I’m with Bane

Sarah Palin for McCain’s VP.

Here’s what Michael has to say:

Life member of the NRA…serously pro-gun…an honest to goodness conservative

I actually love this idea. I’m not really a big fan of playing one-upmanship with the Democrats, but running a smart, tough, conservative and qualified woman with Sen. MacAttack seems like a pretty good idea to me. She has all the appeal of Bobby Jindal, without having to steal a great governor from a state that really needs him right now.

Of course, we’d be stealing a great governor from Alaska, but I’m sure they’d be alright up there in the frozen wastelands. Check out Sarah Palin’s track record:

  • Life Member of the National Rifle Association
  • Currently suing the federal government for listing the polar bears as threatened
  • Has a low tolerance for corruption and bullcrap, apparently

Honestly, McCain’s running mate will go a long, long way toward helping conservatives feel better (or worse) about their choices coming up this fall. We’ve all been hoping for a while that he picks a good VP, someone who we hope can revitalize the party around strong conservative fiscal and foreign policy. Sarah Palin could actually be a pretty solid choice to fill that role; she’s got the conservative street cred, and I won’t lie that I wouldn’t enjoy telling off my Democrat friends because we were running a woman.

McCain thoughts

I don’t know how many other people watched McCain’s speech from Louisiana last night; but I did – and I liked it rather a lot.  While he did kind of blueball me in the sense that I was hoping he was in Louisiana to announce that Bobby Jindal was going to be his running mate (he didn’t); he did hit a lot of key talking points that I was wondering about.

I actually like that McCain is distancing himself from the current administration on some issues – I mean let’s face it, Horhay isn’t exactly popular with conservatives or liberals right now, and a little distance isn’t going to hurt.  Unfortunately for McCain, he keeps trying to tout his record on immigration as a “good thing”, which is probably going to piss off a lot of conservatives.

One of the things I really did enjoy about McCain is that he went right after Obama on a lot of issues – on the night that Obama become the presumptive Democrat nominee for President, McCain wasted no time in hitting Obama’s lack of experience and track record on the issues.

While I did have some issues with McCain’s speech last night, on the whole I was relatively pleased with it – and since we now know who he will most likely be running against, now is the time that I have to solidify my position on The McCain Train.

A cure for cancer

Unfortunately, it’s not for real cancer, but rather “rifle-cancer”, which could also be described as “holy-crap-what’s-that-growing-on-my-rifle”.

Tam has developed an excellent method, which honestly I never would have thought of.

Tools you will need: A cloth; some good protective oil and some cleaner/oil combo (I use Butch’s Gun Oil and FP-10 respectively; everyone will have a favorite); a brush; a brass cartridge case (I’ve found a bottleneck rifle cartridge of about .30-’06 size works best for me); and a hammer.

Since half of central Indiana appears to be under water right now, knowing how to remove orange fuzzy rifle cancer might be a worthwhile skill for everyone to have – I “know” that my guns are high and dry on the 2nd floor, but that doesn’t make me immune from dealing with the potential for water damage.

Another one bites the dust

“And another one gone, another one down, another one bites the dust” could be the theme song for the God not Guns blog, as they’ve removed another post from their blog, this time taking down the Idolatry of the Gun post.  Luckily, Thirdpower caught them in the act was able to screencap the post for all internets posterity.

What I can’t get is why take a post down to only put it back up later – did they think we’d give them a pass on repeating the same material?

Guns ‘n meat is back

The Guns and Meat post has magically re-appeared on the God not Guns Blog.  They used a different URL so the one I link to is still dead, but somehow the post is back up.  Because they were kind enough to re-post the entry, I’ll quite happily re-link to my God and Guns post.   Here are also the most relevant portions of my original post de-bunking her incredibly poorly thought out meat analogy:

The relevant passage of Scripture that’s she’s referring to is found in 1st Corinthians Chapter 8; she’s using the New American Standard Bible, I’m going to switch to the New International Version because I think it’s a little easier to read for most folk.  One of the things that Rachel does in her little Scripture dance is leave out a great big chunk of the passage where Paul is writing.  To get the correct context, you need to go all the way back to verse 4:

Paul is saying in verses 4-7 that it’s not wrong to eat meat that was consecrated to idols, provided that the person doing the eating understands that there is one true God, and as such the idols or the consecration to said idols holds no power over the Christian.  In verse 9, he admonishes the Corinthians to be responsible about exercising their liberty in this regard, as there are among them those whose knowledge and faith has not sufficiently progressed to make that sort of mental leap, and so for them eating meat consecrated to idols is a bad thing.  Paul wraps up by saying that he would rather forgo the consecrated meat than cause his fellow Christian to stumble; his choice is rather to educate and teach Christians who are not as advanced in the faith as he is by not eating meat.

