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What’s wrong? I’ll TELL you what’s wrong!

Posted on October 31, 2012 Written by The Nittany Turkey

El CheA friend of mine, who is a professor of computer science at a state university here in Florida, one that is situated for the most part in our capital  city of Tallahassee (and not the garnet and gold one of Bowdenesque fame), posted the following, um, treatise in his sort of blog thing. Because his blog told me that I lacked permission to comment on it, I feel obliged to post my comments here, where all are welcome to comment, whether in support or in scorn. (That’s how we do things in the U.S.A., Komrade R.)

WhatsWrong

What’s wrong with this picture?

 

In testimony before a recent hearing Florida Gun laws a certain Mr. H. gave an impassioned personal anecdote as to the necessity of having the right to ‘stand your ground’. It contained the following assertions (admissions?):

 

Floridians need to protect themselves.

They are sometimes in remote places with no other help.

Those remote places are near at hand(!?)

He was in the woods and met someone who “did not belong there”(!)

The man did not approach him, did not hinder him and fled  before H. could reach his weapon.(!)

The man was arrested the next day on Marijuana possession.

He should not have to defend his (planned) actions in such cases. (!!)

 

This ‘argument’ is absurd on so many dimensions. The more amazing thing was that no legislator even gently addressed the shortcomings of this turgid, illogical mess! How could one find a worse basis or even atmosphere for law than such arguments?

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Turkey’s Response:

I don’  need no steenking permission to add my comments!

I particularly enjoyed the screwball exclamation points and question marks, Che— I mean, Roger.

What you consider reductio ad absurdum from a logician’s viewpoint doesn’t cut it with me. Frankly, I don’t get the anti-gun thing at all. In the words of Ron Dutton 30 years ago, “You haven’t proven anything, Roger. Sit down.” [Sorry, readers, for the inscrutable reference. This is an inside joke alluding to a classroom episode involving the object of my scorn here back when we were both doing graduate courses in computer science and discrete mathematics. —TNT]

Stand Your Ground LawI spend lots of time in the woods, and there are all kinds of scary situations afoot there — a few involving animals, but most involving humans of the nefarious sort. Do you know how many meth labs there are in the Ocala National Forest? The people running them aren’t nice people at all, and they’re certainly anything but law-abiding citizens. Life is cheap. Do you recall that guy who assassinated a couple of teenagers camping in the ONF — in a very popular area — a few years back? The ONF is huge, replete with poachers and other law breakers of all shapes, sizes, colors, and mentalities. A plethora of recreational users, families and outdoor types, who aren’t looking for trouble and don’t expect to find any, makes for some unholy situations when the two subsets of humanity intersect.

I’ll defend myself and my family, and I’ll damn well carry the armament necessary to achieve tactical superiority over those who would imperil us, in spite of the philosophical waxings of you anti-gun pussies. The bad guys will always get the guns they crave in spite of those who would compromise our right to bear arms. The law doesn’t apply to them, least of all in their minds, so what the hell kind of disadvantage would you like to impose on the good guys? Nah, keep the “stand your ground” law. The good guys, like me, will benefit. ??? ???? ??? ???? The bad guys will get what they deserve.

Occasionally, someone will make a mistake, like perhaps the Zimmerman case. I say perhaps because no one knows what went on there. ???? ???? ????? ??? ???? The broad assumption among the common folk, abetted by none other than the continually race baiting Reverend Al Sharpton, seems to be that Zimmerman was a racist prick bent on offing a nigga, and of course, that crap has attained a life of its own. The mob mentality that created and propagated that story, in my humble opinion, is much more dangerous than a law that enables a man to simply defend himself with lethal force if necessary. The threats are out there. Overreacting to a single incident is a dangerous and naive precedent, Professor Pontificator. ???????? ????????

And by the way, “remote” areas in Florida are indeed close at hand. You know that. It ain’t even paradoxical. I’ll show you homeless camps where life is cheap a couple hundred yards from major roads. You go there, you feel like you is in a remote outpost, fer sure, good buddy. Stop using simplistic overliteralization in feeble attempts to absurdify that which you cannot seem to fathom.

Stop supporting those who would compromise our right to defend ourselves and stop polluting the minds of those impressionable youths who are subjected to your tutelage.

The Turkey supports Florida’s Stand Your Ground law.

 

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Filed Under: Current Events, General Tagged With: don't fuck with gun owners, Florida, gun laws, National Rifle Association, Second Amendment, self-defense, Stand Your Ground

The Wild & Scenic Wekiva

Posted on September 23, 2012 Written by The Nittany Turkey

As I stated in my game recap this morning, I set out in my kayak with every intention of  catching the sunrise. That didn’t work out so well, because the rising sun hid behind the morning fog. What? All this pre-dawn fumbling around to wind up being foiled by Mother Nature? Harrumph!

Why can’t the Pittsburgh Steelers beat the Oakland Raiders, the crappiest team  in the NFL? But I digress, wistfully. Harrumph!

Turkeys
I encountered some of my relatives along the way.

I met some of my relatives along the river today (see picture), and all-in-all it was  a wonderful nine-mile paddle. I encountered many gators and turtles sunning themselves on logs, all kinds of birds, and only three other boats on the Whole Damn River (WDR). One was another old fart in a pretty red kayak. The other two were stink-boats. Harrumph!

One such stink-boat was a flat-bottom fisherman with a guy inside tossing a couple of lines out into the river. As I neared his boat (which wasn’t stinking, as it was stopped), a curious canine rose to attention with forepaws on gunwales. Very intimidating. Not. I dubbed the little Yorkie “Gator Bait.” Harrumph!

When I took out at Katie’s Landing, a Florida State Parks facility, the stink-boat guy turned up again, beaching his flat-bottom and loading it into the back of his pickup. I wonder what part of  the gigantically lettered sign “LAUNCHING OF MOTORIZED VEHICLES PROHIBITED” did he not understand. I bet that his fishing license is expired, too. Harrumph!

I SUCK AT KAYAKING (ISAK) RULE #1: Always make your outbound segment downstream, so you have to paddle your weary ass upstream against the current on the way back. Yeah, I know. We’re only talking 2-3 knots here, but a current is a current. Downstream, I can be totally lazy, with the only need for a paddle being for steering. Upstream, I’ve got to work, and some of those currents in the wild & scenic section of the lazy Wekiva are pretty tricky. (Yeah, like I’m having whitewater delusions here. Harrumph!)

Of course, the task manhandling a 14-foot boat onto the top of an SUV that is almost as tall as I am after paddling for nine miles and with a bad back to begin with, adds more pain to the fun! Harrumph!

Actually, I had a great time. Great solitude. Time for contemplation. The feeling that this scenery was what the native Timacuans saw here 800 years ago. No condos, no Ponce de Leon, no strip clubs, and no deficient public schools. They should have stayed in charge, but instead, the white man drove them to extinction, like their cousins, the Fakowie. Harrumph!

A paddle on a lazy flowing river is good for the soul. I’ll share my pictures with you, hoping that your soul appreciates them as much as mine appreciated the opportunity to take them.

The only thing that would have made the day more perfect (aside from the Steelers, harrumph!) was if Jenny could have been with me. Our days on the water are too rare. I miss singing “water songs” to each other from our respective kayaks, particularly “The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald.”

Turkeys
I encountered some of my relatives along the way.

 

 

—TNT

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Filed Under: General Tagged With: Florida, kayak, Seminole County, Wekiva River

My Civic Duty

Posted on May 22, 2011 Written by The Nittany Turkey

It’s that time again, the time to join 11 other angry men and women to serve my fellow citizens by sitting in judgment of one of them as their peer on a jury. Jury duty is a wonderful and sacrosanct tradition in which I gladly participate, completely devoid of the “how am I going to get out of this” deviousness that afflicts many so-called good citizens. I truly look forward to the experience, even though my most recent service has been largely on mundane county court panels that, in my opinion, have been a waste of time and money. Of course, the U.S. Constitution guarantees that we’ll do it, so we do, gladly and without regard to what it costs the public.

One of my county court cases involved a concrete finisher who had accused his girlfriend, a Hooter’s waitress, of assault and battery. The guy was about twice her size and had a previous felony on his record, as well as several misdemeanors. My comrades and I were treated to a re-enactment of the alleged crime at the behest of the respective attorneys, which was quite an entertaining show. Then, upon hearing summations and being given our instructions, we retired to our stark, uncomfortable jury room. We wise folks on the jury deliberated far too long, getting hung up on the legal definition of self-defense. So, we told the bailiff to have the judge assemble the players for us so we could ask him for the official definition, which he read to us. That did no good. We were hopelessly deadlocked. This stupid case would cost the county even more money, as the judge would declare a mistrial due to a hung jury.

The next county court case was an even greater waste of time and money. Some low-life punk stole a 12-pack of Heineken’s from the local Albertson’s. Such a clever scheme. Two guys came to the checkout aisle. One acted like he would pay, then the other took the beer to throw it in the back of the pickup truck while the other guy stalled the cashier by saying he thought the other guy paid. Meanwhile, the store’s general manager was accosting the beer guy in the parking lot as he tried to make his getaway. We heard testimony from the beer redneck and the store manager and retired for what I thought would be a pretty quick ipso facto guilty verdict. I was wrong. One woman didn’t want to send the poor boy to jail, believing that there was reasonable doubt that he committed the crime. I, who by the way was foreman, thought that she was considering the severity (or lack of same) of the crime as compared to the harsh punishment of 30 days in the slammer, or whatever the punishment would be. That was not up to the jury to decide. Ours was a simple matter of guilty or not guilty. It took us lots of cajoling to get her to understand that, maybe two hours’ worth. Finally, she caved. I hope the guy enjoyed the beer he stole.

Next, I thought I would finally get an interesting case, as I was called to serve on a circuit court panel. As it turned out, my number was drawn for a selection pool for a sexual battery case, which would involve far more testimony and intricate legal maneuvers than my previous two cases combined. The judge explained how voir dire works. The lawyers would question us either as a group or individually and use their challenges, either peremptory or for cause, to weed us out until they agreed on a satisfactory jury. They asked us a lot of questions about whether it was right for a man to hit a woman. One prospective juror said that it went against his religion and under no circumstances would it be acceptable. He ultimately got the ax. My response was that it was not pleasant to consider, but I could envision circumstances under which there would be sufficient justification to do it. (I didn’t tell them what I was thinking — when they pull some obscure shit out from five years ago that you’ve damn well forgotten about and hit you right between the eyes with it if it serves to support their flimsy argument, albeit out of context. But I digress.) That answer kept me in the game. Ultimately, though, I would perish, for whatever reasons the lawyers thought I was unsuitable. Perhaps the prosecutor thought that I was an old pervert who would side too much with the defendant. Who knows? I stayed in the courtroom as instructed, in case I was selected as an alternate. I observed that of the two students in the pool from our county’s community college, the dizzy blonde was selected but the serious young man who said that he liked to read the classical philosophers in his spare time was excused. That told me something about what they were looking for. At the end of the day, I was free to go, but it had been an interesting day of observing the legal process, a good day that I did not consider a waste of time, for a change.

Fast forward to now. Again, this time, the day after the Memorial Day weekend, it will be circuit court, so the potential exists that if I make the cut, the case will be interesting. At last year’s Springs Concert, an annual event in the recreation area in my community, a circuit court judge up for re-election was making the rounds glad-handing the electorate. I told him that I hoped the next time around I would get something more interesting than the concrete finisher or the beer redneck. He told me that all his trials were interesting and if I got on a jury in his courtroom, I would not be disappointed. Oh, sure, he was trying to suck a vote out of me, but on a different plane, I want to believe him.

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Filed Under: General Tagged With: circuit court, Florida, jury duty, Seminole County

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The Nittany Turkey is a retired techno-geek who thinks he knows something about Penn State football and everything else in the world. If there's a topic, we have an opinion on it, and you know what "they" say about opinions! Most of what is posted here involves a heavy dose of hip-shooting conjecture, but unlike some other blogs, we don't represent it as fact. Read More…

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