Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

Our primary was last Tues.

I didn’t vote for Huckabee.

Somehow, the thought of trying to elect someone who has a Bible with the pages stuck together bothers me.

Michael Z. Williamson, May 14, 2008 Livejournal entry.

Sorry if that offends anyone, but the imagery of that post requires mental floss to get rid of!

Really? DEMOCRATS Authored this Legislation?

Really? DEMOCRATS Authored this Legislation?

The NRA puts out a press release about an amendment to H.R. 6842 that:

…will overturn the District of Columbia’s gun control restrictions that defy the recent Supreme Court ruling by continuing to limit D.C. residents’ right to self-defense.

The Second Amendment Enforcement Act will:

· Repeal the District’s ban on semi-automatic handguns. Semi-automatic pistols have been the most commonly purchased firearms in the United States over the last 20 years, and therefore a ban on those firearms is unconstitutional as decided by Heller;

· Restore the right of self-defense by repealing the requirement that firearms be disassembled or secured with a trigger lock in the home;

· Reform the current D.C. registration system that requires multiple visits to police headquarters; ballistics testing; passing a written test on D.C. gun laws; fingerprinting; and limiting registration to one handgun per 90 days. The current system is unduly burdensome and serves as a vehicle for even more onerous restrictions; and

· Create a limited exemption to the federal ban on interstate handgun sales by allowing D.C. residents to purchase handguns in Virginia and Maryland. Currently there is only one licensed firearm dealer in the District, and the District government is standing in the way of additional dealers opening their doors. A 40-year old federal law prohibits residents from purchasing handguns outside of the District.

SayUncle reports that it was a Democrat led bill, and the AP says:

Many of those speaking for the bill in debate that went well into the night Tuesday were conservative Democrats from rural districts that strongly support gun rights. Eighty-five Democrats voted for the bill.

“Number one, I’m a pro-gun Democrat,” said Rep. Mike Ross, D-Ark. “Number 2, if the government of the District of Columbia can take your guns away from you in our nation’s capital, Prescott, Arkansas, and many other small towns across the country could be next.”

The legislation is unlikely to be taken up in the Senate in the few remaining weeks of this session, but it served both to give lawmakers a pro-gun vote shortly before the election and demonstrate the continuing political clout of the NRA.

The bill, sponsored by Mississippi freshman Democrat Travis Childers, repeals the District’s semiautomatic handgun ban and overturns D.C. law requiring that firearms kept in the home be locked up and inoperable. It allows D.C. residents to purchase guns from federally licensed dealers in Maryland and Virginia and repeals what critics claimed were burdensome registration requirements.

Aside from the good work the NRA does to protect and enhance shooting ranges, this is another reason I’ve been a member of the NRA since 1995.

Good work!

THIS is Bloody Brilliant!

THIS is Bloody Brilliant!

Excerpt, to tease you into reading the whole thing:

Many of the party faithful have long had the feeling that the maverick Tigh was not really “one of us,” in the words of fighter pilot Lt. Kara Thrace, who once faced disciplinary action for punching then-Col. Tigh in the face. “No matter what his service record has been or what he endured back on New Caprica,” she said, “he never really seemed like he was one of us. There was always something that made him different.”

These feelings were accentuated when Col. Tigh recently confirmed rumors that he is, in fact a Cylon, though he swears that his allegiance is to mankind.

“After they revealed that, I was thinking about sitting out this election,” Lt. Thrace said. “But then he named Roslin as his running mate, and that won me back over. Personally, I’d rather have Roslin at the top of the ticket than a Cylon who says he’s on our side, but anything’s better than who the other party is putting up.”

Really, RTWT. It’s hilarious. And almost spooky.

Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

I’ll recommend myself to you if you have a pretty strong stomach. (Answering a question about “new” military SF authors.)

I’m not a Libertarian. And the reason I’m not is because there’s three questions Libertarianism has never adequately answered for me:

How do we provide for the national defense?

How do we defend against domestic enemies, to include criminals?

And what about public health? By which I mean plague prevention, not socialized medicine.

I haven’t heard a decent, credible, non-vomit-in-the-gutter answer from a Libertarian on any of those three.

Author Tom Kratman, from An Interview with Tom Kratman, Part 5 that can be found at Blackfive.net The whole interview series is quite interesting. Next up in the interview series is Michael Z. Williamson, but the audio on that is pretty screwed.

The only thing of his I’ve read is Watch on the Rhine, which I thought was actually pretty good. I understand that a lot of his other stuff might, in fact, require that strong stomach he warns about.

Anyway, his three questions are pretty good. I hadn’t considered the public health one, but it does seem obvious in retrospect. Discussion on this would be interesting, I think.

