. . . anthropomorphised female dog characters in Disney animations (well, just about anybody's animations, but Disney is in the sights at the moment) don't have six teats?
I'd image a still here but something tells me that would elicit threats of lawsuits.
Sunday, 23 January 2005
Saturday, 22 January 2005
I've ignored this beast for too long
It's well reviewed by anyone who picks one up or fires it, in spite of its looks and its all-plastic construction.
It's damned light, a minimalist approach to a utility carbine.
It's got the wrong caliber but maybe that can be corrected. Either Grendelization or conversion to a TCU caliber could get me interested.
It's no service rifle but wasn't meant to be. In the Charlie model, the SU-16 looks like a contender.
It's damned light, a minimalist approach to a utility carbine.
It's got the wrong caliber but maybe that can be corrected. Either Grendelization or conversion to a TCU caliber could get me interested.
It's no service rifle but wasn't meant to be. In the Charlie model, the SU-16 looks like a contender.
Alternatives to PayPal?
Who's using what? Who's got critical mass? Is critical mass even necessary for web-transacted minipayments? Is it safe to keep accounts at more than one of them? What features are better than others? I'm leery about having one directly access my bank account, less leery about credit card access. I guess it's a discussion of what I want it for, isn't it? Ease, anonymity, disconnection from credit card, disconnection from social security number, disconnection spender from earner?
Kurt's Kustom Firearms is using YowCow. Never heard of them until looking up alternatives to the AR-15's direct-impingement gas system---Kurt offers one, BTW.
And this, in a nutshell, is why I want something other than PayPal---it's none of their business what I buy using their service. If they want to restrict what I can buy, I won't use them. I still get their emails, and my emailed complaints about that policy go unanswered.
BitPass looks good, eGold looks even better but it's not really meant for micropayments. For cryptanarcholibertarians, eGold must be the shizzle.
Kurt's Kustom Firearms is using YowCow. Never heard of them until looking up alternatives to the AR-15's direct-impingement gas system---Kurt offers one, BTW.
And this, in a nutshell, is why I want something other than PayPal---it's none of their business what I buy using their service. If they want to restrict what I can buy, I won't use them. I still get their emails, and my emailed complaints about that policy go unanswered.
BitPass looks good, eGold looks even better but it's not really meant for micropayments. For cryptanarcholibertarians, eGold must be the shizzle.
Time again for BOD ballots
The ballots arrived again this year for NRA Board of Directors, and this year because of Neal Knox's untimely passing away, we have to evaluate the nominees without his advice.
So I'd like your help in setting criteria for who should receive gunbloggers' votes for the NRA BOD. This is especially so for fellow gunbloggers who have been disappointed (outraged?) with the NRA lately. They aren't the only game in town or even the best, but they still have pull and it's worth it to try to influence them in this new bloggy era of openness and instant communication.
Though it's way too late to seriously consider it for this year, it might be time to write-in nominate an überblogger or two to the BOD. I'd be really cool with Glenn Reynolds or Eugene Volokh. Not so cool with Hugh Hewitt.
Update: After some consideration, I think I want Glenn and Eugene right where they are, free to reason and to blog without any appearance of influence over them. Besides, we'd need different skillsets in an NRA director. What are those skillsets?
So I'd like your help in setting criteria for who should receive gunbloggers' votes for the NRA BOD. This is especially so for fellow gunbloggers who have been disappointed (outraged?) with the NRA lately. They aren't the only game in town or even the best, but they still have pull and it's worth it to try to influence them in this new bloggy era of openness and instant communication.
- Should we eschew police officers as members, and support elected sheriffs?
- Should current or past elected office matter?
- Should Hollywood celebrity matter? John Milius and Tom Selleck are both nominees.
- Should nomination by NRA's nominating committee be a plus, a minus, or irrelevant?
- I'm embarrassed to even ask this one: do we know or can we get access to the past voting records of existing Directors up for reelection? I don't know that answer and I ought to. No finding it on NRA's website, I can't even find the friggin' bylaws there. So much for blognost.
- Should political party matter? Would you rather have a blue-dog Democrat trying to soften the irrational Dem gun control stance, or a lukewarm GOPer? That's an entire other policy debate but its ripples propagate to this issue.
Though it's way too late to seriously consider it for this year, it might be time to write-in nominate an überblogger or two to the BOD. I'd be really cool with Glenn Reynolds or Eugene Volokh. Not so cool with Hugh Hewitt.
Update: After some consideration, I think I want Glenn and Eugene right where they are, free to reason and to blog without any appearance of influence over them. Besides, we'd need different skillsets in an NRA director. What are those skillsets?
Wednesday, 19 January 2005
We've already been here
Strategy Page's Attrition column observes:
(Link is not permanent; scroll if necessary to 19 January 05)
I might be reading a different US Constitution than this person, but mine does not stipulate that only a nation-state may be the recipient of US warmaking. I just don't see this as a problem. Declare it and get on with it.
The Department of Defense wants a change in the regulations that govern how often reservists can be called when the nation is at war, and war has not officially been declared. Why not just declare war? There are political and practical problems with that. For one thing, there's no country to declare war against.
(Link is not permanent; scroll if necessary to 19 January 05)
I might be reading a different US Constitution than this person, but mine does not stipulate that only a nation-state may be the recipient of US warmaking. I just don't see this as a problem. Declare it and get on with it.
Tuesday, 18 January 2005
Quote for the day
Shannon Love at ChicagoBoyz:
Too many people believe that revolutions can and do occur without somebody making a decision to use force if necessary.
Bring out your dead
Arnold Kling at TechCentralStation discusses some policy implications of American health-care quality and the underestimation of American longevity.
I hold up one cautionary finger and intone: all of that will be thrown into the bucket, temporarily, by one strong influenza epidemic. For which we are overdue.
I hold up one cautionary finger and intone: all of that will be thrown into the bucket, temporarily, by one strong influenza epidemic. For which we are overdue.
Saturday, 15 January 2005
Quick hits
The in-laws made it back to Western New York safely, in spite of heavy snow the day they left.
Toad is now free to eat solid food, put things in his mouth, and otherwise return to normal infant-ness. The palate repair seems to be a success.
Anduril now wears three Millett quick-disconnect sling swivel bases and two matching loops in the Carlos Weidemann 3-point configuration. Now for a sling? Then Cabinet Man and I will see if it can hit anything.
Toad is now free to eat solid food, put things in his mouth, and otherwise return to normal infant-ness. The palate repair seems to be a success.
Anduril now wears three Millett quick-disconnect sling swivel bases and two matching loops in the Carlos Weidemann 3-point configuration. Now for a sling? Then Cabinet Man and I will see if it can hit anything.
Wednesday, 12 January 2005
Se permite en Tejas
Colorado and Texas announce CCW reciprocity today. No link, heard on KNUS 710 radio.
Tuesday, 4 January 2005
Tribute to Barbaloot's Dad
While Barbaloot's folks are staying with us, her Dad gets bored easily. When we mentioned that we wanted to wreck out the carpet in the dining room and replace it with laminate flooring, he offered his experience and his patience. He even brought some tools.
The floor went down in a day and a half, interrupted regularly with having to chase Toad back downstairs and keep Mlle Sklodovska from falling down the cold-air return register.

