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Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Michael Cain

Posted by Richard on November 9, 2007

The writers' strike may have some benefits you hadn't considered, such as the ability to catch up on some stuff you missed the first time around. For instance, tonight's Late Late Show rerun featured Craig Ferguson interviewing Michael Cain. I think Ferguson's interview skills are greatly underrated — he has a knack for getting guests to open up.

In this interview, Ferguson asked Michael Cain about whether he regretted giving up the stage for Hollywood, and Cain replied:

 I always regarded the theater as a woman who didn't give a damn about me, and the movies as a woman I could do anything with.

Cool.

That's strictly from memory. If you want to confirm my recollection, browse around the website. I make no guarantee that you'll find it.  

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SCHIP override fails, BDS worsens

Posted by Richard on October 18, 2007

The House this morning failed to override the President's veto of a Democratic bill mandating a massive 140% expansion of the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) — which, despite the name, is a federally-funded program that covers many adults (adults are the majority in some states), and despite the tear-jerking tales of poverty and need, has replaced private insurance for many families with incomes of $60,000, $70,000, or more.

But before the vote, Rep. Pete Stark exhibited yet more serious symptoms of Bush Derangement Syndrome (Michelle Malkin has a video clip), which is becoming increasingly virulent and appears to be completely resistant to treatment (emphasis added):

A longtime war critic, Stark said the president couldn't find $35 billion to expand SCHIP but at the same time had requested an extra $200 billion to pay for military operations in Iraq.

"Where are you going to get that money? Are you going to tell us lies like you're telling us today? Is that how you're going to fund the war? You don't have money to fund the war or children. But you're going to spend it to blow up innocent people if we can get enough kids to grow old, enough for you to send to Iraq to get their heads blown off for the president's amusement," Stark said.

"President Bush's statements about children's health shouldn't be taken any more seriously than his lies about the war in Iraq. The truth is that Bush just likes to blow things up in Iraq, in the United States, and in Congress. I urge my colleagues to vote to override his veto," he continued.

The President, meanwhile, despite six years of evidence to the contrary, still clung to his childlike faith that if he just showed enough compassion by throwing money at Democratic causes, people like Pete Stark would grow to like him. Bush originally proposed "only" a 20% expansion of the SCHIP program, which led to accusations of child murder. Now, he says he's ready to negotiate a "compromise" bill with the Democrats. I suppose that means expanding the program somewhere between 20% and 140%. 

Given today's muddled moral and intellectual climate, I suppose it's fruitless to insist that a State Children's Health Insurance Program, if it must exist, ought to exist — and be funded — at the state level.

But the President just won the initial fight over SCHIP, despite a huge, multi-million-dollar advertising and PR campaign by Democrats and their supporters. If he had any cojones or commitment to the principles of fiscal responsibility and limited government that his party supposedly represents, he'd counter-offer with a bill cutting funding by 20% and limiting coverage to children only, and to households in the bottom two quintiles of household income (lower and lower middle classes). Or at least the bottom half of household income — jeez, that's not exactly harsh!

If you own a $300,000 home, commercial property, a Volvo SUV, a Suburban, and an F250 pickup, you should have been buying your own damn insurance. 

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Atlas at 50

Posted by Richard on October 17, 2007

Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged was published fifty years ago this month, and naturally, The Atlasphere remembered. Read Yaron Brook's column about how influential the novel has been, but why it hasn't changed the world as much as it could — or should. Brook noted that last year Atlas Shrugged sold over 130,000 copies — more than when it was first published.

Then, if you're a film fan who likes Rand, read Bob Bidinotto's long and revealing feature piece about Atlas the movie. The news is terrific, with what sounds like a great screenplay, producers, director, and cast. Bidinotto's bottom line:

I want to emphasize this as strongly as I can: These people are all absolutely committed to doing a great film, faithful to Rand’s story, characters, and ideas.

At long last, I really think this film will be made — and in a way that Ayn Rand would have liked.

Shooting is scheduled to begin early next year, and the film should be in theaters in 2009. 