So where does this leave Rachel’s “guns will not commend us to God” comparison?  In the context of the Scripture that she chose, it pretty much leaves her up the creek without a paddle.  Remember, the context of the Scripture is what really matters; not changing it to mean what you want.  To apply her comparison directly to the rest of the passage, verse 4-7 would mean that it’s okay to own and carry guns, verse 9 would be warning you that some people don’t like guns, and Paul’s conclusion is that he won’t carry a gun because it might upset some people.  Nowhere does Paul say that the Corinthians shouldn’t eat the meat consecrated to idols.

It’s a pretty long theological stretch to twist meat consecrated to idols into carrying firearms, especially when what Paul was driving at wasn’t to get the Corinthians to stop eating the meat, but rather to think about the consequences and affect their actions have on others.  The point of the verse wasn’t that the Corinthians should abstain from eating meat, but rather that they should understand that eating the meat consecrated to idols wasn’t something that everyone was capable of doing.

If the whole chapter is taken in context and used an analogy for firearms ownership (which is ridiculous, but hey, I didn’t start this) Paul would actually be advocating for education on firearms ownership, and not the abolishing of firearms.  Actually, if anything Paul would say “why are we talking about guns when in fact we should be preaching the Gospel”, as a thorough study of his writings shows that he had little patience for topics tangential to preaching the Good News.

To compare eating meat consecrated to idols is a foolish comparison, and to make the ridiculous analogy work you have to ignore a large chunk of the passage of Scripture that Rachel uses as her reference.  Paul didn’t want people to stop eating meat, he was focused and making them aware of their choices and consequences, he wanted them to be more educated and aware – to conclude the ridiculous gun ownership analogy that the author of the blog post started, Paul would have been calling for education and understanding of firearms ownership so as to not impede the preaching of the Gospel with foolish things that are not important.

Of course, I encourage you to read my entire post on the issue – as long as the Brady Campaign insists on abusing Christianity as a platform for gun control, I will continue to rebut their terrible logic and poorly reasoned theology.

Springfields and Smiths and Berettas, oh my

It seems like the Indy 1500 wasn’t just a successful show for me and my acquisition of a spanking awesome 1951E Beretta, it appears that Tamarama made out like a bandit as well by selling her pimped-out 6.8 SPC AR.

When I say “pimped-out” to describe this rifle, I’m really not doing it justice.  The sling attachment alone should have rated a 9.5 on anyone’s tacticool meter, and if you had bought this rifle, you would have been the most tactical badass at school.

Using some kind of dark magic, Tam turned her tactical-death ray into a Trapdoor Springfield and a .32 S&W single-action Smith & Wesson.  Clearly, a good time was had by all at the gun show this last weekend.

Anti-gun judge torpedoes trial

The lawsuit against Adventure Outdoors – the last shop standing up to Mayor Bloomberg’s schoolyard bullying – has been forced to back down; primarily due to the antics of the anti-gun judge sitting on the case, Jack Weinstein.  Judge Weinstein had made the decision that the case would be heard by an advisory jury, which would ultimately mean that the decision on the case was in the hands of the judge, and not the jury.  By doing so, he essentially ensured that the case wouldn’t wind up in Adventure Outdoors’ favor.

According to the New York Daily News, Jay Wallace, the owner of Adventure Outdoors, plans to continue his fight elsewhere; I’ve also contacted him to see what his plans are for the future.

“We’re not cutting and running,” Renzulli [lawyer for Adventure Outdoors] insisted outside court.

Wallace will take his argument that Brooklyn federal court was not the proper venue for the suit, to the U.S. Court of Appeals.

It irks me to no end that Judge Weinstein was able to do this – personally, I feel like a case like this should be heard and decided by a jury.  The whole point of jury trials is to eliminate the potential of bias to influence the case, sadly this appears to be a pretty clear-cut example of bias taking over for reason and logic.

Vidcast: Kirst Konverter

Today’s vidcast presented a double opportunity, 1) for me to vidcast about my very favorite gun, and 2) a chance for me to play with my new Sony cameraphone.

I’ve had my Kirst Konverter for a couple of years now I think, and I love it to death. It’s more accurate than a gun that cost $350 for everything has any right to ever be, it’s comfortable to shoot, and always generates conversation at the range.

You can view all the Call me Ahab vidcasts at my Youtube Channel. On a side note, I said “rock n’ roll” in the vidcast completely on accident – I blame the mall ninja.