Renault, Renault, Burning Bright

This news item is reporting that the damage caused by the French rioters is abating. The benchmark seems to be how many cars are being set ablaze each night.

What isn’t mentioned is how many inflammable cars are left. For the past two weeks, the numbers of autos which lit up the night was staggering. It wouldn’t surprise me in the least if more than 10,000 cars have gone to automobile heaven by now, and I bet that people who own secure garages are making a pretty penny by charging some hefty rent.

The news report attributes the decline in civil unrest to a curfew and, less significantly, to ad hoc neighborhood patrol groups. It seems to be more reasonable to assume that most of the low hanging fruit has been torched, and now there are less targets of opportunity to be found.

One of my coworkers compared the tally of newly burned cars to the body count of Viet Cong dead that was reported every night on American television during the Vietnam War. He then openly speculated what he would do if faced with a riotous situation like that faced by the French. By day two of the riots he would have used a vacant lot on his street as a vehicle park, and organized his neighbors to stand rotating watches over their property. He couldn’t understand why every car owning French citizen didn’t do something similar.

“You’re an American.” I explained.

Fading Away

Hardly a month will go by without some sort of lament from journalists about how their customers are fading away. People are finding other sources for their news, and the ranks of the faithful have been disappearing at an ever increasing rate.

This news article reports that circulation fell about 2.5% in the past 6 months, which is one of the worst periods for the industry in the past 20 years.

Most of the stories I’ve read about this trend blame wanton bias on the part of the readers. The common wisdom seems to be that people will turn away from news sources that actually tells it like it is, and instead they’ll seek out comforting news venues which will reinforce their own slanted vision of the world. It’s remarkable that the Reuters article to which I linked avoids doing this.

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Just a Reminder

We value all of our readers, and that also applies to the thoughtful comments that you leave. Unfortunately, comment spam is a real problem here just like any other blog. Sometimes that means a comment is blocked by our spam protection software because a word or phrase was also used by the spammers.

If that should happen, if there are any problems at all, then please send me an Email with the text of the message you want to leave. Also make sure that you indicate which post you want to comment on. If you want to use a pseudonym then please let me know in the Email. I’ll do my very best to make sure that your message is included toot sweet.

My Email is…

james_43202 at yahoo.com

Personal Experience is Referred to as “Anecdotal”

Steven den Beste sent me a private Email with a link to this article by John Lott. In the op-ed, Lott discusses how Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin brought the subject of gun control up during a visit by US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. This is after badgering the new US Ambassadore on the same subject when he arrived in Canada to fulfill his duties.

Steven asked a question in his Email.

“Why is it that gun control activists have so much trouble with this
concept?”

I started to answer that question in the reply, but decided that it was long and involved enough to rate a post.

I’ve been a self defense advocate and active 2nd Amendment supporter for the past 14 years, and in that time I’ve debated a number of people who support gun control. It’s been my experience that the majority of the hard core true believers, the people who donate the majority of the time and money needed to keep the movement going, have lost a loved one to suicide by gun.

This makes sense when one considers that the majority of all gun deaths are suicides (close to 60%). I’m not qualified to render a psychological profile of the people with which I’ve come in contact, but it seems that they are uniformly extremely emotional about the issue. They also tend to be convinced that their program of abolishing all private gun ownership will reduce all levels of violence, from crime to suicides.

It’s obvious that the persons who provide the greatest impetus for the gun control movement are moral, concerned individuals that are genuinely convinced that they are attempting a great good for all of us. Unfortunately, the record shows that they are wrong.

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Book ‘Em, Nicolas

Europe suffered from international terrorist organizations in the 1960’s and 1970’s. French terrorists got into the game early, with several diverse groups trying to assassinate Charles de Gaulle through his long political career. I’m probably hopelessly biased, but I think the main reason why those groups were dismantled and the major players either caught or killed was due to aggressive and professional law enforcement.

But, of course, times change. A pair of France’s most notorious and dangerous criminal bosses were freed from prison a few years ago by their henchmen. One of the prison breaks, that of Italian mobster Antonio Ferrara, closely resembled a military operation, with machine gun fire being used to suppress the guards while RPG’s were reportedly used to blow open the gates of the facility. What is troubling is that this all took place at Fresnes Prison right outside of Paris, arguably the most secure in the entire country.

This news item reports that gangs of youths have been rioting after dark for the past two days in Clichy-sous-Bois, which is yet another suburb of Paris. The spark that caused this urban unrest was the deaths of two youths who reportedly climbed the fence of an electric substation and were electrocuted. They did this while fleeing the scene of a suspected burglary after the police showed up.

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