Sep
16
2008

Jeff Buckleys Grace really is one of the best albums ever

Too many songs on this album to single out just one.   Believe me I’ve tried.   They are all simply incredible.  I never tire of this album.

Of course I’d LOVE to share with you some select YouTube videos of Jeff Buckley but SONY BMG in its greed has disabled the embedding of all their artists YouTube videos so that they can display an advertisement.  You can find his videos on YouTube but please don’t patronize SONY BMG and validate their poor marketing practice and attorneys.

Written by admin in: Twitter Feed |
Sep
16
2008

You don’t know who I am but I know where you live!

Hackers block Qaeda’s 9/11 terror on tape

Hackers prevented Al Qaeda from releasing a videotape to mark the seventh anniversary of 9/11. Al Qaeda has traditionally issued a video or audiotape by either Osama bin Laden or Ayman al Zawahiri, the terror network’s two leaders, to mark their massive terrorist attack on the US.

As-Sahab, Al Qaeda’s media unit, had indicated earlier this week that it would post such a videotape on September 11. As-Sahab had banner images on the internet showing a silhouetted head with a question mark and the words, “Wait 11 September”.

The US-based intelligence group IntelCenter had speculated the video would be a message from Osama or Zawahiri with a recording of the last will and testament of Mohammed Atta, one of the leaders of the 9/11 attackers.

Sources close to US intelligence said, “Hackers knocked out Al Qaeda’s online means of communication, thus preventing them from posting anything to commemorate the anniversary.”
Western intelligence suspects two hackers who have targeted Islamicist sites before were responsible: Aaron Weisburd from Internet Haganah and Rusty Shackleford from the web group My Pet Jawa.

Both have been active in ongoing Internet battle between Islamicist hackers and their opponents.
Terrorism expert B Raman says, “I received word two days ago that it was possible the tape would not be released because of hackers.” He noted: “As Sahab is having problems. (Al Qaeda spokesperson) Adam Gadan, in charge of the website, has not been heard of for six months. There are reports he may have been killed in Pakistan.” He expects the tape to be issued three or four days from now. “Or they will send it to Al Jazeera.”

This is not the first time hackers have dented the plans of the world’s deadliest terror network. In 2004, a hacker group called TeAmZ USA had knocked out the websites of Abu Musal al-Zarqawi, late head of the Al Qaeda in Iraq, for showing tapes of Westerners being beheaded. The hackers left the image of a gun-toting penguin on the website.

Last year’s Al Qaeda anniversary videotape included a eulogy by Bin Laden to 9/11 attacker Waleed al Shehri and his video will — a recording made by suicide bombers before they carry out their missions. Al Qaeda failed to issue an anniversary tape in 2004 as well, leading to speculation Bin Laden had died. Last year, Washington released the anniversary tape two days before Al Qaeda did. Says Raman, “This was probably to deliberately show the US had hacked the password to Al Qaeda’s website.”

Absolutely Classic. If you don’t get the joke you’ll have to fire up Google. ;)

Written by admin in: In the News, Life, News and Politics |
Sep
15
2008

Paintball by the Numbers

Thanks to David from Artful Articulations for this

Written by admin in: Art and Photography |
Sep
13
2008

Wow…

the teen hottie in the 1988 ‘Corey’ flick “License to Drive” was Heather Graham!

Written by admin in: Twitter Feed |
Sep
12
2008

Happy Birthday Pratt!

Wishing a happy birthday to ‘the Professor” Neil Peart. Thanks for the inspiration Pratt!

Written by admin in: Twitter Feed |
Sep
12
2008

Elevator Humor

Gotta be careful…. :)

Written by admin in: Life |
Sep
10
2008

Someone’s panties are in a twist and I’m not referring to Palin’s

Posted by Ben Smith of Politico.com

Speaking at a high school in Norfolk, Obama took a few moments to address what he calls “the made-up controversy” of the day, Amie Parnes reports.

