Quote of the day—NRA-ILA

Where laws and politics are concerned, no battle for freedom is ever won in perpetuity. But gun owners have certainly pushed freedom’s adversaries back across the Rhine, and apparently no one knows it better than Josh Horwitz.

NRA-ILA
August 23, 2013
What a Difference a Year Makes
[Horwitz is the director of the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence which was formally known as the National Coalition to Ban Handguns. You might think that the name change was to soften their image of gun banners but actually it was because they wanted to broaden their scope to include “assault weapons”.

And now Horwitz has dreams of, maybe, someday, getting “universal background checks” as the law of the land.

Give it up Josh. Gun ownership is a specific enumerated right and your desire for infringing that right is no more valid than denying the rights guaranteed under the 13th Amendment if someone fails a background check.—Joe]

Quote of the day—Amber Callipo

@backgroundn015e @barronbarnett @smrzle @toddkincannon an assault rifle is used to lure for women. Disappointment soon follows.

Amber Callipo (@Acallipo)
Tweeted on February 6, 2013
[It’s another Markley’s Law Monday!

H/T to Barron.—Joe]

Quote of the day—Barb L.

Meh.

Maybe I’m getting spoiled but one stunning view looks pretty much like another.

Barb L.
August 24, 2013
[This was while looking at the scenery seen in the images below.

IMG_8317Corrected

IMG_8323Corrected

IMG_8322Corrected

We walked over 11 miles, at altitudes from 6000 to 8000 feet, looking at stunning view after stunning view.

It was a pretty awesome way to spend the weekend.—Joe]

Quote of the day—Ayo Kimathi

Waging war against whites is at the core of the Afrikan warrior’s spirit.  It’s the flame that drives our willingness to fight in the face of certain defeat and/or death.

….

Afrikan Nationalists must become diligent about making acceptable Black behavior match our Black complexions.  We must become militant, hostile, violent, and deadly to those individuals and groups in our community who don’t comply to Black decency and Race First standards.  We cannot continue to be Black people with white behavior.  – Black Afrikans Only!

Ayo Kimathi
June 8, 2010
Black Ethnic Cleansing: An Idea Whose Time Has Come
[H/T to Lyle in the comments here.

Those who see a revolution on the horizon about freedom/liberty/guns/etc. must also be aware that in almost any revolution there are competing factions. These factions will take advantage of the chaos and fight for domination over the others. In the quote above you can perhaps see more clearly the dichotomy. On one hand he is advocating blacks go to war against whites but he also advocates ethnic cleansing of blacks by blacks. Similar things happen in most civil wars.

In our country in addition to a battle against an oppressive government there would be battles against the communists/socialists/progressives who believe the government should have more power. And the people like the guy quoted above would take advantage of the chaos and fight their own battles. There would not be just two sides, there would be dozens. Civil wars are very messy and there are seldom clear winners.

I believe there are better ways to attempt regaining our freedom.—Joe]

Quote of the day—mikee

Once we’ve gotten that pesky self-preservation instinct under control, getting everyone to head toward utopia will be as easy as loading a cattle car.

mikee
August 22, 2013
Comment to Evil
[This is in regard to the CSGV making it explicitly as well as implicitly clear they are philosophically opposed to self-defense. It shouldn’t come as that big of a surprise to anyone. As irrational as they (or anyone) are within some restrained context their world view will make sense. I’ve seen this sort of thing in many individuals.

I’m reminded of a joke my psychology professor in college told:

Some guy is in the cafeteria holding an empty water glass to each ear. Another guy comes up to him and the conversation goes like this:

Guy2: Why are you holding the water glasses to your ears?

Guy1: It keeps the wild elephants away.

Guy2: But there aren’t any wild elephants in North America.

Guy 1: See! It works!

It is going to be very difficult to convince, in the abstract, the guy with the water glasses that he is wrong about their effects. Within his set of constraints his world view is entirely consistent. Rock solid logic.

The anti-gun person is going to be drawn to the same sort of constrained world view where their logic works. It might go something like this:

Guns are bad.

Guns are used for self-defense.

Self-defense involving lethal force must therefore be bad.

The lethal force qualifier may or may not be required.

It turns out that the concept of using lethal force for self defense is not a universally believed to be moral. I’ve talked to people that strongly believed in “proportional response” even when the aggressor was using lethal force such as a club or a knife. A gun would not be “proportional”. Somehow they believe, and sometimes explicitly state (as my cousin, who has been raped three times that I know of, once told me), that it would be worse to be killed with a gun than clubbed or stabbed to death. In their world view if there were no guns in the hands of private citizens then even the weak/disabled/elderly would not need guns because they would (almost) never have to confront someone with a gun. Hence victims would (almost) never be justified in using a firearm for self defense because proportional force would (almost) always be something less than a gun.

But, you might claim, eliminating self-defense is a long way from loading up the cattle cars. There isn’t anyone that wants to do that these days.

I would like to remind you of Barack Obama’s “neighbor and family friend” Bill Ayers and the Weather Underground who told FBI informant Larry Grathwohl:

I asked, “Well what is going to happen to those people we can’t reeducate, that are diehard capitalists?” And the reply was that they’d have to be eliminated.

And when I pursued this further, they estimated they would have to eliminate 25 million people in these reeducation centers.

And when I say “eliminate,” I mean “kill.”

Twenty-five million people.

I want you to imagine sitting in a room with 25 people, most of which have graduate degrees, from Columbia and other well-known educational centers, and hear them figuring out the logistics for the elimination of 25 million people and they were dead serious.

You could now claim that that was a FBI informant that can’t be trusted.

Perhaps. But it is consistent with what happened in the USSR. They sent 10’s of millions to reeducation camps. And they sent millions to their graves in their pursuit of utopia.

How could they rationalize that? How could they believe that was a path to utopia?

Easy. My communist brother-in-law, a business professor in Chicago, indirectly explained it to me:

The good of the majority always outweighs the good of the individual.

My protestation about individual rights being violated were dismissed without concern:

You have to look at the big picture. The good of the majority is more important that the individual.

He views me as narrow minded. He claims that I “can’t see the big picture”. My examples of tens of millions of innocent people murdered by their own governments in the last century were dismissed with:

We just need to have the right people in charge.

It’s all so simple, logical, and blindingly obvious to these people. This is why they think there is something wrong with us. This is why they want “reeducation camps”. They really believe that despite the grinding poverty and mass graves of all the communist utopia that it is always the fault of a few greedy/selfish/ignorant/stupid individuals that their utopia fails to materialize. Reeducate those that are willing and elimination of the rest and then mankind will finally achieve equality, peace, and social justice. How can it be a high price to pay to dismiss the so called rights of an individual when the achievement of a peaceful forever is so close? What about the rights of the billions of others and the billions more to be born in the future? Don’t they have a right to live in utopia?

The cattle cars will be filling up soon. It’s for the greater good.

My belief is that the greater good will be achieved by small pieces of precisely placed rifling engraved copper jacketed lead in the heads of the so called leaders and intellectuals who give the orders to load the buses and trains*. They think I’m just a narrow minded bigot who can’t see the big picture. But they mistake the narrow focus for narrow mindedness and underestimate the clarity of the picture at a distance with my Leupold scope.—Joe]


* One could make the case there is a compelling reason why liberals are so opposed to individual transportation.

Quote of the day—Lyle

When I hear this drivel about “having a conversation” it sounds like this, set in 1930s Germany; “It’s time we had a serious conversation about the Jewish problem.”

Lyle
August 21. 2013
Comment to Quote of the day—Alan Gottlieb
[I have nothing to add.—Joe]

Quote of the day—Alan Gottlieb

So-called “gun free zones” have never been known to prevent a single violent crime and even the CeaseFire president has acknowledged that “this won’t stop someone determined to cause violence but we hope that standing together and giving businesses a tool to say no to guns will change the conversation around gun violence.”

That is dangerously self-delusional and it is one more exercise of symbolism over substance that makes neighborhoods less safe by creating risk-free environments for robbers, rapists and other criminals.

Alan Gottlieb
August 19, 2013
SEATTLE’S ‘GUN FREE ZONES’ IDEA IS ALL FLASH, NO SUBSTANCE, SAYS CCRKBA
[Self-delusional, symbolism, and dangerous. Yup. That about sums it up.

And don’t forget that we had the “conversation” for the last 40+ years. It’s time these guys got over the fact that they lost every argument.—Joe]

Quote of the day—Kurt Geissel

It sends a message that it’s not cool to just walk around with a gun all the time because bad things happen.

Kurt Geissel
August 18, 2013
McGinn asking Seattle businesses to go ‘gun-free’
[It “sends a message” alright. But it’s not the messages they think they are sending.

The message they are sending is that they don’t want the business of this nations 80 million gun owners. Would they consider putting up signs saying “No colored people allowed”? There are only about 42 million people that identify as “black” or “African American” in this country. There are approximately twice as many gun owners.

The message they are sending is that the people that visit and work at their business are unarmed potential victims. If a criminal is looking for soft targets then these people are self identifying. They are like a deer with a limp with a pack of wolves looking for dinner.

The message they are sending is they are more interested in sending messages of narrow minded bigotry than in the principles of this country or the state of Washington.

And most importantly the message they are sending is they are the type of people who have crap for brains and that think “sending messages” accomplishes something useful.—Joe]

Quote of the day—Joe Faina

.@nra what’s the best kind of gun to carry to conceal a small penis? Asking for several friends.

Joe Faina (@faination)
Tweeted on January 30, 2013

[It’s another Markley’s Law Monday!—Joe]

Quote of the day—BruceVoigt

When some one say’s your a ball of fire, well you really are!

As all cells have a nucleus, we are unable to get to the center of our planet but we can study a water cell. To do this first understand that the nucleus of any cell is made up of orbiting nuclei so small as to not interact with matter as we know it.

You will find at the nucleus what will be to you as air pockets or bubbles and if studing the universe instead of this ice cube you would call these black holes.

Now your really going to want to call these black holes oxygen and hydrogen but when you know the secret way of causing a reaction that has these many particals running into each other then you to can discover the fire in your ice cube.

BruceVoigt
November 21, 2012
Comment to To Make Steam Without Boiling Water, Just Add Sunlight And Nanoparticles
[I stopped reading about half way through, waited a few minutes for my brain to recover, then finished reading it.

The “thought” process reminds me of some anti-gun people.—Joe]

Quote of the day—James Lovelock

We need a more authoritative world. We’ve become a sort of cheeky, egalitarian world where everyone can have their say. It’s all very well, but there are certain circumstances – a war is a typical example – where you can’t do that. You’ve got to have a few people with authority who you trust who are running it.

But even the best democracies agree that when a major war approaches, democracy must be put on hold for the time being. I have a feeling that climate change may be an issue as severe as a war. It may be necessary to put democracy on hold for a while.

James Lovelock
March 2010
James Lovelock: ‘Fudging data is a sin against science’
[A pretty good case can be made that one of the main motivators for the whole global cooling/warming/change fraud is to give more power to governments. That this guy, a global warming fire and brimstone prophet, embraces the government acquisition of power should come as no surprise.

And just who do you think will have the authority? You can be pretty certain he thinks he will have a lot of it. But historically, from China and the USSR, people like him were the first to get a bullet to the back of the head or sent to the gulag.—Joe]

Quote of the day—Hognose

Nobody good, decent, moral or competent has ever been employed by TSA in any capacity whatsoever. The TSA is the primary citizen-facing face of the DHS, and it’s the face of a retard who wants to be a Nazi.

Hognose
Homeland Security ‘needs’ a $5 Billion Palace Complex
August 12, 2013
[The first sentence is probably a bit of an overstatement but the second sentence is a home run.

And don’t forget that TSA is just A Security Theater.—Joe]

Quote of the day—Rivrdog

The situation in CA doesn’t qualify as a “slippery slope”, it qualifies as Free Fall.

Rivrdog
August 13, 2013
Comment to Quote of the day—Chuck Michel
[It’s not quite that bad. The courts have slapped them down a couple times and the lawyers are winding up to do a bunch more swatting.

The “silver lining” in all the oppressive laws against gun owners is that it makes it more likely to get favorable rulings in the courts that can be built upon to push things even further back.—Joe]

Quote of the day—Mark Glaze

The evidence that background checks save lives is overwhelming. In 2010, state and federal background checks blocked more than 150,000 gun sales to prohibited buyers, which suggests as many as 5,000 dangerous people were denied guns in Ohio alone.

Mark Glaze
Director Mayors Against Illegal Guns
August 13, 2013
Gun-control group to Rob Portman: We’ve got some stats, too
[Let’s rewrite this a bit to see this statement from a different viewpoint:

The evidence that background checks save lives is overwhelming. In 2010, state and federal background checks blocked more than 150,000 book sales to prohibited buyers, which suggests as many as 5,000 dangerous people were denied books in Ohio alone.

Just because a bunch of people were denied books (or guns) does not mean there were any lives saved let alone the evidence is “overwhelming”. This scumbag changed the subject from statistics on “saving lives” to statistics on denying sales.

Here is what the CDC said when they did their study:

Overall, evaluations of the effects of acquisition restrictions on violent outcomes have produced inconsistent findings: some studies indicated decreases in violence associated with restrictions, and others indicated increases.

That is NOT “overwhelming evidence” and this scumbag should be taken to task for his lies.—Joe]

Quote of the day—Chuck Michel

This year’s extremist legislative package proves that the threat of the slippery slope is all too real.

Chuck Michel
Attorney for the California Rifle and Pistol Association
August 10, 2013
Gun-control bills could push California to top of firearm-restriction list
[As if we didn’t have enough proof already of the existence of the slippery slope.—Joe]

Quote of the day—Background N015e

@acallipo @barronbarnett @smrzle @toddkincannon Why can’t they compensate like sane guys with small dicks & buy a sports car or something?

Background N015e (@backgroundN015e)
Tweeted on February 6, 2013
[It’s another Markley’s Law Monday!

H/T to Barron.—Joe]

Quote of the day—Bruce C.

That’s cool!

Bruce C.
August 10, 2013
After detonating his first Boomer (and he stopped laughing).

IMG_7780IMG_7789
[I have nothing to add.—Joe]

Quote of the day—Pat L.

I used to think I would die from an angry father. Then I thought it would be from an angry husband. Now I just worry about an angry wife.

Pat L.
August 9, 2013
[This was at our high school reunion last night.

I’m pretty sure there is more to this story and that I know what it is but he wasn’t sharing it so I won’t speculate here.—Joe]

Another Quote of the Day – USAA Insurance claim representative

“We don’t make decisions based on common sense” – USAA Insurance claims representative, total loss department. That was pretty obvious by the time he said it. I told him it was going to be a quote of the day.

In June an old man pulled right in front of us in his pickup, from a cross road on our right, while we were at speed in our pickup on highway 26 in central Washington State. WHAM! My 15 year old daughter was driving on her learner’s permit. She could not have done anything to prevent a hard hit, but I think she saved that old man’s life.

You never really know what you’ll do in a situation like that, but I tell myself not to swerve for deer or anything else unless there is a real need to. Hit the damn deer and stay on the road, or hit that car in front of you and avoid a head-on, if it’s a choice between the two. I’ve seen it go very badly when people swerve. She swerved. If she hadn’t, if she’d gone in a straight line, that old man would have been squashed like a melon, I think. As it was we hit corner to corner instead of hitting him in his driver’s door.

I was telling the claims rep that since I had the trans rebuilt and replaced the engine, the hubs, the breaks, etc., that 309K odo reading meant very little, that the newer and shinier pickup I replaced it with actually has “Less useful life left in it, it cost me more than twice what I’m being offered for the totaled truck, and that I shouldn’t have to remind anyone that the injured party (I) should be made whole, within reason, to the fullest extend possible, and we’re not even talking about our ruined vacation.”
“Where did you get that verbiage?” He asked in reply.
“What do you mean?”
“Where did you get that verbiage?” He repeated. Well how do you answer that question? He seems to think that I’m reading from some book, or repeating someone else’s words, which I wasn’t. So rather than argue about that;
“It’s common sense” I told him. That’s when he came out with the money quote.

Yeah, so I’m out thousands of dollars after I take their settlement. Insurance markets, and the whole set of industries surrounding them, like the towing business and the body repair business, medical care, et al, are completely distorted. In a proper world it would be between me and the offending party, and if things fell apart there it would be in the courts, and the insurance company’s role would be to write a check afterwards (or up to the value of the policy). But this is the messed up world of scammers, politicians (but I repeat myself) and Progressives (and again I repeat myself) and so the party writing the check is the same one determining the value of the loss.

I guess that what we were supposed to do, rather than tell the EMTs at the scene that we were all OK and happy to be alive, if a little bruised, and go against their advice to take a ride in and get checked out by doctors, was instead to complain about pain, act all messed up an carry on and so forth, get some prescriptions and braces and all that, like most people, and scam the insurance company for all that pain and suffereing, woe-is-me-I-have-to-take-three-weeks-off-work-and-I-might-have-to-file-for-disability crap. But we didn’t, and won’t.

Quote of the day—NightShade09

Karl Marx hated the USSR and what it did under the claim of his ideas.

Don’t believe me? Look it up.

NightShade09
August 4, 2013
Comment to The Invention of Ideology
[I’m quite suspicious of people who claim they can “channel the spirit” of someone. Defending the claim that it doesn’t happen is trivially easy. Hence I think the only look up required is that Marx died in 1883 and no government could claim the title of USSR until sometime after the revolution in 1917.

But Marxist defenders don’t really need facts. They just have to “understand” the benefits of communism even if they can’t understand the simplest and best tested of economics theories.—Joe]