I just spent the last hour and a half working on a killer post, and I just deleted it – BY ACCIDENT.
Rule #1: Back up your work.
Rule #2: See rule #1.
It’s too late to generate it again tonight, but rest assured I’ll do it tomorrow.
DAMNIT!
The Smallest Minority on earth is the individual. Those who deny individual rights cannot claim to be defenders of minorities. – Ayn Rand
I just spent the last hour and a half working on a killer post, and I just deleted it – BY ACCIDENT.
Rule #1: Back up your work.
Rule #2: See rule #1.
It’s too late to generate it again tonight, but rest assured I’ll do it tomorrow.
DAMNIT!
Over at The Commentary. (Sorry, permalinks don’t work there.)
It looks like we’re having a communication problem, even though I’ve refrained from the 5,000 word posts.
No blogging tomorrow. I’ll be out of state all day, probably returning late. Sorry.
I get linked by the 800lb gorilla of blogdom, and I’m swamped and unable to post new, gripping, insightful stuff.
Not only do I not have time to blind you with brilliance, I don’t have time to baffle you with bull#^!t.
My posting will be restricted all week, and possibly for some time. Apparently the economy is improving.
Hopefully I be able to get something worthwhile in in the evenings, but I’m not promising much.
To new visitors, please read the “Best Posts.” They might make your visit worthwhile. And remember, this is a new blog. Don’t expect War and Peace.
Thank you for your attention. We now return you to our regular programming.
Now I know what it’s like to be linked to by the Blogfather.
YOWZA! Talk about traffic!
Thank you, Professor Reynolds!
UPDATED 6/17/03 because of image server problems
Want to see the power of Instapundit?
I started this blog May 14. On June 2 I won the inaugural New Blog Showcase competition. The evening of June 8 Glenn Reynolds linked to the Chuck Asay cartoon. Here’s the hit trend for the last month:
Nothing further need be said.
According to Sitemeter, over the last two hours this site has been hammered by visitors.
Who do I thank?
The Truth Laid Bear’s New Blog Showcase is up for its second week of competition. In a stunning come-from-behind fashion (and no one was more stunned than I) my blog won the inaugural competition last week. As a result, I got a LOT of traffic, and quite a few links.
It seems only fair that I pay back that largess by voting on a couple of contenders out of this week’s entries.
I believe that blogging is about to take off like CB radio did back in the late 70’s. Steven Den Beste stated that 90% of the blogs out there right now are crap, and I’m afraid that he’s largely correct, but the difference between CB and blogging is that feedback is immediate, and it’s a positive loop correction mechanism. If you’re crap, nobody links to you or reads you. There is no equivalent to slapping a 100W booster on your station and using a Moonraker to wipe out everybody within 50 miles. And good bloggers have come to act as really excellent corrective feedback loops on the mainstream media, as the recent New York Times debacle, and the even more recent Guardian fauxs pax have proven.
So I found this entry by The Blog Herald really interesting: Europe goes to the Blogs. Freedom of speech is a wonderful thing. Lets hope that it reaches Iraq very, very soon.
I also liked Rkayn Knowledge’s post of Tuesday, June 3 (scroll down, the link may be bloggered) concerning the state of judicial nominees. Fact checking Elanor Clift of (and) Newsweak. See what I’m talking about? Corrective feedback. Pass this one around. The Truth Shall Make You Free.
I WANT to read Graham Lester’s column, “A Nonbeliever’s Defense of Religion,” just on the strength of the blurb he put up on TruthLaidBear’s site, but apparently Blogger isn’t the only service to have problems. I get a “Cannot find server” error at this time. I’ll give him a vote anyway.
My final vote this go-round goes to DANEgeurs’s quite well-done fisking of Gary Hart. More feedback!
It will be interesting to see who wins this week.
Feces Flinging Monkey points to this really cool animated illustration of the growth of “shall issue” CCW in the U.S. He notes that he found the link at Lead and Gold.
Ah, I love interconnectedness.
