Friday, July 21, 2006

You cannot defeat your enemy unless you take the offense. We are opening up another offensive front:

Former U.S. representative Bob Barr of Georgia filed a $400 million lawsuit against New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg yesterday, claiming Bloomberg's attempt to crack down on gun dealers was "careless, willful and clearly illegal."

The lawsuit, filed in Cobb County Superior Court in Marietta, Ga., came in response to a federal lawsuit filed by Bloomberg in May alleging that 15 firearm brokers in five states, including Georgia, were "rogue gun dealers."

...

Barr's lawsuit alleges that Bloomberg made misleading statements to the national media that were defamatory toward Smyrna, Ga., gun dealer Adventure Outdoors.

"We didn't start this fight. They did," Barr told a cheering crowd in Marietta's city square. "But we intend to finish it and win."
Bloomberg's lawsuit claims that the dealer sold 21 guns over a seven-year period that were used in New York crimes. The shop's owner, Jay Wallace, said his name has been "trashed in the public eye of the nation."

"I've run my business with honesty and integrity, and I take pride in being part of the firearm industry,"he said.

The announcement took on a patriotic tune as flag-waving supporters cheered the news of the lawsuit and danced.

"We will fight to prove the Constitution of the United States is still intact, and that Mr. Bloomberg's fight to abolish the Second Amendment must and will fail," said Edwin Marger, a lawyer who filed the lawsuit with Barr.

See also the press release that Cam Edwards received.

I'm hoping to open up a new offensive front of my own soon. Sometimes things move far, far slower than one hopes.

Joe Huffman  Friday, July 21, 2006 12:44:04 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 

In the last five months of World War II, American bombing raids claimed the lives of more than 900,000 Japanese civilians -- not counting the casualties from the atomic strikes against Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This is more than twice the total number of combat deaths that the United States has suffered in all its foreign wars combined.

On one night, that of March 9-10, 1945, 234 Superfortresses dropped 1,167 tons of incendiary bombs over downtown Tokyo; 83,793 Japanese bodies were found in the charred remains--a number greater than the 80,942 combat fatalities that the United States sustained in the Korean and Vietnam Wars combined.


Walter Russell Mead
The Jacksonian Tradition and American Foreign Policy
[Thanks to Kevin Baker for pointing this out. The Barking Moon Bats and the Muslim extremists should be reminded of this every time they whine about the civilian deaths in the MidEast. If you really piss us off you will have something to complain about.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Friday, July 21, 2006 12:15:38 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Thursday, July 20, 2006

Interesting news from California. A guy had some incinderary bullets (not cartridges, just the bullets). He was arrested. Each bullet is a seperate felony.

Read the comments to the post.

Joe Huffman  Thursday, July 20, 2006 10:25:06 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

We will win because we are good and they are evil. We will win because we always came in peace and they came with a call for the destruction of the state of Israel.

...

If the international community will not make an end to the Hezbollah, we will make an end to the Hezbollah. We are after the terrorists and we will be after them until Israel will be 100 percent, from all the world, secure.

 

Ehod Danoch
Israel's general consul to the Southwest United States
July 19, 2006
Las Vegas Jewish community told Israel to prevail in current war
[Like no other country on this planet, Israel knows what we are dealing with in this world war. Just as Hitler wanted to kill all the Jews so do the Islamic extremists. Israel, you've got the ball, now run with it and don't stop until you've won.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, July 19, 2006 11:22:09 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 
 Wednesday, July 19, 2006

In the summer of '95 I was a contractor for Microsoft working on Direct X video drivers. I wrote about that before.

Randy, a fellow contractor and video driver writer had a band, The Swine, as well as a show on public access cable television. A couple of Randy's bandmembers wrote a song about our experience. Mister Bill's Machine (WMA, 1.52 MB) does a fairly good job of capturing my summer of '95.

Some other time when my inhibitions are much, much lower from lack of sleep or something I'll explain how I ended up on the cover of their CD album in a camo poncho with an SKS rifle in my arms:

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, July 19, 2006 10:50:51 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

I'm almost caught up on the Lewiston Pistol Club website now. At least until Sunday when they have another steel match.

Unless you are local there probably isn't much of interest.

I participated in a couple of the matches. I hadn't fired my pistol in months (since November I believe) so I had a mediocre performance. See here and here.

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, July 19, 2006 10:27:15 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]  | 
The darkest places in hell are reserved for those who maintain their neutrality in times of moral crisis.

