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"A Revolver"

A previously undiscovered poem by Carl Sandburg:

Here is a revolver.
It has an amazing language all its own.
It delivers unmistakable ultimatums.
It is the last word.
A simple, little human forefinger can tell a terrible story with it.
Hunger, fear, revenge, robbery hide behind it.
It is the claw of the jungle made quick and powerful.
It is the club of the savage turned to magnificent precision.
It is more rapid than any judge or court of law.
It is less subtle and treacherous than any one lawyer or ten.
When it has spoken, the case can not be appealed to the supreme court, nor any mandamus nor any injunction nor any stay of execution come in and interfere with the original purpose.
And nothing in human philosophy persists more strangely than the old belief that God is always on the side of those who have the most revolvers.

(h/t +Paula Jones)

Embedded Link

U. of I. volunteer finds unknown Carl Sandburg poem
With the debate over gun control heating up, a retired volunteer at a University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign made a timely find.

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Simple gun answers are generally simplistic gun answers

I’ve been thinking a lot about the Connecticut shooting (et al.), but not doing a lot of actually table-pounding posting about it because, aside from inarticulate wails of grief, there’s not a lot simple, straightforward, concrete to say to try and fix what caused this.

Because, sadly, there is no silver bullet (so to speak) for the problem of gun violence in America.  None that are practical, either logistically or politically or socially, at least — because short of a massive confiscation of all firearms and a massive effort to police same, we’re not going to get rid of guns in America. And as tempting as that kind of grand gesture might be, I suspect the harm and disrupti0n from it would outweigh the good.

But I don’t accept that we simply shrug and give up, or treat this tragedy as just the price of having a Sacred Second Amendment.  Saying “We can’t get rid of guns” or “No solution fixes the whole problem” doesn’t mean there isn’t stuff we can do to nibble around the edges, and look for ways over time to reduce gun violence to levels that might even begin to approximate those of the civilized world. That might reduce the blood that guns produce.

(Americans love cars. Lots of people die in car accidents. Getting rid of cars is impractical. So do we just shrug and accept the carnage? No. We’ve actually substantially reduced car deaths.  How?  Through car safety regulations. Through building safer roads. Through socially combating some of the behaviors that lead to auto accidents, like drunk driving and under-age driving and road rage. Do people still die? Yes. But fewer do.  That’s hopeful, and a hopeful model.)

First, we have to define what it is we want to combat. Street crime with guns? Shooting sprees by madmen? Hunting deaths? Gang-banging? Accidental shootings? Armed robbery? Militia zanies? Kids getting ahold of guns? Assassination? All of these have widely different modalities, different weapons, different means of acquiring weapons, different targets, different ways that different approaches would affect them. We tend to conflate them — “gang bangers have guns!” vs “that crazy guy had guns!” vs. “those guys in that compound up in the hills have guns!” — but to tackle any of them requires different approaches.

That the debate is being driven by one of the least common form of gun violence — crazy guy shooting spree — doesn’t help the debate be held rationally (“You can’t do anything to stop crazy guys with guns because the gang-bangers will still get guns!” and “We need to get guns out of the hands of gang-bangers so that crazy guy will stop shooting up our schools and movie theaters!” are both unhelpful.)

All of this is made further difficult by the arguably legitimate reasons people own guns, from self-defense to recreational shooting to legal hunting to “I have the right to do so under the Constitution”. Each of those groups are affected different ways by different solutions to illegal / illegitimate / deadly gun use.

One could write a book (as hundreds have) on how to tackle the overall gun problem, with the understanding that any one suggestion is going to affect different _parts_ of the problem (or different of the problems, depending on how you want to look at it) in different ways. But here are some things that _I_ feel are legitimate actions, none of which will solve the problem but all of which might have some effect:

1. Less Deadly Guns. The infamous Assault Weapon Ban, as previously in place and as proposed to be reinstated, are not terribly helpful, as (from what I’ve been able to glean) they focus in mostly on cosmetics (see here for more). “Eek! It looks like a deadly machine gun army rifle thing!” If you want to make new weapons sold less lethal (for gang banging or shooting spree purposes, let’s say), then look at caliber and muzzle velocity, and perhaps barrel length as a factor. How easy it is to modify for illegal purposes (e.g., to make full automatic) might be considered, though that’s more difficult to objectively define. Having a serious discussion about what bullets can be manufactured and sold to the public would also be worthwhile. Limiting clip size would probably help, too.

These things wouldn’t affect the ability to hunt. They wouldn’t keep people from defending themselves from intruders. They wouldn’t even appreciably reduce the ability of the Common Citizen to Resist the Tyranny of the Evil Government Tyrants. But they might make it less likely that someone could kill a bunch of people (or even one person) quite as quickly and easily.

And, yes, doing something about new weapons sold doesn’t resolve the problems of older, already-sold weapons. We could try a national buy-back, to reduce a few from circulation, but they are out there in the wild. All we can do is change things from here.

And, yes, dedicated gun folks will hand-craft their own bullets, or build their own extended clips. Or maybe even sell them to others in a black market. And, yes, we can put penalties on that and try to prosecute, but some will still get out there. But fewer than now.

Again, none of this is a perfect solution, but we can’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good.

2. Monitor Purchasers. Everyone agrees we want to keep guns out of the hands of bad people — bad-nasty or bad-crazy. The only way to do this is by imposing meaningful restrictions on the purchase of weapons — mandatory background checks that include criminal record and mental health records. That may mean a waiting period, too. And it means requiring such reporting from all institutions that could provide it, not making it optional, or only if a state chooses to fund it, or whatever.

(And, heck, limiting the frequency / quantities of gun purchases is probably not a bad idea I’m hard-pressed to think of why someone would legitimately need to buy more than one gun in a given day, for example. Whereas I can think of a lot of illegitimate reasons.)

