TSM: 2009 In Review

Time once again for the annual blogging retrospective. It has been an odd year, I’ll give it that. I spent the first three months finishing up a project that was supposed to take six weeks, living out of town five nights out of seven and working 65+ hours a week. That ate into my free time pretty heavily, but the pay was good. Consequently, my blogging was a bit lighter than usual – more linky, less thinky. No Überpost for January. I spent some of that overtime on firearms, though. My Boomershoot pistol, for one, and my first pistol chambered in 9mm Europellet, an original early 70’s Browning Hi Power.

February started off interestingly. I got to be the guest of a local radio talk show to discuss my blog and gunblogging in general, and was pleased that a reader from the UK, Phil R., called in. He was listening in Oxford, England to a radio station in Tucson, Arizona through the miracle of the internet. I got to meet Phil later in the year.

I did manage an Überpost in February – Confidence, Part III, a decidedly pessimistic look at the future of our nation. Upon re-reading it, I don’t believe I’d retract a word. Perhaps as compensation for my pessimism I began the fairly regular posting of “Moment of Zen” images in February, as well.

In March, I reprinted a slightly altered version of Orlando Sentinel columnist Charley Reese’s timeless piece, The 545 People Responsible for All of America’s Woes. It’s titled Rope, Trees, Some Assembly Required. Worth a re-read. I also got an Instalanche – once again for somebody else’s work: The Debt Star.

March was also the month that our .gov tried to make once-fired milsurp brass unavailable to reloaders. An immediate, vociferous campaign got that idea quashed.

It was in March that the idea was floated to “invest” .gov money into the Big Three auto makers to bail them out of the hole they’d dug themselves. Now that GM stands for “Government Motors,” a letter from Gregory Knox, President of Knox Machinery Co. and a supplier to GM on the subject of that “bailout” is good for another read as well.

In April we were introduced to “Scotgo” – Mr. James Kelly of Scotland who is wholly in favor of gun and knife bans in order to feel safer. I spent some time debunking him.

On a lighter note, I printed a series of cartoons that rag on engineers that month, too.

Tucson had its April 15th TEA Party, and I got some time to attend and take some pictures. Pretty good crowd!

Also, in an event almost as misguided as the Rachel Corrie Memorial Pancake Breakfast, family members of the Virginia Tech massacre victims held a memorial run. Not the message I think they really wanted to promote.

In other news, we got to see the first “rightwing extremist” picked up and questioned: a Texan grandmother. Her crime? Sending the President and congresscritters the tabs from teabags.

In surprise of epic proportions, the NINTH CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS found in favor of INCORPORATING THE INDIVIDUAL RIGHT TO ARMS UNDER THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT. I still have a hard time with that concept. The point is pretty much moot given that the Supreme Court will be taking up that question this year, but still, that was a shocker. Fifth Circuit, yes. Ninth Circuit? Who knew that you could get three intellectually honest judges on the same court at the same time?

Finally, Boomershoot was in April. My shooting partner and I drove up (two days each way) and had a helluva good time. All I have to say is: four four-inch square targets in a row at a laser-measured 640 yards.

May brought me more evidence (as if I needed it) that our public education system has pretty much entirely collapsed with Ballistic Deanimation‘s Dumbing Down.

Bill Whittle advocated for pitchforks and torches for the first time. In response, I wrote an open letter to Bill asking him to pen the current equivalent of Common Sense. He actually responded in comments.

I did manage an Überpost that month, on gun control no less! Entitled Cultures: Compare and Contrast, it was the concluding piece of my exchanges with Mr. James Kelly (first introduced in April).

TSM turned six on the opening day of the NRA convention, held this year just a couple of hours up the road in Phoenix. Much fun was had by all! I was introduced to Para USA’s new GI Expert, a very slightly modified 1911 model, and arranged through Kerby Smith to get one as a raffle prize for the forth annual Gun Blogger Rendezvous. The opening teaser was announced in May.

The Überpost of the month was a fisking of a New England Journal of Medicine piece by a couple of lawyers – Ah, Yes, the “Guns as Disease Vector” Meme! In a fit of confession, I admit that Phil’s link to the piece from Random Nuclear Strikes was an amusing ego boost.

June brought us solid evidence of Obama’s promise that the Stimulus Bill would help keep unemployment down was like all political promises – bullshit. Now that I count myself among the unemployed, it has particular piquance.

I posted a comment by LabRat in its entirety as Quote-of-the-Day because of the sheer beauty and skill she brought to the use of the Clue-by-Four.

