Sunday, July 31, 2011

If You're The Prayin' Type...

...please say a few words to your deity-of-choice for this little girl.

Hope fading for missing N.H. girl

WEST STEWARTS-TOWN, N.H. — Police picked through garbage and planned today to dive into local waters looking for clues into the disappearance of Celina Cass, the soft-spoken 11-year-old who vanished Monday night, as hope began to falter for unsettled townsfolk.

Meanwhile, the FBI yesterday offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to Cass’ discovery, on top of a $5,000 reward raised locally.

She's been gone almost a week at this point. Statistically the chances of her being found are slim - the best chance for finding someone is the first 24 hours, and odds drop off precipitously after that. Hopefully this will prove the exception to the rule, and with searchers and resources pouring in there's a fighting chance.

Good thoughts and prayers for this girl and her family in this difficult time.

That is all.

Heh...

I can always tell when TheBoy has used the computer - the internet history is full of internet games revolving around killing zombies. Zombie hunting, killing, or stopping in some way seem to figure prominently in his choice of games. It's rather humorous.

T-bolt had better have a good alibi for his whereabouts about 11 years ago...

That is all.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Yes, Even More MA Miracles!

Stretch sends in another MA success story!

Boston Scientific to lay off 1,200-plus
Boston Scientific Corp. said yesterday that it plans to eliminate 1,200 to 1,400 jobs worldwide during the next 2 ½ years to free money for new investments, the Natick medical device maker’s second major round of cuts since last year.

The company would not say how many jobs will be lost in Massachusetts, where fewer than 2,000 of its 25,000 employees are based. In February 2010, Boston Scientific said it would pare 1,300 jobs worldwide, but similarly did not say where.

Ah, yes, that economy's just humming along, isn't it? They keep trying to deflect, using the same "jobless recovery" they derided Bush for back in the 2000s. Interesting, isn't it, that now the shaman in the Oval Office has a (D) next to his name, that same "jobless recovery isn't such a bad thing... Boston Scientific took tax break incentives to stay in MA, and then folded shop anyways, looking to overseas markets to shave costs.

It's not a MA thing, exclusively; one can assume that Boston Scientific would have folded shop in favor of cheap Chinese labor whether they were in tax-heavy MA or tax-friendly NH. What's interesting to note, though, is that even in light of the favorable tax breaks received for staying in MA, they're finding it more appealing to close shop and move operations to China. Cheap labor is one thing; it's a little disheartening to think that they're not concerned about the oppressive government in red China - then again, MA has prepared them well...

And it's more than a little frightening that a company that is doing well is cutting jobs and moving operations overseas - it does not bode well for the state of the state...

That is all.

Friday, July 29, 2011

Interesting Follow-Up...

Remember the 8' long mountain lion that was spotted in Connecticut? Reader Matt sends in a link to this story with some background on the cougar:

Wisconsin’s “St. Croix Cougar” killed in Connecticut
EAU CLAIRE – One of four different cougars confirmed to have visited Wisconsin – this one dubbed the “Twin Cities Cougar” or the “St. Croix Cougar” – was killed by a vehicle six weeks ago on a busy highway in Connecticut, wildlife officials said today.

From Champlin, Minn., where it was first detected by police on Dec. 5, 2009, to the June 11 accident site near Milford, Conn., is 1,055 miles as the crow flies. This represents a new record for straight-line movement of a known cougar, said wildlife biologist Adrian Wydeven of the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.

WI to CT is even further than 1,055 miles. That's a pretty hefty distance for a cat to cover - the longest recorded migration before this was almost half that. According to the article, breeding cougars are found in SD and FL (carry the 10mm, Robb!) - meaning that the distance covered overall by this car is closer to 2,000 miles when all is said and done.

Bottom line: There's pretty much no place in the continental US where you don't have at least a chance of running into a cougar...

That is all.

Friday Car Pr0n

Spotted at the kids' summer camp drop-off:




1932 Ford coupe with a little work. Belongs to a buddy of mine (his dad, actually). Chevy 350, auto transmission, and it'll do wheelies in second gear...

Perfect car to take to the local ice-cream stand!

That is all.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Glad I Don't Pay *That* Premium...

Mopar sends in a story of an extremely expensive fender-bender:

Hapless blonde crashes her Bentley into a Merc, Porsche, Ferrari and Aston Martin
When in Monte Carlo, everything is done in style. And that includes crashing your car.

This was the moment when a woman driver caused a £700,000 five-car pile-up as her Bentley collided with a Mercedes, Ferrari, Porsche and Aston Martin.

Disaster struck as the hapless blonde negotiated the traffic around the Place du Casino in her £250,000 Bentley Azure.
Whatever you do, don't click the link. There's pictures of the carnage and everything. Five exotic cars, the least expensive of which is well into six figures, all damaged, some pretty seriously. Now, I've had my share of fender-benders in the past, but none that required hundreds of thousands of dollars to fix. This one's gonna leave a mark on her premiums - but then again, if she can afford a Bentley Azure, it probably won't phase her one bit.

I just had to share a story where a Mercedes S Class is the cheapest car involved...

That is all.

Not An Addition...

Merlin sends in one that, while not qualifying as a DGC, needs to be shared nonetheless...

Bond set for suspect in shooting death of high school football player
CINCINNATI, OH (FOX19) -Bond was set Thursday morning for a suspect accused in the shooting death of Princeton High School football player Lamar Williams.

Tiana Sullivan, 22, was arraigned on charges of murder and aggravated robbery. Her bond was set at $300,000.

Okay. Read that intro. What's the conclusion you'd draw? This person robbed and then murdered this poor high school football player, right?

Wrong.
Police say Sullivan, Williams and another suspect robbed three people in Springdale on July 20. While fleeing the scene of one of the robberies, police say Sullivan discharged her firearm, hitting Williams in the back of the neck. He died July 24 at the hospital.
So, while leaving the scene of one of the robberies, Sullivan had her booger hook on the bang switch of a loaded firearm and managed to fatally shoot her accomplice. Break more than one of the four rules and tragedy strikes. Thankfully, it was her partner in crime and not one of the people she was robbing that took the bullet - now that would really be a tragedy.

As it stands, someone paid the ultimate price for a failure in the associate-selection process...

That is all.

Friday Gun Pr0n #225

Wally was kind enough to share one of his rare and unique firearms with us for today's gun pic:

Two 7" 45s

Yes, your eyes do not deceive you. That is a 1911 with a 7" barrel. I'll let Wally do the honors and tell you about her:

After I stumbled into the 1911, I told mom I got a 7" .45. She said "what song". Ha!

So I hope the pic is fitting. The Longslide is one of my grail guns and it is pictured with an ubergrail record.

The 1911 is an AMT Hardballer Longslide, 7" barrel, all stainless, in match configuration as it left the factory. It has been flawless with Gold Dots, too.

The AMT hardballer had a hit-or-miss reputation for reliability; I'm glad to hear Wally's example is the former. He's going to bring it to the bloggershoot; I'm looking forward to putting a magazine or two through her just to see what it's like. I'll have my 5" Gold Cup and my 3.5" 1991A1 Compact for comparison - we should have Weerd bring his S&W Commander so we can have a family portrait!

Is 1911. Is big 1911. Is good.

That is all.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

The View...

Is pretty nice...




Boston's not so bad - from a distance...

That is all.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Goin' Ridin'... Goin' Ridin' In A Boat

So we're doing the summer outing thing for the first time in a while. Doing a Boston Harbor Cruise, a "three hour tour" of Boston via boat. Should be a good time; lunch is included; and back home for dinner. Look for some pictures of the Boston skyline and other assorted stuff later.

