From Pine View Farm

February, 2014 archive

Dunn Deals 0

Excerpt:

Jordan Davis was murdered because he defied a white man.

That is the whole story. Everything else was window dressing.

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The Galt and the Lamers 0

Massive traffic jam.  Caption:  Libertarian Intersection

Via BartCop.

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QOTD 0

Kingman Brewster, II:

Incomprehensible jargon is the hallmark of a profession.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

The practice of politeness in pubs proliferates.

The gun went off Sunday night on the patio of the Miller’s Ale House on South Semoran Boulevard, near Orlando International Airport.

Officers said the gun somehow went off under a table, the bullet hit the floor and then ricocheted, grazing a woman in the leg.

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Founders and Expounders 0

Celebrate President’s Day with the Rude One (warning: rude).

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She Had a Beef 0

Shoulda used flank steak.

The 44-year-old was arrested for assault after allegedly striking an Ohio supermarket employee with a pair of “special cut filets,” police report.

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“Don’t Feed the Trolls” 0

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Rugged Individualists 2

Teabaggery in a nutshell: Handouts for me, but not for thee.

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Blood Lust 0

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Missing the Target 0

Ernest Hooper is optimistic.

Gun control needs to be more about controlling the mentality of gun owners and less about the sale of guns.

A gun emboldens, so we end up with murders in movie theaters instead of an annoyed attendee changing seats.

He misses the point. There is an industry devoted to creating that mentality.

Gunnuttery has nothing to do with protection or rights. “Self-defense” is a smokescreen. The NRA (aka the “Firearms Marketing Group”) fosters the gun nut mentality, which is a weird combination of bone-chilling fear of Everyone in the World with a dash of High Noon, a hint of ED, and, in some cases, a dollop of sadism, so as to sell guns. Scaredy-cats are easy marks.

In gun nut world, fear is a marketing strategy.

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QOTD 0

Denis Diderot:

Ignorance is less remote from truth than prejudice.

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Misnomers 0

If it has turkey instead of corned beef, it may be a thing, but it’s not a Reuben.

You won’t find me at that dive.

I’ll be at Elias, where a “Philly cheese steak” is a cheese steak and a gyro is a gyro.

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Officers and Gentlemen 0

Tendaji Ganges has always known he had an unusual name.

Tendaji is a Swahili word meaning “hardworking.” But for many years, Mr. Ganges didn’t have any idea where his last name came from. Traveling around the country and checking phone books, he knew only that there weren’t many other African-American families with that name.

Then, a few years ago, he and his younger twin brothers, Kelly and Larry, were contacted by Kenneth Finkel, former executive at WHYY-TV in Philadelphia. That’s when they learned that they are likely descended from slaves who were captured off the coast of Cuba in 1800 by a Navy warship, the USS Ganges.

The captain of the Ganges sent the captured “cargo” to Philadelphia, where a judge decided that they had been illegally captured, and gave them into the care of the Philadelphia Abolition Society to place as indentured servants. Indentured servants were indentured for a fixed period of time (commonly seven years–my degree is in history, remember) at the expiration of which they were released from servitude. Many early immigrants came as indentured servants, working off the cost of their passage in a fixed period of servitude–not in servitude for the duration of their lives and of the lives of their issue.

The story points out that, as officers and gentlemen,

Most naval captains who captured slave ships would take them to ports such as Charleston, S.C., where they could make a handsome sum from selling the slaves as “salvage,” he (Marcus Rediker, a distinguished professor of history at the University of Pittsburgh–ed.) said.

Read the rest. Learn more about America’s original sin, chattel slavery and (the continuing sin) theft of labor.

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McCronies 0

Run the numbers at Facing South.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Be polite in the “Shot Time II Bar.”

One man said he accidentally discharged his handgun while at the bar. The bullet went through his right thigh and into the left thigh of the other man seated beside him.

Their injuries are not considered life-threatening.

Sgt. Hunt said the man who had the gun has a concealed carry handgun (CCH) license and admitted to having several drinks while in possession of the firearm.

He also refused to cooperate with law enforcement, Hunt said. He was arrested for aggravated battery.

Drunk and armed–a combination which guarantees politeness.

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“The Weed of Crime Bears Bitcoin Fruit”* 2

In a long and closely reasoned article, McGill University’s Reuven Brenner sees one possible redeeming aspect to BitCoins.

More important perhaps, Bitcoin’s mere existence may draw attention to the fact that its birth is due to the utter mismanagement of monetary and fiscal and regulatory affairs around the world, and thus may speed up the search for lasting solutions and re-establishing trust.

Follow the link for the full discussion. Summary cannot do it justice, especially as no one really understands how bitcoins work. Nevertheless, like any other fiat currency, bitcoins have value because (some) persons believe bitcoins have value.

________________

*With apologies to The Shadow.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Duck and cover.

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Everybody Must Get Fracked 0

It’s the hot new thing.

Crews should be able to extinguish a fire that has been raging since Tuesday at two Marcellus Shale natural gas wells in Dunkard, Greene County, by the middle of the week, the man in charge of the containment operation said Saturday.

“Hopefully by the middle of next week the fires will be out and if our plans go as expected, the wells [will be] capped shortly thereafter,” said Blake Loke, incident commander with Chevron Corp., which owns the wells.

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QOTD 0

John Gay:

In war the heroes always outnumber the soldiers ten to one.

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Q. When Is Murder Not Murder? 0

A. When it takes place in Florida, where, if you are a white guy who kills a black kid, murder is only attempted murder.

“Vile” does not begin to characterize this.

To be clear, the problem is not the jury. The problem is Florida and its laws and the culture they reflect, a culture that exists not only in Florida, but in much of the rest of the country.

It is the culture of the “Lost Cause” (tell me again, exactly what cause was lost?), the culture of “black lives don’t matter,” the culture of white racism and white racists, the culture of Judge Lynch.

My words may be harsh, but no harsher than the reality.

It lives among us still, white racism, the legacy of chattel slavery and its rationalizations, of theft of labor, America’s original and continuing sin.

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