Something really weird happened in Italy that involved apparently counterfeit U.S. Bearer Bonds in the sum of $134.5 billion. There was some follow-up on the story, but all the questions have not been answered to my satisfaction.

I added another firearm to my collection, an EAA Witness Match in .38 Super.

Video of the first new Government Motors production automobile was released.

Arizona resident Janet Contreras sent a declaration to Glenn Beck. I don’t think it represents the thinking of a majority of Americans, but it would be nice if a significant minority of us all shared her views. No Überpost this month.

In July Al Franken was finally sworn in as Minnesota’s junior senator. Instapundit had the snark.

In a bit of follow-on to my exchange with James Kelly, the UK’s Daily Mail reported in July that Britain is the most violent country in Europe. How’s that gun- and knife-control working out for you?

We were also reminded that Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged is once again selling like hotcakes. A lot of things she warned against in that novel are apparently coming to pass. Much mirth in the comments, though. Later in the month, someone came up with a graphic that was worth repeating.

Raffle ticket sales for the Para USA GI Expert opened, proceeds going to benefit Project Valour IT. Things would get bumpy, quickly. PayPal shut down all contributions to Soldier’s Angels because of the raffle shortly after it began. I was not amused.

I issued yet another debate invitation to one Marc Rubin, an Examiner columnist who believes that the Second Amendment “has nothing to do with an individual right to own a gun.” He emailed me a reply. My response was Überpost of the Month.

August brought us a piece of artwork that had the Left in a full-blown tizzy.

Thanks to new Rendezvous sponsor Luckygunner.com, ticket sales for the GI Expert raffle resumed.

I joined the EeePCArmy.

Ted Kennedy died. Brewers and distillers worldwide had massive layoffs in mourning.

I wrote Restoring the Lost Constitution. (Brief, for me, but still pessimistic!)

There was some response to that post which prompted the first post of September – Entropy Happens. Then I drove up to Reno for Gun Blogger Rendezvous IV. Damn, what a good time! Reader Phil R. from Oxford, England (remember, he called in when I was on the radio in February) traveled all the way to Reno to meet a bunch of gunbloggers and do some shooting. Alan Gura attended, and gave about a one-hour presentation. We raised $8,243.80 for Project Valour IT – about four times what we raised the previous year. Yea us!

September also brought us the ACORN scandal. Even Jon Stewart was embarrassed by the media’s lack of coverage of this story. Someone else illustrated the media flow-chart used in determining how to classify opposition to President Obama.

I bought another Mustang. It’s not a ’67 big-block fastback, but it runs and I’m not afraid to drive it. I wreck this one, and I’m only out a couple grand.

I tried recipe blogging for the first time. People liked it! And the Supreme Court granted cert. on McDonald v. Chicago. Alan Gura will once again be arguing in front of the Supreme Court for our right to arms. Go Alan!

October brought us further evidence that Dan Rather has lost his mind.

I recommended that the sane members of British society run like hell.

The Überpost of the Month was on the topic of whether health care is a right or not. (Hint: It’s not.)

In sadder news, Melanie Hain, outspoken advocate for open carry, was killed by her husband in a murder-suicide. Gun ban proponents hailed Mr. Hain’s actions, but it was just one more example of “how dare you leave me!” Mr. Hain was an “only one.” “Gun control” would not have kept him from possessing a firearm.

Obama “won” the Nobel Peace Prize. The world’s general reaction: “For WHAT?” In related news, a former speechwriter for Edwards, Clinton and Obama moves to Massachusetts – a state with mandated Universal Health Care – and finds that she can’t afford it.

Further evidence is found that the bias of the New York Times goes back to at least 1898.

Reader Phil B., a UK expat now living in New Zealand (not to be confused with Phil R., a doctorate student studying in Oxford), wrote a helluva comment on the decline of (formerly) Great Britain that I had to make a post of its own.

I went to the 5th Annual Big Sandy Machine Gun Shoot up near Wikieup, AZ. Just damn!

In the Überpost for October, I recommend that we nuke our education system and start over. It’s too far gone to save. Unfortunately, we have the same problem there we have with our political system – nothing and no one to replace it with. The edumacation system has over the last 100 years or so ensured that we no longer have a population sufficiently well educated and moral to do the job.

British police announce that for the first time there would be armed foot patrols in certain sections of London. Not only would the officers be armed, they’d be carrying submachineguns. There was much wailing and gnashing of teeth. The proposal was later rescinded, and denials that this was ever actually proposed were loudly made.

I did a little pro-CCW activism, and decried the number of people who decline my invitation to debate the topic of gun control.

