Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Why I love America, Part 1

I am sure I am not reading this article the way it was intended, but I am proud to see that we are Number 1 in the world for small arms ownership.

U.S. most armed country with 90 guns per 100 people

GENEVA (Reuters) - The United States has 90 guns for every 100 citizens, making it the most heavily armed society in the world, a report released on Tuesday said.

U.S. citizens own 270 million of the world's 875 million known firearms, according to the Small Arms Survey 2007 by the Geneva-based Graduate Institute of International Studies.
About 4.5 million of the 8 million new guns manufactured worldwide each year are purchased in the United States, it said.


"There is roughly one firearm for every seven people worldwide. Without the United States, though, this drops to about one firearm per 10 people," it said.

It is interesting to note that during the American Revolution, less than 10% of the population actually contributed actively to the fight for freedom against the British. Maybe there is something to this number?

"Weapons ownership may be correlated with rising levels of wealth, and that means we need to think about future demand in parts of the world where economic growth is giving people larger disposable income," [Small Arms Survey director Keith Krause] told a Geneva news conference.

Hmm - guns mean wealth? Does that means there should be a measure of firearms, per person to determine how well a country is doing? :)

The report, which relied on government data, surveys and media reports to estimate the size of world arsenals, estimated there were 650 million civilian firearms worldwide, and 225 million held by law enforcement and military forces.

It's actually part of the national culture of America and free societies that power should tilt towards citizens and not governments. Isn't more might with the government rather than the citizenry one of the basic tenants of totalitarianism? Oh wait - isn't most of the world totalitarian?

I am seeing a pattern here . . .

Five years ago, the Small Arms Survey had estimated there were a total of just 640 million firearms globally.

Only about 12 percent of civilian weapons are thought to be registered with authorities.

More here.

I am sure the actual point of this article was to point out how bad America is for having guns. And how unfortunate it is that all of these world governments don't have tabs on all of their armed citizens. I think that is a great point - if you are coming from a "hey, how can we best oppress the populations of our countries?" perspective.

The main idea to keep in mind here is that we live in a free country that is unlike any other country in the rest of the world. Europe is filled with countries that for the past 1000 years or so have hovered somewhere between fascism and a semi-socialist-based-democracy hybrid - depending on their uneasy relationship between warring ethnic factions and how well their economies are doing at the time.

Africa is a post-Colonialist nightmare where their countries have been depleted of all natural resources and then left to their own limited devices. The Middle East is a vast sandbox where some of the kids have won the lottery live like medieval kings and all the other serfs are forced into post-tribalist 'countries' based on British, French, and Belgian-inspired boundaries, rather than the true tribal and/or ethnic make-up of their people.

Most of Asia is based on failed Stalinist promises and a general fear and mistrust of all things Chinese.

Extreme viewpoint?

Sure.

My point is that America is the litmus test for how free people can self-govern without a monarch or tyrant and still be successful stewards of the world.

Maybe these are all unfair generalizations, but I am not one to jump on the 'everything in America stinks' bandwagon. Sure we have our problems - we use too much toilet paper, have too many traffic cameras, and too many people wanting others to be unhappy/poor/vegan because they are unhappy/poor/vegan, but I still think there is a reason we are the number one country in the world.

- We are also the only country that actively contributes money and materials to help the rest of the world with their natural disasters and economic problems (can't remember many countries giving us help with Katrina and/or donating to help the homeless)

- We are the only country that adopts unwanted children from other countries (without regard to the racial and caste lines that other countries are constantly bombing and maiming with machetes over - just ask someone living in Pakistan if they'd like to adopt an Indian orphan)

- We are warlike and we are aggressive, but in all of our battles we take all casualties off of the battlefield and give them the same level of care - friend or foe. Do you think the Islamafacists think enough of the Golden Rule to render medical care to our soldiers? Don't believe me? I sat in a medical conference with a recently returned Naval field surgeon who showed us pictures of US Marines and Iraqi guerrillas sitting in a waiting room for their turn at the operating table.

America is successful because people living in a free society have more reason to excel.

If that means we have more guns - then so be it.

Maybe this is why we haven't been invaded by a foreign power since The War of 1812 . . .

Labels: ,

Monday, August 27, 2007

Paintball this weekend in Dripping Springs -
Saturday, September 1st


We'll be playing our first game of the season this Saturday, September 1st at Dripping Springs. It's gonna be a hot one, so we'll plan on gettng started around 9am.

