Wednesday, February 23, 2011

This just in: The Washington Post is still dead, and Obama dithers, while Hillary gathers her skirts to protect HER butt even if nobody elses.

Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breur scans this morning's Washington Post with a troubled brow, reassured that once again Grimaldi has written nothing about the Gunwalker scandal, but still uneasy about what lies ahead, thinking to himself: You know, if Hillary was President, half the witnesses would be dead by now as an example to the rest.

This just in, the Washington Post is still dead to the Gunwalker scandal story.

While Obama dithers and the political gangfighter Emanuel falls back upon a defensible base to become crowned Emperor Rahmulus the First of the failed state of Chicago and Eric Holder alternately bobs and dunks in his own sea of scandal troubles -- and Gunwalker is not the only one -- there is one administration official who is said to be gathering her skirts for a fight to the death to protect her reputation in this growing scandal -- Hillary Clinton.

The State Department is the one key venue of this story which so far lies untouched. Think about it: do you suppose that the ATF actually made its own foreign policy in Gunwalker by allowing the smuggling but not informing the Mexicans? Certainly, our informants tell us, DOJ was involved, all the way up to Eric Holder. But do you suppose that even Eric Holder would presume to do so without consultation with the State Department at some level?

My sources say no. My sources say that the State Department signed off on Gunwalker stiffing the Mexicans. My sources also say that the Iron Dowager Empress is furious that the cover-up has been handled so poorly and is determined that it not blow-back on her.

This seems a profitable course of inquiry for authorized journalists, to me. With the cover-up collapsing spectacularly, Hillary may want to "go on the record" about how much this had nothing to do with the State Department and how she is shocked! shocked! to find gambling going on here. Who knows, it may be in her interest to appear to be the only responsible adult in the whole Obama administration. It is not like she is heavily invested in being an Obamanoid team player to the extent that she goes down with the Titanic. In fact, this may be exactly the moment she has been waiting for.

Of course don't expect the Washington Post to cover THAT story. Because, as of this morning, they're still dead.

This just in: Hillary Clinton to star as Inspector Renault in re-make of Casablanca!



Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Gf8NK1WAOc

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Harry Reid wants to outlaw prostitution. Does this mean he's turning himself in?


Maybe not.

Larry Pratt comes out swinging on the Project Gunwalker scandal while the "800 pound gorilla" NRA rests upon its considerable ass.

Eric Holder to Lanny Breuer, pointing at the 800 pound gorilla sitting on its ass: "What about him?" Breuer: "Don't worry, that's the NRA, he's tame."

As previously reported, FOX had two pieces on the Project Gunwalker scandal today. The better of the two was Larry Pratt's commentary on the Traver nomination which of course is intimately intertwined now with the Gunwalker scandal.

Larry came out swinging, and apparently the ATF had declined to provide anyone to defend Traver, for it was Larry vs. Megyn Kelly, who was spinning out the administration meme as best she could.

I want to go on record about one thing. When it came to David's and my attention that the whistleblowers were out there willing to tell their stories, Larry Pratt was one of the first guys we called for advice on how and who to contact to make that happen. GOA worked quietly behind the scenes, helping us get in touch with the right people in Sessions' and Grassley's offices. We also consulted him on how to help move the story along in the media. At every turn, Larry and the GOA were there to help any way they could. It is the height of irony that the FOX build-up to the story on Traver credited NRA with its opposition, whereas it was GOA that was, like the Gunwalker scandal, early in the trenches against Traver while the NRA sat back and calculated the odds, as the Lairds of Fairfax always do.

When the behind-the-scenes story of the opening moves of the Project Gunwalker scandal is finally told, you will be able to find Larry Pratt and Gun Owners of America in the index with multiple citations. The NRA? Once again, missing in action, resting upon its considerable "800 pound gorilla" ass. Of course, they will later claim credit for all of it, as they usually do -- after the fact.

Mike
III

Link: Larry Pratt takes on Obama's ATF nomination. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vir7ebYAoWY&feature=player_embedded#at=24

Alvie's action item from today's "Foxy News."

FLASH: FOXY NEWS COVERS GUNWALKER

David's commentary on FOX News piece.

‘Project Gunwalker’ charges surfacing on Fox News.

David Codrea writes: Soldier of Fortune’s Brown backs Steve Schreiner for NRA Board.


Maybe he can get them out of the Weeniemobile.

Flash: FOX News just covered Gunwalker in a piece I wasn't able to see. David and I become "other sources."

Said to be good, including Grassley and Terry family. Larry Pratt is going to be doing a panel on the Megyn Kelly babe show on FOX at 1:45 Eastern that was supposed to be about Traver nomination and now will likely focus on Gunwalker.

