# Thursday, March 08, 2007

Prohibition... goes beyond the bounds of reason in that it attempts to control a man's appetite by legislation and makes a crime out of things that are not crimes...  A prohibition law strikes a blow at the very principles upon which our government was founded.

Abraham Lincoln
[This applies to recreational drugs and mere possession of firearms and their accessories as much as it does to recreational use of alcohol.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Thursday, March 08, 2007 9:43:02 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Wednesday, March 07, 2007

According to my calculations PNNL/Battelle was due to respond to our interrogatories last Saturday. My lawyer said Monday. Yesterday I asked if they had responded. I got the following response:

I gave them a 2-week extension.  Pretty standard courtesy.  I routinely ask for extensions myself.  (You are a high-end motivation client.)

I'm not surprised. In addition to being used to working on government contracts with (sarcasm alert) all the motivation that requires they know that I'm going to be turning over all the appropriate material to federal prosecutors. I'm sure it's hard to work up much passion about delivering evidence which might earn you a honeymoon in prison with a new spouse who rents you out by the quarter hour to the person with the most cigarettes.

Hey guys, you can delay it by a few weeks but you aren't going to be able to delay it past the statute of limitations. Bend over and take it like a man.

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, March 07, 2007 8:51:17 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 

No, this is not about following up on Captain Kirk's example of sex with green alien women--although I can see that having an exotic appeal.

Tree Hugger magazine (yes, the magazine actually exists) is advocating green sex. Check these articles out:

I can see how the mantra "reduce, reuse, recycle" needs some modification in dealing with condoms. And I don't have any problem with the advice to shower with a friend but they are also advocating turning off the lights. What!!!??? How are we going to see anything on the video tape afterward?

Sex
Joe Huffman  Wednesday, March 07, 2007 7:44:51 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Guns don't stop criminals any more than they stop crime.  All gun owners have a fantasy in their head that whenever they're threatened with their firearm, they'll heroically pull it out, shoot at exactly the right time, and save the day.  But reality just doesn't follow that idea-- firearms are much more of a threat to everyone around them then [sic] some kind of mythical protection against evil.

Gun Guy
Guns Don't Stop Crime-- They Attract It
Email March 5, 2007
[If "Gun Guy" was really correct then police departments and the military would have no use for firearms. I can only think of three reasonable explanations for what this guy says: 1) Mental problems; 2) He's actually on our side and is mocking the anti-gun bigots; 3) He can't get a real job and has to make up this kind of crap to make a living.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, March 07, 2007 12:16:38 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 
# Tuesday, March 06, 2007

I don't know if they are opposed to it just because Republicans are the main advocates or they actually care about the facts. Regardless I welcome all to my side of this fight:

The Department of Homeland Security has postponed the demand that states join in creating what amounts to a national identification card. Congress should use the time until January 2010 to reconsider what is likely to become a multibillion-dollar boondoggle.

...

The Real ID Act mandating a national ID was rushed through Congress two years ago as part of a military spending bill. There weren't even any hearings on it. Since then, states have balked at the costs, and civil liberties groups have challenged the threats to privacy.

...

Security issues have not begun to be addressed. For example, what do states do about the millions of licenses that are lost or stolen every year?

A centralized database raises the odds that identity thieves will gain entry. The new regulations will not require that states encrypt biographical data on driver's licenses, so they will be vulnerable to unauthorized copying.

An ID system is only as reliable as the underlying documents establishing that you are who you say you are. To receive the new license, drivers will need to prove their address, birth date and legal status in the United States by submitting birth certificates and immigration records. But the databases needed to authenticate those documents either don't exist or can't talk to each other. It's a weakness that will be easy to exploit.

Most of the Sept. 11 hijackers used fake or forged driver's licenses to board airliners. Clearly, better systems to produce trustworthy identification are imperative. But Congress' solution appears to have irreparable flaws. It's time to retreat before more states revolt.

