GOF Update

As I posted at the beginning of the month, commenter Grumpy Old Fart lost his mother and his home early in December.  He left this comment this morning:

Okay, I have a paypal account. Sorry I took so long to reply, but internet access has been… problematic. However, with that said, I know basically nothing at all about paypal, so I don’t know what good it does or how to tell you to link to it.

With luck, I’ll still have consistent internet access for another day or two, so feel free to let me know what I should be doing with all this. Life has been… interesting lately, in an ancient Chinese curse kind of way.

I think he may be badly needing some other stuff, too.

The stuff I need most is stuff nobody can help me with. The Red Cross has been very good with the basics, clothes, toiletries and such, to the point where for a while I had more stuff than I had places to put it. The glaring issue right now is that I no longer have a picture ID, a SS card, or even a birth certificate. At this point my biggest problem is convincing anyone that I exist at all.

Kevin, you should have my email address in your contacts, so feel free to get in touch with me. You can understand why I’m unwilling to post it on a public forum. I tend to trust the people who post here, but that’s probably not the entire list of people who could conceivably see this either.

Ship-to address is something I’m a lot more comfortable with however:

1350 Rikisha Ln.
Beaumont, TX 77706

Thanks, folks. Just knowing you care makes more difference than you probably realize. Since that’s something you don’t really get a feel for until you’re in a position like this, I hope none of you ever do realize it either.

For your PayPal account, all we need is the email address you use for it, I believe.

UPDATE:  First things first, I just traded emails with GOF.  He needs a computer:

I have some contract work writing for a publishing company in the UK, but since my computer burned I’m having to start all that from scratch as well. More to the point, until I get another computer, I can’t even make a start at redoing all the work I lost.

So… what do I need that you can provide? The only thing I can think of is funds toward another computer. That should probably go into paypal, since the donation account is pretty much meant for bill money.

Anybody got something they can spare?  Can we get together and buy him something?

FAIL!

The first rule of blogging is “post something every day.” 

Yeah, right.

I’ve been really busy with work and some extracurricular activities and haven’t had much of an urge to put pixel to flatscreen recently, so sorry about that.  I’m even sorrier to admit that things don’t look to improve much in the near future, either, so once again the free ice cream machine is on the fritz.

Things will resume when they resume.  Not making any promises at this point.

Happy Freakin’ New Year – Bumped

I’m going to keep this at the top of the page for awhile.  Scroll down for any new content.

Reader (and prolific commenter) Grumpy Old Fart left this comment on the latest Moment of Zen post on Christmas day.  I am remiss in not seeing it earlier:

On December 1st, my mother’s house burned to the ground, with all my worldly goods in it (I had been living there for the last several years taking care of her while she was fighting cancer). On December 8th, a week later almost to the minute, she passed away at the age of 82.
Thanks, I have been badly needing a moment of Zen.

I think he may be badly needing some other stuff, too.

Let us know, GOF.  We’re here for you.

UPDATE:  There’s a Facebook page and a link to a donations page.  GOF, set yourself up a PayPal account, and I’ll link to it, too.  And get me a ship-to address.

What to Take, What to Take…

I’m getting ready for tomorrow’s Central Arizona Blog Shoot.  I’ve decided to take the .458 SOCOM, the Garand (a perennial favorite at these things), the 1917 Enfield (as it shoots the same ammo as the Garand), the new Smith 629, the Power Tool™, and my XP-100.  Oddly, I don’t have pictures of either the SOCOM or the ’17.  Looks like turnout is going to be a dozen or so. 

Should be a good time.  Hope you can make it.

The 2013 TSM Year in Review

Last year I almost didn’t do this post.  This year, I forgot about it until about 11PM, so it goes up today.  Next year…?

January:

I did not post all that much in January, just 39 pieces and only one long one – a fisking of an op-ed by Dr. James J. Magee, Professor of Political Science and International Relations for the University of Delaware. I may not have a doctorate, but I know more history and law than the good Professor apparently does.