LATER: WOW! Larry Pratt did us proud! I'll post the video of both pieces when I can. GOA will have a Congressional Briefing Paper on Gunwalker posted on their website by this afternoon. I will post the link when I have it.

Pardon me, now, while I say a thanksgiving prayer to the Lord.

Here's the link on the first FOX piece: http://video.foxnews.com/v/4545747/are-obama-dems-encouraging-illegal-activity#/v/4550036/exclusive-family-of-murdered-border-agent-speaks-out/?playlist_id=87937

Here's the video:



And thanks to Kurt Hofmann, here's another link: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/02/22/agent-brian-terry-policy-silence/

STILL LATER: From the Hofmann link --

However, other sources say that's exactly what happened, knowingly or not. Not all agencies let ‘guns walk' in order to lead to higher-ups. Precisely for fear the guns will be used in crimes.


"Other sources," hmmm. I wonder who they could be?

Praxis: Ah, I love the smell of butyric acid in the morning. It smells like - victory. Memories of Chemistry Lab and high school guerrilla warfare.

River Valley High School is a public high school in Caledonia, Ohio. It is the only high school in the River Valley Schools district. In the fall of 2003, a new campus was opened for students due to the possibility of cancer-causing chemicals on the old campus. . .

Infamous graduates

Michael Brian Vanderboegh, Class of 1970. Ex-communist, Second Amendment activist, militia leader, ATF gadfly and Christian libertarian rabble rouser who urged "modern day Sons of Liberty" to break local Democrat party headquarters in March, 2010 in reaction to the imminent passage of the Obamacare Law. Founder of the "Three Percenters," a group of militant firearm owners denounced by Bill Clinton in a speech at the Center for American Progress, 19 April 2010. "I cherish my time at River Valley, especially that spent in Conrad J. Floridia's chemistry class, where as a chem lab assistant I learned everything I needed to know about improvised explosives and butyric acid stink bombs." -- Wikipedia.



My old alma mater, River Valley High School, at its best perspective, viewed from a distance. Built on the site of a World War II POW camp and later, military depot trash pile.

I received an email from an Irregular who, for obvious reasons, shall remain nameless. He suggests that the Purple SEIU Thugbus would benefit from the application of a very mild acid called Butyric acid.

As it happens, when I was a young pup back in Marion, Ohio and, having reached a certain age of sly intelligence matched with immaturity and a bit of recklessness, I volunteered to be one of chemistry teacher Conrad J. Floridia's chem lab assistants, with results that are recalled by certain retired teachers and administrators to this day with flashbacks of post-traumatic stress.

From considerable experience I can say that butyric acid is very mild, but packs a wallop upon the olfactories with an odor combining the smell of a cocktail of rancid butter and vomit that has been left in a tightly-closed glass container to cook in the hot sun for three days. By scientific experiment, we high school guerrillas discovered that the only thing worse than butyric acid was burning egg albumin. Now the memory of THAT gives even me the shudders.

Anyway, if you are unfamiliar with the stuff, here is a brief description. I will only say that the laws regarding its tactical application have changed greatly since I was a sprout and I rather suspect that anyone caught squirting this stuff with a large gauge needle on the end of a syringe poked through the rubber window molding of a locked bus (yes, I do have a certain experience along these lines having once done a parking lot of new cars in this manner -- long story) would probably find themselves under arrest as a WMD terrorist. But I must confess the idea of hitting a Thugbus with BA does have a certain karmic charm.



An interesting item to add to 'enhance' the interior (think fabric) of a purple tour bus... guaranteed to gag a maggot... small quantity, less than 1/4 cup... known to cause widespread nausea...

http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-butyric-acid.htm

Butyric acid is prepared on a large scale by the fermentation of starch or sugar. Fermentation uses microorganisms and takes place under conditions where there is no oxygen. It is the transformation of the glucose in these compounds to alcohol or butyric acid, in this case. The microbes gain energy from this process. Less energy is produced than if the compounds were transformed in the presence of oxygen.

Various species of bacteria produce butyric acid as a product of fermentation. They live in places where there is no oxygen, such as the rumen of cows and goats. This is a special digestive organ for degrading plant compounds that are extremely difficult to digest. Bacteria generate butyrate from the plant fibers consumed. Butyrate is also produced as a side product in marine sediments.

Bacteria that live in the human colon transform various fibers such as oat bran to a series of compounds, including butyric acid. This contributes to the foul smell of flatulence. People who consume a low carbohydrate diet have lower amounts of butyric acid in their colon. Some researchers think that butanoate protects against colon cancer; however, the evidence is mixed.

Butyric acid is a component of vomit. Its unpleasant smell has made it a useful stink bomb for non-lethal political attacks. It has been used to attack whaling boats and taint the whale meat, so that it cannot be consumed. It has also been used in a large number of attacks on abortion clinics.

Discretion in purchasing is recommended. Skunk-scent is probably as effective, less expensive, available where deer hunting scents are sold. Either can be safely carried and discharged from a (medium to large, hand concealable) hypodermic syringe, without the needle, easily available at a veterinary supply. Discreetly applied to a hostile crowd's clothing is also effective.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Two from David Codrea:"Lugar, Lieberman looking into ‘Project Gunwalker’ charges" & "Traver material reveals anti-gun positions and troubling allies."

First, Lugar, Lieberman looking into ‘Project Gunwalker’ charges.

Wherein he quotes a certain old fat man with a cane:

Mike Vanderboegh of Sipsey Street Irregulars, the blog which first reported on CleanUpATF.org forum allegations that resulted in the revelations Sen. Grassley is investigating, stressed the importance of supporters following the lead the Lieberman and Lugar constituents have provided, and urged all interested people to follow suit.

“Put simply,” Vanderboegh stated, the institutional forces that go to work when there’s any scandal, regardless of administration, are so difficult to overcome without the active participation of the people.

“They will only investigate that which, if they don’t investigate, will threaten their reelection,” Vanderboegh continued, conceding that Lieberman is retiring, but that the truism applies to all others. “The other thing that is absolutely vital is that we somehow prevent the deportation of the three witnesses to the murder of [Border Patrol Agent] Brian Terry.

“For those reasons, to get to the bottom of the murder of Brian Terry—if nothing else—we have to mobilize the senators,” he concluded.


Second, Traver material reveals anti-gun positions and troubling allies.

Indeed.

Why People Don't Buy Gold (Which is why I only invest in ammunition).

Denethor's Trap: "Becoming your enemy is not the way to win."


Honourable Means, writing at The Bonnie Blue Blog posts and comments upon CS Lewis' Review of "The Fellowship of the Ring" by JRR Tolkien.

It is well timed, to my mind, and he explains --

I posted this here for a few reasons:

1. I love Tolkien and CS Lewis, and find their works "ennobling", inspiring, and spiritually uplifting.

2. I celebrate individual works of great achievement: Tolkien's Lord of the Rings trilogy and the Silmarillion constitute one man's "lifeblood" -- the sum total of a massive synthesis of imagination and scholarship sustained and created over (literally) 60 years of effort. His books: The Hobbit, The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, the Return of the King, and The Silmarillion are the most impressive work of fiction of which I am aware (includes Frank Herbert's Dune; I'm sure you can think of others).

He succeeded in what he consciously set out to do:

“set myself a task, the arrogance of which I fully recognized and trembled at: being precisely to restore to the English an epic tradition and present them with a mythology of their own.”

He started writing the original tales or notes for tales in the trenches of France during the First World War, and the Silmarillion was published in 1977, four years after his death.

3. There have been setbacks and ups and downs in the patriot blogosphere of late.

One very big up is the excellent job that David Codrea and Mike Vanderbeogh have done on the Project Gunwalker scandal.

On the other hand, some posts lately have spoken of burnout or frustration at our apparent lack of numbers, or the apparent futility of our efforts.

What Tolkien described in his works about the end of the Third Age of Middle-Earth applies to our era as well:

“there was sorrow then too, and gathering dark, but great valour, and great deeds that were not wholly vain.”

Somehow, I feel that the efforts of the patriot blogosphere are like what Lewis said of the quests and efforts of the heroes of the Tolkien story:

"Not wholly vain -- it is the cool middle point between illusion and disillusionment."


"Some posts lately have spoken of burnout or frustration at our apparent lack of numbers, or the apparent futility of our efforts."

I can't help but think that maybe he was thinking of this post by Pete at Western Rifles Shooters (who posts under the name of Concerned American) which I must confess disturbed me more than a little when I read it.

Having been completely enmeshed in Gunwalker and other related issues as well as Absolved, I couldn't take the time to respond, but it bothered me greatly. I have had my share of honest differences of opinion with Pete of late, so I forwarded the link to a mutual friend and asked him to give me his thoughts on it to see if it bothered him as much as it bothered me. I still don't have time to respond to Pete, but I think Rick here has said it all for me.

Mike
III

Rick responded thusly:

Denethor’s Trap

Becoming your enemy is not the way to win. When I read this, I immediately thought of the scene in J.R.R Tolkien’s Return of the King wherein Denethor rues that Faramir has allowed Frodo to head for the Morgul Vale – and not brought the Ring of Power back to Minas Tirith. Gandalf, rightly discerning the Steward of Gondor’s character, challenges Denethor’s criticism of Faramir’s choice. [See excerpt following commentary.]

I think CA’s Friday, 18 February, 2011 post is a reflection of his personal frustration regarding the potential for restoration - which doesn’t mean that he is wrong in his observations and impressions (“… the good guys are deeply and perhaps irretrievably disadvantaged by their own rule-set”), although I think perhaps this assertion is over-stated.

