90 Miles From Tyranny

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Sunday, December 30, 2012

C O E X I S T ?

The Progressive professors all got together to convince the gnat that he should coexist with the spider.  The gnat promptly went over to the spider to make amends and the spider ate the gnat for lunch.  The professors blamed the gnat.  When all the gnats were eaten, the spider came to eat the professors, half revealed themselves as spiders, the rest were promptly eaten.  Moral of the Story? Either fight the spider, be the spider or be eaten.

How to Control a Nation

Looks like they are on step 5.....

Awesome Picture...


Late Night Ladies

Don't fight....we can share.....
 
 
 
More Late Night Ladies:

Sexy Girls With Guns:
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/women-with-weapons_4.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/women-with-weapons.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/women-with-weapons_3672.html
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http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/carmen-electra-with-weapons.html
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http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/09/women-with-weapons_30.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/hot-girls-with-big-guns.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/rule-5-girls-with-guns-hot-hot-girls.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/hot-girls-with-machine-guns.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/red-hot-girls-with-guns.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/hot-girls-with-guns.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/hot-pics-of-hot-girls-with-big-guns.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/smoking-hot-girls-with-guns.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/hot-girls-hot-guns-rule-5-girls.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/hot-christmas-girls-with-guns-rule-5.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/hot-girls-with-cool-guns-on-hot-beaches.html
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http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/hot-guns-held-by-hot-girls-in-cool.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/12/beautiful-bikini-bombshells-with.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/09/women-with-weapons.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/09/girls-with-guns.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/10/women-with-weapons_23.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/10/women-with-weapons_10.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/10/women-with-weapons_7.html
http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2012/11/women-with-weapons_1688.html

Hot Anime Girls with Guns




More Hot Anime Girls with Guns:
 
 
 

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Hot SteamPunk Girl with Steampunk Gun

 
 
More SteamPunk:
 

The Irishman isn't the only one who got a Holster for Christmas

My Fobus Paddle for my Glock 19 is one one the things I got for Christmas, I also got the Glock Peltor Hearing Protector Muffs (not pictured)


The Irishman also got a holster here:
http://theferalirishman.blogspot.com/2012/12/yea-my-christmas-present-came.html

The Demise of the Home Phone


The CDC reports that more than one third of American homes are now landline-free, with six in ten adults aged under 30 living in households with only wireless phones.

Pirate radio jammed keyless car entry systems


3:38 p.m. EST, December 28, 2012
It was a mystery no one could solve — until now.
For months, dozens of people could not use their keyless entry systems to unlock or start their cars whenever they parked near the Hollywood Police Department. Once the cars were towed to the dealers, the problem miraculously disappeared.

Police have since cracked the case.
Turns out the problem wasn't with the cars, the batteries or even user error, but an illegal pirate radio station that was jamming the signal from keyless entry systems of several makes of cars, including Lexus and Toyota. The man behind the bootleg operation likely had no idea it would lock people out of their cars, police say.
Lynn Jacobson, who lives on Van Buren Street a mile west of police headquarters, was frustrated for months trying to get into her car.

"It was happening every day," Jacobson said. "We were getting desperate. It got to where every time I went out to the car I'd say, 'Please let it open.'"
Detectives are still searching for the man who set up the bootleg station on the roof of the eight-story Regents bank building at 450 Park Road, a block north of police headquarters. The station was broadcasting Caribbean music around the clock through 104.7 FM, police say.
If found, the man could be arrested on felony charges and face a fine of at least $10,000 from the Federal Communications Commission.
An undercover detective and FCC agent found the equipment on Dec. 6 concealed under an air conditioning chiller.
Four days after they removed the equipment, a man identifying himself as "Jay" left a message for a maintenance worker at the bank building, police say. When the worker returned the call, "Jay" asked if he'd taken his equipment. The answer: No, but the cops did.
Most people have heard of pirate radio stations blocking legal radio stations. But keyless entry? That's so rare it's only happened once before, two years ago in Miami, an FCC official said.
News of the bootleg radio station stunned drivers who'd initially heard the culprit was an antenna behind the Hollywood Police Department. The problem ended as mysteriously as it began, leaving many wondering how it had been fixed.
"How do you like them potatoes?" said Mannolie Disantos, a manager at a nearby Radio Shack where several stranded car owners flocked when their electronic keys failed, only to learn their key batteries weren't dead after all. "We were blaming it on the police. The police were blaming it on the courthouse. We didn't know what was going on."
The problem began in August, said Jacobson, right afer she purchased her champagne-colored Lexus. She figured she'd bought a lemon.
"At first I thought it was me," said Jacobson, who started to say a little prayer every time she tried to use her electronic key. "It wasn't me. It had to be the car."
Jacobson called the closest Lexus dealership, in North Miami, only to learn other car owners were phoning daily with similar complaints.
"Something mystical was going on," said Jed Jacobson, her husband. "We didn't figure out it was only happening in [our] neighborhood until later."
The dealership told customers it suspected the Hollywood Police Department had changed the frequency of its radio antenna.
Jose Camara, a service manager at Lexus of Pembroke Pines, knew of several customers whose locked cars were towed to the dealership.
"Some people thought their batteries had gone dead," he said.
Managers at the dealerships, saying they couldn't replicate the problem, sent owners home without a fix.
Most drivers were forced to read their owner's manual to learn how to access their manual key, Camara said.
Cars made by Ford, Lexus, Toyota, BMW and Mercedes reportedly were affected.
Despite the threat of hefty fines, pirate radio stations continue to crop up throughout South Florida, said Rob Frailing, a ham radio expert from Cooper City.
In February, the FCC slapped Robens Cheriza with a $20,000 fine after he ignored the agency's warning to stop operating a pirate radio station in West Palm Beach.
Last year, Fort Lauderdale resident Whisler Fleurinor was fined $20,000 for running a bootleg radio station on 99.5 FM.
Mercius Dorvilus, of North Lauderdale, was arrested in 2011 after deputies caught him operating a pirate station that broadcast Haitian music on 92.7 FM.
"People want their own music to be played on the radio, so they set up their own radio station," Frailing said. "I think most people do it because they want to be a DJ and they want to be heard. We have it happen a lot here. We have a lot of people from other parts of the world who don't realize they can't do this. It's a crime."

Test Driving the Apocalypse

On December 21, instead of waking up to fire and brimstone, I woke up and read Mitch Horowitz's “Once More Awaiting 'The End.'” Horowitz looks at our apocalypse fetish and sees a society so jaded with the present it dreams of a break from routine, even if that break is a disaster. He also points out that, as we daydream about crisis, we are doing remarkably little to address real—literally real—issues. I like Horowitz's analysis, but there is more to our fixation on zombies, Mayan calendars, and novels about the Rapture than a desire to escape ourselves.

Behind much of the apocalypse talk and the questionably-ironic zombie preparation classes at REI is a sense that something fundamental is out of balance. It may be impossible to articulate but, on a low level, we feel a sense of disquiet.

I began thinking about disquiet as I was working on two sprawling radio projects. After recording long conversations with nearly four hundred strangers about the past and present, I began to hear a common refrain rise out of the clamor: the future was scary. Nobody could agree on the cause, but they shared a narrative structure.


Trespass. Punishment. Redemption—maybe.

The trespass could be anything from capitalist excess to withering family values, but in both cases, it resulted from hubris. Punishment always came in the form of collapse, whether environmental or economic, abrupt or incremental. If the story continued, redemption could look like a Norman Rockwell painting, Star Trek, or a massively depopulated planet of sustainable farms.

If I had been seeking our common humanity, I found it in a primal sense that we are about to enter the punishment phase.

It was tempting to dismiss the disquiet about the future as a timeless part of human nature. Maybe, as Horowitz suggests, it came from our desire for an external event to unleash personal change. Or as a reaction against living in a world of constant change. We could even chock it up to our myths. From Genesis to Prometheus, Greek legend to Hollywood extravaganza, we have a long, masochistic love affair with the narrative of overreach and punishment. This is, after all, the same narrative that rolls Cassandra out of bed in the morning, generation after generation, and she's usually wrong.

Usually.

But this nagging doubt made me take the disquiet seriously. The Americans I met were level-headed, not Cassandra-like. For them, anxiety stemmed less from feeling personally stifled than from a belief that the biggest systems supporting us were cracking at the foundations. There was a consensus that the economy was rigged, money had eroded the democratic process, and, for a large minority, environmental problems were escalating. Optimism about personal lives was mirrored by pessimism about broader change.

It is easy to say that every historical moment is unique and people always feel they inhabit pivotal moments. This is true in many ways, but attributing the disquiet to biology or psychology drags our moment outside of history and prevents us from seeing fundamentally new issues when they arise. We are more interconnected than at any point in the past and our tower of seven billion is propped up by a frail scaffolding of man-made and natural systems. As individuals, we are dwarfed less by God and Nature than by the immense scale and inertia of our own civilization. The stakes are high, the responsibility is ours alone and, perhaps for the first time, we're starting to feel it.

The Mayan calendar did not resonate because most people expected an irate Mesoamerican god to knock on the front door with a jaguar hat and a flamethrower. Instead, collapse fantasies are an excuse to confront a visceral fear that, back in reality, we have created a civilization too complex to pilot and with limited time before it strikes the rocks.

Gloomy fatalism is useless, but our apocalypse fetish could be like the strange behavior of an animal sensing the first shivers of an earthquake. If we only seek explanations within and frame our behavior as timeless, we risk overlooking problems in the world we have created outside.


-Aengus Anderson

Michelle Obama, Ellen DeGeneres, Bill Clinton and Rachel Maddow were all nominated for the same Grammy Award.

I say put them all in a cage match and the one that comes out alive gets the Grammy for Best Spoken Word Album.

Only extreme leftists can speak apparently, or perhaps get nominated for a Grammy award.

The nominations were announced in early December.

A number of politicians have been nominated and subsequently won Grammy Awards in this category before. President Barack Obama won in 2008 with his book "The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream." He also won in 2006 with his book "Dreams From My Father."

Clinton picked up the prestigious award one year earlier—in 2005—with his book "My Life." Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also won in this category in 1997 with her book "It Takes A Village."


It looks like it is Moochelles turn but the left must really be torn, can't they just give them all awards, just because they all clearly deserve it.  They are all leftist ideologues that tow the leftist line. 

The 2013 Grammy Awards will take place on Feb. 10 on CBS.

Obamacare - Guaranteeing Birth Control for the Elderly

Even if you don't need it, it is comforting to know it is there....