Friday, March 24, 2006
About Me
- Name: Aunt B
- Location: Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Like Donnell Alexander says, "It's about completing the task of living with enough spontaneity to splurge some of it on bystanders, to share with others working through their own travails a little of your bonus life." But, it's mostly the kind of place that folks looking for "girls and cars" stumble across by accident.
I'VE MOVED. COME CHECK OUT THE MOST RECENT STUFF HERE.
WHERE TO DIRECT YOUR HATE MAIL AND LOVE LETTERS
ALL PROCEEDS GO TO BEER
THINGS I SAID RECENTLY
- My Blood Runs Cold
- Progressive Men, Are You on Our Side or Not?
- Okay, Tennessee, Listen Up.
- The Picture on My Fridge
- You Can Tell a Lot about a Man...
- Cecilia Fire Thunder
- Come On, I Know You're Dying to Know What Happened
- The Door Saga Continues, But with a Minor Resolution
- Media Bias
THE CAST OF CHARACTERS
Aunt B.--Your kind host.The Butcher--My youngest brother, who lives with me and works as, you guessed it, a butcher. He knows everyone in town.
The Recalcitrant Brother--Our middle brother, who lives in rural Georgia and has a kind of movie star life, if that movie star is Burt Reynolds in Deliverance.
The Reverend--Our Dad, a Methodist minister, perpetually three years from retirement.
Mom--Our Mom. She doesn't get a funny nickname because our mom will not stand for funny nicknames.
Mrs. Wigglebottom--My dog. She's got terrible manners.
The Corporate Shill--Or The Shill, as we call her. My friend from college who was constantly getting me into trouble and going to parties she neglected to tell me about where cute boys would ask her "Where's Aunt B.?"
The Legal Eagle--The Shill's husband.
The Super Genius--She lived next door to me my freshman year of college and we've been friends ever since my first day on the floor.
Miss J.--My first adult friend, meaning the first lasting friendship I made after college. She was my roommate in grad school.
Her Lover--Her Husband.
The Divine Ms. B.--Miss J.'s sister and one of my heroes, because she's brave and funny and mystic and fearless.
JR--My oldest friend. I've known her since I was in the second grade.
Elias--JR's husband and the person who's musical tastes have most strongly affected my own. Oh, how I long to be cooler than him!
The Professor--My closest friend here in Nashville. She's a genius, but she'll never tell you that.
The Man from GM--I've known him since I was 16 and he still hasn't forgiven me for telling him I was a vegetarian when I wasn't.
The Redheaded Kid--No one knows where he comes from or where he goes when he leaves here. I assume he's the Butcher's friend. The Butcher assumes he's mine.
9 Comments:
Well, in order to distill decades of anti-gun prejudice in one comment, allow me just to say that there seem to be certain people in this country who are proud of a right to choice. Unless that choice is "what gun should I buy."
The waffling comes from the use of the word 'militia'. Anti Gun folk rationalise control by assuming that the constitution only grants the right to bear arms to an organised fighting force (or members thereof.)
Pro Gun folk argue that armed citizens are the foundations for any grassroots militia that should rise up.
In summary:
Gun Control=If you are part of the militia you can have guns.
Gun Rights=If you have guns, you can have a militia should you need one.
As kat says, the gun control crowd thinks that 'militia' refers to a state's national guard troops, not to peasants like you and I.
A lot of the federal gun control comes from a supreme court case from the...30's, I think. I remember reading the case and it's total bullshit, but it's been used as precedent for a ton of laws since then.
That's a long discussion that I don't have time for right now. Trying to get my friend out of jail.
Some other time, i promise
-SayUncle
The guns that existed while crafting this nation, although dangerous & lethal, are nothing compared with what is available today. So, I think there are many Gun Control people who don't deny the 2nd Amendment but also don't think that it protects private citizens right to own machine guns and grenade launchers.
Maybe we shouldn't make the guns themselves illegal to own but make the USE of guns in certain situations illegal. So, if you're hunting for food, maybe that's okay. If you're defending your country (or even 'home' in a narrower sense) from an invasion, okay. But not much else. I know, we already have laws and penalties in place that make armed robbery differeny from robbery. But, maybe we should focus more on that place to reduce gun violence and we can still be broadly pro choice and respect the Constitution.
A-Human-Right is a great resource to learn more about gun rights.
The founding fathers had no concept of the internet either, so I guess we should limit free speech on it.
The second amendment is not in place to protect your right to hunt. It is there to provide the tools to overthrow the government, should it become overly oppressive.
make the USE of guns in certain situations illegal.
They already are.
"Licensing is not equal to inf(r)inging."
The hell it's not. If you must petition the government for permission, it's not a right, it's a privilege that can be revoked or denied at any time for any (or no) reason.
So, you're saying that if the government restricted your free speech rights by not allowing you to criticize the government on pain of inprisonment, that's not really "infringement" because otherwise your mouth and vocal cords still work?
"Infringed." You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means. - Inigo Montoya
Aunt B, if I may toot my own horn here in answer to your request to "point you the way," may I recommend a post for your consideration? I answered a similar question by a European gentleman a while back in a post I called The Blog that Ate Poughkeepsie. It's a bit long, but I think it will address the major part of your question of "How did we get here?".
Well, shoot, Kevin. Thanks. That is very helpful.
Glad to be of assistance.
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