Internet Access

I haz it. Bandwidth, no so much. And I’m on the wired network, not WiFi.

Giant Multinational Corp. provided it as part of the conference package. I imagine that they had to, considering their clientele, and the fact that the equipment this conference is covering starts in the low eight-figures price range.

I’ll say this for the venue: Posh. Very, very posh. I feel out of place.

It promises to be a busy couple of days, so blogging will remain light.

Oh, and still no reply from Alan Baird. He must’ve thought my missive was a death threat, too.

On the Road Again

I’ll be out of town until Saturday night. I’m leaving tomorrow morning for a conference. Apparently no one told the Giant Multinational Corporation that Las Vegas was a politically-incorrect place to hold one of these things, and since it’s only a six and a half hour drive I’ll be bypassing the friendly Security Theater kabuki actors and making the round trip by ground vehicle. (I really need to get a Nevada non-resident carry permit.)

Anyway, I don’t know if the hotel will be providing WiFi gratis. If not, I probably won’t be posting much the next three days.

Oh, and as of 7:00 PM MST, no reply from Alan C. Baird.

How Government is Like Bacteria

I’ve been getting links and comments from The Silicon Graybeard for a while now, but I’ll admit that I haven’t spent much time over there.

That’s going to change. One excellent example of why is this recent post, On Germs, Weeds, Companies, Governments and Skunks. Excerpt:

(Lockheed Martin CEO Norman Augustine’s) most memorable law, and where I’m going with this, was “Systems of Regulations created as a management surrogate take on a life of their own and exhibit a growth history which closely parallels other living entities observed in nature”. He went on to show the number of pages in armed forces procurement regulation vs. time along with a curve of weed growth (from the journal “Weed Science”), and produced a graph any biology student will instantly recognize as the sigmoid growth curve of populations, also called the logistic function.

A usual example is the common bacteria E. coli. This species can divide and produce a new generation every 20 minutes; if conditions could remain optimum it would undergo geometric growth and produce a colony the size of the planet in 24 hours. Because conditions can’t remain optimum, it has a logistic growth curve, producing much smaller colonies.

In regulations, there is a price for this. Although the legislators and regulators never consider this, every regulation consumes some amount of time and money to comply with. The new Finance Reform bill has been estimated to required the development of 250-300 new regulations. Every regulation slows down, hinders and costs every honest business real money. Despite the widespread talk of corrupt CEOs and general lack of corporate ethics, I’ve been working in the manufacturing industry since the mid 1970s, and every company has had an active, if not aggressive, ethics compliance program with requirements for training and seminars every year. There are exceptions but most companies do their best to be honest and law-abiding. Government seems to think it’s mere coincidence that countries with lower tax rates and lower regulation attract business, and they demonize companies for moving to countries where the environment is better.

A simple way of determining if someone you talk to has any economic sense is to ask them about corporate taxes. The economically ignorant (I’ll be polite) will scream to tax the corporations. Those with sense will tell you corporations are fictitious and can’t pay tax. Tax is part of the cost of doing business and therefore passed on to the buyer (the people calling for them to be taxed). Corporations can collect taxes for the government (for which they are punished with more costs, not paid) but cannot generate them. Every penny a company has comes from its customers. In a global market where they compete with companies in cheaper environments, they are at a disadvantage.

I quoted that so I could quote this:

This is where we find ourselves as a nation.

We are strangling in a bureaucracy with a Code of Federal Regulations that has grown like a bacterial culture. A nation that was founded by a constitution that fills about 14 printed pages in today’s technologies, passes financial reform bills that go over 2000 pages, health care bills that go almost 3000 pages, and more. Each bill creates hundreds of new regulations, which are so poorly written they have to be refined by hundreds of court cases. The court cases effectively create new law and new regulations. Since congress is in session every year and passes at least one new law every year, the total number of laws and regulations increases without limit and everything eventually becomes illegal.

What can we do? We can’t form a “skunkworks country” that can get around our laws and create a more mobile, productive society. We only have one option: we have to create a national process, like industries do, to become more “lean, mean and low to the ground”. Get rid of superfluous laws. We simply must reduce the size of the CFR and reduce the destruction caused by the regulation and litigation in our society. To me, Tort Reform is absolutely essential. A big part of the industrial lean activities is to study what policies need to be gotten rid of because “we’ve always done it that way”. The same should be done with the CFR.

In other words: “deregulation.”

There’s a lot more there. Please, go read.

And Graybeard? You’re on the blogroll.

EPIC

A couple of weeks ago I posted My New Favorite Flag, a little throwaway post (or so I thought) until perennial commenter Markadelphia spoke up.

The result is quite possibly the longest comment thread in TSM‘s history.

We’re going to top We have topped 500 on this one, folks, and it is positively filled with example after example of why I don’t ban Markadelphia – he’s just too perfect an example of what we’re fighting against.

(Kudos to reader John Hardin for recovering the comment thread after JSKit/Echo went away.)

Blogroll Additions

I met some new people at this year’s Rendezvous. First, GG from Girls {Heart} Guns, who is a newbie shooter, and very enthusiastic! She’s also very safe, as she relates in this post.

Next up was Olav and his wife Patricia from Firearms and Training. Olav is a fine shot, and QUICK. On Saturday, the last run we did was five shots on a single steel plate at 7 yards as fast as possible. I watched Olav put five rounds on target from his 9mm S&W M&P in just over a second. You could have covered the group with a playing card. I told him I didn’t see the happy-switch on his pistol!

Two guys from CS Tactical made their first trip to the Rendezvous, Mike Cecil and Andrew “Mase” Mason. CS Tactical has a forum, too! Not only that, but Mike’s a helluva competitor. He won the Cowboy Fast Draw match on Sunday, beating out “Millisecond Molly” by literally milliseconds.

True Blue Sam made it this year. Zeke of Engineering Johnson couldn’t make it due to work (he was in Viet Nam showing ’em how to make pop-top cans), but his grandmother Bea was insistent that she was going to her second Rendezvous, so it was up to Sam, her son, to provide escort duty! Bea is 79 years old and has been shooting for just a couple of years, but she handloads her own ammo – .357, .44, and .45 Colt.

Making his second trip to a Rendezvous was D.W. Drang of The Cluemeter. I haven’t had him on the blogroll before, but I will shortly!

This was also Molly’s second Rendezvous. She’s going on the roll as well.

Also new this year was Dan Hall of GUNUP.com, a new site (not quite ready, but soon!) that aims to be THE place for people to go for gun-related information on the web. Sounds like they have a plan and the people, let’s wish ’em luck!

No Blog for You!

I’m in final preparations to head out for Reno tomorrow, and of course I’ll be on the road for most of tomorrow. I’ll check either tomorrow evening (assuming I find a hotel with WiFi) or Thursday once I get checked in at the Silver Legacy.

Hopefully the long-promised next Überpost will be finished and up by Saturday. We’ll see.

“Our” Blog?

I just received this in email from Markadelphia – in its entirety:

http://www.theonion.com/articles/new-edition-of-bible-specifically-mentions-second,17882/

This has to be worthy of some kind of recognition on our blog, right?

“Our” blog?

OUR“?!? (Must resist ban hammer . . . must resist . . . .)

UPDATE: In comments, Markadelphia apologizes for his Freudian slip:

Crap. I’m a moron. I left the “y” out of “our.” All apologies and it was not intentional. I honestly am abysmal at typing.

Well, then.