I got my first new gun of the year by trading in an old one: my ’94 Winchester rifle for a ’92 Winchester carbine clone made by Rossi. It was a good trade.  The Rossi is very handy as opposed to the 24″ barreled ’94.

February:

I was a little more prolific in February, but then Tucson got SNOWPOCALYPSEDDr. Benjamin Carson appeared on the political scene and rapidly became an un-person.  The LAPD went completely insane when one of their own went rogue, and they decided to shoot at anything… well, ANYTHING.  Apparently the LAPD has been using these targets in their firearms training.

The nice ladies they shot up are OK.  None of the cops involved suffered disciplinary action of any kind.

Joe Biden advised people – women especially – that they don’t need “assault rifles,” they need double-barreled shotguns!  Which he then advised them to use in an illegal manner.  Way to go, Joe.

March:

I cranked it up in March.  One Quote of the Day has particular application to a much more recent one.  I got my second new (to me) gun of the year (one gun a month!  Yea!!!)  And I first noticed that all of the .22 ammo was gone.  I had my first disagreement with 9th Circuit Judge Alex Kozinski.  Hey, nobody’s perfect.  Magpul announced that, in the wake of Colorado’s anti-gun legislation, they would be leaving the state.  It took them a while to get their ducks in a row, but they’re following through with it.

I got ANOTHER gun (two in one month!!)  But I sold my .308 700-5R to finance the purchase.

In perhaps the most important post of that month (or possibly the year), the question of the reliability of the UK’s homicide statistics was raised.  That question has still not been answered to my satisfaction.

And, finally, as the implementation of Obamacare bore down upon us, I reviewed the predictions made about it before, during, and immediately after its passage.

We were wrong.  It was worse.

April:

I started April off with a bang with Burying Them Won’t Save Them.  It was not an April Fool’s post.  I discovered that it wasn’t just .22 ammo you couldn’t get – I couldn’t find .300 Win Mag brass either.  A post I really liked:  What Takes 55,000 Hp Just to Run the Fuel Pump?  I spent two weeks in Houston for training, and then got to spend the following weekend at the NRA convention.  April’s überpost Gun Control was written after it became apparent that no new federal gun-control legislation was going to be passed in 2013.

I still need to get this T-shirt.

May:

I cranked out more posts in May (52) than any other month.  I got to meet a bunch of bloggers for the first time at the NRA convention and associated dinners.  And the enthusiasm of the gun-control crowd at the convention was awe-inspiring.  (I actually said “Awwwwww.”)  The media, of course, has not let up its constant drumbeat.  They breathlessly informed us that, despite skyrocketing gun sales since 2008, in fact there are fewer gun owners now than some arbitrary number of years ago.  I fisked, but this meme still has legs today.

The blog turned ten.  That’s what, seventy in Internet years?

The media, in the guise of the Chicago Tribune, showed its first cracks in covering up for Obama.  I wrote about it.  Even Piers Morgan gave pause

May’s überpost was Government v3.0, Confidence and Preference Cascades wherein I discussed the idea that we’re on the cusp of a transformation equivalent to the Industrial Revolution as far as .gov is concerned.  I was not sanguine about the possibility (and remain so).

June:

June posting started off with a bang, literallyThe IRS scandal was making waves (though the media has done as much as possible to ignore it.)  The New York Times took up the “overreach” meme, as further cracks in the Obama media armor opened.

The post with possibly the highest number of comments for the year was I Don’t Like Your Face, Obama.  Either One of Them.  Not a lot of words, but three videos.  252 comments.  The Usual Suspect was involved.

I got my Arizona CCW renewed.  114 days after submitting the application.  They’re a little busy, even though Arizona is now a Constitutional Carry state and you don’t need a permit unless you want reciprocity with other states.

I got a new T-shirt.  It inspired a post.

July:

The big news for July was the overturning of Chicago’s ban on concealed carry:  And Then There Were None.