I do think he is wrong in his conclusion (or at least my understanding of his conclusion). “Our gang” cannot afford to adopt the relativistic tactics of our enemy. Doing so has gotten us where we are today. Team Restoration must maintain the duality of principled Christian morality necessarily coupled with the tenets of British constitutionalism (inherent self-worth of the individual; legitimate government is a servant of the public good, not that master of its people; government’s powers and authority are limited, subject to the Higher Law of a Sovereign God) -- as these are the essential core of this uniquely American experiment in ordered Liberty. The Constitution’s republican forms cannot be divorced from the distinctly Judeo-Christian principles of natural law espoused in the Declaration of Independence. “Our gang” needs to understand this and put such principles into operation to combat our statist enemies’ machinations. And yes, even to hold firm against the underlying amoral social-contract rationale of many of our libertarian, ‘neo-conservative’ or agnostic Team Restoration co-belligerents…

(Notwithstanding Billy Beck’s accurate assessment that this present “conflict in American politics is individualism vs. collectivism in all its pretense forms and manifestation.” – the underlying premises of the individualist position are important to the restoration…)

CA falls into Denethor’s Trap. I do not blame him; I am prone to the same conclusions. Remembering that there is a higher purpose to History is the only thing that keeps me from despair. We do what we ought; we do what we must, regardless -- the end-game of history is written despite our efforts. Even if the glory that was the West goes down to utter ruin (as part of Almighty God’s master plan for the end times), we cannot, if we are to be true to our God and to our duty, true to America’s promise of ordered liberty and to our free heritage, do anything less. Yet in being true to our principled heritage we cannot fall into the tactics or adopt the unprincipled stance of our opponents.

I am concerned that CA, and others sharing his frustration, are advocating that direct actions be taken by Team Restoration – before the necessary breaches of the peace can legitimatize such actions … Yet see my response to his “We’re losing, Mike” comment in the post below. We have never been closer to awakening that remnant of actual Americans; we are still not past Ms. Wolf’s “awkward time.”

But if “our gang” loses these underlying Judeo-Christian moral principles; coupled with the limiting ideas of British Constitutionalism - if we become like our enemy - we hasten the endarkenment; we do not prevent it or overcome it.

Tactical patience, study, practice, and recruiting are the watchwords of the day.

Despair and internecine fighting are not.

Team Restoration needs disciplined leadership; its leaders and advocates need self-reinforcing support.

It is time for a long-weekend retreat to recharge each man’s soul, agree on core principles and develop lines of action for future endeavors.

Else we fall into error or despair and our opponents win.

And given the course of history, they may still ‘win” – but only for a season. And after that, comes the final judgment.

/------------------------/

Appended is this "Excerpts of despair" from earlier email exchanges between the three of us.

… and from my 17 January comment regarding CA’s response to K”

“We're losing, Mike. [I really want Pete to explain this, in detail – no waffling. Why are we losing? Says who? In what context? And while it may not be because of Kerodin, Pete and David better understand why Kerodin is dangerous to the necessity of expanding the legitimacy of a constitutional restoration through armed resistance to overt tyranny. But until that awkward time has ended, I think Pete is unduly pessimistic on our chances for limited constitutional reform. The mood of the country has changed. Consider the impact of the Tea Party. Granted 30-40% the electorate (defined as those who minimally bother to pay attention to politics, as opposed to the great unwashed who can’t be bothered to even know which party holds the House vs. Senate vs. White House), are ‘liberals’ in the sense of statist-progressives, and are therefore almost certainly not recoverable, 60-70% the country are still traditional Americans. Bureaucratized, overweening government tyranny, the inevitable, inescapable affects the coming debt-bomb and/or currency collapse notwithstanding, we are closer than ever before in the last 50 years, to actual Americans waking up to the problem of too much government.]”


…and

“Come up with a way that the Resistance can be something more than a paper tiger -- for despite protests to the contrary, that is how it is perceived by the few that knows it exists. [One of the main points of Kerodin’s writings, and one of Pete’s biggest concerns, is that the restoration project is a paper tiger, that there are too few who understand, and even among those who understand, who are morally courageous enough to act, if and when that time comes… I think this is the core reason Pete disagrees with you regarding Kerodin. Pete sees some value in Kerodin’s underlying theme. Kerodin’s writings exude the same visceral frustration – that all the writing and passion on the internet are just posturing; that there is no moral courage to act. ]”


also, other referenced link:

"I keep saying it: the basic conflict in American politics is individualism vs. collectivism in all its pretense forms and manifestation. I keep saying it because no arrangements of coalition electoral politics will address this fundamental schism: as the necessary economic implications become real, so-called 'democracy' becomes impotent to manage coalition demands, all while the force of 'law' becomes more arbitrary at coalition demand.

"I've been saying it for at least fifteen years: "The pace of this thing is picking up."

"I hate to keep saying it, because I know it's no fun to hear it and it just wears my narrow white ass out to keep-ass saying it, but the real problem under all this is fucking enormous

"I really don't think it can be fixed before it really goes the way of the pear. We're really in it. In our lifetimes."

Billy Beck, Two-Four - What Really Happened



Excerpt J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings

“… a captain reporting to his master such matters as had often been heard before, small things of border-war that now seemed useless and petty, shorn of their renown.

Then suddenly Faramir looked at Pippin. 'But now we come to strange matters,' he said. 'For this is not the first halfling that I have seen walking out of northern legends into the Southlands.'

At that Gandalf sat up and gripped the arms of his chair; but he said nothing, and with a look stopped the exclamation on Pippin’s lips. Denethor looked at their faces and nodded his head, as though in sign that he had read much there before it was spoken. Slowly, while the others sat silent and still, Faramir told his tale, with his eyes for the most part on Gandalf, though now and again his glance strayed to Pippin, as if to refresh his memory of others he had seen.

As his story was unfolded of his meeting with Frodo and his servant and of the events of the Henneth Annun, Pippin became aware that Gandalf’s hands were trembling as they clutched the carven wood. White they seemed now and very old, and as he looked at them, suddenly with a thrill of fear Pippin knew that Gandalf, even Gandalf himself, was troubled, even afraid. The air of the room was close and still. At last when Faramir spoke of his parting with the travelers, and of their resolve to go to Cirith Ungol, his voice fell, and he shook his head and sighed. Then Gandalf sprang up.

‘Cirith Ungol? Morgul Vale?’ he said. ‘The time, Faramir, the time? When did you part with them? When would they reach that accursed valley?’

‘I parted with them in the morning two days ago,” said Faramir. ‘It is fifteen leagues thence to the vale of the Morgulduin, if they went straight south; and then they would be still five leagues westward of the accursed Tower. At swiftest they could not come there before today, and maybe they have not come there yet. Indded I see what you fear. But the darkness is not due to their venture. It began yestereve, and all Ithilien was under shadow last night. It is clear to me that the Enemy has long planned an assault on us, and its hour had already been determined before ever the travelers left my keeping.’

Gandalf paced the floor. ‘The morning of two days ago, nigh on three days of journey! How far is the place, where you parted?’

'Some twenty-five leagues as a bird flies,' answered Faramir. 'But I could not come more swiftly. Yestereve I lay at Cair Andros, the long isle in the River northward which we hold in defence; and horses are kept on the hither bank. As the dark drew on I knew that haste was needed, so I rode thence with three others that could also be horsed. The rest of my company I sent south to strengthen the garrison at the fords of Osgiliath. I hope that I have not done ill?' He looked at his father.

'Ill?' cried Denethor, and his eyes flashed suddenly. 'Why do you ask? The men were under your command. Or do you ask for my judgement on all your deeds? Your bearing is lowly in my presence, yet it is long now since you turned from your own way at my counsel. See, you have spoken skilfully, as ever; but I, have I not seen your eye fixed on Mithrandir, seeking whether you said well or too much? He has long had your heart in his keeping.

'My son, your father is old but not yet dotard. I can see and hear, as was my wont; and little of what you have half said or left unsaid is now hidden from me. I know the answer to many riddles. Alas, alas for Boromir!'

'If what I have done displeases you, my father,' said Faramir quietly, 'I wish I had known your counsel before the burden of so weighty a judgement was thrust on me.'

'Would that have availed to change your judgement?' said Denethor. 'You would still have done just so, I deem. I know you well. Ever your desire is to appear lordly and generous as a king of old, gracious, gentle. That may well befit one of high race, if he sits in power and peace. But in desperate hours gentleness may be repaid with death.'

'So be it,' said Faramir.

'So be it!' cried Denethor. 'But not with your death only, Lord Faramir: with the death also of your father, and of all your people, whom it is your part to protect now that Boromir is gone.'

'Do you wish then,' said Faramir, 'that our places had been exchanged?'

'Yes, I wish that indeed,' said Denethor. 'For Boromir was loyal to me and no wizard's pupil. He would have remembered his father's need, and would not have squandered what fortune gave. He would have brought me a mighty gift.'

For a moment Faramir's restraint gave way. 'I would ask you, my father, to remember why it was that I, not he, was in Ithilien. On one occasion at least your counsel has prevailed, not long ago. It was the Lord of the City that gave the errand to him.'

'Stir not the bitterness in the cup that I mixed for myself,' said Denethor. 'Have I not tasted it now many nights upon my tongue foreboding that worse yet lay in the dregs? As now indeed I find. Would it were not so! Would that this thing had come to me!'

