Sunday, June 20, 2010

Just in case you wondered about all those starving North Korean peasants and how they put a little color in their lives. (Coffee Spew Alert.)

Why, thanks to Dear Leader, of course.

Dear Leader Kim Jong Il contemplating his socialist navel.

June 18. 2010 Juch 99

Story of Kim Jong Il

Pyongyang, June 18 (KCNA) -- One day in August Juche 92 (2003) General Secretary Kim Jong Il visited the Pyongyang Cosmetics Factory.

After looking around the production processes of the factory, he was guided to the sample room.

Kim Jong Il, cosmetics marketing wizard of the Korean Peninsula, engages in hands-on management.

Exhibited in the room were different sorts of quality cosmetics produced by the factory.

He took a lipstick in his hand and looked at it.

He then told officials that the factory was producing lipsticks of only a few colors and that it should produce such cosmetics as foundation, lipstick and face powder in various colors so that women could take their choice suitable to their face color and taste.


"Nancy Pelosi is only one of many beautiful women who use Dear Leader cosmetics." -- North Korean News Agency.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Like to support the next Restore the Constitution Rally in North Carolina but can't make it?


Here's how.

This just in from Daniel Almond:

If you’d like to help the organizers pay for the next RTC rally to be held in Greensboro, NC on August 14th, make check payable to NC Freedom and send to the following address:

Restore the Constitution Rally
c/o Cadd Graphics
7714 Chapel Hill Rd
Raleigh, NC 27607


'Nuff said.

The Bitter Fruit of Collaboration: Another great one from Jennifer III

Here.

Taking "Hell NO!" for an answer. Gee, whiz. Some people don't like to be asked unconstitutional questions by prying nanny state lackeys. Who knew?

Mighty Casey at the bat. Daniel Hadley, age 41, after he took a bat to the arm of an insistent, pestering follow-up census worker in my old home town, Marion, Ohio.

My thanks to several Threepers who brought my attention to this story and the one below.

Pity the poor census takers. Note that the WaPo doesn't mention the rapist census takers, or or the woman killed by cops when she tried to make the late-night census taker get the hell off her property.

As far as Citizen Hadley above, the Marion Star reports:

Marion County Prosecuting Attorney Brent Yager said he filed a felony complaint Wednesday for a second-degree felonious assault charge, and Marion Municipal Court Judge Teresa Ballinger set Hadley’s bond at $100,000.

Yager said prosecutors had spoken with Census Bureau representatives Wednesday, who said a female worker who had gone to the Farming Street residence to collect information before was turned away. Tuesday, the male worker was making a second attempt to collect information.


I guess he should have taken "Hell NO!" for an answer.

I fail to have any sympathy for these minions. I should, I know. As a Christian I really should. But I cannot. One more thing for me to answer for someday.

Mike
III

An unexpected result for some census takers: the wrath of irate Americans

By Carol Morello
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, June 20, 2010; A04

This is the scary season for the nation's census takers.

Since they began making follow-up house calls in early May, census takers have encountered vitriol, menace and flashes of violence. They have been shot at with pellet guns and hit by baseball bats. They have been confronted with pickaxes, crossbows and hammers. They've had lawn mowers pushed menacingly toward them and patio tables thrown their way. They have been nibbled by ducks, bitten by pit bulls and chased by packs of snarling dogs.

Some days, being cursed at seems part of the job description.

So far, the Census Bureau has tallied 379 incidents involving assaults or threats on the nation's 635,000 census workers, more than double the 181 recorded during the 2000 census. Weapons were used or threatened in a third of the cases.

Now, with just three weeks to go in the door-knocking phase of the count, the number of census takers has dwindled, and the remaining households are the toughest.

While most homeowners have received census takers graciously, some say they have been surprised at the degree of anger exhibited by Americans who consider them the embodiment of intrusive government.

"I came across loads of hostility," said Douglas McDonald, who summoned police in Deltona, Fla., after a tug-of-war with an irate homeowner over a census form. The homeowner threw his ripped half in the toilet.

McDonald, 70, a District native who retired from the Labor Department after 30 years as an investigator, said he wasn't prepared for the level of anti-government fervor he encountered.

"There's so much anger and bitterness, with people losing their homes and their jobs," said McDonald, who eventually quit. "They're not too fond of the government. They don't want to talk to you."

