Tuesday, September 05, 2006

Incorrect on So Many Levels

Handgun.  This little noun seems to strike fear, nay incoherence, into seemingly rational people.  Verlyn Klinkenborg, a member of The New York Times editorial board, is no exception to this observation.

This morning, Mr. Klinkenborg has opined on the subject of handguns, carried concealed, and the N.R.A., in a piece titled Once a Progressive State, Minnesota Is Now a Fief of the N.R.A. The title itself provides you with a fairly concise synopsis of what Mr. Klinkenborg’s views on are the subject.

Although Mr. Klinkenborg is not so far gone as to be advocating the removal of firearms from the hands of individuals; he owns a .22, a .270, and a couple of shotguns; he evidently considers a firearm which can be concealed and carried by an individual as an imminent danger to every other individual on the street.

Every concealed weapon, with very few exceptions, is a blow against the public safety.

Well, unless you’re a cop and are supposedly well qualified to utilize a handgun in your official capacity as investigators of crime, rather than preventers of crime,

I would leave the police work to the police, and they would leave the squirrel hunting to me.

Further into this oped, Mr. Klinkenborg ridicules the N.R.A. for advocating, for individuals, the right to own handguns and carry them in their day to day activities.  Even going so far as to say this about what he believes is the N.R.A’s. actual agenda,

Sometimes I think the N.R.A. isn’t really about guns at all. It’s about making certain that the public — our political and civil society, in other words — has no ability to limit the rights of an individual.

I do not belong to the N.R.A., so I will not opine on what they’re actually about.  But I will say this, if the N.R.A. is advocating for no limitation on the rights of individuals, I sincerely hope their stance regarding individual rights continues to rile Mr. Klinkenborg.

Posted by John Venlet on 09/05 at 05:13 AM
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Monday, September 04, 2006

Labor Day

The state propounds, through legislation of course, this idea of Labor Day;

Labor Day, the first Monday in September, is a creation of the labor movement and is dedicated to the social and economic achievements of American workers. It constitutes a yearly national tribute to the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and well-being of our country.

I prefer to think of Labor Day, and labor in general, more along the lines which Paul Greenberg expresses;

On this Labor Day, a great deal will be said in the usual press releases, but none of it will be more eloquent than work done well. To me, two new soles on a pair of well-shined shoes still say more than all the Labor Day speeches ever written.

Paul Greenberg’s piece on Labor Day is titled The labor theory of value

Posted by John Venlet on 09/04 at 07:40 AM
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