In November, a jury decided that although the bat in question was not defective, the death of a young baseball pitcher might have been avoided had the manufacturer put a warning label on the bat and in compensation awarded the family of the deceased $792k. See what I mean about 100 years of our education system?

Reader Phil B. emailed me another piece too good not to publish, A Brilliant Bit of Analysis, which chronicles in greater detail the path the UK has been taking towards soft despotism.

Another case of right-wing extremism, er, terrorism, um man-made disaster occurred in November – the massacre of 12 and wounding of 31 people at Ft. Hood, Texas by an Army Psychiatrist and jihadi. But it wasn’t an act of terrorism!. Even though the shooter had attempted to contact Al Qaeda.

The House under dominatrix Pelosi passed its version of “Health Care Reform” legislation, about 2,000 pages of unread text. And it was a bipartisan effort because ONE (1) Republican crossed the aisle and voted in favor. In related news, Rep. Eric Massa informed the public that they were stupid and he knew best. So much for being a representative.

Rev. Jeremiah Wright resurfaced at a celebration of the 60th anniversary of the socialist magazine Monthly Review, saying nothing all that surprising. Infuriating, yes. Surprising, no.

We got a rare look into the contents of an actual Can-o-Whoopass.

Obama’s Justice Department announced that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four other suspected terrorists would be tried in New York in civil court. I had something brief to say about that.

Der Spiegel magazine published an article stating that “average global temperatures have stopped rising over the last 10 years” and discussed how this fact is affecting the public’s perception of Global Warming as a problem. Shortly after that, someone posted a sh!tload of emails, data files and programs from the Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia, England – home of one of the centers for the promotion of the religion of Anthropogenic Global Warming. That information was not supportive of the faith. The fur began to fly – but only in the new media. The AP published a story just a few days later informing the public that “since 1997 . . . climate change has worsened and accelerated – beyond some of the grimmest of warnings made back then.” Things have continued to unravel since.

I got to have dinner with Monster Hunter International author Larry Correia and Servant of a Dark God author John Brown.

TSM was named #102 in a list of the Top 133 Conservative Blogs. It’s not a Nobel Peace Prize, but . . .

And, finally, the Supreme Court announced that oral arguments in McDonald v. Chicago would be heard on March 2, 2010. Go Alan!

That brings us to December. It wasn’t an Instalanche, but I got hits from a number of Climate Skeptic sites for another piece of artwork not my own. Traffic was heavy for weeks.

I finally received notification that the LRB M25 rear-lugged receiver for the rifle I ordered last November had arrived. Apparently I’ll have a super-accurate M14 rifle sometime in March or April.

A movie came out that I actually want to see, but apparently it’s not being distributed in the US.

While there aren’t enough of them, apparently there are still some people out there I’d be willing to vote for rather than against. Lieutenant Col. Allen West is one.

I picked up my last new firearm of the year. I traded in my (almost new) Taurus 605 paperweight on a Kel Tec PF9.

On December 7 I was notified that, due to lack of billable work, my services were no longer needed. I joined the ranks of the unemployed. Regardless, I went ahead with a little blogging/shooting get-together in central Arizona on the 12th. We had a good time. I started looking for another job.

A bunch of people flew in private jets to Copenhagen to discuss how to keep the proles down control Global Warming. Lord Monckton illustrated the entire problem in ten minutes and thirty-eight seconds.

The Senate passed its version of “Health Care Reform” though it had to buy off a number of Democrats to do so. Voting was entirely along Party lines. Now the two bodies have to merge the two bills into one compromise version before buggering us with it. There’s still hope to kill this thing, but not much.

No Überpost this month either. I’ve still got one in queue, I just can’t work up the enthusiasm to finish it.

Here’s to 2010, a year that by all appearances will be even more interesting than 2009. As Wash replied when Capt. Reynolds asked him to define “interesting” – “Oh God, oh God we’re all gonna die?” Perhaps not, but I suggest you tighten your seat belt, put your seat back and tray table in their upright and locked position, and brace yourselves. We’re in for a bumpy ride, and one or more passengers may be wearing Semtex Underoos. But rest assured, the remaining portions of the Constitution will surely carry us all the way to the scene of the crash.

Earworm

Earworm

I recently got a Netflix account, and my wife and I have been watching the Sharpe’s Rifles series. We’re now up to #8, Sharpe’s Sword. Pretty good series, I recommend it. It gives you at least some idea of the culture of Georgian England, and the differences in class that were carried through to their military.

