Wednesday, October 15, 2014

More Colorado Monkey Business from Gary Hart.

"Monkey Business" . . . was an 83-foot Broward motor yacht custom built and owned by the developers of (a) luxury resort. . . The ship was used by USA senator Gary Hart during his campaign for President of the United States in 1987. Around the time that Hart challenged the press to provide evidence of his infidelities, reporters for the Miami Herald, in a controversial move, staked out Hart's townhouse around the clock, and finally spotted the Senator with Miami model Donna Rice. The ensuing report sent the media into frenzy, and within days photos of Hart and Rice on the opulent yacht were flooding international media, and consequently his shot at the presidency had sunk. -- Wikipedia.
The Worst Political Endorsement by a Serious Newspaper in My Lifetime

Len Savage strikes again. ‘Simple Jack’ goes full cool for gun owners, full maddening for hoplophobes

It’s bad enough, from a gun-grabber’s point of view, that the Cyberdyne Systems “Simple Jack” 1919A-10 Man-Portable Modular Weapon System starts with a Browning .30 caliber machine gun. That alone is sure to give the most demanding mom or the most indignant gelding a case of the vapors. The modifications may just give them all apoplexy.

Collectivists never miss a chance to hammer home the party line. Frank Bruni of the New York Times says don't worry about Ebola, worry about firearms.

Tighter restrictions on firearms. More than 30,000 Americans die from gunshots every year. Anyone looking for an epidemic to freak out about can find one right there.

The Secret Casualties of Iraq’s Abandoned Chemical Weapons

Jarrod L. Taylor, a former Army sergeant on hand for the destruction of mustard shells that burned two soldiers in his infantry company, joked of “wounds that never happened” from “that stuff that didn’t exist.” The public, he said, was misled for a decade. “I love it when I hear, ‘Oh there weren’t any chemical weapons in Iraq,’ ” he said. “There were plenty.”

Hey, Hickenlooper, I've got news for you. That's not the only thing they didn't appreciate.

HICK TO RURAL COLORADO: They “Didn’t Appreciate” My “Complicated” Electricity Hike.

Scratch a "progressive," get a totalitarian. City of Houston demands pastors turn over sermons

The city of Houston has issued subpoenas demanding a group of pastors turn over any sermons dealing with homosexuality, gender identity or Annise Parker, the city’s first openly lesbian mayor. And those ministers who fail to comply could be held in contempt of court.
Next thing you know, they'll be wanting all Christians to wear crude patches of crosses on their jackets.

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

More proof, if any were needed, of my contention that collectivists are more obsessed with race than a Nazi gauleiter of Lower Swabia in the 1930s.

CA Prof: Killing Black People Is Killing Barack Obama. "There’s a f*cking n—er in the White House? Well f*ck you, n—er, whoever you are."

NRA’s ‘A-’ grade for Begich in Alaska Senate race endangers GOP takeover

The reason “pro-gun Democrat” Begich was not endorsed this time around, as he has been in the past, is because he voted to confirm Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan to the Supreme Court, and after gun owner uproar, NRA pledged to score those grades. An “A-” isn't much of a price to pay, and it’s fair to ask how meaningful that is if two total betrayals for anti-gun judges committed to ruling against the Second Amendment results in such a lenient penalty. Even without the endorsement, Alaska gun owners are still presented with someone they’re told they can trust, especially after NRA’s spokesman made a special point of assuring them “On gun votes, Begich has stood with NRA members 100 percent of the time.” Is that truly the case? If so, why has Gun Owners of America given Begich a “D”?

Gov. Hickenlooper Spokesman Threatens Journalist with Arrest for Requesting Tax Documents

Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper’s (D) campaign spokesperson Eddie Stern allegedly escorted a reporter out of their building Friday and dialed 911 with the intent to have him arrested.

Gun owners following Dick Morris ignore issues of principle and trust

While Vanderboegh, backed up by a trusted source, focused much of his analysis on indicators pointing to Rahm Emanuel being the architect of that proposed violation of civil liberties, the role of Dick Morris -- one-time trusted adviser-turned career Clinton-basher -- as a cheerleader for the plan merits special notice. That’s because since defecting, Morris now enjoys his following from conservatives opposed to the seemingly perpetually-looming threat of Hillary becoming president.

"Honor is due to all who participated in the shooting." Community Defense in Eureka Springs, Arkansas, 27 September 1922.

Eureka Springs, Arkansas, A modern view of the street where five bank robbers met up with the armed citizenry in 1922.
I found the following true story of community self-defense in a 1970 edition of A Fame Not Easily Forgotten that I picked up at the thrift store for $.98. This slim volume contains many stories of the community of Eureka Springs, Arkansas, including that of its one-time mayor and most prominent and colorful citizen named (and I kid you not) Festus Orestes Butt. But the excerpt I present below is an interesting anecdote of community defense.
Left to Right: Ernest Jordan, Jesse Littrell, Joe McKinney, Sheriff Ed McShane, Constable Homer Brittain, Sam Harmon, and Robert Bowman.
It was almost eleven on a quiet autumn morning, September 22, 1922, when five strangers drove into downtown Eureka Springs in an open Model T Ford touring car. The men had spent the previous night camped out on Leatherwood Creek just west of town and made their final plans as to how they would go about holding up one of the banks in Eureka Springs.
Of the men, Charles and George Price were brothers from Sallisaw, Oklahoma. The two of them, along with Si Wilson of the town of Cookson in that state, were a part of the Henry Starr gang which had broken up a short time after Starr's death in a robbery attempt in Harrison. These three were wanted by the Oklahoma authorities for robbing the Muldrow Bank and were also suspected of a robbery at Everton, Arkansas. The Prices and Wilson looked up two old friends, Mark Hendricks of Parkhill and John Cowan of Tahlequah, persuaded them to come along and set out for Arkansas to keep out of the way of Oklahoma police.
Apparently John Cowan was driving the car and would later act as a lookout while the holdup took place. Cowan parked the vehicle on Spring Street, headed downhill, and just a few doors below the First National Bank building. The other four stepped out and went quickly into the bank, leaving one man, Wilson, near the door to cover them.
It had been a busy morning for the five employees of the bank and when the bandits arrived they were seeing to the wants of four customers. According to the statement given by the cashier, E.T. Smith, later in the day, the men were not masked and at first displayed no weapons. Smith had the presence of mind to step on the burglar alarm button concealed in the floor near his desk as the four men pulled their guns and herded all of the nine patrons and employees into a back room of the building. An assistant cashier, F.M. Sawyer, also stepped on an alarm button near him without being noticed by any of the bandits. The men worked quickly and efficiently, talking little, as they gathered up $60,000 in Liberty bonds and $10,000 in cash, stuffing it into sacks.
Suddenly the man at the door noticed their car start down the street and realized that something had gone wrong. None of the bandits had heard the alarm bells activated by Smith and Sawyer which sounded in four nearby business houses, the Basin Park Hotel, and the Bank of Eureka Springs. As men from these places began to run out into the street Cowan had seen them and evidently fearing only for his own safety tried to flee in the getaway car.
The cashier, G.E. Burson, at the Bank of Eureka Springs, less than a block away, stepped out the door, gun in hand. Seeing the car pulling away in a hurry, Burson fired at the driver, wounding him in the arm. Cowan managed to drive as far as the Basin Spring before two shots fired by citizens Jesse Littrell and Sam Harmon caused him to lose control of the car, smashing into a power pole on the east side of Spring Street.
Ernie Jordan was working at the repair bench in his jewelry store when the disturbance began. He also kept a pistol close at hand and grabbing it he ran out into the street in time to see Wilson, with a drawn gun, step away from the doorway of the bank. Jordan immediately fired at Wilson, who fell dead in the street. An attorney, Joe McKinney, also shot Wilson from an upstairs window over the bank where he had his office. In the confusion it was never determined who had actually fired the shot that killed Wilson.
Inside the bank the Prices and Hendricks had the loot in hand and were preparing to take Smith and Sawyer with them as hostages to assure their safe getaway. At that moment Robert Bowman, the desk clerk from the Basin Park Hotel and Claude Arbuckle, who had been chatting with him when the alarm sounded, dashed into the bank building, Bowman carrying a .45 pistol. The three bandits immediately forced them to put up their hands, then rushed out of the door with Sawyer and Smith between the two fo them. Jordan, not realizing what was happening inside the building, ran to Wilson to examine him and was met by the three bandits and their hostages. One of the armed men shot point blank at Jordan as they ran across the street toward a stairway between two buildings which would take them down to Center Street. Jordan, despite powder burns to his eyes, fired several more times, as did other men coming from both directions as well as those leaning out of upstairs office windows.
Seeing the confusion of the bandits, Smith and Sawyer jerked free and fell to the street where they stayed unharmed until the shooting ended.
Constable Homer Brittain arrived upon the scene just in time to find himself caught between Charles Price and Mark Hendricks, who had reached the bottom of the steps, and George Price, still on the upper street level. Brittain crouched low, firing in both directions. As the shooting continued George Price slumped over the railing at the top of the steps, fatally wounded. His brother Charles also fell to the ground having sustained near fatal wounds, and Hendricks, also seriously wounded, gave up the battle. Throwing away his gun he slumped down on the steps and waited to be captured. The five men were carried a short distance to Huntington Hospital, at the foot of Pine street, where they were attended by Doctors Pace, Bolton, and Albert Tatman.
Si Wilson was dead with eight bullets in his body. George Price had sustained only one wound, in the chest, but the bullet had taken his life. His brother Charles Price, was seen to be dying of stomach wounds though he lived for four more days. Mark Hendricks received two wounds, both from a shotgun, but neither was serious enough to end his life, and John Cowan, who had tried to flee from the scene, was wounded twice in the arm and leg. . .
Spoils of war: Eureka Springs citizens pose with bank robbers' getaway car.
Cowan and Hendricks survived the ill-fated robbery attempt and were lodged in jail until the following February when they were tried and convicted for bank robbery. Just twenty-one years old, Hendricks was sentenced to three years in prison, but Cowan, because of his past record, received a sentence of ten years imprisonment.
So ended what proved to be the bloodiest and most disastrous criminal act in the history of Eureka Springs . . .except for the aftermath of publicity which was picked up by newspapers all over the United States and reached ridiculous heights of praise and honor bestowed on the community and its citizens.
Six young men were given the credit for having "killed on and mortally wounded two others." They were Ernest Jordan, Constable Homer Brittain, Joe McKinney, Jesse Littrell, Robert Bowman and Sam Harmon Though all six owned and kept at hand in their places of business either hand pistols or shotguns, not one of them had ever seriously considered an eventuality which would necessitate their use against another human being. After having reacted courageously to the necessity of stopping a criminal act and protecting themselves from the actions of desperate men, they found themselves subjected to an embarrassing barrage of publicity. Newspaper reports on the local scene used words like "honor," and "glory," and begged to be forgiven if each man were not allowed sufficient "credit" for the deaths of the robbers in their news coverage of the event.
The Daily Times Echo of October 2, 1922, in an article entitled "Our Heroes" enumerated each of the six men in turn, pointing out qualities of their character and past life which had enabled them to make such a fine showing against evil men. Said the writer of this editorial:
"To be unpopular in Eureka Springs is to express sympathy for the robbers who were killed or wounded last week, when they attempted to loot the First National Bank. Man or woman who express themselves in this vein are looked upon by the loyal citizens and friends of our heroes as German sympathizers were during the great World War." The reporter concluded, "We imagine it will be difficult to tell just who fired the fatal shots. Nevertheless honor is due to all who participated in the shooting."
Forget Texas. Don't mess with Arkansas. He came for the money and ended up buying the farm. Si Wilson after his encounter with the good citizens of Eureka Springs, Arkansas.

Monday, October 13, 2014

The FBI’s bogus report on mass shootings

While the FBI study discusses “mass shootings or killings,” its graphs were filled with cases that had nothing to do with mass killings. Of the 160 cases it counted, 32 involved a gun being fired without anyone being killed. Another 35 cases involved a single murder. It’s hard to see how the FBI can count these incidents, which make up 42 percent of its 160 cases, as “mass killings.” They plainly don’t fit the FBI’s old definition, which required four or more murders, nor even its new one of at least three murders.

There's going to be some bad weather moving through tonight

So I can't predict if the power or the internet connection will remain undisturbed. If you don't see any posts tomorrow morning, that's the likely explanation.

Of Tyrants And Dangerous Old Men

Originally posted January 2013: Any attempt to take the contemporary arms of military utility our Founders wanted us to have, which includes the standard magazines and clips used in these firearms, is an act of tyranny that the Founders would recognize as an event justifying the use of force to retain our freedoms.

Boy, talk about eyebrow burners.

Man Armed With Sawed-Off Mosin-Nagant Engages Officer in Shootout, Dies.

Election thievery afoot in Colorado.

Braced for Voter Fraud in Colorado