Just Saw The Dark Knight
One word movie review:
Damn!
The Smallest Minority on earth is the individual. Those who deny individual rights cannot claim to be defenders of minorities. – Ayn Rand
Just Saw The Dark Knight
One word movie review:
Damn!
“One Small Step for (a) Man…
…One giant leap for Mankind.”
On this day in 1969, thirty-nine years ago, Astronaut Neil Armstrong made the first bootprint in lunar dust. At 20:17 GMT, (about 1:17PM Mountain Standard time) with 25 seconds of fuel left in the descent stage of the Lunar Module and warning alarms going off constantly, Armstrong gently set the Eagle on the surface of our moon. At 02:56 GMT of July 21, or 7:56PM MST July 20, Armstrong stepped off the LM and spoke the words recorded forever in our history. He swears to this day that he said (or meant to say) “One small step for a man…” but history records otherwise. I watched him in grainy black-and-white on a neighbors 25″ television. I’d seen the Saturn V launch from the banks of the Indian River four days previously. My father was a quality control engineer for IBM, responsible for ensuring the Instrument Unit (guidance system) of the Saturn V rocket worked to specification.
Doesn’t matter. Armstrong landed on the freaking MOON after taking manual control to prevent landing in a boulder field.
They say nobody remembers who the second man on the moon was, but I do – it was Buzz Aldrin, a guy still willing to punch the lights out of moon-landing deniers. Go BUZZ!
Does anyone remember the name of the last man to leave a boot print on the moon?
I do. Gene Cernan, December 14, 1972.
We’re not scheduled to return until 2019.
Yeah. Like that’ll happen.
McCain “F^*K IT!” Bumpersticker Update
Jed and I are still selling the bumperstickers, but I thought I’d bring y’all up to date on where we stand so far.
There have been a total of 49 orders for 271 stickers. The most recent five orders went out in Saturday’s mail, including one twelve to Vodkapundit (who promises a plug on his blog.) Heh – I’ve got the names and addresses of several prominent bloggers now! Jed got his dental work covered, and on top of that we’ve donated $375 to the Soldier’s Angels General Fund.
Thanks to all of you who ordered, and a big fat raspberry to those who haven’t!! 😉
I Need to Disinfect the Internet Now
With steel wool and sulfuric acid. There is nothing in my pantheon of humanity lower than a pedophile. You can imagine my reaction to finding this in my Sitemeter records for today:

Eeeew!
Note that it came from Pakistan.
Osama can haz internet?
Interesting Excerpt…
…from the WSJ piece on Alan Gura linked below:
The court’s close division meant that Mr. Gura needed the vote of Anthony Kennedy. Most court-watchers consider him the least predictable justice, but not Mr. Gura: “I received a lot of grief from people about Justice Kennedy going into the argument. We were told that we were not responsible, gambling on the views of this one justice who might be completely inscrutable and unpredictable. . . .
“Justice Kennedy did not trouble me all that much. The fact is that if you look at Justice Kennedy’s voting pattern, the cases where he tends to disappoint the so-called conservative bloc — in almost all those cases, Justice Kennedy sides with a claim of an individual right being held by a person against the government, whether that is in the abortion context, or whether that’s in the context of intimate sexual relations, whether it’s the habeas case in Guantanamo Bay.”
However, Kennedy voted against Suzette Kelo in Kelo v New London. He even wrote a concurring opinion in that case.
Almost always isn’t always.
As I mentioned recently, I finished Michael Crichton’s latest novel Next over the weekend. Much like his previous novel debunking global warming hysteria, State of Fear, Crichton is out to raise awareness about something, and has written a damned good book to do it. In this case Crichton’s ire is raised by the way the biological sciences are being abused by government, industry, and even (perhaps especially) research universities. Holding a special place in his catalog of horrors is the law allowing the patenting of individual genes, as though the people who figure out what the particular genetic coding does are somehow responsible for writing that code. He goes on about this at length at his website. I invite you to read his 2007 essay, Patenting Life, and this list of topics brought up in Next.
What inspired this post, however, is the fact that throughout Next Crichton interspersed little “press releases” – a page or two as though torn from today’s newspaper of stories concerning genetics. I kept looking for a URL so I could pull them up online. I have no idea if they were real or simply figments of his imagination, but I could recall some similar things that I had read and heard.