Boston's a nice place to visit, but I am glad I don't live there...

That is all.


- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Whoa, Wait, Full Stop.

A concerned reader sent this story to me:

Gun-wearing couple triggers controversy, praise

PORTSMOUTH — A city police detective is being lauded for defusing a July 4 incident in which Stawbery Banke Museum officials asked a couple wearing his-and-hers pistols to leave a ceremony attended by the governor and a retired Supreme Court judge.

The event was a naturalization ceremony for 105 new U.S. citizens, presided over by retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice David H. Souter. Also in attendance was Gov. John Lynch, with security provided by U.S. marshals, state police troopers and local detectives.

This isn't the issue. Reading the story, it sure seems like everyone involved handled it very well (well, except the cashier who panicked). The folks who were open carrying handled themselves very well; the police who responded did not overreact; no one was arrested; the two OC'rs were respectful and were treated with respect. They were asked to leave private property, they complied, end of story. Cops show up, escort them out, no incident whatsoever. Given that the governor of the state and a US Supreme Court Justice were at this event, it could have gone rodeo very easily.

But that's not the issue. This is:
The gun-wearing couple, Johnathon Irish and Stephanie Taylor of Epsom, made national headlines in October 2010 when the state took custody of their newborn daughter, citing reasons that included Irish's collection of firearms and affiliation with a group called the Oath Keepers. The baby was returned a week later, and a judge issued a gag order, banning comment on the case.
Looking around, there's precious little other information. One story alleges "domestic violence" as the reason for the infant's removal, claiming that Irish abused his girlfriend and her two children from a previous manner. Conveniently, since it's a case involving children, the state makes no comment. Bafflingly, even though the state alleged long-term and persistent abuse, Irish was never charged, and his infant daughter was returned a week later. Since Irish is still eligible to own firearms nearly a year later, one can safely assume that he maintains a felony-free record.

The idealist in me hopes there's more to this story; the cynic in me doubts it. If the state had strong enough evidence to take the man's child away, why the hell was he not prosecuted? If the proof that he was abusing his significant other and her dependent children wasn't enough to arrest him for assault, it damn well shouldn't be enough to take his baby away.

This is, after all, the land of "Live Free or Die", not "Live Free or Here" to the south...

That is all.

Crazy, Meet Hindbrain

Woman tried to break, eat baby's arm
LOS ANGELES, July 27 (UPI) -- A 36-year-old woman in Los Angeles allegedly grabbed an infant from his stroller, beat him against a truck and told police she wanted to eat his arm.

...

Adriana Miranda, 29, told police she was pushing her 4-month-old son in a stroller when Hubbard unbelted him, swung him overhead and hit him against the rail of truck.

Um...

What caliber for deranged lunatic?

Actually, strike that. I don't think I would have shot her for that. I think that at the moment she started unbuckling my child, the hindbrain would have kicked in, turned me into something resembling "The Hulk" on a bad day, and would have resulted in Hubbard resembling something out of a Clive Barker movie when I was finished.

Every parent is different, I understand that. I'm just floored that this person was able to get close enough to unbuckle the kid from the stroller before the mother could stop her. In my case, the urge to protect my kids was rather strong, leading to my mother getting worried the day my son was baptized, because when the priest doused him with water he started shrieking - and my mom said "I swear to G-d I thought you were gonna hit Father C."

Letting a stranger get that close to your kid, and spend enough time to get your kid out of a buckled harness, does not register with me. Even now, with my kids well into elementary school (and TheBoy is a lot closer to middle school than Kindergarten...) I rarely let them get out of my line of sight, and in busy areas I will not hesitate to grab their hands. Yes, I am Overprotective Dad. My job is to make sure they make it to adulthood - and I take it very seriously.

And it's always good to remember that there are some bugnuts motherf**kers out there...

That is all.

[EDITED] Kahr Arms Can [REDACTED] Rot In [EXPLETIVE DELETED] Hell

Wally sends in this story certain to raise your blood pressure.

Warning:

(image courtesy of Robb Allen)


Mass. gun-maker to pay $600K in gun-death lawsuit

BOSTON — A Massachusetts gun-maker has agreed to pay nearly $600,000 to the families of one man who was killed and another man who was wounded in a shooting involving a gun allegedly stolen from the company, a national gun-control group announced Tuesday.

Danny Guzman, 26, was slain outside a Worcester nightclub in 1999. Armando Maisonet was wounded in the same shooting.

Kahr apparently employed a dirtbag with a coke habit - you know, the kind of person that San Francisco is trying to make a "protected" class of employee - who stole a gun and sold it for drugs. He broke multiple state and federal laws when he took possession of the firearm, as well as numerous laws against possession of illicit substances. The gun changed hands several times and ultimately wound up used in a shooting where someone was killed.

Since dirtbag drug addicts don't have deep pockets - but Kahr does - they wound up on the wrong end of a wrongful death suit.

It's hard to tell who I'm more angry at: Kahr for settling, or a judge for allowing the trial to go forward. Obviously Kahr thought that they stood at least a fair chance of losing the lawsuit in court if they offered a settlement; one wonders what backroom deals were cut, etc. This hands the antis a golden opportunity - and the Brady Campaign wastes no time reveling in the blood of the innocents.

Again, substitute "car" for Kahr. Imagine, if you will, that someone from a dealership stole a car off the lot and traded it for drugs. The car changes hands numerous times and then is used to run someone over. Would Ford be on the hook? You can't help but think the lawsuit would be laughed out of the courtroom. But when it's ZOMG EVIL GUNZZZ!!!! all perspective goes right out the window. And Kahr just rolled over and played dead. Thanks.

Well, guess that settles it - no PM9 for me.

That is all.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

The Jokes, They Write Themselves...

Heh. Stretch sent in the following link with the header "So they can find their midnight snack?"...

South Korean scientists create glowing dog: report

(Reuters) - South Korean scientists said on Wednesday they have created a glowing dog using a cloning technique that could help find cures for human diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, Yonhap news agency reported.

A research team from Seoul National University (SNU) said the genetically modified female beagle, named Tegon and born in 2009, has been found to glow fluorescent green under ultraviolet light if given a doxycycline antibiotic, the report said. The researchers, who completed a two-year test, said the ability to glow can be turned on or off by adding a drug to the dog's food.

A self-glowing dog, created by Korean scientists. Nope. Not gonna go there...

That is all.

Always Learning...

I got an e-mail the other day from the folks from the Armed Response program about their line of instructional DVDs. They've partnered with Michael Bane from Downrange TV fame and have a series of short instructional tips uploaded on the Downrange TV site. They've also got their own YouTube Channel with a series of short clips on everything from pepper spray usage to tips on cleaning.

And, just to add to the "hey, I know that guy" part, the gentleman who e-mailed me happens to live in MA - and sold me my S&W 242!

That is all.

Too Awesome Not To Share...

Mopar sends in this almost DGC addition:

West Virginia 72-Year-Old Repels Home Invasion With Butcher Knife, 9-Millimeter And Shotgun
At noon Saturday, 72 year old Menuard Frazier's home was invaded by three men who beat him and tied him up while they robbed his residence.

According to WSAZ, the three men knocked and asked the retiree to use the phone. As he led them to the kitchen, they jumped him, tied his legs up and put a sheet over his head.
Just wait. It gets better. Frazier freed himself, grabbed his pistol, and ran out to confront the men who had beaten him. They started shooting, so he went back into his house for more firepower.
An angry Frazier told police: "I ran out on the porch with an 11-hundred automatic and emptied it as they drove across the creek down here," he said. "I did my best to kill everyone of them."
Emptied a Remington 1100 into a Chevy S-10. Don't. Fuck. With. Old. Men. And this story has the best closing line I've read in years:
West Virginia State Police continue to look for an older model Chevy S-10 riddled by shotgun blasts.
WINNING!

That is all.

Two Days, Two Additions!

Both Bob and Sean sent in this story. It's just perfect.

One suspect killed, second wounded during robbery attempt

One man was killed and another wounded Monday night after police say the men tried to rob a home poker game in North Raleigh.

Brandon Dwain Shelton, 28, was killed, and Brian Matthew Onley, 23, was wounded in his right arm. Both were shot during a struggle at a home at 4809 Sweetbriar Drive.

Bob wasn't sure if it counted because there was an illegal poker game going on. I'm saying yes for two reasons: 1. It's a freakin' poker game - there could very easily have been a poker game just between friends, although it's likely that the goblins chose the house because of the game; and 2. Gambling's a victimless crime. There is simply no reason for a poker game for money being illegal.

Not to mention that there's a certain delicious irony in goblins having their guns taken away and used against them...

Dead Goblin Count: 181

That is all.

Things That Make Me Smile.

Submachine guns. Massachusetts submachine guns. Bloggershoot attendee stickman sends in the following picture from a recent shoot:

Money-to-noise converters

Stickman labels these as his Israeli girlfriend and his buddy's German honey. Heh.

That is all.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Out Of Curiosity...

Anyone know where I could get my hands on one of those blue UN helmets?

Purely for decorative purposes, I assure you.

That is all.

Just Because I Like Saying It...

...I was right!

Chasing Freedom takes my advice (and looks smashing while doing it!)

When I first reviewed the Dragon Leatherworks Pistol Pouch (holy smokes, was it really a year and a half ago?!?!), I commented that it would be perfect for Renaissance Faires. I even wore it to a small Faire in New Hampshire last year. Nice to see one of my blogkids actually take my advice! :)

Now, if only I could get my own children to start listening to me...

That is all.

Mad Skills...

Linoge sends me a link to this article (with the subject header of "I want to see you do this"), which contains this video:



I ride an Electra Glide Standard, which is only marginally different from the Road King shown performing those amazing feats. The bike weighs about 800 pounds, give or take a few, depending on what you're carrying and how much gas you have in the tank. Harley Davidson touring bikes are not what comes to mind when the word "nimble" is used. But Officer Williams makes that big FLHRP look like a Ninja...

Now that is a man who knows his bike.

That is all.

Tuesday Campaign Pic, Part 9

Gotta keep up the good fight. Here's the latest of my attempts to provide Teleprompter Jesus with the kind of campaign posters he deserves:

Obamaruption!

Because if we don't do it to Øbama, who will?

That is all.

Again, More Like This...

Mopar brings us a most excellent DGC addition:

Sheriff: Dead motel robber was going to rape clerk

COLUMBIA, SC (WIS) - A man is dead after the motel clerk he tried to sexually assault and rob early Monday morning fought back and killed him, deputies said.Investigators say 43-year-old Vincent Carson of Orangeburg entered Days Inn motel at 133 Plumbers Rd. near I-20 and North Main St. sometime before 6:00 a.m.

As the female clerk went into the breakfast room to prepare breakfast, she found Carson waiting inside. The victim said Carson held a knife to her throat and said "this is a robbery." Investigators said when her attacker slipped the knife into his pants pocket to begin tying her up with plastic ties, the woman pulled a handgun from under her shirt, turned and fired into the man's chest at point blank range.

This is one of the better DGC stories I've read. It's quite sympathetic to the victim here - and by victim, they mean the woman who was assaulted and forced to defend her life with deadly force. They even identify the firearm used - a .22LR semi-automatic. Single shot to the chest, DRT. The Brady's would rather see this clerk robbed and possibly raped - perhaps even killed - rather than the outcome as it stands.

I prefer this outcome by a wide margin.

Dead Goblin Count: 180

That is all.

But They Want to Restrict *My* Rights...

Bubblehead Les sent this to me via e-mail. This qualifies for a

Warning:

(image courtesy of Robb Allen)



Feds Silent on How Convicted Felons Bought Guns in 'Operation Fast and Furious'
EXCLUSIVE: In the latest chapter of the gunrunning scandal known as Operation Fast and Furious, federal officials won't say how two suspects obtained more than 360 weapons despite criminal records that should have prevented them from buying even one gun.
...
However, according to court records reviewed by Fox News, two of the 20 defendants indicted in the Fast and Furious investigation have felony convictions and criminal backgrounds that experts say, at the very least, should have delayed them buying a single firearm. Instead, the duo bought dozens of guns on multiple occasions while federal officials watched on closed-circuit cameras.
The more news gets out about this operation, the more I am convinced this was 100% designed to provide a "crisis" upon which the Øbama administration could leverage support for more gun control. We started hearing about the mythical "guns from US gun shows winding up in Mexico" as far back as 2008 - which, I'm certain, is only coincidentally the same time that "Operation Fast & Furious" was getting started.

We heard about grenades, rocket launchers, and machine guns finding their way from American gun shows to Mexican gangs. We were shown statistics of dubious origin claiming that a disproportionate number of guns were traced back to the US. The more that comes out about this, the more it seems like the ATF was the main facilitator of guns flowing from the US to Mexico, with straw purchasers not merely encouraged, but outright abetted by agents of the ATF. Folks who had no business being approved for a sale - folks that the Brady Bunch lobbied hard to have denied - were given the green light to buy multiple guns.

As long as those guns were finding their way across the border.

These are the same people that don't want you to have a 30 round magazine. Or a bayonet lug. They want to limit you and I to buying one firearm a month (year? lifetime?). They would love to see Massachusetts-style permitting in place, with a $100/5 year permit needed to simply own a firearm, and no guarantees you'd be allowed to carry that firearm. And here they are, gleefully helping convicted felons buy guns that they knew were crossing international borders.

People - American people - died as a result of this program. Where is the outrage?

That is all.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Let's Play A Game...

This is a game we've played before. The name of the game is "Imagine If Bush Had Said This"...

Obama: 'I need a dance partner' on immigration reform


Washington (CNN) -- America's immigration system is broken, but pressure from a larger political movement is needed to fix it, President Barack Obama said Monday.

"The idea of doing things on my own is very tempting. I promise you, not just on immigration reform. But that's not how our system works. That's not how our democracy functions. That's not how our Constitution is written," Obama said at the National Council of La Raza's annual conference.

Emphasis mine.


Oh, wait, Bush *did* say something like this. And he was roundly criticized for saying it. And it was widely reported - front page news and all - and linked. Whereas this is behind-the-fold hardcore political junky stuff. Oh, and Øbama's not joking, either. He's dead-serious about wanting to just push legislation through without all that pesky nonsense of dealing with other branches and stuff...

The name of the game could also be "Imagine If We Had An Impartial Media"...

That is all.

Also Sad But Not Surprising...

Weerd notes the addition of Amy Winehouse to the 27 Club.

Now, I'll readily admit to not really being all that up on the popular music scene these days, being an admitted old fart and curmudgeon who feels that good music died when grunge took over (right before Kurt Cobain joined the 27 Club, AAMOF...) Allegedly Ms. Winehouse had considerable talent - when sober - that leads to a lot of lamenting and "what if" ing. It's her life, her body, her choice.

What I take issue with, though, is those that would place the blame for her death on the war on drugs/legalization/etc. I'm about as big a proponent of "legalize" as you're gonna find - it's your body, do whatever you'd like to it as long as you don't want my money to fix your ills and you stay away from me and mine while under the influence. Claiming that Amy Winehouse would still be alive if heroin were legal is BS, though.

Folks die of alcohol poisoning and alcohol-related illnesses every day, and that's as legal as the day is long. Legal stuff killing people? Hell, cigarettes are still legal, and will remain so as long as the .gov makes their $3 a pack in taxes... Heck, heart disease is still the number one killer, and they haven't outlawed Big Macs or prime rib yet...

There are a lot of deaths that can be laid at the feet of the drug war, from the cartels in Mexico and Colombia to the street gangs in every big city here in the US. Whenever the government decides to save us from ourselves someone will step in to fill the void, and they're usually pretty vociferous about keeping others from doing the same. Make the drugs legal, and the incentive - read: giant piles of tax-free cash - goes away. What does not go away is the need - for some - to cram their bodies full of poisons, in some cases more than their bodies can handle.

The drug war didn't kill Amy Winehouse; Amy Winehouse killed Amy Winehouse.

That is all.

Sad, But Not Surprising...

Group Of Mass. Soldiers May Not Get Homecoming In Hudson

HUDSON (CBS) – Hundreds of Massachusetts troops are coming home from Afghanistan this week, but the families of one National Guard company may not have the homecoming they feel their heroes deserve.
...
They have been planning for a huge welcome home celebration on Wednesday, but have been told the unit is 15 members short of the minimum required for a special homecoming.

Now, I may be showing my ignorance here, but what's the size of the company in question as compared to the minimum number needed? It's germane to the story - if the company is 250 people and they're 15 short, waive the limit. If there's 10 people and they're 15 short, then while they still deserve a hero's welcome, it's hard to fault the town for conserving resources.

It's a sad commentary that this is one of the areas that gets cuts in these tough economic times, but such is life. There's a not-inconsequential cost associated - the police, fire, etc. details that accompany these homecoming events aren't free (and, I suspect, even if the police officers and fire fighters wanted to donate their time, the equipment costs would still be prohibitive). It's sad - but understandable - that the returning troops aren't in sufficient number to warrant the "official" homecoming regalia.

Then again, whether it's one soldier or 100, they should still receive the full hero's welcome, IMHO...

That is all.

When Words Lose Their Meaning...

Dennis sends in this story which amazingly is not from Massachusetts:

San Francisco Considers Legal Protection for Criminals
A legislative proposal in San Francisco seeks to make ex-cons and felons a protected class, along with existing categories of residents like African-Americans, people with disabilities and pregnant women. If passed by city supervisors, landlords and employers would be prohibited from asking applicants about their criminal past.

Supporters say it's an effort to help former offenders get back on their feet, but critics call the concept a crime in itself.
Okay. Let me see if I get this straight. Someone makes a conscious decision to break the law. San Francisco now wants to shield them from the consequences of that decision under the guise of "fairness"? Eventually everyone will fall into one "protected" class or another, and the word will cease to have any meaning - once every applicant is "protected", then businesses and landlords will be back to hiring or renting to whoever they feel like.

Without a hint of irony - nor explanation - the article mentions that San Fran has the highest rate of recidivism of any city in CA, almost 80%. This is supposed to be an argument FOR putting one's criminal history on the "protected" list - the thinking is that people go back to committing crimes because they can't get jobs. No one ever stopped to consider that maybe they can't get jobs because they insist on committing crimes.

I guess we shouldn't be surprised. This is a logical extension of the line of thinking that says no one is responsible for their actions. San Fran's just at the forefront of the push to shield us from every possible consequence. It will be interesting to see how this plays out, as valet services start hiring car thieves and credit card companies start hiring people who have be involved with identity theft. Right now they're claiming that businesses won't have to hire folks whose crimes are in the areas of the business, but what's the likelihood of that standing?

San Francisco: Proudly proving to the rest of the country that not all the stupidity in the US comes out of Beacon Hill...

That is all.

Fourth Annual Northeast Bloggershoot: Ordnance and Other Bits

Well, the Fourth Annual Northeast Bloggershoot is less than two weeks away (two weeks as of yesterday). Time to start thinking about what to bring, both in the way of ordnance as well as other supplies. Here's what I'll be lugging to the shoot:

Rifles:
VEPR (.308Win)
Savage Model 10 (.308Win)
Bushmaster AR-15 (.223 Rem)
Ruger 10/22 (.22LR)
Remington 572 (.22LR)
Poss: SKS (7.62X39mm)

Shotguns:
Mossberg 590 (12 ga.)
Winchester 1300 with pistol grip (12 ga.)
Stevens 31 side-by-side (12 ga.)

Pistols
:
Sig Sauer P226 (9mm and .22LR)
Colt 1991A1 compact (.45 ACP)
Colt Gold Cup National Match (.45 ACP)
Ruger LC9 (9mm)
Smith & Wesson Bodyguard 380 (.380 ACP)

Revolvers:
Smith & Wesson model 17 (.22LR)
Smith & Wesson model 13 (.357 Magnum)
Smith & Wesson model 27 (.357 Magnum)
Smith & Wesson model 242 (.38 Special)
Smith & Wesson model 360 (.357 Magnum)
Colt New Frontier (.22LR)

If there's something in the G. armory that you'd like to try out, give a holler and I'll see if I can make room...

I'll be bringing food for all of the above, as well as to try out anything that might happen to be of interest. For the shotguns, I've got buckshot, slugs, and birdshot for various shotgun related activities that might arise. For targets, there will be paper, 2 liter bottles filled with water, orange clays, targets for Redneck Trap, and whatever else folks would like to bring. If someone could see to bringing a suitable victim for a bayonet charge that would be fantastic (since neither Lissa nor Borepatch will be attending this year *sniff*).

As an additional note, we have folks bringing full auto weaponry in .223 and 9mm that I am certain of, and I suspect that there may be .22LR as well. My personal feeling is that if someone is kind enough to lend me their firearm to shoot, I'm going to run factory brass-cased ammo through it - no reloads or steel-cased/corrosive/extra dirty ammo. Just my personal feelings; others can bring as they see fit - and those allowing the borrowing have final say in what gets fed to their babies...

I'm also bringing a table, chairs, and canopy for staging my arms as well as ammunition buckets for everything I'm bringing. I am a little on the OCD side (stop laughing) and have marked up all my magazines with my initials - not that I think anyone would walk off with something that wasn't theirs, but because, let's face it, a bunch of us have 1911s and AR-15s, and initials help avoid confusion. It's also a good idea to write down exactly how many of each time magazine you have when it's time to pack up.

Anyone that needs directions to the sooper seekrit range please send me an e-mail and I will oblige. Bring sunscreen and bug spray and prepare for any sort of weather - this is New England in August. It could be 105º and really humid; it could be 55º and drizzly raw. Bring your favorite firearm, any target you'd like so long as you're prepared to haul it back out, and, most of all, yourself.

Is Northeast bloggershoot. Is good.

That is all.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Don't Mess With Marines. Even Old Ones.

Snarky sends in this story that, while not a DGC addition, merits sharing nonetheless.

Armed crook loses life in tangle with Marine vet

Kenneth Kobobel Sr., a 72-year-old Marine veteran, had yet to put on his eyeglasses when he heard a knock at the door of his office in a northwest Houston strip mall around 9:45 a.m. on Friday.

The great-grandfather was chatting with his brother inside the office, making plans for the day, and figured the towering man waiting outside was one of his workers coming to collect his Friday paycheck.

Thought #1: 9:45 AM robbery? Man, the crooks get to work *early* in Texas!
Thought #2: Great-grandfather at 72? Man, the dads get to work *early* in Texas!
Thought #3: "When the man with a .45 meets a man with a Buick, the man with a .45 is a dead man".

Don't ever point a gun at a Marine, you'll just make him mad...

That is all.

Teh Stoopid! It Burns! (Literally)

Jeff from OR sends in this story of stoopid:

Man burned while siphoning gas with leaf blower
Officials said a Seminole man was seriously burned in an explosion while siphoning gas from a car with a leaf blower.

Pinellas County Sheriff's Spokesperson Tom Nestor said Joseph P. Williamson, 31, was working on the fuel lines of the 1997 Saturn belonging to his girlfriend, Sommer M. Brocuglio, 34, outside their home on 61st Avenue N when the gas ignited.

Gas lines. Electric leaf blower. What could possibly go wrong? Oh yeah, this:

(picture from link)

Yeah, doing it yourself saves money - now they won't have to worry about sugar in the gas tank!

That is all.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

How Hot Was It?

Yeah, I know. My friends in southern climes are gonna pooh-pooh this but it was hot yesterday. How hot?




About 105 degrees according to the thermometer on the Harley...

That is all.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

"Safe" Neighborhoods

PISSED sent me this story about a rash of break-ins in towns nearby (PISSED lives a couple towns over from me, interestingly enough). Now, I've lived in my town all of my life, and worked in one of the towns mentioned in the article and had friends in both towns. One is a small city that brought itself back from the edge of oblivion about 30 years ago with a "gentrification" program; the other is a small town in northeast MA, unremarkable for the most part except, perhaps, for being what folks would consider a "safe" area, a "good" town where the harsh realities of goblins and such don't intrude.

Except, of course, that they do.

PISSED covers the story well, and even includes a Google Earth shot of downtown Newburyport that identifies two of the affected businesses in relation to the police station. The further of the two businesses is maybe a five minute walk - and a leisurely walk at that - from the police station, and both businesses are smack in the downtown area that is busy during daylight and evening hours. There are police officers both on bicycles and on foot in the area at "peak" tourist times - such as the Fourth of July when they have a fireworks display - and yet thieves hit two businesses during daylight hours.

The other area, the small town, appear to be break-ins of opportunity (i.e. looking for unlocked doors) or just grabbing unattended items. These types of crimes are simple to thwart - don't leave valuables in your car, lock your car and house doors, secure outside items, etc. Your town being "good" or "safe" doesn't mean that folks from "bad" or "unsafe" towns can't come in and decide to grab what they can while they're passing through. Simple precautions that we tend to take for granted when we live out in "quiet" areas, and when these simple steps aren't taken are opportunities for the goblins to ply their trade.

So far, none of these stories have had bad endings. No one's gotten hurt, the goblins in question have run off at the slightest hint of discovery. It's possible that these are not career criminals but folks driven to extreme measures by the hard economic times (not excusing it, mind you, just theorizing at the seemingly amateurish attempted break-ins), but the one overwhelming message to take home from this is: Be smart. Make their job harder. Lock your doors. Don't leave your GPS sitting on your dash (or a big honkin' suction cup ring on the windshield). Don't leave your purse sitting in the carriage while you walk half the aisle away.

And be prepared in case the worst does happen, and have the best tools for the job at hand, namely keeping yourself safe.

That is all.

One-oh-Two!

Vicious Circle #102 - Silent Warrior - is up for your listening pleasure.

Please join alan, Weerdbeard, ThotPolice, aepilotJim, Chance and Chase, FarmDad, Lawdog and Breda as we talk about the news of the day. This one was interesting. We started out quite serious, for a change, talking about the Canton, OH police video and associated. The militarization of police; the fact that police brutality, etc., has actually gotten quite a bit better; small town law enforcement; politics of policing; it's all covered - and with not one but two actual law enforcement professionals (and I use that word in all of its meanings, especially given the two gentlemen who joined us) giving their opinions both of the case but also of police work in general.

And then it got silly. I suppose we needed the relief from the seriousness of the topic, because, really? If you think too hard about the way things are headed it'll just make it too depressing. Episode links are here and are, for once, work-safe - unless you're the type to get your blood all angered up and throwing things...

Vicious Circle: More fun than having Maria from New Jersey as your babysitter.

That is all.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Putting Two And Two Together...

Something just dawned on me. Take Officer Steroid. Give him a police car with a license plate scanner. Now give him a vendetta against, say, a CCW holder. Imagine the hell that could be unleashed against someone by a thug with a badge who can track your every move. Imagine for his entire 8 hour shift he makes a game of seeing how many tickets he can write - since he knows where you are every second of your day. Imagine him showing up at your work - and it wouldn't take more than a couple of weeks to divine where you worked; it's the only other place you spend 8 hours a day. Imagine just how bad an out-of-control officer could make things for someone if he had a plate scanner at his disposal. Especially in an "officer-can-do-no-wrong" place like Canton...

Now. Still support giving the police these shiny tools?

That is all.

In More Shocking News...

More information is coming out about the police officer in Canton...

Canton officer under investigation after concealed carry arrest

The first part of the article covers the events on the video. It's about 3/4 of the way through the article that we find these interesting tidbits about Officer Steroid:

Canton’s internal affairs unit has investigated 16 complaints involving Harless dating back to 2000.

He was reprimanded in one 2003 case. Harless and another officer were exonerated of using excessive force, but were given a letter of reprimand for not activating the in-car video camera at the scene per department policy.

SIXTEEN IA investigations in 11 years. That's one and a half a year, or roughly one instance every 9 months. Unfortunately there's no information on whether there were 16 exonerations, 16 convictions, or whatever. It is very interesting to note that Harless has been officially reprimanded for not turning on the dash cam - as well as having at least one excessive force claim against him already.

This guy's a bad cop, and the Canton PD has known about it for a while.

That is all.

And Speaking of MA and Freedom (Or Lack Thereof)...

Stretch sends in this lovely little story about a nice little abuse of power and technology, shockingly here in Massachusetts...

Lawyer: Cop scanner ‘crosses line’

Civil libertarians are raising the alarm over the state’s plans to create a Big Brother database that could map drivers’ whereabouts with police cruiser-mounted scanners that capture thousands of license plates per hour — storing that information indefinitely where local cops, staties, feds and prosecutors could access it as they choose.

“What kind of a society are we creating here?” asked civil rights lawyer Harvey Silverglate, who along with the ACLU fears police abuse. “There comes a point where the surveillance is so pervasive and total that it’s a misnomer to call a society free any longer.”

Two thoughts on the title, and then I'll get onto the article:

1. At first I thought they were outlawing the scanners that old people listen to for news of hoodlums, speeders, and other lawbreakers in their town. I remember my grandfather listening to his scanner religiously...

2. I knew it was too much to hope that MA would be taking on the TSA scanners...

Now, the article... This is one of those "first pass" stories - at first pass, it doesn't sound all that bad, does it? I mean, cops are allowed to call in plates, right? They're out in the public domain, and we permit our police force to check on plates and such. What's the harm? As far as keeping records? Who's to say they can't keep records now? Personally, I think the more records like this they keep the better - nothing clogs a system up tight like far too much extraneous data...

Follow the Benjamins, though:

Some ALPR scanners already are deployed on Massachusetts roads. State police have two. Several cities use them for parking enforcement. Chelsea has four scanner-mounted cruisers.

(emphasis mine). BINGO. That's what it's all about right there - as this technology becomes more widespread, gaining begrudging acceptance, etc., more towns are going to see this as a fantastic revenue opportunity. Parking infractions, moving violations (I'd wager it's a trivial matter to record a specific plate and match it against known distances and calculate speed and, of course, fine), etc.; the opportunity to turn this technology into a bona fide cash cow will be far too tempting for cash-strapped towns.

So, we're basically granting carte blanche to our police forces to drive around all day recording licence plates. It's not enough that they already know where we live, where we work, etc.; now they want to know where we go for lunch? Are we going to have to explain our whereabouts if our plate is discovered in the dark side of town at 3AM? And isn't there something in some old musty parchment about no unreasonable search? I'd say this is pretty damn unreasonable...

I put this in the "MA Miracle" group, but this is hardly limited to MA. The first thing they're going to do with this technology is raise a dumptruck full of money through parking tickets and other civil infractions. Red light cameras have paved the way for municipalities to raise money by simply using cameras to record lawbreakers - there's already precedent - so this is just the natural progression of things. Once cities and towns realize what a goldmine this is, they'll fall over themselves ordering up the units - I applaud the manufacturer of this software for knowing their target demographic.

I just hope they get a parking ticket every single day until the end of time...

That is all.

Who Says Bloggers Don't Have Editors?

I made a mistake in my last post, typing "NJ" twice when the last should have been "NY" (it has been corrected). In less than an hour, I get an IM:

weerdbeard@gmail.com: FYI you listed "NJ" twice in your latest post. While deserving I think an "NY" needs to be in there in its stead!

You think the NY Times gets an IM from Weer'dbeard when it makes a mistake?

That is all.

This Should Surprise No One...

The Ten States That Restrict Personal Freedom (And Those That Protect It)

24/7 considered the ten states that the report lists as “most free” and those ten that are “least free.” We have used Mercatus Center analysis and definitions for what makes people free. Here is a list of the most and least free states, according to the Mercatus Center.
The States That Protect Personal Freedom:
1. New Hampshire
Fiscal freedom: 0.299 (2nd highest)
Regulatory freedom: 0.058 (18th highest)
Personal freedom: 0.084 (11th highest)
Net Migration (2000-2009): +2.8%

The States That Restrict Personal Freedom:

5. Massachusetts

Fiscal freedom: -0.023 (23rd lowest)

Regulatory freedom: -0.222 (2nd lowest)

Personal freedom: -0.147 (4th lowest)

Net Migration (2000-2009): -4.3%

MA only came in the top five, but given the competition (in order, HI, CA, NJ, and NY) that's a pretty crowded field. Second lowest in regulatory freedom - but that's got nothing to do with why businesses - and taxpayers - are leaving in droves, right "Cadillac" Deval? Fourth lowest in personal freedom, yet we still see skyrocketing crime in MA's big cities. Nope, that's just coincidence. And yet NH, literally next door, is ranked #1. Go figure...

New Hampshire's motto is "Live Free or Die"; Massachusetts's model is "Live Free or Here"...

That is all.

Friday WTF?

Okay. Who can identify this bizarre automobile?

(picture taken from link here)

This is a Dodge Deora, a custom show car designed in the 1960s for Chrysler, most likely as a theoretical Mopar counterpart to the El Camino and Ranchero available from Chevy and Ford, respectively (side note: The GMC version of the El Camino was the Caballero). It's gotta be one of the weirdest looking carrucks (car-truck hybrid a la El Camino, Ranchero, Subaru Brat, or Dodge Rampage) ever conceived. It takes "cab-forward" design to the extreme, utilizing a Ford rear window lift to gain entry with a swinging door.

BMW Isetta, eat your heart out!

That is all.

Friday Gun Pr0n #224

Today's gun pr0n is a brace of guns from mopar and his lovely bride:

Rugetta? Baruger?

Obviously that's one of the new Ruger SR1911s, and next to it is a Beretta Bobcat Inox in .22LR. They'll be coming to the Fourth Annual Northeast Bloggershoot, and I'm curious to try both. The Ruger because, well, it's a Ruger 1911; the Beretta because mouseguns have always held a special fascination. The Beretta's especially of interest because of the tip-up barrel - that's an ingenious bit of engineering, and I'd like to take a closer look at it.

Thanks for sharing these today, Mr. & Mrs. Mopar!

That is all.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Need a Laugh?

After the heavy news, we need something to make us laugh, right?

Robb Allen gives the top ten reasons creepy van guy is better than the TSA.

UPDATE: PISSED has sent in a picture of the van in question:


Robb is one funny bastard, that's all I'm sayin'...

That is all.

The Video...

By now, pretty much everyone's commented on "The Video" (Weerd has a link to it in this post). In a nutshell, a Canton, OH police officer goes certifiably batshit insane upon finding out that the guy he's been harassing has a CCW license and a concealed handgun. He first threatens to beat the guy up ("put lumps on you") and graduates to threatening to kill him ("put 10 in you and then go home and sleep like a baby") over the course of the video.

According to the Canton, OH PD's facebook page, the officer has been "relieved of duty" - given that these types of officers generally do not last long without a compliant or completely inept chain of command, I suspect he's got a paid vacation. Several things spring to mind about this:

1. I am shocked, frankly, that the video saw the light of day. I'll tip my hat to the Canton PD that the video didn't suddenly "go missing" or have "technical difficulties" - go watch that video (take blood pressure meds first). It's bad. REAL bad. That cop has serious issues with anger management, and he does not handle himself in a professional manner. His partner's reaction doesn't exactly instill confidence that these sorts of incidents are reported to the chain of command - one wonders what would have happened had the guy who was arrested not retained counsel.

2. This cop needs to be fired, prosecuted, and should seek professional help. If this is how he reacts to a citizen legally carrying a firearm, how the bloody hell is he going to react to some punk pulling a stolen gun on him? If he continues as a police officer, he will kill someone eventually - generally these types of incidents don't happen out of the blue, and I'd wager that there are several other such incidents that were not followed up on out there. Even if he's fired, he should never work as a cop again - or a security guard, etc. in any sort of position of authority. At least not until he exorcises whatever demons he's carrying around inside his head.

3. The dude in the video really needs to learn to clam up. Once the cop threatened his life, nothing he said was going to matter. "I would like to talk to my attorney" is the only thing that should have come out of his mouth after being threatened with physical harm. Whether or not you believe his story is a matter of discussion; the one thing that's crystal clear is that nothing he said was going to influence the officer's demeanor one whit. In a situation like this, silence is golden.

4. You do have the phone number of a 2A-versed lawyer memorized/in your cell phone/among your personal effects/with your carry permit, right? RIGHT?

5. Both officers display, IMHO, shockingly bad situational awareness. The partner is rooting around in the back seat of the car with absolutely no regard for what the two people in the front seat are doing - they are not removed from the vehicle, they are not restrained, they are just kinda watching him over their shoulder. If either had malicious thoughts, that cop would have been dead before he knew what happened, and chances are good that Officer Steroid would have stroked out before he had a chance to respond.




That video is frightening on many levels. First, that an officer would be that close to outright murder and his partner shrugs it off? It sure puts the Jose Guerena and Erik Scott shootings in a different light, doesn't it? It shows the need for CCW holders to rehearse traffic stop scenarios beforehand, and to have the number of a competent 2A-versed attorney available (this video came to light as a result of the defendant's legal counsel). It shows that not all cops are our friends, that not all police officers are friendly to CCW holders - in fact, they can be downright hostile.

We don't know all the facts of the case, that much is true. What we can assume, though, is that the citizen with the CCW has a clean record (since he has the CCW permit); we can assume that whatever the reason for the traffic stop was insignificant (since the first thing the DA did was offer to drop all charges in exchange for not pressing charges against the officer/PD); and we can extrapolate that we need to exercise the greatest care when dealing with members of the law enforcement community. We don't have to see them as the enemy, necessarily (although in this case it's certainly fitting); but we view them as allies at our own peril.

Sadly, they're not all like officer Matt Lyons, LawDog, or MattG.

That is all.

Music As Time Machine...

So I'm sitting in my truck on the drive to work, and what comes on the radio but Guns N Roses' "Paradise City". For six minutes and 46 seconds I was a teenager again, listening to the cassette tape version of Appetite for Destruction in my buddy Neil's apartment off-campus. Kenny was playing air drums while leaning against the gas stove, Bob was playing air guitar, and Neil had lead vocals. Hey, it was his apartment.

It's funny how certain things are tied to the past, and how something as simple as hearing a song on the radio can transport you back to that moment in time. Certain songs, certain albums, even, are tied to points in my life: Pink Floyd's "The Wall" with high school, "Appetite for Destruction", Whitesnake's "Slip of the Tongue", Van Halen's "5150"; these are the soundtrack to high school and college (yes, I'm a middle-aged 40 year old former metalhead). Nirvana and Pearl Jam took over in college, and Offspring, Rage Against the Machine, and Limp Bizkit for graduate school.

Much like using the car you were driving as a yardstick for measuring time, what's playing on the radio is much the same way. It's neat the way our brains are wired - that a song, a simple juxtaposition of vocals, drums, and guitar, can evoke memories of a phase of one's life. I'm told that it's much the same with certain smells, like the smell of the ocean or chlorine from a pool (I have no sense of smell, so I wouldn't know); even certain sounds can evoke powerful memories - for me, the sound of "peepers" in the pond down the street are the surest sign of summer I can think of.

So, what's on your soundtrack?

That is all.

The Green Police?

Stretch sends in a story that forces me to dust off my wookie suit:

UN security council to consider climate change peacekeeping

A special meeting of the United Nations security council is due to consider whether to expand its mission to keep the peace in an era of climate change.

Small island states, which could disappear beneath rising seas, are pushing the security council to intervene to combat the threat to their existence.

There has been talk, meanwhile, of a new environmental peacekeeping force – green helmets – which could step into conflicts caused by shrinking resources.

Very timely article, considering Tam's recent missive about gun ownership and such. This is exactly the kind of story that feeds into the "blue helmets on American soil" nonsense that populate some gun forums and chat rooms (and blog). Heck, if you'd talked to the Jay G. of 1999, he was pretty damn well convinced that Klinton (yes, I spelled it with a K; my wookie suit has always been long and luxurious, thank you) was going to suspend the 2000 elections and keep the peace with Belgian troops.

But here's the thing: The "troops" aren't going to have guns and tanks, they're going to have laptops and rulebooks. They're going to legislate everything away, bit by bit, rather than one dramatic showdown - they know they'll lose the dramatic showdown. What's especially notable in the article is that there's no debate whatsoever about the reality of "climate change", that nebulous, squishy nothing that used to be "global warming" which used to be "hole in the ozone layer" which used to be "acid rain", which used to be "the new ice age", which... "Climate change" is real, they claim, and therefore it is.

And if they do start painting those helmets green, well, a whole generation of keyboard commandos is going to have to change their targets...

That is all.

Nothing Like the First Time...

Commenter, blogshoot and blogdinner attendee, and good friend Brad_in_ma got his MA LTC recently. He bought his first gun not all that long ago, and was kind enough to share his first time at the range with her with me. And, through me, with you.

I went to Westford Sportsmen's with friends... I think I'll be joining there once I drop the news about the Ruger to Mrs. Brad... Mrs. Brad will be able to get her hands around the place and see it as more of a Gentlemen's club and less of place where Harley riding, shaved-head, gun toting, knuckle-dragging, cousin-humping, mouth-breathing, Michelle Bachmann loving troglodyte red-necks go to blow shit up while swilling case after case of Pabst beer. The grounds were clean, trimmed, relatively free from weeds and the 'cover' structures were in decent shape. Having seen the club-house from when I had the March 19 safety course, I can say also that it too is in good repair. On to the important stuff.

Fun, fun, fun was had by all. Wow. Just wow. Wish you could have seen the many Cheshire Cat, shit-eatin' grins I was sporting. They compared to the grin BabyGirl G. was sporting while on the back of your Harley. I was making two to three inch groups pretty consistantly at 25 feet. At 75 feet in waning light, I was able to keep most of the rounds on an 8" square paper. And as dusk approached, those little .22lr rounds were spitting nice jet of orange flame out the muzzle.

Pals and I blew through about 300 rounds in 90 minutes, give or take. My compadres and I were filling magazines for each other almost as fast as we could empty them. The little Ruger digested everything I fed it. I had one dud round from the Federal bulk stuff, and I blew through both 100-round boxes of the CCI and Winchester. In fact, we blew through the 100 round box-o-CCI so fast, my friend thought it was a 50-round box. Towards the end, I had one failure to chamber, I think because the works were getting gummed up with junk and the bolt didn't slam into battery with quite the right amount of force. I should probably spray a little oil on the internal workings of the mags too, just to make sure the follower slides up and down, nice and easy. As for ammo, I think I'll be sticking with the Federal bulk stuff for now since it works just fine and dandy, and is highly affordable.

The bull barrel did well too, only getting just a little warm to the touch. The rear sight had a minor issue, with a small pin working loose after a while. I was able to push it back in most of the way, and seat it flush by gently pushing the pin into place with the 'foot' of a magazine. I think I should get a small bottle of lock-tite and put a drop or two on the pin to secure it.
Ah, magazines . . . I need more magazines. Lots more. Like four or five more. Two is just not enough. I also need to get a mag speed loader gizmo or at least toss an old work glove into the bag . . . while the mag does have a pull down button to compress the spring, an old work glove would make compressing the spring a whole lot more comfortable on the thumb. One other thing I need for the range bag -- BUG SPRAY. Skeeters last night were tough. Lousy, malaria-carrying bastards deserve to die a horrible death. In fact, I was reminded of the Gary Larson "Far Side" 'toon where one skeeter hits an artery and the other skeeter pleads for the first to pull out. Funny stuff.

I have to work on accuracy now . . . I think I might put a dot of bright orange paint on the front sight for visibility. I also think the rear sight is a bit off . . . rounds were impacting left and perhaps a bit low. Since My Ruger has a bull barrel and is considered a 'target' model, the rear sight has both windage and elevation adjustments -- I'll have to make a couple minor adjustments. But before I do that, I want to run some more rounds though it in a controlled manner and really figure out what's going on.

Anyway . . . . I can't wait to go again. And the event at doubletrouble's is only 3 weeks away.

Do I like my purchase? Am I happy with it? You bet your pasty white, dago-wop ass I am. [ed: My ass is not pasty white. I'm Italian. It's olive...]

This is my Ruger. There are many others like it, but this one is MINE.

Oh . . . and I've named it, too. Since it is my first, the name is now Cherry. First, Cherry . . . get it?
Awesome. Just awesome.

Interestingly enough, my first gun was a Ruger as well. Shortly after getting my license some [mumble] years ago, I walked into the gun shop portion of the range where I'd taken my first pistol shots, looked at the cases of handguns, and selected a 6" barrel Ruger Security Six in .357 Magnum. It was sleek. It was chambered in the .357 Magnum I would come to love so much. It was cheap. And the cylinder only backed out on occasion!

But she was mine.

There is simply nothing like the first gun that you plunk down your hard-earned cash to buy. In the years since I got the Security Six, I've acquired many different firearms, some better, some worse, some simply different. But when I take the Security Six out of the safe, it fills my hand like nothing else - because it brings with it the memories of being the first.

Enjoy Cherry, Brad - and never let her go.

That is all.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

And Yes, Even More MA Miracles...

State Street cutting 850 technology jobs, most of them in Bay State


State Street Corp. said yesterday it will cut 850 jobs, including 558 in Massachusetts, as it launches a second major round of layoffs in less than a year.

The Boston financial services giant said all the affected workers are in information technology and described the cuts as part of an “IT transformation,’’ where transactions and data can be processed in less costly ways. State Street manages investments and handles record keeping on trillions of dollars for pensions and other investors; it depends heavily on technology in its business.

This brings the number of layoffs in MA alone to nearly 1,000 workers. Any guesses on how long it will be before we receive another glowing media report about how well the economy is doing? I mean, it's not like we bailed State Street out already or... wait. At least they had the common sense to forgo bonuses after the bailout, ri- wait. Maybe they should have done some cutting in the management areas - but then again, they don't want to farm those jobs overseas...

State Street claims to be committed to staying in Massachusetts - but not to the people that it employs there, apparently...

That is all.

Bullying Is A Federal Case?

Feds investigate Minn. school district after civil rights complaint


(CNN) -- Federal authorities are investigating "incidents involving harassment and bullying" in Minnesota's largest school district, the U.S. Department of Justice confirmed in an email to CNN.


The civil rights investigation is currently underway in the suburban Minneapolis school district, Anoka-Hennepin, a community already embattled in a culture war over homosexuality in the classroom.

The "war" is over the fact that the school district has opted to remain "neutral" on gender and sexuality issues. The "war" stems from the school declining to put a policy into place for sexual orientation issues and allegations of bullying stemming from such issues. And now the Justice Department is expending resources to investigate bullying in MN over sexual orientation issues.


Is this really an effective use of our Federal employee time, money, and effort? Have we no other pressing matters that we need to inject the Feds into a local school district over their handling of a policy matter? Bullying sucks, there's no doubt about that; it must be even harder when it's over something completely outside of your control - this does not, however, excuse the FedGov from marching in over a difference in policy opinion.


Do we really need to go down that particular rabbit hole?


That is all.

Please Note: NOT Massachusetts...

OGNTSA.

'Bullet Tax' Proposed By Mayoral Candidate
A mayoral candidate's plan to reduce violence in Baltimore includes a "bullet tax" that he said will increase the cost of committing a crime.Otis Rolley said he would, if elected, propose a $1 per bullet tax on all bullet purchases in the city. The idea was part of an overall crime plan he unveiled Tuesday.
I'm guessing that the rest of his anti-crime initiatives were just as grounded in reality. You know, like stopping drive-by shootings by banning scooters... Now, Rolley is only a candidate, and as such hasn't garnered the approval of a majority of Baltimore residents (yet), so he's not on a par with Mumbles - yet - though with stupid ideas like this it's not for lack of trying.

He then goes on to say that banning guns won't work because criminals steal guns - which completely ignores the fact that they'll steal the bullets too. This yutz is in danger of collapsing in a black hole of stupid, which means he'd fit in perfectly with Mumbles and Bloomin'idiotberg. Here's the best part:
Rolley, a Democrat, served as the city's planning director from 2003 to 2007.
So, this nutball has held an active role in Baltimore's inner workings, and this is what he comes up with. No wonder Baltimore is in such rough shape.

I shudder to think of what idiocy Mumbles will come up with to top this...

That is all.

Maine Knows How to Do It Right...

Wally sends in this feel good article:

Ammo therapy

NORTH ANSON -- For a few minutes Sunday, Tim Valliere, 25, of Portland, felt normal.

The Deering High School graduate, who served his country with the 82nd Airborne Division in Afghanistan and Iraq, sustained a traumatic brain injury, is deaf in his right ear, has torn muscles in his lower back and has post-traumatic stress disorder.

But Sunday, at the Warrior Legacy Foundation's Wounded Heroes Machine Gun Shoot, Valliere was in his prime.

That's just awesome. They hold an annual machine gun shoot for wounded vets, but that's not all. The Warrior Legacy Foundation also organizes food drives, toy drives, and helps vets get assistance they need. They also have a section for vets to share their stories, and have a donations page for any who are interested (and yes, they are tax-deductible).

Here's the best part, though:
Attorney General Bill Schneider, who graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point and is a retired U.S. Army officer, organized the ammunition between volleys, and Gov. Paul LePage arrived for a visit as the first of several volleys wrapped up.
According to Wally, AG Schneider wasn't just organizing ammunition. He was loading magazines for the vets. Take THAT Martha "We discourage self-help" Coakley!

Every once in a great while, my normally elevated levels of cynicism about this country are brought down just a bit.

That is all.

I See Your Glock 1911...

...and raise you the new Glock revolver, Caleb.

Glock 21R

Heh. This came in from Stretch, with the caveat that he received it from his local gunshop NOVA Armament. The first thing I noticed, of course, was the Colt cylinder and release; next is the Smith & Wesson-style porting on the barrel; the rest is either taken from Glock (trigger & trigger guard, front of grip; side of barrel) or 'shopped.

Well played, NOVA, well played.

That is all.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Gunnie Reviews...

Seems like there are a buncha reviews out there these days. Here's a few I've come across that might be of interest:


Thought these might be of some interest - if not, hey, it's more gun pr0n!

That is all.

Almost Got It...

My #1 Blogson e-mailed this to me as being, in his words, "up your alley":

(taken from here)

I mentioned in comments that there was one type missing: The BMW 1200RT/Honda ST1100/Kawasaki Concours that's only 5 years old, has 150K on the clock, and a rider with bugs tattooed on his eyelids - and a permanent smile. There's a subset of #2 (sportbike), the $20K Ducati superbike that's filling in for a Ferrari, but otherwise spot-on.

And I don't care which one y'are, if you're riding it, I'll wave - it's not what you ride, it's that you ride...

That is all.

Insert Facepalm Here...

Stretch sends in this head-scratcher:

Police officers shoot each other as they try to arrest child porn suspect at Harry Potter screening
Two policemen are recovering after they were shot by fellow officers as they tried to arrest a man on child pornography charges outside a crowded move theatre.

The incident happened as undercover officers tried to apprehend the unarmed man in the parking lot as he left a screening of Harry Potter in Plainville, Connecticut.

The officers opened fire after Eric Gothberg, 45, suddenly reached for his waistband after resisting arrest.
Adrenaline is a scary substance. When under its influence, folks do crazy, unpredictable things. Things like forget the four rules and fire seemingly at random when the perception is your life is in danger. I'm not ready to condemn these cops - I've never had someone try to shoot me. Sure, from the sidelines it appears they overreacted - but from their point of view, as undercover cops going to intercept a sexual predator, this guy could have been ready for anything.

Fortunately, no one was seriously injured and they caught the guy, so all's well in the end. There's at least one police officer who had better either get some more training or think about getting out of undercover work - had the suspect actually had a gun, this guy's marksmanship under fire wouldn't have saved him. While everything worked out in the end, had the bad guy been more determined, we might be reading about a real nasty scene here.

And I'd rather snicker at the Keystone Kops-esque scene with the perp in custody than a Dirty Harry one with a dead perp from a twitchy cop...

That is all.

Tuesday Campaign Pic, Part 8

If it's Tuesday, it's time for another Øbama/Biden 2012 Campaign Poster:

I fear that ship is more seaworthy, though...

That is all.