Dante Alighieri
[I'm thinking of the current war against Islamic extremists... WW III or WW IV depending on how you keep count.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, July 19, 2006 7:02:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Tuesday, July 18, 2006

The Canadian kook Cukier is blabbering away again:

REGINA (CP) - The shooting deaths of two RCMP officers in northern Saskatchewan and other crimes like it in recent years show the need to maintain the federal registry for long-barrelled firearms, gun control advocates say.

...

The deaths of constables Robin Cameron, 29, and Marc Bourdages, 26, have tugged at the heartstrings of people across the country and plunged the tiny farming community of Spiritwood, Sask., into a state of grief.

Police say the two young officers died after being shot by a man who fled the scene armed with either a hunting rifle or a shotgun on the night of July 7.

...

Wendy Cukier, a professor of justice studies at Ryerson University and president of the Toronto-based Coalition for Gun Control, says it doesn't make any sense to dismantle the long-gun registry.

Just how does the registry prevent or help solve this crime? Was the criminal so stupid he left the gun, registered in his name or someone that could connect to him, at the crime scene? Nope. The kooks thinking is that of a simpleton.

But Cukier says registration is a tool that allows police to trace a firearm back to its original owner.

It's a good way to prevent someone who shouldn't have a gun from buying one legally and it forces legal gun owners to be accountable by making sure their weapons don't fall into the wrong hands, she argued.

It can also serve as an early warning tool for officers, letting them know that a routine situation could turn dangerous because guns may be involved.

"No system is perfect, but it reduces the chances that people will be killed," Cukier said. "The system, however imperfect it might be, is better than nothing at all."

How does a gun registry prevent stolen guns or smuggled guns (think recreational drug smuggling) from ending up in the hands of anyone that wants one? And no it is not "better than nothing at all". It took between one and two billion dollars (Canadian) to implement the registry which could have been spent on police personnel and equipment.

I have Just One Question for Ms. Cukier.

Update: I realize I should have explained things just a bit better. Cukier claims this crime shows the need to maintain the registry but the registry wasn't a factor in solving this crime. And furthermore the last time I had an update on the topic since Canada started registering handguns decades ago there has only been one crime that the registry did help solve.

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, July 18, 2006 10:00:22 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Ry and I have talked about this type of thing until the wee hours of the morning many times. It always came down to destroying their culture or engaging in some really nasty stuff. It turns out we weren't the only ones that came up with those conclusions. This is from 2003:

A Pew poll finds 40% of Americans worry that an US city will be destroyed by a terrorist nuclear attack. James Lileks thinks the annihilation of a city is a dead certainty and will only mark the start of a long, wearying struggle against Islamists armed with nuclear car bombs.

...

In stark contrast, the nuclear threshold against a terrorism may be crossed once they get the capability to attack with weapons of mass destruction. Unlike the old early warning systems, designed to gauge Soviet intent, the intelligence systems of the War on Terror are meant to measure capability. The relevant Cold War question was 'do they intend to use the Bomb?'.  In the War on Terror, the relevant question is simply 'do they have the Bomb?' This puts the nuclear threshold very low.

...

This fixity of malice was recognized in President Bush's West Point address in the summer of 2002, when he concluded that "deterrence -- the promise of massive retaliation against nations -- means nothing against shadowy terrorist networks with no nation or citizens to defend."

...

Because capability is the sole variable of interest in the war against terrorism, the greater the Islamic strike capability becomes, the stronger the response will be. An unrepeatable attack with a stolen WMD weapon would elicit a different response from one arising from a capability to strike on a sustained and repetitive basis. The riposte to an unrepeatable attack would be limited. However, suppose Pakistan or North Korea engineered a reliable plutonium weapon that could be built to one-point safety in any machine shop with a minimum of skill, giving Islamic terrorists the means to repeatedly attack America indefinitely. Under these circumstances, there would no incentive to retaliate proportionately. The WMD exchange would escalate uncontrollably until Islam was destroyed.

...

The so-called strengths of Islamic terrorism: fanatical intent; lack of a centralized leadership; absence of a final authority and cellular structure guarantee uncontrollable escalation once the nuclear threshold is crossed. Therefore the 'rational' American response to the initiation of terrorist WMD attack would be all out retaliation from the outset. 

...

It is supremely ironic that the survival of the Islamic world should hinge on an American victory in the War on Terror, the last chance to prevent that terrible day in which all the decisions will have already been made for us. That effort really consists of two separate aspects: a campaign to destroy the locus of militant Islam and prevent their acquisition of WMDs; and an attempt to awaken the world to the urgency of the threat.

I wish Israel well in their efforts to exterminate radical Muslims from their neighborhood. It's a start down the appropriate path. The alternate paths are far too uncomfortable for me.

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, July 18, 2006 9:43:54 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

The English may have some sexual hangups but this former Socialist Scottish party leader doesn't appear to have many:

A former Scottish Socialist party member today told a jury how she had a three-in-a-bed sex session with its former leader, Tommy Sheridan MSP, and his brother-in-law.

Katrine Trolle, 31, said she first had sex with the Glasgow MSP months after his wedding in June 2000.

The Danish occupational therapist also described a visit to Cupids, a swingers' sex club in Manchester, and said Mr Sheridan had offered her a "wonder drug" at a house party later that night.

...

Ms Trolle, from Dundee, told the court that Mr Sheridan flirted with her and made remarks about how liberal Danes and Scandinavians were compared to the British.

The witness said her second sexual encounter with Mr Sheridan took place at his brother-in-law's home in Glasgow.

Asked by Michael Jones QC, representing the Sunday newspaper, who was in the house, Ms Trolle replied: "Andy (McFarlane), Tommy and myself."

Mr Jones said: "What happened?" The witness replied: "We had sex."

Mr Jones sought clarification as to what Ms Trolle meant when she used the term "we".

She replied: "All three of us."

Mr Jones asked: "Together?" Ms Trolle said: "Yes."

Earlier she described her first sexual encounter with the MSP, which she said happened at his house.

Ms Trolle said: "He offered me a glass of wine. We talked a wee bit about politics and then went upstairs to the bedroom."

Asked what happened in the bedroom, Ms Trolle said: "We had sex."

The witness also told the court it was Mr Sheridan's idea to visit the swingers club in Manchester in 2001.

She confirmed the party which left Glasgow to travel south included Mr Sheridan, his brother-in-law, journalist Anvar Khan and a man named Gary.

...

The witness said: "We went into one of the small side rooms and had sex."

Mr Jones said: "Who went into this room and had sex?"

Ms Trolle replied: "Tommy, Anvar Khan, myself and Andrew. I can't remember if Gary was there or not."

Barb knows some occupational therapists at her work. I wonder...

Sex
Joe Huffman  Tuesday, July 18, 2006 9:26:15 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

They want to destroy Israel and kill all Jews. That's the truth. Got a solution Katie? We'd all love to hear your perky plan.

Michelle Malkin
Vent--July 18, 2006
On Katie Couric saying "We heard from many people that the news is just too depressing... I believe we can be a little more solution-oriented."
["Don't be surprised if Katie's "solutions" are socialistic, involved the loss of personal freedoms, and masquerade as "news". Malkin introduces Couric to a cluebat.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, July 18, 2006 9:09:19 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Monday, July 17, 2006

Xenia has posted a bunch more pictures (and a little bit of story) from her visit here and her trip to Oklahoma to see her boyfriend graduate from Army Boot Camp.

My favorite pictures from the collection:


Xenia's pinkie. My toes (I wear size 14 shoes).


Sara and Xenia get the ultimate desert offered at the Space Needle.

Joe Huffman  Monday, July 17, 2006 10:55:07 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]  | 

As in my previous post/QOTD I pointed out that English women leave the country to get some good sex. Here's more from the U.K closely related to the same topic:

WOMEN are getting a rough deal in bed — with some rating dull sex as a “household chore”.

And over a third complained of a lack of thrills from their fellas in a survey.

The poll proves women are NOT getting enough satisfaction in spite of greater sexual liberation.

A quarter of women in the 25 to 34-year-old age bracket find it difficult to get aroused.

And 45 per cent of women rarely or never make the first move for sex.

One in ten women said they have sex when they do not want it and regularly fake orgasm. And one in 20 think sex is a chore.

Meanwhile a quarter of men are snubbed for sex HALF the time by their regular partner.

Heavy sigh. So much work for Dr. Joe and I just don't have the time to do it all.

Sex
Joe Huffman  Monday, July 17, 2006 10:45:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

I'm not naïve. I've been around the block. I come for sex - of course the sun, but mostly the sex.