Sherri Chesney, 46, said she was cursed and spat at during follow-up visits in Houston. One day, she encountered a woman working in her garden. Chesney showed her census badge, she said, prompting the woman to launch into a tirade: "I don't need the blankety-blank government snooping in my business." Then she threw a metal patio table at Chesney, who escaped injury by ducking.

"I was stunned, I really was, that America is so mad at the government," said Chesney, who no longer works for the census. "People don't know what it's like out there. It's scary and dangerous, and it's not worth my life."

Census officials say they do not consider anti-government sentiment more widespread than usual this year. But Fernando Armstrong, the Philadelphia regional census director responsible for Maryland and the District, said it seems to be more vociferous.

"It's the degree of passion they have," he said. "When they don't want to participate, they really don't want to participate."

In the Washington area, the threats made to census takers have been infrequent, and no one has been harmed.

Some of the attacks elsewhere represent random violence, such as a robbery at knifepoint in Richmond, Va., and a carjacking in Connecticut. In some situations, the job turned unexpectedly dangerous, as for the Baltimore crew leader who was fatally shot seven times while sitting in his car and the Wisconsin census taker who knocked on the door of a man who tried to drag her into his apartment.

Other workers were beset by mean-tempered animals. Wendy Soto, who was knocking on doors in California, still can't move two fingers after being attacked by a pit bull that pushed open a security door.

Among the more troubling were incidents that arose from residents' seething resentment that anyone from the government would seek their personal information.

Some people pointedly mentioned President Obama.

While conducting follow-ups in an upscale Seattle neighborhood, Grover Ellis said he came across a woman who considered him an agent of Obama, not the U.S. government.

"The idea of the census just enraged her," said Ellis, 64, stressing that the overwhelming majority of people he met were welcoming and responsive. "The way she saw the census, she was required to help Obama. And she wasn't going to do anything to help out Obama."

Police have been dispatched after confrontations between census takers and property owners who posted No Trespassing signs. As federal government employees, the census takers are not breaking the law by disregarding the signs.

But try telling that to a homeowner with a crossbow.

In a rural part of California's Nevada County northeast of Sacramento, two census workers told authorities that a man ordered them off his land. He mentioned his submachine gun, then followed them down the drive with a crossbow in hand. No charges were brought against the resident, the sheriff's department said.

A homeowner in Marion, Ohio, called police, saying he had just used his baseball bat against a stranger on his property. The perceived interloper was a census taker who told police the resident flew off the handle as soon as he mentioned the word census. The census taker was struck in the forearm, warding off blows from the aluminum bat. The resident was charged with felonious assault.

Dallas regional director Gabriel Sanchez said occasional encounters with dogs and protective property owners are par for the course in any census.

"It's not that people are waiting to gun down a government worker or waiting to assault a census worker," he said. "Some people have a strong need for privacy and being left alone. I'm sure they would treat the FedEx man the same way."

Soto, the pit bull victim, says census takers should be permitted to carry weapons, such as pepper spray, to ward off harm.

"If I'd had pepper spray in my pocket, I probably would have had a good chance of not losing my hand," said Soto, 38, who was earning $15 an hour and saving for a vacation with her children and a used car.

The dog bit Soto in the stomach, leg and hand. The census is paying for her doctor's bills, medication and replacement clothing. She doesn't know when she will be physically able to return to her regular job as a special-education teacher's aide.

Steven Jost, a spokesman for the Census Bureau, said it is unlikely that the policy prohibiting census workers from carrying weapons will be rescinded. After the 2010 census is completed, officials will examine all incidents to determine whether changes are needed to reduce risks, for both workers and the public. The number of verified incidents might go down after analysis.

Chesney, for one, won't be back for another census unless she's offered an office position.

"I want to help my country," she said. "I want us to have funding for schools, and all the things that are involved with the census. But I'm not putting my life at risk."

Be sure you visit the Cliffs of Insanity on Alvie's latest post about Internet tyranny's unintended consequences.

Here.

NRA makes excuses, again. Der Judenrat Sprechen.

The Judenrat speaks.

Friday, June 18, 2010

OK, so maybe Thulsa Doom was a Kenyan.



My thanks to Avie D. Zane for the creative use of genetically-spliced symbolism.

OK, now we know who Holder's really working for.



Thulsa Doom.

Plan B


Just received this email:

Hello Mike,

I check in with the blog everyday, it's a part of my keeping in tune with the endarkenment. I think things will get much worse and to that end, if or when the government claps down on the internet do you, Pete and others have plans to keep us grey men informed and motivated?

I greatly appreciate everything you guys do, and enjoy the writing and the links. I was hoping my son and I would had a chance to introduce ourselves at the last Knob Creek fall shoot, but I understand you didn't attend due to your health problems. Maybe next time.

I hope you start feeling better. Stay healthy we need ya!

Paul


Actually, yes. Plan B will be done with methods that work around the roadblocks on the Internet, supplemented by Radio Free Alabama, a short wave Threeper radio program. More on that in a month or so.

Mike
III

PS If all goes well, I will be at Knob Creek in October of this year with copies of Absolved to sign.

Check this out. The RTC on 19 April has become iconic.

Accompanying an article on a left-collectivist blog (check the comments) about the latest NRA sellout of liberty is this photo with the caption:

Gun rights supporters gather in Washington, D.C




Of course, we were not in DC, but across the river at Gravelly Point Park, but the image of gun rights supporters carrying long arms at a political demonstration has now become iconic.

Well done, Daniel Almond and RTC participants.

We live inside their heads rent free.

Bilderbergers talking about "global cooling"? Has anybody told Al Gore or the "Cap and Tax" crowd?



Those of you who have been reading me for a while know that I'm not into the whole "NWO is out to eat your momma" conspiracy mantra. There is no big spider in some central web out to steal your liberties. There are demonstrably many spiders in many competing webs and they occasionally eat each other as well. I figure the best anti-arachnid strategy is that of the Founders: a wide-awake, trained ("well-regulated") and militarily capable armed citizenry. But I found this more than a little interesting. A snippet:

The 58th Bilderberg Meeting will be held in Sitges, Spain 3 - 6 June 2010. The Conference will deal mainly with Financial Reform, Security, Cyber Technology, Energy, Pakistan, Afghanistan, World Food Problem, Global Cooling, Social Networking, Medical Science, EU-US relations. Approximately 130 participants will attend of whom about two-thirds come from Europe and the balance from North America. About one-third is from government and politics, and two-thirds are from finance, industry, labor, education, and communications. The meeting is private in order to encourage frank and open discussion.


Wait. What? "Global cooling"? Has anybody told Al Gore or the Mighty Kenyan and all of his Capitol Hill sycophants who are trying to ram "Cap and Tax" down our throats?

A list of invitees doesn't include old Al. Maybe the global elites have decided that global warming no longer suffices as a shaman's rattle to awe the skeptical villagers.

Shaman's rattle. Al Gore, call your office.

Dale Peterson weighs in on the race for Alabama Ag Commissioner and the theft of political yard signs.

Another Peterson classic.

One more provocation. One more assault on liberty. Several more for the list of the recusationers.

Julius "Caesar" Genachowski

My thanks to Pete at WRSA for this link.

A snippet:

Despite opposition by a House of Representatives majority and a bipartisan group of Senators, the Federal Communications Commission on Thursday is expected to proceed with plans to impose federal government regulation of the Internet, which would essentially treat broadband networks -- and the companies that invested more than $200 billion in private capital to deploy them -- as utilities.

The commission's chairman, Julius Genachowski, and his staff have insisted that imposing federal regulations originally written in the 1930s for the telephone is the only way the Obama Administration can gain the "kind of oversight and control that we need," says an FCC staffer with ties to another Democrat commissioner. "Look at the Gulf oil spill, that's what happens when we let corporations just do their own thing without any accountability. We can't allow that to happen with the Internet. We won't allow it."


Hmmm. "We won't allow it." I guess he's never heard of Wiley Fortner and his merry recusationers.

Ten thousand lawyers, indeed.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Praxis: Source for packboards.



A tip of the boonie hat to Threeper Lee F. for spotting this --

Sportsman's Guide has these Swiss military packboards:


FXM-182411 - Used Swiss Military Pack Board, Olive Drab $29.97

For transporting heavy loads of Swiss chocolate! Actually for turning troops into mules to move heavy stuff, such as ammo and shells.

* Metal framework
* Leather chest straps
* Padded canvas shoulder straps with leather belts
* Padded back and kidney pad
* Padded headrest
* Adjustable back shelf. 18 x 22"h. Weighs 11 lbs.

Condition: used, in very good shape.


Looks like good price for what you get. Does anyone have any experience with these?

Rough Patch

Sick yesterday, woke up puking today. Don't know what the cause is. Will try to post later today after treatment.