'Comfort yourself!' said Gandalf. 'In no case would Boromir have brought it to you. He is dead, and died well; may he sleep in peace! Yet you deceive yourself. He would have stretched out his hand to this thing, and taking it he would have fallen. He would have kept it for his own, and when he returned you would not have known your son.'

The face of Denethor set hard and cold. 'You found Boromir less apt to your hand, did you not?' he said softly. 'But I who was his father say that he would have brought it to me. You are wise, maybe, Mithrandir, yet with all your subtleties you have not all wisdom. Counsels may be found that are neither the webs of wizards nor the haste of fools. I have in this matter more lore and wisdom than you deem. '

'What then is your wisdom?' said Gandalf.

'Enough to perceive that there are two follies to avoid. To use this thing is perilous. At this hour, to send it in the hands of a witless halfling into the land of the Enemy himself, as you have done, and this son of mine, that is madness.'

'And the Lord Denethor what would he have done?'

'Neither. But most surely not for any argument would he have set this thing at a hazard beyond all but a fool's hope, risking our utter ruin, if the Enemy should recover what he lost. Nay, it should have been kept, hidden, hidden dark and deep. Not used, I say, unless at the uttermost end of need, but set beyond his grasp, save by a victory so final that what then befell would not trouble us, being dead.'

'You think, as is your wont, my lord, of Gondor only,' said Gandalf. 'Yet there are other men and other lives, and time still to be. And for me, I pity even his slaves.'

'And where will other men look for help, if Gondor falls?' answered Denethor. 'If I had this thing now in the deep vaults of this citadel, we should not then shake with dread under this gloom, fearing the worst, and our counsels would be undisturbed. If you do not trust me to endure the test, you do not know me yet.'

'Nonetheless I do not trust you,' said Gandalf. 'Had I done so, I could have sent this thing hither to your keeping and spared myself and others much anguish. And now hearing you speak I trust you less, no more than Boromir. Nay, stay your wrath! I do not trust myself in this, and I refused this thing, even as a freely given gift. You are strong and can still in some matters govern yourself, Denethor; yet if you had received this thing, it would have overthrown you. Were it buried beneath the roots of Mindolluin, still it would burn your mind away, as the darkness grows, and the yet worse things follow that soon shall come upon us.'

Pete at WRSA asks us to "Confront the SEIU 'thugswarm.'" Sounds like a great idea to me.



Atlanta Tea Party - Facing The SEIU - State Capitol, 23 February, 4 PM Local

Members of the various Tea Party, 9/12, and other freedom-oriented folks in the Atlanta area will be assembling in the vicinity of Georgia State Capitol this coming Wednesday afternoon at 4 pm. We'll be providing balance to the ravings of the passengers aboard the SEIU Thugbus, which is scheduled to vomit forth its stooges at that same place and time.




Here's the Thugbus' schedule for other spots around the country.

If anybody from the Birmingham area is going to this event, would you kindly let me know?

SEIU trespassers on banker's lawn, frightening his kid home alone inside (ironically the banker is a dyed-in-the-wool-Democrat).

This just in: The Washington Post is still dead. . . although the corpse just let go some trapped flatus & "Civil discourse' for me but not for thee."


Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer scans his morning Washington Post. Ah, nothing again from Grimaldi on the Gunwalker scandal. Good, very good. And I must add Mr. Markon to my caviar list for following the meme.

"This just in, the Washington Post is still dead" to the Project Gunwalker scandal. The corpse, however, just expelled some trapped flatus consistent with the party-line meme.

The first fart to escape the decay is this story by Jerry Markon entitled "Deaths of 3 federal agents highlight changing dangers" which of course fails to mention anything of the real circumstances of Border Patrol Agent Terry's death, according him only this bare paragraph:

Drug-related violence along the Mexican border also may have played a role in the death of Border Patrol agent Brian A. Terry. He was gunned down Dec. 15 while tracking narcotics traffickers and searching for illegal immigrants near Rio Rico, Ariz.


Our second bit of corpsical collectivist flatulence was expelled by Grimaldi's occasional partner in anti-firearm religious meme observance, Sari Horwitz writing in yesterday's Pravda: "National Institute for Civil Discourse to open at University of Arizona."

Horwitz writes:

Former presidents Bill Clinton and George H.W. Bush will serve as honorary chairmen of a new center at the University of Arizona that will focus on civility in political debate, university officials will announce Monday.

The National Institute for Civil Discourse - a nonpartisan center for debate, research, education and policy about civility in public discourse - will open Monday in Tucson. It was created in the aftermath of the Jan. 8 shootings in the city where six people were killed and 13 injured, including Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.).

Former Supreme Court justice Sandra Day O'Connor and former Senate majority leader Thomas A. Daschle (D-S.D.) will serve as honorary co-chairmen. Board members will include former secretary of state Madeleine K. Albright; Kenneth M. Duberstein, chief of staff to President Ronald Reagan; Fox News anchor Greta Van Susteren; Trey Grayson, director of Harvard University's Institute of Politics; and former representative Jim Kolbe (R-Ariz.).

"This institute is the right people in the right place at the right time," said Fred DuVal, vice chairman of the Arizona Board of Regents and former co-chairman of Giffords's finance committee.

The center will be funded with private donations, and $1 million has already been raised, said DuVal, who will head the working board of the institute, which is his brainchild. The institute plans to organize workshops and conferences in Tucson, Washington and elsewhere nationwide, and will bring together leaders from across the political spectrum to develop programs to promote civil discourse.

"Our country needs a setting for political debate that is both frank and civil," Bush said in a statement.

Clinton said in a statement that the new institute "can elevate the tone of dialogue in our country."


Ah, well, if Bill Clinton is going to "elevate the tone of dialogue in our country," then I suppose we must all follow along. Of course, there seem to be a number of Bill's former voters who haven't got the message. Writing from the collectivist side of the spectrum, Lou Kusay exults "We Have Our Invitation to The Class War in Wisconsin."

Perhaps these are some examples of the "polite discourse"?




Oh, I suppose that when put on the spot, Clinton might softly cluck his tongue at such "incivility." But the fact of the matter is that such people insist on "civility" only when they are losing the argument. This is certainly a case, as it always is with collectivists of any stripe, of "Civil discourse' for me but not for thee." In a crowd that believes that "peace" is when all your enemies are either silent, in prison or the graveyard, how could it be any different?

Indeed, why a "National Institute for Civil Discourse" and why now?

One of the institute's first events will be a conference with members of the media, foundations, academic institutions, government and corporations to discuss advancing the national conversation about civil discourse, said Meredith Hay, provost of the University of Arizona.

Although the Tucson shootings were not linked to public discourse, she said, they "created a space for us to think about civil discourse."


Huh? One thing not having anything to do with the other thing, but we "let no crisis go to waste," is that it?

Look, when the Democrats were about to pass the flagrantly unconstitutional "health care" law, I called for modern day Sons of Liberty to break the windows of local Democrat Party headquarters as a warning to make folks understand where such tyrannical conduct was headed -- civil war. For this, I was denounced, along with the Three Percenters, by Bill Clinton on 19 April last year. I received death threats against me and my family. And that's okay. It comes with the territory. I can say that because I realize the nature of the conflict I and every other liberty-loving person in this country is in: it is an ideological struggle to the death, and the threat of violence comes first and foremost from the enemies of the Founders' Republic.

Take the "health care" monstrosity. Who first made threats of violence? It was Nancy Pelosi who plopped the federal pistol down on the table. Do this or we will we compel your ass with all the power and might of the federal government. Isn't that the threat behind every federal statute? The law provided for fines for non-compliance and more, thousands more, IRS agents to enforce them. And the penalty for refusal to pay the fine is? Well, arrest, of course. And the penalty for resisting a federal raid party at your doorstep is? Ask the Davidians, if you can find any left alive.

So, they order us about, they tell us we will by the whim of the demi-god of government -- or ELSE -- and now they want us to be "civil"?!? They expect us to soften our tone and protest only mildly, verbally, when they are using the gun of government to steal yet more of our liberty and property?

Wisconsin shows how much their side values "civility" and "reasoned discourse." Anyone on our side who buys into unilateral disarmament in the struggle between liberty and tyranny is denying reality.

And anyone who tells you different is selling something.

If something is the truth, I will shout it if necessary. I will not be silent, I will not even be polite, if by doing so that makes me an accomplice to tyranny.

Mike
III

Praxis: The recoilless rifle makes a comeback with the Currahees in Afghanistan.


U.S. Army Soldiers from 1st Battalion and 2nd Battalion, 506th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, familiarize themselves with the M67 90mm recoilless rifle by firing the weapon at a Forward Operating Base Orgun-E range Jan. 27th. The Soldiers fired roughly 150 rounds of 90mm ammunition. (Photo by U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Nathan J. Hyman, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 101 Airborne Division)

"There are no obsolete weapons, only obsolete tactics." -- Mike Vanderboegh


Just received this email from Parrothead Jeff:

Mike,

I saw this and thought you'd want to see it. I sent you the earlier info on the recoilless in action in some foreign mountains and figured if you liked that then you'd like this. Here's the link - http://mjm.luckygunner.com/2011/02/13/surprising-comeback-the-90mm-recoilless-rifle-returns-to-the-curahees-at-the-101st/

I found this in a post on The Firearm Blog (http://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2011/02/21/m67-90mm-recoilless-rifle-back-in-use) where the author on that blog said something that really reminded me of Absolved:

Being the armchair-Lieutenant that I am, it has been amusing to watch how many obsolete weapons have been brought back into action during the past decade. The M14 is one notable example. Another is the M72 LAW. The Marines should be receiving their first batch of newly manufactured M72A7 LAWs in April.