I'm not coming to live and set up house with a guy. I just want some fun and good sex.

A 42-year-old English woman
She travels at least three times a year to Boca Chica in the Dominican Republic for sun and sex.
[Those English and sex... I'm telling you they are bit on the strange side. It must be because the men in the U.K. have been neutered, in part, by the removal of their firearms. I think Dr. Joe has a lot of work to do there. Or else NRA Instructor Joe. One of the two.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Monday, July 17, 2006 10:39:46 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Sunday, July 16, 2006

Xenia visited part of week before last and then again last week. Here are some of her pictures and comments. I like this one best:

Of course I took the picture and it is a picture of my daughter so I suppose there is the possibility of some bias.

Joe Huffman  Sunday, July 16, 2006 10:52:59 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

It would have required courage to hang out with the Mahdi Army, if there were any likelihood that a member of the Iraqi "insurgency" would regard a representative of the New York Times as an enemy.

John Hinderaker
July 15, 2006
Power Line post commenting on this picture.

Joe Huffman  Sunday, July 16, 2006 10:34:49 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Saturday, July 15, 2006

All lies and jest, still a man hears what he wants to hear and disregards the rest.

Paul Simon
Recorded 1968
The Boxer
[In part this is what happens When Prophecy Fails, Bush Derangement Syndrome, and in everyday life.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Saturday, July 15, 2006 4:43:01 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Friday, July 14, 2006

An anti-gun bigot targeted the SKS again. Pretty much every thing I said before when the SKS was singled out for "being evil" is true this time as well. The new stuff is taken care of by Kevin.

Joe Huffman  Friday, July 14, 2006 9:40:40 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 

I spend $2 million [campaigning] every election. If my colleagues are smart, they’ll pay their $20,000 and Michael will draw the district they can win in. Those who have refused to pay? God help them.

Rep. Loretta Sanchez
From Stealing Democracy: How to Rig Elections by Spencer Overton
Pages 19 and 20
[Sanchez was referring to Gerrymandering the election districts to win elections. If you read the Amazon description of the book and the comments by the author be sure to keep your blood pressure medicine close by. Hat tip to Larry Pratt for pointing out the Sanchez quote. Read Pratt's article for the gun rights connection.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Friday, July 14, 2006 7:45:26 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Thursday, July 13, 2006

I just love it when they say things like this:

..no matter how much training is involved, or who’s holding it, a gun is always dangerous. This guy, it seems, thought that because he was a police officer (and weapons instructor– which probably means NRA member), that he could be above the law. After all, he’s a cop, right? He would never do anything wrong, right?

Wrong. These fully automatic weapons are illegal for a reason, and it’s because they’re not safe in anyone’s hands, police officer, NRA member, weapons instructor, “law-abiding gun owner,” or otherwise.

These "guys" have no clue. They don't realize just how far out of touch with the rest of the world, and reality, they are. Or else they really are our friends and are trying to further discredit the anti-gun movement.

Joe Huffman  Thursday, July 13, 2006 10:51:26 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 

We call upon the city government and Congress to immediately repeal the District's Draconian gun regulations. The city's law-abiding citizens must be allowed to fight back, and regain control of their neighborhoods. Any politician, whether in the municipal government or on Capitol Hill, who does not trust the citizens of Washington, D.C. with their Second Amendment rights does not deserve to hold office, and should hand in his or her resignation. This risk-free working environment for criminals must end now.

Alan Gottlieb
July 13, 2006 News Release
Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms

Joe Huffman  Thursday, July 13, 2006 10:38:10 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 
 Wednesday, July 12, 2006

The murderous attack that took place this morning was not a terror attack. It was an act of war by the state of Lebanon against the state of Israel within its sovereign territory.

The government of Lebanon, of which Hezbollah is a part, is trying to undermine regional stability. Lebanon is responsible and Lebanon will bear the consequences of its actions.

Ehud Olmert
Prime Minister of Israel
July 12, 2006
Chicago Tribune

I want to make clear that the event this morning is not a terror act, but an act of a sovereign state that attacked Israel without reason. The government of Lebanon, of which Hezbollah is a part, is trying to shake the stability of the region.

Ehud Olmert
Prime Minister of Israel
July 12, 2006
New York Times

[Regardless of which quote is more accurate (the Times Online of the UK agrees with The Chicago Tribune) the spirit is the same. This is war.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, July 12, 2006 9:52:35 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |