Early: So is it still her room when it's empty? Does the room, the thing, have purpose? Or do we -- what's the word? Simon: I really can't help you. Early: The plan is to take your sister. Get the reward, which is substantial. 'Imbue.' That's the word.

'Objects In Space'


Spike's Bitches 44: It's about the rules having changed.  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


meara - Aug 20, 2009 6:37:08 pm PDT #20287 of 30000

I would totally like to learn to shoot. That said, I don't really feel a need to own a gun--I wouldn't feel comfy having it out, but having it locked up wouldn't seem to be the point of "ooh, there's a robber", so....no need to own.

That said, there is a freakish part of me that is all "but someday when the apocalypse comes and I have to fight off the hordes and/or the Evil Government..." But then the logical part of me says that (a) that day is unlikely and (b) even if it comes I'll probably die right away anyway, and/or lose my glasses and be pathetically helpless.


billytea - Aug 20, 2009 7:03:18 pm PDT #20288 of 30000
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

There is rumor of evidence that a reason Hitler didn't invade USA was because so many folks had a gun, that the insurgence factor was too high.

Just on this point, I'm curious to know who thinks Hitler could ever have invaded the US in the first place, given he couldn't even invade Britain. Wasn't the fear of insurgency keeping him away, methinks.


ChiKat - Aug 20, 2009 7:26:31 pm PDT #20289 of 30000
That man was going to shank me. Over an omelette. Two eggs and a slice of government cheese. Is that what my life is worth?

the hunter types are all fanatical about proper gun safety and storage and education

These are the people I grew up around, my dad included. He has quite a few shotguns and used to hunt regularly when he was physically able. He hunted birds: geese, quail, duck, pheasant. I grew up eating a lot of that kind of game.

I have no problems with the hunters I know because they are very fanatical about gun safety. I eat meat and have no problems with hunting in general. I, personally, prefer to buy my meat in packages at the grocery store, however.


WindSparrow - Aug 20, 2009 8:16:22 pm PDT #20290 of 30000
Love is stronger than death and harder than sorrow. Those who practice it are fierce like the light of stars traveling eons to pierce the night.

As an extreme example: you wouldn't lock up your aluminum tent poles but many people have electrocuted themselves by accidentally or purposely touching a tent pole to a power line.

My childhood brush with death, coming almost as near to it as javachik, ironically enough was with a tent pole. So I do advise at least putting them away, if not actually locking them up. But yeah, I'm probably the only kid who ever thought it would be a good idea to pole vault over the sprinkler with one, so they definitely aren't as disastrous as guns.


Deena - Aug 20, 2009 9:04:02 pm PDT #20291 of 30000
How are you me? You need to stop that. Only I can be me. ~Kara

Deena, how have you been feeling?

Achy and tired. I can't wait for the heat to subside. I'm hoping that's the cause, anyway, since I can see an end to it.


Seska (the Watcher-in-Training) - Aug 20, 2009 10:36:57 pm PDT #20292 of 30000
"We're all stories, in the end. Just make it a good one, eh?"

Hil, wishing you reduced pain. (Yup, progesterone not so good with hypermobility. I can't take the pill because of joints falling out of their sockets all over the place.)

Shir, good luck with the paper. And we knew you were good. (Did I mention my result for the paper you gave me advice on? A good distinction. Highest mark I've ever had. So, thanks - and *please* study sociology at a higher level, for you are awesome at it.)

I'm in the UK, where guns are anathema, so I won't try to contribute to the gun debate. But it's interesting to read!

In terms of the healthcare debate, we have right-wing politicians currently arguing for a US-style healthcare system, saying that the NHS has failed. Every time they say this, I shout at the TV about how I'd probably be dead without the NHS, along with many other people with chronic illness I know, who all get pretty good treatment regardless of their ability to pay (it's not a perfect system, but at least we're all, well, not dead). And I point out to them, in this ineffectual shouting-at-the-TV manner, that current popular support for the NHS is really high because of politicians saying things like this about it. Idiots...

If they do disband the NHS, I'm moving to somewhere in Scandanavia. Pronto.


Shir - Aug 20, 2009 11:25:33 pm PDT #20293 of 30000
"And that's why God Almighty gave us fire insurance and the public defender".

I have a screwdriver

Yeah, but is it sonic?

{{Hil}} {{Deena}} {{Barb}} {{sj}} and I hope I didn't leave anyone. Between mothers and pains, this is... my ~ma to you, ladies.

Now, the gun thing.

You all know where I'm from, and it's not the most peaceful country in the history of ever. However, a very low percent of Israelis have a gun of their own. We also enjoy relatively low crime percent. When I shot M-16 in the army, I didn't think "oh, that's cool, I want one!". I don't feel much towards guns. If not for hunting or army/police, I don't even understand why to have them in first place. I think it's because you can't rely on your state to protect you: just look how we moved from the health care topic to the gun topic: I can't help but thinking that there's this thread that's connecting them, and that thread is that you can't trust your country to protect you so much. Strange to me that more people choose to become gun owners and not, say, doctors.

And oh, Seska - I'm really glad I could help there, but given that my advice was so small, I'm sure you're responsible to much of the awesomeness of it, and hence, the grade.

The thing I'm excited about in my paper, is that if it will work the way I think it will - it's gonna show why any photograph that's attached to an article in the newspaper, or just being used in the public sphere will never ever "prove" us something we didn't "know" is there to begin with. Never. Ever. Not even tabloids. And I'm gonna show why, in 12 pages or less, and why the Victorians are the ones to blame (I have a meter of books piling on my bed, floor and desk, from rationality studies to modernity studies and philosophy of photography and the making of public space to support me. I hope) - and I think it can be a huge deal. At least, for me. I hope I didn't just jinx it - I'm pretty much working on this theory for the past 9 months, and I'm kind of sure there are bazillion ways to say "you have a mistake here and there and there and there" - because I'm no expert on any of the fields I'm combining to my argument. They all just seem somehow connected, almost perfectly.


billytea - Aug 20, 2009 11:33:41 pm PDT #20294 of 30000
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

And I'm gonna show why, in 12 pages or less, and why the Victorians are the ones to blame

Speaking as a Victorian myself, may I say, hey!


Shir - Aug 20, 2009 11:40:55 pm PDT #20295 of 30000
"And that's why God Almighty gave us fire insurance and the public defender".

Speaking as a Victorian myself, may I say, hey!

19th century Victorians, mostly in Europe. You just keep taking pictures of Ryan and let none of my theories affect you, OK?


billytea - Aug 20, 2009 11:48:10 pm PDT #20296 of 30000
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

19th century Victorians, mostly in Europe. You just keep taking pictures of Ryan and let none of my theories affect you, OK?

See, this is what we've come to. "Just keep sending the pictures of baby cuteness and no one gets hurt." Not that these pictures will prove anything you didn't know to begin with, of course.