A couple of young men took the law into their own hands took Robert Peel’s Seventh Principal at face value and saved a young child from a predator.  Stuff like this should get wider coverage.

George Zimmerman was found not guilty by a jury of his peers in a court of law after being tried in the press.  Iowahawk got a QotD on the topic as well.

And, after six years here and uncounted comment threads 100 responses or longer, our lone perpetual Leftist was voted off the island.  It was a very close thing.  Apparently he still visits frequently, but has made it quite clear I’m not wanted in his comments.  Fair enough.

But that’s OK, a post very shortly afterward drew over 100 comments without him.

August:

I was kinda busy in August.  Lots of Quotes of the Day, not much original content.

Not my content, but worth the read:  I Love My People.

And I discovered the webcomic Failure to Fire.  Definitely NSFW, but fun, nonetheless.

September:

The Gun Blogger Rendezvous, of course!  Drove up this year in my 2002 F-250 diesel, 13 hours and 40 minutes door-to-door.  Sure could carry a lot more people and their stuff than the ‘Stang.  Fuel costs, though…  STILL haven’t won a gun there, but I did get TWO Crimson trace lasers.  (Haven’t sent in the certificate for the second one yet.)

Before the Rendezvous, though, I introduced my readers to Dr. Grover Furr, Stalin denialist.

Good news from Colorado.  After passing gun control legislation, two State Senators lost their seats in a recall election.  Think THAT got politician’s attention nationwide?

Dilbert’s mom came out as a Tea Partier.

There was another rampage shooting, this time at the Navy Yard in D.C.  The media was its usual self, with layers of fact-checkers and editorial oversight.  Oddly, when the perpetrator turned out not to be a middle-aged white male member of the Tea Party who used a shotgun instead of an “assault rifle,” they lost interest.  Instead, they brought out the drums made from the skins of dead children.

The Pima County Sheriff’s Department got a slap on the wrist for killing veteran José Guerena in 2011 for the crime of having a scummy brother.  No officers were disciplined, not even for the Keystone Kops routine they performed in front of Guerena’s home as they killed him.

And we all prepared for a .gov shutdown!

October:

As Obamacare implementation loomed ever closer and the healthcare.gov website fired up, those cracks in the façade we were seeing started to widen.

A .gov shutdown?  I guess dead kids aren’t really that important when politics are involved!

I got another gun!  (Traded in for it, too.) What is that now, four for the year?

With the .gov shutdown in full swing, the Obama administration, through the mechanism of the National Park Service, cranked up the pettiness to eleven.  The media, of course, paid little attention.  Cracks in the façade, yes, but lots of spackle to cover ’em up.  Bill Whittle, however, was paying attention.

The Republicans surrendered, of course, but they just play the game badly – not realizing that the old rules no longer apply.

The For the CHIIIILLLLDREN! drumbeat was taken up again.  Spackle over the cracks, distract, obfuscate.  Still, the Obamacare debacle pushed those cracks wider.  “It’s like peeling an onion of fail,” said Instapundit.

November:

In November, I received an email from someone who claimed to be an Obamacare insider.  I see no reason to doubt their story.

More and more people began feeling the bite of the “Affordable” “Care” Act.

I got my last new gun of the year, a Lew Horton custom .44 Magnum, circa 2001.  Five guns this year, but only two additions to my collection arsenal.

In desperation over the disastrous implementation of his signature legislation, Obama keeps making law up on the fly. Eleven state Attorney’s General have sent a letter to HHS head Sebelius declaring his actions illegal.  But that doesn’t matter – they’re all Republicans.  Which makes this QotD more telling.

The Chicago Tribune doubled-down on its position first expressed in May.  I was starting to have some glimmer of hope.  Nah, not really.

And, in November, the Democrats finally detonated the “nuclear option” in the Senate, after railing against it most eloquently (and accurately) in 2005.  I called them on their hypocrisy.