It also means that the only ones who can legally sell guns have to have a federal license, one of the conditions of which is being able to provide such checks, and keeping records showing that the checks were made. And that includes some way of dealing with such checks by Internet sales (and if there’s no practical way to do that, then such sales have to be illegal). And it means no gun show loopholes or private sales of firearms. And if that’s inconvenient, tough. (I suspect that “gun sale brokers” will pop up to support such business, which is fine, as long as the checks are made.)

Again, folks will dodge this, even if it’s illegal to do so. But it will reduce the number of known felons or people with dangerous mental illness from getting guns — not eliminate them (and not solve all crime violence), but it will help.

And what about the person who desperately needs a gun right now because they feel like they are in danger and the police can do nothing about it? I don’t know. If we can do some sort of instant checking, great. If not, then we balance that person’s safety vs. the safety of those endangered by a criminal or mentally ill person being able to get a gun right now.

As an alternative, or even addendum, I think we could probably constitutionally justify a federal firearms license (as part of that “well-regulated militia” clause in the Second Amendment).  Getting such might create more uniformity in permitting between the states, and let the background check thing be simplified, if you could set up a system to then use that for instant check validation.  And, yes, this will have some conspiracy-minded folks getting all paranoid about the Feds knowing who has guns, etc. To which I say, tough.

The goal here is not to prevent gun sales. The goal is to try and reduce the number of avenues that folks who should not legally have guns can get them.  That will cause inconvenience to those who are legally allowed to buy guns — but that’s no different than the inconvenience of queueing up to show your ticket before you go into a concert, rather than letting everyone in and letting security figure out who didn’t buy a ticket.

3. Improving Mental Health Care. It’s way too easy to demonize the mentally ill and pretend They are not Us.  But we need to do something about mental health diagnosis and treatment in this country. We’ve spent the last forty years trying to save money by shutting down state-owned residential mental health facilities (some of which were crap, some of which weren’t), and the results are not good by anyone’s measure. The provisions of the ACA that prevent mental health treatment from having different costs and deductibles and caps than physical health treatment is a fantastic start, but we need to be much more proactive about trying to find, and treat, people with mental and emotional problems.

And, yes, that will cost money. And, yes, that does run the risk of Horrible Tyrannical Government Types Sending Dissidents Off To The Gulag. But the alternative — what we have now — seems to be costing us much more, and raising much higher risks.

4. Moderating the Culture of Violence. Singling out violent video games or movies as promoting a culture of violence seems to me backward. Instead, we have a culture of violence that makes it profitable to produce violent video games and movies.

How do we get around that? By patience and insistence and social (not legal) pressure. The same way we’ve been slowly working on animal experimentation, or (fill in the blank) discrimination, or drunk driving, or any number of other social campaigns where people said, “This is not acceptable, and I will not only not tolerate this for myself, but I will exert social pressure for change in others.” It means responsible parenting (including “No, because last time you were over at Fred’s after school you played ‘Double-Tap to the Head 2012’ on the PlayStation, and that’s no more acceptable than if you were drinking beer when there, so no going over to Fred’s”). It means pressure on friends and colleagues (“Gee, Suze, You liked that movie? I decided it really felt like it was cheapening human life, so I decided I wasn’t going to see it”). It means changing hearts and minds.

The goal is not to get rid of violent video games or movies. Those are a symptom, a sign of what people like and want. The goal should be a culture and society were they are not  seen as fun and entertaining, where most people don’t think ultra-violence is an acceptable thing to play with or view.

Which is why legislation is not terribly productive here, since it’s such a subjective measurement. Plus is not an organic change, but an imposed one.

And, again, this will never be perfect (because it will never be fully agreed what is or should be acceptable). But consider what was once tolerated movie fare — or social behavior — that is no longer socially tolerated (and thus no longer commercially pandered to by the media). Slapping your wife. A three-martini lunch. Movies in blackface.

If people are concerned that a culture of violence is leading to certain types of (gun) violence, then let’s change the culture. And cultures can only be changed from within.

5. Shaping the Culture of Guns. I don’t believe “an armed society is a polite society” (see DOF’s take on this idea from  while back). I’d rather us strive for a society where guns are like abortions — safe, legal, and rare. To that end, I don’t think it’s useful to throw armed security guards everywhere or encourage the citizenry to get their CCLs and tote around firearms to safeguard the public in case a shooting takes place. Guns — in particular being armed with them — should not be normal, but an exception.

Something similar can be said about the culture of “guns as macho empowerment”. If we are going to have guns in people’s hands — and we are — then the sentiments of what seem to be sane, responsible gun owners — that guns are a useful tool that’s very dangerous, sort of like fire, so treat them with respect, don’t play with them, don’t take chances with them, make sure they are put away securely, etc. — need to be what we try to inculcate as an attitude toward firearms.  People who swagger about with guns, or who consider their gun to be an extension of their personal potency and agency as an individual, need to be considered objects of scorn and derision, not admiration and respect.

*     *     *

There’s a lot above that people aren’t going to like. But I think it’s all doable, and constitutional, and, again, that it will help overall reduce (not eliminate) the number and lethality of guns in the hands of folks who are looking to use them to bad ends.  Which, I hope, we all think is a good goal.

Punishing the many for the crimes of the few

The below post raises a valid point:

'80,000,000 people did nothing wrong in Connecticut.

80 million people haven't done anything wrong this week, won't do anything wrong next week and have done nothing wrong in the past.

When did it become normal to suggest that the United States of America punish 80,000,000 of its' citizens for the actions of a number of evil people totaling less than 0.00001%?'

Fair enough.  I can point at consumer protection laws ("I've played lawn darts for thirty years and never pithed any of my friends!"), but let's take the argument as is.

So what would be the right number.  Would there ever be a right number?