At least not until much later. I have honeydo’s to do, and I’m going to load some ammo. I’m going to the range tomorrow. I want to play with my “new” 1917 Enfield (made by Winchester in 1918) and my Kimber Custom Stainless .45. And maybe my 1896 Swede (Carl Gustaf, 1916). And yes, both rifles are sporterized (not “bubba-ized”).
No, I’m not narcissistic. That’s a line from a Bette Midler movie that has stuck with me like a popcorn husk between molars, for some reason. (Quiz: Which movie?)
This blog is precisely two weeks old today. I’m coming up on 300 site hits, and I’ve got a couple of readers who return and spend some time. I’ve got a little bit of linkage already. I’ve put up some pretty serious stuff, and some pretty silly stuff, and some funny stuff. Hopefully it’s been enough to give you an idea of the personality sitting on the other side of the glowing phosphors or oscillating liquid crystals banging this stuff out. I thought I’d spend a few minutes fleshing out some details about moi, your gentle host.
I’m 41. I spent most of my life being 35, so it was kind of a relief actually hitting that age chronologically. Then I hit 40. 40 hit back. I’m married, have been coming up on eight years. I have a daughter (step), 24, and two grandkids, 4 (girl) and 3 (boy). They all live here with us. (Those three years of just me and my wife are but a distant, glimmering memory now…)
I am who I am, I think, primarily because of reading. I feel pity for people who don’t or won’t or can’t read for pleasure. Short of a bodice-ripper, I don’t think there’s a book out there that can’t teach you something. (Oh, wait. Battlefield Earth…No, that taught me never to read L. Ron Hubbard again.) My primary influence was Science Fiction. At about 12, I discovered The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Vol. I, and I was never the same kid again. I went for SF, and I found Robert Anson Heinlein.
Exposing a pre-pubescent to R.A. Heinlein is a dangerous thing. Especially when you set him up with things like Have Spacesuit, Will Travel, and The Menace From Earth, and then you hit him between the eyes with Starship Troopers and The Moon is a Harsh Mistress. And then follow those with Stranger in a Strange Land and Time Enough for Love. Anything that man wrote, I read. Even his crap was better than most people’s best work.
But I also read Asimov, Clarke, Poul Anderson, Theodore Sturgeon, Robert Silverberg, James Blish, Jerry Pournelle, Larry Niven, Ben Bova, Alan Dean Foster, Piers Anthony… Many more. It’s called “speculative fiction” for a reason. It awoke, or at least encouraged, an interest in how things work – from cars to guns to computers to governments. But Heinlein’s responsible for my politics. I found Henry Louis Mencken and P.J. O’Rourke much later. By then the foundation had set.
I’m not a Libertarian, though. Nor am I a Republican or a Democrat (though that’s what my voter registration says – I like screwing with their primaries.) I’m sure as hell not a Green. I don’t “affiliate.” I figure that anyone willing to run for elective office should be immediately disqualified. At least, anyone willing to run for national office. I’ve forgotten who said it, but someone did: “Anyone who rises to the level of national politics is either a cutthroat or a useful idiot.” Or both. The ones that are both are the really dangerous ones.
My politics and my personal philosophy are also based in the works of two other writers: John D. MacDonald, and Robert B. Parker. Their characters of Travis McGee and Spenser, which I read through my adolescence, resonated with my personal sense of rightness and honor, socially responsible independance: in short – morality.
Since this is becoming a bibliography, I thought I’d throw in a list of my favorite books. The order is not absolute, but generally accurate:
1. The Moon is a Harsh Mistress
, Robert A. Heinlein
2. Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Vol. I, Edited by Robert Silverburg
3. Dune, Frank Herbert – possibly the most finely constructed novel I have ever had the pleasure to read.
4. Understanding Physics, Isaac Azimov (non-fiction) – A trilogy, excellent for a high-school student. Clear explanations of basic physics for the layman.
5. The Past Through Tomorrow – A Future History, Heinlien, a collection of his short stories tied together.
6. Barrayar, Lois McMaster Bujold. Hell, ANYTHING she writes with Miles Vorkosigan in it, but Barrayar has one of my favorite scenes.
