Snowflakes in Hell


Where There’s Snow, There’s Firepower

Archive for April 3rd, 2007

Modersky Gets 14 Months

author Posted by: Sebastian on date Apr 3rd, 2007 | filed Filed under: Philadelphia

It’s always hard to fight a crime epidemic when you associate with criminals.  Just ask Mayor Street.

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A man accused by prosecutors of orchestrating a plan to funnel illegal contributions to the campaign of Mayor John F. Street was sentenced Monday to 14 months in prison and ordered to pay more than $25,000 in fines and restitution.

Joseph Moderski, 70, of Bryn Mawr, was the only one of the four defendants sentenced to prison in the scheme. Street was not charged with any wrongdoing.

Thank god for term limits.

Turnpike Leasing - Pissing Off The Right People

author Posted by: Sebastian on date Apr 3rd, 2007 | filed Filed under: Pennsylvania

I suspect the Governor may be doing right when I see things like this:

Democratic Gov. Ed Rendell’s initiative to lease the Pennsylvania Turnpike was instantly panned by the state Turnpike Authority and union workers who operate toll booths on that road. A majority of New Jersey residents oppose Democratic Gov. Jon Corzine’s idea to lease the Garden State Parkway to cut the state’s debt or lower property taxes, according to a January poll.

People from New Jersey, the Turnpike Commission and the toll workers unions are against it?  Sounds like it might be worth a try if you ask me.  Personally, I’d rather just rip the damned tolls up entirely, but I’m willing to give leasing a try for a bit.  They certainly would have a hard time doing a worse job of maintaining the Turnpike than the Turnpike Commission currently does.

Slot Troubles

author Posted by: Sebastian on date Apr 3rd, 2007 | filed Filed under: Pennsylvania

Several spurned suitors for a coveted license to operate a gambling establishment in PA are suing to have the deliberations opened up.

The rejected applicants will get a chance to make those points in person on May 15, when the state Supreme Court hears oral arguments on challenges to the slots licenses awarded Dec. 20 by state gambling regulators.

Their arguments were outlined in briefs dozens of pages long filed Monday with the court. Separate confidential briefs were also filed, containing information from the applicant’s files that the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board has withheld from public view.

The gaming board will have a chance to respond in its own briefs to the Supreme Court, which are due April 23. A spokesman said Tuesday that the agency is confident it will prevail in court.

“The board is sure that the record will support its decisions and that the process used to determine awards was not only designed to assure fairness to all parties, but was applied consistently by us throughout the licensing process,” spokesman Doug Harbach said in a statement.

The record they are so sure is fair that they don’t want to open it to public scrutiny?  I smell a rat.

DeNaples, a politically connected businessman with interests in landfills, auto parts and real estate, was repeatedly allowed to skirt rules designed to allow competitors to critique each other’s plans, Matzel’s group said.

Changes to DeNaples’ application continued practically up until the gaming board’s vote, almost a week after the panel was to have stopped considering any new material, Matzel’s group said.

Nothing to see here.  Please move along.

New Topic

author Posted by: Sebastian on date Apr 3rd, 2007 | filed Filed under: Brewing

I’m going to add a new topic called “Brewing”, because that’s my other hobby.   I don’t plan on posting about it much, but every once in a while, I will.

We gun owners are often concerned about preparedness, especially during shit hits the fan situations.  Beer making is all about preparedness and survival, because, let’s face it, life without beer isn’t really worth living is it?  So it’s good to know how to make the stuff yourself.

Beer is civilization.  Don’t believe me?  Just look at the societies that won’t touch the stuff.  I rest my case.

Comment Registration at Brady Blog

author Posted by: Sebastian on date Apr 3rd, 2007 | filed Filed under: Anti-Gun Folks

According to Pro-Gun Progressive, the Brady Campaign is requiring registration for their blog comments. I suppose they got tired of the volume of pro-gun comments on it, and figured since we don’t like the r-word very much, this might keep us off :) It doesn’t appear to me that the comments are still restricted. It seems to have the same Wordpress style comment section as it had before

But seriously, it does look like registration isn’t restricted, but to be honest, I’ve never felt good about signing up for their mailing list or other such things. Who knows whether they count registrations or mailing list members for purposes of counting how much grass roots support they have. If a politician were told there are 20,000 people on the Brady mailing list, do you think they’d realize half of them might be pro-gun people “keeping tabs”?

I was amused at the volume of pro-gun comments when they opened them up, but I didn’t ever comment there, because I didn’t see much point. I mean, it’s not like Sarah Brady is going to come out and say “OK, I was wrong, now who wants to show me how you field strip this AR-15?”, or Paul Helmke will start asking for advise on a good reloading press.

UPDATE: Crap.. it got rid of my first update.  Anyway, I said I rethought this, and decided that it’s not a waste of time to post over there, just in case anyone on the fence happens by their blog.  I don’t plan to make a regular habit of it though.

UPDATE: Yeah, the comments work. I just submitted one. It goes into a moderation queue and has to be approved. You can see your comment, but no one else can. That’s how it was working before.

FakeRAID Sucks

author Posted by: Sebastian on date Apr 3rd, 2007 | filed Filed under: Technology

Whoever decided that “FakeRAID”, which is a highly technical term used to describe the types of Serial ATA RAID apearing on some cheaper motherboards, was a good idea needs a severe beating.  It appears that FakeRAID is just basically a BIOS hint, requiring the CPU on the machine to do the majority of the work with regards to creating and maintaining the array.  I was trying to make Ubuntu do the FakeRAID thing on a server at work, but I think I’m just going to use the Linux software RAID, which seems to be the conventional wisdom these days anyway.

Now back to your regularly scheduled gun blogging.

NRA Not Quite So Confident?

author Posted by: Sebastian on date Apr 3rd, 2007 | filed Filed under: 2nd Amendment

Robert Levy wrote, Instapundit and SayUncle linked it.   Levy asserts that the NRA’s actions make it appear that they want to derail Parker by pushing the D.C. personal protection act.

I understand why the NRA is doing this: Parker vs. DC could backfire on us in a big way, and a legislative remedy is the safer short term option.   But I’m more open to Alan Gura’s argument that the Supreme Court is going to hear a second amendment case soon in any regard, and we might as well make the first case a good one.

I’m as nervous about the case as the NRA is, however, and even if Parker gets a favorable ruling, I’m really nervous about the aftermath.  But to use warfare as an analogy, a general doesn’t always get to pick his battlefield, and this is quite likely where circumstance is going to demand that we roll the dice with The Court.  I’m nervous but optimistic.   I’d really like to understand why the NRA isn’t, and hear their point of view, their real point of view, not just the official line.

I’d Like to See This Tried in Texas

author Posted by: Sebastian on date Apr 3rd, 2007 | filed Filed under: Weird

Bruce has the skinny on an attempt to charge 20 dollars for your Sunday cookout, all to fight global warming, of course.   The best part is:

The local authorities plan to monitor compliance with the new tax legislation from helicopters, whose thermal sensors will detect burning grills.

Wow!  I almost feel like this has to be a joke.   Can people really be this stupid? Can they?  The people that came up with this need to emigrate to Texas, and try it there, where I’m sure the population would be happy to give this the response it deserves.