Obama said the McCain campaign moved to “seize an innocent remark and take it out of context because they knew it’s catnip for the news media.”

“See, it would be funny, but the news media decided that would be the lead story yesterday. This happens every election cycle. Every four years, this is what we do. This is what they want to spend two of the last 55 days talking about…Enough!” he said.

Obama called the attacks “lies, outrage and swift boat politics.”
Read Full Story Here

See it’s only a “made up controversy” when it refers to ME, stop parsing MY words and get back to parsing THEIR words.

ohhhhh and pssst…. Mr Obama? They are the media…..deciding whats going to be the lead story…. it’s kinda their job…. they make these things called decisions…. I know you are only vaguely familiar with the concept…. you can be critical of the decision, but at some point SOMEONE (I Know I know, NOT YOU) has to make one.

Written by admin in: News and Politics |
Sep
09
2008

Sarah Palin Rumors Debunked

The folks from the non-partisan FactCheck.org debunk many of the claims from the Liberal Blogosphere about Sarah Palin

We’ve been flooded for the past few days with queries about dubious Internet postings and mass e-mail messages making claims about McCain’s running mate, Gov. Palin. We find that many are completely false, or misleading.

Palin did not cut funding for special needs education in Alaska by 62 percent. She didn’t cut it at all. In fact, she tripled per-pupil funding over just three years.

She did not demand that books be banned from the Wasilla library. Some of the books on a widely circulated list were not even in print at the time. The librarian has said Palin asked a “What if?” question, but the librarian continued in her job through most of Palin’s first term.

She was never a member of the Alaskan Independence Party, a group that wants Alaskans to vote on whether they wish to secede from the United States. She’s been registered as a Republican since May 1982.

Palin never endorsed or supported Pat Buchanan for president. She once wore a Buchanan button as a “courtesty” when he visited Wasilla, but shortly afterward she was appointed to co-chair of the campaign of Steve Forbes in the state.

Palin has not pushed for teaching creationism in Alaska’s schools. She has said that students should be allowed to “debate both sides” of the evolution question, but she also said creationism “doesn’t have to be part of the curriculum.”

Read the full article/Analysis Here

Written by admin in: News and Politics |
Sep
01
2008

When seconds count…the police are minutes away

Great article on the merits of Citizen’s with Concealed Weapons.

http://www.thenewstribune.com/news/northwest/story/467502.html

More in state get license to carry concealed gun
JOSH FARLEY; Kitsap Sun Published: September 1st, 2008 01:00

AMSEABECK, KITSAP COUNTY – In Julian Piercy’s mind, the small bulge in his shirt near his lower back is a way of “leveling a situation.”

The clip he fastens to his waistband before leaving the house isn’t just another accessory. It gives him an option, he said, when all others are off the table and a life is on the line.

When he feels the pressure of metal on his back, it gives him confidence that he has a chance of protecting those he cares about most.

“As a parent, I am the first line of defense for my children,” he said. “Not the police.”

Piercy, a nursing student at Olympic College, lifts his shirt to reveal a .45-caliber Springfield XD, a semi-automatic handgun that weighs about 30 ounces when loaded. He carries it constantly with a few exceptions, mostly when he’s on campus and prohibited from doing so.

Having carried in his younger days because, frankly, he could, Piercy, 38, has again obtained a license to carry a concealed weapon and is getting used to the feel of carrying again.

“The gun doesn’t make me invincible, smarter or tougher than anyone else,” he said. “It’s merely there as a tool.”

Spurred by fear of a violent attack or because they’ve survived one, more Washingtonians are getting a concealed pistol license. License-holders jumped from about 179,000 to 258,000, 43 percent, between 2003 and 2007.

‘NOBODY KNOWS’
Federal buildings, courthouses, military installations, bars, schools and airports are off-limits to concealed weapons, but they’re allowed in most other public areas. In fact, Washington’s constitution permits its residents to “open carry” with a gun on their hip in public, but many gun owners choose to apply for the license and keep their weapon hidden.

“Nobody knows,” said Jim Wamsher, 52, of Port Orchard, who carries a Kimber 1911 on his hip. “And that’s the whole idea.”

Wamsher believes he has a “moral obligation” to protect his family and the community. But he acknowledges that carrying also gives him an obligation to be well-trained with his weapon.

There’s no training requirement to get a concealed pistol license, however. To be eligible in Washington, residents must have no felony or domestic violence misdemeanor convictions, or any warrants for their arrest. They must pass nationwide and local criminal background checks.

Many subscribe to the mantra: “When seconds count, the police are just minutes away.”

“It’s like a seat belt,” said April Borbon, 41, a business owner in Central Kitsap. “Hopefully I’ll never need it. And if I do, it’ll be a life-or-death situation.”

Eugene Volokh, a law professor at the University of California at Los Angeles, said those considering carrying concealed weapons aren’t necessarily analyzing the crime rate when they decide to apply for a license.

“I think they ask themselves, ‘What’s the cost of this to me and what’s the benefit to me?’” he said of those who seek the concealed pistol permit. “It’s very little cost to them, but they feel very comfortable with guns and carrying one gives them confidence.”

‘SACRED RESPONSIBILITY’
Do concealed pistol holders make society safer, a kind of armed public service?

Mark Duncan, deputy police chief on Bainbridge Island, said that’s a difficult question to answer. An easier question for him is whether they make society more dangerous. His answer is no.

“The cases of someone misusing their concealed pistol license are virtually unheard of,” he said.

Dean Byrd, chief deputy with the Mason County Sheriff’s Office, goes further.

“Sometimes that’s what people have to rely on,” Byrd said of license-holders in rural parts of the county he patrols, “because law enforcement may be a long ways away.”

Duncan, who added that he carries “everywhere I go,” including when he’s off duty, said those who get a concealed pistol license see themselves as having a “sacred responsibility.”

Kristen Comer, executive director for Washington Ceasefire, a gun-control advocacy group, questions whether having more people carrying concealed pistols results in greater public safety. But she concedes that it might be true among weapons carriers who are trained and know the “gravity” of their undertaking.

Reserving the use of a gun for life-and-death situations and spotting them is what Marcus Carter, executive officer at the Kitsap Rifle and Revolver Club, tries to instill in everyone he teaches.

Carter’s classes include instruction on the legalities of carrying. He can cite from memory numerous articles of the both the U.S. and Washington Constitution. Their amendments on the right to bear arms come easily to mind.

But just as he believes in guns, he believes in gun safety.

“If you’re going to carry a firearm, you have a responsibility to train with it,” he said.

Carter sees an upswing in the numbers coming to the club for training. He points to many reasons – a slumping economy or an upcoming election with fewer “pro-gun” candidates, for example – that prompt people to take their Second Amendment rights more seriously.

He said there’s been a steady influx of women, who typically are outnumbered by their male counterparts in gun use, at the club. In Kitsap County, home to a large and often out-to-sea naval population, those women left behind are apt to get trained with a firearm.

The most heated issue recently concerning concealed weapons occurred in the Legislature this past session with the introduction of two bills.

Sen. Ed Murray, D-Seattle, tried to ban guns from any campus that hosts high school students, such as at Olympic College, which hosts the Running Start program for high school juniors and seniors. Sen. Pam Roach, R-Auburn, introduced a bill aimed at prohibiting colleges and universities from banning holders of concealed pistol licenses from carrying on campus. There’s no state law, only college policy, keeping weapons off campus.

Roach, who has a concealed weapons permit, said she supports having carriers on campus because the mentality of a shooter “is to hone in on places that people are the most defenseless.”

“The reality is these scenarios are never good ones,” she said. “But potentially we have 258,000 people out there who can save people from dying. The issue is how many lives can be saved.”

I can understand the concerns of those who aren’t exposed to firearms on a daily basis.  However for those of us who ‘don’t leave home without it’  it really isn’t that big of a deal.  It becomes as natural as a cellphone, wallet and car keys.