In yesterday’s USAToday was another one – this Reuter’s report that could have begun any chapter in Next:
Study finds genetic link to violence, delinquency
Three genes may play a strong role in determining why some young men raised in rough neighborhoods or deprived families become violent criminals, while others do not, U.S. researchers reported on Monday.
One gene called MAOA that played an especially strong role has been shown in other studies to affect antisocial behavior — and it was disturbingly common, the team at the University of North Carolina reported.
People with a particular variation of the MAOA gene called 2R were very prone to criminal and delinquent behavior, said sociology professor Guang Guo, who led the study.
“I don’t want to say it is a crime gene, but 1 percent of people have it and scored very high in violence and delinquency,” Guo said in a telephone interview.
His team, which studied only boys, used data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, a U.S. nationally representative sample of about 20,000 adolescents in grades 7 to 12. The young men in the study are interviewed in person regularly, and some give blood samples.
Guo’s team constructed a “serious delinquency scale” based on some of the questions the youngsters answered.
“Nonviolent delinquency includes stealing amounts larger or smaller than $50, breaking and entering, and selling drugs,” they wrote in the August issue of the American Sociological Review.
“Violent delinquency includes serious physical fighting that resulted in injuries needing medical treatment, use of weapons to get something from someone, involvement in physical fighting between groups, shooting or stabbing someone, deliberately damaging property, and pulling a knife or gun on someone.”
The story goes on for another two pages.
I’ve quoted several times in the past a bit from Grim’s Hall on the topic of young men and violence:
Very nearly all the violence that plagues, rather than protects, society is the work of young males between the ages of fourteen and thirty. A substantial amount of the violence that protects rather than plagues society is performed by other members of the same group. The reasons for this predisposition are generally rooted in biology, which is to say that they are not going anywhere, in spite of the current fashion that suggests doping half the young with Ritalin.
The question is how to move these young men from the first group (violent and predatory) into the second (violent, but protective). This is to ask: what is the difference between a street gang and the Marine Corps, or a thug and a policeman? In every case, we see that the good youths are guided and disciplined by old men. This is half the answer to the problem.
According to this report, the other half (or more) is genetic.
It’s not their fault! They have a disease!
Anyone want to bet what the reaction would/will be if someone suggests that the reason young black men in America die of homicide at six times the rate of the rest of the population is genetic? Anybody want to bet what would happen if they developed an embryonic screening test for these genes?
In Next there is a scene where a group of genetic scientists and marketing people at a biotech firm are brainstorm over naming the gene they have decoded that controls (they think) sociability. I can just picture sociology professor Guang Guo and his team brainstorming “the CRIME GENE!“
Edited to add this Charlie Rose interview that I found on YouTube. It’s 56 minutes long:
Remember to Pay Your Domain Fees!
Somebody at Wilson Combat has some ‘splainin’ to do!
UPDATE: Looks like it’s fixed now. Move along folks, nothin’ to see here.
I Can Haz Podcast?
Squeaky and Caleb are running a weekly podcast every Tuesday night at 11:00PM Eastern on topics of general shooty goodness. Tomorrow night’s ‘cast includes a pre-recorded interview with Michael Bane “about the ParaShoot and gun stuff.”
You can “tune in” by going to Gun Nuts: The Next Generation, and if you can’t catch it “live,” it’s available for download later.
Modern media. They’ll let anyone do it.
No wonder the LA Times is laying off people.
…and the rest of you who voted for me in the Para-USA Win a Weekend at Blackwater competition. I’m going! So is Tam, Dave Hardy, SayUncle, Robb, Ahab, JR, and Joe Huffman! I don’t know who the other two are yet, but congratulations to them as well!
Three days, 1,000 to 1,500 rounds of someone else’s ammo, and training with Todd Jarrett? What more could you want?
Only downside? My fat ass will be on television, unless they use some damned creative editing. Michael Bane is going to film the weekend for the Outdoor Channel. He also reports (so it’s official now) that Para-USA is relocating from Toronto, Ontario to Charlotte, N.C. in October.
Thanks, y’all. You’re the greatest!
UPDATE, 7/8: The last two gunbloggers chosen by poll are Armed Citizen and Mad Duck
And even better news, Bitter Bitch and Sebastian will be going as well, according to Michael Bane. (He needs someone to film while the rest of us are worshipping learning from Todd Jarrett.)
One Word Movie Review: Wanted
Meh.