Archive for December, 2013

A Christmas Eve Range Trip & Errant Bullets

By From http://www.musingsoverapint.com/ • Dec 24th, 2013 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

I was one of the few folks in the office on Christmas Eve, so I decided to take a lunchtime excursion to the indoor range. Arriving at the range, just a few of the lanes were occupied, but I ended up near a lane being shared by three “youths.”It’s not …



A Dark Beer Evening

By From http://www.musingsoverapint.com/ • Dec 24th, 2013 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

We went down to Capital Ale House for dinner and a beer or two last Friday. Due to the crowds, we were seated in the dining area instead of taking our preferred bar seats. The table servers are generally clueless about what’s on tap, especially with re…



Final 2013 chase summary: The rest of August

By From http://stormsrus.blogspot.com/ • Dec 23rd, 2013 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

Given the proximity of Christmas I’m wrapping up my summary of the 2013 Virginia stormchase season in this post. I actually had a rather busy rest-of-August, with chases on the 9th, 10th (5 wall clouds sighted), 13th, 21st, 24th, and the culmination of…



Family Range Time

By From http://www.musingsoverapint.com/ • Dec 23rd, 2013 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

So the first weekend of Winter turns out to be more like Spring; warm and raining. Most of the weekend was filled with Christmas preparations. Sunday was especially filled; Mass, last minute gift buying, shopping for beer, hauling in the tree, stringin…



Jingle Bells at the Range

By From http://www.musingsoverapint.com/ • Dec 22nd, 2013 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

This looks like fun.With enough “tuned” steel, and enough ammo, one could have a whole concert!
[ This content originated at Musings Over a Pint ]



The United States of War

By From http://odonnellweb.com/pelican/ • Dec 21st, 2013 • Category: Blog Entries.Local


The United States of War

By From http://odonnellweb.com/journal • Dec 21st, 2013 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

I was born in 1967. My parents were Boomers, born in the mid-40s after the war. The US has been at war for my entire life, and for the lives of my parents (only my mom is still living). At the end of WWII we fell right into the Cold War. The Cold War morphed into the War on Terror, and in the 80s we started a War on Drugs too. Just think about that for the moment. The country has been in a state of war and wartime reduction in freedoms since 1941. How can that not have a damaging effect on the culture of any country? There are very few people alive today in the US that remember what it was like to live in a country not at war.

In WWII we interred tens of thousands of Japanese-Americans. Through the 50s we harassed and abused citizens because they knew somebody who knew somebody who once attended a communist party meeting. Let’s not forget that a big part of why the USSR came to be a world power is the billions we gave them in support during WWII. We were forced to side with Stalin because our involvement in WWI can be connected pretty damn directly to the rise of Hitler and Nazism. (Our involvement in WWI resulted in the very one-sided Treaty of Versailles. Without that treaty Hitler probably never rises to power.) In the 80s we destroyed communities trying to root out demand for drugs. Today we regularly destroy innocent lives both at home and abroad over the War on Terror.

Do you ever stop to think about the price we are paying for all this war? I’m not talking money, although all the money wasted on these useless wars could have done a hell of a lot of good in many other places. I’m talking about the cost in freedom. These wars being fought allegedly to protect our way of life are in fact destroying our way of life. From the Red Scare of the 50s to the Drug Scares of the 80s to the manufactured fear of terrorists today, our freedoms as citizens are being eroded more and more. If you are paying attention at all you know that our current government considers the Constitution a minor inconvenience at best when it gets in the way of the War on Terror or Drugs or whatever. In 1999 Scott McNealy, CEO of Sun, famously stated, “You have no privacy anyway. Get over it.” At the time I thought McNealy was an asshole. Now I realize he was right.

All these wars we are fighting are at least partly our fault. If we don’t get involved in WWI Hitler likely never rises to power. That forced us to ally with Stalin to defeat Hitler, which helped the USSR become a global power. In the 50s we overthrew the modern and progressive Iranian Government and installed the Shah as a dictator / king. Iranians have been rightly pissed ever since and the extremist Mullahs in power today are the result of that overthrow in the late 50s. In the 80s were we forced to support the Muslim opposition to the USSR invasion of Afghanistan. Central to that opposition was a young Saudi named Osama Bin Laden. Later, we were forced to support Saddam Hussein as he battled the Iranians that came into power because of our meddling in Iran. It goes on and on. The US gets involved in a foreign country. Thousands and thousands of innocent people die. Eventually an entire generation of people that hate us comes to power in these countries. Every time our drones take out a wedding party in the middle east dozens of new terrorists are created. We’ve created just about every major enemy of the US in the last century.

For a country so hell bent on being in a permanent state of war, we sure do suck at it. Maybe we should give peace a chance. But that might be kind of difficult since there is really nobody around that knows what peace looks like.

<

p>This post inspired by the Vampiric Memories episode of the Common Sense podcast.

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Politics History



The United States of War

By From http://odonnellweb.com/ • Dec 21st, 2013 • Category: Blog Entries.Local, Politics

I was born in 1967. My parents were Boomers, born in the mid-40s after the war. The US has been at war for my entire life, and for the lives of my parents (only my mom is still living). At the end of WWII we fell right into the Cold War. The Cold War morphed into the War on Terror, and in the 80s we started a War on Drugs too. Just think about that for the moment. The country has been in a state of war and wartime reduction in freedoms since 1941. How can that not have a damaging effect on the culture of any country? There are very few people alive today in the US that remember what it was like to live in a country not at war.

In WWII we interred tens of thousands of Japanese-Americans. Through the 50s we harassed and abused citizens because they knew somebody who knew somebody who once attended a communist party meeting. Let’s not forget that a big part of why the USSR came to be a world power is the billions we gave them in support during WWII. We were forced to side with Stalin because our involvement in WWI can be connected pretty damn directly to the rise of Hitler and Nazism. (Our involvement in WWI resulted in the very one-sided Treaty of Versailles. Without that treaty Hitler probably never rises to power.) In the 80s we destroyed communities trying to root out demand for drugs. Today we regularly destroy innocent lives both at home and abroad over the War on Terror.

Do you ever stop to think about the price we are paying for all this war? I’m not talking money, although all the money wasted on these useless wars could have done a hell of a lot of good in many other places. I’m talking about the cost in freedom. These wars being fought allegedly to protect our way of life are in fact destroying our way of life. From the Red Scare of the 50s to the Drug Scares of the 80s to the manufactured fear of terrorists today, our freedoms as citizens are being eroded more and more. If you are paying attention at all you know that our current government considers the Constitution a minor inconvenience at best when it gets in the way of the War on Terror or Drugs or whatever. In 1999 Scott McNealy, CEO of Sun, famously stated, “You have no privacy anyway. Get over it.” At the time I thought McNealy was an asshole. Now I realize he was right.

All these wars we are fighting are at least partly our fault. If we don’t get involved in WWI Hitler likely never rises to power. That forced us to ally with Stalin to defeat Hitler, which helped the USSR become a global power. In the 50s we overthrew the modern and progressive Iranian Government and installed the Shah as a dictator / king. Iranians have been rightly pissed ever since and the extremist Mullahs in power today are the result of that overthrow in the late 50s. In the 80s were we forced to support the Muslim opposition to the USSR invasion of Afghanistan. Central to that opposition was a young Saudi named Osama Bin Laden. Later, we were forced to support Saddam Hussein as he battled the Iranians that came into power because of our meddling in Iran. It goes on and on. The US gets involved in a foreign country. Thousands and thousands of innocent people die. Eventually an entire generation of people that hate us comes to power in these countries. Every time our drones take out a wedding party in the middle east dozens of new terrorists are created. We’ve created just about every major enemy of the US in the last century.

For a country so hell bent on being in a permanent state of war, we sure do suck at it. Maybe we should give peace a chance. But that might be kind of difficult since there is really nobody around that knows what peace looks like.

This post inspired by the Vampiric Memories episode of the Common Sense podcast.



Chase season 2013 summary: August 8th local chase

By From http://stormsrus.blogspot.com/ • Dec 20th, 2013 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

I actually was heading east to intercept a cell in Bedford county when I noticed a lowering over the southern Roanoke Valley that was vacuuming up scud. I watched it for a while and then decided to continue toward Bedford, but before I had gone a half …



Conference Diversion 2: The Big Hunt

By From http://www.musingsoverapint.com/ • Dec 20th, 2013 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

After my final evening working the conference, a coworker and I walked over to one of DC’s oldest beer bars, The Big Hunt, for an early dinner. By this time in my week, I was on the verge of exhaustion, but I didn’t want to pass up the opportunity to v…