Because there are two ratios here:

First, the number of law-abiders vs. criminals, and at what point you restrict the rights of the former for the offenses of the latter.  If 0.00001% is too small (for sake of argument), what would the right number be? 0.01%?  1%? 10%? 49%?  At what point does the number of people who misuse (intentionally or unintentionally) firearms become sufficient to warrant some restrictions on the people who never err, never use their weapons irresponsibly, never go on shooting sprees, never leave their guns where kids can find them, never lead to anyone being harmed by said firearms except criminals or game critters?

More importantly, what's the number of victims that warrant restrictions? (And let's say sensible restrictions that would impact gun owners but, for sake of argument let's say restrictions that would reduce the guns available for whack jobs and miscreants, too?) Twenty kids? Two hundred? Two thousand? Twenty thousand?  Is there a threshold, or is the Second Amendment, as it stands (and is interpreted) so sacrosanct that no number of dead bodies justifies infringing upon it?

I don't have an answer, because I do tend to reject the idea of knee-jerk punishing the innocent with the guilty. But I do think it's a legitimate question.

Embedded Link

A simple question
For the liberals/Leftists/what-the-hell-ever-label the gun banners are hiding under this week, I have a simple question: How would taking my guns away from me have stopped what happened in Connecticut…

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The Material Oddity of the Second Amendment

It seems to me that the Second Amendment to the US Constitution is unique in terms of having a very material aspect to it lacking in the other rights guaranteed to the people.  It gives you the right (as currently defined by the Supreme Court) to bear arms — in other words, again as SCOTUS has defined it, to own firearms.

There are restrictions that have, more or less and so far, withstood judicial scrutiny as not overly infringing on those rights.  There are restrictions on certain classes of weapons. There are restrictions on where I can carry weapons (varying by state and municipality). There are restrictions on where I can buy them, what background checks they need to run, etc. (again, sometimes varying by state, and often with odd loopholes, like internet purchases). There are restrictions on concealed carrying of weapons (again, varying by state and municipality).  There are restrictions on who can own guns — the mentally ill and former felons face various restrictions (again, with variations).

But, fundamentally, the Second Amendment provides all citizens in good standing a right to own a thing.  That makes it different from all those other rights, which are about intangibles, the right to do something, or protection from the government regarding religion or the justice system, or protection from certain impositions such as slavery.

There is no Constitutional Right to own anything … except for firearms.

And that has complicated dealing with guns and gun violence in this country in a variety of ways.

Set aside the question of why that right was considered sufficiently important to codify in the Constitution — as protection for hunters, or as a way for states to protect themselves from invaders, or for individuals to protect themselves (from criminals or tyrants), any restrictions or regulations on guns must face that uphill battle against that fundamental right.

Take the "firearm insurance" thing I mentioned earlier.  All practical considerations (is what it seeks to do good, will it actually accomplish its ends), if the effect of such a law is to unduly burden people from possessing a firearm, then it will get tossed out. That's the double-edged sword of "make it to expensive for folks to own guns": you end up letting just the rich own them (and, really, is that what you want?) and you open yourself up to a court challenge.

Consider a parallel case of a right.  It is possible to harm people through your free speech, by defaming them. We have laws about slander and libel to reflect that. But what if someone said, "Perhaps we should require people who are publishing things — be they journalists, or boggers, or tweeters, or whatever — to get defamation insurance, to cover them in case they do harm to someone  and get sued."

I think most folks would consider that outrageous and unworkable.  And, yes, there is a difference between a school massacre and a someone's reputation being ruined.  But the general principle applies.

That said, no right is absolute. As noted, we do allow some restrictions on  speech (both those civil laws as well as limited cases of criminal law regarding national security, as well as direct incitement to violence, criminal conspiracy, etc.). Similarly, we have some restrictions on firearm ownership. But they are required to be of a limited nature, since the fundamental right to bear arms (as interpreted) remains.

No particular conclusions here. It just occurred to me that, in some ways, the Second Amendment is unique in the sort of thing it does, very different from all the other amendments.

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Firearms Insurance

By which I don't mean insurance to pay for replacing stolen firearms, but liability insurance for damage that might be done by same.

I've seen a lot of suggestions about mandating this at some level as a way of  (a) paying for the damages done by people irresponsibly using (storing, playing, loaning) their guns, but (and less emphasized) (b) reducing gun ownership by increasing the costs associated with it.

The below article makes a good case, in general, for (a).  I find (b) a bit more problematic, if for no other reason than it's a regressive cost on the poor. Someone middle class or upper class or super-upper-class can easily afford such insurance. I doubt it would be by gun, so it wouldn't directly impact the folks who buy and keep dozens of the things.  It might encourage people to be more responsible with how guns are stored (stolen guns had better be from a broken-into gun safe or your next policy will be a lot more expensive; ditto for what happens to your rates when little Billy finds the loaded gun in the desk drawer and shoots his friend with it), but it if means that poorer people simply can't afford the insurance, I doubt it will dramatically affect gun violence (or coverage for same) in those communities — people take the chance of driving without insurance all the time, and it's a lot easier for someone to hide an uninsured gun than an uninsured automobile.

So, yeah, I think there are some potential benefits (under (a)) to a mandatory liability / damages insurance for gun ownership. But it's hardly a magic bullet.

(The same problem applies for the parallel suggestions that we simply tax guns at a really high rate.  That won't stop Joe One-Percent, or even Suzie Fifty-Percent from buying a gun or twenty if they want one, but it will encourage a huge trade in tax-free black market pistols, or else de facto price guns out of the hands of a substantial proportion of the population. And, sooner or later, someone is going to suggest subsidizing the purchase of guns for poor folks who need them but who can't afford them under the current laws — at which point the heads of both liberals and conservatives will blow up.)

Embedded Link

The Case for Firearms Insurance
We require automobile owners to carry vehicle insurance. It’s time we did the same for firearms. The tragic shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut are in the news this week…

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Okay, let’s do compare violent rampages in the US and China

And I raise it largely because I've seen it used as a defense of broadly available guns in the US.  _"See, there was an attack in China, too, and the guy there was able to use a knife! So, what you gonna do, ban knives, too?"_

If you're going to compare the crimes, you need to compare the outcomes, too. And looking at the outcomes doesn't help the pro-gun case.

You can't control the crazies (though you can certainly do better at trying to find them, and help them — that has its own slippery slopes and issues, but …). But you can try and control what the crazies have access to. 

(Note: this isn't a call to any particular solution, just pointing out a really poor defense argument I've seen used this debate.)

Reshared post from +Koushik Dutta

In the last few days, gun enthusiasts have pointed out and asked "If gun control works, what happened in China?".

Well, they survived.

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Unblogged Bits (Thu. 1-Sep-11 1730)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Sun over the yardarm – Wikipedia – For some reason, this topic just came up …
  2. Sears To Start Selling Craftsman Tools Through Costco – A smart move on their part, as I doubt it will hurt sales at Sears stores.
  3. COBRA Subsidies Expire, Leaving Unemployed To Scramble For Healthcare – Well, obviously, now that the COBRA money has run out, these slackers will get motivated and find jobs again!
  4. Man faces 75 years for recording police – Hopefully the judge is reading his legal newspapers. And, dear Illinois Attorney General, please get stuffed.
  5. Feeble President, Feeble PlansSigh.
  6. First Grader handcuffed for misbehaving in class – Yeesh.
  7. The 5 Most Depraved Sex Scenes Implied by ‘Harry Potter’ | Cracked.com – Heh.
  8. Why won’t the government tell us the truth? PROOF OF A COVER UP! « Stupid Evil Bastard – Those who deny the conspiracy … are obviously part of the conspiracy!
  9. Banks Still Fabricating Documents One Year After Robo-Signing Scandal Broke | ThinkProgress – What these guys fail to understand is that society (and property, and business) only exist in a civil fashion if everyone trusts the process and the documents that back up claims. If they squander too much of that trust, then they have the most to lose.
  10. WikiLeaks: Iraqi children in U.S. raid shot in head, U.N. says | McClatchy – “At the time, American military officials in Iraq said the accounts of townspeople who witnessed the events were highly unlikely to be true, and they later said the incident didn’t warrant further investigation. Military officials also refused to reveal which units might have been involved in the incident.”
  11. Florida sued for ticketing motorists who warn others of speed traps – Here’s hoping for a big win against the state. I have no problems with highway speed enforcement; in fact, I am in favor of it. Abuse of power and violating First Amendment rights, though? Especially when the courts have already ruled against it? Nuh-uh.
  12. Alex Brant-Zawadzki: Pima County Repubs Raffle Glock As Fundraiser; Same Gun Type Used In Tucson Shooting – Stay classy, Arizona GOP!

Unblogged Bits (Sun. 24-Jul-11 0530)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. WND Forums – WorldNutDaily strikes again, still carrying a poll based on the premise that the Norway killings were carried out by Muslims. What’s truly chilling, though, is reading the comments.
  2. How to Avoid Repeating the Debacle That Was the Space Shuttle | Space Flight | DISCOVER Magazine – My concern, annoyance, and sadness over the end of the shuttle program is not so much about the shuttle itself (which the article correctly lampoons as a failure), but because we (the US) don’t have a coherent vision or intentional steps toward something to replace it.
  3. IndieObserver.com » Before and After Terrorist IDed: Fox News Commenters Weigh in on Norway: – Before: “Evil towel-heads deserve to be shot, Middle East turned into glassy parking lot.” After: “If only Norway didn’t have gun control to protect it from random lunatics, and shame on liberals for being glad it was a Christian.” Pathetic.
  4. Burned by the Courts – Re the “silly woman burns herself with coffee, sues McDonald’s for gazillions of dollars” meme.
  5. If Harry Potter was an anime – That’s … very well done.
  6. Photo – Fascinating.

Unblogged Bits (Mon. 11-Jul-11 2331)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. DOJ Trusts Wall Street To ‘Police Itself’ As It Takes A ‘Softer Approach’ To Corporate Crime – Best government money can buy.
  2. House Republicans Look To Push Lower Capital Standards For Banks In Through The Back Door – Because why should we ever worry about banks undercapitalizing again? I mean, it’s been a couple of years now — I’m sure they’ve learned their lesson, after all.
  3. Firefighter loses bid to sue over New York mosque | World | News | Toronto Sun – Injury to the ability to commemorate? Crikey. If having a mosque a few blocks away damages your ability to commemorate the lives of your colleagues lost on 9/11, I suggest you seek therapy, not a court injunction.
  4. AZ State Senator Points Loaded Gun At Reporter – So will we actually hear the NRA criticize this pol for her appalling lack of gun safety?
  5. Fred Upton Pushes Vote to Kill His Own Light Bulb Efficiency Standards – Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia.
  6. Wingnut Camper Art Project Shares How-To Secrets For Sexing Obama – Wow, that’s … that’s … actually not all that different from the rhetoric one’s heard all over the Right in the past 2-3 years. Simply in special concentrate form (just add water).
  7. July 11, 2011 – Simply the Best – Well, if you can do the latter, why worry in the least about the former?
  8. Obama: “I Have Bent Over Backwards To Work With Republicans” – But … why?
  9. $140 Google eBooks reader, iriver Story HD, hits stores July 17 – I remain happy with my Kindle — but I’ll note both this and the recent Nook ads show those platforms with home screens more attractive and useful than the Kindle’s …
  10. Feature: Leaks, riots, and monocles: how a $60 in-game item almost destroyed EVE Online – Games are like societies writ intense. Screw with the economy, and folks get antsy, to say the least. Present them with a situation that seems unfair, and they will, metaphorically or literally, riot.
  11. First Footage & Posters For ‘Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows’ – Woot!
  12. Please Don’t Put Fireworks Through a Coffee Grinder. They’ll Blow Up [Wtf] – /facepalm
  13. This Freaky Optical Illusion Turns People Into Horrible Monsters [Video] – Majorly freaky!
  14. Chile Might Soon Recognize Same-Sex Civil Unions – If the GOP take back the White House, maybe they’ll stage another coup in Chile to prevent it.
  15. Arizona State Rep. Points Her ‘Raspberry-Pink’ Loaded Gun At Journalist | ThinkProgress – Lovely.
  16. Colo. pot proposal faces another legal challenge – The Denver Post – If something becomes legal and taxable and taxed … is that actually a tax increase?
  17. Misleading Missouri Measure: Amendment Harms, Not Helps Religious Liberty « The Wall of Separation

