Malice vs. Stupidity

Heinlein’s (or, if you insist, Hanlon’s) Razor:

Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity, but don’t rule out malice.

Then there’s Grey’s Law:

Any sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice.

And Rick Cook‘s admonition:

The key to understanding the American system (of government) is to imagine that you have the power to make nearly any law you want. But your worst enemy will be the one to enforce it.

One more on top of that, from my comments recently:

Congress does two things well – Nothing and Overreact.Adam Putnam

The topic of the 2008 Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act has once again arisen in the blogosphere. Megan McArdle brought up one unintended consequence of that particular overreaction, and that was picked up in a couple more places, like Tam’s View from the Porch (not a good idea to get Tam mad at you), and The Washington Examiner. But these pieces were primarily about children’s books, and the CPSIA covers a lot more than just books.

Walter Olson of Overlawyered has been on top of this since the legislation was introduced. From a Forbes piece from January:

Self-congratulation makes for bad law.

If someone you know volunteers at a thrift store or crochets baby hats for the crafts site Etsy or favors handmade wooden toys as a baby shower gift, you’ve probably been hearing the alarms about the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA).

Hailed almost universally on its passage last year–it passed the Senate 89 to three and the House by 424 to one, with Ron Paul the lone dissenter–CPSIA is now shaping up as a calamity for businesses and an epic failure of regulation, threatening to wipe out tens of thousands of small makers of children’s items from coast to coast, and taking a particular toll on the handcrafted and creative, the small-production-run and sideline at-home business, not to mention struggling retailers. How could this have happened?

I find the title to Olson’s piece particularly interesting, since it echoes a particularly fine book, Thomas Sowell’s Vision of the Anointed: Self-Congratulation as a Basis for Social Policy. Professor Sowell’s book was published back in 1996 and it covers thirty years of history, so the CPSIA has a lot of company. I strongly recommend it, if you haven’t read it.

Malice, or “sufficiently advanced incompetence”?

Does it really matter?

For example, let’s look at the McCain-Feingold Incumbent Protection Campaign Finance Reform Act. It passed in the House by a fair margin, and squeaked through the Senate, and was signed into law by G.W. Bush, even though Bush said he thought parts of it were probably unconstitutional. Shortly after passage, training seminars were instituted to instruct incumbents on the nuances of the bill they had just passed.

The general response when told what they could and couldn’t do under the restrictions of the new law? “I didn’t know it said THAT!

The tradition of not reading bills (a book on the law and its meaning runs a mere 457 pages) has a long, rich history. The War on (some) Drugs™ has resulted in numerous unintended consequences from poorly thought-out legislation and laws enforced with either malice or incompetence sufficiently advanced so as to be indistinguishable. Radley Balko has made a career out of reporting on those. But there are others that people know less of. I wrote about the prosecution of Christopher and Trudy Sherburne for the possession of ten rounds of tracer ammunition. The state of California destroyed their home and business – literally – over those ten rounds, and sentenced Christopher to five years in prison.

I’ve written about George Norris, whose business was raided and in effect destroyed by gun toting, body-armor clad agents of the Fish & Wildlife Service over some rare orchids that he insisted were legally imported, but the Feds insisted were not. The Feds have unlimited funds with which to persecut, er, prosecute. Mr. Norris did not. He plead guilty at the advice of his attorney and got a 17 month sentence. Read the update to the story here. Store all breakables before you do. Then read the story of Krister Evertson and his persecution by the Feds.

And it’s not just laws, look at a recent regulatory change. The EPA has now classified carbon dioxide as a pollutant, and the EPA has the power to regulate the production of pollutants. I’m unsure where, exactly, that power comes from under our Constitution, but it’s a fait accompli. What will the unintended consequences of this decision be?

I’ve quoted Rand’s take on this several times (do read that link). As others have noted, as time goes on she seems more and more prescient.

And now the Obama Administration wants to shove a 1000+ page bill that totally reforms the American health-care system through Congress, and Congresscritters aren’t even shy about admitting that they don’t know what’s in it.

At some point it becomes immaterial whether the laws were due to incompetence or maliciousness. That point is when their implementation is indistinguishable from maliciousness. I submit that we’ve passed that point, and the only thing preventing even more massive public blowback is our general ignorance and our well-established general respect for the Rule of Law. As I’ve said, the .gov has done a good job of practicing such persecution on a retail level, rather than wholesale, but it’s getting to the point where the abuse is going wholesale and the stories are getting out to the mass audience.

I’ve also stated that I know where my personal “line in the sand” is. I suspect that the number of others reaching their own conclusion on that subject is growing.

Too bad it won’t result in a restoration of the Constitution. Entropy doesn’t work that way.

And I need to cheer the hell up.

UPDATE: PolyKahr has a related post up.

Open Carry ≠ Public Panic

Open Carry ≠ Public Panic

Long ago another blogger (I won’t link to it now, but you can search this site if you’d like) said about citizens carrying firearms:

I just…I just blink my eyes in amazement everytime this crops up – actually watching people feel the need to carry a concealed weapon in public…

If I were to take a live, armed weapon and carry it on my person, in public, it would eat away at my sanity just as if it were emitting lethal radiation. To know that I carried an instrument of sure and certain death on my person, available and ready to be pulled out and used at a moment’s notice to possibly kill…a child. A homeless person. An innocent.

Tonight I had dinner with about thirty people at a packed Golden Corral restaurant in Phoenix.

And almost every one of us was open carrying. About half of us (me included) were toting 1911s. At least another third were carrying revolvers of various types, from Single-Action Army models to modern Smith & Wessons. Then there were a smattering of the various plastic-fantastic pistols – Glocks, Springfield XDs, etc.

There was no public panic. Lots of children running about the place. (I damn near stepped on the cutest little girl – so much for my situational awareness in a crowded restaurant! She came around me like John Force at the WinterNationals, only without the blast of nitromethane exhaust to warn me.) Lots of families. No one got shot at the salad bar. No one was winged at the dessert buffet. There were no duels over the last popcorn shrimp. No wild-west shootouts over the last parking space.

No one ran screaming from the restaurant in fear. No one (to our knowledge) complained about all the armed people in the place. The police were not summoned. The FBI did not put in an appearance.

And nobody robbed the place either. (Can you imagine what an epic failure of the victim-selection process that would have been?) All in all, it was a pleasant meal with good company – all members of The Gun Counter. And me. I’m not a member, but I got an invite anyway. It was a much bigger turnout that I expected.

UPDATE – 8/16/09: INSTALANCHE!! Welcome! Please do spend a little extra time perusing the site. I recommend checking out the “Best Posts” on the left column.

<——— (Over there! Scroll down a bit.)

But get a beverage and a snack first. Some of them run a little long. I call them “Überposts.” One reader, for example, said Of Laws and Sausages was a “13,000 word wall of text, but I assure you, it’s worthwhile.”

Thanks for visiting!

OK, How Did I Not Know About This?

OK, How Did I Not Know About This?

I’ve lived in Arizona now for 28 years, moving here from Cary, NC in July of 1981. How did I not know about the bi-annual Big Sandy Machine Gun Shoot? It’s been going on almost five years!

I don’t own any NFA items, but I will be the first person to tell you that full-auto hardware is the finest mechanism for turning large volumes of cash into noise and smiles. The next shoot is scheduled for October 16-18.

Here’s a short promotional video of the inaugural 2005 event:

http://img.photobucket.com/player.swf?file=http://vidmg.photobucket.com/albums/v99/smallestminority/mgs_2005tzr.flv

Remember that op-ed I fisked a bit back where the moron Marc Rubin asked about privately-owned cannon? I bet he’d leave skid-marks in his drawers if he watched that clip.

I think I might have to take a drive up there that October weekend. It’s only about five hours . . .

Because Bank of America Thinks You’re Stupid

Because Bank of America Thinks You’re Stupid

Now we have three bloggers in my office. The Obama supporter I’ve written about? While his worldview remains left of center, recent events have altered his thinking a bit. The world may not run on unicorn farts after all! I’ve even gotten him to put up an 11×17 full color poster of the Obama-as-Joker image in his office! And he has decided that everyone deserves to know what he thinks – thus a newbie joins the blogosphere.

His first post is a worthy one. Bank of America has had three advertising slogans recently:

Bank of America. Higher Standards
Embracing ingenuity
Think what we can do for you
Perhaps those would be better stated thus:

Bank of America. Higher Lower Standards
Embracing ingenuity (in how we screw our customers)
Think what we can do for to you

If you have a BofA mortgage (like I do, since they bought it from Countrywide), perhaps you should look very carefully at the multiple payment options BofA offers. Specifically, the terms of those options.

Bill did. He was not amused.

Neither am I.

Hey! STILL Wanna Win One of These?

That’s ParaUSA’s new GI Expert entry-level 1911 I’ve been talking about for a couple of months now. Gun World magazine just published a review of it that was very positive. The specs are:

Caliber: .45 ACP
Barrel: 5 inches, stainless steel
Twist: 1 in 16 inches, left-hand
Action: Single-action, Semi-automatic
Sights: Dovetail Fixed, 3-White Dot
Receiver: Carbon Steel
Trigger: Medium length
Hammer: Skeletonized Spur
Magazine: 8-round with removable base pad (two provided with pistol)
Overall Length: 8.5 inches
Height: 5.75 inches
Weight: 39 ounces
Finish: Covert Black Para Kote™
Stocks: Checkered Polymer
Safeties: Slide Lock, Internal Firing Block, Grip
Additional Features: Lowered and flared ejection port, beveled magazine well, flat mainspring housing, grip safety contoured for spur hammer, two eight-round stainless magazines
MSRP: $599

I picked up the pistol from Murphy’s Guns this afternoon at lunch, and it’s a beauty!

Regardless of our being screwed by PayPal, this raffle is going forward. Soldiers’ Angels is still taking phone orders for the tickets, AND hopefully tonight or tomorrow on-line ticket sales will resume HAVE RESUMED! Rendezvous sponsor LuckyGunner.com has stepped up to let us use his commercial web site to sell the tickets with all proceeds (minus the 3% credit card fee) going to Soldiers’ Angels. At least PayPoop won’t be getting another dime.

We’ve got about four weeks left before the Rendezvous for ticket sales, and – don’t forget – the OTHER prize in the drawing is a $2,000 value gift certificate to Front Sight, good for a four-day class or two two-day classes. I think if the first ticket we draw comes from a “prohibited” state, you might very well be the winner of that prize. I’ll talk to Mr. Completely about that.

Here are some pictures of the actual pistol in question:


Add to that, Maryland. No spent casing in the box for their useless IBIS system.
Sorry about that, but I don’t make the stupid damned laws, I just have to abide by them.


What’s on the inside.


It even comes with a bushing wrench and lubricant!


Puuurty!


Pretty nice, no? Only $10 a ticket! And it’s for a great cause! Tickets will be on sale both on-line through LuckyGunner.com and by phone through Soldiers’ Angels until September 7, so hurry! Get yours today! (And maybe buy some ammo while you’re at it. If it’s on the LuckyGunner site, it’s in stock!)

Words to Live By – QotD

Words to Live By – QotD

I got to the “public” townhall sponsored by Rep. Kathy Castor and the SEIU an hour and a half before the doors were scheduled to open. Apparently, it would not have mattered when I arrived. We stood out in the 90 plus degree weather only to be told that that the hall had been filled through a side door and no one else would be let in.

The crowd surrounded the building. We stood in front of every door and window and chanted “just say no” and “live or die”. The crowd was well behaved but really worked up. I heard several people say that there were three thousand people outside. I can’t confirm it but I certainly don’t doubt it.

I am upset, like everyone else that showed up, that we were locked out of what was supposed to be a public meeting. On the other hand, I am really proud of my fellow citizens. We represented every age group, every race and ethnic group. Rep. Kathy Castor made it clear that she doesn’t represent us. That is okay. Next election, we will find someone who does.

Carol’s Closet, The Tampa Town Hall WAS NOT Open to the Public

Throw ’em ALL out.

RTWT. It’s a pretty interesting first-hand (“Primary Source”) account of the Tampa hijinx.

(h/t: Instapundit)

Where Are My Wheelbarrows Full of Cash

Where Are My Wheelbarrows Full of Cash?

First I’m supposed to be a paid shill of the NRA and the eeeeeevil gun manufacturers, and now I’m supposed to be a paid shill of the Rethuglicans, the Big pHarma, and the Health Insurance Cabal for opposing the chOsen One’s selfless efforts to save us from our near-sighted stupidity.

I want to know, where’s my damned money?

A Blast from the Past

Back in May of 2007 I wrote Good Guys 1, Bad Guys 0, the story of a defensive gun use by a Cape Coral, Florida man who was accosted in his own front yard by two young men, one armed with a revolver. He resisted and managed to disarm one opponent, who he then shot. That assailant died as a result of his wound. His accomplices, the other young man involved in the assault and a young woman who was acting as the getaway driver, were later caught. They were charged, per Florida’s law, with murder, since a death occurred during the commission of a felony.

One murder trial began yesterday:

The trial of a Fort Myers man charged with murder started this morning with opening statements and the case’s first witness.

Damion Shearod, 22, faces up to life in prison if convicted of second-degree murder with a firearm, attempted armed robbery with a firearm and burglary with a firearm.

Shearod is charged in the killing of John Patrick Moore, who was shot to death by Cape Coral homeowner Jacob Selack at 2125 N.E. 1st Ave. on May 16, 2007, during a botched robbery.

According to police, Shearod, Moore and Jazzmyne Rahshel Carrol-Love drove from Fort Myers to the house occupied by Selack and his fiancee Elizabeth Kachnic.

Moore, who was carrying a weapon, and Shearod walked up to Selack, who was mowing his yard, according to Cape Coral police. They put a gun to his head and demanded he take them into the house. Selack resisted and when Moore dropped the gun, Selack fired it at him, killing him in the driveway. Shearod ran away. Carrol-Love remained in the car during the alleged robbery attempt.

Shearod was convicted of murder in 2005 and sentenced to 30 years in prison, but a judge overturned the conviction because he determined the jury didn’t have enough evidence to convict.

They should now.

Read the original post, it’s pretty interesting. Note that, once again, the media has no qualms about printing the street address of the actual victim here, Jacob Selack. You can look it up on Google Maps and get a damned street view of the place.

But do we get the home addresses of the perps?

(*crickets*)

August 6, 1945

August 6, 1945


At 08:15 on this date in 1945, an atomic bomb was for the first time used against a wartime target – the city of Hiroshima on the island of Honshu, the largest of the Japanese Home Islands. At the time, the population of Hiroshima is estimated to have been 300-350,000.

Ever since the end of WWII, America has been excoriated for being the only nation to have used nuclear weapons in warfare, especially for using those weapons against civilian targets – cities – rather than strictly military targets. Most recently Jon Stewart expressed such an opinion, and essayist and now video star Bill Whittle took some time to explain to him how many ways he was wrong.

I want to do something similar, but I don’t have days to do interviews, much less access to quality video recording and editing hardware. However, via Blackfive I discovered that the Rome, Georgia Rome News-Tribune had done extensive video interviews with surviving WWII vets in their town, and produced some damned fine documentary shorts of those interviews. Fine enough that they ought to win that publication some prizes. Here are two of them, of survivors from the Pacific Theater. Watch and listen, and hear how these men felt about the atomic bombing of Japan.

http://img.photobucket.com/player.swf?file=http://vidmg.photobucket.com/albums/v99/smallestminority/harrybattle0709b_F8_1Mb.flv

http://img.photobucket.com/player.swf?file=http://vidmg.photobucket.com/albums/v99/smallestminority/atomicbombforweb_F8_1Mb_IVND.flv
The two atomic blasts killed between 250,000 and 300,000 people, but they ended the war. Estimates of American casualties alone, had we invaded the Japanese Home Islands, were on the order of 1 million. Japanese casualties, given the grim statistics of Iwo Jima, Saipan, and Okinawa, would have been at least 3-5 times higher, and would have included women, children, and old men.

My only question is when and where will the third atomic bomb used in war be detonated? Tel Aviv? Los Angeles? Paris? London? New York? Because it is going to happen, sooner or later.