One of the characters, Hagland Hagman (thanks, Chris), is British actor and folk singer John Tams. He was chosen as much for his voice as for his acting ability. Remember, no iPods back then. Somebody sang and played an instrument, or you did without music. The song that’s stuck in my head, though is a very old one, and the song they end each episode with, Over the Hills and Far Away. John Tams added stanzas for some of the episodes. I’ve even gone so far as to copy down the damned song.

Over the Hills and Far Away – John Tams & Dominic Muldowney

Here’s forty shillings on the drum
To those who’ll volunteer to come,
To ‘list and fight the foe today
Over the Hills and far away.

O’er the hills and o’er the main
Through Flanders, Portugal and Spain.
King George commands and we obey
Over the hills to far away.

Mid smoke and fire, shot and shell,
And to the very walls of hell,
But we shall stand and we shall stay
Over the hills and far away.

(Chorus)

Though I may travel far from Spain
A part of me shall still remain,
For you are with me night and day
And over the hills and far away.

(Chorus)

When Evil stalks upon the land
I’ll neither hold nor stay me hand
But fight to win a better day,
Over the hills and far away.

(Chorus)

Let kings and tyrants come and go,
I’ll stand adjudged by what I know.
A soldiers life I’ll ne’er gainsay.
Over the hills and far away.

(Chorus)

If I should fall to rise no more,
As many comrades did before,
Ask the pipes and drums to play
Over the hills and far away.

(Chorus)

Then fall in lads behind the drum
With colours blazing like the sun.
Along the road to come-what-may
Over the hills and far away.

O’er the hills and o’er the main
Through Flanders, Portugal and Spain.
King George commands and we obey
Over the hills and far away.

Here’s a video compilation done by someone even worse off than me:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16D8ZSXeVXw&hl=en_US&fs=1&rel=0&w=480&h=385]
I wouldn’t be surprised if this is the closest thing most Brits AND most Americans get to any knowledge about the Napoleonic wars. It certainly is for me.

Is it Time?

Is it Time?

I’ve seen this comment, or one very much like it, several places around the Web:

Only one solution… if the bastards have no money, they can not steal it. Tax revolt 2010. Don’t send the IRS anything. Pass it on.

This is what Billy Beck has been advocating for as long as I’ve been reading him. It’s actually a pretty good idea, but it depends on significant buy-in by the tax-paying population – enough that imprisoning us becomes a significant problem, and confiscating our property must be made as difficult as possible. Onesy-twoseys like Wesley Snipes are easy “example” targets. Flood the system with these cases, and that’s a problem of a different order.

So now we have unemployment at about 10%. Is ten percent of the population enough? Would it take twenty? Twenty-five? And what exactly happens when the .govs – Federal, state and local – can’t fund their daily operations, much less their pyramid schemes? “Starve the beast” is the challenge, but we all have a pretty good idea of what a starving beast can do.

I’ve said previously that one thing that struck me on my first reading of Heinlein’s The Moon is a Harsh Mistress was that after the plotters decided to revolt against the Lunar Authority, the first thing they did was go about making the lives of their fellow citizens worse, and antagonizing that government to be the agent of that worsening. It was necessary in order to motivate the majority of the population to stand up and say “ENOUGH!”

A tax-revolt won’t do that. It’ll be people “not paying their fair share” etc, etc. But would it be possible for people to just drop off the IRS radar entirely? No principled stand, middle finger held high, just walk away. How would they go about doing that? CAN a significant chunk of the contributors to this society “go Galt”? What would be the actual result?

Merry Christmas


Another from digitalblasphemy.com

Edited to add:

A Christmas Poem for All Americans

The embers glowed softly, and in their dim light,
I gazed round the room and I cherished the sight.
My wife was asleep, her head on my chest,
My daughter beside me, angelic in rest.

Outside the snow fell, a blanket of white,
Transforming the yard to a winter delight.
The sparkling lights in the tree, I believe,
Completed the magic that was Christmas Eve.

My eyelids were heavy, my breathing was deep,
Secure and surrounded by love I would sleep.
In perfect contentment, or so it would seem,
So I slumbered, perhaps I started to dream.

The sound wasn’t loud, and it wasn’t too near,
But I opened my eyes when it tickled my ear.
Perhaps just a cough, I didn’t quite know,
Then the sure sound of footsteps outside in the snow.

My soul gave a tremble, I struggled to hear,
And I crept to the door just to see who was near.
Standing out in the cold and the dark of the night,
A lone figure stood, his face weary and tight.

A soldier, I puzzled, some twenty years old,
Perhaps a Marine, huddled here in the cold
Alone in the dark, he looked up and smiled,
Standing watch over me, and my wife and my child.

