Sorry, Been Out of Town.

On business. With no internet access. And now I’ve got to catch up around the house, and load some ammo for a range trip in a week or so. Plus I’ve got to catch up on my reading. Did we slavering hoarde of gun-nuts hound another innocent old man out of a job at the behest of the eeeeevil NRA yet? No one sent me any marching orders, and I’m feeling left out.

I Love Being Right

As I noted in the first line of That Didn’t Take Long,

I’m unfamiliar with the MySpace page ostensibly run for or by the Brady Campaign, but they glommed on to Jim Zumbo’s article almost as rapidly as the gun community did.

I also noted in comments here and other places, that the author of that site seemed a little too stereotypical. In fact, at a post at Snowflakes in Hell I commented:

I’m not convinced that that MySpace page really is affiliated with the Brady Campaign. I can’t help but wonder if it’s run by someone trying to make the Brady Campaign look worse than it already does.

Later in that same post a Brady representative commented:

I can confirm that these statements were made by an impostor. I’m a spokesman for the Brady Campaign, and I know that none of us were involved in those postings. That’s not our statement, and it’s not our position.
Sebastian, you should have access to the email address I logged with WordPress, so you can verify that I am who I claim to be.

So the question remains: Is the MySpace poster serious, or is he just trying to make the Brady Bunch look bad?
The sad part is, it’s impossible to tell, really. Good job, Sebastian!

Let it Wait

I was going to post a really long piece tonight on the Zumbo controversy, but I have decided (taking his example) that I’m going to let it marinate overnight before I hit “publish.”

Besides, things are changing rapidly in this case, and I might miss something I’ll want to include.

Tomorrow.

Philosophy

All who have meditated on the art of governing mankind have been convinced that the fate of empires depends on the education of youth. – Aristotle

I’ve been writing here for right at three and a half years. If the post counter is to be believed (blogspot being what it is), this is the 2281st post here. Prior to TSM I spent six months and a bit over 1800 posts at DemocraticUnderground.com in the “Gun Dungeon” irritating the Progressive faithful. (Most honest expression of the faith ever posted there: “There is no room in the progressive agenda for gun rights.”) Before that I spent a few months in the mosh-pit of talk.politics.guns and at the late, lamented Themestream.com. I have been a member of AR15.com since February of 2001. I have posted about 8,500 times there, and am still active.

In the last, oh, three years or so, on top of the fiction I prefer, I have read the following books (not a complete list, and certainly not in order):

Albion’s Seed: Four British Folkways in America, by David Hackett Fischer

Guns, Germs & Steel by Jared Diamond

Restoring the Lost Constitution: The Presumption of Liberty by Randy Barnett

Shooters: Myths and Realities of America’s Gun Cultures by Abigale Kohn

Born Fighting: How the Scots-Irish Shaped America by James Webb

Revolutionary Characters: What Made the Founders Different by Gordon S. Wood

1776 by David McCullough

On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society by LTC Dave Grossman

Ripples of Battle: How Wars of the past Still Determine how We Fight, how We Live, and how We Think by Victor Davis Hanson

Life at the Bottom: The Worldview That Makes the Underclass and Our Culture, What’s Left of It: The Mandarins and the Masses, both by Theodore Dalrymple

For the Defense of Themselves and the State: Legal Case Studies of the 2nd Amendment to the U. S. Constitution by Clayton Cramer (Contact Clayton directly. I’m sure he’d be happy to sell you an autographed edition.)

Bias: A CBS Insider Exposes How the Media Distort the News by Bernard Goldberg

Philosophy: Who Needs It and Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand

Armed: New Perspectives on Gun Control by Gary Kleck and Don Kates

Whose Right to Bear Arms Did the Second Amendment Protect? edited by Saul Cornell

True Believer: Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements by Eric Hoffer

and, by association,

Conversations with Eric Sevareid by Eric Sevareid, which has two interviews with Hoffer

Men in Black: How the Supreme Court is Destroying America by Mark Levin

The Vision of the Anointed: Self-Congratulation as a Basis for Social Policy by Thomas Sowell

Honor: A History by James Bowman

And, of course,

Silent America: Essays from a Democracy at War by Bill Whittle

This is in addition to all the blogs, court decisions, op-eds, news pieces, and other internet reading I’ve done. Next on deck are Milton Friedman’s Free to Choose and Capitalism and Freedom, and F.A. Hayek’s The Road to Serfdom. (Be still, my beating heart.)