Quote of the Day – American Exceptionalism

Quote of the Day – American Exceptionalism

Since the golden age of Greece, there has been only one era of reason in twenty-three centuries of Western philosophy. During the final decades of that era, the United States of America was created as an independent nation. This is the key to the country—to its nature, its development, and its uniqueness: the United States is the nation of the Enlightenment. – Leonard Peikoff, The Ominous Parallels

And yet, as Billy Beck observes, we now seem headed for The Endarkenment – a point made even more ironic by AlGore’s latest tome, since it’s his side of the aisle doing most of the attacking.

The Bush Doctrine

The Bush Doctrine

I wanted to write about this ever since I saw the clip where Charlie Gibson asked the question and (*GASP!*) Sarah Palin didn’t know what “The Bush Doctrine” was.

Funny, because I didn’t either. Oh, I had my own understanding of “The Bush Doctrine,” but it didn’t equal the one Charlie Gibson enuciated:

The Bush doctrine, as I understand it, is that we have the right of anticipatory self-defense, that we have the right to a preemptive strike against any other country we think is going to attack us.

Charlie stated that this doctrine was laid down by President Bush in “September 2002.” Wikipedia (yes, I know) states:

The Bush Doctrine is a phrase used to describe various related foreign policy principles of United States president George W. Bush, created in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks. The phrase initially described the policy that the United States had the right to treat countries that harbor or give aid to terrorist groups as terrorists themselves, which was used to justify the invasion of Afghanistan. Later it came to include additional elements, including the controversial policy of preventive war, which held that the United States should depose foreign regimes that represented a threat to the security of the United States, even if that threat was not immediate (used to justify the invasion of Iraq), a policy of supporting democracy around the world, especially in the Middle East, as a strategy for combating the spread of terrorism, and a willingness to pursue U.S. military interests in a unilateral way. Some of these policies were codified in a National Security Council text entitled the National Security Strategy of the United States published on September 20, 2002.

That would be, I believe, this document. Here’s the key excerpt:

In the 1990s we witnessed the emergence of a small number of rogue states that, while different in important ways, share a number of attributes. These states:

* brutalize their own people and squander their national resources for the personal gain of the rulers;
* display no regard for international law, threaten their neighbors, and callously violate international treaties to which they are party;
* are determined to acquire weapons of mass destruction, along with other advanced military technology, to be used as threats or offensively to achieve the aggressive designs of these regimes;
* sponsor terrorism around the globe; and
* reject basic human values and hate the United States and everything for which it stands.

At the time of the Gulf War, we acquired irrefutable proof that Iraq’s designs were not limited to the chemical weapons it had used against Iran and its own people, but also extended to the acquisition of nuclear weapons and biological agents. In the past decade North Korea has become the world’s principal purveyor of ballistic missiles, and has tested increasingly capable missiles while developing its own WMD arsenal. Other rogue regimes seek nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons as well. These states’ pursuit of, and global trade in, such weapons has become a looming threat to all nations.

We must be prepared to stop rogue states and their terrorist clients before they are able to threaten or use weapons of mass destruction against the United States and our allies and friends. Our response must take full advantage of strengthened alliances, the establishment of new partnerships with former adversaries, innovation in the use of military forces, modern technologies, including the development of an effective missile defense system, and increased emphasis on intelligence collection and analysis.

First Charlie Gibson asked Gov. Palin if she agreed with “the Bush Doctrine.”

Then he asked her this, not once, not twice, but three times:

What if Israel decided it felt threatened and needed to take out the Iranian nuclear facilities?

So if we wouldn’t second guess it and they decided they needed to do it, because Iran was a threat, we would be cooperative or agree with that?

So if it felt necessary, if it felt the need to defend itself by taking out Iranian nuclear facilities, that would be all right?

Charlie apparently forgot that Israel took out Iraq’s Osirak reactor in 1981. (Read that piece!) Apparently he forgot the even more recent destruction of a Syrian nuclear facility (built with the apparent assistance of Kim Jong Il’s government) in September of 2007. Governor Palin simply stated,

I don’t think that we should second guess the measures that Israel has to take to defend themselves

three times.

Governor Palin’s response to the original “Bush Doctrine” question was this:

I believe that what President Bush has attempted to do is rid this world of Islamic extremism, terrorists who are hell-bent on destroying our nation. There have been blunders along the way, though. There have been mistakes made, and with new leadership, and that’s the beauty of American elections, of course, and democracy, is with new leadership comes opportunity to do things better.

Once Gibson clarified his question, her response was this:

Charlie, if there is legitimate and enough intelligence that tells us that a strike is imminent against American people, we have every right to defend our country.

And so does Israel. But what I wanted to point out is that Charlie Gibson’s definition of the “Bush Doctrine” doesn’t agree with the document that he supposedly cites. Charlie states that the Bush Doctrine is

…that we have the right of anticipatory self-defense, that we have the right to a preemptive strike against any other country we think is going to attack us.

However, the National Security Strategy spells out plainly the nations against which this doctrine is directed. States which:

* brutalize their own people and squander their national resources for the personal gain of the rulers;
* display no regard for international law, threaten their neighbors, and callously violate international treaties to which they are party;
* are determined to acquire weapons of mass destruction, along with other advanced military technology, to be used as threats or offensively to achieve the aggressive designs of these regimes;
* sponsor terrorism around the globe; and
* reject basic human values and hate the United States and everything for which it stands.

I’m not sure what Gibson was looking for. Was it just Palin’s acknowledgment that preemptive strikes were not out of the question? Was it to make her look ignorant or stupid? Personally (for a politician), I didn’t think her answers were all that bad.

More troubling still, I asked my Obama supporting colleague today whether he believed the US had the right to strike preemptively against such regimes.

He said no. I asked him again, specifically, if he was willing for the country to lose a city before we took action, and he said “Yes. We don’t shoot first.”

Is this something the Left as a group actually believes?

The hell we don’t.

I’m Conflicted.

I’m Conflicted.

There are a lot of things I ought to be writing about. Things I feel I need to write about. Unfortunately, this need comes up against two opponents – I have a lot of things I need to do that do not involve sitting on my ass in front of my computer, and I have developed another case of ennui, where I do not particularly want to sit and write for hours, or even minutes. Thus, instead of my trademark long, rambling essays, you’ve recently been receiving Free Ice-Cream Lite in the form of Quotes of the Day, videos and cartoons.

Still, there’s half a dozen (or more) things a day that poke at me, insisting that I write something about them just to get them out of my system. For example, here’s a case of EPIC FAILURE:

Witchcraft rumor sparks riot at Congo soccer game

KINSHASA, Congo (AP) — Accusations that a soccer player was using witchcraft during a match in eastern Congo sparked a riot that killed 13 people, a U.N.-funded radio station reported Monday.

Most of the victims were between the ages of 11 and 16, Radio Okapi said. They were suffocated as panicked crowds ran for the exits during the mayhem Sunday in Butembo in eastern Congo’s North Kivu province.

Charming, but not Epic Fail. This is the Epic Fail:

Radio Okapi said police tried to control the violence at Matokeo stadium by firing into the air to protect their commander, who was hit in the head and wounded by fans.

Now, this is an AP story, so I expect to receive a lawsuit for having linked to it and quoted from it, but the interesting thing is that between the time I first read it (and emailed it home so I could write about it) and now, when I opened the story to do the pullquotes, the AP has revised it. The revision? The original story reported that the soldiers fired into the air “to calm the rioters” (no mention of defending the commander), which then sent them into an even greater panic.

Got a angry riot on your hands? Try full-auto fire into the air! That’ll calm ’em down!

Next up, the Nigerian scammers have apparently switched tactics. No longer has some rich dude died, leaving million$ in an account somewhere that needs to be moved. No, now apparently I have won a lottery that I didn’t even enter!

Your E-mail Address was selected online and has won you $2,000,000.00 in the lucky day lotto NL world-wide.Write to agent E-mail: [email protected]
contact the claim agent Mr.Pieter Vaart,

Win no: 442/121/909, Ticket no:al-4343/132/001, our phone No:0031-6111- 464-78,Regard,Mrs,I.versloot,Award co-ordinator.

Nice, Dutch-sounding names, right? And if you can’t trust the Dutch, who can you trust? The originating email address is [email protected]. Is Idi Amin still alive and living in exile in Italy? If so, why did no one tell me?

Sorry, Mrs,I.versloot,Award co-ordinator, I think I’ll pass on your truly generous offer.

Now, I’m going to generate one more post after this, look up something for tomorrow’s Quote of the Day, and then get to work on some things I really, really need to do around the house.

Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

This is leftism’s great strength: it’s all white lies. That’s its only advantage, as far as I can tell. None of its programs actually works, after all. From statism and income redistribution to liberalized criminal laws and multiculturalism, from its assault on religion to its redefinition of family, leftist policies have made the common life worse wherever they’re installed. But because it depends on—indeed is defined by—describing the human condition inaccurately, leftism is nothing if not polite. With its tortuous attempts to rename unpleasant facts out of existence—he’s not crippled, dear, he’s handicapped; it’s not a slum, it’s an inner city; it’s not surrender, it’s redeployment—leftism has outlived its own failure by hiding itself within the most labyrinthine construct of social delicacy since Victoria was queen. – Andrew Klavan, “The Big White Lie,” City Journal, Spring 2007