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«-- Jim's Quote of the Day: | Main | Letter Re: Question on Body Armor "Expiration" Dates --» Odds 'n Sods:Yesterday, one of our kids was reading aloud from a "Hunting Safely in Grizzly Country" pamphlet that we picked up when buying some topographic maps at the local USFS ranger station. It was published by the "Interagency Bear Committee" and the Wyoming Fish and Game Department. Most of the advice was good, but some of it must have been written by tree huggers. They opined: "Shooting a bear when it is charging is not recommended. The bear almost always lives long enough to maul the hunter severely." Excuse me, but what am I supposed to stop a bear with? Harsh language? I suspect that they give this advice because statistically some bear charges are just "mock" charges. Based on these statistics they'd rather risk your life, than a bear's life. Grizzly bears are of course a "protected species". But to the tree huggers, we deserve no such protection. o o o Florida Guy sent us this: Victims Fight Back in Home Invasion. The last line in the article displays the almost obligatory liberal hand-wringing: "The police are very cautious not to make this seem like a heroic act. They say fighting back can sometimes end with the victims being more seriously hurt." Yeah, right. OBTW, I think that the journalist that wrote this could take on some moonlighting work, writing wilderness bear safety pamphlets. o o o The following comes from economist Bill Bonner, in a recent issue
of the pro-hard money e-newsletter The
Daily Reckoning (highly recommended, and subscriptions are free):
"In the last seven years of the Bush administration, the federal debt
increased by two-thirds
while
U.S.
household
debt doubled.
Despite all this extra spending, median real incomes have continued to go down.
Practically all new jobs have been created either by government, or in housing,
health care, bars or restaurants. Jobs in manufacturing are now at levels not
seen since just after WWII. |
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