Unblogged Bits (Thu. 28-Apr-11 2330)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Video Chat on Your Android Phone – Which would be cool, if the camera and the screen on my Android phone pointed in the same direction.
  2. Are Trump and the birthers hypocrites? Racists? – Nice …
  3. Letter from George Washington to an annual meeting of Quakers – Particularly given the persecution of Quakers in most of the colonies, I see nothing here that doesn’t sound like Washington would apply it to any religious faith.
  4. David Barton on Thomas Jefferson – Did Jefferson approve church in the Capitol? – Sounds like an exercise in fellowship more than ministry to my eyes.
  5. John Yoo Discusses Limits to Executive Power – The guilty man flees where no one pursueth.
  6. Too cute Disney Duck Picture (Not Donald) – TEH CUTE! (And I know exactly where that is.)
  7. Wingnut Mob Now Boycotting Superman, Because He Hates America – Yeah, there’s no surprise. No actual examination of the storyline, nor even consideration of what the statement might be about. Yeah, cause that’s “nuance.”
  8. Oh look. The Birthers are already playing with the new toy President Obama gave them. – I think it was probably a reasonable timing to convince Hawaii to make an exception to provide the long form birth certificate. But the point was not so much to shut up the birthers (who are so deranged that they’ll come up with new conspiracy theories) as to finally put paid to the “why doesn’t he show his birth certificate?” crap. Which, one would hope, would further discredit (to the rest of the nation) the whole right-wing zaniness that is birtherism.
  9. Facebook shoots first, ignores questions later; account lock-out attack works (Update X) – Ah, the joys of active management of an Internet monoculture.
  10. Rick Santorum: U.S. Shirking Its Responsibility To Fight “Militant Socialism” – The Red Menace is back!
  11. Ayn Rand and the Conservative Contradiction – “Any politician or media figure who claims to be an admirer of both Rand and Jesus is either hopelessly confused or an out-and-out liar.”
  12. Oklahoma GOPer: It’s A Fact That ‘Blacks’ Don’t Work As Hard | TPMDC – Stay classy, Oklahoma GOP!
  13. Letter from Mark Twain to a snake oil peddler – Lovely.
  14. The Only Thing You Can Do Legally If You’re on the Terror Watch List Is Buy a Gun [Gun Control] – The only rights the Right wouldn’t be willing to take from even terrorists.
  15. The Ancient Japanese Tsunami Stones Kept Villagers Alive [Japan] – It’s fashionable to poke fun at tradition and ancient community wisdom. And there’s sometimes reason for that. But it’s worth at least considering they might know what the heck they were talking about …
  16. Facebook Games Could Be Responsible For Demise Of Soap Operas – Innnteresting. Not quite sure whether that’s a good thing (interaction!) or a bad thing (Facebook Games!).
  17. Watching Shows On DVR Might Save Them From Being Canceled – This is good news. Especially since I rarely watch TV shows any other way.
  18. E.T. call waiting – SETI just costs $2.5MM? Damn, I’ll bet I could find that money in about 15 minutes in the federal budget.
  19. Sarah Palin Mocks Katie Couric For Leaving CBS – Stay classy, Ms. Sarah!

Unblogged Bits (Fri. 18-Feb-11 1630)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. YouTube – Spiderman 2 Intro Weird Al Yankovic Ode To A Superhero HD Version – This one’s for Avo. (Kay inadvertently introduced it to me, though she’s never heard the Billy Joel original.)
  2. America’s Worst Commutes | MintLife Blog | Personal Finance News & Advice – That said, light rail works great (for me) in getting around this problem here in Denver — and timeshifting companies are a great help, too.
  3. Mozilla’s “modern browser” attack on IE overlooks Firefox shortcomings – I’ve been doing a lot of playing with Chrome 10 (at home) vs Firefox 3.6 (at work); process isolation is one of the significant gaps I see in FF still (and will be in FF 4, too). On the other hand, I’ll take either of them in a heartbeat vs the the instability and restrictions of IE 8. I don’t anticipate leaping into IE 9 any time soon.
  4. GOP budget to defund Net Neutrality, Consumer Financial Protection and Wall Street pay czar – “Yes, the Democrats are pretty lame on all of these issues but the GOP is now taking these weak positions to the extreme. It’s yet another business feeding frenzy government. It’s a government for business, by business. Consumers be damned.”
  5. Indiana Bill Would Allow Guns Almost Everywhere – Yeah, and as long as that guy “shoulder to shoulder” with you knows which of the other guys waving a gun around is the right one to shoot, then everything will be hunky-dory!

