Monday, March 30, 2009

Meanwhile, Over in...

...what do the Brady's call it...?

Oh, yeah:





Anyway, this happened.

7 comments:

Joel said...

Yay!

We're number 36! We're number 36!

Let's shoot for #50!

(Oh, look! There's a linky about something bad that happened in California. Well, no surprise; who gives a damn?)

We're number 36!

Anonymous said...

The well publicized killings are piling up; by April 10, BHO should have plenty on tap to come at us with the new gun ban. It's just dumb luck one incident hasn't tallied 50 or more.

Who or what winds these killers up, and how do they always run in packs?

David Codrea said...

These are high pressure, tense times, Anon. I certainly feel it--the uncertainty, and it seems like everything is happening at once.

There's a general sense, fueled by the headlines, that something very big and very bad is about to happen.

The more pressure, the more on-edge minds will snap.

Kent McManigal said...

The "Manchurian Tools" are being used up at an alarming rate. They had better ration them before they run out.

Shy Wolf said...

Damn! MN is number 11...WTH? I was hoping to be Number One Hundred...but the few facts I scanned are lies, just the same. Where is the "feedback" link to the friggin bunch of liars? Methinks more letters to editor are due post haste.
Shy III

straightarrow said...

I just have to wonder what pushes them over the edge. We can go months and even years in between, then we get people in elected majorities who despise our liberty and these things seem to multiply like rabbits.

Agents provocateurs, anyone?

Sean said...

I read sometime back about when Pearl Harbor got bombed, the padded cells and nuthatches emptied out. Seems the overiding danger and enormous stakes caused many of the borderline to make a decision for sanity, and go and become a hero, rather than a zero. So, human nature being what it is, the buildup on the way to the Big Change will cause a lot of twitchers to cross a line. When I trained soldiers, twitchers would crack up in training, showing us who could psychologically withstand combat, and who could not. In my time, soldiers who were mentally unfit for duty numbered almost as many as the physically unfit.