Former Enron adviser Paul Krugman compared Obamacare with Benghazi.  He said it, I didn’t.

And, finally, December:

It was a light month for posting, as I’ve been VERY busy.  The only real post of note that month was about a legal decision in the 9th Circus with ANOTHER outstanding dissent by Chief Judge Alex Kozinski.  Too bad his best work seems to be in dissent of poor decisions.

And another calendar year slips by.  Amazing how they seem to do that faster and faster each year.  Five more months, and this blog will be eleven years old.  I’m not sure at this point how much longer I’ll keep it up.  It’s time-consuming as hell, and I find I am repeating and repeating and repeating what I’ve said years before.  I don’t know. We’ll see what comes.

Anyway, a happy new year to you all, and let’s hope 2014 turns out to be better than any of us have any right to expect.

Ice Cream Machine is Broken

Sorry about the recent lack of posting, especially original content.  I’m working on an überpost on political civility, but it’ll be a while before it’s done.  The link-hunting is like drinking from a fire hose again, and each click takes me on a wiki-wander into Never-Neverland.

I’m reminded why I don’t write these things as often anymore as I used to.

So, for your entertainment, please let me point you to Texts from Superheroes.  One of these made me literally laugh until tears came, and there are PAGES of them!

Central Arizona Blogshoot!

No, we won’t be shooting blogs.

Or bloggers.

The date has been set for the (mumble, mumble, mumble…) annual Central Arizona Blogshoot:  Sunday, January 5, 2014, at the Elsy Pearson Public Shooting Range in Casa Grande, beginning at 0700 and running until we get tired and go home. 

Same as last year, the range opens at 7:00AM. There are no rangemasters. There are no chairs – bring something to sit on. The firing line is covered and there are concrete shooting benches, however.

And the city has porta-potties out there on a permanent basis, so we don’t have to rent our own (but bring your own TP just in case.)

The rules are pretty simple:


No explosives, no .50BMG rifles, clean up after yourself, don’t be a dick.

The rifle range is 300 yards deep with the first berm at 200.  The mountains that form the ultimate backstop are another 300 yards out and farther.  The ground there is reinforced concrete disguised as sun-baked clay. Forget about any target stand that needs to stick into the ground, it ain’t happenin’ short of bringing a sledghammer. Steel and targets that don’t need taping are best. And the benches are funky-shaped. Regular camping chairs are marginal, stools are better. I bring a folding chair, a target stand made of 2″ PVC pipe, and my steel swingers. I also have some .22 rimfire rated rolling targets made of steel.

The other other Kevin will be bringing an M1903, at least 2 AR’s, some pistols and a scattergun or two along with a clay flinger and some clays.  I haven’t decided exactly what I’ll be bringing, but my 1917 Enfield will definitely be coming.  I’d like to try some clays with it again.

I recommend you bring:  water or other non-alcoholic beverages (no alcohol on the range), sunscreen, ear and eye protection.  Ladies, don’t wear anything low-cut or open-necked.  Yes, I’m sure it looks lovely, but you don’t want to catch hot brass down in there.  OPTIONAL:  Something to shoot with, and something to shoot AT.  If you’re a reader or a non-gun blogger interested in coming to a off-the-cuff funshoot, please come on down!  I imagine most of us will be bringing multiple firearms and lots of ammo, but if you don’t, well, I’m willing to let people shoot my stuff (with my ammo), and I’m willing to let them shoot at my targets.

If you’re coming, please let us know in comments, or on the Facebook Event page.

New Playground

Apparently, some time ago I became a member of the website Quora.com.  I recently discovered that they discuss gun control there.

I’ve been spending some quality time there, rather than here.  I figure the TSM audience is what it is after ten years, so I’m spreading the love to a new group.  So far it’s been kinda fun, since most of my research is already done, and all I have to do is dig through my archives for the data and quotes I want to use.  It appears that most of what I post is new to people there.

(*sigh*)

My work is never done.