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Law

Left Wing Logic

Apparently, there are a great, but politically insufficient, number of voters in California who do not agree with their sitting governor. As Dan Walters pointed out:

Californians have been legally adding about 1.5 million firearms to their personal arsenals each year, according to FBI and state Department of Justice data. A visitor to one of the state’s many gun shows will find patrons emerging with cases of ammunition to counter anticipated ammo rules.

Gang members and other gun criminals, by their nature, don’t make legal purchases. Rather, they acquire weapons and ammo surreptitiously, in ways that don’t leave paper trails of ownership.

Leave it to the political left wing ideologue's to enhance the "worse" in the term "for better or worse."

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History: Old and New

The Undercover World of Pretext

The JFK Files are Positively X-Files

CBS Miami reports documents show CIA considered false flag terrorist attacks in Miami to blame on Castro. http://miami.cbslocal.com/2017/10/27/jfk-files-cia-plotted-kill-castro-stage-bombings-miami/  This is huge.

... and the minimum wage equals the wages of sin!

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Culture

Deadly Ignorance

It seems that people with a materialistic worldview tend to consider a gun as being more dangerous than ignorance, while the antitheses to that belief, for people with a biblical worldview, is that ignorance is much more deadly than a gun. This is probably why a so-called "common sense solution" to "gun control" can never work in our society as a whole. These two distinctive worldview's can, at best, produce a form of lukewarm emulsion.

Why is ignorance more deadly than a gun?

In his daily briefing today, Albert Mohler discusses the deadly nature of ignorance, from an historical point of view.

October 2017 marks the 100th anniversary of the Bolshevik communist revolution in Russia. That led of course to the creation of the Soviet Union, and that as it now turns out in any honest retrospect is one of the darkest chapters of human history. We are looking at the 20th century representing as one major historian has called the century of megadeath, and at the center of that megadeath is the great lie and deception, the great evil that was the communist revolution and the communist regime in the Soviet Union. And now it is high time that Americans amongst others consider honestly the legacy of that Bolshevik Revolution in 1917 and remind ourselves of some of the necessary lessons to be learned.

First of all, we need to remind ourselves that the Bolshevik Revolution, that communist revolution of October 1917, did not come out of a vacuum; it didn’t come out of the blue. It came in the context of enormous social unrest and a lack of confidence in the autocratic monarchy of czarist Russia. So, we were looking at one of the crucial hinges of history, the end of one age, the age of autocratic totalitarian monarchies — in this case represented by the czarist in the Romanov dynasty — and we were seeing the hinge turn towards revolution, and in this case a revolution that if anything was even more horrifying than the totalitarian monarch that it replaced. But, of course, in the midst of all this tumult there was a great deal of confusion, and we also have to recognize that the 19th century was in so many ways the century of revolution. Some of those revolutions would harken back to the American Revolution in the 1770s. Some of them would look back to the French Revolution in the early 19th century. Some of them would look to the revolutions that took place in the middle of the 19th century, almost all of them abortive and almost all of them tragic in terms of their outcome. But there was a revolutionary spirit in the air, and it was aided and abetted by the emergence of new ideas and by a worldview, a worldview that was promoted most famously by Karl Marx and by his co-author Frederick Engels, it was the worldview of communism. A worldview that, remember, was described and is rightly described as dialectical materialism. The very idea of communism, the very idea of Marxism, is a denial of the reality of God and an affirmation of the accidental nature of the universe; a denial of the supernatural, and instead an affirmation of the essentially material. That dialectical materialism was based in an intentionally atheistic and godless worldview. That meant that as Marx understood all of the old morality would disappear with all of the old social structures. In the famous words of Marx, “All that is solid melts into air,” and with those words Marx did not mean merely the economic and political structures, even merely the social structures, he meant the entire structure of truth, of being, and of morality that had shaped Western civilization. Marx was absolutely confident that the masses would demand a Marxist revolution worldwide. He had, even in his own secular worldview, as every secular worldview eventually must have, an eschatology. His eschatology promised the emergence of a new age of communism, the emergence of the new communist man; a newly liberated human being who would be liberated by revolution, he would be liberated by a revolution that would eventually lead to a dictatorship as a temporary condition in which the old system had to be broken down, but a dictatorship of the Communist Party that would give way once that eschatological promised utopian reality of the emergence of the new communist humanity had come.

But, of course, as it turned out, the Communist Party, the communist regime in Soviet Russia turned out never to deliver on that promise of the emergence of the New Age of communism; never to deliver on that promise of the emergence of a new communist humanity. Instead, what was supposed to be that brief interregnum of a necessary dictatorship in the name of the people to give way to this utopian reality, instead, it was the dictatorship and the dictators who remained. And of course the communist revolution came about by violence and it came about on a premise of lies, and, yet another thing we need to note is how many Westerners, including even many Americans, thought that when they saw the Soviet revolution they were seeing the future. Famously, one of these Western observers made the statement “I have seen the future, and it works.”

But of course as it turned out that future didn’t work, it wasn’t actually even the future, and the future that did come was a murderous future. We are looking at the fact that Soviet communism almost surely lead to well over 100 million deaths. Add to that about 300 million deaths either by direct action or by starvation that came in the wake of the Maoist communist revolution in China. It’s also important for us to recognize that those deaths were often excused by academics, historians, and other forms of professors who argued that they were simply necessary in order to bring about the revolution. One of the most infamous of these was the British historian Eric Hobsbawm, who as late as 1994 said in an interview that, if another 20 million deaths had been necessary to achieve the socialist utopia, then 20 million deaths would simply have been necessary.

In an important article that appears just this week at National Review, Douglas Murray points to a study, a survey conducted in Great Britain, a survey of young people in the age 16 to 24 bracket, and it turns out that even as at least the oldest in that age bracket would have been alive at the time of the collapse of the Soviet Union, less than 50 percent of those British young people even knew the name of Vladimir Lenin. Seventy percent of those British young people said they had never heard the name Mao, that is the Chinese communist dictator. But what we’re looking at here is the fact that this is a history if unknown that is dangerously unknown, and we are looking at one of the most historic milestones of our times, the 100th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution in the Soviet Union. We can look with some satisfaction to the fact that that communist regime failed. The Communist Party’s failure was so spectacular that the Soviet empire fell apart; it crumbled from within, but we also have to note that even as Americans and other Westerners were then celebrating what we thought was the inevitable triumph of democracy that communist autocracy in the Soviet Union wasn’t followed by any kind of lasting or stable democracy; it was followed by what might be considered the feudal totalitarian dictatorship of now Vladimir Putin.

There were keen prophets of the Soviet Union back during the age of its heyday, especially perhaps during the Cold War, the second half of the Soviet Union’s bitter and barbaric experience, but one of the things we need to note is that the most accurate and the most influential of those critics were operating out of an explicitly Christian worldview. One of the most famous of those was the prophetic Russian man of literature, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, who eventually won the Nobel Prize for literature and whose prophetic writings indicted the moral cancer at the very heart of the Soviet Union. And then in one of the most interesting historical turns, Solzhenitsyn, who was exiled from the Soviet Union and was received as a heroic figure in the United States, was invited — no doubt to the regret of the inviters — to speak at Harvard University, and there at the center of American secular thought, it was Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, who looking at the ruins of the history of the 20th century said to the audience at Harvard, you ask how all this could’ve happened. “Men have forgotten God,” said Solzhenitsyn. That’s how all this has happened.

But those who are seeking to think in terms of a Christian worldview are reminded, as Richard Weaver famously reminded us, “ideas have consequences.”

Ideas always have consequences. Good ideas have good consequences; bad ideas have bad consequences; deadly ideas have deadly consequences. And one of the most deadly ideas in human history is the deadly idea of communism. A deadly idea made deadly by the atheism that is celebrated at it’s very heart, an atheism that was coerced and enforced, even at the point of death in terms of communist regimes. An atheism that even now as demonstrated by the monomaniacal atheism of the regime, the communist regime, of North Korea. The atheism that is even now enforcing a crackdown on Christians in the communist regime of China. We dare not allow the 100th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, one of the most important worldview tests of humanity in the 20th century, a test that so many millions of human beings failed, and of which so many hundreds of millions of human beings were its victims, we dare not fail to observe this 100th anniversary with the amazing reflection upon the fact that that communist regime is no more, but that one set of political demons is often followed by yet another set of political demons. There is no assurance that history is necessarily moving in our direction. And then there is the humbling realization that communism isn’t dead. Just look again at China or North Korea. Look at the fact that the Chinese Communist Party even this week is resurgent and is enforcing its party doctrine in China, not lessening the hold of Chinese communism on the people or on the regime. And of course this comes with the realization that the worst ideas come with the worst consequences. The deadliest ideas come with the deadliest consequences. And of the fact that bad ideas are not only bad, evil ideas are not only evil, but they tend to stay around for a very long time. Their affects long outlasting the death of their promises.


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Law and Order

What's the problem?

Well, it's obviously not the guns!

Four Years for Murder?

The Greektown shooting the other day continues to pop up in our comments and e-mail:

  • OT: Hey SCC, if you get a chance look at the background of two of the offenders involved in the Greek Town shooting. Both are on parole for Murder, both charged in 2008 and eventually convicted. Offender 1 was sentenced to 18 years and offender 2 was sentenced to 80months. Correct me if I'm wrong but I thought you didn't get day for day good behavior on a murder conviction? How in the world is offender 1 out of prison and how does offender 2 get 6 1/2 years on a murder?!?! Where's the outrage, where's the accountability, where's the protest? News Media, you want to know why our City's streets are lost? Start by looking here!

It seems the shooter was convicted of Murder. That's a felony for starters, so he shouldn't have had a gun according to the law. More interesting is the rap sheet that says he served only FOUR years of his EIGHTEEN year sentence. His accomplice, who actually handed him the gun, was convicted of the same murder and served ONE year of an EIGHTY month sentence.

We're wondering where the outrage is? Where's the media's breathless coverage of democrats releasing murderers back into society where, 'lo and behold, they manage to get a gun, get into a fight, blast a few people and generally be a pain in the ass to the taxpayers.

Here is the current tally in this 'gun-free' stronghold of democracy.

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Culture

A 'Real' Progressive

Former National Public Radio (NPR) CEO Ken Stern suggests the liberal media’s coverage of the Second Amendment proves they do not understand guns...

Writing in the New York Post, Stern said, “I found an America far different from the one depicted in the press and imagined by presidents (“cling to guns or religion”) and presidential candidates (“basket of deplorables”) alike.”

Given the opportunity, and enough time, most people will finally come to realize that individual gun ownership represents freedom, and that freedom and responsibility are inseparable. It's the 'responsibility' part of the equation that the anti-gunners really are rejecting; this is evident from their behavior.

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Government

The 'Third-world Government' of Puerto Rico

Of all of the duties of government, the primary duty is to protect its citizens. I received this video clip showing Hurricane Maria hitting San Juan.

Why are there so many people out on the street? There was plenty of advance notice of the storm available to those who cared, and yet it looks like there were scores of people taken by surprise!

...as Maria approached. Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority (PREPA) struggled with increasing debt, reaching $9 billion even before the hurricanes prompting them to file for bankruptcy. Furthermore, the company lost 30 percent of its employees since 2012. Aging infrastructure across the island makes the grid more susceptible to damage from storms; the median age of PREPA power plants is 44 years. Inadequate safety also plagues the company and local newspapers frequently describe poor maintenance and outdated controls...

When a government can't perform the simple task of properly relaying a storm warning to its constituency, is it any wonder that it can't function in the storm's aftermath....

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Navigation

Art and Science

There are countless examples of how an over reliance of GPS navigation and the electronic charting systems, as well as the use of dead reckoning without a known fixed starting point – instead “eyeballing” the situation – are leading vessels in to danger.

Complacency is like an ever-present bank of fog; it demands some special effort to properly deal with it. Therein lies the problem. 

Navigation waste is hazardous waste! It's good to call to mind that GPS is nothing more than an $12+ Billion radio-navigation system that will tell you precisely where you have run aground.

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Baseball

2017 in the can for the Cubs

The Cubs deserve credit for making it to the NLC, but ...

People started leaving when the Dodgers increased the lead to 9-0 in the fourth, walking out of the ballpark and into the uncertainty of the offseason. Looking ahead beat looking at the debacle on the field.

"The better team won," Maddon said correctly.

The Cubs have officially been relieved of their title...... Get some rest and stay away from the goats!

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Law

ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ....

H.R.38


There are some politicians that should remember that we are about a year away from the mid-term elections.

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Baseball

Blew and Blue

With the Cubs leading 3-2 in the top of the eighth inning and a runner on first base, Dodgers outfielder Curtis Granderson swung at a two-strike pitch as the ball bounced in front of catcher Willson Contreras.

Initially, plate umpire Jim Wolf signaled Granderson was out, but after Dodgers manager Dave Roberts protested, Wolf got together with the other five umpires. As they huddled, replays of the swing were shown on the video board that seemed to indicate Granderson never made contact with the ball.

The umpires never looked at the replay and [ignoring the screams of fan's from a packed Wrigley Field] instead called it a foul ball.

The Cubs [overcame the bad call and] held on for their first win of the [NLCS].

Well, the dream of seeing 'the' World Series played in Wrigley Field and Yankee Stadium is still alive—by a thread—for the moment!

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Operation "Fast and Furious"

Update

Federal agents caught the last suspect in U.S. Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry's murder this week.

Terry was killed in 2010 during a fierce gunfight between U.S. Border Patrol agents and five Mexican drug cartel members in the Arizona desert.

The ATF estimates that they lost more than 1,400 of the 2,000 weapons that made their way across the border. Two of those guns were found on the scene of the crime where Agent Terry was gunned down.

Without the dangerous “Fast and Furious” gun-running scheme initiated by Barack Obama’s Justice Department, Agent Terry may very well still be in uniform today.

Yet still, nobody has been held accountable for the madness that resulted in Terry's death.

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Law

Hey guy's, you forgot something important!

H.R.3999 - A proposed "bill to amend title 18, United States Code, to prohibit the manufacture, possession, or transfer of any part or combination of parts [e.g. "bump stocks"] that is designed and functions to increase the rate of fire of a semiautomatic rifle."

So, what is the 'standard' rate of fire for a semi-automatic rifle? How can an "increase" in the rate of fire be established if you don't know the standard rate of fire? 

H.R.3999 is a good example of the kind of poorly crafted law that cause painful grimaces from those who are charged with enforcing it, not to mention the millions of law-abiding citizens who are left wondering where they stand in compliance.

At best, poorly crafted, vague or ambiguous laws leave the door open for abuse, as pointed out in the following video:

I guess this is a good example of why we need a "Committee on the Judiciary" ...

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Law

ATF Senior Technical Expert: “We Couldn’t Find a Way to Classify Bump Fire Stock as a Machine Gun

“We could not find a way to classify it as a machine gun. We did the right thing by the letter of the statutes.” That’s the word from the Former Assistant Chief and Acting Chief of the ATF’s Firearms Technology Branch....

The Slide Fire bump fire stock submitted for ATF approval didn’t meet the legal definition of a machine gun... 

Former ATF Agent Vasquez isn’t happy with the NRA’s condemnation of his team’s work on bump fire stocks, with the attendant implication that the Bureau should shoulder some of the blame for the Mandalay Bay hotel spree killing.

For years, the NRA has critically scrutinized the BATFE to guard against the BATFE going astray by injecting some draconian mis-interpretation. And now, with the NRA's recent statement regarding "bump fire", it appears that the NRA is trying to claim the high ground by criticizing the BATFE for complying with the letter of the "law." You can't have it both ways!

There is no place for ambiguity in the law—period; and that includes firearm regulations. Look for the definition of "machine gun" to be rewritten to include a definitive rate of fire.

In the meantime, Congress needs to get off its duff and remedy the situation with interstate travel while (legally) carrying a firearm.

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Weather

Hurricane Nate

201710071200
201710071200windforecast

Hurricane Nate continues to follow the forecast track. It's fairly common for these storms to pick up strength as they travel across the warm Gulf of Mexico waters; but, Nate is a fairly fast moving storm, so it will probably not have time to strengthen very much. 

The forecasted wind strength for Pensacola calls for 40MPH winds with peak gusts to 60MPH around midnight tonight then slowly diminishing throughout the day tomorrow.

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Safety

Deadly Assumption

This device is being touted as the "loudest whistle in the world."

The most treacherous thing about this kind of claim is the fact that there are many people who cannot hear sounds in this frequency, in which case this device is worse than useless.

Caveat emptor!

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Navigation

iOS 11

An illustration of the new Apple iOS 11 for iPhone/iPad split-screen display capability. More than one application can be displayed at one time.


Culture

Madness

The rhetoric centered on the recent Las Vegas murder spree makes it obvious that there is a multitude of people who are ready to turn over our freedom to the works of a psychopath, coupled with the usual crowd of politicians who think that they have the omnipotence to effectively outlaw evil, while at the same time leaving individual citizens with no way to fight it.

There are still many questions to be answered concerning the known facts of the case.

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Law and Order

Subsisting with psychopaths in a free society

There are essentially three immediate responses to being confronted by a madman with a gun: run, hide, or fight. The third response has the most potential for saving lives, if you are prepared to do so. You notice that none of these initial responses involve calling 911; that comes later—hopefully.

The means by which we can prepare ourselves for dealing with what we recently saw in Las Vegas is the essence of our citizens' right to keep and bear arms.

As the investigation of this incident unfolds, we have this reality check from the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department:

I believe them when they say that they did, and are doing, their best to "keep you safe." But, there are times when the best effort of the police falls short.

As that tired old saying goes, "when seconds count, the police are only minutes away!"

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