“What are you doing?” I asked without fear,
“Come in this moment, it’s freezing out here!”
“Put down your pack, brush the snow from your sleeve,
You should be at home on a cold Christmas Eve!”

For barely a moment I saw his eyes shift,
Away from the cold and the snow blown in drifts,
To the window that danced with a warm fire’s light,
Then he sighed and he said, “It’s really all right,
I’m out here by choice. I’m here every night.”

“It’s my duty to stand at the front of the line,
That separates you from the darkest of times.
No one had to ask or beg or implore me,
I’m proud to stand here like my fathers before me.

My dad stood his watch in the jungles of ‘Nam,
And now it’s my turn and so, here I am.
I’ve not seen my own son in more than a while,
But my wife sends me pictures, he’s sure got her smile.”

Then he bent and he carefully pulled from his bag,
The red, white and blue. . . an American flag.
“I can live through the cold and the being alone,
Away from my family, my house and my home,
I can stand at my post through the rain and the sleet,
I can sleep in a foxhole with little to eat.
I can carry the weight of killing another,
Or lay down my life with my sister and brother
who stand at the front against any and all,
to ensure for all time that this flag will not fall.
So go back inside,” he said, “harbor no fright,
Your family is waiting and I’ll be all right.”

“But isn’t there something I can do, at the least,
Give you money,” I asked, “or prepare you a feast?
It seems all too little for all that you’ve done,
For being away from your wife and your son”
Then his eye welled a tear that held no regret,
“Just tell us you love us, and never forget
To fight for our rights back at home while we’re gone.
To stand your own watch, no matter how long.
For when we come home, either standing or dead,
To know you remember we fought and we bled
is payment enough, and with that we will trust.
That we mattered to you as you mattered to us.”

Michael Marks
December 7, 2000

I Can’t Wait to Miss This One

I Can’t Wait to Miss This One

Avatar is every militant global warming supporter’s dream come true as the invading, technology-worshiping, environment-ravaging humans are set upon by an angry planet and its noble inhabitants. But the film’s message suffers mightily under the weight of mind-boggling hypocrisy. Cameron’s story clearly curses the proliferation of human technology. In Avatar, the science and machinery of humankind leads to soulless violence and destruction. It only serves to pollute the primitive but pristine paradise of Pandora.

Of course, without centuries of development in science and technology, the film putting forth this simple-minded, self-loathing worldview wouldn’t exist. You’d imagine Cameron himself would be bored to tears on the planet he created.

There are no movies on Pandora, so he’d be out of a job.

That’s from Popular Science magazine’s review of Avatar.

I think I’ll pass.

Second Interview

Second Interview

Well, in about an hour I will be having my second interview with XYZ Engineering Co. (name changed to protect whoever) where I’ve been told in no uncertain terms “we want to hire you” but they suffer from the same problem my previous employer had – no billable hours for me. It’s a chicken & egg thing, or perhaps cart-before-horse. Everything looks good for the first quarter of 2010, but realistically we’re talking February before people start cutting purchase orders.

I fully expect to be employed again by the end of January, but sooner would be better.

Well, THAT Sucks

Oh Boy! I’ve just joined the ranks of the unemployed. Due to lack of work, the entire Controls staff of my office (all three of us) just got laid off.

However, I do have an interview tomorrow morning. I’m not all that concerned about getting another job, but you have to admit, the timing SUCKS.

So it Wasn’t Government-hatin’ Inbred Redneck Gun-clinging Bible-Thumping

So it Wasn‘t Government-hatin,’ Inbred, Redneck, Gun-clinging Bible-Thumping Meth-heads?

Investigators: Ky. census worker committed suicide

FRANKFORT, Ky. — Authorities are saying a Kentucky census worker found hanging from a tree with “fed” scrawled on his chest committed suicide and staged his death to look like a homicide.

A news release from Kentucky State Police said Tuesday that Bill Sparkman died at the same location where his body was found Sept. 12 near a cemetery in a heavily wooded area of southeastern Kentucky.

A man who found the body in the Daniel Boone National Forest said the 51-year-old was bound with duct tape, gagged and had an identification badge taped to his neck.

Investigators say Sparkman acted alone in manipulating the scene to conceal the suicide.

The news release says Sparkman had recently taken out two life insurance policies that would not pay out for suicide.

Damn, the Lefties must be so disappointed.

My condolences to his family, though. Losing a loved one sucks. To find out that he committed suicide in an effort to try to leave them something must hurt worse.