Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Why I like my friends....

My guys would do this.


I think my dog would too....


Can't really type well, I've got something in my eye....

Good Advice

"If you feel unsafe, you shouldn't be there"

Awesome advice.  Critical to those people that put themselves in "Harm's Way"

My professional time has been spent in very risky arenas.  On the street, in the ER, out in the field at my last job, all had serious risks associated with them.  However, I'm definitely not drawn to risk.
A friend of mine once called me "Risk averse", to which I replied "Risk mitigating"

That's the big thing when you routinely do risky jobs.  You learn what the risks are, where things go bad, and you figure out how to prevent them from happening, or how to rapidly address them when they do happen.  Risk is an integral part of everything we do (EVERYTHING), and we have to accept that.  Professionals acknowledge (never ignore) the risk, prepare for it, deal with it, and over come it.

Carrying a gun because you like to go to risky places is pretty freakin' stupid.  First, your best defense against that risk is to completely avoid it.  Second, the minute you pull that gun your risk goes through the roof.  

Good job, cowboy.  /sarcasm

I would take my hat off to Mr. Goodell.  Thank you for taking the smart avenue through this mess.  Thank you for telling your agency the realities of life.  Thank you for cleaning up a group that the public occasionally views as a den of criminals and cut-throats.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Responsibility when other's lives are in your hands

Throughout our lives we encounter people who have power over us.  All sorts of power, sometimes they have power without us even knowing it.  The police officer directing traffic, to the bank manager examining our loan application, to the professor reading our thesis, all of these people have some level of power over us.  In fact, they have a tremendous amount of power that they could use to abuse us, should their concept of "right and wrong" fail.

The professor, reading our thesis, could deliver a scathing and inappropriate grade.  In the age of digital media, he could substitute our submitted work with a previously published article, and accuse us of plagiarism.  At my university this would result in immediate expulsion, and would make it incredibly difficult to continue my education.  He could end my scholastic career, and make it relatively impossible to continue in my chosen profession.  Highly unlikely.

The bank manager, with my loan application in his hand, could control my financial future for quite sometime.  A copy of my loan application would could be sold to unscrupulous individuals for a certain amount of money, and I would face identity theft problems for quite sometime. Again, highly unlikely.

A police officer could easily decide to simply shoot someone out of hand, ending their life.  Properly staged, they could probably get away with it.  Also, unlikely.

All of these individuals have a duty to the person they are interacting with, whether it is professional, civic or otherwise, they have some sort of requirement to help others.

I'm a big fan of people making responsible choices.  Put simply, I'm a big fan of personal responsibility.  Those that risk others to advance their agenda cause me a tremendous amount of concern.

The recent arrest of Plaxico Burress for carrying a firearm without a license caught my eye this weekend.  I didn't think much of it, as it seemed an open and shut case.  The guy was a moron carrying a firearm without adequate care to ensure that it would be safe to himself and those around him.  Allegedly he was carrying a firearm while drinking (an absolute no-no).  While he claims that the firearm discharged accidentally while he was adjusting it, this is no defense, and runs counter to basic firearms safety.

A couple of days later, this article catches my eye:

That any concealed carry advocate could even consider supporting Plaxico Burress is beyond me.  I'm simply stunned.  The guy has quite literally given every gun-banning-legislator a poster boy for irresponsible carry.  The fact that Burress was licensed to carry in another state only adds to the fire.  He was an idiot, he broke numerous fundamental rules regarding gun safety, and if he had a shred of personal responsibility he would shut-the-hell-up and take his punshment quietly.

It's quite clear that Mr. Burress has never consider his duty to others, to keep them safe, and make sure that they are safe in light of his decision to carry.  And why should he?  Society is all to quick to attempt to place the blame away from him.

Let's be completely clear:  Mr. Burress would have been negligent and (probably) criminal if he had obtained a permit in NYC and suffered the negligent discharge in a crowded nightclub.  Certainly if he had been drinking, or if his errant round had struck an innocent, he would be up on charges.  Allowing him to have the opportunity to legally carry would have done nothing to stop this potential calamity.

As it is, we're lucky.  Well, almost lucky.  Mr. Burress shot himself in the leg.  No one else was injured (though I imagine several people were scared witless).  

