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# Saturday, September 30, 2006
By: Joe Huffman Saturday, September 30, 2006 10:09:23 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot | Home Life )

Xenia's boyfriend just came home on leave from his army training. Xenia has been anxiously awaiting his return after not seen him for months.

After saying, "Hi." The first thing I asked him if he brought any hand grenades back for me. Alas, he says access is restricted. <heavy sigh>

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, September 30, 2006 3:27:29 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Home Life )

My nephew, Scott Amos, became an Eagle Scout today. We just got back from the ceremony. His name was engraved on a plaque that is kept in the local church. His was the 13th name on the plaque. The first one had the date of 1983. There have been just 13 Eagle Scouts in the town of Potlatch Idaho in the last 23 years.

I was surprised at how big a deal it was. The mayor was there, a city councilman, and our State Representative, Shirley Ringo. He got letters of congratulation from our U.S. Representative Butch Otter, our U.S. Senator Larry Craig, our Governor Jim Risch, Vice President Dick Cheney, and President George Bush.

Congratulations to Scott for acceptance into such an elite group.

Xenia took lots of pictures and I expect I'll be getting one to put up with this post later today.

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, September 30, 2006 6:29:26 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot )

I don't help people make bombs (exception given to the U.S. Military should they ask but that is exceedingly unlikely). And I don't help idiots make explosives.

A case in point:

From: Andrewball20@aol.com
Sent: Saturday, September 30, 2006 5:48 AM
To: blog@joehuffman.org
Subject: Comments on: The View From North Central Idaho

i want 2 get some hydrogen peroxide beacause can u send me some and how much will it cost i live in england by the way.

Hydrogen peroxide is used for many things. But if someone doesn't know where to get it then almost for certain they want it for making explosives. Otherwise they would go to a retailer that specializes in that particular legitimate use and ask for the substance that performed the function they wanted accomplished. For example you would get acetone for removing paint at the paint store and ask for "paint remover". Or you would get acetone from the cosmetic department of the drug store by asking for fingernail polish remover.

And why else would he find me (actually boomershoot.org/general/bombhelp.htm and then to blog.joehuffman.org) via this google query:

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=how+to+make+a+bomb
My response to this idiot:

From: Joe Huffman
Sent: Saturday, September 30, 2006 6:42 AM
To: 'Andrewball20@aol.com'
Subject: RE: Comments on: The View From North Central Idaho

 
In particular this link should be of use to you: http://nobombs.net/brucel/explosivegraphics.html
 
And as near as I can tell you don't live in England. You probably sent this message from NYC and certainly from within the U.S.
 
And furthermore if you can't figure out how to get hydrogen peroxide on your own you are far too stupid to know how to build explosives without hurting some innocent person. I wouldn't worry about you getting a Darwin Award but hurting innocent people I do worry about.
 
-joe-

I may be wrong about him being from NYC. His email appears to have come from a dialup in NYC. His browsing appears to come in from the U.K.

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, September 30, 2006 4:49:04 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

Giving a friend or neighbor a firearm doesn’t help them– it puts them in danger. And re-releasing a firearm into the community instead of destroying it is, as Shaw rightly realizes, asking for trouble.

'Mike' at GunGuys.com
September 29, 2006
Gun Owner Can’t Get Rid of an Unwanted Gun
[One could surmise from this nut case that the gun, a bolt action .22 rifle, was caught in a trap while on the prowl for a victim. He uses language that would be more appropriate for a live rattlesnake than an inanimate object made of metal and wood. Either 'Mike' has mental problems or he is actually on our side and is mocking the anti-gun bigots.--Joe]

# Friday, September 29, 2006
By: Joe Huffman Friday, September 29, 2006 4:43:40 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot | Gun Rights )

From Sean and Wendell.

Sean says, "In the spirit of Boomershoot Adventures..."

Skeet shooting has been replaced.

I'm amazed by his excellent aim shooting the shotgun from the hip and what appears to be without sights with the machine gun.

Now if those cars had been filled with Boomerite...

I've had several requests to blow up cars but people always lost interest when I told them they would have to help clean up the mess.

By: Joe Huffman Friday, September 29, 2006 8:25:57 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot )

I'm working on the web page(s) for reserving a Boomershoot 2007 shooting position. You can see it here. For test purposes only at this time. Let me know what you think.

The pictures were taken March of 2006 on a rather "gray" day. During the actual event the grass is green even if it's snowing, you have 40 MPH winds, and the forecast is looking up because they are only predicting 20 MPH winds and rain.

Actually, some times it's beautiful (from Ry, click on the picture for the video):

Now, isn't that beautiful? One of my favorite quotes says it so well:

I don't know why everyone does not share my delight with explosives. If they don't, it has to be some abhorrent character defect.

Ragnar Benson
From: Ragnar's Guide to Home and Recreational Use of High Explosives
Page 110, Copyright 1988.

By: Joe Huffman Friday, September 29, 2006 7:14:34 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

The time is overdue for a reassessment of such laws. All they have done is create target-rich, no-risk environments for monsters who have no fear of encountering an armed teacher or administrator, or a legally-armed private citizen who might happen to be in the building.

This sort of thing didn't happen before the advent of gun-free school zone laws. You never saw such an outrage in the days when high schools typically had rifle teams, and -- particularly in the West -- where it was common in the fall to find both teachers and students with hunting rifles or shotguns locked in their cars.

Alan Gottlieb
Chairman of the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms
CO. ATTACK PROVES FALLACY OF ‘GUN FREE SCHOOL ZONE’ LAWS, SAYS CCRKBA
September 28, 2006

# Thursday, September 28, 2006
By: Joe Huffman Thursday, September 28, 2006 8:13:52 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Technology )

Actually it is a Discovery Channel piece that I was pointed to by the anti gun bigot at "Freedom State Alliance". This time I actually mostly agree with him when he says:

This shocking video might be the best demonstration of the lethality and power of the .50-caliber sniper rifle – YOU SIMPLY MUST WATCH IT.

Drop the words "shocking" and "YOU SIMPLY MUST" and we've come to agreement.

There is some false/misleading information in the video however. Bolt action rifles don't take 15 to 20 seconds to cycle. And the AK round is seldom referred to as "308".

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, September 28, 2006 12:30:31 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

Liberal gun-grabbing legislation is going to go down here... . And I'm going to continue to stand with some of my colleagues and reference those hundreds of thousands of Second Amendment supporters that want the gun-grabbing legislation to go down.

Daryl Metcalfe
Pennsylvania State Representative 
September 27, 2006
Mostly, a miss on gun control
The Philadelphia Enquirer September 28, 2006
[This particular gun grabbing special event attracted a lot of attention outside the state as well as inside. It's good to see the anti-gun bigots stopped.--Joe]

# Wednesday, September 27, 2006
By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, September 27, 2006 7:31:40 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

The Utah Supreme court:

In the decision, the court ruled a University of Utah policy prohibiting students, faculty and staff from carrying weapons on campus violated Utah's Uniform Firearms Act. The law, enacted in 2004, prevents any state entity from creating a rule which in "any way inhibits or restricts the possession or use of firearms on either public or private property," according to the ruling.

So what are the schools doing?

Paul Murphy, spokesperson for the attorney general's office, said the policies at both Weber State and USU raise legal concerns in light of the court's recent ruling.

"Right now, the law is very clear that only the legislature can make laws concerning firearms," Murphy said. "And if they [state schools] are out of sync with that, they will have to make changes."

So far, however, USU and Weber State have no plans to permanently change their gun policies.

"I haven't heard anything on our campus about making a change to this policy [prohibiting firearms]," said Travis Hampshire, a human resources generalist at Weber State. "I imagine if this was brought up to the president, they would look into it."

"Look into it"? Yeah, right. They are going to do their best to ignore it and if necessary fight it every inch of the way. It's just like 50 years ago with signs that said "no colored people allowed". These bigots are defying the law, denying people their inalienable rights, and should be prosecuted, fined, and jailed under 18 USC 242.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, September 27, 2006 7:14:40 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Technology )

When the Intel 386 came out tech pundits joked about the computers could then wait faster for the next keystroke while running your word processing program. But Bill Gates told the world that no matter how fast the computers were that Microsoft would be able to write software that would bring them to their knees. He wasn't joking but I'm pretty sure it didn't come out quite like he intended it.

The 386 ran at something like 15 to 25 MHz and required a separate math co-processor in order to compute the sum of two floating point numbers in anything less than dozens of clock cycles. Trig functions, square roots, or logarithms were hundreds of clock cycles without the co-processor.

Now Intel has announced quad-core processors with more cores on the way:

Intel will deliver the company's first quad-core processors for high-performance PCs and servers in November, getting the jump on rival AMD in providing the next generation of chips designed to deliver the power needed to handle high-definition video, cutting-edge games, and math-intensive number-crunching.

...

Intel officials already have indicated that chips with dozens of cores might be possible by the end of this decade. The company hinted that, 10 years down the line, chips with hundreds of cores might be possible.

Mark Margevicius, a research director at Gartner, said that the move from single- to dual-core processors broke the barrier to such developments. "We're now in a multicore world," he said in a recent interview. "There's no looking back."

One of these quad-core processors can do more hard core (pardon the pun) math computing in a second than my first 386 could in five hours. Now I just have to write applications than can put that processing power to useful work.

By: Lyle at UltiMAK Wednesday, September 27, 2006 3:05:36 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Freedom | Politics )

A mere 70 some years after many Jews no doubt told each other, "Careful not to piss off the Nazis.  It might antagonize them" we see the German government ceding to the Jihadis' wishes.  No doubt this will be a big help in bringing "Peace In Our Time".

Mozart's Idomeneo, re di Creta (K. 366) was written in 1780, and premiered in Munich in 1781.  225 years later, it has become politically incorrect-- apparently banned in Germany until further notice.  My! How we have progressed.

LONDON (Reuters)
Berlin security officials had warned that staging the opera "Idomeneo" would pose an "incalculable security risk."

The controversy centered on a scene in which King Idomeneo is shown on stage with the severed heads of Buddha, Jesus, Mohammad and the sea god Poseidon.

This Mozart was an unusual fellow.  Here's a background of the offending opera.  You can see it performed for yourself, or arrange a community showing.

On a slightly interesting side note;  Mozart died in December of 1791-- the same month in which our United States Bill of Rights was ratified.  Both, it seems, are unpopular today among idiots.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 26, 2006 11:27:44 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

Action is greater than writing. A good man is a nobler object of contemplation than a great author. There are but two things worth living for: to do what is worthy of being written; and to write what is worthy of being read.

Ross Perot
[I was thinking of Jeff Cooper when I selected this quote. He did both.--Joe]

# Tuesday, September 26, 2006
By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 26, 2006 8:15:41 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Sex )

At first glance at the newspaper version I was only surprised by one statistic; "one in five men had homosexual experiences". That seems a little bit high but it would depend on the exact question asked. Other bits of information include:

"Materials in our archive range from holiday makers enjoying themselves on the beach at Blackpool to the experiences of the Second World War when many people, fearing they may not survive the war, were more sexually active," she said.

Despite the taboos of the time, the 1949 sex survey, originally meant for national newspapers but never published due to its content, found one in five men had homosexual experiences and a quarter admitted to having sex with prostitutes. One in five women confessed to extra-marital affairs.

Alan Crosby, a historian at Liverpool University, said the archives also show how attitudes to sex crimes have changed.

"Sexual offences in the past were recognized as serious crimes, just as they are today," he said, but the punishment system was very different.

Documents detail how a man convicted of a sex crime in northern English town in 1630 was punished by being paraded through the streets and humiliated in front of fellow citizens.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 26, 2006 5:49:15 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Gun Rights )

As noted by others (and hereJeff Cooper has passed away.

I have more quotes from Cooper (147) in my collection than from any other person. Greg Hamilton comes in at a distant second with 82, Heinlein comes in at third with 61. And I stopped collecting Cooper quotes years ago when people said they were getting just a little tired of me posting the latest gem from him.

For the next week rather than trying to mix things up the QOD will be nothing but Jeff Cooper material.

Update: Due to popular demand I'm posting my entire Jeff Cooper quote collection here and now. See also the collection at Front Sight, Press.

Update2: I should have mentioned in my original post that when I teach a self defense class part of the materials I hand out are a copy of Cooper's book Principles of Self Defense. This book is tool independent. Whether you defend yourself with your bare hands or rifles and hand grenades what is most important is your state of mind. In this book Cooper points out, in hindsight, the obvious.

I also mention to my students that Cooper is the Father of IPSC. IPSC is the PC term for a game/sport that is in essence combat pistol. Cooper created the game in order to advance the state of the art in pistol craft. He succeeded in a big way. Shortly after the beginning of the sport it was considered world class if you could shoot an El Presidente in nine seconds. Today nine seconds is way below average with world class being half that. It was partly better equipment but mostly it was because of better technique. Technique that came from the creation of the sport and the competition that followed. Even if Cooper's contribution were simply this he would earn a place in history but his contributions were far, far, greater. The quotes below give only a hint of his genius and his contributions to our society.

----
Found 147 quotes.
----
At the S.C.O.P.E. Conference we attended in Buffalo, New York, as guest
speaker, a young man was honored for successfully defending himself and
family after he had been shot twice in the forehead with a 22. We saw the
pictures and the two holes were quite close together and almost centered
between the hairline and the eyebrows. The victim fell down, but was able
to pick himself up, move to another room, seize his shotgun, and dispose of
the would-be murderer. I guess the moral is, do not worry about your
condition, make your assailant worry about his condition.
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 10
    15 November 1993
----
Jack Furr, who was an Orange Gunsite Rangemaster, reports that one of his
Mexican students last year had a most successful engagement south of the
border. When set upon by two goblins, he precisely acquired the kneeling
position, as taught here, and put two rounds in two targets each. One was
dead on the scene, the other was dead on arrival. Though he was using only a
9mm pistol, his technique was exactly as put to him by Jack, and he came out
in complete charge of the situation. This is elegant vindication of the
technique.

On that subject of repelling boarders, we discovered recently that Ty Cobb,
the legendary baseball player and notorious curmudgeon, was once hit upon by
what today would be called a mugger in a dark alley. Cobb relieved his
assailant of his pistol and beat him up with it so badly that his face could
not be identified in the morgue. Street punks should be careful to pick on
the right people - or the wrong people, depending upon your viewpoint.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 6, No. 5
    May 1998
----
During our recent motor touring, we noticed on several occasions the road
sign "Gusty winds may exist." Now I find that pretty fascinating. The notice
that gusty winds may exist suggests some thought be given to the
relationship of reality to existence. Whether such winds may or may not
exist opens the door to questions about what constitutes existence.
Descartes declaimed, Cogito ergo sum (I think: therefore I am). Whether
winds may or may not really and truly exist calls for serious thought. I
almost ran off the road considering this matter.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
----
When driving in our current urban battle zones, remember that when a car
stops suddenly in front of you and two people get out simultaneously, you go
to Condition Orange. This is particularly true if you have rear-ended the
car in front of you slightly with your bumper. This is a pre-planned
car-jacking technique. Bear it in mind!
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 6, No. 4
    April 1998
----
The profusion of new pistols makes a detailed survey of the market too large
a job for a newsletter. We may note, however, that the Europeans retain
their preoccupation with the 9mm Parabellum cartridge. This is due primarily
to the fact that the Europeans as a group are not interested in stopping
power. As one Frenchman once told me, if in Europe you shoot a criminal, he
sits down on the curb and bursts into tears. In America he will shoot back
and kill you if he can. Different attitude.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 6, No. 2
    February 1998
----
The Barret single-shot 50 BMG is now selling well in the United States, and
the Germans have come up with their own version of the same sort of piece.
The item is very attractive to the eye, but I have not had the chance to
shoot it. I have reason to believe that it will shoot very well. Its price
is high and it is forbidden in the United States as a "destructive device"
by the BATmen. I cannot regard this as any more than the usual annoyance I
feel with government regulation, but I really cannot see a purpose for this
rifle. It is doubtless great fun to shoot at medium- and long-range, if you
can afford the ammunition, but the only really appropriate target I can
conceive for it is the 55 gallon oil drum, suitably decorated. (Of course,
you can hit that drum just as well with a 30-caliber rifle such as an M1 -
but to bring up that point would be to spoil the fun.)

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 6, No. 2
    February 1998
----
Family member Mark Terry tells us that his nephew was decisively shot up last
October with a 32 auto. Range was very short and one of the hits was in the
head, but he was conscious and pretty chipper when the paramedics arrived.
At the hospital it was discovered that he had one of those little 32 pills
inside his skull, and so, rather than mess with an operation, they left it
there. As Mark says, that miniature bullet probably won't even set off metal
detectors at airports.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 6, No. 1
    January 1998
----
We see now that the Russians are pushing for police pistols of very small
caliber and very high velocity, presumably to defeat the body armor they
assume will be worn by their criminals. There are a couple of things wrong
with this approach, but I am quite content to let these people pursue their
own strange gods.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 6, No. 3
    March 1998
----
At long last I have discovered that most shooters are not interested in
firearms as tools, but rather as toys. Such people do not acquire their
weapons because of what they will do, but rather to gratify the "Christmas
morning joy" that we largely left behind in our childhood.

For many decades I have striven to design firearms that were primarily
useful, but now I discover that only a few people care about that. Well, so
be it. Let each one enjoy himself according to his tastes.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 6, No. 3
    March 1998
----
And now how about this new 440 Corbon cartridge? It is supposed to be
available in a new pistol by Magnum Research Incorporated, and it is said to
start a 260-grain bullet at 1700 f/s. This is just the ticket for the power
hungry pistolero always troubled with aggressive polar bears in Svalbard. I
suspect that anyone who can fire a 308 rifle, one hand, unsupported, at arm's
length, will have no trouble managing this new item.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 6, No. 3
    March 1998
----
Do you know what the "Big Twenty" is? The Big Twenty is the placement of 20
shots in a 20-inch circle in 20 seconds at a 1000 yards. Old time target
shots claim that this is impossible, but then for most of the 20th century
it was held that it was impossible to run a mile in 4 minutes.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 5, No. 5
    April 1997
----
The following nifty anecdote from our old friend Ian McFarlane, the
professional hunter from Botswana:

"About 0:300 we received a radio message that a Bushman tracker had returned
to one of the camps with a chest shot from an AK and was brought into Runtu
Hospital by helicopter. On notification that the patient had arrived and was
in theatre, we found him standing there smoking a cigarette. He had a wound
on the left chest in front and in the back. We took x-rays and found indeed
that it was through and through. We cleaned and closed the wound, and kept
him for a week in case of infection. This did not happen, but during that
time we found out that the Bushman had been wounded early in the morning of
the previous day. He tracked his antagonist during the day for about twelve
hours. He said he could have shot his man a few times during the day, but he
wanted to shoot him in the abdomen so that he would die painfully and
slowly. Just before sundown, he got his shot properly placed, and then
walked another eight hours back to base."

The wound, of course, was delivered by the 30 caliber Russian Short cartridge
of the AK47. Presumably the bullet had an iron core and a copper jacket,
allowing no deformation. Still, getting shot through the chest with a 30
caliber Russian Short might be thought to be enough to spoil one's appetite,
but these Bushmen are great little guys. I have associated with them just
enough to appreciate their admirable qualities.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 5, No. 2
    February 1997
----
We have discovered a marvelous use for the laser pistol sight. It is a nifty
toy for pet dogs, who can spend many happy hours chasing that orange dot all
over the living room.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 5, No. 1
    January 1997
----
Anyone who studies the matter will reach the conclusion that good
marksmanship, per se, is not the key to successful gunfighting. The
marksmanship problem posed in a streetfight is ordinarily pretty elementary.
What is necessary, however, is the absolute assurance on the part of the
shooter that he can hit what he is shooting at - absolutely without fail.
Being a good shot tends to build up this confidence in the individual.
Additionally, the good shot knows what is necessary on his part to obtain
hits, and when the red flag flies, the concentration which he knows is
necessary pushes all extraneous thinking out of his mind. He cannot let side
issues such as fitness reports, political rectitude, or legal liability
enter his mind. Such considerations may be heeded before the decision to
make the shot is taken, and reconsidered after the ball is over; but at the
time, the imperative front sight, surprise break must prevail.

Thus we have the paradox that while you almost never need to be a good shot
to win a gunfight, the fact that you are a good shot may be what is
necessary for you to hold the right thoughts - to the exclusion of all
others - and save your life. This may come as a shock to a good many
marksmanship instructors, but I have studied the matter at length and in
depth, and I am satisfied with my conclusions.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 5, No. 1
    January 1997
----
There has never been much question about it, and it is indisputable after
decades of observation that the single-action self-loading pistol - the Colt
1911 and its clones - is the easiest, heavy-duty sidearm with which to hit.
The crunchenticker is the most difficult, and the Glock is somewhere in the
middle. Shooting a Glock is simply shooting a single-action self-loader with
no safety and a very poor trigger. If real excellence is not the objective,
this is a satisfactory system to employ.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 16
    December 1996
----
Family member Norm Vroman recently went down to a cop gathering in Mesa
attended by about 400 lawmen.  Norm's 1911 was one of only two in evidence on
the range, and was the object of considerable wonder, as many of these young
people did not know what it was. Norm entered the shooting, and, not
surprisingly, won his class.  Then they knew.
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 14
    December 1996
----
Our old buddy Gene Harshbarger from Guatemala reports a recent episode with
the 25 ACP pistol cartridge. It seems that Gene's cousin was set upon by a
trio of car thieves who shot him once almost dead center with that dinky
little pistol. The bullet entered at a very flat angle, however, proceeded
laterally just inside the pectoral muscle, and exited after about 5 inches
of traverse, continuing on into the target's left arm.

The cousin hit the deck and started shooting back, whereupon the assailants
split. When he stood up the bullet slid out of his left sleeve and bounced
on the pavement. It penetrated the jacket, but not the skin of his left arm.

As we used to teach in the spook business, carry a 25 if it makes you feel
good, but do not ever load it. If you load it you may shoot it. If you shoot
it you may hit somebody, and if you hit somebody - and he finds out about it
- he may be very angry with you.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 14
    December 1996
----
We hear from neighbor Colonel Bob Young that the penalty for possession of a
hollow-point bullet in the great state of New Jersey is $1,000 per bullet.
Sometimes it seems that New Jersey should be treated as suggested for
Somalia - surrounded by an impenetrable wall and allowed to stew in its own
juice.
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 13
    November 1996
----
Among the new 10mm pistol cartridges, the "Cor-Bon .400", as reported to us
by Dick Davis of Second Chance, is supposed to put out a 165-grain bullet at
1300 f/s. Dick comments: "If we open it up to a 45 caliber and increase the
bullet weight to, say, 230 grains, we might have a real man-stopper."
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 13
    November 1996
----
From Chechnya via Time magazine:

"They are simply afraid of us. We saw it in their eyes during battle. They
have very strong weapons - but not very strong spirits."

As always, it is the man, not the gun, that wins.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 11
    September 1996
----
According to our official informant from the Smallarms Development Division,
we learn that the proposed personal arm of the individual soldier will be a
two-phase, handheld weapon basically equipped with night vision. Its lower
barrel will be a semi-automatic 223 for use against individual targets up to
perhaps 200 meters. Its top barrel will be a 40-millimeter grenade launcher
utilizing laser sight setting and good for proximity hits out to 1,000
meters.

This is just one of many proposals which may be due for experimental
adoption, and all of which seem to run on batteries. Our informant, who
spent much of the Gulf War racing around trying to keep people supplied with
batteries, advises us to invest in Duracel. (Which was just recently
purchased by Gillette.)

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 11
    September 1996
----
On a considerably less tragic line we may consider a case which happened not
long ago here in Arizona in which a felon undertook to engage the police
from a sixth floor balcony. The police smothered the target (with their
Glocks) who came down airborne to his death. When it was attempted to find
out how many shots the felon had taken, it was discovered that it was the
fall that killed him - no bullet wounds.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 11
    September 1996
----
European designers, including Lapua and Heckler & Koch, among others, are
hard at work producing what they call oberfliegeren. These are rifle
cartridges which serve about the same purpose as hot rods, which is to gain
attention. One of the most prominent is the 9x90mm, which uses a case
somewhat similar at the head to the 50 BMG, but is necked down to a 36
caliber. But the manufacturers of these remarkable cartridges maintain that
they are designed for police snipers, but it is pretty hard to see just what
tactical niche they fill. Pushing a 280-grain missile out the muzzle at
4,400 f/s may indeed accomplish something, but I can't imagine what that
might be.
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 9
    August 1996
----
In a recent curious case the subject was struck in the left side of the face
by a 380. The bullet was deflected by his jawbone down through his neck and
into his torso beneath the shoulder blade. The subject did not respond to
the blow, walked to the ambulance, was treated at the hospital for infection
and sent home with a Tylenol. According to the account he was laughing and
joking with bystanders throughout the experience and did not return for
medical assistance on the following day. Moral: If you insist on using a
miniature sidearm, confine your hits to the eye sockets.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 3
    February 1996
----
Up at a cop session at Bakersfield, we were treated to the usual round of
extraordinary cop stories. One such involved a goblin who unbelievably
accepted nine pellets of double 0 amidships without apparent distress. He
was annoyed, however, and called out to the shooter, "What did you do that
for?" We hunted around for a good answer to that question, and finally
settled upon, "My foot slipped."

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 12
    October 1995
----
"A fear of weapons is a sign of retarded sexual and emotional maturity."

    Sigmund Freud in "General Introduction to Psychoanalysis" via John Pate

    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 11
    September 1995
----
We hear from our overseas agents that law enforcement and the whole judicial
system in Kenya has now broken down to the extent that the people are now
largely executing summary justice on the spot. There is a good deal to
recommend this, but it does have certain disadvantages, principally in what
may be called over-control. (Shoplifters are frequently beaten to death at
the scene.)

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 11
    September 1995
----
We have a good anecdote from our neighbor and colleague, Colonel Bob Young,
who did a stint not long ago in Saudi Arabia. It seems that on this occasion
an American aircraft was parked on a runway, and being rather a sensitive
item it was given an individual sentry to keep unauthorized personnel at a
proper distance. In a demonstration of bad judgement, somebody in charge
gave this job to a girl soldier, the idea of which is extremely offensive to
a devout Muslim. In Saudi Arabia at this time the purity of the faith is
enforced by priestly types who prowl the country on the lookout for
violations of doctrine. These characters are armed with long, heavy whips.
One of them wandered onto the base and became totally scandalized at the
sight of this girl patrolling the aircraft with her M16. Shouting holy
imprecations, he endeavored to use his whip on the lass, who quite
reasonably shot him six times in the chest with her 223.

International Incident!

Bob tells us that the Air Force moved with uncharacteristic alacrity and got
the girl out of the country in a matter of minutes, and the whole incident
was immediately swept under the rug. It is hard to say who won that round,
but it recalls the principles of Hastings' Third Law, which reads

    "Do not throw rocks at people with guns."

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 9
    August 1995
----
War cry from darkest Connecticut: "Watch it, kid, or I will twist your head
around 'til your cap's on straight!"

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 9
    August 1995
----
Herewith an interesting tactical ploy for our times. Late night shopper comes
out of supermarket to be confronted by a hostile crowd of pickaninnies asking
for money. The shopper greets hostiles in friendly fashion and raises a
question,

"Any of you brothers seen my speedloader?"

"Speedloader?"

"Yah, something like this,"

and he brings out his Detective Special, fishes around in his pockets and
says,

"A speedloader is something you use to load this piece. It's round and made
of black rubber. I swear I dropped it around here someplace. Anybody see it?"

We have often noticed that one can frequently disconcert a goblin by asking
him a question he is not prepared for. This would seem to be a good one.

    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 6
    25 April 1995
----
Through Randy Umbs, our man in Wisconsin, we have finally acquired a
practical explanation for golf. It turns out that dog droppings freeze
iron-hard in the Wisconsin winters, and one can make excellent practice
with his 4-iron lobbing these remnants onto adjoining property. Chipping
one down the neighbor's chimney is the equivalent of a hole-in-one.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 2
    31 January 1995
----
I find it odd that the great majority of "gun writers" insist upon doing
accuracy testing of rifles at 100 yards range. You cannot find out much of
anything at 100. You can begin to get the picture at 200, but only at 300
can you derive a true accuracy assessment of rifle, ammunition and sight. Of
course in the field you will do very little shooting at 300 (despite what
the ads say), but if you are looking for an accuracy index nothing you will
find at 100 will show you very much.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 16
    20 December 1994
----
Note that the goblins choose as victims only those they deem to be patsies.
Louis Awerbuck and Chris Pollack have recently gleaned the following
statement from a restroom wall:
   
    There are no victims, only volunteers. You volunteer by looking
    uncertain and afraid. You volunteer by being, as grass-eaters invariably
    are, unprepared to confront the hazards of life.
   
As it used to be emphasized at Orange Gunsite, you are an easy mark in White,
but you are a difficult problem in Orange.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 10
    11 August 1994
----
Family member and Babamtulu veteran Jack Buchmiller notes that if Nicole
Simpson had studied at Gunsite she would now be a wealthy widow.    

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 9
    26 July 1994
----
As we have long taught, the rifle and the pistol serve two conceptually
different purposes, and while each may be called upon to perform the
function of the other, this is not a good practice and best results should
not be expected.

The essential difference is that the pistol is designed to solve totally
unexpected problems, whereas the rifle is taken in hand when the problem is
foreseeable. Thus instant readiness is the primary quality of the pistol. As
has been well said, "You cannot make an appointment for an emergency." When
you know there is going to be an emergency, you pick up your rifle. Now
there are all sorts of curious circumstances which may pose specific
exceptions to the foregoing principles, but the fact remains that the two
instruments fill different tactical niches, and training and practice
should be based upon that concept.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 4
    22 March 1994
----
Indian Country, 1994
Goblin shows up late at hamburger dispensary behaving obnoxiously.
Management calls the cops. Cop shows up and challenges goblin, who begins
shooting at him. Cop sustains several hits before returning fire and goes
down with a broken femur. Goblin runs dry and, bleeding from three wounds,
commences to reload. Two Navajos are trying to get their car started on the
parking lot. Analyzing the situation, they move in on the goblin and pound
him into the pavement, leaving him for dead. They then go back to the car
and continue fiddling with it. All manner of cop cars show up, complete with
flashing lights. County deputy attorney, who arrives with the cops,
approaches the two Navajos and asks if they can use any help. The answer is,
"Well, yes. You got a flashlight?" Cops furnish flashlight.

Moral: Always carry a flashlight in Indian country.

    Jeff Cooper
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 3
    1 March 1994
----
I'm just glad it'll be Clark Gable who's falling on his face and not Gary
Cooper.

    Gary Cooper
    On his decision not to take the leading role in "Gone With The Wind."
----
At Whittington I was asked, quite reasonably, by family member Art Hammer if
there was not some inconsistency in my emphasizing stopping power in
handguns while favoring medium power in rifles (short of buffalo guns.) Good
question!

The answer is essentially conceptual. A pistol is a defensive instrument,
designed to stop a fight that somebody else starts. It is strictly an
emergency device called for in an unpredicted emergency. The shooter has to
respond to an action initiated by another, thus he needs all the emphasis he
can properly control.

The rifle, on the other hand, is normally an offensive instrument with which
the shooter has the initiative and is carrying the play to his prey. Hence
the rifleman can shoot with great care, placing his bullets properly. He
needs only enough power to insure proper penetration into the vitals of his
target. Blowing down trees on the far side is an extravagance.

The pistolero defends. The rifleman attacks. The problems are different.
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 10
    15 November 1993
----
Anyone who knows anything about marksmanship knows that it is something one
does not boast about. You may remember that Billy Dickson always attributed
his long shot on the Indian to pure luck, and this was always called mere
modesty on his part. Other examples will occur to you. However, if you would
like a conspicuous case study of how it was done, consider the famous
"Tinian shot" delivered during the occupation of Saipan and Tinian during
the Pacific War.

When we had taken Saipan, it was planned to move across the intervening
straight and land on the north end of Tinian Island, utilizing as much
supporting artillery as we could muster, in addition to aerial bombardment
and naval gunfire. To bring this off we moved all of the guns available on
Saipan to the southern tip of the island and set them into position to fire
across the straight on targets selected as appropriate. The smallest guns
were placed as far forward as possible. In the case of the 75 millimeter
pack-howitzers, this was right on the beach. Now the 75 millimeter
pack-howitzer in not much of a cannon. Its principal virtue is that it is
light and compact and can be moved around in difficult terrain with minimum
effort. It fires a 3-inch shell at high angle to a fairly modest range -
say, 2,500 yards. When all was ready, the signal was given to commence
registering across the straight, starting with the little guns first. One
battery of 75 pack-howitzers fired one round, which arched over the
separating water and came down almost vertically.
 
It so happened that I was present at this time, riding offshore some 3,000
yards to the east of the straight. I was looking right at the point of
impact. The result was unbelievable. The first thing I saw was a white,
hemispherical flash, perhaps 500 yards in diameter. Out of this boiled a
huge black column of smoke thrusting skyward into the traditional mushroom
cloud. There was no sound, but we could see the shock wave moving out
towards us across the water in a curved pattern. In a moment that shock wave
struck the escorting destroyers and heeled them radically over in the water.
The curve raced on towards us and we turned away and covered our ears. What
hit us then is indescribable in words, but it was a sensation one is
unlikely to forget.

What evidently happened was that first ranging shot from the 75-millimeter
battery had found its way down some sort of ventilating shaft into the main
ammunition depot on the north end of the island, and everything went up
together.

I never heard what reports were circulated around amongst the artillerymen
on Saipan, but one can guess at a number of appropriate wisecracks:

    You want me to do that again?
    Now you guys with the big guns can have your turn.
    That was Number One gun. Now I am going to try with Number Two.
    Why didn't I think of that last week?
    Everybody break for chow.

And so on. That was the "Tinian shot." Anytime you feel like bragging about
something, keep that one in mind.

    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 9
    October 1993
----
Family member Dr. Werner Weissenhofer reports from Vienna. It seems that a
felon armed with a 357 revolver robbed a bank. As he left the bank, he was
accosted by a policeman whom he murdered with one shot. Great excitement
ensued, with the felon taking hostages and racing madly around from one
store to another. When the forces of law and order had been mobilized and
surrounded the goblin, a policeman volunteered to trade himself to the
goblin for two hostages. This offer was accepted, at which time the felon
fired at the policeman and seriously wounded him. The forces of law and
order opened up with everything they had, which was mostly AUG and Glock
fire. Shortly, the goblin killed himself with one round. He had fired three
times and achieved three hits. The police, according to their official
report, fired 1,261 rounds without drawing blood.

At one time, we used to refer to an event of this sort as a "Chinese Fire
Drill." Later we came to call if "Father's Day in Harlem." After the
interment of the Ayatollah Khomeini, we began to call it "An Iranian
Funeral." Now, I guess we can call it "A Viennese Bank Robbery."

As I have often stated, if someone wants to shoot at me, I sure hope he does
it on full-auto.

    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 9
    October 1993
----
We read in a recent news item from Britain that officers from Scotland Yard's
elite firearms team foiled an attempted armed robbery on Barclays
Westminster Bank. These highly trained specialists were armed with MP5s and
achieved conspicuous success. There was special praise for Police Constable
John Benson, who shot himself in the groin as he jumped from a Landrover to
chase two of the suspects.

"He did a great job," said Detective Superintendent Albert Patrick.

A great job indeed! One wonders how he would do a bad job.

    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 7
    29 September 1993
----
When two opposing sides of an argument are presented, one by an honest man
and the other by a liar, the liar usually wins, simply because he is not
inhibited by the truth.

    The Guru
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 7
    29 September 1993
----
Recently we glimpsed a bright red Ferrari driven by a conspicuous "flash
bird" with top down. The combination of the brilliant color of the car and
the bright golden mane of the driver was set off by the personalized license
plate, which displayed the two words, "WAS HIS."
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 7
    29 September 1993
----
Personally, I feel that the [International Practical Shooting] Confederation
might well consider going to the 22 rimfire cartridge since there is no
attempt at this time to relate the activity to defensive combat. The 22
would be vastly cheaper and even easier to machine-gun.
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 7
    21 September 1993
----
I have often preached that the proper antidote to fear is anger, and I see
no reason to change my opinion on this. However, there is another mental
condition that serves as well or possibly better, and that is concentration.
I have discussed this matter at great length with people who are in a
position to know, and I am not without experience of my own, and I can state
positively that when you find yourself facing deadly danger, your ability
to concentrate every mental faculty upon doing what needs to be done to save
yourself leaves no room for fear. If it happens that return fire is the best
solution to your danger, you are fortunate, because if you have organized
yourself properly your total preoccupation with your front sight and trigger
control will have become automatic; and therefore you cannot fear your
enemy's bullet since you are simply too busy concentrating on hitting him. I
think this truth is incontrovertible, but we certainly see that large numbers
of people who get involved in street fights, on either side of the law, have
never heard of it.

    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 6
    2 September 1993
----
This fashionable buzz word "sensitivity" is beginning to gall. I do not see
sensitivity as the necessary attribute of a considerable man. We may search
through history for manifestations of sensitivity in the great without
particular success. Pericles, Xenophon, Socrates, Caesar, and so on down
through Washington, Napoleon, Roosevelt, and Churchill were not distinguished
for sensitivity. Thinness of the skin seems to be one of the paramount
troubles of the age.    

    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 6
    2 September 1993
----
I have never been taken with the idea of selling a gun. When you possess a
firearm, you possess something of importance. If you trade it for cash, you
have lost it - and the cash in your hand will soon be gone. Sell something
else!
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    June 11, 1993
----
This is not a world in which one can turn the other cheek. Doing
so does not avoid violence, but rather encourages it. The bad guys
threaten, but they do not seem to want to get hurt. They should
be taught that their presumed victim is more dangerous than they
are. This is not a matter of weapons, but rather of will.

Jeff Cooper
Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
Vol. 12 Number 12 - 2004
http://harris.dvc.org.uk/jeff/jeff12_12.html
----
For those who are proud of their lifetime shooting record, we learn of an
old geezer, aged 96, who at the end of his life in the Transvaal boasted
that he had taken 341 elephants, 187 lions, 40 kaffirs and two Englishmen.
It will take some doing to top that.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 11
    September 1996
----
I am by no means sure that legalizing drugs would be a good policy, though
there are some very good thinkers in the country who hold just that view.
However, in view of the fact that the so-called drug war is used to justify
the excesses of the federal ninja, it might be proposed that if we abolish
the drug war, we could abolish the ninja too. The thing that keeps the drug
trade going is the enormous amount of money involved. We must remember that
both narcotics and stimulants were readily available over the counter during
the Victorian period. We had very few junkies, and as far as I can tell, we
had no ninja. One cannot turn the clock back, but we might give serious
thought to some feasible means of turning it forward.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
----
A recent report from Africa informs us that a Bantu hunter of our
acquaintance was recently set upon after dark by an armed robber. Our friend
cut him down neatly and went on about his business. Naturally, I am not going
to furnish any details about the nationality or locality of our friend. In
cases like this, the less the authorities know, the better. Years ago in our
Balsas expedition we were forcefully informed by our permit issuing
authorities in Mexico City that if we had occasion to knock off a bandit, we
were by no means to report the matter. Just get the body out of sight in the
bushes and get on with your business.
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 6, No. 4
    April 1998
----
And now BATman McGaw proclaims that home schooling turns the home into a
school, and therefore makes that home off-limits to personally owned
firearms. I always thought that the BATmen were of a different species, and
this discovery confirms my suspicion.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 6, No. 4
    April 1998
----
 ... Which puts me in mind of the old aphorism to the effect that "If you're
not a socialist at 20, you have no heart. If you're still a socialist at 30,
you have no head." To that I would like to add the following: "If you do not
reach the age of 60 without becoming a card carrying curmudgeon, you have
just not been paying attention."

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 6, No. 4
    April 1998
----
Taking a long view of history, we may say that anyone who lays down his arms
deserves whatever he gets.

 Col. Jeff Cooper
----
Further nasty news from the nasty United Nations Organization:

One Eric Kibuka, who delights in the title of "Director of the United
Nations African Institute for the Prevention of Crime and Treatment of
Offenders," has gone on record to the effect that "The international
community (sic) has decided that firearms regulation is at the core of
democracy and good government." The connection between firearms regulation
and democracy is about as obvious as the connection between traffic
regulation and quail hunting, but that is not likely to trouble a U.N.
official. As we have all noticed, the cry of the modern left seems to be
"To hell with the facts. It's the gut reaction that matters."

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 6, No. 1
    January 1998
----
We ran into a pleasant interlude up in Vermont which emphasized the wisdom
and social utility of the Vermont firearms laws. It seems that some
foreigner from down below was in a supermarket when he observed one of the
customers wearing a pistol openly. He got all flustered and immediately
called 911. In due course a cop showed up and located the complainer, who
pointed out the "culprit." The cop agreed that the man really was carrying a
pistol, and then he asked what the problem was. I suppose the poor fellow
rushed off out the door and went back where he came from. Obviously the
state of Vermont was too dangerous for him.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 6, No. 3
    March 1998
----
Way back when I was a student at Command and Staff School, the class was
treated to an all day session by a group of white-coated biology professors
who told us all about the limitations and capabilities of "biological
warfare." This session was very secret - evidently to the point where no one
learned anything from it.

The professors in this case informed us that if biological weapons were to
be used, no existing affliction would be involved - not anthrax or bubonic
plague or typhus or anything else that anyone had seen before. The agent
used would be a synthetic disease created in a laboratory and given a code
name, such as "Q27." All members of the attacking population could be
immunized against it, but the defenders would have no way of combating it
since they would not know what it was.

The professors further pointed out that the symptoms of the disease could be
manufactured to order and need not be permanently serious. The affliction
would have to last only long enough to allow ground victory by the attacking
force. These professors pointed out to the class how humane that was. Well,
maybe, but anybody who chooses to use anthrax as a weapon does not
understand biological warfare.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 6, No. 3
    March 1998
----
Note that the state of Louisiana has opened the season on "car jackers" -
under proper controls, of course. The consensus of the legislature was that
if someone chooses to approach a driver, gun in hand, that is sufficient
reason to assume that he is a legitimate target. One commentator wailed that
this amounts to no less than "a license to kill." Well, sure. Car jackers
are not yet an endangered species, but it is high time that we made them so.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 5, No. 10
    September 1997
----
Tony Blair, the new Prime Minister of England, has announced officially that
his government's grotesque gun laws are not expected to have any effect upon
crime, but rather to eliminate what he calls "the gun culture." If he
succeeds in eliminating the gun culture in Britain, he will presumably feel
good. Isn't that sweet? Well, we ought not to jeer too loudly at the Brits.
Just look at what we have elected!

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 5, No. 9
    August 1997
----
We have discovered a proper use for this communication system newly termed
"ebonics." We discovered that when we asked the question, "What is Windows
95?," it sounded wrong; and when we changed that to, "What are Windows 95?,"
that also sounded wrong. By using ebonics we can say, "What be Windows 95?,"
and now we are all right. (We asked someone who knows about such things just
exactly, "What be Windows 95?," and his answer was, "Windows 95 be cooool.")

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 5, No. 5
    April 1997
----
As we understand it, it was the aim of Karl Marx to achieve a classless
society. What the Clintons have achieved, however, is a classless White
House.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 5, No. 5
    April 1997
----
We were recently treated to a bizarre exchange between a hapless Englishman
and some BATchick in some front office in Washington. Our English friend was
inquiring about bringing his arms into the United States, and was told that
he could not import a Peacemaker (Colt Single-action Army) because it had no
"legitimate sporting purpose!" Now, apart from the fact that "legitimate
sporting purpose" is a blatantly unconstitutional interpretation of the
Second Amendment, it is apparent that these poor souls who are confined to
the District of Columbia cannot keep up with the times. Clearly the girl
involved had not heard of the proliferation of "Cowboy Action Shooting." I
stuck my oar in to tell her that this sort of bureaucratic behavior gives
ignorance a bad name. I guess I can expect the black helicopters any night
now.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 5, No. 5
    April 1997
----
It has been suggested to me that we are very fortunate that our adversaries
have not discovered the combat efficiency of the scout rifle. I do not think
we have a problem here, because a hoplophobe can never discover the good
qualities of any firearm since he does not want to think about firearms at
all. The hoplophobe worries about buzz words like "assault-rifle" and
"automatic-weapon," and can never accept the fact that the weapon is the man
and the firearm is just the instrument in his hands. With this in mind it is
pertinent to observe that several recent army recruits have been told that
the enemy they are preparing to fight is not the English, or the Spanish, or
the Germans, or the Vietnamese, or the Chinese - but rather the good old
boys in rural America who constitute an armed militia. The question arises,
of course, as to how the unorganized militia, no matter what their politics
or determination, can stand up for an instant against the United States
Army. Well, let us hope it never comes to that, but if the army is teaching
it, we had better realize that they are. The atrocities of the ninja are
certainly beating us into an unpleasantly confrontational society, but if
worse comes to worse, I think that we can assume that the private citizen
who owns, cleans, loads and shoots his own personal weapon is a considerably
more serious antagonist than the trooper who has to turn his weapon back in
every time he uses it. This is probably the principle reason why socialists
never cease their attempts to disarm the private citizen.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 5, No. 3
    March 1997
----
We learn from our friends in law enforcement that the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms (BATF), which we frequently refer to as the "BATmen,"
is now commonly termed "F Troop," by other members of the federal service -
presumably because of their astonishing predilection to foul things up.
Could be.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 5, No. 3
    March 1997
----
In observing our political scene, it is necessary to remember that in any
democracy the absolute goal of the politician is power. Not money, power.
This means that the only thing of any consequence to a politician is
re-election. He will walk on eyeballs to be re-elected, and the only time
that principle means anything to him is when it happens to coincide with
what appears to him the best course towards his own re-election. Now the
only way to get power is to take it from someone who already has it. Under
our system, the theory is that the people at large are sovereign and have
the power, but the only way the politician can achieve power is to take it
from the people who already have it - or should have it. This makes for a
permanent conflict in principle between the voter and his representative.
This is not cheerful, but it is nonetheless a fact.

Of the three systems of government enunciated by Aristotle - monarchy
(tyranny), aristocracy (oligarchy), and polity (democracy) - polity
(democracy) is the best, not because of its inherent virtue, but because of
its basic lack of efficiency. An inefficient government is best for the
people, simply because it is inherently incapable of doing anything well,
and the less it does the better.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 5, No. 2
    February 1997
----
We heard the Feds recently insisting that those are not black helicopters,
they are dark green. Sorry about that.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 5, No. 2
    February 1997
----
We read a notice from Canada to the effect that "The purpose of anti-gun
legislation is to establish criminal supremacy over the citizen by awarding
the goblins the status of being the sole armed caste of the population." The
publisher has gone on to state that the time has come to ask ourselves what
is behind all this.

Well, we know what motivates the hoplophobe. He simply envies the man who
can cope where he, the hoplophobe, cannot. A skilled, armed man lives on a
plane of security and contentment different from that of others. This is not
egalitarian! The man who cannot cut it, envies, fears and sometimes hates
the man who can. This is all very clear, it is just a pity that so many
people choose to hide their perfidious motivation behind what they claim to
be "crime control."

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 5, No. 1
    January 1997
----
We have been reading "Unlimited Access," by Gary Aldrich. This work is
absolutely required reading for every responsible U.S. citizen. If we accept
the word of this veteran F.B.I. agent, as we are inclined to do, the court of
Caligula did not match the Clinton White House for iniquity.
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 16
    December 1996
----
A family member recently returned from Bolivia points out that they do not
seem to have a gun problem in that country. They have what may be the ideal
gun control laws - there are none. Additionally, cocaine in various forms is
available on the open market, and they do not have any trouble with drug
lords.
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 16
    December 1996
----
Our friend the Count Randaccio-Lodi informs us that this business of
"politically correct" communication has begun to affect the Italian language
too. The Italian word for such talk is sinistrese, indicating its origin on
the political left.

    "Certain words are replaced by others giving a bad thing a nice sounding
    appearance (like gay for sodomite or progressive for communist). Trouble
    is that this game never ends since sooner or later the meaning catches
    up with the sound and a new word must be issued."

I know this curious affliction still afflicts the English-speaking world,
despite its obvious foolishness, but I had not thought it had gone abroad
just yet. We do not hear of it in German or French, but I suppose the time
will come.
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 16
    December 1996
----
The antics of the sleazemaster reached a new peak just before the election.

    He stated for the record that he thought Lincoln's Gettysburg Address was
    included in the Constitution.

    He paid special attention to the death of a police officer incurred in
    the line of duty and insisted that his bullet-banning policies would
    have saved the officer's life - and it turns out that the officer was
    killed in an auto accident.

    He paid specific honor on Veterans Day to the war dead at Arlington
    Cemetery. There must have been a great rumbling noise caused by all those
    dead soldiers turning over in their graves.

And yet the people went right out and elected him. As Harry Hopkins, FDR's
sidekick and exec, put it: "The people are too damn dumb to understand."    

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 14
    December 1996
----
Michael Howard is "Home Secretary" of the U.K., sort of a national chief of
police. In his words, "Gun ownership is a privilege, not a right, and the
use of firearms in self-defense is not acceptable for civilians in this
country" (presumably it is okay for a soldier). So much for The Land of Hope
and Glory! Die if you must but do not shoot back.
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 13
    November 1996
----
We hear from the British press that it is now "too late to disarm the U.S.
public."  God save the mark!    

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 13
    November 1996
----
Napoleon may have got off to a scruffy start as a Corsican corporal, but he
did develop a good deal more class than Bill Clinton. When the Emperor wanted
a special girl in Warsaw he sent a Field Marshal to pick her up. Clinton sent
a couple of enlisted men.
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 13
    November 1996
----
You may remember the attributed demand from President Jefferson for "men to
match my mountains." In today's scene, the politically correct version of
that might be "Send me mole hills to match my men-and-women!"
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 11
    September 1996
----
From family member Paul Kirchner of Connecticut we receive the following
anecdote:

"I recently had an interesting conversation with a Polish immigrant who was
driving a cab. I have met about a half dozen Polish immigrants in recent
years and I have been consistently impressed by them - they are better
educated and more politically sophisticated than the average American. When
I asked this fellow what surprised him most about the United States he said,
'l. Affirmative action, 2. Bad manners, 3. The fact that we are more
relentlessly propagandized by our mass media than he was in Communist
Poland.'"
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 11
    September 1996
----
We are informed by presumably good authority that 90 percent of the young
men now recruited by the Marine Corps have never handled a rifle in their
lives. If I were king, the Marines would not recruit anybody until he could
shoot "expert" in a prescribed course with the service rifle.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 11
    September 1996
----
We note with amazement that Bill Clinton has had the chutzpah to pose as a
devotee of Theodore Roosevelt. For a draft dodger to presume to align himself
with the hero of San Juan Hill is possibly the crowning impertinence of the
20th century.

As it has been mentioned, the Clinton administration may be quaintly
characterized as "the evil of two lessers."

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 11
    September 1996
----
It has long been a principle of mine that a man cannot have too many books,
too many wines, or too much ammunition. It turns out that a number of
governments in the world manifest considerable distress at the idea of large
amounts of ammunition in private hands. They insist that any man who
stockpiles thousands of rounds must have some sinister and ulterior purpose
which should be investigated by the state. Here we have yet another example
of the thought control characteristic of the Age of the Common Man. Many on
the left seem to hold that one may be punished not for what he does, but for
what he thinks - as with what have come to be called "hate crimes." In this
age of thought-control, various sorts of busybodies, in and out of
government, feel the need to arrange your thinking for you. In this matter
of ammunition, I personally like to keep a large supply on hand, not for
any specific purpose, but simply because it makes me feel good. To have a
large supply - several thousand rounds - of 45 ACP or 30-06 or 308 is
comforting in and of itself, and by no means necessarily because one has
some conspiratorial notion about expending it. As you know, there are people
such as Senator Moynihan who feel that the subtle way to disarm the people
is to cut off the supply of ammunition. We hope that such people do not
prevail, but it does not hurt to be prepared for unpleasant eventualities -
thus we have seatbelts, crash helmets, life jackets, and pistols.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 9
    August 1996
----
By now the British have fairly written into law the position that a
personally owned firearm may only be acceptable for "sporting purposes."
Teddy Kennedy used this idea in the 1968 gun law, despite the fact that we
in America are protected, at least theoretically, by the Second Amendment,
which has nothing whatever to do with sport. Various sorts of legislators
are still at it, and the BATF takes the notion of "legitimate sporting
purpose" seriously, even though this would appear to be obviated by the
supreme law of the land. This is a fight in which we all must continue to
participate. Self-defense has nearly come to be a misdemeanor on the face of
it in Britain, where the subject is conditioned with the belief that whatever
happens he (or she) must not fight back. If the wimps prevail in the next
election, you may be sure that America will then gain on Great Britain on
the road to serfdom.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 9
    August 1996
----
A family member recently returned from Bolivia informs us that Bolivian gun
laws may be the best in the world. There are none, and Bolivia gets by with
a serious law against murder. Funny that no one in Britain or America has
thought of that so far!

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 9
    August 1996
----
On the subject of concealed carry, it occurs to us that the occupation most
in need of this asset is that of trained nurse. A nurse goes on and off duty
at all hours. Most nurses are young, trim, reasonably attractive females.
They must necessarily make their way from the hospital door to a parked car
out on a darkened parking lot in all kinds of weather. It seems to me that a
trained nurse should be issued a concealed carry permit - and her tuition-
free application to a reputable pistol school - when she gets her RN
certificate.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 8
    July 1996
----
Did any of you catch the testimony of the handwriting experts in the Vince
Foster case who established that the so-called suicide note left by the
deceased was a forgery? The New York Times did not exactly censor this item,
but placed it where it could hardly be found in the back pages of the
financial section. When quizzed about this, the editor stated that he
thought implications to the effect that Vince Foster was murdered lead to
inappropriate attitudes on the part of the reading public. I am sure that
the White House is in full accord with this policy.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 8
    July 1996
----
As you know, the British subject is effectively forbidden the use of firearms
in defense of his life. So now we read in the English press of one retired
army officer who overcame this problem by repelling boarders with his sword.
When three goblins broke into his house with knives, he produced his
regimental sabre and gave battle. He ran those birds out of his house and
well down the street, though the account does not say that he damaged any of
them severely. Swordsmanship is effectively a lost art, but I doubt if the
world's miscreants are fully aware of that.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 7
    June 1996
----
We learn from the Clinton administration that there is now a move afoot in
the United Nations to ban all international traffic in smallarms. This turns
out to be a Japanese idea whose time, God help us, has not yet come, but
Bill and Hillary are all for it. It can be said a fanatic is defined as one
who doubles his efforts after he has lost sight of his goals. Examples will
occur to you.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 6
    May 1996
----
Have you noticed that this weird group calling itself "People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals" (PETA) is now agitating for a ban on the use of baboon
marrow transplants into people? Whether such transplants are successful or
not I cannot say, but I have observed baboons at some length and I can
assure all and sundry that ethics are not their strong point.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 6
    May 1996
----
We hear that one of the men shot at Tinananmen Square was able to speak out
as follows before he died:

"Tell the American people never to lose their guns. As long as they keep
their guns in their hands what's happened here will never happen there."

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 3
    February 1996
----
We discover with some gratification that a Swiss citizen, in order to
maintain his rights of citizenship, must qualify annually with his rifle,
even when he is on station overseas. We knew that the Swiss had to do this
while in Switzerland, but we find that Swiss diplomats in Washington are
experiencing some difficulty in finding a facility on which to maintain their
Swiss citizenship. Riflemaster John Pepper has been helpful in this matter by
encouraging these people to make use of the Fort Meade ranges where he
conducts his training and competition operations.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 3
    February 1996
----
Note that twenty-eight states now have "right to carry" laws on the books,
and that crime is down. The notion that the state can grant such a right is
philosophically moot, but let us be glad with what we've got.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 3
    February 1996
----
In view of the recent shenanigans in Washington, does it not seem that
things run better when the government is shut down? Of course, the
administration only furloughed "non-essential" workers. Just what the
government is doing hiring non-essential workers is not explained.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 3
    February 1996
----
If you liked Ruby Ridge, you will love Clinton's second term.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 4, No. 3
    February 1996
----
Despite the best efforts of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, we now have
access to a photograph of Lon Horiuchi, who shot Vickie Weaver in the face
but who still has not been brought to justice. Col. Bob Brown ran it down in
a West Point yearbook and it appears on page 38 of the December issue of
Soldier of Fortune magazine. It is not very clear, and it is twenty years
old, but it is better than nothing.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 13
    November 1995
----
Despite the best efforts of the hoplophobes, the U.S. remains way ahead of
most other jurisdictions in the matter of firearms freedom. Recently an
English jeweler, whose shop had been raided twenty times in twenty years,
repelled borders by seizing the firearm of one of the bandits who broke into
his shop. With the captured firearm he shot both of the bandits, though not
fatally.

This was in England, and, of course, he was immediately in a great deal of
trouble. He was fined 2,000 pounds for "illegal use of a firearm," 100 more
for possession of ammunition which was related to another weapon, plus 1,050
more pounds for prosecution costs. This whole affair is costing the jeweler
over $6,000 in American money, plus his attorney's fee.

Just how this sort of idiocy is justified in the eyes of the British courts
is unclear, but though we find a lot of domestic jurisprudence pretty bad,
such things can get worse.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 12
    October 1995
----
We are informed by a good friend in Sweden that the allowance for private
ownership of ammunition in that country is 25,000 rounds per each weapon
owned. We found this hard to believe, and checked it further. The figure is
correct - 25,000 rounds. Basically, we are opposed to arbitrary limitations
on private armament, but somehow we do not find a 25,000 limit all that
oppressive.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 12
    October 1995
----
I am sure you are all glad to learn that the BATmen now have their own air
force, composed of 22 OV10Ds they purchased from the Marine Corps. That is
just what those boys need in their further operations against gun owners -
close air support! Obviously the sooner we abolish the BATmen the better off
everybody will be.
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 11
    September 1995
----
The syndicated columnist, Walter Williams, who happens to be a college
professor, has recently finished a study of governmental murder and has
concluded that in the twentieth century far more people were killed by their
own governments than died in war. Statistics are always questionable, but
Williams' come out as follows:

    Killed in Warfare: 39 million
    Killed by Lenin and Stalin: 62 million
    Killed by Mao Tse-tung: 35 million
    Killed by Hitler: 21 million

These are the leaders, and the figures are beyond comprehension, but coming
down to more comprehensible numbers we find that 2 million were killed in
Turkey, 2 million in Cambodia, 1.5 million in Mexico, and 1 by Tito in the
Balkans. It should be noted that the time over which these atrocities were
perpetrated has a bearing on the magnitude of their atrocity. Combined
executions committed by Lenin and Stalin, for example, were spread over 70
years between 1917 and 1987. Mao's murders took place over about 37 years
between 1949 and 1987, so his intensity could have been greater. Hitler's 21
million were murdered over a much shorter period, and so the intensity
factor pretty well evens out, but the fact remains that vastly more homicide
was perpetrated in this century of slaughter by governments against their
own people than by armies against enemies. Man's inhumanity to man seems
more virulent when it is domestic.
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 11
    September 1995
----
Many years ago in Command and General Staff school at Quantico the class was
treated to a super secret session on biological warfare. It was impressive,
but it does not seem to have been followed up. Fifty years later the media
are still talking about infection with known diseases such as anthrax. It
was impressed upon us back at school that if the biological weapon is to be
used in any serious fashion the agent will be an unknown disease for which,
of course, there is no treatment nor cure. This disease will be created in a
laboratory and given a code name, such as "Q12" or something of the sort,
and all of our troops will be inoculated against it before it is employed.
The doctors assured us that almost any desired symptoms could be caused. The
afflicted could be knocked flat for two days, upon which they would recover.
They could go blind for two weeks and then regain their sight. They could be
either killed or totally incapacitated at the choice of the using power, but
it was impressed upon us that in a sense the biological weapon might be
considered more humane than conventional weapons because the victims do not
have to die. (Of course, some might die from heart attacks or side effects,
but not many.) So here we are closing in on the twenty-first century, and
while people still talk about biological warfare no one seems to know
anything about it. Perhaps that is just as well.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 11
    September 1995
----
In Northern Europe during the Middle Ages the tradition of wergeld was
widely observed. This is, bluntly, payment for murder. If one could pay off
the victim's family, the case was closed. See how we have progressed, now
that the Justice Department, while "admitting no guilt," is either paying or
preparing to pay the Weaver family several million dollars for the life of
their wife and mother, Vicki Weaver, who was shot in the face by Lon
Horiuchi while holding her baby. Wergeld was supposed to have been abandoned
in principle a thousand years ago, but here we are reintroducing it at the
close of the twentieth century.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 11
    September 1995
----
I am sure you know about Schumer by now, but just in case you have not, here
he is portrayed by Linda Bowles, who is one of our favorite columnists:

    "Rep. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) exposed himself as a radical, left-wing
    extremist who is phobic about guns and sees a camouflaged member of the
    National Rifle Association lurking behind every bush. He is a conspiracy
    theorist, outspokenly paranoid, who firmly believes that the Waco
    hearings were some kind of insidious NRA plot to prevent him from
    confiscating all the guns in America, except, of course, those in the
    hands of the government."
   
Schumer constitutes a blot on the democratic process.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 10
    August 1995
----
We hear that the Russian ninja engaged in the suppression of the Chechens
have now taken to wearing face masks. I guess this is a trick they learned
from the American cossacks - a sort of cultural exchange.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 9
    August 1995
----
No doubt you have heard that Diane Feinstein, among others, is seeking to
abolish the Office of Civilian Marksmanship, on the grounds that civilians
ought not to know how to shoot. The leftist elite obviously fears an armed
citizenry, which is, of course, the sole barrier to tyranny.

From the opposite point of view, what ought to be abolished is the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, a rogue organization that was never needed in
the first place and which has now developed into an uncontrolled instrument
of harassment recruited from the dregs of the federal employment
establishment.

Let us by all means economize, but let us get our priorities straight.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 8
    21 June 1995
----
Curious that in light of this so-called fertilizer bomb in Oklahoma City our
Glorious Leader in Washington made a point of offering the hospitality of
the White House to the leader of the Irish Republican Army, which is the
world's leading specialist in fertilizer bombs. This guy has a real talent
for ineptitude. Or should we put it more precisely, gaucherie.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 8
    21 June 1995
----
More than two thousand years ago Aristotle opined that most of the human
race has essentially the soul of a slave. A recent Associated Press poll
recorded that fifty-four percent of those questioned seemed willing to trade
liberty for security. The sad fact is that one cannot trade the one for the
other. You can surrender your liberty, but what you get in turn is never a
significant increase in your security. There are those in Israel who feel
that they would like to trade "land for peace." That will not work either.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 7
    16 May 1995
----
So much has been written about the Oklahoma bomb that there is little point
in adding to it. I can, however, extract the following from a recent letter
to a friend which covers my feelings on the matter:

    A planted bomb is a despicable instrument, as any decent human being
    will attest. One may reflect, however, that more children were killed
    at Waco than at Oklahoma City. No sympathy must be shown to the
    perpetrators of either atrocity.
   
    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 7
    16 May 1995
----
The new concealed carry program in the State of Arizona has called for a
great deal of hastily improvised education, and that, of course, has
resulted in the publication of a number of training pamphlets with the
level of excellence one might expect under these somewhat emergent
conditions.

A friend was recently subjected to one of these training programs and was
shown a text which insists, "Do not load your pistol until you are ready to
shoot." And further, "Always unload your pistol when you have finished
shooting."

A little thought please, Professor! These injunctions are the equivalent of
saying, "Never wear a life-jacket unless you are sure your boat is going to
sink." Or, "Never put on your armored vest unless you are sure you are going
to be shot." Or, "Never fill your tank with gas until you are ready to
drive."

Until the handgun is recognized properly as a life-saving instrument, we can
expect more of this sort of administrative garbage.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 3
    22 February 1995
----
Those who insist that the citizen has no chance against the army must be
pondering the situation in Chechnya. Of course the Russians will win, if
they have not done so already, but the Chechens are still there in the hills
and their efforts so far have almost upset the Russian government. When it
comes to pass that citizens must take up arms against their own government,
the results are uniformly dreadful, but the outcome is not necessarily
foregone.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 2
    31 January 1995
----
Note that Finland's five million people own four million personal firearms.
Just wait till Congressman Schumer finds out about that!

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 2
    31 January 1995
----
Herewith wisdom of one John Markoff, reprinted in the New York Times:

    "The American people must be willing to give up a degree of personal
    privacy in exchange for safety and security, the head of the Federal
    Bureau of Investigation said."

Louis Freeh, meet Benjamin Franklin!

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 2
    31 January 1995
----
Remember when Kennesaw, Georgia, made it mandatory for all households to be
armed, and the media viewed this with dismay?  Well note further that in
Kennesaw, Georgia, where there used to be very little armed violence, there
now seems to be none.

What was it that Heinlein said about an armed society?

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 3, No. 1
    13 January 1995
----
For the FBI to investigate Horiuchi is somewhat like Hitler's investigating
Himmler.

But no matter what Reno and Freeh and Rogers and Horiuchi may say, that case
is not closed. Whether Horiuchi committed a procedural error at Ruby Ridge
is not important. What he committed was a mortal sin, and that sin will find
him out. The only appropriate demise for this man now would seem to be the
traditional route of sepukku, with which he should be familiar. If he needs
a proper knife I have one, which I will provide to him upon request.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 16
    20 December 1994
----
I have been criticized by referring to our federal masked men as "ninja,"
when in the view of the critic the traditional role of the ninja in Japan
was to fight against oppression and tyranny. Let us note that almost no one
ever resorts to force and violence unless he is convinced that his cause is
right, but without going into that let us reflect upon the fact that a man
who covers his face shows reason to be ashamed of what he is doing. A man
who takes it upon himself to shed blood while concealing his identity is a
revolting perversion of the warrior ethic.

It has long been my conviction that a masked man with a gun is a target. I
see no reason to change that view.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 16
    20 December 1994
----
Reading in a copy of the Journal of the National Rifle Association of the
United Kingdom, sent to us by a British correspondent, we discover that for
quite a long time aimed fire on the part of soldiers was held to be
"illegal, immoral, and probably fattening." In the day of the Brown Bess the
infantryman's weapon was employed in mass with an effect rather like that of
a giant shotgun. The weapons themselves were so inaccurate that it was
almost pointless to fit them with sights at all, but they were not supposed
to be fired individually, but rather on command by the entire infantry unit.
Blasts of musketry of this sort were quite effective as long as there was a
suitable target available, preferably a similar unit of massed infantry
standing within range at close order. Victory, of course, would go to that
side which got the blast off first.

When rifles appeared the capacity of the rifleman to pick out an individual
enemy and deck him became apparent. This was considered to be a VBT (Very
Bad Thing) in many military circles. Among other things, it placed the lives
of officers in particular danger, which was considered to be an antisocial
development. During the Peninsular War, for example, the matter came to a
head:

    During the Peninsular War the British employed sharpshooters where they
    were used to great effect. During one seven-day period these marksman
    killed 500 officers and eight generals. This resulted in the order that
    rifleman were to be given no quarter if captured on the grounds that
    their fire was aimed, a practice that was considered unfair.
  
Thus it was that for a particular set of circumstances if you set about
killing your enemy on purpose you were held to be a war criminal, at least
by the French Revolutionary Army.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 14
    10 November 1994
----
Since we are informed that these black ninja helicopters do not in fact
exist, we may infer that if you shoot one down it does not count.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 13
    27 October 1994
----
This from an FBI agent who must obviously remain anonymous:

    I wasn't surprised when I heard that Horiuchi had killed Mrs. Weaver. We
    were in the same class at Quantico. The man was a robot. He would do
    anything to please his superiors.

Well, Horiuchi is still at large. One wonders how much he pleased his
superiors.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 13
    27 October 1994
----
Family member and full-time California cop Gabriel Suarez, who is gradually
working up to his Ace Rating in police actions, contributes the following:

    Gun control is a band-aid, feeling good approach to the nation's crime
    problem. It is easier for politicians to ban something than it is to
    condemn a murderer to death or a robber to life in prison. In essence,
    'gun control' is the coward's way out.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 12
    27 September 1994
----
The media insist that crime is the major concern of the American public
today. In this connection they generally push the point that a disarmed
society would be a crime-free society. They will not accept the truth that
if you take all the guns off the street you still will have a crime problem,
whereas if you take the criminals off the street you cannot have a gun
problem.

In the larger sense, however, the personal ownership of firearms is only
secondarily a matter of defense against the criminal. Note the following
from Thomas Jefferson:

    The strongest reason for the people to keep and bear arms is, as a last
    resort, to protect themselves against the tyranny of government.

That is why our masters in Washington are so anxious to disarm us. They are
not afraid of criminals. They are afraid of a populace which cannot be
subdued by tyrants.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 5
    May 1994
----
Note that the infamous traitor, Aldridge Ames, had donated five thousand
dollars of his Russian payoff to the Democratic National Committee. No
comment!

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 5
    May 1994
----
Now it happens that our elected government, after a fifteen year hiatus, has
resumed the destruction of 1911 45s, M1 Garands, 03s, and Springfield 22
Trainers. Note that this has nothing whatever to do with crime. This is
aimed directly at obviating the armed citizenry which is historically the
only guarantee of human liberty.

Act on this at once. If you have not got a 1911, get one. If you have not
got an 03, get one. If you have not got an Ml, get one. (If you can possibly
afford it, get two.)

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 5
    May 1994
----
With all due respect and full apology to Mr. Lincoln, the following:

    Now we are entering the opening engagements of a great civil war,
    testing whether this nation, or any nation conceived in liberty and
    dedicated to the proposition that free men bear arms, can long endure.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 4
    22 March 1994
----
Rumor has it that Sarah Brady is being put forward by the Shooting Industry
Magazine as "saleswoman of the decade." It is quite obvious that Sarah has
done more to boost the sale of personal arms than any person in recent
memory, and she should be appropriately honored.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 4
    22 March 1994
----
Amid all the dismal news that we acquire daily about the state of the nation
and the world, some dim but promising lights appear. For the first time
since the reign of Roosevelt II, people are beginning to notice the Tenth
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Much as liberals may laugh, that Article
is still on the books. It establishes beyond any question that powers not
granted to the U.S. government by the U.S. Constitution are specifically
unlawful and need not be obeyed.

Note this from the Sixteenth American Jurisprudence, Second Edition, Section
177:

    The general rule is that an unconstitutional statute, though having
    formed in nature of law, is in reality no law, but is wholly void and
    ineffective for any purpose, since unconstitutionality dates from the
    time of its enactment and not merely from the date of decision so
    branding it. An unconstitutional law in legal contemplation is as
    inoperative as if it had never been passed. Such a statute leaves the
    question that it purports to settle just as it would be had the statute
    not been enacted.

    Since an unconstitutional law is void, the general principles follow that
    it imposes no duties, confers no rights, creates no office, bestows no
    power or authority on anyone, affords no protection and justifies no
    acts performed under it.

    No one is bound to obey an unconstitutional law and no courts are bound
    to enforce it.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 4
    22 March 1994
----
No, Janet, the Waco case is not closed. We have passed judgement upon the
defenders, but it now remains to bring their attackers to justice.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 3
    1 March 1994
----
There is a good side to everything, it appears. The recent series of cold
snaps in Washington pretty well shut down the operation of the government
for several days at a time.

    Jeff Cooper
    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 3
    1 March 1994
----
That curious trial of the survivors of the Waco atrocity suggests trying the
Christians for irritating the lions. ("Your honor, he just kept hitting me
on the fist with his face!")    

    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 2
    31 January 1994
----
We hear of an unfortunate woman who, during an nighttime asthma attack,
confused the small handgun she kept under her pillow with an asthma inhaler
and proceeded to relieve her symptoms. It was not a fatal mistake, partly
because she used a 25 ACP, which everyone knows is not sufficient to clear
sinuses.

From John B. Hubbard of Bangor, Maine
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 2
    31 January 1994
----
The Republic is in very bad shape - probably the worst since 1776 - but it
does us all well to remember that the principles of the Founding Fathers
stand as sound and irrefutable today as yesterday. We must bear in mind
that "they" cannot disarm us. They do not have the legal power, of course,
but neither do they have the physical power. An army may be defeated by
another army, but the people of a nation cannot be, as long as they are
aware of their principles and maintain their determination to observe them.
We hope, of course, that "they" never presume to try, because "they" simply
cannot do it. What the American people need is the viscera to tell "them"
No! God grant that we still have the courage!

    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 2
    31 January 1994
----
Now that the media are doing their best to cover up the Waco atrocity, they
have been able to downrate the news with the forensic pornography surrounding
the Bobbitt case. In response to this, Dan Dennehy, the renowned knife maker
who has long been one of the stalwarts of Orange Gunsite, will now offer a
special instrument to be known as the "Dan Dennehy Dick Docker," featuring a
serrated edge and a pink plastic hilt. He will have it on special order for
uppity feminists as soon as it is available.
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 2
    31 January 1994
----
Of course not all pundits are our enemies. Joe Sobran is a strong warrior on
our side. Consider the following, extracted from his column appearing on 12
December in the Washington Times.

    Because the state can no longer protect us from crime, it wants to take
    away from us the means of protecting ourselves. This is the logic of gun
    control.

    In short, we - or our rulers, at any rate - now make law lawlessly. Bill
    Clinton wants to license all handguns in the United States. He affects
    not to know that the Second Amendment forbids the federal government to
    infringe our right to keep and bear arms. He doesn't ask, because he
    doesn't care, where the federal government gets the lawful power to
    require the licensing of guns. He thinks it has the actual political
    power to do it, and for him that is all that counts.

    So law-abiding citizens are left at a disadvantage - caught between a
    criminal class that disdains the law and a ruling class that disdains the
    Constitution.

That is beautifully put and, we hope, widely read.
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 1
    1 January 1994
----
From family member Bob Budz the following:

    "Big Brother is now here - and look, he is retarded!"   
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 1
    1 January 1994
----
From our enemies in the media we learn that the passage of the Brady Bill,
while admittedly a totally ineffectual measure, was nonetheless a victory
because it diminished the power of the National Rifle Association. From our
standpoint, it is hard to believe that it did. It made Congress, not the NRA,
look silly. But mostly it made these hoplophobic news commentators look even
sillier. These people remind us of the spoiled child who threatens to hold
his breath until he turns blue if he does not get his way, whether or not
his way makes any sense - even to him.
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 1
    1 January 1994
----
This Russian patriot Zhirinovsky now claims that Russia should reclaim
Finland, Poland, the Baltic states, and Alaska. Much as our State Department
enjoys giving in on all points suggested by European claimants, I do not
think we should let Zhirinovsky have Alaska, which is our national game
preserve. On the other hand, in the true spirit of negotiation, maybe we
should make him an offer. Chick Hastings suggests that we offer him the
District of Columbia, New York City, and San Francisco.
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 2, No. 1
    1 January 1994
----
Now is the time for all good men to stock up on ammunition and deck the
halls with boughs of holly. Merry Christmas To All and To All a Good Sight!
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 11
    10 December 1993
----
It was amusing, in a grim sort of way, to watch the hoplophobes accelerate
the business of their feared foes, the gun dealers. The message delivered
by the Brady Bunch was evidently, "Citizens, arm yourselves, the Clintons
are coming!

    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 11
    10 December 1993
----
The passage of the Brady foolishness was a foregone conclusion in Washington
- despite its blatant unconstitutionality - as soon as we lost the election
of `92, thus it comes as no surprise. What is really awful is the unblushing
profession that while the bill itself will do nothing at all, it is still
necessary to "make a statement," as if the legislators meant that they were
going to do something. You and I will not be inconvenienced by any five day
waiting period, since we already have our guns, as all proper members of the
United States Militia must have. The idea that our lawmakers-can profit from
doing something silly, and admitting that it is silly, makes one more than
ever doubtful about the merit of the democratic process. Alcibiades pointed
out that it would never work, and that was some four-hundred years before
Christ. Perhaps he was right after all.
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 11
    10 December 1993
----
We certainly have slid into some sort of slough, politically and
intellectually, when Winchester is coaxed into removing an expanding
bullet from its line of products. Expanding bullets have been available
since this time last century at least. Apparently, the term "Black Talon"
was unnerving to the wimps, but why in the name of common sense must we
give the time of day to the wimp establishment!
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 11
    10 December 1993
----
The Federal agent who shot Vicki Weaver in the face, deliberately, while she
was unarmed and holding her child is named Lon Horiuchi. Remember that name.
He is still walking around loose. That man must eventually pay for his crime,
here or hereafter. Lon Horiuchi.    
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 11
    10 December 1993
----
Pearl Harbor Day slipped by without much notice. I daresay a huge number of
our population has never heard of Pearl Harbor and has no idea of what it
is like to live in a nation of unified purpose.

Apparently the Nips are playing it smart by entreating us to give up our
guns. That would indeed be a proper revenge for their defeat. They could not
destroy us in battle so they are now doing their best to destroy us
politically by abrogating our constitution. They cannot accomplish this by
themselves, but they are getting a lot of help from our own wimp culture.
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 11
    10 December 1993
----
We encountered what may be the ultimate in chutzpah. Down at Whittington, we
were shown a BATF baseball cap crediting the wearer with attendance at "The
Waco Siege." Though we cannot believe it, it appears that at least some
people in the nefarious organization are actually proud of what took place
in Waco. One wonders if the KGB ever issued uniforms commemorating the
massacre of the Katyn Forest or if the guards at Dachau or Buchenwald were
issued commemorative T-shirts   
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 10
    15 November 1993
----
We pray that it will not come to shooting in South Africa, but if it does -
God forbid - consider who is likely to win between a group armed primarily
with AK47s and no skill in their use and another group armed with sporting
rifles and considerable skill in their use. Numbers would not matter
particularly in such a confrontation. Formal armies can defeat other formal
armies, and they can put down mobs of agitators, as in China. They cannot
defeat a population completely armed with simple old-fashioned rifles. What
the disarmers never recognize is that episodes like Tiananmen Square can
never occur if every citizen maintains his own rifle in his house, as in
Switzerland.
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 10
    15 November 1993
----
Following is a sentence passed by Judge W. Wyatt McKay of Trumbull County,
Ohio, via Mike Royko:

    When you slithered out of your hole that day, and you spewed your venom
    all over this defenseless 12-year-old girl, you made this court's top 10
    hit list. In a way, the best sentence this court could give would be no
    sentence at all, because if you left this courtroom I don't think you
    would be alive 10 minutes. You are nothing but a weed, a weed among
    wheat... And when we have a weed, it's my job to eradicate the weed,
    because if you don't you will choke the wheat. Therefore, I'm going to
    take you off the streets for just as long as I possibly can. It means
    you aren't even eligible for parole until you're 92. That leaves only
    one more count, aggravated robbery... You stole this little girl's bra
    as a souvenir, probably to brag about it to your friends later on. Well,
    I'm going to give you a souvenir of Trumbull County justice. And that
    is, you will receive a maximum sentence of 10 to 25 on the aggravated
    robbery for the stealing of that bra. And I hope that if you last 25
    years in prison that you remember that you remember that souvenir."
   
    Get this scum out of here!

    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 9
    October 1993
----
The interview with Gordon Liddy, back in D.C., was most pleasurable. He is a
man of the same stamp as Sir Thomas More and Solzhenytsin, among others. The
motto of such people is, "Do your worst, I do not coerce!" The human race is
honored by such.

    "One man with courage makes a majority"
    Andrew Jackson
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 9
    October 1993
----
It is interesting to hear certain kinds of people insist that the citizen
cannot fight the government. This would have been news to the men of
Lexington and Concord, as well as the Mujahedeen in Afghanistan. The citizen
most certainly can fight the government, and usually wins when he tries.
Organized national armies are useful primarily for fighting against other
organized national armies. When they try to fight against the people, they
find themselves at a very serious disadvantage. If you will just look around
at the state of the world today, you will see that the guerillero has the
upper hand. Irregulars usually defeat regulars, providing they have the will.
Such fighting is horrible to contemplate, but will continue to dominate brute
strength.
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 9
    October 1993
----
Can anyone reading this paper come up with anything - any single act - that
the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms has done that needed doing?
Even if it were not suspected of committing atrocious acts against the
people of this country - as it is now - it is not apparent to me that any of
its other activities are in any way contributing to the welfare of the
Republic.  And yet, even without atrocities, it is costing us money. Here,
if there ever was one, is the right place to retrench.

    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 7
    29 September 1993
----
It would appear that the media are desperately attempting to sweep Waco under
the rug. Let us hope this takes more sweeping than they can handle. The
success or failure of the National Health Plan or of NAFTA are trivial
considerations compared to the menace of the federal ninja making war upon
American citizens on no stronger grounds than suspicion of bad behavior.

We are thankful for the policies of Colonel Bob Brown, publisher of Soldier
of Fortune, who is determined not to let the matter drop.

We simply must do something about these fat men with face masks and MP5's
who shoot down unarmed citizens. Personally, I would not think that the
American people would stand for this, but then I am a member of an older
generation which took the Declaration of Independence and the United States
Constitution with more than a grain of salt.
   
    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 7
    29 September 1993
----
It was interesting to observe the Attorney General coming forth to "accept
full responsibility" for the atrocity at Waco. One wonders what that means.
When one accepts responsibility, one accepts appropriate punishment for
one's transgression. The Japanese have a long tradition of the proper means
of accepting responsibility. It is conducted by means of a short, sharp
knife. I have such a piece in my armory and I would be glad to part with it
in a good cause, such as appropriate use by the Attorney General.

    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 3
    1 July 1993
----
 ... we celebrate the signing of the Declaration of Independence, in which
it was set forth unmistakably for posterity that human rights are not
granted by man but rather by God, and that when any government or
institution threatens those rights it is the duty of the people to abolish
it. That is an idea especially pungent at this stage of America's political
devolution.    

    -Jeff Cooper-
    Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
    Vol. 1, No. 3
    1 July 1993
----
Bumper sticker:
Only criminals, dictators and democrats fear armed citizens.

    From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries, Vol. 1, No. 6, 2 September 1993
----

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 26, 2006 5:18:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( PNNL )

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory is a government laboratory managed by Battelle for the Department Of Energy.

I just (as in about seven minutes ago) got a hit from the DOE on my PNNL site. It turns out that their search terms on Google resulted in my site being listed number 1.

Cool.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 26, 2006 5:05:18 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot | Technology )

When I casually think of an explosion I think of a rapidly expanding sphere of gases. It turns out this is rarely the case. An explosion propagates from the point of detonation along a (typically expanding) "front". Because the pressure at the front is much greater than both ahead and behind it the gases produced, which are behind the front, expand in a direction away from the front. This video from Ry demonstrates that. The exploding targets are 7" x 7" x 1.375". The gases expand into the axis parallel to the 1.375" dimension. Until this video we did not realize this.

Whatever shape of the explosive and whereever the point(s) of detonation are affects the directions of the explosion. This is used to great effect in the Rocket Propelled Grenade (RPG) which can, with a rather small amount of explosives, penetrate over 30 inches of renenforced concrete, or a foot of steel.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 26, 2006 4:23:26 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Politics | Quote of the Day )

Politics, it seems to me, for years, or all too long, has been concerned with right or left instead of right or wrong.

Richard Armour
[At no time in my memory has this been more clear than since September 11, 2001.--Joe]

# Monday, September 25, 2006
By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 25, 2006 10:19:07 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot | Technology )

Ry gives us video from one of our tests for Boomershoot 2003--Project Fireball. And contrary to what Ry says at the end of the video it did tell us what we wanted to know. I just hadn't told Ry the entirety of my test plan prior to pulling the trigger. It went like this:

The first target used diesel instead of gasoline for the fireball fuel. It's safer to work with and has more energy per unit volume. We thought maybe it would work. It didn't ignite. The second target used "farm gas" which no road tax had been paid. It was cheaper than the gas we got at the Moscow gas station and was the second choice for a fuel. It worked and hence it was what we used. The third and I think fourth targets were both the 10% ethanol gas that we had purchased from the Moscow gas station and had done all our previous development with. We didn't know if the 10% ethanol was a critical component of our success and needed to know so dozens of shooters wouldn't be disappointed (they weren't).

What Ry was concerned about was that once a successful ignition occurred all the following ones were guaranteed. True, but once one of them ignited that was the one we were going to use. Had I shot them in a different order then it would have invalidated the tests and Ry would have been correct. 

By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 25, 2006 7:54:46 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

For those of you who think Second Amendment cases can't be won in court don't forget that the U.S. Attorney Generals office has commented on the Second Amendment. They concluded:

For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the Second Amendment secures an individual right to keep and to bear arms. Current case law leaves open and unsettled the question of whose right is secured by the Amendment. Although we do not address the scope of the right, our examination of the original meaning of the Amendment provides extensive reasons to conclude that the Second Amendment secures an individual right, and no persuasive basis for either the collective-right or quasi-collective-right views. The text of the Amendment's operative clause, setting out a "right of the people to keep and bear Arms," is clear and is reinforced by the Constitution's structure. The Amendment's prefatory clause, properly understood, is fully consistent with this interpretation. The broader history of the Anglo-American right of individuals to have and use arms, from England's Revolution of 1688-1689 to the ratification of the Second Amendment a hundred years later, leads to the same conclusion. Finally, the first hundred years of interpretations of the Amendment, and especially the commentaries and case law in the pre-Civil War period closest to the Amendment's ratification, confirm what the text and history of the Second Amendment require.

Of course we can't "take this to bank" but in the right circumstances it can be very useful to help "cash in" on the overconfidence of the anti-gun bigots. Look around for an appropriate application.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 25, 2006 11:24:45 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

Kevin and Say Uncle pointed out this Fifty Caliber Institute alert. Some people are pointing out the Unintended Consequences aspects and are euphemistically talking about law enforcement becoming more risky but there is a better way.

Federal prosecutors need to start enforcing 18 USC 242 (and 241). There are some legal and political obstacles before that becomes a viable option but I may have a way to remove some of the legal obstacles. Mr. Completely has agreed to give me a few minutes to speak at the Gun Blogger Rendezvous in a few days and I plan to elaborate on how I hope to make that happen. You are going to be there, right?

By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 25, 2006 8:56:29 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

At the steel match yesterday one of the better handgun shooters I know told me he has been hired by Blackwater USA and will be going to the Mideast soon as the team leader of an emergency response team. Compared to what he currently earns the pay is nearly irresistable. It's a one-year contract with a two week vacation after six months. The first thing Barb asked when I told her about it was, "What about his wife and kids?" Well... his wife isn't too keen on it but the pay makes it very attractive. Barb is glad I'm only as far away as Seattle and only fighting software bugs rather than halfway around the world being shot at and trying to avoid IEDs.

A year ago I was seriously considering how I could get such a contract but with my current pay the delta isn't enough to make it that attractive and they still aren't scrapping the bottom of the barrel hard enough to take me without prior military or law enforcement experience. I wished my friend luck and asked him to return in one piece. I hope it turns out well for him.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 25, 2006 8:35:27 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom )

I attended a seminar that discussed some of the video tapes found in Afghanistan. According to the tapes using a motorcycle in an assassination was one of the things taught in the training camps. A leading woman's rights leader was killed using this technique:

Safia Amajan, head of the province's women's department, was leaving her home for work when a gunman on a motorcycle opened fire, police said.

She may have been targeted by Taleban militants because of their opposition to women taking part in politics and education, the BBC's Dan Isaacs says.

Other techniques found in the tapes included taking and killing of hostages in office buildings and schools, ambushes of law enforcement, drive up kidnapping on streets, and residential assassinations. It's what Israel deals with every day and it's what in store for us here if we withdraw our military from the Mideast and we continue to ignore their calls for us to convert to Islam.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 25, 2006 8:14:34 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom )

If you don't believe me do you believe it if you read it in the Boston Globe?

For example, Schneier blasts almost all airport screening measures as meaningless ``security theater" that makes people incorrectly believe they are safer. After all, who says the next terrorist attack will involve the methods used last time? Who says it even has to involve airplanes?

"The game of having all these tactics is one we can't win, because terrorists get to see it in advance," he says.

"By definition you're going to pick a plot we're not going to catch. It's a game we can't win. Let's stop playing it."

Instead, Schneier says the game ought to be about stopping bad people, mainly through better intelligence and police work.

That money would be much better spent, he says, than making sure that security screeners confiscate corkscrews or any other particular item from passengers.

Existing airplane "security" is about making some people feel better not making anyone more secure.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 25, 2006 8:04:00 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Politics | Quote of the Day )

The size of the lie is a definite factor in causing it to be believed, for the vast masses of the nation are in the depths of their hearts more easily deceived than they are consciously and intentionally bad.  The primitive simplicity of their minds renders them a more easy prey to a big lie than a small one, for they themselves often tell little lies but would be ashamed to tell a big one.

Adolf Hitler
[I was reminded of this by the weekend spectacle of Mr. "I did not have sex with that woman, Miss Lewinsky."--Joe]

# Sunday, September 24, 2006
By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 24, 2006 9:47:38 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Home Life | Sex )

I've had numerous women tell me I have a nice butt and once had a strange woman give it a squeeze but today was the first time I had a man tell me that. It was more that just a little bit odd. Especially since I obviously had a loaded gun (I was about to shoot a stage in a steel match) and he didn't.

Don, thanks (I think), for the compliment but we are not going on any camping trips together.

By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 24, 2006 12:15:08 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom )

There's rumors of his death but there's also lots of reason to be skeptical. Lack of confirmation of his death and physical possession of his body shouldn't stop us from planning appropriate disposal of his carcass. Here are my suggestions:

  1. Attitude adjustment. Shove a large dildo "where the sun don't shine", freeze him and ship the display to Club Gitmo. Keep him on ice and use him as a motivational tool in interrogations ("You could have a place beside your great and wonderful leader.")
  2. Warning to others. His carcass fed to the hogs and the video of both the entrance and exit from the alimentary canal put on YouTube.
  3. Grim reminder. His head mounted on a 10 foot pole, be the highest point of anything within ten miles, and be perpetually illuminated with a soft green glow from the glass covering Mecca.
By: Joe Huffman Saturday, September 23, 2006 11:40:48 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

Professor Cornell is visiting us from a parallel universe, where Whig political thought never developed, and no one in the Revolutionary and early Republic periods ever feared governmental oppression.

Clayton Cramer
Saul Cornell Is Suddenly No Longer a Partisan on Gun Control
September 22, 2006
[Clayton fisks this editorial about Cornell's new book.--Joe]

# Saturday, September 23, 2006
By: Joe Huffman Saturday, September 23, 2006 10:59:02 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Politics )

Two different people (Dave and Stephanie) have sent me this link so I really should post about it. The gist of the article is the following:

All Americans have the right to bear arms.  Some towns have even gone as far as to require each household to have a gun.   Now a small Idaho town is contemplating a similar idea-- it's called the Civil Emergencies Ordinance. And although gun ownership is just one piece of this ordinance, it's the part that's getting the most attention.

"We've blessed to be a fairly rural area of the state, so we don't have a lot of crime and I think we'd like to keep it that way," said Lee Belt, Greenleaf city clerk.

Drive about 10 minutes west of Caldwell and you'll run into Greenleaf, Idaho, population 860.  If city council member Steve Jett has his way, each head of household that can legally own a gun, will.  Along with that they're encouraged to have ammunition and appropriate training.

Aside from hunting I sort of think of guns as flush toilets. They aren't something that is particularly appealing on their own merits but they do a good job of disposing of human waste. I think every home should have at least one. It should be keep clean and functional. Everyone in the house should know how to use it or if they are too small to use it they should be keep away from it so they don't get hurt.

For the city to mandate, with certain exceptions, gun ownership is sort of like mandating flush toilets. Are people so stupid that they don't recognize the benefits of flush toilets? No. And people aren't so stupid they don't recognize the benefits of gun ownership either. The problem is the anti-gun bigots of the world make it socially uncomfortable in some circles to own guns. What needs to be done is to make those bigots social outcasts. It may be that this proposed ordinance will help make those bigots more obvious and hence it could be that it is a "good thing". But in general it makes me just a little bit uncomfortable that government is getting involved in something like this.

I first saw this article at Saysuncle and Alphecca.

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, September 23, 2006 6:14:13 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Quote of the Day | Technology )

They estimate the possibility of accidentally destroying the planet as extremely low.

Reuters

# Friday, September 22, 2006
By: Joe Huffman Friday, September 22, 2006 7:10:20 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

More bad news for the anti-gun bigots. It turns out Utah isn't the first place to allow guns on campus. Here is a report of where fully automatic assault rifles as well as pistols are carried either openly or concealed with no problems:

I studied for six years at Tel Aviv University, Israel, and although gun control is tighter in Israel than it is in the United States, I was accustomed to seeing students and staff carrying firearms to classes on an almost everyday basis.

One may see students in their 20s carrying fully automatic assault rifles while on furlough from army duty and others who carry pistols, either openly or concealed, with the blessing of the university's security staff and administration.

We are winning. Keep up the pressure on these bigots and felons. We need to make it just as un-PC to talk about restrictions on guns as it is to talk about segregated drinking fountains, bathrooms, and seating areas on buses. We can drop back into "maintenance mode" when the only law on the Federal books that directly refers to firearms is the 2nd Amendment and 18 USC 241 and 242 are vigorously enforced against all who violate a person's inalienable rights.

By: Joe Huffman Friday, September 22, 2006 6:55:47 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | PNNL | Technology )

Jeff reports on new modification to Firefox but it comes out too late to help the felons at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. They got caught because of their sloppy browsing habits.

Long before they committed their crimes I tried to tell them they had a security leak in their browsing. But in a supreme irony they didn't listen and when they committed their crime they left behind more than enough information for me to catch them.

I'll have more news on this front soon.

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, September 21, 2006 11:24:55 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot | Home Life )

Dooce said this:

One of the many, many, endless and uncountable downsides is Leta’s breath which used to be the color of fairy wings and was so sweet it could cure broken hearts. Now it is a visible black smoke that curls into forked tongues and seethes with the voices of screaming demons. I cannot withhold kisses or hugs from her like I can from Jon because she’s just an innocent pawn in all of this, and a true test of parenthood has been willing myself to endure the pain of having my eyebrows roasted off my forehead when, after stuffing her mouth full of licorice, she crawls up into my lap and says HEEEEEEELLLLLOOOOOOO. I just pick up the flesh that melts off my face and stick it back on, pretending that it happens all the time.

Which reminded me of this image (click on the image to get the original 260 Kbyte image):

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, September 21, 2006 11:00:54 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

The UltiMAK school of charm. Its a one-day course. Students downrange. Attitude adjustment comes really fast.

Lyle Keeney
September 21, 2006
3:44:00 PM
[In a comment regarding Islamic extremists needing to attend a charm school before being ready to introduce to polite society.--Joe]

# Thursday, September 21, 2006
By: Joe Huffman Thursday, September 21, 2006 10:48:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Technology )

From Newsweek:

COLUMBUS, Ohio - New federal security rules for issuing driver’s licenses could cost $11 billion to implement, raising concerns among states about paying for the changes, according to a national survey of states released Thursday.

“There’s no question that state legislators believe driver’s licenses should be as secure as is possible,” said William Pound, executive director of the National Conference of State Legislatures which helped conduct the survey. “The $11 billion question is, ‘Who’s going to pay for it?”’

Actually that's not the question. The question is, "What will you get from spending $11 billion dollars?" The answer is, "Nothing of value."

Here's why:

The law requires states to incorporate common security features to prevent tampering or counterfeiting, such as using standard materials in every state to print the cards. States will have to verify the legitimacy of documents used to obtain a license and buy equipment to digitally store those documents.

The problem is that with a document that is common to 300 million people (coordination with Canada is supposed to be occurring too), and highly regarded/valued the efforts put into forging the document will be quite high. What they erroneously believe is that with the biometric identifier used on the document is that they can catch (nearly) all efforts of creating a duplicate identity for someone. There are only two biometrics that have a chance of this kind of quality. They are DNA and fingerprints. A duplicate iris scan shows up about once for every 200,000 people and that particular biometric has other issues as well (think specialty contact lenses for example). Voice and facial recognition biometrics don't even come close to meeting the bar.

DNA testing as a biometric used on this wide of scale "isn't ready for prime time" and may never be.  No matter how many times you watch Gattaca it's still just a movie. Sometimes legislators have a difficult time distinguishing Hollywood from reality and I suspect this is one of those times. And even if were "ready for prime time" the character played by Ethan Hawke in Gattaca shows us how it is defeated it.

Fingerprints have been on California drivers licenses for something like 20 years (I wish I still had the notes from my biometrics class, but the people at PNNL didn't return those to me after they committed their felony and wrongfully terminated me). Of those fingerprints on all those licenses only about 40% are actually usable. They were obtained at the DMV by people that were inadequately trained and motivated to get good fingerprints. Even if they were properly trained and motivated there will have to be thousands of people with authorization to enter and edit data in the system. With that large of an attack surface (read this to understand attack surfaces) and with the value of the document so high there will be lots of opportunity and motivation for obtaining an authentic, but fraudulent, document. See also my thoughts on an universal biometric ID which this is "a good first step" toward.

Since the terrorists, which this document is aimed at defeating, only need to find one hole in the system to "win" that particular battle we will have spent $11,000,000,000 on virtually nothing and it could have been invested in real security.

I'm thinking the UltiMAK school of charm would be a good place for some of those dollars.

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, September 21, 2006 9:45:10 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Sex )

From Britain:

A LARGE number of Britons would be prepared to give up sex if it meant they would live to be 100, according to a survey published today.

The Mori research found that 40 per cent would pass on the passion for longevity, although far more women (48 per cent) were willing to make the sacrifice than men (31 per cent).

Not that anyone is saying one could successfully make such a trade. They were just asking to see how important life is to people.

One friend of mine wrote an essay complaining about all the people that want to live a long time. His view is that these people are getting in the way of evolution and therefore life extending activities were immoral.

Still another friend told me, "I'll know I'm dead when my dick stops working."

Dr. Joe is most in agreement with this last viewpoint.

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, September 21, 2006 8:41:21 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

A guy after my own heart:

Wendy Cukier, head of the anti-gun lobby in Canada, opines that the Dawson College shootings are "evidence that we can do better". Wrong.

These latest shootings - make that every shooting since the passage of the Firearms Act - are evidence of the complete and utter failure and futility of all such so-called gun control laws.

If Kimveer Gill obtained his firearms legally, it is evidence that such laws don't work. If he obtained them illegally, it is evidence that such laws don't work.

Now if he would ask Just One Question.

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, September 21, 2006 8:24:54 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Politics )

This is my listening material for my trip to and from home (and then some) this weekend. Read a quote from it here:

"It is Islam, a different civilisation whose people are convinced of the superiority of their culture and are obsessed with the inferiority of their power. The problem for Islam is not the CIA or the US Department of Defence. It is the West, a different civilisation whose people are convinced of the universality of their culture and believe that their superior, if declining, power imposes on them the obligation to extend that culture throughout the world. These are the basic ingredients that fuel conflict between Islam and the West".

The Amazon reviews are just as intriguing:

This is the eminent Professor Huntinton's magnum opus, and it deserves to be read. No one can profess an understanding of modern global politics without studying this masterful work which was written in 1996. It remains a treasury of prophetic insights for our present day.

Of particular interest are the following: Chapter II, Part 5, "The Islamic Resurgence, Chapter IV Part 9, "Islam and the West" and Part 10 "Islam's Bloody Borders."

Huntington's immense learning does not leave him optimistic. On the final page he writes: "On a worldwide basis Civilization seems in many respects to be yielding to barbarism, generating the image of an unprecedented phenomenon, a global Dark Ages, possibly descending on humanity."

Keep in mind that this book was published in 1998 (and supposedly written in 1996)--years before 9-11!

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, September 20, 2006 11:09:15 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

Gun confiscation won't happen in my lifetime.

Pat Kelley
IPSC Grandmaster
Wily Coyote Three Gun Shoot
Whitebird, Idaho
August 1998
[No further explanation was offered. Nor was it needed.--Joe]

# Wednesday, September 20, 2006
By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, September 20, 2006 9:14:38 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Fun )

Very impressive video from Berreta. Not just the speed (0.144 seconds per shot) but the accuracy at that speed. I have always been super impressed with Pat Kelly and it appears this guy is on par with Pat. Here is a quote from Pat when I saw him shooting at a match:

Damn Benelli!  As soon as you try to do a point one three split the hammer follows the bolt down.  It'll do a point one four, but you get yourself in trouble as soon as you try a point one three.

Pat Kelley
IPSC Grandmaster
Wily Coyote Three Gun Shoot
Whitebird, Idaho
August 2, 1998, 11:45 AM
Referring to his shotgun that malfunctioned when he tried to shoot it faster than it was capable of shooting.

This reminds me that I have another quote from Pat that I'll use for tomorrows QOD.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, September 20, 2006 7:04:57 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

One of the biggest mistakes that freedom advocates make is we often fail to take the moral high ground on freedom issues, and we let our enemies define the terms. This is a huge mistake. Never forget: We are in the right on this issue. We are on the side of the Founding Fathers. They are on the side of Hitler, Stalin, Mao Tse-Tung, Pol Pot, Saddam Hussein, and every other leader of an oppressive, totalitarian regime.

John Ross
Mistakes We Make in the Gun Culture or How to Be a More Effective Advocate for Freedom
From Ross in Range September 14, 2005
[I'm working on a "high moral ground" piece. Here Ross is more succinct than me. The major point to be made is that we need to put them on the defensive. If we are defending we are losing. If you are defending any compromise is a loss. They need to be defending their alignment with tyrants.--Joe]

# Tuesday, September 19, 2006
By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 19, 2006 8:20:54 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom )

If you didn't already figure it out from the Danish cartoon incident and about 100 other examples the incident with the Pope should give you some more guidance. Here is another article:

A hardline cleric linked to Somalia's powerful Islamist movement to call for Muslims to "hunt down" and kill the pope, while an armed Iraqi group threatened to carry out attacks against Rome and the Vatican.

...

Gunmen shot and killed an elderly Italian nun Sunday at a children's hospital in the Islamist-controlled Somali capital of Mogadishu, in what Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi denounced as a "horrible act.

And a third day of attacks on Christian places of worship in the Palestinain territories saw unknown assailants throw Molotov cocktails and a burning tire at two Catholic churches in the northern West Bank.

I especially love this observation:

...the former “moderate” Iranian president criticized the Pope, stating that it is strange to observe how ignorant Benedict is about Islam, a faith of tolerance and humanity.

I think their tolerance and humanity needs a bit more work before they are ready to introduce to polite society. Is there a charm school that would accept them?

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 19, 2006 8:04:40 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot )

From Dave at Ozark Pyrotechnics:

It was just over 2 pounds of HE, that was heard over 12 miles away at a lake party, and neighbors 3 miles away came up wondering what in the hell I had blown up this time, as it shook their windows. I've set off as much as 10 pounds before that did not get this response. If I keep doing this I will need a seismograph and a deciblemeter.

The video is here.

He was testing a new mixture. He was pretty pleased with the results as he didn't use any chlorates. Chlorates are considered rather hazardous and something we do use at Boomershoot which makes his experiments all the more interesting to me. Unfortunately when I asked for the recipe and an approximation of the cost per pound he told me:

I have no idea how sensitive the formula is, or really what I actually did. It was at 150 yards with a 20" barrel Mini-14, with that cheap Russian Wolf 55 grain JHP steel case ammo. You know better than I how fast that bullet was going at that distance. Let me know what you do think the bullet was traveling at that distance.

I estimate between 2200 and 2300 fps.

I was just throwing stuff in thinking that the AN was of no value...

...I measured nothing, but did guess by volumes I've used before. The base was 400 mesh AL, with 200 mesh MG, 100-200 mesh MG/AL, the smallest Ti that I have (I'll have to look up the size), powdered Graphite, and Antimony Trioxide 200 mesh? If I had Zr, I would have thrown that in too.

The AN was so bad that it was nothing but a mush that left your hand wet holding it. The only thing I can think of is that it still had great oxidizer properties and allowed a more complete mixture. The mixture was dry when finished, but was so completely mixed that it is was more like pouring silver colored garlic granules while cooking.

From the fireball (see the picture below) it's obvious he had an excess of fuel. But that makes for a more interesting display for the participants.

More videos are here.

Anyway, Dave plans to put on another explosives shoot in October. Check with him before finalizing your travel plans I don't think the date has been pinned down yet.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 19, 2006 7:51:42 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot )

I have set the dates to be be the last weekend in April but the survey showed that enough people were interested in reserved positions that I want to implement that before accepting the entries.

The price will remain the same as last year. There were only a few in the survey that disagreed with the statement that the price was reasonable and one that strongly disagreed with the statement. But this last guy said he thought the price should be $4000/person so it sort of balances out.

The Precision Rifle Clinic will be April 27th and 28th.

The hotel package option isn't going to happen this year. Too much work for me to do at this time. Maybe next year. The survey did show some interest in that. So you can go ahead and make your hotel reservations if you want. Suggestions are here.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 19, 2006 7:28:07 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Quote of the Day )

The worshipper of the cross you and the West are doomed as you can see from the defeat in Iraq, Afghanistan, Chechnya and elsewhere. ... We will break up the cross, spill the liquor and impose head tax, then the only thing acceptable is a conversion or the sword.

Mujahedeen Shura Council
An umbrella organization of Sunni Arab extremist groups that includes al-Qaida in Iraq
Iraq al-Qaida says pope, West are doomed
[The Pope says Islam has a reputation for violence, the Muslim are insulted and express their displeasure with violence and threats of violence. The Religion of Peace has me convinced.--Joe]

# Monday, September 18, 2006
By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 18, 2006 9:59:49 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

Background:

  • Why not think for yourself?
  • A question for my readers
  • My decision

    I had agreed to remove her name from my blog by next March and if I was sufficiently impressed I would remove it sooner. I wasn't sufficiently impressed to remove it immediately but I decided that six months early was appropriate.

    As far as I am concerned the story is over now.

  • By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 18, 2006 7:42:07 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Sex )

    First willy swap is lopped off:

    AN accident victim who became the first person to have a PENIS transplant has had it removed because of psychological problems.

    The 44-year-old man was given the 4in manhood taken from a brain-dead patient half his age.

    Surgeons in Guangzhou, China, said it had a rich blood supply and he was able to pass water through it ten days after the complex 15-hour op.

    But despite the success doctors had to remove the organ after just 14 days due to “a severe psychological problem with the recipient and his wife”.

    Transplant expert Prof Andrew George, of Imperial College London, said: “It’s not clear if the patient would have been able to have sex with it.”

    By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 18, 2006 7:38:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Sex )

    Just so you know (from The Sun):

    SEX toys could make you seriously ill, a study claims.

    Research by Greenpeace Netherlands has found that 7 out of 8 sex toys contained high levels of chemicals linked to hormone and reproductive disturbances - which means they could stop women having children.

    Apparently ‘phthalates’, which are used to soften plastics, accounted for between a quarter and a half of the offending items, including dildos and vibrators.

    The substances do not easily biodegrade and can be dangerous - even in small amounts.

    Lab rodents who were exposed to high levels of phthalates reportedly suffered damage to the liver, kidneys, lungs and developing testes.

    By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 18, 2006 6:12:02 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

    There are four kinds of homicide: felonious, excusable, justifiable, and praiseworthy ...

    Ambrose Bierce
    The Devil's Dictionary
    [Something to keep in mind when people whine about all the people "killed by guns". Not all deaths are tragedies.--Joe]

    # Sunday, September 17, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 17, 2006 9:52:39 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Home Life )

    Barb and I went into Seattle today. For some reason it was all a bit surreal to me.

    We were just walking down the sidewalk and I saw a couple guys looking at speed loader filled with hollow-point cartridges. One guy was explaining, "This are 180 grain..." I kept on walking and didn't hear the rest. How odd I thought. In broad daylight on the sidewalk in Seattle openly exercising their right to keep and bear arms. Who would have thought it would happen in Seattle?

    We walked on toward the library (Barb was going to do some genealogy research) and we saw this vehicle all of a sudden stop then back up, fast, for several hundred feet out of sight over a small hill on 4th. Something is going on. I looked around and saw two guys, in plain clothes, with radios on the corner next to us. Across the street ahead of us were two more people with radios. A siren in the distance was getting closer. And I noticed the street was completely empty except for the vehicle I had seen earlier which had parked almost out of sight on the opposite side of 4th from where I had seen him back up at high speed. It was a strange vehicle. It was a very flat shade of dark greenish blue and the headlights were covered with the same flat color. It had a boom on top with some sort of small platform at the end of the boom. It was too small to hold a person but I couldn't figure out what it was. Here is a picture which I took later:

    I decided it was time to leave but one of the guys with radio asked us to go in a different direction, "There's going to be a vehicle coming around the corner right away and I don't want you in the way." Fair enough, we can go the other direction. I then figured it out, or pretty close anyway. "Is there some filming going on?" I asked. "Yeah, we're filming a Lincoln Navigator commercial."

    We stayed to watch and a minute or so later the vehicle with the boom and a black Lincoln Navigator came zooming up the street at probably 35 or 40 MPH with the Lincoln not more than 15 feet behind the first vehicle. The boom did a smooth dance from one side to the front and then to the other side. As they came to the corner the boom vehicle went straight and stopped beside us as the Lincoln did a sharp turn to the right with it's tires squealing and went up the street we were about to cross. The end of the boom finished it's dance as the two vehicles stopped.

    We were given permission to cross the street and were thanked for our patience.

    We went on the the library and I set up my laptop at a desk while Barb did her research. I looked at a sign with the rules and regulations of the library. No weapons allowed. This was the Seattle I expected-violating state law on guns (gun laws are the sole domain of the state). I need to send a letter to the city prosecutor asking them for "clarification" on that sometime.

    There were a couple people outside my window on the Federal Courthouse lawn with dogs that looked like they were training the dogs for searching. I watched for a while and some people came up to them and appeared to ask them to leave. Hmm... Law enforcement doesn't like them sniffing around the courthouse? Unknown--but they left without much discussion as far as I could tell.

    Later the boom vehicle and two black Lincoln Navigators parked on the street outside my window while people milled around setting up something else. It took quite a while as they unpacked some equipment and I mostly ignored them until a tall very slender black guy in a ragged jacket, so ragged that looked as if it were about to fall off him in several pieces, came up to me. He softly asked if I had any idea what was going out there. "Yes, we saw them earlier and I asked someone what was going on. They said they were filming a Lincoln Navigator commercial." His eyes got a little bit bigger and he became very somber. "Someone is sending a subliminal message. Certain people had better leave town if they don't want to get killed." "Huh? I don't understand." He didn't answer for several seconds and finally he told me his reasoning, "Lincoln freed the slaves. And to navigate sort of means to move."

    The conversation didn't get any better from there. He went on about how the CIA could program people to do whatever they wanted them to do. And he had first hand knowledge of that. They could make people commit crimes they would never do on their own. And they could plant devices in them so they could track them by satellite. Then he told me I had a vague resemblance to Joe Kennedy. "You know who he was don't you?" "Yes, he was John Kennedy's father." He got just a little bit intense and said, "He was much, much, more than that. He was a bootlegger, a slave trader, and ran gambling and prostitution. People don't talk much about that but it's true." Not wanting to engage him any more but not wanting show any disrespect to him either I said I knew about the bootlegging but not about the other stuff. But I did tell him that it was all very interesting. And that I was no relation to Joe Kennedy. "Is that your name too?", he asked. "Nope, my last name is Huffman", hoping he didn't know any famous slave traders by the name of Huffman. He asked if I was from around here. "No, I grew up in Idaho. Where are you from?" "You are still a northwesterner and that's good. I'm a man of the world. A man without a country. Sort of like Dr. King."

    He rambled on for a while more about Congress putting people in their place, about we don't have freedom of speech anymore, and about people being put in prison without a trial. I was glad when the announcement came over the speakers that the library was closing and Barb showed up and was ready to leave. As I packed up my computer my conversation partner walked away--much to my relief.

    We went to Coyote Creek Pizza in Kirkland for dinner which is one of our favorite places. Then we watched the chick flick, The Last Kiss. It was a pretty good movie. It won't be a classic and in some ways it was a rip-off of The Big Chill but it was nice enough.

    End of the day. Time for bed now.

    By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 17, 2006 8:53:24 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

    Via Jeff I saw this this picture in the NY Times:

    It couldn't cause a more empty, terrible feeling in my stomach if it were books being thrown on a bonfire. And in case you forgot this quote describes what I think about burning books. It's guns that prevent them from burning books.

    By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 17, 2006 3:48:20 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

    Ian Robinson writes about two losers:

    Here he is again, the loser with a grudge and a gun slithering up from the basement of a middle-class home where he fermented his immaturity, anger and resentments to full and deadly potency "interacting" with like creatures on the Internet.

    His mom says he was "a good son."

    The neighbours' comments -- the banality of this would be screamingly funny were it not for the horror of the event -- amount to this: He was quiet and kept to himself.

    Aren't they always.

    His resentment and anger are perfectly understandable.

    He's a loser and losers spend their lives being angry and resentful.

    And more importantly:

    Wendy Cukier, the mastermind behind Canada's obscenely expensive and ineffective gun registry -- she's president of the Coalition for Gun Control -- along with her Liberal Party lapdogs promised us more gun control would make us safer.

    Way to go, Wendy.

    See, this loser jumped through all the hoops, complied with the gun legislation and guess what?

    He passed. His firearms were legally owned.

    When questioned in the aftermath of this event, Cukier told CBC that: "The argument for gun control has never been based on individual cases. (It) has always been based on the general principle that if you have adequate control on all guns, you reduce the chances that dangerous people will gain access to them. You don't eliminate them."

    Her statement is disingenuous to say the least.

    "Disingenuous" is a fancy word for "lie."

    Yup. Ms. Cukier helped convince Canadians to spend over $1 billion (some reports say as high as $2 billion) on a gun registry after an eerily similar shooting in 1989. Ms. Cukier created losers of all Canadians. They got nothing in return from all that money spent. All the while gun owners were telling them it wouldn't do any good. Yet the press gave her high praise and flashed her flattering photo.

    Losers. All led by the Queen of Losers--Wendy Cukier.

    By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 17, 2006 3:19:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Politics )

    I haven't put much effort into the topic but I keep thinking there must be a better way than a fence or trying to catch them once they have made their way 20 miles or more inside the border.

    Can't this be broken down in to a simple exercise in controlling a "black market"? It seems to me that if there were no minimum wage, welfare, free schooling, and no guaranteed health care the immigration problem would go away. Employers in this country have to pay a "tax" for domestic, legal, labor. It's just like a tax on anything else. As soon as the tax rate on a marketable product goes above about 15% the government ends up creating a black market for the product.

    In other words I suspect the government could solve the immigration crisis by repealing laws and spending less money rather than trying to come up with more complex government solutions to a problem they created to begin with.

    By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 17, 2006 2:50:07 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Freedom )

    The Muslim extremist culture must be destroyed. The apologists in the west think we need to get out of the Mideast, or stop supporting Israel, or "something". In other words we did something wrong.

    So tell me what Thailand has done to deserve this:

    Two bombs exploded in front of a pub and parking lot at the mall. The third was set off at a massage parlour. The other two bombs exploded at departments stores, including one in a restroom.

    Authorities quickly blamed separatist insurgents for the attack. Since 2004, they have waged a bloody campaign that has left at least 1,700 dead, mostly civilians.

    "We do believe that the insurgents are responsible for the bombs attack," said military spokesman Lt.-Gen. Palangoon Klaharn. "Their intention is to spread fear in the region."

    The Thai army warned military personnel in the deep south to be on high alert from Saturday through Wednesday, after reports of possible attacks by the Gerakan Mujahidin Islam Pattani to mark an anniversary.

    Last month, Thai militants launched a series of daylight attacks against banks in Yala province, killing one, injuring nearly 30 and forcing the temporary closure of financial institutions.

    Even the Thai military is trying to do the "peace thing."

    The attacks, in Songkhla province's commercial centre of Hat Yai, came hours after the military staged a peace rally in the south, site of a Muslim insurgency, where it expressed hope people would work with authorities to end the violence.

    The only peace the Muslim extremists want is the peace of submission. The only peace they deserve is that of death or a prison cell.

    By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 17, 2006 2:36:25 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Places Without Guns )

    Lucy Braham was stabbed to death in her own home. Disarmed by her own government and unable to defend herself against an attacker armed with only a knife she died at the age of 25. The attacker had virtually nothing to fear entering her home. If someone enters almost any home in the U.S. and they will be hyper-alert for the sound of a 12-gage shotgun being racked and prepared for firing. Not in this home, not in this country.

    How many more tragic deaths do the people in these countries need before they start asking Just One Question then demand their government stop infringing on their inalienable rights?

    By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 17, 2006 2:11:38 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Sex )

    This probably doesn't quite meet the definition of a sick joke but it's close enough for me to get a laugh.

    Jake was dying. His wife sat at the bedside.

    He looked up and said weakly: "I have something I must confess."

    "There's no need to, " his wife replied.

    "No," he insisted, "I want to die in peace. I slept with your sister, your best friend, her best friend, and your mother!"

    "I know," she replied, "now just rest and let the poison work."

    By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 17, 2006 2:08:24 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Politics | Quote of the Day )

    We can't just jump into the dark and make conclusions without facts. That's how we got the gun registry in the first place. That's how we spent a billion dollars on a policy that didn't prevent the tragedy.

    Stephen Harper
    Prime Minister of Canada
    September 16, 2006
    $1-billion didn't prevent tragedy
    [I have Just One Question for Canadians.--Joe]

    # Saturday, September 16, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Saturday, September 16, 2006 6:42:44 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Quote of the Day )

    I was not the lion, but it fell to me to give the lion's roar.

    Winston Churchill
    [And when will the people of the west as a whole realize we need to give the lion's roar again?--Joe]

    # Friday, September 15, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Friday, September 15, 2006 9:41:43 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot )

    Via Kim du Toit.

    Walter was there when his fellow Boomershoot instructor, Adam, was killed in Iraq. Then he was seriously injuried in Iraq. Now Walter is going back as a civilian and photographer. It makes me uncomfortable to think about it but you can't get much more "fully informed" than he is. I hope things go well.

    By: Joe Huffman Friday, September 15, 2006 9:03:02 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

    Clayton Cramer lives near Boise after having escaped California and it's repressive gun laws and taxes. He played a major part in bringing down Michael Bellesiles with his fradulent book Arming America: The Origins of a National Gun Culture which was widely praised by gun grabbers all over the U.S. Now Clayton's book, Armed America: The Remarkable Story of How and Why Guns Became as American as Apple Pie is almost ready to ship.

    Another book to be added to my library.

    By: Joe Huffman Friday, September 15, 2006 8:50:50 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Sex )

    Today I got several interesting searches. These are just the top of the list:

    • how long to wait before having sex after a c-section
    • sex habit of nude wild african male

    There were some others too but I've abused the target of those searches enough already.

    Here's the details of the ones above:

    Domain Name   cox.net ? (Network)
    IP Address   68.97.119.# (Cox Communications)
    ISP   Cox Communications
    Location  
    Continent  :  North America
    Country  :  United States  (Facts)
    State  :  Oklahoma
    City  :  Oklahoma City
    Lat/Long  :  35.4715, -97.519 (Map)
    Distance  :  1,271 miles
    Language   English (United States)
    en-us
    Operating System   Microsoft WinXP
    Browser   Firefox
    Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.8.0.6) Gecko/20060728 Firefox/1.5.0.6
    Javascript   version 1.5
    Monitor  
    Resolution  :  1280 x 1024
    Color Depth  :  32 bits
    Time of Visit   Sep 15 2006 1:05:27 pm
    Last Page View   Sep 15 2006 1:05:27 pm
    Visit Length   0 seconds
    Page Views   1
    Referring URL http://search.yahoo....ggle=1&cop=&ei=UTF-8
    Search Engine search.yahoo.com
    Search Words how long to wait before having sex after a c-section
    Visit Entry Page   http://blog.joehuffm...ew,category,Sex.aspx
    Visit Exit Page   http://blog.joehuffm...ew,category,Sex.aspx
    Out Click    
    Time Zone   UTC-6:00
    Visitor's Time   Sep 15 2006 3:05:27 pm
    Visit Number   99,192

     
    Domain Name   (Unknown) 
    IP Address   72.204.71.# (Unknown Organization)
    ISP   Unknown ISP
    Location  
    Continent  :  Unknown
    Country  :  Unknown Country
    Lat/Long  :  unknown
    Language   English (United States)
    en-us
    Operating System   Microsoft WinXP
    Browser   Internet Explorer 6.0
    Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)
    Javascript   version 1.3
    Monitor  
    Resolution  :  800 x 600
    Color Depth  :  32 bits
    Time of Visit   Sep 15 2006 1:04:01 pm
    Last Page View   Sep 15 2006 1:05:40 pm
    Visit Length   1 minute 39 seconds
    Page Views   5
    Referring URL http://search.yahoo....ggle=1&cop=&ei=UTF-8
    Search Engine search.yahoo.com
    Search Words sex habit of nude wild african male
    Visit Entry Page   http://blog.joehuffm...ew,category,Sex.aspx
    Visit Exit Page   http://blog.joehuffman.org/default.aspx
    Out Click    
    Time Zone   UTC-6:00
    Visitor's Time   Sep 15 2006 3:04:01 pm
    Visit Number   99,190
     
     
     
    By: Joe Huffman Friday, September 15, 2006 8:42:23 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Quote of the Day )

    I am by no means sure that legalizing drugs would be a good policy, though there are some very good thinkers in the country who hold just that view. However, in view of the fact that the so-called drug war is used to justify the excesses of the federal ninja, it might be proposed that if we abolish the drug war, we could abolish the ninja too. The thing that keeps the drug trade going is the enormous amount of money involved. We must remember that both narcotics and stimulants were readily available over the counter during the Victorian period. We had very few junkies, and as far as I can tell, we had no ninja. One cannot turn the clock back, but we might give serious thought to some feasible means of turning it forward.

    Jeff Cooper

    # Thursday, September 14, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Thursday, September 14, 2006 10:34:34 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom )

    Sean sent me this link and I pulled the following insights from it:

    During his six months at the Colorado State College of Education (and thereafter in California), Sayyid's hungry disapproval found a variety of targets. American lawns (a distressing example of selfishness and atomism), American conversation ('money, movie stars and models of cars'), American jazz ('a type of music invented by Blacks to please their primitive tendencies - their desire for noise and their appetite for sexual arousal'), and, of course, American women: here another one pops up, telling Sayyid that sex is merely a physical function, untrammelled by morality. American places of worship he also detests (they are like cinemas or amusement arcades), but by now he is pining for Cairo, and for company, and he does something rash. Qutb joins a club - where an epiphany awaits him. 'The dance is inflamed by the notes of the gramophone,' he wrote; 'the dance-hall becomes a whirl of heels and thighs, arms enfold hips, lips and breasts meet, and the air is full of lust.' You'd think that the father of Islamism had exposed himself to an early version of Studio 54 or even Plato's Retreat. But no: the club he joined was run by the church, and what he is describing, here, is a chapel hop in Greeley, Colorado. And Greeley, Colorado, in 1949, was dry

    ...

    Qutb is the father of Islamism. Here are the chief tenets he inspired: that America, and its clients, are jahiliyya (the word classically applied to pre-Muhammadan Arabia - barbarous and benighted); that America is controlled by Jews; that Americans are infidels, that they are animals, and, worse, arrogant animals, and are unworthy of life; that America promotes pride and promiscuity in the service of human degradation; that America seeks to 'exterminate' Islam - and that it will accomplish this not by conquest, not by colonial annexation, but by example. As Bernard Lewis puts it in The Crisis of Islam

    'This is what is meant by the term the Great Satan, applied to the United States by the late Ayatollah Khomeini. Satan as depicted in the Qur'an is neither an imperialist nor an exploiter. He is a seducer, 'the insidious tempter who whispers in the hearts of men' (Qur'an, CXIV, 4, 5).

    ...

    Qutb is the father of Islamism. Here are the chief tenets he inspired: that America, and its clients, are jahiliyya (the word classically applied to pre-Muhammadan Arabia - barbarous and benighted); that America is controlled by Jews; that Americans are infidels, that they are animals, and, worse, arrogant animals, and are unworthy of life; that America promotes pride and promiscuity in the service of human degradation; that America seeks to 'exterminate' Islam - and that it will accomplish this not by conquest, not by colonial annexation, but by example. As Bernard Lewis puts it in The Crisis of Islam

    'This is what is meant by the term the Great Satan, applied to the United States by the late Ayatollah Khomeini. Satan as depicted in the Qur'an is neither an imperialist nor an exploiter. He is a seducer, 'the insidious tempter who whispers in the hearts of men' (Qur'an, CXIV, 4, 5).

    ...

    The fact of expansion underwrote the mandate of heaven. And now, for the past 300 or 400 years, observable reality has propounded a rebuttal: the argument from manifest failure. As one understands it, in the Islamic cosmos there is nothing more painful than the suspicion that something has denatured the covenant with God. This unbearable conclusion must naturally be denied, but it is subliminally present, and accounts, perhaps, for the apocalyptic hurt of the Islamist.

    ...

    As a Sunni military man put it, Iraqis hate Iraq - or 'Iraq', a concept that has brought them nothing but suffering. There is no nationalist instinct; the instinct is for atomisation.

    ...

    We may wonder how the Islamists feel when they compare India to Pakistan, one a burgeoning democratic superpower, the other barely distinguishable from a failed state. What Went Wrong? asked Bernard Lewis, at book length. The broad answer would be institutionalised irrationalism; and the particular focus would be the obscure logic that denies the Islamic world the talent and energy of half its people. No doubt the impulse towards rational inquiry is by now very weak in the rank and file of the Muslim male. But we can dwell on the memory of those images from Afghanistan: the great waves of women hurrying to school.

    ...

    What would happen if we spent some of the next 300 billion dollars (this is Liz Cheney's thrust) on the raising of consciousness in the Islamic world? The effect would be inherently explosive, because the dominion of the male is Koranic - the unfalsifiable word of God, as dictated to the Prophet:

    'Men have authority over women because God has made the one superior to the other, and because they spend their wealth to maintain them. Good women are obedient. They guard their unseen parts because God has guarded them. As for those from whom you fear disobedience, admonish them, forsake them in beds apart, and beat them. Then if they obey you, take no further action against them. Surely God is high, supreme' (4:34).

    Can we imagine seeing men on the march in defence of their right to beat their wives? And if we do see it, then what? Would that win hearts and minds? The martyrs of this revolution would be sustained by two obvious truths: the binding authority of scripture, all over the world, is very seriously questioned; and women, by definition, are not a minority. They would know, too, that their struggle is a heroic assault on the weight of the past - the alpweight of 14 centuries.

    ...

    I will never forget the look on the gatekeeper's face, at the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, when I suggested, perhaps rather airily, that he skip some calendric prohibition and let me in anyway. His expression, previously cordial and cold, became a mask; and the mask was saying that killing me, my wife, and my children was something for which he now had warrant. I knew then that the phrase 'deeply religious' was a grave abuse of that adverb. Something isn't deep just because it's all that is there; it is more like a varnish on a vacuum. Millennial Islamism is an ideology superimposed upon a religion - illusion upon illusion. It is not merely violent in tendency. Violence is all that is there.

    They think of us as inferior, arrogant, and sinful. It might have been acceptable for us do so in isolation but we, the west, tempt and corrupt them. And even worse we have been destroying their culture via our temptations and demonstrating their inferiority. It's sort of an extreme case of When Prophecy Fails. Not only must they increase their proselyting when their prophecy of superiority fails they must convert or kill the unbelievers.

    The suggested solution here is interesting and worthy of throwing into our multiple front attack on Islamic extremism--liberate the women.

    By: Joe Huffman Thursday, September 14, 2006 9:18:01 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Places Without Guns )

    Twenty people wounded or killed. Hundreds of people were present but none of them were allowed to legally possess a firearm there. The person willing to break the law prohibited murder obviously wasn't that concerned about the law against possessing a firearm. The victims were disarmed by their own government and that government bears a large portion of the responsibility for those injuries and deaths. And notice how the attacker was stopped? By people with guns. Don't give me any crap about "bringing a gun into the situation just increases the violence". It put a stop to the violence. If the victims hadn't been disarmed they could have stopped the violence much sooner.

    A 25-year-old man who mounted a deadly shooting rampage at a downtown Montreal college had posted pictures of himself on the Internet with a rifle and said he was feeling "crazy" and "postal" and was drinking whiskey hours before the attack.

    The man, identified by police as Kimveer Gill, also said on a blog that he liked to play a role-playing Internet game about the Columbine High School shootings in Colorado and wanted to die "in a hail of gunfire."

    In the end, Gill dressed in a black trench coat like the Columbine shooters put his own gun to his head and pulled the trigger during a shootout with officers at Dawson College on Wednesday, police said.

    Gill, wielding a rapid-fire rifle and two other weapons, had already wounded 20 other people by the time he took his own life. One of his victims, an 18-year-old woman, later died. Four others remained in critical condition Thursday, including three in extremely critical condition and one in a deep coma.

    ...

    Police initially said Gill shot himself but later Wednesday they said they thought officers killed Gill during an exchange of fire. On Thursday, however, Francois Dore of the Quebec provincial police said "preliminary results of the autopsy showed that he died of self-inflicted wounds." Dore said police shot Gill in the arm before he turned his gun on himself.

    "Remember September 13th" should be the slogan of the people of Canada as they march in the streets by the tens of thousands and demand their government stop infringing their inalienable rights.

    By: Joe Huffman Thursday, September 14, 2006 6:36:51 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Politics | Quote of the Day )

    The state is a divine institution. Without it we have anarchy, and the lawlessness of anarchy is counter to the natural law: so we abjure all political theories which view the state as inherently and necessarily evil. But it is the state which has been in history the principal instrument of abuse of the people, and so it is central to the conservatives' program to keep the state from  accumulating any but the most necessary powers.

    William F. Buckley, Jr.
    [So why do conservatives think it is so important to get the state involved in sexual preferences and practices?--Joe]

    # Wednesday, September 13, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, September 13, 2006 10:58:42 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot )

    My way overdue survey for Boomershoot 2006 is now available:

    http://survey.boomershoot.org/

    It doesn't matter if you were there as a shooter, spotter, spectator, or even if you just heard about the event and didn't attend. There is a survey for everyone.

    I want feedback of any type. But just because I'm listening doesn't mean I'll change. But I will consider it. And if you want to send an email or give me a call that works too.

    I plan to announce the dates and prices for Boomershoot 2007 sometime this weekend. If you have input that might affect that please get it to me before then. But even if you run across this posting in March of 2007 the survey will probably still be up and I'll still be listening.

    Thanks for your input.

    By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, September 13, 2006 8:58:11 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot )

    Saturday I put in a culvert for easier access to the Boomershoot explosives magazine Ry named the Taj Mahal. This will make it easier for Boomershoot helpers (who are ATF approved explosives handlers) to get to the explosives magazine. I had been thinking about it for a while and finally made it happen. It was either that or get snorkel kits for their 4x4s. More pictures are here.

    While I was in the neighborhood I talked to our neighbors just across the road from the Boomershoot site. I want to help them get high speed Internet access (currently they are just on dial-up) and then making the entire Boomershoot site a WiFi hot-spot. They seemed quite agreeable to it and I'll probably work on that enhancement early next spring. It depends somewhat on the survey of Boomershooters and potential Boomershooters I'll be doing this week (sometime tonight I'll be posting the survey link here and sending out emails). If no one is interested then I might not bother with the hassle and expense.

    Boomershoot--It's not just one weekend a year, it's a year around commitment.

    By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, September 13, 2006 5:46:24 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Politics | Quote of the Day )

    If voting changed anything, they'd make it illegal.

    Emma Goldman
    [I'm not quite that cynical but it does have a grain of truth in it. Think McCain-Feingold.--Joe]

    # Tuesday, September 12, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 12, 2006 9:58:23 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Sex )

    Part of due process is being able to confront your accuser(s). Apparently that isn't part of the law in some cases in the UK and this guy spent five years in jail before they figured out the accuser was a liar:

    A father who served five years in jail for sexually assaulting a woman had his conviction quashed yesterday after new evidence suggested his victim was a liar who inflicted her own injuries.

    Warren Blackwell, 36, embraced his wife, Tanya, outside the Court of Appeal in London, saying he would always love her for standing by him. But the ordeal made him "a very angry man indeed".

    "It took the police and the justice system nine months to convict me of a crime that not only did I not commit, but a crime that never even took place," he said in a statement read by his solicitor.

    And not only that she still can't be named:

    "It has taken almost seven years to clear my name." The court was told that the woman, who cannot be named, had made strikingly similar claims of other sex attacks, had an ability to lie and a possible propensity to self harm.

    ...

    Mr Justice Tugendhat said that when Parliament passed the law granting lifetime anon-ymity to complainants in sex cases it did not contemplate someone acting as she had.

    "There may, in future, be another case in which she makes allegations against another man."

    We have a Constitution which was designed to prevent these sort of abuses by government. It's too bad our government doesn't abide by it. But at least it gives us a clear goal in our pursuit of regaining our freedom.

    By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 12, 2006 8:57:34 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Sex )

    This wouldn't work with me and I can't imagine it working any better with Columbian gang members:

    BOGOTA, Colombia, Sept 12 (Reuters) - They are calling it the "crossed legs" strike.

    Fretting over crime and violence, girlfriends and wives of gang members in the Colombian city of Pereira have called a ban on sex to persuade their menfolk to give up the gun.

    By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 12, 2006 2:32:07 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

    I have some suggestions for Jeff Soyer in regards to his last sentence in this post where he advocates some changes in the hunting regulations:

    • There are no bag limits.
    • The season is year around as with other varmints.
    • There are no restrictions on hunting with various lures, calls, traps, poisons, calibers, spot lights, magazine capacity, rate of fire, or use of sound suppression accessories as long as a reasonable person would conclude that the hunting methodology would normally be expected to result in a humane kill.
    • The markings and other means of identification for the various species should be published in the hunting regulations and be regarded as definitive.
    • Hunters are required to notify authorities of wounded animals who have escaped as soon as is practical so others can be engaged to track and put down the animal in a humane manner.
    • All carcass disposal is the responsibility of the local government body. The government body may do this in any manner it so decides as long as it does not endanger the public health. This may include, as decided by the local government body and local public health officials, the sale of the carcass in whole or in part for any lawful use.
    • Hunters are required, if they can do so without endangering themselves or other innocent life, to guard the carcass until the police have arrived to properly strip the carcass of valuables, identify the species, verify it was a legitimate kill, and search for evidence as might be needed in civil or criminal cases.
    • Sales of valuables found on carcasses shall be used for the purposes of carcass disposal by the local government body. Except:
      • Valuables identifiable as stolen property shall be returned to their rightful owners or their heirs.
      • Valuables needed as evidence in criminal or civil cases shall be retained as necessary.
    By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 12, 2006 1:42:52 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Home Life )

    When someone tells me "anyplace is fine" when we are trying to decide where to go for a meal I frequently tell them "Sankt Gertruds Kloster". When they ask where it's at and for directions I tell them it's in Copenhagen, Denmark. They then get this confused look on their face (or a frown as in this case). You shouldn't tell me anyplace is fine. If you don't mean what you say or say what you mean I'm likely to expose to you your inability to communicate accurately and amuse myself in the process.

    Regardless, my boss and his wife are really into fine restaurants as well as travel. I suggested this unique restaurant in Copenhagen for his benefit. I'm not sure I would travel all the way from the Pacific Northwest just for dinner but if I were spending time in the area anyway I would be sure to go back again.

    I was there in ’79 so I’m sure things have changed some. But my impression from the website and a few of the other hits I got looking for it is that it is still a very nice place to visit.

    By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 12, 2006 12:58:02 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Home Life )

    I got a call yesterday from someone I have only seen once in the past six years. He barely introduced himself and immediately went right to the point. He talked so fast that I didn't get quite get all the words. What I did get was that he was in a domestic violence situation, had restraining order against him and had to get his guns out of his house as soon as possible. He had some other possibilities but wondered if I would be able to hold on to them for a couple months until he could get things all straightened out.

    I agreed but didn't have secure storage for all of his guns here in the Seattle area. I said I have plenty of room but he would need to buy a cheap gun safe to put them in. He said he would check out his other alternatives and get back to me.

    I ended up with his gun safe, filled with his guns, next to my bed, and the keys to it in my pocket. He then told me his story about the incident with his 18 year-old son, about spending the night in jail, and his search for a lawyer.

    I gave him a little bit of advice--If this were to turn into the worst case scenario how much money would you be willing to spend to have a better outcome? "A lot", he said after about 1.5 seconds of thought. So I told him, "Then spend that money now on the best lawyer you can get." As painful as it is to hire the best up front hiring a better lawyer than your first pick to go back in time is beyond the means of everyone I know.

    By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 12, 2006 12:33:38 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot )

    Dave, of Ozark Pyrotechnics, and I exchanged several emails in the past few hours and he pointed out something I sort of knew but it hadn't really bubbled up to full awareness. He is planning an explosives shoot next month. The format is a little different than the Boomershoot but the targets are similar. If Missouri is in your "neck of the woods" you should check it out.

    By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 12, 2006 12:07:22 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Politics )

    Reader, friend, and Boomershooter Sean sent me a link to this article in the Weekly Standard, Return of the Tribes. It's kind of a long article but all very interesting. Near the end is a section on Magic vs. jihad and from there Peters goes on to explain that "magic" is an essential part of dealing with people and how the magic of the forests and jungles in the hands of people that didn't even have the wheel defeated the Muslim jihad that had swept through nearly every other culture the Muslim encountered:

    The spread of Islam into Europe and Africa struck very different, but equally potent, barriers in the north and south. In Europe, it could not overcome a rival monotheist faith with its own universalist vision. In West Africa, Islam stopped, roughly five centuries ago, when it left the deserts and grasslands to enter the African forest, that potent domain of magic.

    It should excite far more interest than it has that a warrior faith with an unparalleled record of conquest and conversion dead-ended when it reached the realms of illiterate tribes that had not mastered the wheel: In the forests of sub-Saharan Africa, Islam could not conquer, could not convert, and could not convince. On their own turf, local beliefs proved more powerful than a faith that had swept over "civilized" continents.

    His thesis is that essentially all people need magic in their lives. In our country we have our own substitutes for it. As Sean rightly surmised this would push a button of mine. Magic???? We don't need to stinking magic! Well... maybe I don't but most people do and failure to take this into account will result in unexpected results when you deal with them.

    As Barb points out at times I am frequently bewildered at the unexpected results when I deal with people. Apparently it's not that they are stupid, as I would like to claim, but that they believe in magic. I guess I can buy that. From airplane security to gun control to socialized medicine they all believe in magic not realizing it's nothing but a comforting illusion.

    By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 11, 2006 11:57:38 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Quote of the Day )

    War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things. The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks that nothing is worth war is much worse.

    John Stuart Mill
    [This reminds me of the famous quote by Churchill.--Joe]
    # Monday, September 11, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 11, 2006 7:07:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot | Gun Rights | Technology )

    Ozark Pyrotechnics is now selling binary exploding targets.

    Barb and I visited Dave and his family a month ago and I saw a small stock of the targets ready for shipping. We didn't ask for a demo so I can't report on functionality but I fully expect they will work as advertised.

    If you test them please send me a report.

    By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 11, 2006 6:53:04 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Politics )

    From the Seattle PI:

    TORONTO -- First, General Motors. Then gun control, followed by George W. Bush. Now rabble-rousing filmmaker Michael Moore has turned his irreverent camera on health care in America.

    Socialized medicine will be his inevitable conclusion.

    "Michael Moore is a political activist with a track record for sensationalism. He has no intention of being fair and balanced," Johnson said.

    Yup.

    By: Lyle at UltiMAK Monday, September 11, 2006 6:25:56 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Gun Rights | Politics )

    Here's something you don't see-- a gun ban struck down on constitutional grounds, thoughbeit a state constitution:

    "The Utah Supreme Court on Friday struck down a ban on guns at the University of Utah, saying campus officials cannot adopt a policy that runs counter to state law."

    Did I read that right?  State institutions cannot enact policies in violation of the constitution?  This is groundbreaking stuff (well, outside the issue of public funding for Maplethorpe or Piss Christ exhibits, et al, being claimed as "free speech" elsewhere).

    Here is the pertinent language out of Utah, courtesy of the Second Amendment Foundation:

    Utah Constitution Article I, Section 6

    The individual right of the people to keep and bear arms for security and defense of self, family, others, property, or the state, as well as for other lawful purposes shall not be infringed; but nothing herein shall prevent the Legislature from defining the lawful use of arms.

    Take note that security and defense of self, family, others, property, or the state are mentioned as the primary reason why the right to keep and bear arms should be protected.  That blows the whole "Sporting Purposes" test concept all to hell, doesn't it?  But Utah reserves the right to define “lawful use”, like, I guess, not allowing shooting at your local community range at 03:00 for instance, without an effective sound suppressor.  That makes sense.

    And "...defense of...property"?  There's an obscure concept.

    Now, if we could only get the several states to recognize the U.S. Constitution, it wouldn't matter what any state constitution says about the keeping and bearing of arms (unless I am mistaken, the U.S. Constitution prevents, ostensibly, your home state legislature from banning newspapers, forcing Catholics to wear crucifix arm bands, for example, or reinstating slavery, but maybe someone could correct me on that).

    The NRA linked to the story also, but had little to say about it as of this writing.

    By: Lyle at UltiMAK Monday, September 11, 2006 9:25:43 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Politics )

    I was thinking all morning about posting on this subject, then a pen pal in Israel, Howard, a marksmanship instructor for the IDF, sent me an e-mail along the same lines.  I therefore can simply post the exchange I had with him:


    From: Howard in Israel
    Sent: Monday, September 11, 2006 9:46 AM
    To: GPOSUMMARY
    Subject: Fw: Headlines and Editorials


    Friends:

    The other night Israeli TV news reported that a recent survey in the USA determined that a third of all Americans believe that there was US government complicity in the 9/11 terrorist attacks.  I find it hard to believe.  I also find it hard to believe that a group of 75 (?) university professors say the evidence of such complicity is undeniable.

    If the TV report is correct, all I can do is shake my head in disbelief.

    Howard
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    To which I replied:

    Funny you should mention that.  I was just commenting to my wife this morning that I believed I had identified a parallel between Holocaust deniers and 9/11 deniers.  Yes, it is true that there are a number of Americans, many of them college professors and administrators, who are touting the notion that the twin towers were brought down in a “controlled demolition” and the Pentagon was hit with an American cruise missile.

    My hypothesis is that, just as Holocaust deniers are the very ones who agree with the Nazi’s “Final Solution”, so too are the 9/11 deniers the very same people who hate capitalism and especially international free trade.  To put it another way, they agree with the premises of the terrorists, though their rationalizations may be slightly different.

    I’m no psychologist, and I cannot begin to explain why those who most agree with the anti-Semitic premises for the Holocaust would be the ones most likely to deny that it happened, or that those who most agree that Western capitalism is the root of all evil in the world would deny that the attack on the World Trade Center was perpetrated by anti-Western, anti-capitalists, but I find this fascinating.

    Lyle

    ------------------------

    Update, 9/12/:

    Lyle:
    "Fascinating" is the politest term used so far.
    Howard

    ------------------------

    They just lost another soldier this morning in Gaza.  He isn't joking at all about any of this.

    By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 11, 2006 8:05:23 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Quote of the Day )

    Today, America is fighting a war that is testing our Nation's resolve. We are once again answering history's call with confidence, and we know that freedom will prevail. Our brave men and women in uniform have stepped forward to fight our enemies abroad so that we do not have to face them here at home, and we are grateful for the courageous individuals bringing terrorists to justice around the world.

    We are also confronting the extremists in the great ideological struggle of the 21st century. September the 11th made clear that, in the long run, the only way to secure our Nation is to advance liberty and democracy as the great alternatives to repression and radicalism. By working together with our friends and allies, we are helping spread the blessings of freedom and laying the foundations of peace for generations to come.

    George W. Bush
    President of the United States of America
    September 7, 2006
    Patriot Day 2006

    # Sunday, September 10, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 10, 2006 2:33:17 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

    Creationists make it sound as though a 'theory' is something you dreamt up after being drunk all night.

    Isaac Asimov
    [One of my pet peeves is that most people, including nearly all the scientists I have worked with, don't distinguish between a theory and a hypothesis. The gun control advocates who do this are particularly irksome to me when they do this.--Joe]

    # Saturday, September 09, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Saturday, September 09, 2006 8:44:21 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot | Quote of the Day )

    During Wednesday’s drill, a K-9 trooper put the Semtex on the rear bumper of a pickup truck parked in a Massport pool lot. Troopers have so far disassembled a street sweeper in the hope of finding it sucked into the device. Last night it remained as lost as luggage.

    O’Ryan Johnson
    September 9, 2006
    Security breach at Logan — ‘It’s Keystone Kops’
    [If I lose explosives, either by misplacement or theft, I have to report it within 24 hours to the ATF. I hope these Troopers have the same paperwork and hassles I would have if I would have done this.--Joe]

    # Friday, September 08, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Friday, September 08, 2006 7:30:03 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Politics | Quote of the Day )

    The worst thing in this world, next to anarchy, is government.

    Henry Ward Beecher
    [Which is why we are supposed to have a limited government with enumerated powers.--Joe]

    # Thursday, September 07, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Thursday, September 07, 2006 8:33:58 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Home Life )

    This weekend we borrowed my parents boat to go out on Dworshak Reservoir (pictures here). The air was filled with smoke from the wildfires to the west but we hadn't been boating in a couple years and it was originally planned to take all our kids out and do some water skiing as well as check on a geocache that was reported to be missing. Kim and James ended up not going so it was just Barb, Xenia, and I.

    We arrived at my parents house and the boat battery had a charger and my brother's van jumpered to it. My brother showed up and said he had cleaned the points and other minor maintenance that had caused problems with boat before. It wouldn't start until he jumped the battery but it ran fine once he did that. We disconnected the charger and the jumper cables and tried starting it again. It started just fine. Great! We hooked up the pickup to the boat, transferred our gear and took off for the lake.

    While Xenia and I put the boat in the lake Barb used the restroom. We were blocking someone about to pull their boat out of the lake so I pushed us off and hopped in the boat expecting to start the boat, hover just off shore until Barb came back, pick her up on the dock then take off. The boat was quickly drifting away from the dock with the help of a breeze when I turned the key and instead of being awarded with the roar of the 140 HP Chevy II engine I heard just "click, click, click" as the solenoid alternately engaged and disengaged without the engine even turning over.

    Xenia and I extracted the paddle from underneath the life-jackets and ropes in the side of the boat and I managed to paddled to the tip of a point before we drifted far away from the shore. With Xenia pushing the boat away from the shore every time it came close I pulled it back to dock with the rope tied to the bow. Barb arrived about then and I ran back to the pickup and found jumper cables behind the seat (I had planned to transfer our jumper cables to the pickup with our other gear but had forgotten). We got a jump from the good Samaritan next to us and took off.

    I made a big loop out in the open water with the boat at cruising speed while watching the ammeter. The battery was charging at the rate of about 7 amps. Everything appeared normal but I wasn't comfortable yet. I went back to dock, turned the engine off and then restarted the engine. It instantly roared to life. Great! We are set to go. I turned around and we took off upstream to the nearest campsite to have our picnic lunch before going further on upstream to the missing geocache. We had a pleasant lunch and took lots of picture and then I tried to start the engine again. "Click, click, click." Barb asked, "Now what?" "We're dead", I replied. It was a gross exaggeration of course. We were only about three miles from dock and there was a trail alongside the lake if we wanted to walk back and get help. I decided we probably could paddle the boat back if we didn't mind spending the time and there was a good chance we could get a jump from one of the other boaters. I started paddling, first from one side then the other. Then Barb came back and sat on one side and we traded the paddle back and forth. I estimated we were moving at about 1/2 mile per hour. Arrival at dock, even without getting help, would be before dark. Good. I could pull out the GPS and get an accurate number if I wanted and do a better estimate of our ETA but I wanted to wait until we got our rhythm going. Barb suggested we use my Boomershoot cell phone (my usual cell phone has zero service in that area) and see if the sheriff had a boat on the lake and could help us if needed. Inland Cellular (the Boomershoot cell phone provider) claims coverage but it was on the extreme fringe of usability. It took something like five calls to call my brother's wife, tell her the problem, and get her our GPS coordinates. We continued paddling and when a boat went by we stood up and waved the paddle and shouted. The boat went on by without anyone acknowledging us. We padded some more and another boat went by. This one stopped in response to our waving and gave us a jump.

    As we were waiting for the battery to get charged enough to start we talked with our benefactors. It was a man, his wife, and a another couple which we surmised were one of their adult kids and their spouse. It turns out the older woman mother was a good friends of Barb's mom and her dad was Barbs biology teacher. The man was a retired soil conservation officer and had spent a lot of time on the farm helping lay out grass waterways and gully plugs. He had even had dinner with my parents at least once. I recognized his name from my parents and brother talking about him.

    The engine started, we zoomed back to the dock where the first thing I did was to use the two-way radio (the cellphone signal was still barely registering) in the pickup to contact my sister-in-law and tell her we didn't need the assistence from the sheriff. As we were about to put the boat on the trailer Barb noticed a sheriff's vehicle pulling up to the launch area. Xenia and could handle getting the boat chores she went to see if he was about to go looking for us. It turns out he was and he told Barb that he was disappointed that he didn't get to go out on the lake. He was looking forward to doing a little boating. Apparently his office hadn't gotten the word yet via my sister-in-law.

    We went back to the farm, put the boat back in the garage, I gave my sister-in-law and my niece the complete story and then gave her $60.00 and asked her to have my brother get a new battery for the boat. This wasn't the first time we had been stranded on the lake with this boat with battery problems (it was a different battery that time) but I wanted it to be the last. Because the boat is used so infrequently they share the battery with the combine (a grain harvester) which "worked fine all fall".

    It wasn't a disaster, just an adventure--another one of those stories you tell when people are telling stories of things gone wrong.

    By: Joe Huffman Thursday, September 07, 2006 7:34:33 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

    There are risks and costs to action. But they are far less than the long range risks of comfortable inaction.

    John F. Kennedy
    [Appliciable to freedom activists as well as our fight against Islamic extremists.--Joe]

    # Wednesday, September 06, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, September 06, 2006 7:17:23 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Politics | Quote of the Day )

    When dealing with people, remember you are not dealing with creatures of logic, but creatures of emotion.

    Dale Carnegie

    # Tuesday, September 05, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 05, 2006 8:57:08 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

    I just love it when people attempt to prove their point without addressing your point, supply facts, or even present a logical argument.

    Probably my favorite of these techniques is proof by ridicule. I just became aware of someone addressing some of my writings in this manner as in, "Incidentally, this is the stupidest thing i've read so far today." An earlier, even more blatant case is here.

    Another methodology that gets high praise from me is proof by vigorous assertion--as in this case.

    I would like to ask, "Who do they think they have positively influenced in this manner?" But I know that expecting people to be rational is irrational and that a great many people will think such methods are irrefutable when it allows them to continuing to believe what they want to believe. This is, of course, just a minor variation of Paul Simon's acute observation.

    Still, the people in the "undecided" category will have a greater tendency to "vote your way" when presented with such proofs by people that lack sufficient character to admit they were wrong. It can be frustrating but it's not a fruitless exercise if it's a public debate. One-on-one you might as well walk away from it. As Dale Carnegie said, "Those convinced against their will are of the same opinion still."

    Another applicable Dale Carnegie quote on this topic will be used for the QOD tomorrow.

    By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, September 05, 2006 8:20:01 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Politics | Quote of the Day )

    Osama bin Laden and his fellow jihadis may well have figured out that the only way that they can continue to feel good about their place in the world is by reducing the West to the same level of desperate impoverishment as the Arab world. This also explains the left's alliance with bin Laden almost from the beginning--they also share this resentment that the West isn't desperately poor (but not enough to give up their private jets and Ferraris).

    Clayton Cramer
    September 3, 2006
    A Dark Thought as We Approach The Fifth Anniversary of 9/11

    By: Lyle at UltiMAK Tuesday, September 05, 2006 7:35:45 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Sex )

    First:  Thank you, Joe, for allowing me to post on your blog.  The trouble is I have this terrible habit of writing whole essays (but I did get freedom, gun rights and sex into a single issue):

    Years ago I had a conversation with a man who considered himself a libertarian-- one who had been reading Ayn Rand's definitive work, "Capitalism". He persisted in trying to convince me that "state's rights" might properly involve the right to "allow" slavery if the people of that state so choose. It took some doing before I could get him to admit that just maybe, there can be no right to enslave, because such a "right" involved the blatant violation of rights.

    I ran across two examples of this kind of silliness today.  One was in a discussion of self protection rights. A state "shall issue" concealed carry law, it was asserted, would take away "local discretion", or to put it another way, it would deny local governments the "right" to ban the carrying of concealed guns. In another discussion I heard of the practice of removing a girl's clitoris being described as though it were a right, or as a “traditional cultural practice” that certain peoples had a right to exercise.

    In both cases, there is desire to define the protection of Liberty (the right to bear arms, or the right to keep your body parts) as “taking away local discretion” as though local “discretion” (to impose force upon individuals) is the same thing as Liberty. Lets apply that position to some other hallmarks of a free society: Nation-wide Emancipation denies "local discretion" regarding the keeping of slaves. The First Amendment takes away "local discretion" regarding the confiscation of computers and printing machines or the forced shut-down of local radio stations, and it takes away "local discretion" to ban Jews from owning land.

    I guess we’re not “free” after all if we don’t have "local discretion" to ban or confiscate anything we want, or to cut various body parts off of anyone we want, so long as it gives us the sort of "Culture" we desire for "Our Community" and what about "democracy" after all? (Is anyone else reminded of Jim Jones at this point?)

    Such an attitude is rooted in a fairly complete lack of principles and a total ignorance of the U.S. Constitution and history. Government's job, in the uniquely American sense, is to protect us from force and fraud, to ensure our right to life and property, and to ensure our right to peaceable, voluntary association and exchange with others.

    That's it. Whether government has "local discretion" or "regional discretion", or "global discretion" to control us, rob us, allow our neighbors to cut pieces off us, or enslave us, the outcome is going to be very much the same—violation, stagnation, decay, and suffering.

    Government, properly, has only responsibilities. We as individuals retain all the discretion, and we as individuals, or as collectives, do not have any "right" to initiate force or fraud upon anyone, no matter how wonderful and “Cultured” it might make us feel. Is that so terribly difficult to understand?

    # Monday, September 04, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Monday, September 04, 2006 12:44:32 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Quote of the Day )

    We must all hang together, or we will surely all hang separately.

    Benjamin Franklin
    [Gun owners, are you listening? Anti-war activists, are you listening?--Joe]

    # Sunday, September 03, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 03, 2006 11:47:36 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Home Life )

    Xenia, our youngest, is a senior this year. We are now counting down the months until she will be done with high school. We have a tradition, from when I was growing up, of taking a picture of the kids on the first day of school. Here is Xenia's collection of those pictures. And here is another set from the first day of the last year of us having kids going to K through 12.

    All three of our kids are in the house this minute and it's almost alien to see them as adults (Xenia will be 18 in a just a few days). And then next year both of our daughters plan to get married in July. I look at the pictures of our kids when they going to grade school and I want to reach back in time and give them hugs. We give them hugs now of course but I also miss the children that they no longer are.

    By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 03, 2006 10:35:19 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

    Victory In Sight. I highly recommend this conference.  I was a speaker at the Gun Rights Policy Conference in 1999 and 2000. I have been wanting to go back every year since then but I could never quite make it work. This year I decided to attend the Gun Blogger Rendezvous instead since it was closer and hence would take less time and money.

    Maybe next year.

    By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 03, 2006 10:17:30 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom )

    I just watched An Invitation to Islam. While the very first of it has English subtitles most of it is in English. My favorite parts was where the guy says:

    Islam is the only religion acceptable to God.

    ...

    God recognizes no separation between religion and state.

    ...

    He has no need for the legislatures and parliaments which you in the west have, to put in mildly, used to legislate yourselves into a prison of your own making. Who in his right mind would want to legislate himself to death like you have done to yourselves?

    This is the religion that executes teachers who dare to instruct women, stones to death women suspected of adultery, and beheads homosexuals.

    We must Destroy Their Culture.

    By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 03, 2006 9:44:11 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights )

    From the Chicago Tribune (and here):

    In a documentary taped earlier but scheduled to be broadcast Sunday on the BBC, Peter Clarke, head of Scotland Yard's anti-terrorism branch, said that "thousands" of British Muslims are now being monitored by police and intelligence agencies.

    And from The Observer:

    Police are investigating a network of terror training camps across Britain which they fear are nurturing a new wave of home-grown Islamic extremists. The investigation is linked to raids late on Friday in which anti-terrorism officers arrested 14 people.

    Yesterday police also sealed off a school in East Sussex run by an Islamic charity, Jameah Islamiyah, in the grounds of which The Observer understands the jailed cleric Abu Hamza secretly ran terror camps, training young militant Muslim men to use firearms.

    ...

    A counter-terrorism official described the arrests as part of a 'new plank' of attack against Islamic terrorists in Britain, one that targets their 'upstream' activities. 'It is not just about disrupting specific plots,' the source said. 'It is about closing down their opportunities to plan these attacks. Those that set up terror training camps are very much in our sights.'

    The source said they were not just talking about military-style camps, but bases where religious extremists 'bonded' and indoctrination took place preparing young extremists to become suicide bombers.

    The source refused to quantify the number of camps they were investigating, but confirmed there were likely to be several around the UK, both in metropolitan areas and remote rural regions.

    The Observer understands camps have operated in some of Britain's most isolated areas including Scotland, Wales and the Lake District. There has long been speculation that Abu Hamza operated a training camp in the Brecon Beacons in Wales and an unknown location in Scotland. At least two of the 7/7 bombers were known to have gone on white water trips in North Wales before their lethal attacks in London, and the use of activity-based training camps are suspected of playing a pivotal role in preparing young extremists.

    At first glance this might seem reasonable. But what of the precedent being set? What if it were Jews being monitored and their firearms training being investigated in Germany in 1938? For those that don't pay that much attention the German Weapons Control Act of 1938 forbid Jews from owning firearms.

    I am certain we must Destroy Their Culture. But unless there is some probable cause (does being Muslim constitute probable cause?) I'm uncomfortable with widespread monitoring. Yes, I realize this is the U.K. we are talking about in this case but in many cases restrictions on human rights in the U.K. are a predictor of things to come in the U.S.

    By: Joe Huffman Sunday, September 03, 2006 12:27:22 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot | Freedom )

    Airport security is getting a lot of attention recently. And as I have often noted it doesn't stand up well to scrutiny. Here is more data supporting my point:

    NEW YORK, Sept 2 (Reuters) - The Transportation Security Administration is suspending installation of the only airport checkpoint device that automatically screens passengers for hidden explosives due to problems with the system's reliability, The New York Times reported in Sunday editions.

    "We are seeing some issues that we did not anticipate" with the devices known as "puffers," the Times quoted Randy Null, the agency's chief technology officer as saying.

    Duh! It's an insolvable problem.

    They are trying however. I'm actually surprised at the level of effort they are putting into it--without realizing they can't solve the problem:

    Spread out on a table at the Transportation Security Laboratory outside Atlantic City last week, like a dim sum meal, was a collection of small dishes with samples of the explosives people here are working to defeat. They included Semtex, TNT, C4, British RDX and dynamite - several of which are popular among suicide bombers and have been used in successful airline plots - along with liquid explosives in bottles marked only “A,” “A1” and “B.”

    Scientists and technicians carefully stuff these raw materials into computers, small electronic devices, shoes and cigar boxes, building every imaginable bomb and then testing them on detection equipment.

    “We do our best to try to figure out all the options before someone else does,” said a laboratory technician who would identify himself only as "Mr. T" in accordance with a laboratory policy of not identifying staff members.

    Criticism of the Homeland Security Department and the Transportation Security Administration is not so much directed at the 190 federal employees and contractors at the laboratory here, or at Susan Hallowell, the chemist who runs the place.

    They are spending millions and millions of dollars on this and yet I am virtually certain that with a team of no more than five people and a couple hours of work by each team member we could shut down all commercial air traffic in the U.S. for a several days without breaking any existing explosives laws or anyone getting physically hurt (economic damage would be rather high however). Repeat once a week or so and within a couple months they would abandon their expensive and stupid attempts at preventing explosives from getting on planes.

    But the problem is that most people really don't appreciate being taught a lesson--especially if it makes them look incredibly stupid. If we were identified as their teachers, unlikely but possible, the odds are that the thanks we received would be in the form of free room and board and a "spouse" that rented us out several times a day for a couple packs of cigarettes.

    By: Joe Huffman Saturday, September 02, 2006 11:54:52 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

    A gun is a very important part of a farmer's equipment. There are more illegal guns held within the M25 than the whole of the British Armed Forces.

    Getting a gun illegally has never been easier. People who want to use them illegally do not get them registered.

    Liz Mort
    August 30, 2006
    Concern as gun numbers soar in Suffolk
    Eastern region spokeswoman for the Countryside Alliance

    [See also the Countryside Alliance our shooting campaign. I thought everyone had given up over there. Apparently resistance fighters still exist. I think I see more free Boomershoot entries for U.K. entrants again. This quote brought to you via Phil and Kevin.--Joe]

    # Saturday, September 02, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Saturday, September 02, 2006 2:29:19 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

    Professor Fox’s maundering is based upon the unproven assumption that more gun control will lead to less violence. He believes that being a university professor entitles him to dictate public policy, and our request for supporting statistics is irrelevant because we are not part of his Ivory Tower clique. He uses his command of the English language to create subtle innuendos to label us gun-fetishists and paranoids, and to imply that we have taken the government hostage like so many terrorists.

    It’s easy to lose touch with reality when one gets to live life in a protected enclave with a tenured position from which one can espouse fanciful ideologies without impacting job security. Regardless of the damage inflicted on regular people for implementing his recommendations, by nature of his gentrified position it’s unlikely the “Dean of Death” will be suffering the consequences of his beliefs.

    Howard Nemerov
    September 2, 2006 - 10:41
    Gun Control: Rebuttal to James Alan Fox
    [An excellent fisking of this bigot (also referenced by another bigot here).--Joe]

    # Friday, September 01, 2006
    By: Joe Huffman Friday, September 01, 2006 12:18:04 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom )

    This started out to be a comment to SayUncle's post on jury nullication but ended up being a blog post instead.

    We have a legal system. Not a justice system. I'm not saying this is avoidable, it's just a statement of the facts.

    IMHO our legal system is an approximation to a justice system. That given I fully agree there are lots of laws that need to be eliminated or changed. There is more than one path to that end. There is the obvious path through the legislature and is to be preferred but there are alternatives as well.

    One alternate path to legal change is jury nullification. After I was on a jury I talked to the prosecutor about this very issue. Read about it here if you want.

    Another path that is less palatable is demanding the vigorous enforcement of unjust laws. If fornication is against the law (it was in Idaho the last time I looked), so demand the unmarried child of the prosecutor, or police chief living with there significant other be prosecuted. Make a big stink about it such that it gets in the papers. Make it such that the law enforcement community of that jurisdiction comes out and literally says, "We will not prosecute cases under this law." The law is, in essence, stricken from the books in that jurisdiction. The down side is that if you can't find someone that is "conviction proof" to make the stink over you might end up with lot of "innocent" people convicted. If you can fill the jails with "innocent" people the legislature will fix the problem because of the population at large will demand it. But, in essence, you will be creating martyrs for your cause. You should get their permission to be martyred before doing so. It is considered very rude to martyr someone without their permission and could result in their own version of justice being visited upon you.

    By: Joe Huffman Friday, September 01, 2006 7:34:57 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Quote of the Day )

    Despite their differences, these groups form the outline of a single movement, a worldwide network of radicals that use terror to kill those who stand in the way of their totalitarian ideology. And the unifying feature of this movement, the link that spans sectarian divisions and local grievances, is the rigid conviction that free societies are a threat to their twisted view of Islam.

    George W. Bush
    President of the United States of America
    In a speech to veterans at an American Legion convention in Salt Lake City.
    August 31, 2006