Here's the article on the LAW - http://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2008/11/25/m72-law-making-a-comeback/

Best wishes for quick healing for you as well as good health and prosperity for your family!


In terrain characterized by mud huts and concrete buildings (Afghanistan and Iraq)it doesn't make any kind of sense to use an insanely expensive Javelin on them -- yet that is what we've been doing. Plus, there is no hi-tech substitute for a portable cannon firing a beehive swarm of flechettes for close-in defense. Interesting too that they are bringing back the LAWs. If they're smart, the M40 series 106mm RR will be next.

M67 in training, circa 1970s.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

David Codrea asks: "Is ‘Project Gunwalker’ reason for Traver hearing delay? "


All dressed up and no agency to rule.

David's Examiner column.

His Guns Magazine column on the same subject.

Now why didn't I think of this? It seems so simple.

Light to non-existent posting for the rest of the day.

Rosey's Camry, our only working transportation, needs some new brakes badly so a friend of mine and I are going to crawl underneath to attend to it. Don't know how long that will take so don't hold your breath on more posts today. Sorry.

This just in: The Washington Post is still dead, and, on a somewhat lighter note, the AZ Republic is still clueless. "Nobody died at the Watergate."

Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer scans the Sunday Post front page: Good, good. Again nothing about Gunwalker. Grimaldi must still be passed out on that vodka I sent him.

This just in: The Washington Post is still dead to the Project Gunwalker scandal. The Post's investigative journalism of the Watergate scandal now seems so distant from present reality that it must have occurred in an alternate universe.

Speaking of Watergate and how high this Project Gunwalker scandal extends up the Obama administration's food chain, a reporter who is actively working this story told me the other day, "I have sources who tell me this could be as big as Watergate."

To which I replied, "Nobody died at the Watergate."

Just a little something to keep in mind.

The Watergate still stands. The WaPo's reputation for investigative journalism sadly does not.

The Arizona Republic's Robert Anglen is not dead, it seems, but he could hardly be more clueless.

Studying the same documents that our ATF whistleblower so skillfully deconstructed in my post of 7 February, "Open Source Analysis of 'Fast & Furious' Bust Confirms It As An Integral Part of the Project Gunwalker Cover-up," Anglen can only muster up "Arizona has few rifle-sale limits: Law allows big purchases that feds say supply cartels."

Once again we have a reporter, this one who has been thrice-nominated for a Pulitzer, who feeds at the ATF's trough and regurgitates the meme upon request.

Still, on the theory that you can yet, with a two by four, guide the hog from the trough to the tasty truffles hidden in the forest, I wrote the following email to Anglen this morning:

-----Original Message-----
From: georgemason1776@aol.com
To: watchdog@arizonarepublic.com
Sent: Sun, Feb 20, 2011 7:00 am
Subject: For a Pulitzer-nominated big dog investigative reporter, you sure missed the point with your latest story -- and in your own back yard(?).

If you want to be nominated for another Pulitzer, you're going to have to do better than than this story (link) which is only amazing for what it missed altogether.

Try reading this exchange of mail mostly from Senator Grassley on the Project Gunwalker scandal:

(Links omitted for reasons of space.)

Then, to discover how much you missed the point of the documents you cited, go to this Open Source Analysis by an ATF whistleblower of the Fast and Furious bust which can be found here: (Link.)

Then, check out Carter’s Country in Houston as an example of ATF requests to gun dealers:

(Links omitted for reasons of space.)

My own Summary, etc.:

(Links omitted for reasons of space.)

A reporter told me the other day, "I have sources who tell me this could be as big as Watergate." To which I replied, "Nobody died at the Watergate." So far in the Project Gunwalker scandal we have Brian Terry and who knows how many nameless, faceless dead Mexicans: (Link.)

And when they hand out the next Pulitzer for investigative journalism, won't YOU be kicking yourself in the ass for failing to get the point and cover the real story -- in your own back yard?

Mike Vanderboegh


Saturday, February 19, 2011

This Just In: "The Washington Post is still dead. . . but, the corpse just twitched, a bit."

Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer reads his Saturday Washington Post. Good boy, Grimaldi, you managed to leave out Project Gunwalker again. Maybe I send you vodka next time.

This just in: The Washington Post is still dead" to the Project Gunwalker scandal. But, the corpse just twitched, a bit:

"House votes to kill reporting system for assault-weapon sales."

Janet Napolitano isn't running -- except as fast and far away from the Project Gunwalker scandal as she can.


"Napolitano Won't Run For Kyl's Seat."