People who are trained (truly trained) how to carry a firearm are taught to make sure that the general populace is safe.  Further, they are trained that if the general populace cannot be kept safe during a firearm deployment, then the firearm is not deployed.  It's quite clear that Mr. Burress missed that lecture.  A little education (taken to heart) would have averted this potential calamity.

So I come to the article, which I almost believed was a "Wolf in Sheep's Clothing".  I could easily picture a strict gun-control advocate writing the article.  However, that is not the case.

Mr. Kopel, please stop advocating for my rights.  You're doing more harm than good here.  
While your website does make me believe that you believe in gun rights, your execution is terrible, and sheds light on the worst possible aspects of concealed carry.  It does little to nothing to advocate responsible carry, and will only increase the ignorance surrounding the cause.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Another bizarre coincidence

It's been a couple of days since I last posted.  Well, it's been over a week.  
I've been using this spot as a place to rant and rave, and get some of my thoughts down in a semi-therapeutic fashion.  Not as an avenue to get my life out there, but rather to scrawl my thoughts out on a wall in a mostly anonoymous fashion.  

I'm a graffiti tagger on the information superhighway.

I imagine that someone speeding by (googling) this page would see a splash of disjointed topics (maybe a photo or two) and wonder "What the hell was that guy thinking?"

So, I really haven't been writing for anyone, or for any real reason (beyond the reason that I need to).  I get an idea stuck in my head, or a project that I'm working on (got a new one, BTW), and I can jot it down here. 

I'm doodling in the margins of the internet.

So my heart kind of skipped a beat when I saw I had someone commenting on my iPost-its.  

Then I realized it was my best friend.

Now I'm having to fight the urge to re-read everything that I've written for the last month.  I don't think I said anything mean, but I constantly say things that can be taken out of context or misused (I'd make a very poor political candidate for that reason.  I think Palin had it right for the first week.  Just don't say anything public.  Doesn't work so well when you're running for public office though....)

Is it bad that you would be a worse candidate than Palin?  Given the state of mad-media, chopped sound-bites, and misrepresentations?

So, I've got a guy peering over my shoulder, reading what I'm typing.  And he's commenting on it.  Verbally and publically.  Now I gotta make sure I don't step on my crank.

Hey amigo, you freakin' rock.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Sequel to the bad movie

http://www.cnbc.com/id/27451527

I'm sorry, they can't account for the $90 Billion they've spent since mid-September???

Folks, I keep hearing people screaming about the war in Iraq and Afghanistan costing Billions a week.  

I'm doing the math here, and I'm seeing about $15 Billion per week ($90 Billion divided by 6 weeks), by a single company, who can't say where the money is going.

I know where some of the money is going:  nice business "retreats".  That news story has been done.  But I ask you:  If they're that stupid about publicly spending that kind of money, what are they doing privately?

Cell Phones

It strikes me that a cell phone seems to be the common excuse to be in public, but ignore the public.

It's bizarre that this little tiny device, with it's incredibly small level of interaction, can take the place of the massive sensory stimulus that is the world around us.

I'd like to think that I don't do this.  I know that almost certainly I'm wrong on that.

I do try to not talk on the cell phone around other people.  Let's face it, it's kind of rude to talk to someone that isn't there.  It's why we call crazy people "Crazy People".  We generally don't invite those people to parties.

I hate talking on the cellphone when I'm in the car with someone.  That's got to be one of my ultimate pet peeves.  You've basically just forced this other person to sit down, shut up, and not move.  The strange converse?  I don't mind that much if someone else takes a phone call while I'm in the car.

Not so in restaurants.  Seriously, you wouldn't do it at your mother's table, certainly don't do it out in public.

I truly applaud restaurants with a "No Cellphone" policy.  I recently went to one that kept my meal warm when I stepped outside to take a call.  Incredibly classy place, even if it was a 24 hour diner serving greaseball cheesesteaks (hey, at 2am, sometimes you really get a craving for an awesome cheesesteak).

I guess this is one other part of the "Treat others better".  Not well, but better.  Maybe start small, and just try to make one stranger actually happy that they were in your proximity that day.  If you find that you need to be a little bit stronger in an interaction, it's always easier to go from nice to nasty, than mean to nice.  Give everyone the opportunity to be nice.  I think the results will astound you.