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Guard Dog

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Everything posted by Guard Dog

  1. This is pretty cool! https://www.chronicle.com/article/And-for-Extra-Credit-Read-a/246357
  2. Nothing from the man himself but multiple sources say Rothfuss's Doors of Stone will be out 8/2020: https://lrmonline.com/news/third-kingkiller-chronicle-book-gets-2020-release-date/
  3. Give 'em hell!
  4. Doesn't our trade agreements with Canada and Mexico prevent such shenanigans? Or have we finally reached the point when saying "The President can't do ______" is pointless?
  5. Congress can stop this at any time. That is THEIR power he's abusing. My biggest hope for a Trump Administration would be for Congress to recall that it is in fact a co-equal branch of the government and looking the other way when the executive does things the executive cannot do is unacceptable. Still waiting on that one. Some of them do get it... not enough on either side though
  6. I would not describe my relationship with democracy as love-hate. I'm not ambivalent at all about it... it's terrible system for selecting leaders. It just happens to be better than all the others. You vote hoping you get an Augustus, end up with a Caligula and just thank God it wasn't a Tiberius. I figure honest and ethical leadership is likely too much to hope fore from either political party anymore. Let's face it... all the good people are getting real jobs. But ironically the democratic process is moving steadily in the direction of drug legalization over the explicit objections, threats, and attempts to undermine by those exact same lawMAKERS (emphasis yours) who won during the same elections. Marijuana legalization (to one degree or another) won more states than Hillary Clinton did in '16. Booze is perfectly legal and people are still forbidden to fly or drive under it's influence. MJ is legal in CO & AK and it's still illegal to use it and drive. What's the problem? Last point, in response to your first, just because a thing is democratically popular or decided on does not exempt it from criticism, resistance, disobedience (civil or uncivil as a last resort) by people with an approving conscience or a moral objection or just a bug up their rear about it. After all American slavery was both legal and democratically popular. Just an aside. Liberty is not the child of democracy. Nor vice versa. They are like cousins at best. You definitely want both. If you have one you are more likely to get the other but they can exist without each other as well. But Liberty without democracy is fleeting. Democracy without liberty is indistinguishable from tyranny.
  7. I cleaned out the camper, had a few drinks and ordered some books on my Kindle and a few "real" ones too.
  8. That is only a problem because some things are arbitrarily illegal and other things are not. Maybe it should be no one's business what you put in or do with the body you supposedly own. I'm certain I recently heard abortion advocates say much the same thing.
  9. I don't care who my leaders pray to, have sex with, dress like, or eat/drink/use in their free time. All I want from them is to do their damn jobs and leave me the f--k alone. Don't take any more of my money than the barest minimum the law requires. Don't tell me what I can/can't read/watch/listen to/ believe in. My home and my property are exclusively mine. Stay the f--k away and don't bother me about what I do there. If they do all that I don't care if they are fundamentalist Muslim, gay atheist, or bible thumping Pentecostal minister with a secret cocaine habit.
  10. Assuming we even have a choice. We both cast votes in states where the outcome is a foregone conclusion. Unless you know a way to reprogram the simulation so we actually can rescue the ship. Of course I didn't vote for either so I'm cool with the guy in the mirror. Not voting for either D or R in '20 or ever again for that matter. Now when it comes to the make up of Congress we do have a little more control. Just a little. I like my Congress in opposition to the Presidents. If only they would find the back bone to actually take back power ceded to the executive. Like tariffs. Of course they won't because all 535 of them dream of having that power themselves one day. Like I've said before, there are no saints in hell
  11. Leaving tomorrow morning for Johnson's Shut-Ins State Park in MO for five days of camping and fishing and watching Sunny & Bella's high jinks. See y'all when I get back!
  12. Grom & Bruce: Would you rather be stung by a scorpion of bitten by a snake. Trading one bad for another is no bargain. Besides sooner or later you know this country was going to elect an utter idiot. I thought we already had, turns out I was wrong. Maybe we got that out of our system now.
  13. I'd go back to the Jurassic age and stomp on some butterflies
  14. This is not a joke. This is for real. Makes sense I guess. She would have a lot to say about the effective disposal of non-volatile memory devices.
  15. Gromnir if it makes you feel any better you would be in exactly the same place you are now had the coin landed the other way in 2016. As much as you value integrity, ethics, character, and adherence to law it could not end any other way for you. There is absolutely nothing in the history of Hillary Clinton or the people around her to suggest her administration would not be one of hubris, executive overreach, and malfeasance. The difference being she's a lot more adept at keeping things quiet. Rather than the roaches on the walls and counter tops we have now they would be behind the oven and in the pantry. But you better believe we'd still be hip deep in roaches.
  16. We went wrong when the executive did things that were beyond the enumerated powers of the office and the legislature did nothing. Does anyone have a time machine I can borrow? I'm going to go back to 1911 and kidnap Teddy Roosevelt. If he's not around Taft would be re-elected, WW2 would never happen and maybe... just maybe, the Executive branch of the US would not be out of control.
  17. How petty is this??? https://www.wsj.com/articles/white-house-wanted-uss-john-mccain-out-of-sight-during-trump-japan-visit-11559173470
  18. Jesse Dougherty is the Nats beat writer for the Washington Post. I've been a subscriber to the post for years on my Kindle and I've always liked it. But the quality is slipping and here is an example of why. Dougherty ran a column yesterday about a kerfuffle involving the Nats AAA affiliate, the Fresno Grizzlies. During their Memorial Day in-game ceremony they ran a video with pictures of the "enemies of freedom" of some such. AoC's pic was included with Kim Jong Il, and an assorted cast of bad guys. It was a pretty stupid thing to do and the team and person who made the video have apologized. Dougherty opined the person should be fired and if the Grizzlies won't do it the Nats should step in and do it. Just one problem: the Nats have no ownership interest in the Grizzlies. Like 90% of minor league teams they are a privately owned and operated entity. The Nats could no more have that guy fired than they could call my boss and have me fired. Now, I bring all this up because Dougherty published something that was not only wrong it was dumb. And no one caught it. He's been the beat writer for the Nats for 10 years and does not even know how the business he reports on works. His editors didn't catch it. The problem with the media isn't that they knowingly publish false information. It's that they UNKNOWINGLY publish false information. I'm pointing this one thing out as an example. Many journalists bemoan the loss of trust in their profession. But they refuse to see they are the only ones who can undermine their own credibility. Just my $.02. I'd post a link to the column but it's behind a paywall
  19. Unfortunately that stopped being important the day the political factions (not parties) in the country realized the court was a way to get something they wanted through the back door rather than through the front door of the legislature. Sometimes the justices are willing to do that, sometimes they are not.
  20. Of course. Mostly certainly isn't all the time. I seriously doubt there has been one you agree with more than 75% of the time in all the years you've studied them.
  21. There is no way to know where Garland would have come down on this or anything. But my best guess he is one who would have sided with LE 9 times out of 10. Just a guess though. As for you point on US vs Miller and AR-15's being more likely to be protected I beat you to it: https://forums.obsidian.net/topic/109120-politics-and-statesmenship-a-forum-special-report/?do=findComment&comment=2156851
  22. Hey you've seen me say nice things about Ginsburg as a consistent 1st Am champion and Sotomayor as a consistent 4th Am champion. They are both much less reliable on other things. As much as I respect Thomas on 2nd, 5th, 10th, & 14th Am issues I am far from with him 100% of the time. I'm not going to find agreement with the reasoning of any of them all the time. But with Goresuch more than the others I find myself saying "that's right!". Also Kagan and Breyer are both "liberal" (what does that word even mean anymore) and found against the plaintiff. Of course has Kagan ever found against a government authority on anything other than the "muslim ban" thing? Not that I can remember
  23. Every President has a guy who tried to put a spin on stupid things Presidents say (or tweet in this case). Dunno who it is for Trump but he's got his work cut out for him after this one!
  24. There is no one on this board who thinks less of Trump than I do. But I am so freaking glad he won this election. This is one big reason why: https://reason.com/2019/05/29/dissenting-from-a-decision-blocking-a-retaliatory-arrest-claim-neil-gorsuch-notes-that-almost-anyone-can-be-arrested-for-something/ The "good guys" might have lost this one but Goresuch was on the right side. Garland, I seriously doubt he would be. Presidents come and go, but judges can f--k you over for a generation or more.
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