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The skills list

Posted by Richard on September 19, 2007

I'm often the last to learn about something. Take, for instance, Popular Mechanics' "25 Skills Every Man Should Know," which was posted last week (see also the October issue of the print magazine) — I think half the bloggers in the English-speaking world have tallied their scores and put in their two cents' worth on the list. Here it is:

1. Patch a radiator hose

2. Protect your computer

3. Rescue a boater who has capsized

4. Frame a wall

5. Retouch digital photos

6. Back up a trailer

7. Build a campfire

8. Fix a dead outlet

9. Navigate with a map and compass

10. Use a torque wrench

11. Sharpen a knife

12. Perform CPR

13. Fillet a fish

14. Maneuver a car out of a skid

15. Get a car unstuck

16. Back up data

17. Paint a room

18. Mix concrete

19. Clean a bolt-action rifle

20. Change oil and filter

21. Hook up an HDTV

22. Bleed brakes

23. Paddle a canoe

24. Fix a bike flat

25. Extend your wireless network

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I've done 21 of those. I haven't done numbers 1 (replaced a few, but never patched one), 3, 12, or 19 (I have only semi-auto rifles). Some of the others I can't claim to be particularly good at.

I prefer Robert A. Heinlein's list, although my score is much lower on it:

A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.

— from Time Enough for Love (1973) 

 

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Best wishes, Bert

Posted by Richard on September 8, 2007

I've known Bert Wiener for quite a long time, although I haven't seen him much in recent years. We both used to be very active in the Colorado Libertarian Party. Bert is a smart, funny, thoroughly decent guy. I've linked to his blog, Wienerville, for a long time now. As I noted in this post about him, he's even less prolific than me, but always worth reading. I guarantee you'll enjoy going through his three years of blogging (it's all one page), and I encourage you to do so. There are some truly wonderful posts.

Back in February, Bert posted some bad news — his leukemia had returned, and after chemotherapy, he was facing a bone marrow transplant. Blogging subsequently ceased (understandable, considering the chemo). After that, I dropped by Wienerville from time to time to see if there was any news. I just checked for the first time in a few weeks, and finally there is! On August 17, Bert posted:

Haven't posted for a good long while. Sorry about that. Anyway, I go to Presb/St. Lukes today to begin a bone marrow transplant. It's a bit risky and no fun at all. But they make a great effort to alleviate both problems. This will be an umbilical cord transplant. They take the marrow stem cells from two cords (two, because I need a lot of mass to kick start marrow growth and one cord doesn't have much at all) and inject them, following truly horrific amounts of radiation and chemo. But, I know someone who went through all this and came out smelling like a rose. I'll be talking to her now and then to reinforce my spirit. I'll try to update this blog when I feel some strength – in about 8 weeks. Wish me luck.

Bert, I'm hoping you, too, come out smelling like a rose. I'm not religious or mystical or touchy-feely, but I'm thinking about you. And I hope my legions of readers will visit your blog and take a moment to think about you and wish you the best. It can't hurt. Good luck, buddy. Let us know when you feel better.

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Working vacation

Posted by Richard on September 5, 2007

On Labor Day, President Bush paid a surprise visit to Iraq. Not just any part of Iraq, but Anbar province, which a few months ago, critics of the war held up as the poster child of U.S. failure in Iraq. Now it's safe enough for a presidential visit, complete with a meeting with local Sunni tribal leaders.

I first learned of the visit when I heard an NBC reporterette describing it as a "working vacation." A friend of mine was taken aback, and noted that Bush's trip to Iraq and then to Australia for an APAC summit is more properly described as a "business trip." There is nothing about it that approximates a "vacation."

Of course, the mainstream media routinely describe every visit to the Crawford ranch as a "vacation," regardless of what he does while there, so calling this business trip a "working vacation" is actually a concession of sorts. At least they used the adjective "working."

Bush was joined by Lieutenant General Raymond Odierno, Commanding General, Multi-National Corps, General David Petraeus, Commander, Multi-National Force Iraq, Admiral William Fallon, Commander US Central Command, General Peter Pace, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, and Secretary State Condoleezza Rice. Wow.

Since what I've stated above plus a 10-second sound bite is probably all that (or more than) you've learned from the mainstream media, I thought I'd provide the text of his address to the troops (at least, most of it), from the White House site: 

As you know, today is Labor Day back home — (hooah) — so I thought I'd come by to thank you for all your hard work. (Hooah.) Every day — every day — you show bravery under incredibly difficult circumstances. Every day you're doing work on the sands of Anbar that is making it safer in the streets of America. And every day the United States of America is grateful for what you're doing. I want you to tell your families the Commander-in-Chief stopped by to say hello, and he said, I'm incredibly proud to be the Commander-in-Chief of such a great group of men and women. (Applause.)

I'm keeping pretty good company, as you can see. I brought out the A Team so they could be with the folks who are making a significant difference in this war against these radicals and extremists. In Anbar you're seeing firsthand the dramatic differences that can come when the Iraqis are more secure. In other words, you're seeing success.

You see Sunnis who once fought side by side with al Qaeda against coalition troops now fighting side by side with coalition troops against al Qaeda. Anbar is a huge province. It was once written off as lost. It is now one of the safest places in Iraq. (Hooah.) …

The surge of operations that began in June is improving security throughout Iraq. The military successes are paving the way for the political reconciliation and economic progress the Iraqis need to transform their country. When Iraqis feel safe in their own homes and neighborhoods, they can focus their efforts on building a stable, civil society with functioning government structures at the local and provincial and national levels. …

Earlier today I met with some of the tribal sheiks here in Anbar. It was a really interesting meeting. And at the table were the leaders of the central government, as well. They told me that the kind of bottom-up progress that your efforts are bringing to Anbar is vital to the success and stability of a free Iraq. See, Iraqis need this stability to build a more peaceful future. And America needs this stability to prevent the chaos that allows the terrorists to set up bases from which they can plot and plan attacks on our homeland.

The very people that you helped the Iraqis defeat in Anbar swore allegiance to the man that ordered the attack on the United States of America. What happens here in Anbar matters to the security of the United States.

And so I thank you for your sacrifice. I thank you for volunteering in the face of danger. I thank you for your courage and your bravery. Every day you are successful here in Iraq draws nearer to the day when America can begin calling you and your fellow servicemen and women home.

But I want to tell you this about the decision — about my decision about troop levels. Those decisions will be based on a calm assessment by our military commanders on the conditions on the ground — not a nervous reaction by Washington politicians to poll results in the media. (Hooah.) In other words, when we begin to draw down troops from Iraq, it will be from a position of strength and success, not from a position of fear and failure. To do otherwise would embolden our enemies and make it more likely that they would attack us at home. If we let our enemies back us out of Iraq, we will more likely face them in America. If we don't want to hear their footsteps back home, we have to keep them on their heels over here. And that's exactly what you're doing, and America is safer for it.

In Anbar you're doing this hard work every day. We've all come to say thank you. We've come to tell you the American people are standing with you. They're grateful for your sacrifice. As Commander-in-Chief, I'm proud to be in your presence on this Labor Day. I ask for God's blessings on you and your family, and may God continue to bless America. Thank you. (Applause.)

In case the "hooah" and "applause" notations in the transcript above don't make it clear, the troops loved him. And if you routinely rely on the mainstream media for your news about what's happening in Iraq, this may be news to you, too: Troops in Iraq exceeded their reenlistment goals for the year last month.

Screw Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid. The people who know best what's happening on the ground and how important it is are backing this effort in the most important way possible — they're committing their lives and their honor. Dammit, treat their commitment with respect.

 

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Deferred maintenance

Posted by Richard on August 16, 2007

A few weeks ago, I was stuck in traffic just before passing under a bridge somewhere, and I was struck by how rusty the girder in front of me was. This wasn't a terribly old bridge — maybe twenty years at the most. And it looked otherwise in fine shape. But the paint was gone from the top two-thirds of this big girder, replaced by rust.

I remember being annoyed at the state highway department and thinking that in ten years, they'll say the bridge needs replacing and whine about not having enough money in their budget. Yet, it would probably last a century if they spent a relatively piddling sum every few years to paint it and perform other routine maintenance. 

Since the Milwaukee bridge collapse, we've heard a chorus of voices calling for more spending on infrastructure (and usually calling for tax increases to fund that, despite overwhelming evidence that tax cuts provide more revenue, not tax increases).

But anyone with even a passing familiarity with federal and state spending and budgets knows our infrastructure isn't in disrepair due to lack of funding. The problem is the incentives are all wrong. 

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Suspicious biceps

Posted by Richard on August 15, 2007

J.F. Beck pointed out this story from Sweden illustrating how the drug war is pursued in a liberal, enlightened,  socialist paradise that cares about the health of its citizens and isn't being turned into a police state by Bush and the neocons:

A well-built man was forced to take a drugs test in Stockholm recently after a police officer assumed that muscles like his could only have been developed with the help of illegal substances.

According to Boduljak, 27, the police officer was pleasant at first, but changed her attitude when he said he worked out. Saying his muscles were 'abnormal', she said he must have used drugs.

Despite Boduljak's assurances that he didn't use steroids, she forced him to go to the police station and give a urine test. In her report, the officer said he had "unusually large muscles, particularly large arm muscles, which are a sign of steroid use."

Mr. Boduljak's urine was clean, and he was released.

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Happy birthday, Army!

Posted by Richard on June 14, 2007

Today is the 232nd birthday of the United States Army:

 U.S. Army 232nd birthday coin

Since its birth on 14 June 1775—over a year before the Declaration of Independence—the United States Army has played a vital role in the growth and development of our Nation. Soldiers have fought more than 10 wars, from the American Revolution through the Cold War, the Gulf War, to the current War on Terrorism. This 232nd Birthday is a recognition of The Army's history, traditions, and service to the Nation, a Call To Duty, 232 Years of Service to Our Nation.

Today is also Flag Day. I hope you remembered to fly your flag today.

 American flag waving

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Principled government

Posted by Richard on June 13, 2007

The cynics declare "principled government" an oxymoron, like "military intelligence" and "congressional ethics." It sure looks that way, doesn't it? But we don't abandon the quest for perfection just because it's rarely or never achieved. We resign ourselves to the fact that the code we write will contain bugs, the documents we edit will have typos, and some of the products we manufacture will be defective. We work to eliminate all the flaws, but accept the fact that there will always be some.

So, let's not give up on the idea of principled government — let's just acknowledge that our institutions, like ourselves, are imperfect, and the best we can hope for is to move toward a more principled government. And perhaps cheerily conclude that finding and fixing bugs is easy when they're plentiful!

So, now that you have the proper perspective, go visit the new Carnival of Principled Government! This is the seventh, and Dana may have been a day late, but she has nothing to apologize for — she's put together another fine carnival. 

 

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Math challenged

Posted by Richard on April 9, 2007

The Large Hadron Collider is a $4 billion proton accelerator project at the Cern complex in Switzerland. It’s intended to mimic the conditions of the Big Bang. Recently, scientists there created a big bang all right, thanks to some embarrassing mistakes in simple math:

The mistakes led to an explosion deep in the tunnel at the Cern particle accelerator complex near Geneva in Switzerland. It lifted a 20-ton magnet off its mountings, filling a tunnel with helium gas and forcing an evacuation.

It means that 24 magnets located all around the 17-mile circular accelerator must now be stripped down and repaired or upgraded. The failure is a huge embarrassment for Fermilab, the American national physics laboratory that built the magnets and the anchor system that secured them to the machine.

It appears Fermilab made elementary mistakes in the design of the magnets and their anchors that made them insecure once the system was operational.