He is talented at "cutting in," be it paint, roofing, linoleum or tile. The plank at the kitchen door was tricky, but when he had it just as he wanted it, it slipped in like a Garand bolt. Angle it like so, twist it a bit this way, that end first, easy eeeeeeeeaaaasssssyyy, pop.
When my vacation was over and I returned to work, he kept going with the moulding to cover the expansion gap at the edges of the new floor. I tell him how I appreciate and respect his work, and he just looks at me.
Did I mention he knows how to thread blackpipe?
The floor went down in a day and a half, interrupted regularly with having to chase Toad back downstairs and keep Mlle Sklodovska from falling down the cold-air return register.

He is talented at "cutting in," be it paint, roofing, linoleum or tile. The plank at the kitchen door was tricky, but when he had it just as he wanted it, it slipped in like a Garand bolt. Angle it like so, twist it a bit this way, that end first, easy eeeeeeeeaaaasssssyyy, pop.
When my vacation was over and I returned to work, he kept going with the moulding to cover the expansion gap at the edges of the new floor. I tell him how I appreciate and respect his work, and he just looks at me.
Did I mention he knows how to thread blackpipe?
If a woman answers honestly, size does not matter
But horsepower and durability matter very much. Barbaloot mentioned in passing how she admires her sister's premium stand mixer, and how it accepts all manner of powered accessories. She would not go for a hand-operated pasta roller---gotta be Powered, man.
I took her at her word.

My God, this thing should not come with a plug, just white, black and green 12-gauge tails for its own circuit breaker.
At top, the big shield with the knob on its side is an accessory power takeoff worthy of John Deere. Hello, pasta roller.
Merry Christmas, Barbaloot.
I took her at her word.

My God, this thing should not come with a plug, just white, black and green 12-gauge tails for its own circuit breaker.
At top, the big shield with the knob on its side is an accessory power takeoff worthy of John Deere. Hello, pasta roller.
Merry Christmas, Barbaloot.
Quote for the day
This phenomenon -- legal victory that leads to cultural and political defeat -- has a long history. In the 1850s, slaveholders collected some huge legal prizes: the Fugitive Slave Act, the Kansas-Nebraska Act, the Dred Scott decision. Those victories produced an anti-slavery movement powerful enough to elect Lincoln and win the Civil War. Sixty years later, the temperance movement won its long battle for national Prohibition. Within a decade, the culture was turning against temperance; Repeal came soon after. In America's culture wars, the side with the law's weaponry often manages only to wound themselves.
Could we be seeing this phenomenon at play in Britain, with respect to gun control? Is it long in coming to America? Or are we already seeing it in motion, say, in state CCW laws and reciprocity agreements, and the sunset of the AWB?
William J. Stuntz at TechCentralStation, The Academic Left and the Christian Right, Part II.
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