Backlash, finally.

This is very interesting. Less than 48 hours after the shooting at the Highlands Ranch STEM school, a surrogate group for the Brady Campaign organized a “vigil” for the victims.

Of course, the Brady Campaign doesn’t do things like this out of the goodness of their hearts, and the whole thing was a clumsy attempt at politicizing the tragedy. That’s nothing new, but what is new is the fact that many of the students stormed out, specifically citing their dismay at the event. Their sentiments are echoed by parents and even the families of the victims.

Even more interesting is that this isn’t just being covered by right-wing blogs. The mainstream press has picked up on it.  Hopefully, this is the moment things break and people start calling out the gun-control movement for its predatory and morbid tactics.

The Brady Campaign was once known as Handgun Control Inc.  By the late 1980’s, it became apparent that the general public wasn’t interested in banning handguns, so everybody switched to the “assault weapons” meme. 

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Still alive.

Most of my recordings the last few years have been done on fairly limited equipment: a Fender Jazz bass, a few effects pedals, and some processing on the computer. Over the last decade, I’ve compiled a series of sketches, but life and work being what they are, I haven’t had time to do much more.

I recently picked up a Synthstrom Deluge.  It’s a wonderful little blinky box, but I’m still learning all the capabilities.  Workflow is shockingly easy to manage, and considering my last real experience with MIDI was when the Roland Juno and DX-7 were the big things, it’s quite powerful.  I’ll be gaining back some significant free time in the near future, and this should be a great palette to work with.

So far, I’m just poking around the parameters, and everything sounds like 1997 trance.  It’ll be a bit before I can build a sample library and work my voice around this, but for now, enjoy.

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The Bump Stock Ban

I’m going to give you the short version up front. That bump stock you bought a few months ago? It’s now the most dangerous thing you could possibly own. It’s classified as a machine gun, you have 90 days to get rid of it, and there’s no way to make it legal.

You have two options. The first is to destroy it. I suggest having a witness present to make a video recording. The second is to turn it over to law enforcement. Have a witness present and get a written receipt as well as the name and number of the official to whom you surrendered it.

There’s no third option. Since these are essentially post-1986 machine guns, there’s no way to register them. If you want to play games and hold onto it, remember that 82 people burned to death at Waco on the mere suspicion of that.

The deadline is March 21st.

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It’s a Supreme Court Appointment, Not the End of the World.

So, you might have heard Justice Kennedy is retiring. The news was hard to miss, given the gnashing of teeth on the left and the gleeful anticipation on the right. For the most part, this isn’t really much to worry about, and the people claiming it’s the end of the Republic are being petty and disingenuous.

Let’s all take a deep breath here. In. Out. In. Hold it. Out. Now jazz hands. OK. Let’s talk this through like grown-ups.

This should come as a surprise to absolutely nobody. Kennedy has been making noises about retirement for at least three years. The idea that this blindsided the DNC leadership means that they’ve hidden their heads in the sand under the impression he’d wait out Trump’s first term. That was beyond stupid. The fact they’re unprepared for this means they’re still laboring under the same smug complacency that has bled the party dry at the state level over the last decade, and the same one that led them to nominate an awful, untrusted Presidential candidate who couldn’t beat Donald J.

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Here We Go Again

17 children are dead because the state failed to protect them.  This isn’t about “assault weapons,” the NRA, or Donald Trump.  This situation is a grim litany of apathy, ineptitude, and ultimately cowardice.

The FBI was explicitly warned.  They never acted.  The Broward County Sheriff’s department was called to the shooter’s home 39 times but never saw fit to take action.  The deputy charged with protecting the school hid from the shooter.  The first officers to respond to the scene chose not to intervene.

So, we should launch immediate and urgent inquiries into this situation, right?  Wrong.  Instead, we’re told by politicians and the media that the solution is to ban the tools the shooter used.  That’s how little sense we make as a society.

It’s a morbid bit of irony that Sheriff Scott Israel, whose department investigated the shooter’s home more than 3 dozen times and whose deputies showed cowardice throughout the shooting, is leading the charge to advocate for gun control.

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The Last Jedi isn’t the Star Wars film we wanted, but it’s the one we need.

The Last Jedi has more than its share of plot twists. There’s almost no way to discuss the movie without spoiling them. If you haven’t seen it yet, please do so before reading on.