That’s what they get for letting Americans make critical mathematical calculations. Don’t they realize that, when it comes to math, Americans are typically cocky and dumb?  😉

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A bar full of John Does

Posted by Richard on April 3, 2007

There's been some murmuring lately about 24 jumping the shark, and it's coming from a variety of sources. But despite the fact that a few plot developments have made me groan, I'm still enjoying this season, and I think the series still sports far more positives than negatives.

Tonight's episode featured a groaner — Gredenko, in whose arm CTU had implanted a radio-isotope for tracking, decided, "Screw my immunity agreement! Chop off my arm with that handy axe and let's run for it!"

But it also had a scene that made me cheer. Gredenko and Fayed ran into a crowded bar. The news was on the TV. Gredenko pointed at Fayed and yelled something like, "Look, it's that terrorist they're looking for!" A patron agreed, "Yeah, that's him," and Fayed fired at a ducking and running Gredenko. In an instant, practically everybody in the bar jumped Fayed, and they proceeded to beat the crap out of him. Jack Bauer had to save his sorry ass. Woohoo!

That brief bar scene was so great I forgave them for the preceding silliness. It made the statement that the spirit of United 93 is alive and well among the American people. The episode was written and shot long before Michelle Malkin issued The John Doe Manifesto, but that's exactly the attitude that it exemplified. The bar was full of John Does! I like to believe this country is full of John Does.

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The New Seven Sisters

Posted by Richard on March 27, 2007

In the latest issue of The Global Guru , Nicholas Vardy looked at today's powerhouses in the oil and gas industry. Financial Times recently christened them the "New Seven Sisters," and they're mostly — and unfortunately — government-owned enterprises. (The original Seven Sisters were the seven big international oil companies that dominated production after WWII.)

The New Seven Sisters are also largely from developing countries. Saudi Aramco is the big kid on the block, with a quarter of the world's reserves and three times the capacity of anyone else. But the others are growing in importance:

Although less powerful than the Saudis, the other sisters now dominate the familiar Western majors in terms of influence. Russia's Gazprom is the industry bad boy, never reluctant to flex its muscles on the battlefield of business. China's CNPC owns 88% of PetroChina and is active in about 20 countries from Azerbaijan to Ecuador. NIOC, Iran's national energy company, has partnerships with Italian, French, Dutch and Norwegian companies and collaborates with Chinese and Russian groups. PDVSA is Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez's political pawn. The company's profits are subsidizing London commuters. Brazil's Petrobras is a global leader in finding and producing oil from deep waters. Petronas is Malaysia's national oil company and may be the slickest and most commercial organization of the bunch

Aside from the moral and practical harm related to expropriation of private property, the growing "natural resources nationalism" has other bad consequences:

Some of the New Seven Sisters have become little more than their home country's bottomless piggybank, funding politically expedient social ventures. The poster child of irresponsible profligacy is President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela who spends two-thirds of PDVSA's profits on his populist social programs. The result? PDVSA's production capacity has fallen from 3.4 to 1.5 million barrels per day since 1999. In Iran, NIOC cannot boost its oil production or fix its refineries because its profits go toward keeping gas at 40 cents per gallon for Iranian consumers. In Russia, too, little of Gazprom's earnings go towards upgrading Russia's antiquated, leaking pipeline system.

This mismanagement has global consequences. The IEA estimates that the world is falling 20% short of making the investment needed to ensure adequate energy supplies for the next 25 years. And governments' unwillingness to allow their national oil companies to reinvest profits back into industry is the primary culprit.

Just what we need. Megalomaniacal socialist scum who would flunk Econ 101 are dragging down global energy production to satisfy their lust for power and indulge their redistributionist whims.