Not that such a thing is not treated seriously.   I may misplace my cellphone (well not now since I became an iTard ) but the firearm is always under my control.  I strongly recommend those considering this option to seek professional training.  It won’t be cheap but it’s cheaper than having to hire legal council.  Such training isn’t just the basics of marksmanship but on the judicious use of lethal force.  A simple primer from Useofforce.us:

The use of lethal force that can end in homicide is justified in the situation of immediate, otherwise unavoidable danger of death or grave bodily harm to the innocent. — Massad Ayoob

Mas effectively condenses the concepts of Ability, Opportunity, Jeopardy and Preclusion into one handy sentence.

Ability

Your attacker must have the ability—the physical, practical ability—to cause you harm. Common sense applies here, as does context. A gun gives your attacker ability (lethal ability, in fact); a knife gives ability as well. Indeed, most weapons qualify, all the way down to glass bottles, baseball bats, and screwdrivers. While the latter are not designed as weapons, if they are applied as such, they can certainly kill you just as dead.

Other “ability” considerations include disparity in size or physical power between you and your attacker—a very large man versus a very small man, a strong man versus a cripple, a trained fighter versus a bookworm, a man versus a woman, all can apply. And don’t forget disparity in numbers—four men attacking one can very easily kill or cripple, unless that one is a Hollywood action hero.

Most of the above are valid lethal force scenarios, but non-lethal force uses the same standard. Just about anyone can punch you and break your nose, or break your arm, or bruise your stomach.

In short, common sense is a more or less effective guide on this point. The important question is simply whether, as far as you know, the attacker has the ability to harm you—kill or maim you, if you respond with lethal force, or lesser degrees of danger for equivalently lesser uses of force.

Opportunity

Although opportunity can be viewed as a subset of ability, it is an equally important criterion. Basically, while your attacker may very well have the ability to cause you harm, it means nothing unless he also has the opportunity to do so—right here and right now. After all, there are probably countless criminals in the world who “could” kill you and might do so, given the chance; but they aren’t standing in front of you at this moment, so they don’t have that opportunity.

The biggest consideration here is range or proximity. Although a man with a gun is considered dangerous at any reasonable distance, a man with a knife standing 300 feet away is not, simply because he cannot stab you from that far away. Yet there is another factor, as well. If he were standing mere yards away, he still probably couldn’t reach you with his knife, but because it would only take him moments to approach you and change that, he would still be considered dangerous. A common police standard is to assume that a knife-wielding assailant is capable of covering 21 feet and striking with the blade in 1.5 seconds. Mull on that time span.

Some other considerations may apply when it comes to Opportunity. For instance, is a knife-wielding assailant behind a locked door a threat? Probably not. Therefore, if you were to shoot him through the door, that would not be justifiable. On the other hand, if he started—successfully—breaking the door down, then he would promptly become dangerous again. Again, use common sense.

Jeopardy

The most subjective factor of the AOJP analysis is the jeopardy requirement, sometimes called “imminent jeopardy.” This criterion requires that, in your specific situation, a “reasonable and prudent” person would have believed himself to be in immediate danger.

In other words, jeopardy is what distinguishes between a potentiallycould punch or stab or shoot you. The reason you aren’t “defending” yourself against them is because you have no reason to think that they are actually about to attack you. (Why would they?) dangerous situation and one that is actually dangerous. Hundreds of times every day, you walk by people who

On the other hand, if someone screams a threat and points a gun at you, any sane person would expect that behavior to indicate an intent to cause you harm.

It’s important to recognize that you cannot actually know this person’s intent; you are not a mind reader. All you can judge is his outward appearance and demeanor, which, in that case, are consistent with harmful intent. If it turns out that he was joking, or lying, or the gun was fake, or he wouldn’t actually have pulled the trigger, nothing changes, because you could not have known those things.

The other important qualifier to remember is that the jeopardy must be immediate. A general threat to your well-being in the distant future is meaningless, but “I’m gonna kill you right now!” is meaningful.

Finally, it’s essential to understand that the “immediate jeopardy” condition can go away at the drop of a hat. On the one hand, if you are attacked, beaten, and left lying in an alley, you are not justified in shooting your attacker in the back as he walks away, because he will have ceased to be a threat. On the other hand, if he turns around and comes back for more, then the immediate jeopardy resumes. Jeopardy can cease suddenly and unexpectedly if your attacker surrenders or clearly ceases to be a threat (if you knock him unconscious, for instance, or he tries to run), and continuing to use force in such situations can change your action from legal self-defense to illegal battery in moments.

Preclusion

Preclusion is not so much an individual consideration as it is an all-encompassing lens through which to view your actions. More complex than the others, it is nevertheless just as important. It is the idea that, whatever the situation, you are expected to use force only as a last resort—that is, only when the circumstances preclude all other options.

In other words, even when the ability, opportunity, and jeopardy criteria are satisfied, and knowing that you must clearly do something to protect yourself, the use of force, particularly lethal force, may only be that “something” if you have no other safe options.

The word “safe” is key there, because at no time does the law ever require you to choose an action that endangers yourself. If you can run away or retreat, you should, but if doing so would put you in harm’s way, you are not required to do so.

Preclusion is the factor that is missing in most self-defense arguments, and thus the reason most fail. You must remember that you bear the burden of proof; until you prove otherwise, the law merely sees two equal citizens in a dispute. You can say, “He tried to hit me,” but then the police and the courts will ask, “Why didn’t you _____?” You must have no options to offer to fill in that blank—there must have been no other courses of action you could have taken to maintain your safety except the use of force. Otherwise, you’re just fighting because you want to, and that’s a crime.

Does the Preclusion standard mean that an ultimatum like “give me your money or I’ll hurt you” requires you to, well, give him your money? Unless you honestly believe that he may hurt you anyway, yes. The law values “life and limb” above property. Or you can refuse, but you may not respond with a fist. He’s giving you a choice, which, by definition, means that you still have options other than force.

The point is simply that you must exercise self-restraint to the greatest extent possible. One vital aspect of this requirement concerns the appropriateness or degree of the force you employ, or how well suited your response is to the threat itself. If a man punches you, you probably cannot justifiably shoot him, because that’s a lethal response to a non-lethal attack. If a three-year-old punches you, you probably cannot do anything at all. If, on the other hand, a 300-pound boxer punches you, you may be justified in responding with deadly force, because his fists can be deadly as well.

Always remember:

  1. The threat must be current, immediate, and unavoidable.
  2. Your level of force must be appropriate to the threat.
  3. Your use of force must stop when the threat ceases.

Any of you folks in the Greater Boston/Southern New Hampshire area looking for excellent professional training, give me a shout and I’ll be happy to hook you up.

Finally don’t buy a pistol without considering how you are going to carry it.  Most of the holsters sold in local gunstores are actually astonishingly inadequate.  Good quality holsters are however available online but it helps to talk to those who carry daily in order to avoid the ‘drawer full of holsters’ that some of us have.

Personally I prefer Mitch Rosen’s ARG Inside the Waistband holster.  I’ve been using one for 10 years now and it’s held up very well and is very comfortable.

Written by admin in: News and Politics |
Sep
01
2008

No bounce? at all?

This was supposed to be the anti-Bush elections.  It was inevitable, a Democrat was going to be in the White House come January…

Not so fast there friends…

With all the hype the smugness may have backfired.  ZeroBama should be leading the GOP by 10-20 points, however initial polling is showing that post DNC he’s received almost zero bounce from the convention.  Maybe that speech played well with the True Believers but it’s beginning to look like one hell of a flop outside of Hollywood and the Smug-states.

Zogby:  47 McCain, Obama 45

CNN:  49 Obama, 48 McCain

If they lose this election expect the streets to turn red….from the mass suicides =)

Written by admin in: News and Politics |

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