7. Asimov’s Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and Technology:, Isaac Asimov – a chronological compilation of short biographies of history’s greatest scientific thinkers.
8. 1632, Eric Flint – If you consider yourself a patriotic American, this book is a helluva romp. And an interesting history lesson.
9. The Deed of Paksennarion, Elizabeth Moon. This is a fantasy, which I don’t read a great deal of, and the story drags a bit in the middle, but the ending redeems it. Wholly.
10. The General, David Drake. A five-part series that I’ve re-read probably ten times.And that’s the SHORT list. At present, I’ve got something like 1,000 books in the house, and that’s only because I had to get rid of 400 or so because I had no more space to store them (kids, you know.)
I’m a shooter. I don’t hunt, though I might eventually do some varminting. I like to go to the range with two or three guns and spend the day shooting. I like hitting small things far away, and many things fast up close. I reload, so I can afford to shoot. I still don’t get to shoot as much as I’d like, and now blogging has cut seriously into my reloading time, but it’s worth it. Blogging’s cheaper, I’ll give it that.
Oh well, enough for now. I might expand on this later, or I might not. That’s what blogging is about.
Yesterday we celebrated my daughter’s 24th birthday by having a picnic in the park in the afternoon, but I spent the majority of the morning working on “The Blog that Ate Poughkeepsie”.
I got home about 9:00 PM and was up until 12:30AM last night finshing it. Then I had to get up at 5:30 this morning so I could run my IHMSA pistol match. (Every 4th Sunday of the month at Tucson Rifle Club.) I got back home about 2:00 PM and took a nap. Right now, my wife, daughter, and grandkids are over at my in-laws. The silence is nice. I’ve been catching up on my reading.
Steven Den Beste has a post up concerning England joining the EU that I find worrying. Hell, I find the EU worrying, because as far as I’m concerned there are no checks and balances to restrain the power of the EU government with relation to the member countries, nor the individual citizens of those countries. A “United States of Europe” it’s not.
Rachel’s grandfather died. Drop her an e-mail with your condolences, if you would.
Michelle’s prepubescent husband had another birthday. What is he now? 16? :^)
Emperor Misha is on a roll with his continuing phillipics concerning the Islamofascists™
The Volokh Conspiracy has moved. Change your bookmarks.
Instapundit has links to two articles concerning Germany – one on the political ramifications of its opposition to the war in Iraq, and one on Germany’s collapsing economy. And, Glenn, I’m no econoblogger either – but it worries me too.
Kim du Toit has contributed again to the American economy by finding a reasonably priced M1 Carbine. And lots of ammo for it. (Why couldn’t I have married Connie? Ah, well, I don’t think it’s possible to have done better in the wife department than I did. I’ll just have to envy Kim’s gun collection.)
Clayton Cramer hasn’t posted since Friday, but what he lacks in quantity he makes up in quality.
Ravenwood has some good stuff up. Scroll down to “Government Schools at Work.” Then weep for our lost children.
Acidman is on hiatus. He’s gone to illegally fish for trout. (At least he’s not using dynamite.)
Comments are still open over at Bill Whittle’s Eject! Eject! Eject! for his most recent post Magic. He has over 300 now on just that one post. I will not envy, I will not envy, I will not envy…..
Frank at IMAO is offering the really cool “Nuke the Moon” T-shirt.
And finally, Courtney has a truly evil plan to stuff Acidman’s e-mail while he is gone fishin’ with – and I quote – “every annoying e-card, pics of cuddly kittens, and e-hugs we can find. Want to join in?”
BUWHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!! Um, no. No I do not. Really. No, I’m not kidding…..
I’m off work tomorrow, but I’ll have honeydo’s to get done. Hopefully I’ll get some blogging in. And I can’t WAIT to see what Jack will have to say in response to my last two posts to The Commentary. Hopefully I didn’t blow one of his frontal lobes.