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Econ 101 and Iran

Posted by Richard on March 22, 2007

The Watcher of Weasels chose Big Lizards to fill the last vacancy on the Watcher's Council, and it looks like a fine choice. Check out, for example, The Contranomics of Global Jihad, nominated by the Council as one of this week's most link-worthy pieces of writing. Dafydd's excellent post argues that Iran is in the process of being defeated in the same way that the Soviet Union was defeated — by economics, not military force (emphasis in original):

Force projection is dreadfully expensive, even if you call it global jihadism: Iran is supporting Hezbollah in Syria and Lebanon, the Qods Force in Iraq, a war against Israel a few months ago, assassins all over the world, and Shiite revolutionary movements from Malaysia to Venezuela. But at the same time, the drain on their resources from trying to develop a nuclear "Qods bomb" and buy a delivery system from North Korea, Russia, or Red China has caused Iran to stop investing in its oil infrastructure.

Totalitarian, anti-capitalist societies, Dafydd points out, simply can't afford the technological development and force projection that Iran is trying to pursue. Only free, open societies that grasp Econ 101 can do that.

Read the whole thing. And browse some of his other stuff, too — it's a good blog, once you get past the blinding banner!

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Gun ban shot down

Posted by Richard on March 10, 2007

fireworks animationThe U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia has ruled 2-1 in favor of the plaintiffs in Parker v. D.C. The ruling overturns the District's ban on handgun ownership, as well as its requirement that rifles and shotguns be disassembled and locked up. This is a terrific win for the self-defense rights of D.C. residents and a stupendous Second Amendment victory that will have nationwide impact.

The District will ask for an en banc review by the entire court. If the court upholds the ruling (which is probable, IMO), expect the Supreme Court to take the appeal:

District of Columbia Mayor Adrian Fenty told reporters Friday afternoon that the District will appeal the ruling.

In a 2-1 decision, the judges held that the activities protected by the Second Amendment "are not limited to militia service, nor is an individual's enjoyment of the right contingent upon his or her continued intermittent enrollment in the militia."

"This is a huge case," Alan Gura, the plaintiffs' lead lawyer, told FOXNews.com Friday afternoon. "It's simply about whether law-abiding citizens can maintain a functioning firearm, including a handgun, inside their house."

Gura said his six clients, all Washington residents, challenged three separate District of Columbia laws: A 31-year-old law that prevents handgun registration; a law that requires rifles and shotguns to be either disassembled or disabled when being stored; and a law that requires a permit to carry a gun in your own home.

Senior Judge Laurence Silberman (a Reagan appointee) wrote the opinion, and Thomas Griffith (a Bush 43 appointee) concurred. As for the Bush 41 appointee on the panel (emphasis added):

Judge Karen Henderson dissented, writing that the Second Amendment does not apply to the district because it is not a state.

WTF??? I hereby nominate that as the Single Stupidest Argument Against the Second Amendment Ever. And there's no shortage of worthy competitors for that title.

I wonder if Judge Henderson is prepared to apply that argument to other rights of the people in the District. What a crummy President George Herbert Walker Bush was, and what awful judicial appointments he made! 

I haven't read the opinion (it's 75 pages; here's a link to the PDF), but Jed Baer has, and he's impressed. That's saying something —  Jed's a pretty tough critic of such things, and he's practically giddy:

I encourage you to download and read this decision, as it contains one of the best arguments and explanations of how the 2nd Amendment protects an individual right that I've read in a while. In a significant rebuke of the District of Columbia, the opinions uses words such as "risible" in dismissing the District's legal arguments. It also does a good job of explaining the issues in the oft misinterpreted Miller decision, and in explaining the composition of the militia, and how that relates to the 2nd Amendment.

The opinion starts off with a discussion of the issue of standing, which is interesting by itself. If you want to dive right into the meat of the 2A opinion, jump to the bottom of page 12. I'm not going to quote any of the opinion, because I think the entire thing, from p.12 onward, is worth reading in its entirety.

Jed also has more links to other commentary from the RKBA community than you can shake a cordless mouse at — it's your one-stop-shopping place for Parker v. D.C.

It's a great victory for self-defense-rights advocates, and it deserves to be celebrated. There's a gun show in Denver tomorrow —  I may just have to purchase a handgun or two in honor of Judge Silberman.

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