Remember the last scene of The Force Awakens? Rey has tracked Luke Skywalker across the galaxy. She seeks training, and the Resistance needs his help. She shows up on his doorstep and presents him with a lightsaber. The movie ends with that shot. Rey’s face is filled with expectation. Luke’s expression is hard to gauge.

It’s not just any lightsaber. It was Luke’s first, the one that belonged to his father, Anakin Skywalker, the Chosen One who was prophesied to bring balance to the Force, trained by Jedi Master Kenobi…oh, for $%^&# sake.

It was with no small amount of relief that I laughed aloud when Luke’s first act in the new film is to take the saber, examine it, and throw it over his shoulder.

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The One about the CDC and Guns

One of the canards we keep hearing from gun-control advocates is that the CDC is somehow banned from doing research on gun violence, and that this is a contributing factor to the problem. President Obama used it, Secretary Clinton used it, and the media has latched on to it since Newtown.

The problem is, it’s an absolute lie. The CDC can do all the studies they want. However, if they want to do advocacy, they don’t get federal funding to do so.

Their crusade against guns (particularly handguns) started in the 1970’s, but things reached a head in 1993 with the publication of Arthur Kellerman’s “Gun ownership as a risk factor for homicide in the home” study, which despite being easily and soundly debunked, was published and repeated like crazy among the media and gun-control advocates. Any time you hear “you’re X times more likely to get shot if you own a gun,” it’s a reference to this study.

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But they’re not coming for your guns…

Another mass shooting, another opportunity to politicians ignore the root causes and just exploit it for pet legislation.  Here’s the rundown of what has been proposed on the federal level so far.

HR 3998: the Protect America Act of 2017.  What an inspiring name! This one claims its purpose is to deny firearms sales to “known or suspected terrorists.”  So, if you’re on a vague, unconstitutional list with no notification or due process, you can be denied the right to own a gun.  This has nothing to do with the Las Vegas shooter.

HR 3999: the “bump stock” bill.  This would outlaw “bump fire” stocks, as well as “any part or combination of parts that is designed and functions to increase the rate of fire of a semiautomatic rifle but does not convert the semiautomatic rifle into a machinegun.”  That language is vague enough to include any replacement trigger, even one that simply makes a hunting rifle more accurate or a pistol easier to shoot for someone with weak hands.  

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Not Really Katrina

As Hurricane Irma approaches the Virgin Islands, Governor Kenneth Mapp has issued an order allowing the National Guard to confiscate lawfully owned firearms from citizens if deemed necessary.

Many people are drawing parallels between this and the situation in New Orleans in 2005, when Mayor Ray Nagin signed a similar order. The NRA brought litigation then, and Congress responded by outlawing any such future confiscations.

So, it seems Mapp’s order would be illegal, right? Not exactly.

As an unincorporated territory, Virgin Islands are governed under the provisions of the Revised Organic Act of the Virgin Islands. The US Constitution, which limits the authority of the federal government, doesn’t really apply there. It’s something of a gray area. The USVI proposed their own constitution in 2007, but nothing came of it.

This, along with the Insular Cases as precedent, will cause real problems for 2nd (or 5th) Amendment claims. It stinks, but this is the situation.

Gizmonic Feedback Alterator #3

Some days, you just feed some material into the machinery. Some of those days, something interesting comes out. I’ve no idea what to call it, so here goes.

[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/336865088″ params=”color=45acc1&auto_play=false&hide_related=true&show_artwork=true” width=”100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” /]

Trump’s War

It appears the Syrian government has used chemical weapons, namely Sarin, on its own citizens. It’s only human to feel grief and outrage. Something needs to be done.

The frustrating truth is, we’re not the ones to do it. Sryia poses no direct threat to the United States or its interests. Military action on our part is simply not justified. It would be nice to see the United Nations grow a pair and intervene, but we have no real authority to act on our own. To do so is to engage in exactly the sort of overbearing forced regime changes we so resent Vladimir Putin for doing.

It is also a complete violation of a very significant campaign promise made by Donald Trump, which gives me pause. Trump ran on the idea that we wouldn’t get involved in things like this, that we wouldn’t become the world’s policeman, and that he’d pursue a Wilsonian “America First” sort of isolationism.

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It Looks Like Private FFL’s Are a Thing Again

Once upon a time, you could order a gun through the Sears catalog and have it mailed to your door.  Contrary to much of the political rhetoric you may have heard, that’s no longer the case.  In fact, it hasn’t been since 1968, when the Gun Control Act mandated the requirement for a Federal Firearms License (FFL) to transfer firearms.  Essentially, one had to acquire the license to “deal” in firearms, and the licensee would act as a gatekeeper between manufacturers and the general public.

Many collectors acquired the license and used it to transfer firearms to friends and other collectors.  That was, until Josh Sugarmann of the Violence Policy Center decided he didn’t like that.  Among several of his odious initiatives, he successfully badgered the Clinton administration into wiping out non-profit, or “kitchen table,” FFL’s in the 1990’s.  Since then, common wisdom was that the ATF would not issue a Type 1 FFL to anybody who was not “engaged in the business” of selling firearms for a profit.

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How Trump Happened

We’ve heard the blame shifting.  We’ve seen the finger pointing.  By now, you’ve no doubt heard the theory from the Left:  Donald Trump won the election because of uneducated white males, which is liberal codespeak for racists.  Apparently, there are 60 million or so of them.

When the last shred of an argument one has is a shockingly and unfeasibly large allegation of racism, it’s time to reconsider strategy.  They were wrong, so wrong it cost the Democrats everything.  Hillary Clinton must be fuming that she not only lost–she lost to Donald Trump.

Just consider that.  He’s the most ridiculous and inept Presidential candidate we’ve ever had.  Any one of his stupendous blunders or unearthed scandals would have been enough to destroy any other campaign.  How did he get this far?

The answer is simple: anger.  Not just the kind that makes people throw a vase and feel better, but the kind that gets deferred.  

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Y’all $#*%ers Need Talos

So, the Skyrim Special Edition is out.  PC players have long had access to graphical upgrades and community mods, but the SE brings those to console players.

Some of the graphics updates are subtle, while others are still quite noticeable.  While the frame rate is still locked at 30fps, load times are drastically reduced.  That said, this is still Skyrim, so some of the character models are janky, and many of the glitches are still there.  Expect to see the occasional mammoth falling out of the sky and such.

The mods are an inexhaustible supply of novelty, though.  The unofficial patch fixes a great number of nagging issues.  Others offer everything from small tweaks (realistic weather effects, better companion dialogue) to entirely new quests and cities.

If you never played this game when it came out, this is a good chance to rectify that mistake. For those of us who did, the upgrades and mods certainly make it worth revisiting.

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Do Let’s Shut Up

I’m sick of the manufactured outrage this election.  The American public was fully aware what kind of people both Presidential candidates were when we nominated them.  We have only ourselves to blame.

Let’s be honest and stop with the fist-waving and name-calling.  We relinquished that right with an enthusiasm and abandon that should trigger nothing but shame in retrospect.

Donald Trump is, for lack of a more articulate adjective, an asshole.  He’s the spoiled rich kid, the bully, the fraternity jock who hopes a comely cheerleader will get drunk enough not to remember who took advantage of her in the morning.  The evidence of his disdain for nonwhite elites is apparent to anyone who knows how to use Google, and it always has been.

Those who voted for him in the primaries should have known this.  The only explanation is that we’re truly desperate or that we chose to disregard that in favor of bumper-sticker slogans.

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The Lonely World of No Man’s Sky

This may be one of the most hyped media properties of the last two years. There was no way the finished product would live up to expectations, especially when those were built on unrealistic assumptions.

This isn’t an outer-space shoot ’em up. Players looking for a fast-paced action game are going to be disappointed. Is it the fault of the developers? No. They promised an exploration game built on a dynamic, procedurally-generated universe. On that score, they delivered.

What we do get is a haunting, quiet experience. It rewards, well, just walking around and enjoying the world it creates. There are no easy answers, and the player is expected to figure out the mechanics and lore himself. Its only presumption is that we simply live in it, which is a brave design choice on its own.

The Democrats don’t care about gun violence

Oh, sure, they pretend to.  They make sure the media sees their crocodile tears following every public shooting.  They do their little sit-ins for measures that gut due process, and they push selective gun bans that do nothing about the underlying madness that grips our society.

But when it comes to initiatives that actually reduce violence, they clam up.  Case in point:  current Democratic Vice Presidential nominee Tim Kaine.  As Mayor of Richmond, he backed a program that actually reduced gun violence, and now he’s taking flak for it.

That’s not Alanis Morissette irony; it’s the real thing.  Democrats don’t really care about inner-city violence, which represents the vast majority of firearms-related homicides in this country.  They care about symbolic gestures that score them political points.

Among other things, Project Exile was notable for receiving the support of both the NRA and the Brady Campaign (then known as Handgun Control, Inc.).  

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Black Lives Matter: We All Deserve Better

This group has been a problem since its inception.  It is a leaderless, anarchical mess.  Their juvenile shock tactics have dismayed established civil rights leaders, and their constant drumbeat of hostility towards law enforcement has now inspired outright murder.

That’s it.  We need to be done with them as a country.

It’s hard to write that because I’m well aware of the sources of their anger.  The unconscionable killings of Tamir Rice, Eric Garner, and countless other black men by law enforcement are unacceptable.  The disproportionate prosecution, ridiculous mandatory sentences, and deficient legal representation black men receive in our justice system is a travesty, and it is utterly unAmerican.

Of course, to hear representatives of Black Lives Matter tell it, I don’t get to have an opinion because I’m white.  That’s preposterous and dishonest.  I don’t need to be abused by a rogue police officer to tell that there are elements of our system that are terribly broken and in need of reform.  

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Hollis, Again

Less than two years ago, a guy named Jay Hollis brought a case to the Texas District Court challenging several aspects of the 1934 National Firearms Act and 1968 Gun Control Act. Long story short, he wanted to build a machine gun for personal use, and the ATF said no. He then filed a rambling, poorly argued case, despite knowing that his actions were illegal before he began this whole endeavor.

I predicted then that it would fail on the District level.  I was correct.  I predicted he would appeal to the 5th Circuit, where he would also lose.  I was correct on that as well.

Well, yay for me, I guess.

He needs to put a stop to this right now, before he causes us all serious harm.

If this case goes to the Supreme Court, Justice Breyer owns it.  He’ll have Sotomayor, Kagan, and Ginsburg in his corner.  Without Scalia to act as a counterweight, Kennedy will swing to the other side.  

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False Flags, Part 641

There’s a website up today asking that gun buyers “share the safety” by sharing guns with people in “impoverished” areas. The shared guns will supposedly go to “locations with highest incidences of police, security guard, and vigilante violence against unarmed citizens.”

Yes, it apes the NRA’s website design. Yes, the links all take you to legitimate sites. No, it’s not real.

Both the NRA and Smith & Wesson have denied knowledge of it. I don’t see how it doesn’t constitute libel.

The bigger question is, why stoop to this? That site cost money and effort. It isn’t a weekend project by some college student. It’s obviously fronted by one of the major groups, but the whois information for the site is redacted.

This isn’t the first time they’ve done something like this, even in the recent past. The question remains: if the arguments of gun-control advocates are so compelling and (they claim) resonate with a vast majority of the public, why do they have to resort to these sorts of deceptions?

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Lies, More Lies, and the Liars Who Tell Them

This has been a tough week for gun-control advocates.  We had the worst mass shooting in American history, and they just couldn’t seem to exploit it.  They had a cute filibuster in the Senate, and they got the vote they wanted.  Problem is, it didn’t go the way they wanted.

The plain fact is, the general public doesn’t consider gun control a pressing issue.  We all grieve at the horrors of Newtown, Aurora, and Orlando, but gun-control advocates would have us believe they grieve even more.  The rest of us just don’t feel it as much as they do, and anyone who suggests their hasty “solutions” might be defective gets labeled as stupid, bigoted, or lacking in conscience.

And let me tell you, nobody has more conscience than a bunch of progressives craving attention.  So, this week, John Lewis decided to stage a sit-in on the floor of the House of Representatives.

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The Sanders Con

Bernie Sanders has made history, but not in the way the media tells it.  In short, he’s committed what may be the largest and most brazen piece of fraud in, well, ever.  He managed to raise $208 million, and he did so by convincing a huge number of gullible children that politics is a retail transaction.

They actually believed his promises of a $15 minimum wage, single-payer healthcare, and free college education.  They deserve to be parted from their money.

Let’s start with the minimum wage thing.  It’s not going to happen.  The last time it was raised was in 2009.  Even that was the product of a very contentious process that had begun in earnest two years earlier.  Despite having an unassailable majority in Congress, Democrats still had to shoehorn it into the U.S. Troop Readiness, Veterans’ Care, Katrina Recovery, and Iraq Accountability Appropriations Act.

And that was only to get it to $7.25/hour.  

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Even the Libertarians Are a Sideshow

If I were to sum up my personal politics, I hew most closely to the Libertarian platform.  The problem is, they can’t put forth a candidate worthy (or likely) to be elected dog catcher.

Gary Johnson is this year’s nominee for President, same as 2012.  Failing to secure the Republican nomination, he went to the Libertarian ticket as a consolation prize.  Johnson isn’t bad; he’s just uninspiring.  Still, he has more mainstream name recognition than anyone else in the party, so they might as well nominate him in 2016.

The big problem is his pick for Vice President.  William Weld was governor of Massachusetts for two terms in the 1990’s.  During his tenure, he supported very strict gun-control measures and government seizure of private property under eminent domain.  Both of those positions run absolutely counter to Libertarian ideology.

Weld claims to have dialed back on some of those positions, but when pressed on his support for gun control, he gave Jake Tapper a response I find far less than convincing.

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Autechre: elseq

The last couple of years have been busy ones for Autechre.  Exai was an album of staggering scope, made even more audacious by the fact that it was uniformly good.  Not many musical acts in any genre can still turn out solid material with such consistency three decades into their career.

The group has always been known for its live shows, but they’ve never seemed keen on releasing recordings of them.  Then, without notice or fanfare, they released nine different live sets on the same day.

The marketing and distribution were interesting.  No physical copies are available.  The music can be downloaded off their website.  Grab whichever sets you want; they’ve said there’s no specific order in which they’re to be digested, and the sum of them is 8 hours of listening.

Needless to say, it was a huge surfeit of material.  Most artists would be content to sit back a couple of years while the audience digests that much.

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Low Energy, Totally Uninspired

At this point, I can’t see the math working out any other way.  Donald Trump is going to be the Republican nominee for President this fall.

That scares the living bejeezus out of me.  It should frighten any reasonable person.  Apparently, “reasonable person” excludes a large portion of the American electorate.

Let’s be clear:  Donald Trump doesn’t care about you.  He only cares about himself.  This is all a game to him, and one in which the most uncouth bully wins through sheer force of will.

The obvious retort is, “well, that’s politics as usual.”  It’s not untrue, but this guy claims to represent a repudiation of politics as usual.  Right.  If anything, he represents an amplified version of it, filtered through the worst kind of populism I’ve seen since, well…

I’m going full Godwin here.  It’s the worst kind of populism since Hitler.  There.  I’ve done it, and I’m not sorry.

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Is the Gun Industry Really Free of Liability?

Over the last couple of years, the Democrats have decided that gun control is no longer a toxic political issue.  In fact, they seem to consider it a vital imperative, and support for new restrictions has become something of a litmus test.  Presidential candidates Clinton and Sanders have both been strident in calls for new legislation.

One of their primary targets is the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act.  The claim is that the PLCAA exempts manufacturers and retailers from any sort of liability for their actions.  As Clinton put it,

So far as I know, the gun industry and gun sellers are the only business in America that is totally free of liability for their behavior. Nobody else is given that immunity. And that just illustrates the extremism that has taken over this debate.

This isn’t just wrong; it’s an utter lie.

During the late years of the Clinton administration, the Mayors of Chicago and Bridgeport decided to sue gun manufacturers for the damage inflicted by the criminal misuse of their products.  

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Executive Power and Gun Control

The President has announced that he’s seeking to enact new controls without the cooperation or consent of Congress. I understand how this could be worrying on the surface.

The thing is, he really can’t do that.  I’ve written about this before.  Whatever murky construct they may be, executive orders can’t be used to enact or alter laws.  The chief executive doesn’t have that power, and for very good reason.

It’s unsettling that this President has repeatedly and publicly stated a desire to bypass our system of checks and balances.  Regarding economic relief in 2011, he said,

We can’t wait for Congress to do its job. So where they won’t act, I will.  We’re going to look every single day to figure out what we can do without Congress.

Statements like that should be chilling to anyone, regardless of political affiliation.

With that said, we haven’t seen the actual orders yet.  The main one rumored will redefine or tighten the definition of a “dealer” in firearms.  

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One Way Around the Legislature

State Attorney General Herring has announced that he’s cancelling reciprocity agreements with 25 states.  Those agreements allow permitted nonresidents to carry concealed firearms in Virginia.  The justification is that those 25 states have more “lax” gun laws than Virginia and that the measure will keep dangerous criminals from bringing guns into the Commonwealth.

Right.  Because dangerous criminals go through the trouble to get carry permits.  Essentially, he’s punishing the people who’ve done nothing wrong, which is pretty much the central tenet of the gun-control approach.

Worse yet, he doesn’t need the approval of the legislature to do this.  It just takes a pen stroke.  Hopefully, state lawmakers will intervene, but that remains to be seen.

It’s not a novel strategy.  The President himself has threatened to bypass Congress in a similar fashion, though his legal authority to do so is questionable at best.  On one hand, the reluctance of lawmakers (who represent the wishes of their constituents) shows that the public doesn’t support gun control.  

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Star Wars: JJ Abrams Gets It

I just watched The Force Awakens, and I’m going to get my thoughts out while it’s fresh on my mind.

First off, it’s good.  Not “good,” as in, “well, maybe it wasn’t a total trainwreck.”  No, it’s “good” as in, “tons of kids are going to emulate the new characters like my generation did with Luke and Han” good.

The visuals are impeccable.  Abrams doesn’t feel the need to clutter every inch of screen real estate, so the creature and building designs really stand out.  The dogfight sequences are kinetic and exhilarating.  Poe Dameron is absolutely the man.

Which brings us to the dialogue.  The earliest comedic beat in the movie comes from his back-and-forth with Finn (actually, “FN-2187”).  It the kind of dialogue at which Joss Whedon excels, and a minute worth of witty banter sets up their characters perfectly.

The humor?  There are no fart jokes or awkward mascot characters.  

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Due Process and “Terror”

The gun-control lobby is attempting to use the San Bernardino shooting for political fodder.  The problem is that the incident occurred in California, a state they consider to be a model laboratory for gun restrictions.

They’ve chosen to sidestep that issue, and they’re proposing a new solution:  bar anyone on a terrorist watchlist from owning firearms.  If we don’t look too closely, it seems sensible.  It also makes for good soundbites about security.

In practice, it’s a terrible idea, and it’s something that should offend anyone interested in civil liberties.

Consider the “no fly” list.  One has no way of knowing whether they’re on it until they try to board a plane.  If they are, it’s nearly impossible to find out why they’re on it.  Aside from a feeble DHS program, there’s no way to redress the situation.  Even that venue places the burden of proof on the accused.

It also bears mentioning that neither Farook or Malik were on the list.

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Life on the Road

I recently switched careers, and I’m now training as an over-the-road trucker.  So far, it’s been an intense learning experience.  Here are a few observations I’d like to pass along.

I’m driving a vehicle that can weigh as much as 80,000 pounds.  When that thing is moving at 65mph, it can’t stop on a dime.  Physics doesn’t work that way.

If you want to go faster than me, by all means pass me.  No, I want you to.  I’m travelling as quickly as conditions and the vehicle will allow.  If you do choose to pass, please make sure to leave some space before cutting in front of me.  See the previous paragraph for an explanation.  Your best bet is to wait until you can see the marker lights above my windshield in your mirrors.

If I can, I’ll let you merge in.  Sometimes I can’t.  I’m not going to slam on my brakes to do so.  

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An Alternative to Gun Control

In the wake of this week’s mass shooting, we’re going to hear calls for more background checks.  This, despite the fact the shooter underwent and passed several background checks when he purchased his guns.  This, despite the fact that Oregon passed more strict background check legislation only a couple of months ago.

Background checks don’t stop these tragedies.  With the exception of Newtown, every mass shooter in the last two decades has purchased his weapons at retail and passed a check.  The lack of a deterrent effect is obvious.  Any other social policy that has failed this utterly would have been abandoned by now.

Of course, whenever I point this out, it’s implied that I’m somehow obligated to provide a solution.  Well, OK.  Here’s one that might actually help.

In 2013, Dan Roberts conducted a study on mass shooters.  Every single one of them had been on Selective Serotonin Re-Uptake Inhibitors.

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