I’m 44 years old. I think I’ve finally developed a firm grasp on just how much I don’t know. I believe I’ve developed a firm grasp on what little I do know. I’m reminded of that quote from The Purple Avenger‘s blog:

“I now understand”, he said, “why engineers and their like are so hard to examine, whether on the stand or in a deposition. When they say a thing is possible, they KNOW it is possible, and when they say a thing is not possible, they KNOW it is not. Most people don’t understand know in that way; what they know is what we can persuade them to believe. You engineers live in the same world as the rest of us, but you understand that world in a way we never will.”

I’m interested in what works. In the course of writing this blog, I’ve had numerous discussions, both in posts and in comments, with others interested in the same things I am from similar and from widely divergent perspectives. In my six-part discussion with Dr. Danny Cline, he stated:

I do indeed believe that man has innate moral knowledge (I wouldn’t say an instinct, but that’s a pretty minor problem). I should say rather that I believe that I have innate moral knowledge.

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.

In Philosophy, Who Needs It, Rand said:

As a human being, you have no choice about the fact that you need a philosophy. Your only choice is whether you define your philosophy by a conscious, rational, disciplined process of thought and scrupulously logical deliberation — or let your subconscious accumulate a junk heap of unwarranted conclusions, false generalizations, undefined contradictions, undigested slogans, unidentified wishes, doubts and fears….

Dr. Cline may have an “innate moral knowledge,” I won’t gainsay him on that, but my observation of objective reality leads me to believe that he is by far the exception rather than the rule. The overwhelming majorty of people “accumulate a junk heap of unwarranted conclusions, false generalizations, undefined contradictions, undigested slogans, unidentifed wishes, doubts and fears” and are therefore incapable of leading themselves anywhere. Aristotle was absolutely right: the fate of empires depends on the education of youth.

And we’re failing in that – horribly. The entirety of Western Civilization is, apparently. If this was a WordPress blog, I’d have a category titled “Dept. of Our Collapsing Schools” filled with story after story of how parents, lawsuits, and socialist influences not limited only to political correctness and teachers unions have caused our education system to largely give up on the duty of education, and instead become twelve years of daycare. We’ve produced generation after generation of people with no coherent philosophy. At least, no single philosophy, or one that stands up to scrutiny.

For example, many localities passed minimum-wage increase initiatives with the last election. Speaker-elect Pelosi promises to address this apparently crucial issue in the first 100 hours of the new Congress. Why? Because a lot of Americans are convinced that the minimum wage is too low. Dale of Mostly Cajun isn’t. Neither is Tam from View from the Porch. They’re in good company. As Leo Rosten channeled recently deceased economist Milton Friedman on the topic:

“The public,” sighed Fenwick, “is not well-informed about economics, and will pay for its innocence. Increased minimum wages lead to increased costs, which lead to higher…. Then many honest, low-wage earners in the South (where the cost of living is lower; which is one reason wages there stay lower) will become disemployed. And many more of the young and no-skilled, in Harlem no less than Dixie, will remain more hopelessly unemployed than they already are.” Fenwick regarded Rupert Shmidlapp innocently. “Tell me, honestly: Would you rather work for $1.25 an hour or be unemployed at $1.40?”

While Shmidlapp was wrestling with many unkind thoughts, Fenwick gave his guileless smile: “I am strongly in favor of wages rising — which is entirely different from raising wages. Let wages go up as far as they can and deserve to, for the right reasons, which means in response to demand and supply and freedom to choose… Take domestic servants, Mr. Shmidlapp. Why maids, cooks, cleaning women, laundresses have enjoyed a fantastic increase in their earnings. And notice, please, that domestic servants are not organized; they don’t have a union, or a congressional lobby. Or take bank clerks…”

In Arizona, voters decided to ban smoking in public places but also decided to raise taxes on cigarettes to fund a child health-care program. What will they do with the fallout from dwindling tax revenues? (Oh. Silly me!) I’m sure there are other similar examples from all over the country.

For far too many people, what they know is what they can be persuaded to believe, and they can be persuaded to believe two or more mutually exclusive things simultaneously with apparently little effort. Without putting my tinfoil hat on too tight, I’m convinced that the primary reason our education system, and that of the majority if not entirety of Western civilization has collapsed is that ignorant people are easily persuaded, and politicians like it that way. So do trial lawyers. A populace with a conscious, rational, disciplined philosophy cannot be easily lead around by the nose. Such a philosophy must be avoided in a democratic society if power is to be acquired and accumulated.

To have a populace with such a philosophy, it is crucial to start with the education of youth. Some of us have been lucky in our education. I owe my basic beliefs to the quite good education I received as a child growing up on America’s “Space Coast” during the Cold War and our race to the Moon. The rest of it has been a desire to educate myself that comes from I don’t know where. I know I’m relatively rare; I’ve seen who we keep getting for elected officials and the programs they keep foisting on us to keep getting elected. We don’t “lead ourselves” because most of us aren’t willing to lose what we have in order to become tomorrow’s forgotten martyrs. We know that there are not enough of us to affect radical change – and radical change seems to be the only answer. “Blowing the place up” worked once. I hold little hope that it will again, because the general populace does not share a common philosophy in any way, shape, or form. I’m afraid Henry George was right:

A corrupt democratic government must finally corrupt the people, and when a people become corrupt there is no resurrection. The life is gone, only the carcass remains; and it is left for the plowshares of fate to bury it out of sight.

And I’m afraid that Osama Bin Laden and his ilk through their madrassas schools have inculcated a shared philosophy that will allow them to build a new empire on the buried carcass of the West.

Aristotle never said empires had to be benevolent.

Scraping Off the Rust

I was listening to talk radio the other day. I can’t even remember which show it was, but something was said that caught my attention. The speaker said that, while the Right has got talk radio and (to some extent) Fox News and the Right side of the blogosphere, this is a long-haul thing. This is something I’ve alluded to here, when speaking about the cockroach resilience of the Left – they that scatter, mumbling about “repression” and “free speech” when hit with the light of truth and fact, but who come back out once the light has passed, and continue on unscathed and unrepentant.

This person, either an interview subject or a caller, I can’t remember, likened the job to that of keeping the rust on a ship at bay. It’s a job that requires constant labor; sanding, scraping, painting, in order to maintain the ship. If we stop, the rust eventually wins. Well, I’ve been taking a break, at least from the blogosphere end of it. Since I started blogging three years ago, many others have joined their voices, added their scrapers, sanding blocks and paintbrushes to the job. But the force of corrosion haven’t slacked off any, nor do I expect them to. We’ve discussed before the “true believer,” and the opposition is, if nothing else, true believers.

Anyway, I just wanted to post this note to let you know that, even though I’m not posting much, I’m not quitting either. I’ve been spending my downtime (what there is of it) reading and thinking. I’ve been spending quite a bit of time reading up on the philosophers Hobbes, Locke, and Rousseau. I’m trying to finish David Hackett Fischer’s Albion’s Seed, and I have two more books lined up after it, Victor Davis Hanson’s Ripples of Battle: How Wars of the past Still Determine how We Fight, how We Live, and how We Think, and Gordon S. Wood’s Revolutionary Characters: What Made The Founders Different. I’m going to have to order a copy of James Bowman’s Honor: A History because my local Barnes & Noble doesn’t carry it. Before too much longer, I’ll start writing again. For those of you hanging in there, checking in periodically: Thanks. I appreciate it.

I’ll be back.

A Nice, Relaxed Day.

The NoR shoot is coming up next weekend, so I’m spending some time this weekend doing some loading in preparation. I loaded 11.5 lbs of .45 Colt ammo (that sounds somehow more impressive than “200 rounds”), and 200 rounds (so far) of 75 grain Hornady .223 ammo. I’ll load a couple hundred more tomorrow. Hopefully I’ll also manage to do 300 .45 ACP rounds, too. I’ve still got about 400 rounds of .30-06 on en bloc clips in bandoleers, so I won’t have to load any of that.

In the midst of that, I cooked up a damned fine batch of pinto beans, made a trip to the grocery store and (among the regular supplies) got some corn meal and buttermilk so I could make cornbread to go along with it. I also baked a couple dozen Tollhouse cookies (storebought dough, on sale. Better than pre-packaged, not as good as from scratch – but they’ll do.)

If you’re interested, here’s the schedule for the NoR shoot next weekend:

Friday: Dinner, 7:00 PM MST at the Buffalo Chip Saloon and Steakhouse, 6811 E. Cave Creek Rd, Cave Creek, AZ 85331

Directions to the Buffalo Chip Saloon and Steakhouse are available at the website.

Menu, all you can eat:

Smoked Beef
Pulled Pork
Smoked Chicken
Cowboy Beans
Country Slaw
Buns

Cost will be $9.95 plus tax and gratuity; beverages are not included in the price.

Saturday: The Range opens at 7:00 AM MST. Shoot til lunch.

Ben Avery is a public range and shooting stations are first come, first served. We want to get there early and secure some benches together.

How we’re handling lunch is still up in the air.

Shoot some more after lunch.

Saturday evening: Meet at 7:30 PM MST at the Buffalo Chip Saloon and Steakhouse for Dinner and Guest Speaker Alan Korwin who is confirmed, and then have some libations and tell lies. (I would appreciate it if anyone who witnessed me shoot clay pigeons in the air with my 1917 Enfield would show up to corroborate my story!)

Menu, all you can eat:

Flat Iron Steaks
Smoked Chicken
Cowboy Beans
Country Slaw
Honey Butter Biscuits

Cost is $19.95 per person plus tax and gratuity. Beverages are not included.

Sunday: Shoot til lunch. Maybe a picnic at Pioneer Village?

Shoot some more.

Go home tired and happy.

I think I’m going to run out of ammo early on Sunday. That’s why I’m also bringing a 500 round box of .22’s.

C’mon up and join us.

THIS is Why Tam is on My Blogroll!.

Beside the fact that she’s a great gunblogger, she has a wicked sense of humor!

Edited to add:

She’s a damned good writer, too.

Why is it that when some bright spark in the marketing department at Apple, Cannondale, or Pontiac notices that slightly more than 50% of the planet’s population is setters rather than pointers, it gets two column inches on page 24 of the WSJ, but when their counterpart at Remington or Smith & Wesson does likewise, it calls for a panting TeeWee news spot from ABC? Build a Saturn that has room to stow a purse in the front passenger compartment, and nobody notices. Make a SIG small enough to fit in that purse, and shoulders get dislocated in newsrooms across America as folks reach for dusty tomes by Freud. Weird.

Ayup.

I’d Like to Thank…

…everyone who voted for me in the Best Commentary poll at Countertop Chronicles. I won! I’ll be damned!

Other winners were:

Best Gun Pr0nOleg Volk
Most EducationalMr. Completely
Best RantsKim du Toit
Best Legal AnalysisJohn Lott (OK, but check his data!)
Best AggregatorAlphecca
Best Range ReportsMr. Completely (Again!)

Congratulations to everybody nominated. I’m proud to be among such company. (*choke*, *sob*)

Other People’s Ideas

(Sorry about the lull in posting. It wasn’t that Reasonable People took a lot out of me, it’s that I managed to come down with the creeping crud making its way through the rest of the family on Monday. Commenting was about all I was up for for the last few days. It still sounds like a TB ward around here.)

One of the things I often get in comments is that my posts run too long. (No, this is not specifically targeted at you, Mark.) Reasonable People runs about eight and a half printed pages. Why Ballistic Fingerprinting Doesn’t (and Won’t) Work about eleven. Ravenwood dubbed it “Longest post ever.” The self-consciously named Blog that Ate Poughkeepsie runs about seven. I guess Reasonable People ate Cheboygan.

The point is, I’m fully aware that my posts often require a longer than average attention span. I will happily admit that they could be improved with some judicious editing for length and precision. However, while my audience is important to me, and what I’m doing is quite plainly open advocacy (thus necessitating said audience), my posts are more (and admittedly often less) than that.

Mark Alger wrote a piece at Baby Troll Blog that touched on the length of Reasonable People which inspired this post (now that I feel up to writing it.) Here’s the pertinent part for this discussion:

I want to offer this piece of gratuitous advice: an op-ed is 500 words. A regular column maxes out at 1500. By the time you get to 2,000 words, you’re in short story territory. At 7,500 words, you go into novelette mode, and at around 15,000 you make it to novella — which rolls over into a full-blown novel at 40,000 words or so.

Kevin’s post is (by MS Word’s count) 5,692 words. ‘Way too long.

So — as Kev himself might say — the fuck what?

Well, Baby Doll, it’s this: I think his thesis — as vaguely as I understand it — is worthwhile. It deserves consideration. It deserves discussion. It needs to be disseminated far and wide.

There’s a joke among writers. It goes: “Sorry it’s so long; I didn’t have the time to make it short.”

A joke I deliberately used in the post, about word 5,200, which makes me think that Mark didn’t get that far.

Distillation adds to the dwell time on an article, and delay in posting can be deadly to a blog post. By the time you consider and mull over a subject long enough to bake it down to the bare minimum necessary, a couple of days may have gone by. You’re yesterday’s news. Not exactly good for the old relevance quotient.

It’s a lot of pressure. And competing needs drive the blogger — the need to get a post up in a timely manner, versus the need to exposit clearly and with economy his thesis.

As Dirty Harry said in one movie or another, “A man’s got to know his limitations.” And I know I’m not my own best editor. But I’m a blogger. I’m all I’ve got.

I also know I’m not an original thinker. I’m never going to sit under an apple tree and invent the next big thing in mathematics since chaos theory. I studied physics in college for three years before convincing myself that it wasn’t a good choice of major because I’d have to get a PhD before I could get a decent paying job. With just a wee bit of hindsight, and someone else’s quotation, I understand much better why I became an engineer:

Engineering is very different from physics.

A good physicist is a man with original ideas.

A good engineer is a man who makes a design that works with as few original ideas as possible.

Freeman Dyson

I keep that posted above my desk at work. It draws some interesting comments.

I was not suited to a career in physics. I am ideally suited to a career in engineering. I am also not a philosopher, though I study the subject shallowly. What I do, in my spare time, is read and think. I collect bits and pieces; other people’s ideas. I store them in my head, and on my computer, and both consciously and subconsciously fit them together in different ways. I’m interested in what works – in fact, one of the things that caught my attention in Dr. Godwin’s post How I Cured Myself of Leftism was this:

(C)onservatism is not so much based on ideas, but on simply observing what works, and then generalizing from there.

There’s a whole essay on “Right vs. Left” in that sentence, and not what most would expect, I think.

As I explained to Mark in his comments – and as I want to expand on (Run away! Run away!) here, writing this stuff down helps me get my mind around it. I’m still working out my worldview, hopefully based on what works rather than how I’d like it to be. I am a pragmatist, albeit with an ideological bent. If you want evidence of that, slog through the seven quite long pieces of The “Rights” Discussion linked on the left sidebar. Or just the two pieces on Is the Government Responsible for Your Protection?

I write a lot of this stuff to help me figure it out. And if others can follow along for the ride, the more the merrier.

The process goes somewhat like this:

A) Here’s a new (to me) idea.

B) Does it seem logical on its face?

C) Is there evidence to support it?

D) Is there evidence to invalidate it?

E) How reliable is the evidence, either way?

This can take minutes, days, weeks, months. Depends on the idea. I collect these ideas constantly.

F) Does this new (to me) idea support what I already know/believe?

Bear in mind here, I fully understand the difference between knowing via emipirical testing, and believing through mere faith. And I’m also quite aware that what one “knows through empirical testing” can sometimes be proven quite wrong – with the right test. Same for beliefs.

G) Does this new (to me) idea contradict what I already know/believe?

H) Does this new (to me) idea suggest a solution to a problem I already have, suggest a problem I haven’t previously considered, or reinforce a concept from an entirely new angle I hadn’t seen? (Otherwise, it’s not a new idea. It’s a restatement of one I’ve already seen. Though restatement can sometimes be helpful itself.)

Reasonable People is not a stand-alone essay (though it does stand quite well on its own). It’s the third (at least) in a series, beginning with True Believers, followed by March of the Lemmings. Hell, it’s part of a long ongoing theme here – coming conflict due to the the dichotomy between what works and how we’d like it to be. Eric Hoffer’s ideas simply reinforced a concept from an angle I hadn’t considered – a new rising mass-movement. But as soon as I processed his ideas it became pretty obvious what “Bush Derangement Syndrome” represents – the attraction of the “average person on the street” to the early stages of the movement. It is a movement capable, as Dr. Santy said, of “being able to convince normally sane people that the source of all evil in the world is George W. Bush.”

And that idea scares the shit out of me.

So please, pardon me for babbling.

(103 minutes, 1,250 words!)

UPDATE: D’OH! I knew Newspeak wasn’t the right piece when I wrote this seven hours ago. See what happens when you’re in a hurry? Your subconscious wakes you out of a perfectly good sleep to go fix your damned mistake at 1AM. I plead illness as an excuse. The piece has been edited to correct the error.

The Seven Things Meme

Gunscribe over at From the Heartland has tagged me with the latest meme. So, here goes:

Seven things to do before I die

Build my ’67 Fastback big-block Mustang.

Build a true 1,000 yard-capable rifle.

And learn to shoot it well.

Shoot a perfect 40×40 in IHMSA competition (if I ever start shooting IHMSA again.)

Win the lottery (I can dream…)

Buy my dream house. (We remodeled this one because I couldn’t get the house I wanted. Yet.)

Write a book on my philosophy – just so I can get my mind around it all.

Seven things I cannot do

Stay off the internet.

Carry a tune worth a damn.

Sleep peacefully through an entire night.

Speak a foreign language. (Studied Spanish in college. That’s gone. Tried Japanese – gotta try again.)

Type fast enough to keep up with my thoughts. At least not accurately.

Get a pilot’s license. (Don’t think I’d pass a flight physical anyway.)

Read fast enough.

Seven things that attract me to my wife

She knows her priorities: Family first.

She’s fierce: about family, about loyalty, about honor, about everything.

Her sense of humor has warped to match mine – I can make her laugh.

Her laugh.

She thinks – and she’s not afraid to argue her beliefs –especially when they don’t agree with mine. (Post to follow illustrating this)

We understand each others space – and we need it. Both of us.

The way she…. No, can’t talk about that. (But WHOA!)

Seven things I say most often

This is Kevin, how may I help you? (To the customers.)

Let me drop everything and work on your problem. (To the salesmen.)

(Recently) It’s how much?

(Also recently) Put it on the card.

(Most especially recently) Aren’t we finished yet?

Sweet bleeding jebus. (Nod to Acidman for that one.)

Thank you. (Really. I say that a lot.)

Seven Books (or series) that I love

The General by S.M. Stirling and David Drake – consists of five books, The Forge, The Hammer, The Anvil, The Steel, The Sword. I read it about once a year.

Eric Flint’s 1632 and all of its ancillary works. Hell of an alternate universe he’s created there.

Lois McMaster Bujold’s Vorkosigan Saga – all of it. And pretty much anything else Lois writes.

The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Vol. I. I first read this collection of classics from the Golden Age of SF when I was about thirteen. It absolutely hooked me on science fiction. Incredible collection of short stories. And it’s back in print, too.

Heinlein’s The Moon is a Harsh Mistress. I own everything by Heinlein except his last/first, posthumously published novel. The quality of his work faded a bit with his health, but The Moon is a Harsh Mistress helped mold my political outlook, and it’s a damned fine read to boot.

John D. MacDonald’s Travis McGee novels.

Robert B. Parker’s Spenser novels. These last two greatly influenced my personal philosophy.

And seven isn’t nearly enough to cover my favorites.

Seven Movies I watch Over and Over again

I don’t really do this, except when I stumble upon them on TV, but here’s a few:

Pretty much anything with John Wayne in it, but especially The Quiet Man, The Shootist, Big Jake, True Grit, and Rooster Cogburn.

Laurence of Arabia – as long as it’s shown in letterbox. Without commercial interruption.

Aliens – perhaps the best SF action flick ever.

Seven Suckers I want to infect

Steven Den Beste

Ravenwood

Doc Russia

Fran Porretto

Mike of Feces Flinging Monkey

C. Dodd Harris – Leave it as a comment, Dodd.

Ry Jones

Here’s the questions:

Seven things to do before I die
Seven things I cannot do
Seven things that attract me to (…)
Seven things I say most often
Seven books (or series) that I love
Seven movies I watch over and over again (or would if I had time)
Seven people I want to join in, too.