I've long been opposed to a national ID card. It fails my Jews In The Attic Test and that should be the end of the discussion. But many people have a severe lack of imagination and claim, "That's crazy thinking." Oh yeah? Brigitte Gabriel, who I quoted yesterday, reported in her book that they had a national ID card in Lebanon. Even before the civil war started the Islamic extremists would set up road blocks, stop every car, demand the ID cards, and if the card reported the people in the car were not Muslim they would be executed beside the road.

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, March 06, 2007 9:34:44 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Remember when the anti-gun bigot at a National Park claimed right to carry laws don't help people protect themselves from wild animal attacks?

We may have an opportunity to educate that bigot. Also of possible interest is the DOI secretary, Dirk Kempthorne, is the former Governor of Idaho and very pro-gun. Here is a hint:

VCDL has just learned from our sources on Capitol Hill that the Department of the Interior (DOI) is **livid** over the National Park Service's (NPS) asinine rejection letter sent to VCDL concerning VCDL's Petition for Rule Making!

Follow up with letters and phone calls.

[Via Jeff at Firearms Coalition.]

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, March 06, 2007 9:17:56 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

I exaggerate only a little bit when I say this paint resists bombs.

[Hat tip to Jason for sending me the link.]

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, March 06, 2007 8:43:51 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 

She definitely needs to get her terminology straight:

We went straight to their shooting range. Each of us shot a Colt-45 handgun at a target of cardboard with the outline of a person drawn on it. I was shaking when the man loaded the gun and placed it in my hand. I was so freaked out by the blast, that once was enough for me. But I was a one-shot wonder. I actually hit the target nearly dead-center.

Our shooting instructor told us they moved up to the 45 handguns because the 22s didn’t kill the terrorists fast enough.

Then two people in our group shot M-16s. It was unreal to not only be that close to those huge guns, but to hear them shot.

I could see a trip to Boomershoot 2007 being quite educational for her.

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, March 06, 2007 8:37:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [3]  | 

The man who prefers his country before any other duty shows the same spirit as the man who surrenders every right to the state. They both deny that right is superior to authority.

Lord Acton

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, March 06, 2007 8:29:50 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Monday, March 05, 2007

Muslims in the Arab world have a saying, "First comes Saturday then come Sunday." Every Muslim in the Middle East knows exactly what this means. This is their way of saying that first they'll get the Jews who observe the Sabbath on Saturday and then they'll get the Christians who's Sabbath is Sunday.

Brigitte Gabriel
Chapter Eight
Because They Hate
[The first half of the book is about her experience as a teenager in Southern Lebanon during the civil war. Lots of emotional stuff. I enjoyed it but would have been reluctant to recommend it because it didn't have much in the way of facts except for the details of her very limited view of the events around her. The next quarter of the book is very factual. Good stuff. It changed my mind about recommending it for people that are pro-Muslim and need their eyes opened. That last quarter of the book gets a bit "shrill". She says that most Democrats should be tried for treason, we shouldn't mind having our conversations listened to or being searched without a warrant, and is rather sarcastic about the ACLU. Yeah, most Democrat politicians (and a fair number of Republicans) should be in prison for treason but the political reality is they are above the law. And I disagree with her about giving up freedoms in the name of security. But if you are going to read just one book on our war against Muslim extremists this is the one I recommend. I think I've read seven different books that devote at least 25% of the content to this topic. This is the easiest to read and because of her very personal experience she makes the threat from the Muslims as undeniable and as frightening as the Holocaust.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Monday, March 05, 2007 11:45:04 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 
# Sunday, March 04, 2007

It's interesting to me how I'm so frequently associated with survivalists. Just because I'm into guns, explosives, and live in Idaho shouldn't necessarily mean I  have anything to do with survivalists. Sure, I have a electric generator but it's for Boomershoot. Sure I know a lot about growing both animals and plants for food. But that's because I grew up on a farm. I even went hunting once. But I don't consider myself even loosely associated with the survivalist crowd. Not that I think associating with them is something to be avoided. I just don't think it's accurate to make that link.

<heavy sigh>

Over at Survival Blog part of my post on biofuels and farmers was picked up as the quote of the day.

Joe Huffman  Sunday, March 04, 2007 2:56:06 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [5]  | 

Yesterday I went to a local store to pick up the 800 surveyors stakes used to mount the targets and some powdered lime used for neutralizing acid in the soil. The acid in the soil causes the lead bullet to leach into the ground and water. I wandered around looking for the lime and finally asked. The guy found two broken bags spilling their contents in a back corner. He checked inventory in the computer and found a quantity of zero. I asked about the next shipment and was told I would have to talk to someone "up front". As we walked into the main store he said I might be able to get the two broken bags cheap if I asked the guy up front. He introduced me and I explained the situation with the two broken bags. Instead of the usual $8 something a bag he offered me them for $2.00. I agreed if they could put them in a garbage bag or something so the contents wouldn't spill. He agreed and asked if I needed anything else.

I told him I needed 800 surveyors stakes. He asked, "What are you going to do with that many stakes? You're not surveying for a house." I paused as I internally debated telling him it was for explosives or for a big vampire hunt. He said, "Maybe we don't want to know..." I agreed, "Maybe not." As he wrote up the ticket I pointed to the BOOMERSHOOT label on my jacket and told him, "I put on a shooting event called Boomershoot every year. We make explosives, put them in cardboard boxes, and put on the stakes. Then people from all over the country show up to shoot at them." He stopped typing. "Really! I was a 8541 in the Marines. Where is this at?" I told him near Cavendish and he knew where it was at and said he would have to check it out. He started type again told me, "I'm going to give you those broken bags for free because I like you already." He talked about the scopes he used in the military and asked what sort of guns people bring to Boomershoot. I told him lots of things up to and including .50 BMG. We talked about match ammo and the size and range of the targets. As he finished typing he told me, "I'm giving you a discount on the stakes too... unless you have a problem with that." I told him the event was full but it's fun to watch and we get spectators that drive from Seattle each year. He said he would definitely check it out and asked if there was a website. I gave him Boomershoot.org and a buddy and he were checking it out as I left to load up the stakes and lime.

I looked at the receipt later and realized I got the stakes for half the normal price.

Joe Huffman  Sunday, March 04, 2007 2:26:27 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 

Guard with jealous attention the public liberty. Suspect every one who approaches that jewel. Unfortunately, nothing will preserve it but downright force. Whenever you give up that force, you are inevitably ruined.

Patrick Henry
Speech of June 5 1788

Joe Huffman  Sunday, March 04, 2007 9:48:17 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Saturday, March 03, 2007

"This is a display of anger and rage after more than seven years of struggle to keep what is ours."

This (riots in Copenhagen) is what you get in a socialist society.

The building, which has been viewed as free public housing by young squatters since the 1980s, has become a popular cultural center for youngsters with anti-establishment and far-left sympathies.

...

The eviction had been planned since last year, when courts ordered the squatters to hand the building over to a Christian congregation that bought it six years ago.

The squatters refused to leave, saying the city had no right to sell the building, which has hosted concerts with performers like Australian Nick Cave and Icelandic singer Bjork. They have demanded another building for free as a replacement.

The problem is they have no sense of what constitutes ownership. They are like spoiled children screaming "Mine! Mine!"

Socialists and communists have a long history of these sort of riots. It's how they get their way. For example, The National Socialist German Workers Party had numerous riots in their rise to power. Similar riots brought socialists to power throughout all of Western Europe.

The building was sold six years ago and the rightful owners have been unable to use their own property for that time. It's long past time to send the brats to their "free" jail cell for a long "time-out". Had the thugs of the Germany National Socialists immediately been thrown in jail millions of lives might have been saved.

Joe Huffman  Saturday, March 03, 2007 12:45:49 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 

Today I received an email from a Boomershoot entrant requesting a couple of friends be put on the waiting list for Boomershoot 2007.

We get quite a few squirrel hunters at Boomershoot. The skills and equipment required for both sports are essentially identical. However, it appears these two squirrel hunters are a little unequipped for conventional squirrel hunting. Pistols are marginal at best (Rolf used hot .357 magnum loads from "entertainingly close" distances to get marginal results). And the rifle the other guy is shown carrying doesn't have a scope. The closest targets are 375 yards away and without a scope it's really tough to see the targets. Therefore I'm putting these guys AT the 375 yard line. It'll be a once in a lifetime event for them. And no waiting list either.

Joe Huffman  Saturday, March 03, 2007 12:15:15 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

I recently was given a tour of a "secure area". For access it required your hand geometry biometric information, your RFID card, and your PIN. Or did it?

There were two bolts that connected the sliding door on it's tracks. The removal of two nuts with a 11/16" (I could be wrong on the size, I've been out of the farm shop too long for my eye calibration to be trusted) open end wrench would have allowed the door to be removed. It probably would take as much as a minute to remove the two nuts and the door and a similar amount of time to restore the door and other than the video camera in the area there would be no evidence of access to the "secure area".

I pointed this out to my guide. They didn't seem concerned, "That's why we have other security measures such as the cameras." Security is no stronger than the weakest link. The hand geometry sensor, RFID card, and PIN are easily bypassed. They don't have "other security measures". They have video cameras as their sole means of security.

And of course guns, even in the possession of the guards, were banned in the area.

Joe Huffman  Saturday, March 03, 2007 11:19:35 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 

Very cool. I used it with Net Stumbler files with great results.

Joe Huffman  Saturday, March 03, 2007 10:48:49 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

For years liberals have misrepresented the danger of legal gun ownership and suppressed or ignored data proving legal gun ownership does not pose a danger to the public. Much to the disappointment of liberals, study after study has found that more guns do not mean more crime nor does more gun control mean less crime.

Gary Palmer
Gun rights issue about to be resurrected in Congress
Alabama Policy Institute
[Yup. Liberals are disappointed by the lack of blood in the streets but that doesn't stop them. They do love those dances. Facts are irrelevant to their reality.

The editorial has further interesting stuff in it. I'd heard rumors in other places but Palmer elaborates on how pro-gun members of congress are attempting to flush out the pretend supporters of our RKBA. Once they are flushed it's our job to shoot them down in the next election.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Saturday, March 03, 2007 9:32:34 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 
# Friday, March 02, 2007

My brother Doug still lives on the farm. While visiting recently we talked about the recent trend to make grain into fuel. It's been done for years but recently there has been a lot of new ethanol plants going in and using up a lot of the corn production. We don't raise any corn on the farm but prices for wheat and barley have risen because the corn previously used for livestock feed is being pulled off the market for ethanol. Cattle, sheep, and pigs will eat chopped barley and wheat as well as corn so wheat is now at something like a 30 year high. Ignoring for now the fact that it's not an all time high, that 30+ years ago wheat sold for more than it does today, we realize that there might be an increase in prosperity of some farmers in the near future.

Some people are fantasizing about replacing nearly all our non renewable fuels with "natural" fuels made from grain. The key word in previous sentence is fantasizing. I knew Doug had done the calculations 15 or 20 years ago and realized then farms cannot begin to supply our fuel needs and I asked him to redo the calculations. He sent me this short paper (Microsoft Word .DOC, slightly edited by me). The important information is as follows:

Comparing potential alcohol production to current petroleum production, we see that if we stop eating and make ALL of the world grain production into alcohol, we will produce:

1.77e16/1.447e17 or 12% of the energy we currently get from petroleum.

...

...we are falling behind on world food production versus consumption in the last 10 – 15 years, so there are a few billion people that will have to stop eating if the rest of us want to stop using fossil fuels and switch to biofuels.

Also on the negative side is the fact that the huge increase in agricultural production that we have seen in the last 50 years is mostly due to fertilizers that are based on natural gas. Modern agricultural production also depends on fossil fuels for farm equipment and transportation. Thus, the “renewable” biofuels are also based in part on fossil fuels.

He doesn't take into account that a fair amount of the oil pumped from the ground is not burned as fuel but is used as lubricants, paints, and materials such as plastic. So that 12% number is wrong in that it assumes all oil is converted into energy. So you can probably boost that number up to something like 15 or 20%. But still that is assuming that the entire world's production of grain is used for energy. So assuming that we only ask half the planet to stop eating foods that have grain products in them (no more bread, cookies, noodles, or Twinkies and don't forget most of your meat is grain fed) we can only supply about 8 to 10% of our energy requirements with our current production levels of grain. Also he probably wasn't aware of this recent news on converting cellulose to fuel.

Maybe we can increase production, right? Yes, some. But the last time I checked the U.S. was losing about one million acres of farm land per year. Farm land is easily converted into roads, housing developments, and shopping malls so that's what is happening to most of that one million acres per year. Add to that dwindling supply of farm land the increasing population and the fact that most of the prime farm land is already in production and you rapidly realize biofuels aren't going to be the answer to our energy needs.

Something no person living in the U.S. has experienced is a shortage of food. In Europe during and after WWII there were times when there just wasn't enough food for everyone. In China and Africa it's been even more common. But in the U.S. someone might go hungry because they didn't have enough money for food but there was always food available.

For at least the last 15 years my brother and I have asking each other "when are things going to turn around on the farm?" They are running equipment that is over 30 years old which only keep running because they have a good machine shop and can do their own repairs and even build new parts and equipment. Things have been tough on the farm for a long time and we watched as the cost of production kept rising and the crop prices remained flat or even dropped. Dad figures the government should "set a fair price for everything and keep it there". Nixon tried that and it didn't work. That sort of thing will never work. It simply can't work. There has to be a shortage or at least the threat of a shortage before the price of our crops will increase. Maybe then "things will turn around".

Food is an interesting exercise in supply and demand. Classically one would claim that as prices go down consumption will increase. But in the U.S. today ask yourself, how much more would you eat if the price of food dropped by half? What if the price of food was 10% of present day prices? Or what if food was free? Would you and your family significantly increase your consumption? Probably not. And in the other direction, how much would you pay to avoid cutting your consumption in half? Food demand is extremely inelastic.

15 or 20 years ago there was something like a years supply of wheat in storage. Stop production, and assuming perfect transportation and distribution, and it would be a year before the supply of breads, noodles, and Twinkies disappeared. Recently that surplus has dwindled down into the neighborhood of 30 to 45 days. And during that time the price of wheat did not increase above the "noise". Why? Because there was still a surplus and the demand is inelastic. Now, with the ethanol plants coming on line and wheat and barley replacing corn in the feedlots we might see an actual world-wide shortage of wheat in our near future. And then what happens?

That's an interesting question. Far more interesting that what one might think at first glance. Farmers, contrary to popular impression, are not stupid. All the stupid ones went out of business years ago. What you are left with are smart farmers that were too stubborn to get a job in the city. Smart, stubborn, and making do, scrimping by for 30 years. When it looks like there is actually going to be a shortage do you think those farmers will sell their crop as soon as they get it in from the field? Or will they hold on to it for a while to get a better price? If there wasn't going to be a shortage there will be as all those smart, stubborn farmers figure it's payback time. It's time to make up the missed profit for the last 30 years. They are going to sit on that wheat and wait as long as they can. And with the prices going through the roof it shouldn't be hard for them to get the banks to loan them the money to pay their bills while they "wait for prices to peak".

What happens next? My speculation, and everyone I have talked to about this, is that the people in the cities won't stand for it. Once they start seeing they can't buy an unlimited number of Twinkies and Big Macs anymore and the ones they can buy are twice as expensive as they were a couple months ago they will demand the government "do something". Maybe then Dad will get his wish, the government will set a "fair price" for wheat and the farmers that refuse to sell at that price will have their crop forcibly taken from them. Those smart, stubborn farmers with 30 years of resentment built up will have their crops taken.

Every farmer I knew growing up owned one or more guns. Most of them went hunting. I wonder what they will hunt when the government says they have to sell their crop for less than what the market would pay for it?

Interesting times we live in...

Update: Doug made the following comments:

I am aware of cellulose.  I went on a tour last summer on WSUs conservation farm north of Pullman.  They talked about switch grass in the midwest.  It doesn't grow well here, but we would probably grow things like Reed's Canary grass here.  You can get more energy per acre from switch grass, but they are still working on ways to convert the cellulose to starches and sugars so the yeast can digest it.  It didn't seem like the technological difficulties were insurmountable, but we aren't there yet.  In 10 years, we may be replacing corn ethanol with switch grass ethanol, but I would be willing to bet that without a major crisis of some type, the world demand for energy will continue to outpace production of biofuels.  China for example is ramping up their industry and will have an insatiable thirst for energy if that continues to go well for them.

The second point is what happens when we actually have a shortage of food.  First off, the wealthy people in the world, (Americans and Europeans) won't have a food shortage.  Africa, the poor contries in the middle east and south east asia will all be unable to buy food.  They can't afford it right now, so we give them a lot of food.  If the price of wheat triples, it would then cost a whopping $0.27/lb.  This should barely be measurable when you buy a big mac or other prepared foods.  Breakfast cereals often cost that much per ounce, so I don't think the American consumer will get hurt that bad.  What I do think will happen is the American people will feel empathy for the starving people of the world and the guilt that people of western european culture seem so eager to feel will take over.  The media will start scolding us for taking food out of the mouths of starving children in Africa to put in our SUVs.  The political correctness of biofuels will butt head to head with the political correctness of feeding the starving children of the world.  The media, which controls the thinking of the American people and which takes sides in nearly every issue will have to decide if we want biofuels or if we want to continue fueling the population explosion of undeveloped countries.  My guess is they will instruct the American people through biased reporting to send our food to the starving children of the world.  Politicians will respond accordingly and the ethanol mandate and biodiesel tax credits will be swiped away as an experiment gone wrong.

Where does that leave us with energy?  I am not certain, but I suspect we will be drilling for more oil and speeding up the process of depleting that natural resource.  Greenhouse fears are the fad right now, but will probably fade away when people like Al Gore realize they can't enjoy the things they want in life without consuming fossil fuels.

Update2: I don't expect prices to just triple if a shortage occurs. Prices tripled once before when the Russians had a crop failure and started buying a noticeable portion of the worlds supply. They didn't produce a world wide shortage just reduced the reserves. If there is an actual shortage I wouldn't be surprised to see prices increase by a factor of 10. This might increase the cost of processed food in the U.S. by something like 25 to 50%. Not so much that most people in the U.S. would be unable to buy it and most probably wouldn't change their shopping habits. But something Doug did bring up will put some elastic into the demand. We give a lot of food away to other countries. Those give aways are almost for certain dollar based rather than quantity based. As the price rises less food can be purchased for the same amount of money. Hence the demand (demand in the sense that people with money to actually purchase the food as opposed to just being hungry but without the means to buy it) will decrease some with increasing prices. And of course what will happen when people start actually going hungry in some of those other countries? People will die both from actual lack of food and from fighting over what food is available. Interesting times...

Joe Huffman  Friday, March 02, 2007 2:43:07 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]  | 

Xenia was in the school play a few weeks ago. She played one of the lead roles of course (since she and Meghan WON FIRST PLACE IN STATE COMPETITION). I took a bunch of pictures for them and Xenia finally had the time (and the computer which I just got up and running for her last weekend) to Photoshop them into "good enough" condition to be presented in public. Below is just one of the many pictures. In this picture you see my 30+ year old coveralls (I don't wear them much now that I'm not on the farm) Xenia borrowed for another cast member:

Joe Huffman  Friday, March 02, 2007 1:26:03 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

A hammer, a simple tool, is not impersonal. And the more complicated tools and machines get, like guns, the more personal they get. Guns don’t like living beings. Their goal is to eliminate living beings.

David Gerard
Sketches: Set up the guns and the oatmeal
[When my gun safe starts bulging from the guns procreating I'll believe they have become personal and have goals. Until then I'll be more inclined to believe that David Gerard has mental problems.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Friday, March 02, 2007 1:06:06 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Thursday, March 01, 2007

Guns ARE evil! And very little good comes from the availability of a bullet designed to kill human beings!

Mackenzie Astin
[He's an actor. That means he knows how to read his line but it doesn't mean he knows anything about guns, bullets, or politics. But unfortunately because of an actors visibility they become authority figures.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Thursday, March 01, 2007 11:21:38 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Guns destroy and kill and they are a threat to our democracy.

Judy Bassingthwaighte
Director of Gun Free South Africa
January 24, 2006
http://www.thestar.co.za/index.php?fSectionId=129&fArticleId=3079045
[I always find projection interesting. Guns are what protect the people from a government turning tyrannical and she gets it precisely backward. I remember having a conversation with one woman who totally agreed the press was extremely biased. But she believed it was biased against liberals. Projection is just one of many tools utilized by anti-gun bigots with mental problems.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, February 28, 2007 8:36:23 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]  | 
# Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Kevin Baker at The Smallest Minority and a couple of other guys put in a lot of time trying to talk sense into some bigots over the last couple of days. I just lurked until today. I finally posted my Just One Question--which of course went unanswered.

Then the bigots attacked a gun owner that reported an instance where he felt he was about to be attacked by a couple of young men. He put his hand on his gun and without drawing it faced the young men down. They went away without incident. Then the bigots claimed the incident never occurred or that if it did the young men were just probably "asking if you want to buy a ticket to a school's charity event." That pissed me off. My response:

I find it quite interesting that someone that was not a witness to the alleged event concludes the event did not occur without producing any facts of their own or pointing out any inconsistency in the reporting of the event. Apparently they believe they have some sort of ESP that allows them to remotely view the event in the past without knowing the exact location or time of the event. Very impressive...

Or perhaps it's just another bigoted statement against a gun owner. Dismissing their statements out of hand simply because they reported facts that are uncomfortable to the bigot.

Gun owners are the niggers/gays/Jews/pick-your-minority of the 21st century. What would your reaction be if the some politician demanded you be registered because of the color of your skin, your choice of sexual partners, or your religion? What if you were not allowed to freely associate with others of your kind without reporting it to the government (gun show laws present in some states)? What if you were subject to special investigation and discrimination in your employment if you spoke up about these infringements of your rights outside of work and on your own time? What if there were organizations that were openly advocating your extinction from society despite clear constitutional and statutory protection? What if the courts ignored the constitution and the laws supposedly protecting these minority? What if the bigoted politicians that, by law (check out 18 USC 242), should go to jail are instead regarded as “progressive” and “innovative” and are reelected again and again? What if people said you "are all empty scrotum shriveled dick creeps who need guns to bolster some sad sense of masculinity"?

That's what it's like to be a gun owner today. That is why we are so sensitive and why we are so dedicated. It's because our culture is being threatened with permanent extinction by bigots who don't care what the facts are. Bigots who can't answer Just One Question.

It's a waste of my time. It's jousting with windmills, so to speak, but it made me feel better.

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, February 27, 2007 9:53:07 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [5]  | 

Weekend before last I had the joy of spending a little more time with my wife and remaining child at home when they came over to the Seattle area on Thursday night and stayed until Monday. Xenia tells the story with pictures.

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, February 27, 2007 8:58:55 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |