Quote of the day–Joe Waldron

Ah, yes, the three great lies:


The Mercedes is paid for;
the mortgage check is in the mail, and
“Lawful gun owners have nothing to fear.”

http://www.suntimes.com/news/politics/obama/1318968,obama-gun-sales-up-120808.article

Joe Waldron
8:44 AM, December 8, 2008
Washington state CCW email list

What to do after a rainy, slushy, windy Sunday

Well, duh!  You dry out your guns, of course.  If they stay wet, all kinds of corrosion can happen, which is bad.  The Remington 700 at the top has already been disassembled, dried and reassembled.  The Daewoo pistol and the Colt rife are still airing out.



I took my nephew, Ben, into the Idaho mountains to try some “long range” shooting on Sunday.  After 4-wheeling it through several miles of snow, we found a nice place to shoot.  Ben had never fired at anying more than 100 yards distant, and had only fired pistols and carbines. Shooting a sub two-inch group on the first try at 200 meters was something he was pretty sure he couldn’t manage.  He did that much easily, shivering in the rain, firing over the hood of my pickup using the Remington with its “deep space telescope” and heavy barrel.  Ben did some 25 yard work with the pistol and I worked out a preliminary zero on the Colt AR-15 HBAR’s new tritium sights at 25, 200 and 300 meters.  Ben made some comment about being “all wet and cold, and stuff” but I’m not sure what point he was trying to make.  It is December and we’re in the mountains, so?  By then it was getting too dark to shoot so we had to pack up.  There never seems to be enough time in the day.

Being married to a physical therapist

I frequently get comments from envious guys who when finding out I’m married to a physical therapist say something about “the massages”. I just smile and let them believe what they want to believe. More about those “massages” later.

I don’t believe I’ve posted about this before but when I had lunch with her last Saturday at her office I saw a sign on the wall above her desk. It brought the whole issue into sharp focus.

The sign said:

The Ten “NEVERS” in Physical Therapy

  1. Never say you can’t, because you’ll do it anyway.
  2. Never say, “It’s easy”, because we’ll just make it hard.
  3. Never say, “I want to go home”, because you’ll just stay longer.
  4. Never lose count because you’ll start at one again.
  5. Never complain because we never listen.
  6. Never argue because you’ll never win.
  7. Never scream or cry because it only encourages us.
  8. Never look like you’re enjoying it because we’ll put a stop to it.
  9. Never hold your breath because if you pass out and die, we have to fill out the paperwork.
  10. Never lie or cheat because we know the truth, and you’ll live to regret it.

For most people that is just a hint. You don’t really understand what it means until you have been married to one for a few years. Here is another hint; when asked what the P.T. stands for on their badges they frequently give one of two answers:

  • Physical Terrorist
  • Pain and Torture

Now we go into the specifics of being married to one.

If you think of “massage” when you think of a physical therapist then you obviously don’t know what friction massage (also called Cross Friction Massage-CFM) is. The previous link says:

Where most massage methods use some form of skin lubrication, CFM uses none so that the finger (usually one, but sometimes two) doing the massage is not sliding across the skin, but rather is taking the skin with it, allowing for the force to be transmitted directly to the deep tissue being treated. The motion is small, maybe an inch or so, back and forth “across the grain” of the tissue, so you have to have some idea which direction the structure normally runs. The amount of pressure should be moderate, which will often cause some amount of discomfort, but this should never be too painful.

“Too painful” is a technical term which means the patient’s adrenaline reaches a level such they can break out of the restraints. Furthermore what they do is push you right up to the edge of “too painful” and hold you at a plateau until the area starts to goes numb. They keep asking if it has gone numb yet and as it starts feeling a little bit better they press harder to keep the pain at the same level. They claim this is just to “treat the deeper tissue”. The veracity of this claim depends upon what your definition of “treatment” is. All observable data indicates that “treatment” consists of destroying your pain receptors through over stimulation.

You might ask how I know all this. Good question. It turns out that in order to keep her Pain and Torture license up to date your local friendly Physical Terrorist has to take classes on a regular basis. Guess who she experiments on before she starts charging money for practicing her evil trade. It’s me. In the early years of our marriage she would come home from a class and coyly ask something like, “Didn’t you say your shoulder was a little sore last week?” I would answer truthful — and regret it. Since then I learned the wisdom of Oscar Wilde when he said, “The one charm of marriage is that it makes a life of deception a necessity.”

A contest with a thinking being is never over and a little white lie about all my body parts being in perfect working order was only a minor speed bump to someone who has made their career P/T. One time when she came home from class she had a little box with wires coming out of it she wanted to experiment with me as the subject. I have a couple degrees in electrical engineering and I know what can be done with a box with wires coming out of it. I also hate electricity going through my body. I mean just a little bit of it which most people think of as “I can barely feel it” makes me very irritated. If someone else were to describe the sensation as “a little tingle” it will infuriate me. I asked if the box had batteries or plugged into the wall outlet. She informed me that it had “little batteries”. Apparently she didn’t realize the only word I needed to hear was “battery” and “little” was superfluous unless she was talking “little” on a microscopic scale. I mean, I could make a device that would kill a horse with a watch battery if I wanted to and her trying to downplay the part about electricity being involved was only increasing my suspicion.

When her telling me how much it didn’t hurt when it was used on her, and how it felt “kind of strange” only caused my teeth to grind she broke out the sad eyes and looked like she was about to cry. I softened a little bit and she said she would put it at the lowest level and slowly increase the intensity and as soon as I wanted to stop she would immediately stop. I said I wanted to stop now, but she brought back the sad eyes and I let her attach the electrodes to my leg.

She slowly turned the knob clockwise repeatedly asking, “Can you feel it yet?” “I don’t want to hurt you, let me know if it hurts.” I told her I didn’t feel a thing and she continued to turn the knob. Her face grew more and more puzzled and I started to smirk. Her little box was broken and I was going to get away with not being shocked! She finally stopped and announced that the intensity was at the maximum setting and that I “should feel something.” I assured her that I didn’t and repressed my satisfaction as best I could. She looked her little box all over and said, “Oh! I see!” and before I could twitch a muscle she turned the switch she found from “Off” to “On” and muscle twitches were generated without any conscious effort on my part. I levitated off the bed and roared in anger. Before I came back down I had torn the wires off my leg and when I landed was facing her like a lion in a crouch and ready to pounce. She instantly brought back the sad eyes, froze absolutely still, and mouthed the words, “I’m sorry.” This saved our marriage but not from her from being very vocally reminded that I do NOT like electricity going through my body.

Another time she came back from a class and told me she had learned how to test for “bone spurs“. She explained that you pushed with your thumb in various places and watch for a “chandelier sign”. I politely asked about bone spurs and she explained they usually go unnoticed until the person gets up years a ways. At my age, then in my mid twenties, I might have some but wouldn’t notice them at all. Even with testing she probably wouldn’t be able to find them. But she wanted to practice the tests anyway.

I should have paid more attention during the part about what a positive test result indicator was rather than the part about “probably wouldn’t be able to find them”. I took off my shoes and socks and she started pressing her thumb into the flesh around my heel. She pressed harder and harder and I could hear her grunting with the effort required to probe deep into the tissue of my feet which were nearly armored with strong muscles from playing tennis almost every day. It felt kind of nice. Basically I was getting my feet massaged which I considered a real treat. It was what I had expected when before we got married she said she wanted to become a physical therapist. I was relaxing and enjoying it and I could tell she was getting a little frustrated (see rule 8 above). I was sympathetic and asked, “What is it you are trying to get to happen again?” Between grunts she growled out, “A chandelier sign”. I started to ask what that was when she said, “Maybe it’s over here” and she pressed deep into my flesh. We didn’t have a chandelier in our bedroom and hence I returned to floor level after bouncing off the ceiling. I do remember looking down at Barb still in position as if my foot was still cradled in her hands with her thumb mashing as hard as she could on that hidden button in my foot which should have been labeled, “DANGER! DO NOT PRESS UPON THE PAIN OF DEATH”. She had a big smile on her face and after I stopped bouncing I demanded to know why she was so happy. Her glee was totally oblivious to my state of mind and she told me, “Because I found it! I couldn’t find it in class but I found it with you! That was the chandelier sign. It was just like they said it would be.” Her moments of happiness are somewhat rare with me around and since I had not warned her I did not like chandelier sign I didn’t do anything but glare at her and resolved to listen more carefully and think things through in the future.

Surely, you might ask, there are some “benefits” (nudge, nudge) to being married to a physical therapist. My response to that is, “Do you know why physical therapists make such poor lovers? It’s because they use ice to take the swelling down.”

Lest you think my life is miserable or even uncomfortable I need to point out that I’m not only married to the physical therapist named Barbara, I’m also married to Barbara the woman. I’m not going to go into all the details but the card below is a hint. I get cards of a similar nature for my birthday, Valentine’s Day, and our anniversary (click to see the inside):

Barb explained, “It really should say, ‘You win’, rather than ‘You lose'”. But it’s close enough. I’ve been with her for 34 years now and most of the time I know how to read between the lines with her.

Quote of the day–Thomas Paine

Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil; in its worst state, an intolerable one.


Thomas Paine
[Which is why every effort should be made to keep government at the smallest size necessary to accomplish its necessary and authorized functions.–Joe]

UK gets a lecture. Is anyone listening?

Richard Mundy spells it out for them in the Times Online. I just wonder if anyone is listening:



The firearms massacres that have periodically caused shock and horror around the world have been dwarfed by the Mumbai shootings, in which a handful of gunmen left some 500 people killed or wounded.


For anybody who still believed in it, the Mumbai shootings exposed the myth of “gun control”. India had some of the strictest firearms laws in the world, going back to the Indian Arms Act of 1878, by which Britain had sought to prevent a recurrence of the Indian Mutiny.


The guns used in last week’s Bombay massacre were all “prohibited weapons” under Indian law, just as they are in Britain. In this country we have seen the irrelevance of such bans (handgun crime, for instance, doubled here within five years of the prohibition of legal pistol ownership), but the largely drug-related nature of most extreme violence here has left most of us with a sheltered awareness of the threat. We have not yet faced a determined and broad-based attack.


The Mumbai massacre also exposed the myth that arming the police force guarantees security. Sebastian D’Souza, a picture editor on the Mumbai Mirror who took some of the dramatic pictures of the assault on the Chhatrapati Shivaji railway station, was angered to find India’s armed police taking cover and apparently failing to engage the gunmen.



In Britain we are not yet ready to recall the final liberty of the subject listed by William Blackstone in his Commentaries on the Laws of England as underpinning all others: “The right of having and using arms for self-preservation and defence.” We would still not be ready to do so were the Mumbai massacre to happen in London tomorrow.


“Among the many misdeeds of British rule in India,” Mahatma Gandhi said, “history will look upon the act depriving a whole nation of arms as the blackest.” The Mumbai massacre is a bitter postscript to Gandhi’s comment. D’Souza now laments his own helplessness in the face of the killers: “I only wish I had had a gun rather than a camera.”



Quote of the day–William Earl Dungey

So, since I know how to use machine guns, automatic weapons, submachine guns, rifles, pistols, explosives and other such – like I know how to find the proper place and time to defecate so as not to upset the public nor my friends and family – I don’t need the regulations, laws and infringement on my rights to be armed and dangerous. I also don’t advocate destruction of my community, government nor world to make it my way – but then I do think there are more good people in the world than bad – but the bad ones tell lies, cheat and dishonor their ancestors for personal gain and general stupidity. I remain, armed and dangerous, but then that is all in my mind and not in yours, you never think about me – just the old man in the back of the room.


William Earl Dungey
December 6, 2008
One issue people, arise and think…. it matters

Franken and the “Recount”

This touches close to home for me, since our now WA state gubnuh “found” enough votes after recount after recount, to turn a loss into a victory.  Ann Coulter gives us more detail from the Minnesota senatorial race than you’ll find anywhere in the Old Media;



According to Michael Barone, an examination of King County [Washington State] records showed that nearly 2,000 more mail-in ballots had been “cast” in King County than had been requested.


I was immediately suspicious when WA state went to an all mail-in voting system.  Now I’m not suspicious– I know.



But Gregoire got to be governor — having done unusually well among the imaginary voters of King County.


The head of the Washington State Democratic Party orchestrating this ballot theft was Paul Berendt. Guess who is advising Al Franken on the Minnesota recount right now? That’s right: Paul Berendt.


Surprise, surprise.  We now have evidence of an interstate rent-a-cheat.  Coulter adds;



And, per usual, the Republicans clearly haven’t the vaguest notion what is about to hit them.


Clearly.  The Republicans are too busy trying to appear nice, and can’t be bothered with vague abstractions like the rule of law, or the state and federal Constitutions.  I never could, and can never refer to them as the Grand Old Party.  For now, it’s the Party of the Perpetually Clueless, or PPC.  The trouble with the clueless is that they never know they’re clueless, and cowards always have a perfectly good rationale for doing nothing.

Xenia is our artist


Uhhhh…. WOW!


Awesome picture Xenia.

Too little, too late

Way too little:



To Our Valued Customers:


H-S Precision has received comments relating to individual testimonials in our 2008 catalog. All of the testimonials focused on the quality, accuracy and customer service provided by H-S Precision.


The management of H-S Precision did not intend to offend anyone or create any type of controversy. We are revising our 2009 catalog and removing all product testimonials.


Sincerely,

The Management of H-S Precision


As I said before McMillan makes excellent stocks and when I have another precision rifle built it will have anything but a H-S Precsion stock.


Via David.


Update: I agree with the Queen of Snark’s last line on the topic.

It’s about time

We are still making progress even with the Obama adminstration gearing up for a take over. If we can only hold our ground for the next election or two we should be able to make progress again after the current set of bigots are thrown out of office.


Via the Triangle of Death:



Fairfax, Va. – The U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI), through the National Park Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, has announced the final amended version of its changes to rules on carrying of firearms in national parks and wildlife refuges. DOI’s move will restore the rights of law-abiding gun owners who wish to transport and carry firearms for lawful purposes on most DOI lands, and will make federal law consistent with the state law in which these public lands are located. The National Rifle Association (NRA) led the effort to amend the existing policy regarding the carrying and transportation of firearms on these federal lands.

Quote of the day–Cherry River Blog

Can anyone here imagine a group of ten ordinary American police officers standing, cowed, behind building corners and simply watching such a slaughter? I doubt it. There may be tactical considerations, and some reasonable self-preservation making a degree of caution possible, but a two-man team with AKs and grenades would not last long even in a place like Los Angeles. Transplant that same situation into most of the rest of America, that beyond the deep-urban elites, and the conclusion of the attack would be swift, brutal, and total, and not in favor of the attackers.


Let those same terrorists figuratively come ashore in a place like Pennsylvania, Texas, or Wyoming, and the police would be arriving only in time to distribute body bags and take pictures.


Cherry River Blog
December 4, 2008
Mumbai
Via David Hardy.
[As pointed out in the comments to the post: one word, “Columbine”. But from both Columbine and 9/11 (flight 93) the police and private citizens learned valuable lessons. Sometimes fighting back NOW is the proper course of action. As long as people have the tools to fight I think the proper mindset will surface when the situation presents itself–even if it is somewhat repressed by modern society.–Joe]

Remington gets my approval

David reports on what Remington says about HS Precision. Good on Remington. I hope things continue to go along the current path.


My only Remington gun is fitted to a HS Precision stock. Except for HS Precision thinking a government thug is a good endorsement I’m very pleased with the combination.

Quote of the day–Richard K. Willard

Just as studies showing the dangers of prejudice and error in jury trials should not undermine a criminal defendant’s Sixth Amendment rights, neither should studies purporting to show the dangers of private gun ownership undermine law-abiding individuals’ Second Amendment rights.


Richard K. Willard
D.C. versus Heller–brief Amicus Curiae Of The Heartland Institute in support of respondent.

Unintended consequences of the TSA

Via Bruce Schneier:



They both say there are organized rings of thieves, who identify valuables in your checked luggage by looking at the TSA x-ray screens, then communicate with baggage handlers by text or cell phone, telling them exactly what to look for.

“This is a laptop here, VCR here and it’s located in this area of the bag. Here’s the color of the bag. They give them all the information they need to know.”

“He was going through the bag like he was searching it? Yeah searching it.”

Sky Nguyen knows firsthand. He took this picture of a TSA screener with his camera phone after he saw the agent steal his iPod.

“You saw the Nano in here? Yeah inside here between the glove and palm.”


With 20/20 hindsight it makes perfect sense. With 10’s of thousands of low paid people having access to property you normally have locked you have a huge attack surface (please excuse the geek talk).


As Bruce said:



Someone should investigate the extent to which the TSA’s security measures facilitate crime.


TSA is a crime. It’s government searching without a warrant. It’s also nothing but A Security Theater.

It makes perfect sense

In formerly Great Britain they banned nearly all guns, they have essentially banned self defense, and they are talking about registering and banning knives. With that sort of mindset it follows perfectly well that they have banned fire extinguishers as well.


Via Ry.

Quote of the day–Ride Fast


Why some choose to disarm in the face of a violent enemy is easily explained. Insanity. It’s really no different than fighting a fire by throwing away an extinguisher. Or treating an infection with a Chinese fire drill. It does look like they’re doing something, but I call it surrender.


There are times when negotiation is pointless and accommodation is only seen as weakness. Open carry of legally owned arms would go a long way toward throttling a criminal at the “thinking about it” stage of a violent crime.

Why the good people of Scotland and California continue to elect cowards that codify their fear into law is beyond me.


Ride Fast
December 2, 2008
Gun Control in Scotland
[My outrage is not easily translated into words and probably would be incriminating as well. I think I’m sexist because seeing injured females creates a visceral reaction unmatched by similar injuries to men. And you really don’t want to know what I’m thinking right now.–Joe]

Talking about HS Precision

Tonight on Gun Nuts Radio will be a discussion about HS Precision and the “coveted Horiuchi endorsement“.


I was planning on being at the range at that time but I may delay my range session just to listen in and chat live.


I’ve been playing “catch up” with all the Gun Nut Radio shows. I listened to about eight hours of them on my Zune in the last few days. I have a few more hours to go before I’ve finished all of them but I”ve been impressed.


It’s interesting to see the development of the hosts over time. At the first things were a little “rough around the edges” but with Breda doing the research and Caleb being better prepared and more experienced it’s smoothed out a bunch. And even with the rough spots, except for a few times when they corrected themselves very quickly, I never caught any instances where they got their facts wrong.

Well duh!

I never would have guessed. So someone didn’t and commissioned a survey:



More than a third of Britons rank sexual activity at the top of their list of freetime activities, according to the YouGov survey conducted over the Internet.


That was more than the next three highest options combined – gossiping with friends (18 per cent), window shopping (9 per cent) and going to a museum (6 per cent). According to the poll, however, women preferred gossiping with friends, while men tended to rank sex as number one.


At least it was a private charity that did the research rather than using taxpayer money.

Posted in Sex

Quote of the day–Edward Abbey

Better a cruel truth than a comfortable delusion.

Edward Abbey
[This is something the gun banners apparently cannot and/or will not understand. They refuse to answer Just One Question.–Joe]

The mocking of H-S Precision contest winner

Sebastian had a contest (which I intended to link to but never got around to in time) and the results are in. It is a very deserving entry. Congratulations Tim.