Unblogged Bits (Mon. 31-Jan-11 1030)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. IMPORTANT HEALTH NEWS: “Adults who make love first thing in the morning apparently not only feel mo… – But, honey, if you don’t have your health …
  2. Cella Energy claims breakthrough that would result in $1.50 per gallon gasoline alternative. – “If this is real you can expect the Oil Industry to have an absolute shit fit over it. I’d like to be optimistic about it, but the cynic in me can’t help but think that even if it does work as well as claimed that there’ll be some wicked trade-off like it causes cancer in everything that comes in contact with it or something else equally horrible.” Or at least that’s what some with a vested interest in the status quo will CLAIM … [/conspiracymode]
  3. A note to the Teapartiers… – But … but … if they had guns, they’d automatically have freedom! Plus, they’re Muslims! You can’t trust them with guns!
  4. DORK TOWER, Tuesday, January 25, 2011 – The Door into Summer …
  5. Would you like to play a game? – RLC January / 31 / 2011 – Yet another reason I intentionally don’t spend much time on Facebook …
  6. Again with ‘exceptionalism’? – I’d like to think that “exceptional” is meant as “unique” or “unanticipated” or somehow particularly wonderful. But “exceptional” also seems a lazy way of excusing our behavior: nobody should be allowed to torture prisoners “except” the US (because we’re “exceptional”); nobody should overthrow governments “except” the US (because we’re “exceptional”), etc. That this word has become a ginned-up synonym for “patriotic” is all the more lousy.
  7. The serious flaws in the GOP’s anti-abortion bill – Not only does it block Medicaid funding for abortions when rapes aren’t “forcible” enough, it effectively does the same for private insurance under the Affordable Care Act. But remember, the GOP is steadfastly against imposing the government’s tyrannical health insurance rules on private individuals!
  8. Opposition Leader ElBaradei: Threat of Muslim Brotherhood Is A ‘Myth’ Lacking ‘One Iota Of Reality’ – For some, 30-year-regime autocrats are less anti-American than scary MMMMUUUUSSSLLLIIMMMMSSSS …
  9. Boehner Admits Failing To Raise Debt Ceiling Would Be ‘A Disaster,’ But Takes It Hostage Anyway – “Nice economy we got here. Be a shame if something were to happen to it …”
  10. Politician Breaks Into Home, Sues Owners For Injuries – Shall I mention that Sen. Alesi is a Republican, that party of rugged self-responsibility, private property rights, and tort reform?
  11. Frank Rich: The Tea Party wags the dog – The GOP establishment is potentially in a lot of trouble. Unfortunately, that has consequences for the nation as a whole, too.
  12. GOP Priorities: Redefining Rape – While abortion is an option I’ll never be happy about, this, right here, is precisely why I will never make that decision for someone else, for the person, individual, citizen, woman, who is ultimately having to make that choice. That there are those who are so enamored of the abstract that they would deign to decide who “qualifies,” whose rape was “forcible” enough to “merit” coverage of abortion services, is itself sickening enough.
  13. Man With Explosives Arrested Outside Michigan Mosque – I’ll be curious to hear more about this case.
  14. 15 Of The World’s Coolest Swimming Pools – I love the Hearst one they show — but the other one is far better.
  15. I Me Mine: The Unholy Trinity Of Ayn Rand « Tomfoolery – Rand appeals to the high school / college period of self-discovery by saying, “You are the only person in the world who matters. Pursue your own self-interest because that is the highest good.” Most people grow out of that, fortunately. Randians never seem to. And way too many of them are now in the halls of our government.
  16. Building a Better Word Cloud – An interesting analysis (esp. if you compare the most frequent words and compare them to the person usually considered more “aloof” and “analyitical” and out of touch, vs. the person who it’s often claimed is “one of us”).
  17. HOWTO make health-care cheaper by spending more on patients who need it – ” In other words, providing excellent, personalized care to the small number of patients who don’t fit the system’s model saves far more money than making the system more stringent, with more paperwork, higher co-pays and other punitive measures. It’s a win-win.” The problem with systems is that they are rarely dynamic enough to deal with those outside the system. And they usually do everything they can to defend themselves from change.
  18. AMERICAblog News: Maddow: The story behind Michelle Bachmann’s speech — it was a manufactured ‘event’ by CNN & a Republican for-profit consultant – CNN: All the News that’s Fit to Gin Up!
  19. Neil Barofsky: Credit ratings for banks now include assurance of government bailouts – Imagine the brouhaha if social activists were stating that any individual should feel free to take whatever risk they want because the government would always bail them out with a security net. But, then, the banks are “too big to fail,” and too many individuals are “too small to matter.”

Unblogged Bits (Sat. 29-Jan-11 1630)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. GOP Conference Chair Thaddeus McCotter Says ‘America Must Stand’ With Mubarak Dictatorship – “An imperfect government capable of reform”? Really? Yeesh.
  2. The Truth About Facebook – Um … yeah.
  3. Job Interview – Man, I wish it were that easy.
  4. MAD – SMBC January 29, 2011 – Heh. Fortunately, for some, after the Apocalypse can come an unexpected Golden Age …
  5. Give ’em the Axe – Zits for 1/29/2011 – While there is many the fashion faux pas in my own teen past, I have to believe (and, indeed, hope) that the current trend for heavy cologne (excuse me, “body spray”) is a short-lived one, and that the purveyors of fashion/cosmetics have not implemented a permanent change in male society.
  6. The pressing need for a ‘spudnut moment’ – Sarah Palin is, of course, a dolt.
  7. Still waiting for that ‘zero tolerance’ policy to kick in: Steve Benen
  8. Paul Ryan and his media base: Steve Benen
  9. The anti-science party – Sad, but true. I have to wonder, though, how much of the anti-science (evolution, climate change, basic research, etc.) bent of many prominent GOP leaders is because it’s to their political benefit (anti-science = anti-regulatory = pro-business = contributions!) and how much of it is the other way around (business contributions go to those who are anti-science = anti-regulatory). In either case, too many people are fiddling while Rome burns, either for profit, power, or just intentional ignorance.
  10. Read the first draft of Gene Roddenberry’s Star Trek pitch, starring “Captain April” and the “S.S. Yorktown” [Television] – Interesting seeing which pitched plots eventually saw light of day, which didn’t.
  11. Revolver that fires shotgun shells – Have to wonder what the kick on that would be. Btw, the BATFE had Taurus pull it after deeming it not a pistol but a short-barreled shotgun, which are illegal. (And which points out how firearm definitions, for legal purposes, can be very slippery things.)
  12. No Longer Caring About Democracy, Bolton Disparages Egypt Protests And Defends Mubarak – While Bolton’s expressed concern about Islamicist radicals taking the reins of the revolt and possible follow-on government are legit, the idea that we should reflexively back Mubarak because of that is as shortsighted as our backing of every other strongman we’ve done for the last sixty years — little of which as ever ended well for the countries in question or US security.

Unblogged Bits (Thu. 13-Jan-11 2230)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Life Without Left Turns | Surprising Science – Um, wouldn’t roundabouts be another way to address this?
  2. Harry Potter villain FINALLY allowed to tan after 10-year ban | Blastr – The down side of being in an wildly successful film franchise.
  3. Stingray Nebula
  4. AFA Blog: It’s Not Genocide If God Tells You To Do It – Well at least they’ve chosen a refreshingly open way to address some of the horrors in the Old Testament. Yeesh.
  5. Wiley Drake Focuses His Imprecatory Prayers On Fred Phelps – Man, I hate it when I don’t know who to root for …
  6. Conservative Blogs Unleash More Animosity in Reaction to Obama’s Speech – Stay classy, Lunatic Right!
  7. U.S. income distribution (2010 edition) – “Most people imagine that the rich are in heaven, but, as a rule, it is only a gilded hell. There is not a man in the city of New York with genius enough, with brains enough, to own five millions of dollars. Why? The money will own him. He becomes the key to a safe. That money will get him up at daylight; that money will separate him from his friends; that money will fill his heart with fear; that money will rob his days of sunshine and his nights of pleasant dreams. He cannot own it. He becomes the property of that money. And he goes right on making more. What for? He does not know. It becomes a kind of insanity. No one is happier in a palace than in a cabin.” — Robert Green Ingersoll
  8. Individual Responsibility And Sarah Palin – Does Ms Palin speak at public and private events and on TV shows and in her never-ending chain of books because she thinks her words have no influence? That they might not change, or guide, or have an effect on the minds of her listeners? Of course not. Does she take credit when her vocal support of a candidate assists in their victory? Of course she does. There is, of course, a difference between who actually pulled the trigger and who offered up suggestions and targets and stoking up as to which direction the gun should be pointed. But that doesn’t mean the latter is absolved of any responsibility, moral if not legal. Ms Palin’s refusal to accept that is yet another indication of why she should never be elected to public office again.
  9. 1023 2011 – Homeopathy is one of those quack sciences I’ve never understood otherwise intelligent people being devotees of. Craziness.
  10. Climate change has guided 2,500 years of European history
  11. The new Zodiac – Wait … I’m a Sagittarius now? Aw, man, now I’m going to have to change my whole personality.

Unblogged Bits (Mon. 10-Jan-11 1030)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. NYT on holding ‘Republicans and particularly their most virulent supporters in the media responsible’ – Folks who favor less restrictive gun ownership will not see this as a sign that controls should be tightened, but that everyone should be encouraged to carry. “If Loughner had pulled out a gun and three people around him had been armed and able to shoot, we wouldn’t have had this tragedy.”
  2. Obama administration moves forward with unique internet ID for all Americans, Commerce Department to head system up – Not only sounds like a national ID system, but one that will be prone to all sorts of lovely identity theft. Do not want.
  3. The anti-government grammar of :David-Wynn: Miller – While being “not legally a person” might mean you can dodge taxes (if you follow the thinking), it might also mean that the government can do whatever it wants to you (it can anyway, but not legally). Doesn’t sound like a winning strategy.
  4. YouTube – The Brick Thief: A LEGO Short Film – While there’s a vague creepiness about it, it’s also cute. Plus it also demonstrates that, yes, Lego does actually make something other than model kits.
  5. The Final Hobbit Hurdle Has Been Cleared – Not that we haven’t heard that before …
  6. Ani – Ghost City of 1001 Churches – An amazing-looking place.
  7. 20 predictions for the next 25 years – I’ll be curious to see where this is correct — and wrong — as it turns out.

Unblogged Bits (Sun. 26-Dec-10 1631)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Pickup Lines – December 25, 2010
  2. Flickr .Net Screensaver – Oooh … looks like this works with Win7. Excellent.
  3. The 6 Most Terrifying Work Commutes in the World | Cracked.com – Okay, this might make even my brother feel a bit better …
  4. What WikiLeaks revealed to the world in 2010 – Well worth reading, especially Greenwald’s commentary on the story of the reaction to WikiLeaks being as important as the information revealed. The only caveat (as we saw with the Cuba/Moore tale): diplomatic cables are not objective truth, and at least some fraction of what was “revealed” was what folks were reporting on to their bosses, or rumors that were being passed on, not necessarily smoking guns (cf. your own company’s email system).
  5. Badass Quote of the Day [Dispatches from the Culture Wars] – The problem is, it’s not a binary thing. There is a lot of good the US has done. There’s a lot of good ideas we’ve shared, too. I hold no truck with the “America is TEH EVILLL!” croud. But by the same token, the idea that God has mysteriously favored this country to be the moral (if not economic and political) arbiter for the world, or that this somehow gilds all of our actions into some sort of exceptionalism (i.e., that we are an exception to … what, the forces of history and the nature of humanity?) is equally ludicrous, and just as dangerous.
  6. Congress Should End Ethanol Subsidies : Dispatches from the Culture Wars – Imagine spending $6 billion / year, not on subsidizing net-fossil-neutral ethanol subsidies for major agribusinesses (don’t fool yourself it’s all for Mom-n-Pop farmers), but on some actual renewable energy sources — heck, wouldn’t it be nice to be able to recycle all those Amazon boxes from gift-giving into fuel?
  7. South Carolina Holds Secession Ball [Dispatches from the Culture Wars] – “But we do celebrate the courage and the integrity of 170 men who signed their signatures to the Article of Secession – the courage of men to do what they think is right.” But doesn’t WHAT they thought was right play into the question of whether it deserves celebration?
  8. Listening – Dilbert for December 24, 2010
  9. Porn site: publicizing takedown notices is copyright infringement – Yes, by slapping a copyrighted image in your takedown notice (so you can notify someone in the notice of what you say they are violating), you are now making it a copyrighted document in and of itself, which means it has to be kept hidden. Brilliantly evil!
  10. Guns for Christmas – All I can think of here is that Zombies for the Holidays video …
  11. Newly Discovered Molecule Will Make Rocket Fuel Super Efficient [Rockets] – Cool.
  12. More ISS photos from space poet & NASA astronaut Wheelock | triggerpit.com – Lovely.
  13. Economy Forces Big Budget Cuts for Science Fairs – FoxNews.com – Who needs Science Fairs?! We can just have Bible Memorization Bees!
  14. I love – HA!
  15. My Christmas Tree – I want.
  16. Tomes 2010: Harry Potter Mania Edition – Nicely written. And, yes, setting the movies aside (though they do have something to recommend them, esp. later on), these are books that a lot of adults would get a lot of entertainment (and thrills) from. I’ll probably be ready to reread the series again after the next (last) movie comes out.
  17. Reading as inclination leads – I think it’s good to push oneself (or to be pushed a bit), but I’m also very much (obviously) a believer in Reading What You Like, and then encouraging yourself to like more.

Unblogged Bits for Fri, 2 Apr 2010, 8:00PM

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. 5 Ways The Google Book Settlement Will Change The Future of Reading [Publishing]: Annalee Newitz
  2. Preacher Compares Attacks on Pope to Anti – Semitism – NYTimes.com – The more the Vatican criticizes the attacks being made — painting itself as victim instead of the children who were abused — the more credibility and sympathy it loses. And, on another note, hiding behind what your aide did on your behalf is hardly a substantive defense. “The buck stops here,” as Truman put it.
  3. Michele Bachmann: Nancy Pelosi Tried To Incite Something By The Way She Crossed The Street – “And if she’d been raped it would have been her fault, too.”
  4. KFC’s Bacon Sandwich On Fried Chicken “Bread” Starts Killing People Nationwide April 12 – The O.R. one is the same calories and fat as a Big Mac (but twice the sodium). Maybe too much of a good thing.
  5. Star Trek Re-Watch: “What Men Dare Do” – One of the lengthiest and most nicely done April Fool bits I saw all day: part of Tor’s ST:TOS retrospective, in this case a fake TOS episode review. Brilliant.
  6. Obama admin: time to make radio pay for its music – I would rather eat broken glass than fill the coffers of the RIAA … unless, of course, if it were at the expense of ClearChannel. Hrm. While this will likely hurt small broadcast stations (and public radio) more than Big Broadcasting, it’s also clearly a case where something needs to be done to rationalize both the domestic and international markets.
  7. Wes Anderson Is the Hipstery Lord of the Rings – Amazing what a different sound track and some clever cuts will do to a trailer. Amusing.
  8. Topless Robot – The 8 Most Common Ways D&D Characters Die – That’s pretty much the gamut all right.
  9. Improved comment collapsing for Google Buzz posts – Nice. I’m still not settled in my use of Buzz, as it falls sort of between GReader and Twitter without really replacing either. But for what I do use it for, this will be helpful.
  10. Pineberry to Make Debut in U.K. Stores – Hmmmm … need to keep my eyes open for these here in the States. Though I’m generally not a big fan of fresh fruit.
  11. RNC’s Filings Reveal Creative Definitions Of ‘Office Supplies’ – Okay, okay, it’s probably (maybe) just expenses entered under the wrong account code (as someone who both does expense reports and tries to reconcile departmental expenses vs. budgets, I’ve seen this happen a zillion times). That said, it’s still damned funny.
  12. Palin’s 20 House Dem Targets Use Her As A Fundraising Ploy – I suspect her involvement will get more traction from Democrats than Republicans.
  13. Indiana Threatened By Giant Poop Bubbles, For Realsies
  14. Northeast Hit With Devastating Floods, As Federal Flood Insurance Expires Due To GOP Obstruction – Well played, GOP! Let’s all remember this next fall!
  15. Erickson: I’ll ‘pull out my wife’s shotgun’ if someone comes to my door for the American Community Survey. – To summarize: “I’m not advocating killing census workers. I’m advocating threatening to kill them with a shotgun if they come onto my property.” That’s a remarkably nuanced approach for a Erickson.
  16. Scott Roeder gets Hard 50 in murder of abortion provider George Tiller | Featured Story | Wichita Eagle
  17. Can Animals Be Gay? – NYTimes.com – An interesting (and long) article on same-sex mating and social behavior in a remarkably lengthy list of species. That complicates the “‘Tain’t Natural!” argument (though it can still be noted that it’s less usual than male-female activity), but, then, that’s never been the point, to me, of why we should (or shouldn’t) accept homosexual behavior in humans, which boils down to, “Why the heck shouldn’t we? Where’s the harm?” (Note: “I think it’s icky” is not an actual harm.)

Unblogged Bits for Thursday, 17 December 2009

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

Unblogged Bits for Tuesday, 07 April 2009

Links that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries …