the third through technical school, and have retired comfortably. I married into instant family, and have a step-daughter and two grandkids, a home and three cars (one about to go up for sale.) I live comfortably, am paid well enough to indulge in an expensive hobby, and have time enough to indulge in this one.

When in 1993 I met the woman who would later become my wife, I was exposed for the first time to someone who only knew about guns and gun owners what she saw on TV or read in the media. Her father owned firearms, but they stayed, literally, in the closet. He, like a lot of gun owners, didn’t hunt, didn’t shoot. His guns just collected dust.

The day we met I had spent the afternoon at the property of family friends with the rest of my family, blasting away at the desert with our combined arsenal; rifles, pistols, and shotguns. I told her up front that I was a gunny, just in case it was going to be a problem.

The discussion was . . . interesting, to say the least.

Prior to that point I looked at what the “gun control” groups said, and what our legislatures were doing and thought “You idiots. That’ll never work.” I saw the anti-gun movement as a “feel good” effort on the part of misled do-gooders, and never really considered the path being taken. But the more I studied, the more pissed off I got. It became apparent to me what the endgame was, and what was being perpetrated to accomplish it. That realization was crystallized by a quote from leftist Alan Dershowitz:

Foolish liberals who are trying to read the Second Amendment out of the Constitution by claiming it’s not an individual right or that it’s too much of a public safety hazard, don’t see the danger in the big picture. They’re courting disaster by encouraging others to use the same means to eliminate portions of the Constitution they don’t like.

And it wasn’t just the gun-banners and the Second Amendment. The rest of the Bill of Rights was under attack as well. “For the Chilllllldren.” For “Public Safety.” For “The War on (some) Drugs.” For “The War on Poverty.” For (insert your favorite cause here.)

In 1994 Congress passed and Clinton signed the “Ugly Black Guns with Certain Terrifying Features Assault Weapon Ban” (that wasn’t). I had had enough.

But what to do?

For one thing, I joined the NRA. I’d always seen them as too compromising, but I had to admit that no matter what they were the 800lb. gorilla (mostly) on our side. I joined the GOA as well. And I kept reading.

And you know the most important thing I learned? There are four groups of people out there. There are the (for want of a better term) dedicated gun-haters. There are the (for want of a better term) dedicated gun-lovers. There are those who understand something is going on, but aren’t deeply interested. And there are the deeply uninterested.

You know what else I learned? Only one of those groups can be reasoned with.

REASON being the operative word here.

I got online about 1996 (AOHell), a complete newbie to the intertubes. My education on the four personality types came from spending time at talk.politics.guns and other usenet sites where I was exposed for the first time to trolls and psychotics of all stripes. But there were resources, and there were eloquent voices, and there was humor. I learned some other things. Humor works. Stridency tends to be off-putting. Frothing-at-the-mouth lends itself to ridicule. And facts have a power all their own.

Another thing I learned: The internet bypasses the traditional gatekeepers of information, the mass-media.

Another thing: The internet allows those of like mind to find each other.

And another: This is not always a good thing.

And, for the purposes of this essay, one final thing: Not enough people use the internet to gather or even vet the information they get daily.

As I said, I spent some time wandering around the interweb, learning. I finally found the gunboards and spent a lot of time there, mingling with those of like mind. I found AR15.com first because of the 1994 Assault Weapon Ban (that wasn’t), because I was determined to purchase an AR15 if for no other reason than “the ban.” If the powers-that-be didn’t want me to have one, that was reason enough to buy. Where better to learn about them than from the site with 10,000+ active members? I have had, and continue to have, a lot of fun there, but even among those of like mind, all is not rainbow-hued, marshmallow-pooping unicorns. There’s a lot of divisiveness over certain topics; censorship, law-enforcement, the courts, just to name a few. And these people are our allies.

Through ARFCOM I found DemocraticUnderground.com. Talk about a target-rich environment! By this time I was developing my skills at writing, having spent time at the late, lamented ThemeStream site. DU offered a place where I could – directly – engage the enemy. But! DU was monitored and moderated. Arguments there would have to be made calmly, factually, and without a hint of uncalled-for insult.

I started posting there in December of 2001. I lasted until early September of 2002, and 1819 posts, almost all in the “Justice/Public Safety” forum, otherwise known as “the gun dungeon,” before being quite ceremoniously ejected by none other than the site founder, Skinner, for something I’d written at Themestream that had been picked up and republished by keepandbeararms.com.

Someone went to more than a little trouble to get rid of me.

I archived some of the threads from DU. Let me quote some of the commentary from just before I was kicked off:

I’m fully aware the khabker is an outstanding poster here on this forum and throughout the rest of DU. – “curse10” 8/28/02

But the problem I as I see it.(sic) Is that Khbaker has already obliterated all the ‘facts’ and the ‘numbers’ from the anti side, and all they have left is emotion. Sometimes I will admit I get the picture of a few of the posters clinging to a cliff face with nothing left, the only thing keeping them from falling into the ‘abyss’ is their emotions. – “AdamSelenne”, same thread

Know when I realized that the pro-gun side’s claim of non-emotionalism was a crock of shit? It was when I received my first death threat from some upstanding citizen on a gun thread over at Lucianne.com, the first of several. That abyss you refer to is an equal opportunity crevice; people on both sides of the issue routinely fall into it.

I’m here to be amused, not to persuade. On that basis, Justice/Public Safety is worthwhile to me. – “Paladin” same thread.

Paladin was my “loyal opposition” at DU. He/she/it wasn’t a whacked-out anti, but he was definitely in favor of gun control. Here is my response to him:

One difference, Paladin, that Adam pointed out and you skipped merrily over – (yes, indeed there is emotionalism on both sides and you are not alone in being victim to it, BUT) the cold, hard facts are on my side. All that’s left to your side is clinging to the cliff wall. “I believe this. My mind is made up. Even if you’re right, you’re wrong.”

I’ll grant that there are any number of people on my side who cannot substantiate the gun-rights side of the argument, and who resort to the same emotional position. That just means they’re ignorant, too.

I’m NOT here to be amused (though it is vastly entertaining at times.) I AM here to persuade. And I’m here to do it with facts and reason and logic and philosophy. Something you don’t see much in here, I think you’d admit.

When you boil it down to the basics, the argument over gun control is one not of “public safety,” but philosophy. Politics is applied philosophy. That’s the main thing I’ve learned in the time I have spent in here. I came to this site thinking that facts and historical evidence would be enough, but that’s not the case, obviously. It’s a philosophical argument. I understand the primary philosophy behind the desire for gun control. I want others to understand the philosophy behind the Second Amendment and the right to arms, not to mention the rest of the Bill of Rights.

The argument doesn’t need to be more polite and refined. It needs to be redefined.

A couple of days earlier someone linked to Oleg Volk’s A Human Right site. Paladin and I had a short exchange in that thread, too. Here’s a taste:

Paladin: I don’t think you want to open up the whole emotional wellbeing issue, KH. Considering the kind of comments that turn up here from Gun Huggers on a regular basis, I don’t think a cautious, intelligent advocate such as yourself can afford to…….

Me: I will readily admit (and have, I believe) that we are often our own worst enemies. The number of “people with less than 100 posts” who come in here and hurl invective certainly make points for your side of the argument. But have you spent any time in the talk.politics.guns newsgroup? Your side is abundantly represented by the slavering gun-phobic there. I don’t bother with it because it is essentially a flame-fest of the far fringes attacking each other through the anonymity of the internet.

You know why I like this forum so much? Because it represents a good cross-section of the gun-control demographic – the people who “believe in gun control” but who aren’t really involved in it, and who don’t really think about it. The moderators do a good job of keeping at least the gun freaks out of the board. Instead, the groups represented are the moderates, and the gun haters. The moderates I think I can reach. The gun haters make excellent illustrative examples. They generally sound so reasonable until you expose them. The gun freaks? Yes, they frighten John Q. Public. Hell, I find them a bit discomforting. I find skinheads and the KKK discomforting too, but that’s insufficient reason for a general restriction of free speech and search-and-seizure rights.

I think I represent something you don’t see a lot – the reasoned, logical fanatic (as I defined it to CO Liberal in another thread, “fanatic: won’t change the subject, and won’t shut up.”) Or, the “cautious, intelligent advocate” as you put it.

You want to discuss emotional wellbeing? Hell, I’m up for it.

See? The discussion hasn’t changed much in six years. Paladin responded:

Cut Yourself Some Slack

This issue needs a lot more “advocates” and a lot fewer “fanatics,” on both sides.
I think you fit in the “advocate” category. As I’ve said before, I also think you fit in the “pain in the ass” category, but you’ve exhibited your emotional wellbeing by considering that a compliment….

I replied:

I LIKE being a PITA

It’s tough to ignore a nagging pain.

And I am, most certainly, an advocate. But, as CO Liberal and I have discussed, I’m also inflexible. I have a position I’ve taken after research and due consideration, and I’m not movable on that position. So, my advocacy is to get others to consider that position, and accept it. If being a PITA is required (and it seems to be,) that’s what I do. Like I said, I won’t change the subject, and I won’t shut up.

But the key comment there was from a site moderator:

Dear PITA:

Don’t shut up. I wildly disagree with most of your positions on this subject, but you are a damn fine advocate. And you make me think. And that is important. – Cappurr (9681 posts), 8/27/02

I was booted off DU on September 4. Apparently making DU denizens think, especially about gun control, is verboten.

I learned a lot in DU. I got to see the fanatics and the undecideds up close and personal. Did I change any minds? I’d like to think so. Did I weaken any strongly held opinions? I can only hope. I spent a little over eight months there, and avoided being one of the verbal bomb-throwers who lasted less than 100 posts.

This whole recent brouhaha started over a letter to the editor of a local newspaper in Madison Wisconsin, a verbal hand-grenade penned by Mike Vanderboegh. Consider the fact that people all over the country have read that letter through the magic of the internet.

Then, Sunday two weeks ago, there was another rampage killing by someone who decided that he needed to commit suicide by cop and be accompanied to Valhalla by a bunch of Unitarian Universalists. I wrote three pieces concerning Mr. Vanderboegh that week, two before and one after the church shooting; Frightening the White People, The Four Boxes, and finally The Threshold of Outrage. Mr. Vanderboegh took extreme exception to the last piece. So did a couple of others. Apparently my observation that Mr. Vanderboegh’s verbal threat,

There are some of us “cold dead hands” types, perhaps 3 percent of gun owners, who would kill anyone who tried to further restrict our God-given liberty.

was a claim of a “threshold of outrage” generally indistinguishable to the general public from that of a man who decided that his inability to get a job worthy of his talents was due to the policies of “liberals” made me somehow “not a patriot,” or in Mr. Vanderboegh’s parlance, a “cheese dick.”

I’ve read quite a bit of Mr. Vanderboegh’s writing recently. I’m especially enjoying his ongoing novel Absolved. I understand his anger, frustration, and especially his despair. The system is broken, it appears irretrievable, and things are going to hell in the proverbial handbasket.

But Mr. Vanderboegh has convinced himself (or is working himself up to it) that if a mere 3% of the gun-owning population rises up in righteousness, supported by another 10% of the population, we can defeat our collectivist enemy and restore our lost Constitution.

He is not alone in that belief.

It is a beautiful one.

Unless you look too closely at it.

Now, I’m NOT ACCUSING VANDERBOEGH OF BEING ANOTHER TIMOTHY McVEIGH HERE, but McVeigh apparently believed that there was a population ready to rise up against the Federal government, too, when he set off the bomb that destroyed the Oklahoma City Federal building. He was wrong.

Vanderboegh has written in comments here:

For the purposes of my work, the “people” being discussed are rogue federal agents who operate contrary to the law and the Constitution yet under the color of that law. They are the lawbreakers, not me or mine. The “arbitrary line” that is being crossed is my front door, my property and my liberty. If you don’t have an “arbitrary line” at your front door, you must have homeless folks drifting in and out all the time. How do you keep food in your refrigerator?

Guys, guys, you don’t need to COME to my aid. Just follow Bob Wright’s advice to the FBI SAC of New Mexico when he asked him back in the 90s if Wright and his boys would really come to the aid of another Waco type situation in another state: “Why would I want to do that? There’s plenty of you federal sonsabitches around here.” 😉 Vanderboegh III And as another friend of mine observed the other day, “Freedom fighters fight.”

Since 2003 I’ve written something like 25 posts and 25,000 words on the topic of “the RESET button.” Here’s where we differ.

I don’t think Vanderboegh’s 3% is out there. I think the Great New Orleans Gun Grab illustrates it. Nobody shot at a cop or a National Guardsman. Nobody jumped into a car and headed for New Orleans armed to the teeth. Like McVeigh’s destruction of the Murrah building, as a fuse to light the revolution New Orleans was a dud.

We read here on the internet, on an almost daily basis, of events where government actors abuse their powers in egregious ways against individuals – and no one’s “threshold of outrage” is exceeded. In fact, when someones threshold is exceeded, it’s a rare, newsworthy event! Man bites dog! The most recent example of egregious misbehavior by government was illustrated by David Codrea just today. This was gun confiscation. Apparently Gabriel Razzano’s threshold of outrage wasn’t exceeded. Is he still a patriot? Where’s the 3% on this? Why aren’t we all saddling up?

I have decided for myself, in agreement with Mr. Vanderboegh, that “The ‘arbitrary line’ that is being crossed is my front door, my property and my liberty.” That’s my “threshold of outrage.”

It isn’t, necessarily, your front door, property, or liberty.

There are, reportedly, about 80 million people in this country who own firearms. Three percent of that population is 2.4 million, less than the advertised membership of the NRA. How many NRA members do you think belong to the 3%? Much less the 10%?

And that’s what needs to change.

Billy Beck has ranted on at length that there is no philosophy behind the gun-rights/individual rights movement. He’s absolutely right. Our .gov indoctrination mills, run largely by people in the embrace of the beautiful idea of socialism don’t teach it. Multiple generations, at this point, have never really been exposed to a coherent philosophy of individualism and liberty. I’ve commented on that before, too:

In a comment to Freedom’s Just Another Word for Nothin’ Left to Lose, Billy Beck said:

At the root, I don’t understand how and why individuals don’t “lead” themselves.

But he had already answered his own question:

(Y)ou people are talking about blowing the place up, whether you know it or not. That’s the only way it can go, as things are now, because there is no philosophy at the bottom of what you’re talking about.

No philosophy.

Damned straight.

Readers of this blog know I like to quote the words of others. When I find something stated better than I can do it, I use those words. Here are two very important quotes:

Every revolution evaporates and leaves behind only the slime of a new bureaucracy. – Franz Kafka

Revolution is an abrupt change in the form of misgovernment. – Ambrose Bierce

One of the books I mentioned above is Revolutionary Characters: What Made the Founders Different by Gordon Wood. What made them different is that they generally shared one common philosophy, that of John Locke, and they cared deeply about how they would be seen by future generations.

Pick a crowd of 100 people at random. How many would know who John Locke was? How many know the source of the phrase “Life, liberty, property”?

Now, pick a crowd of 100 gun owners. Same question.

Be honest.

The objection to Vanderboegh’s letter to the editor (for most, certainly not all) was that he risks alienating possible allies.

We need allies. I’ve mentioned before that my favorite novel is Heinlein’s The Moon is a Harsh Mistress. The thing that struck me the most about it when I first read it as an adolescent was the fact that, as soon as the protagonists had decided that revolution was necessary, they went about making conditions for the general populace worse. They had to make the government act more intrusively, more egregiously, more aggressively. They had to make the population hate the government that was oppressing them, because without popular support, the revolution would fail.

The second thing that struck me was the “constitutional convention” that occurred after the hated Lunar Authority was defeated. No underlying philosophy. Everybody wanted everything for free. As the main protagonist put it,

Must be a yearning deep in human heart to stop other people from doing as they please. Rules, laws – always for other fellow. A murky part of us, something we had before we came down out of trees, and failed to shuck when we stood up.

And that’s why revolutions almost always fail to make things better.

I said in my 2003 post Pressing the “RESET” Button (echoing Vin Suprynowicz’s The Ballad of Carl Drega without knowing it):

I don’t think you’re going to see a widespread armed uprising. What you’re going to see is individuals and small groups who’ve simply had enough arming and striking – and probably dying in the process. If you’ve read John Ross’s Unintended Consequences you’ll get the idea, but I don’t expect anything like the level of response he writes of. Not enough people are pissed off enough to do that.

Of course the media will spin it as “lone deranged gun-nuts” or “anti-government militias,” but if you pay attention you’ll note an increase in the numbers over time.

Someone once wrote; “If you’re not boiling mad, you’ve not been paying attention.”

Mencken wrote: “Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit upon his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin slitting throats.”

Today “Concerned American” wrote a post at Western Rifle Shooter’s Association that began as a comment to “The Threshold of Outrage.”

He claims that anarchy is here, and that (I think) the Uprising Is Upon Us. Yet he admits:

It’s unpleasant in the extreme to face, but the pro-freedom, pro-individual, pro-principles segment of the American populace is a decided (and frankly, despised) minority.

Our job, then, is not to “Frighten the White People,” it’s to make them MAD. It’s to make them “pro-freedom, pro-individual, pro-principles.” It’s to educate them.

It’s to MAKE THEM THINK.

And hope we haven’t waited too long.

UPDATE: Robb Allen responds.

Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

Bread and Circuses is the cancer of democracy, the fatal disease for which there is no cure. Democracy often works beautifully at first. But once a state extends the franchise to every warm body, be he producer or parasite, that day marks the beginning of the end of the state. For when the plebs discover that they can vote themselves bread and circuses without limit and that the productive members of the body politic cannot stop them, they will do so, until the state bleeds to death, or in its weakened condition the state succumbs to an invader–the barbarians enter Rome. – Robert Anson Heinlein To Sail Beyond the Sunset

Range Report: Baby Blue

I took my M1 Carbine and M1 Garand out to the Casa Grande public range today for a tryout. I brought 100 rounds of Federal American Eagle commercial .30 Carbine, and a couple of bandoleers of the Greek HXP M2 Ball I bought from the CMP for the Garand. As seems to be standard practice when I go to Casa Grande, I forgot to take my spotting scope.

While I was interested in the accuracy potential of the little Carbine, mostly I was interested in how (or whether) it was going to function with the magazines I bought last year. The good news: It functions pretty damned well. I loaded ten rounds into each magazine. Out of the 100 rounds, I had one failure to feed that was very simply cleared. I had one magazine, one of the two Union Hardwares, that didn’t want to fit in the well. It did, but it’s pretty tight. Other than that, the rifle cycled like a sewing machine.

Without sandbags or any other decent rest, and my eyeball Mk. I sighting system, the Carbine was capable of holding minute-of-paper-plate at 50 yards. I’m certain that this is mostly me, and with some work I can definitely improve on that. I was startled to discover that the adjustable sight is dead-nuts on. Set at 200 yards, it hit (pretty much) where I aimed at the 200 yard berm, and set for 250 yards I was able to hit the (rather large) steel plate set into the 250 yard berm with regularity. Set for 300 yards I believe I was lobbing the rounds over the top of the 250 yard berm.

Overall, I’m very pleased! Now I just need to get some more ammo and practice!

I let some other shooters try the Garand and the Carbine. That put some smiles on faces! There was already a Garand shooter at the range when I arrived, and when I left the guys at the table next to me were shooting a Lee Enfield No. 4 Mk. I.

Damn, I love old rifles!

Quote of the Day

America is the most benign hegemon in history: it’s the world’s first non-imperial superpower and, at the dawn of the American moment, it chose to set itself up as a kind of geopolitical sugar daddy. By picking up the tab for Europe’s defense, it hoped to prevent those countries lapsing into traditional power rivalries. Nice idea. But it also absolved them of the traditional responsibilities of nationhood, turning the alliances into a dysfunctional sitcom family, with one grown-up presiding over a brood of whiny teenagers — albeit (demographically) the the world’s wrinkliest teenagers. America’s preference for diluting its power within the UN and other organs of an embryo world government has not won it friends. All dominant powers are hated — Britain was, and Rome — but they’re usually hated for the right reasons. America is hated for every reason. The fanatical Muslims despise America because it’s all lap-dancing and gay porn; the secular Europeans despise America because it’s all born-again Christians hung up on abortion; the anti-Semites despise America because it’s controlled by Jews. Too Jewish, too Christian, too godless, America is George Orwell’s Room 101: whatever your bugbear you will find it therein; whatever you’re against, America is a prime example of it. – Mark Steyn, America Alone: The End of the World as We Know It

I owe Mike Vanderboegh an überpost today, but I’m taking the M1 Carbine to the range this morning. Don’t expect it before tonight some time.

Another Che / Obama Fan

Another Ché / Obama Fan

This time from Gaza.

Curmudgeonly & Skeptical reports that The Golden Child has been receiving illegal campaign contributions from the Gaza strip. I guess an endorsement from Hamas means more than we thought!

But the interesting thing about the post was the image:

Who is that on the floor behind the artist?

It is said you are known by your associates. Both John McCain and Joe Lieberman have stated that “they cannot say” that Obama is a socialist, but given the evidence of the people who have staked their hopes on him, I’d say the question has been answered.

Third Time was Not the Charm

Third Time was Not the Charm

I just watched SpaceX make their third attempt to put a payload into orbit on their Falcon 1 lift vehicle. This is the one that was carrying (among other items) some of James Doohan’s ashes. The initial attempt at liftoff was aborted when one of the launch parameters went outside its limits after the main engine started, but before the rocket lifted off. About thirty minutes later the rocket launched.

It cleared the pad, transitioned through Mach 1, passed through Max-Q – the point of highest aerodynamic loading – and at just about the instant it switched to internal inertial guidance, the video signal from the rocket was lost.

SpaceX announced that there had been “an anomaly.”

Usually this means “flaming chunks of debris falling back to Earth.”

Damn. Sorry, Scotty.

Better luck next time, guys. NASA didn’t have much of a record at first either.

UPDATE: NASAWatch has a message from Elon Musk:

From: Elon Musk
Sent: Saturday, August 02, 2008 9:45 PM
To: Space Exploration Technologies
Subject: Plan Going Forward

It was obviously a big disappointment not to reach orbit on this flight. On the plus side, the flight of our first stage, with the new Merlin 1C engine that will be used in Falcon 9, was picture perfect. Unfortunately, a problem occurred with stage separation, causing the stages to be held together. This is under investigation and I will send out a note as soon as we understand exactly what happened.

The most important message I’d like to send right now is that SpaceX will not skip a beat in execution going forward. We have flight four of Falcon 1 almost ready for flight and flight five right behind that. I have also given the go ahead to begin fabrication of flight six. Falcon 9 development will also continue unabated, taking into account the lessons learned with Falcon 1. We have made great progress this past week with the successful nine engine firing.

As a precautionary measure to guard against the possibility of flight 3 not reaching orbit, SpaceX recently accepted a significant investment. Combined with our existing cash reserves, that ensures we will have more than sufficient funding on hand to continue launching Falcon 1 and develop Falcon 9 and Dragon. There should be absolutely zero question that SpaceX will prevail in reaching orbit and demonstrating reliable space transport. For my part, I will never give up and I mean never.

Thanks for your hard work and now on to flight four.

Elon

There’s video of the launch there, too.

(Weird) Quote of the Day

(Weird) Quote of the Day

Skydivers: If you are at all like me, and if you are at all like me then you regard thirty-minute home pizza delivery as one of the fundamental characteristics distinguishing truly civilized societies from those inchoate masses of culturally benighted heathen hearts who put their trust in reeking tube and iron shard and English muffins with mozzarella and tomato sauce on them, then it necessarily follows that you must also regard the now almost constant loss of various and sundry body parts by skydivers as they plunge towards the Earth as an especially irksome phenomenon and one with disturbing implications for the long term electoral viability of the Republican Party. – Akaky Bashmachkin, Skydivers – at The Passing Parade, in a rather odd but fascinating (in a fatal traffic accident rubbernecking kind of way) rant on . . . I’m not quite sure what.

“There Goes MY Citizenship!”

I received an interesting piece of mail today, a letter from Mr. Tim Morgan, the Treasurer of the Republican National Committee. I don’t wish to bore my readers, but I think you need to see what it said:

Dear Mr. Baker,

I don’t want to believe you’ve abandoned the Republican Party, but I have to ask . . . Have you given up?

Our records show we have not yet received your Republican National Committee membership renewal for the critical 2008 presidential election year.

As the Treasurer of the RNC, I know our Party’s success depends directly on grassroots leaders like you.

So I am surprised and concerned especially because I know how generously you supported President Bush and the RNC in the past. You helped advance our vision for America and elect Republicans at all levels of government. Mr. Baker, I know other things come up, and perhaps you’ve just been delayed in renewing your membership. If that’s the case, I understand.

But we’ve not heard from you this year — and I hope you haven’t deserted our Party.

Your generous financial assistance and active involvement are more important than ever as we work to elect a new Republican president and Congress.

There is so much at stake. The Democrats are determined to put a liberal like Barack Obama in the White House, expand their narrow majorities in the U.S. House and Senate, and push our country to the Left with their agenda of high taxes, big government and weakened national security.

Big Labor, radical liberal protest groups and Hollywood elites are planning to spend more than $500 million to defeat Republicans and aid the Democratic power grab.

That’s why I urgently need you to renew your RNC membership for 2008 with a contribution of $1,000, $500, $250, $100, $50 or even $25.

The men and women who will represent us in this year’s elections are hard at work building strong campaigns.

And so is the RNC. We are doing our part to provide the research, staff support, voter registration, volunteer recruitment and training, and direct financial assistance our candidates need to win.

The RNC is the ONLY Republican organization permitted by federal law to directly support our presidential nominee.

If we fail to hold the White House and make gains in Congress, the Democrats have made clear they will overturn every reform you helped President Busyh achieve.

Democrat presidential candidates and the Reid/Pelosi-run-Congress have promised to repeal the Bush tax cuts, retreat from the War on Terror and increase the size of government through their one-size-fits-all health care plan.

We cannot allow them to succeed! That’s why your renewed commitment is so important.

So if you have delayed in renewing your membership because you feel the RNC has let you down, or no longer needs you, please let me know. I want to hear from you.

Just include your comments and suggestions with the enclosed Membership Confirmation and return them with your 2008 membership renewal check. You can also renew by calling 1-800-XXX-YYYY or via our secure website at www. gop.com/gotohellyoustupidLOSERS.

But please don’t turn your back on our Republican candidates running for office from the Courthouse to the White House; they are counting on your support. Renew your RNC membership today. Thank you.

P.S. The 2008 elections are critical to the future of our nation. We need the support of every Republican to retain the White House, regain Congress and elect GOP legislators at all levels. Please don’t quit on our Party and our cause now. Renew your RNC membership today. Thank you.

Fascinating. Smells a bit of desperation, no? Especially since I’ve never been a member of the RNC.

So I took up Mr. Morgan’s suggestion and decided to send him some comments. I wrote a nice, concise one page letter to stick in the little postage-paid envelope. When I read it to my wife (who is a Japanese national, though she’s lived here since she was nine years old,) she said “There goes MY citizenship!” She decided this year that she would finally apply to become officially an American.

Below is my brief reply to Mr. Morgan:

Mr. Morgan:

I read with interest your recent missive to me (attached) beginning “I don’t want to believe you’ve abandoned the Republican Party, but…”

Mr. Morgan, I’ve never been a member of the Republican Party. I changed my voter registration before the last Arizona presidential primary because I wanted to vote for Fred Thompson, but he withdrew before my vote even got counted. (I voted absentee for work reasons.)

Your letter continued: “So I am surprised and concerned especially because I know how generously you supported President Bush and the RNC in the past.” Really? You know that? Because Fred Thompson is the only Republican candidate I think I’ve ever donated money to. I “supported” President Bush by voting against Al Gore in 2000 and John Kerry in 2004, but he never saw a dime of my money.

Continuing on: “…I hope you haven’t deserted our Party.” No, you’ve deserted me. “The Democrats are determined to put a liberal like Barack Obama in the White House, expand their narrow majorities in the U.S. House and Senate, and push our country to the Left with their agenda of high taxes, big government and weakened national security.” Well, Tim, I have to tell you; the only difference I can see between what the Democrats want, in that description, and what the Republicans did over the last seven-plus years is taxes.

Here’s a clue if you want any of my money: secure the borders, confirm the judges, CUT SPENDING, keep the Bush tax cut in place, DRILL FOR OIL ON OUR OWN SOIL, rein in the BATFE and get rid of the TSA. Oh, and implement a damned flat-tax while you’re at it.

The next four to eight years look to suck like a Dyson vacuum cleaner, and personally I’m not certain the Republic can survive it. I’ll hold my nose and vote for McCain, though, in the faint hope that more than half the (tiny) voting population isn’t insane. I’ve enclosed one of the McCain campaign bumper stickers I’m selling to benefit my favorite charity, Soldier’s Angels. Sorry I had to fold it to get it in the envelope, but somehow I doubt seriously you’d actually put it on your vehicle.

Thanks for writing, and have a wonderful day.

It goes out in tomorrow’s mail. With the McCain bumpersticker.