I know, I know it's Labor Day weekend, but this will be a good chance to get your sweat going before your trip out to the lake. If nothing else, it'll give you some good stories for the parties the rest of the weekend. :)

If any of the San Antonio crew want to caravan up, we'll be meeting at my place at 8am to make the trek out to the land.

Let me know if you are coming as a guest (gear is very limited) or if you need to meet out at the Dairy Queen before we get started. Make sure you bring plenty of water and a pack - we may run some games campaign-style.

Labels:

Lata, Sucka!


More here.

Labels:

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Run for it, Marty! It’s the Libyans!

Who isn’t obsessed with time travel? The idea that you could go back into time to visit a deceased relative, see if primitive man really looked like the Geico commercials, or go back to middle school and slap yourself for being such a putz with the ladies. . .

Most of us can’t get the DeLorean up to 1.21 gigawatts and will have to settle for daydreaming, but this recent news story described how it may be possible, albeit only with much more scientifically advanced than ourselves.

What a cop-out!

Time Travel Machine Outlined

A new concept for a time machine could possibly enable distant future generations to travel into the past, research now suggests.

Unlike past ideas for time machines, this new concept does not require exotic, theoretical forms of matter. Still, this new idea requires technology far more advanced than anything existing today, and major questions remain as to whether any time machine would ever prove stable enough to enable actual travel back in time.

Time machine researchers often investigate gravity, which essentially arises when matter bends space and time. Time travel research is based on bending space-time so far that time lines actually turn back on themselves to form a loop, technically known as a "closed time-like curve."

"We know that bending does happen all the time, but we want the bending to be strong enough and to take a special form where the lines of time make closed loops," said theoretical physicist Amos Ori at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa. "We are trying to find out if it is possible to manipulate space-time to develop in such a way."

Ori's latest research suggests time machines are possible without exotic matter, eliminating a barrier to time travel. His work begins with a donut-shaped hole enveloped within a sphere of normal matter.

Inside this donut-shaped vacuum, space-time could get bent upon itself using focused gravitational fields to form a closed time-like curve. To go back in time, a traveler would race around inside the donut, going further back into the past with each lap.
Ori emphasized one significant limitation of this time machine—"it can't be used to travel to a time before the time machine was constructed."


More here.

Umm . . . donuts.

Of course they cover themselves with the idea that humans won’t be able to do this for a long, long time, which of course begs the question, if humans in the future are able to figure out time travel – why aren’t there time travelers from the future around now?

Or the even creepier question – what if we are the race spawned by a bunch of time travelers who crash landed in the past on earth and we all have a combined racial memory to build the technology to start ourselves? And if that’s the case, then would that explain the lack of a clear missing link between our supposed simian ancestors and modern man? Did these time travelers crash and supplant the pre-historic dominant Neanderthal race?

Wait a minute – if that’s the case, then how did the original time travelers cum proto-modern humans come about?

Stupid chicken and egg hypothesis.

Besides, if you can only theoretically travel back to the point at which you built the machine, what fun is that?

Good thing I don’t think too deeply about these things.

Labels:

Monday, August 13, 2007

We're back . . .

I hope that everyone has been having a fun and special summer and is looking forward to reuniting with our friends and comrades of the brush and marker. Wow - sounds like an art club . . .

We are going to be trying out a few new things this season:

1. More games involving radios: We have Sport 7/Talkabout radios in our possession and I really want to look into getting these more involved in game play. Two years ago our big spend was on the mortar and bazooka, last year was the new chronograph, this year will be all towards getting some good radios for the team. The ones we have are ok (2 mile range listed on the box - which means about 100 yards in the woods), but I would like to put all of our dues and some other team member's donations towards getting us some industrial-class radios. This will mean getting an FCC license and having a maintenance fee - but I think it will be worth it for the fun that we'll have.

2. Tactical day: More details to come on this one, but it will be a day that involves a longer, single scenario that focuses heavily on small unit tactics. If everyone enjoys doing it, we may try to do these more often.

We are going to be having a small skirmish game this weekend (August 18th) down at Miller Ranch. We'll get started at 9am and then probably play for a couple of hours - and then spend an hour or so afterwards wondering what we were thinking by hanging out in the pool.

Our first official game will be on 9/1.


The schedule for Fall 2007 has been posted to the paintball page.