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Thread: Activism Thought Experiment

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    Activism Thought Experiment

    First, let me preface my remarks by stating that everything I present here is presented as a hypothetical thought experiment only. I would never endorse or encourage anyone to actually do any of the things mentioned in my own comments or in the essay appended after them. Some of that would be illegal. All of it would be likely to get people in trouble with someone or the law if caught. We certainly wouldn't want any of that. So kids, don't try this at home.

    @ Origanalist posted this meme over in the picture thread:



    When I saw it it made me think that if someone were to do exactly that and leave a copy of the meme in the cart, it would be obvious that it was done in protest and might even send a positive message. Later, while I was taking a shower it occurred to me that if that someone were to take a picture of it and then post it online with a caption to the effect of “Hey, look what I just saw at my local Walmart. Weird huh?” the damn thing might even go viral and start a landslide of such behavior. People could do the same kind of thing at Dick's and Kroger, or anywhere else for that matter.

    The whole thing reminded me of an essay I read back in the 1990s or early 2000s called The Window War, which I've appended at the end of this post.

    Purely as a hypothetical, of course, I'm wondering if anyone else thinks that this kind of thing could produce any kind of positive effect? As things stand right now people have very few avenues by which to address the kinds of attacks on civil liberties that we've been seeing in the last couple of decades, and at a much greater pace here recently. Boycotts are practically useless and contacting elected officials has never done much good either. Thoughts?


    The Window War

    by Mike Vanderboegh



    Author's Note: The events related in this story are true. It is set in the real town of Hobbs, New Mexico, although some names have been changed to protect the guilty. It begins early in the morning, the day after tomorrow.

    "And he took his staff in his hand, and chose him five smooth stones out of the brook, and put them in a shepherd's bag which he had...and his sling was in his hand; and he drew near to the Philistines."-- 1 Samuel 17:40.

    "We Americans have set dangerous precedents. We can rest assured that those pushing for gun control have no intention of stopping short of total gun confiscation. At some point, we who cherish liberty must summon the courage of our forefathers and tell America's tyrants, 'Give me liberty, or give me death!' The longer we wait, the greater the ultimate bloodshed." -- Walter E. Williams, Professor of Economics, George Mason University.


    Bob Stone stared at the ceiling in the darkness, the popcorn surface barely discernible in the soft glow of the porch light filtering through the bedroom curtains. He had come home angry-- just about as angry as he'd ever been-- and he knew that sleep would not come with his mind still clicking along at about ninety miles an hour. Better to try to walk it off, he thought, since I can't shoot anybody over it. At least not yet.

    As he gently rose from the bed, his wife stirred. He froze, and soon her breathing resumed its regular pattern. No need to disturb her anymore than he already had tonight. The meeting had been stormy and had run on into the late evening. Afterwards, he and his friends had refought the arguments for almost an hour. And yet, when he got home, his wife was waiting up (the kids had long ago been put to bed for it was a school night). Amy was anxious to hear what had happened with the Congressman. Bob told her in clipped, furious sentences and her anger rose to meet his with the re-telling. A half-hour later they had turned in, but Bob was too tired and angry to sleep. As Bob collected his pants and shirt from the chair, the clock clicked over to 1:47.

    Ten minutes later, he was walking toward downtown in the New Mexico spring night. It was chilly, as it usually is when the sun goes down in the desert, and he was wearing his work jacket. Like most folks in Hobbs, Bob made his money working in the "oil patch". Times had been pretty thin for a while, but now that the price of oil was up thanks to OPEC, things were picking up in the oil and gas business all over the Southwest. It wasn't anyone messing with his money that made Bob Stone mad this night. It was someone messing with his God-given liberty.

    They were being sold out. That was the long and short of it. Oh, the Congressman put on a long face, and swore it wasn't any of HIS doing, but they were being sold out, no doubt about it. The Republicans had come up with their own gun control bill, trying to protect their left flank against Clinton-Gore in the upcoming Presidential race. From now on (and for the first time in American history), law-abiding private citizens were going to have to ask the federal government's permission to sell a firearm to another law-abiding private citizen. Not even King George the Third had been so grasping. In addition, there would be no more "high-capacity" rifle or pistol magazines imported. ("High-capacity" meant greater than ten rounds.) Domestic production had already been forbidden in the so-called "assault weapons ban." George "Dubya", the Congressman said, insisted upon it, and the Republican majority leaders in Congress were going to go along. The latest shooting of children by other children (read: "gang members") at the national Zoo in Washington, D.C. hadn't helped.

    "But don't they realize that D.C. has the strictest gun control laws in the country?" someone behind Bob had shouted. "How will passing one more law help that?" It wasn't about reality, the Congressman sighed, it was about perceptions. And he didn't have to add that the antigun liberal media had the corner on perception-making.

    Bob had listened quietly for over two hours. He'd had enough and now rose to his feet. "But WE put you Republican jerks in power!" he half-shouted. "WE made you a majority party in '94 because you told us you'd try to roll back the Clinton gun-control agenda. Even Clinton blamed the Brady and so-called "Assault Weapons Ban" laws for the Democrat's loss in '94. It was gunowners who put you in power, and kept you in power these past six years, and now you're selling us out! Why don't you look up how much money Lea County gunowners gave you and your Republican brothers over the past six years?"

    The Congressman opened his mouth to reply, but Bob cut him off in a low, determined tone: "But I'll tell you one thing, Mr. Republican Congressman, you'll never get another stinking dime out of me or my friends! We won't pay you for the privilege of pissing on our backs and telling us it's raining!" The room erupted into loud clapping and cheers.

    Almost drowned out in the din, the Congressman cried: "But it's not MY fault!".

    "Whose is it then?" three or four people shot back at him, almost in unison.

    The Congressman had the look of a deer in the headlights of an oncoming truck. He had come here prepared to talk about Social Security, but nearly every question had been about gun control. Reaching for an answer that wouldn't be a mistake in front of this hostile crowd, he came up with: "The Columbine killers. Everything changed after Columbine." Wrong answer.

    The room erupted. Someone threw an empty coffee cup that landed well short of the Congressman. Bob was back up on his feet, shouting full-throat this time: "That's a load of crap and you know it! When your Republican bosses in the House came to you with this treason, did you tell them that passing it would violate your oath to uphold the Constitution and that you would be forced to resign from their party if they went ahead with it?!? Well, did you?!?"

    The shouted question cut through the air and the crowd quieted, wanting to hear the answer. The Congressman was silent, looking down at the empty coffee cup on the floor.

    Bob repeated the challenge: "Well, did you?"

    The Congressman stirred from his appreciation of the trash on the floor to ask, "Did I what?"

    "I think you heard me the first time, Congressman, but I'll repeat it so we can get an answer: When the House Republican leadership told you they intended to pass this treasonable bill, did you tell them that it would violate your oath to 'preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States' and that you would be forced to resign from their party if they went ahead with it?"

    The Congressman hesitated, then answered: "Well, uh, no. Look, if I resigned my seat every time a vote didn't go my way..."

    Bob cut him off: "I didn't say 'resign your seat', Congressman. I said, 'resign the party'. The people of this district sent you up there. You took an oath to uphold the Constitution. Your party is about to assist in the destruction of one important part of that Constitution. If you resign out of principle and become an Independent, I feel sure that the people of this district will return to your office when it comes time for re-election. So let me re-phrase the question: When you go back to Washington, will you seek out the House leadership and tell them that if they pass this bill, you intend to resign their party and become an independent because you refuse to be a party to treason?"

    The Congressman's aide crossed over and, shielding the microphone, whispered something in the Congressman's ear. The Congressman nodded. The aide returned to the sidelines as Hobbs police officers began to filter into the room from the side and rear doors. The aide had summoned them on his portable phone the moment the coffee cup was thrown.

    The Congressman leaned into the microphone, "Well, I'll have to think about it."

    Bob wouldn't let it go. "What's to think about?" he shot back. "Either you have principles or you don't. If you don't, have the guts to say so now."

    The Congressman shook his head. "I said I'll have to think about it. What you're asking is pretty extreme..."

    "Extreme?!?" Bob countered. "Extreme?!?. Congressman, you ain't even close to seein' 'extreme' yet. Don't you realize that if you don't find the guts to stop these treasonable SOBs in Congress, and that if the judiciary doesn't have the guts to stop them in the courts, that someday soon gun-owners like the ones in this room are going to have to stop them in the streets with rifles in our hands? Congressman, you'd better pray you never see 'extreme', for if you do it'll take more than all the cops in Hobbs to protect you from the widows and orphans of the men who will die fighting to preserve the God-given liberty you didn't have the guts to risk your precious political career for!"

    The room erupted once again, the cops moved to the front, and the Congressman departed out a side door, almost as fast as it takes to tell. And now, four hours later, Bob was still furious.

    They don't roll up the sidewalks at sundown in Hobbs, but the streets were fairly deserted this time of night, or morning actually. Even the cops who usually patrolled every twenty minutes or so in the business district Bob was walking through were busy on drunk and disorderly patrol over on Del Paso or out on Bender Street (no pun intended). The bars close in New Mexico at 2:00 A.M. by state law, so between 2 and 3 is often the night shift patrolman's busiest time. As it turned out, that was a good thing for Bob.

    To be truthful about it, Bob was still so mad he wasn't paying a whole lot of attention where he was walking. Later, he would attribute his arrival at the scene of the crime to either his subconscious mind or the hand of God. But all of sudden, without knowing why, he stopped and looked up from his thoughts. And there, smack in front of him, was 509 East Broadway. Now as it happens, 509 East Broadway, Hobbs, New Mexico, is a modest, well-kept building with sort-of old-fashioned windows flanking the entrance. It also happens to be the headquarters of the Lea County Republican Party.

    Now Bob Stone was a church-going, law-abiding fellow. Oh, he'd done his share of tearing around violating traffic laws when he was young and stupid, but never anything serious. A Lea County boy born and bred, the only time he'd seen the inside of the local jail was when he'd bailed out Manny, his buddy from the gas plant, when Manny had been busted for driving drunk on Bender Street at 2:10 in the morning. But as Bob Stone looked up at the sign proclaiming 509 East Broadway as the Heaquarters of the Republican Party of Lea County, New Mexico, a snatch of conversation from earlier in the evening (yesterday?) came back to him like divine inspiration.

    Bill Dodd, a hunting buddy of Bob's, was a bit of a history buff. They had been standing around after the meeting, trying to answer the question: "What do we do now?"

    "Well, ah don't know about y'all," (Bill was originally from Alabama) "but when the Sons of Liberty wanted to make a point back durin' the Revolution they'd get a bunch o' folks together and go pay the local Tories a call. Usually they'd just bust their windows (Bill pronounced it 'winders') with rocks and tell 'em the next time it'd go harder with 'em. The Tories usually got the message and moved away or shut up about likin' the King. Glass bein' so expensive back then and Tories bein' mostly rich folk, it seemed the natch-rel thing for the Sons to do. An' it worked. Maybe we ought-ter do the same thing to these gun-control puke-politicians."

    They all had laughed, and the conversation moved on, but Bill Dodd's words now came back to Bob loud and clear. He looked at the windows, he looked at the sign, and he looked up and down the street. Nobody. Nothing but the street lights going through their paces for traffic that wasn't there. But what to use for a rock?

    The streets of Hobbs, New Mexico, are pretty well kept. On any other night, the plan that was forming in Bob Stone's angry mind would have failed for lack of ammunition. But as it so happened (and later Bob ascribed it to none other than divine intervention) there at the curbside was a piece of broken concrete which had dropped off the back of a demolition company's truck about ten o'clock the previous morning. Somebody, Bob decided, wants me to do this.

    Bob Stone picked up the chunk of concrete. Smooth on one side, it had been part of the parking lot of an old greasy spoon south of town that had been demolished to make way for a new BP super-station. He hefted the chunk. Yep, he decided, just about right.

    Even so, Bob hesitated. He wasn't a vandal by training or inclination, and if a car had come by just then, even as angry as he was, he'd have given the whole thing up. But in hesitating, another thought came to him: How would anyone know WHY he had thrown the stone through the Republicans' window? If he intended to make a political statement, the rock would have to be accompanied by a message lest the act be dismissed as ordinary juvenile hi-jinks. His hands went to his jacket pockets, finding (and instantly rejecting) his note pad. First of all, it had his company logo on each sheet (now wouldn't that be bright?), and secondly, he had no way of attaching it to the chunk of concrete. Tape and rubber bands were not items he routinely carried. But when his right hand found the felt-tip marker he always carried in his left breast pocket, he knew that the missile would be the message.

    Moving a few steps to take advantage of the street light, Bob rotated the chunk so its flat side was up, and wrote across the top of the flat, "Second Amend." (he ran out of room). So he wrote underneath the first line in smaller letters: "Shall Not Be Infringed." He re-capped the marker, and placed the pen back in his jacket pocket.

    His resolve had returned. He was going to do it now, even if a car came by. Even if a cop came by. He was going to send the Republicans an old-fashioned Sons-of-Liberty message. He didn't even check again to see if the street was clear, though it was. He positioned himself at what he judged was the proper distance and heaved the concrete telegram as hard as he could. With what seemed to him to be an atomic crash, the chunk sailed through the window easily. No alarm went off. Hobbs wasn't that kind of town. But Bob Stone began to run away.

    He ran west down East Broadway, passing the Martin Boot Company, then crossing over to the other side of the street. He kept on running-- laughing, scared, and immensely proud of himself. He ran until he was winded, past where East Broadway turns into West Broadway. A thought occurred to him then that it was probably a stupid thing to be running down the streets of Hobbs at just past two in the morning. If anybody did drive by they'd rightfully conclude he'd been up to no good. And he didn't have the right shoes on to be able to convince a curious cop he'd been out jogging.

    So when he caught his breath, he began to walk west on West Broadway at a normal pace. He passed Desert Guns, his favorite local gunstore, owned by one Mark Stone (no relation, unfortunately, for Bob wouldn't have minded a family discount). He wanted to put as much distance between 509 East Broadway and himself before he made the wide turn that would take him back east to home. So he continued a block or so past the Western Motor Company, when he realized with a start that his night's work was not yet done. For there in front of him was 604 West Broadway: The Democratic Party Headquarters of Lea County, New Mexico.

    It was true that the Republicans had taken his money, his time, and his support only to sell him out. Bob supposed that that was why he was so angered at the Republican betrayal-- he expected more of them. You didn't expect your so-called friends to stab you in the back. But the Republicans in truth were only half the problem. It was the Clintonista Democrats who had brought the country to this state. And while it was true that Democrats could no more be blamed for stealing the rights, liberties and tax money of their fellow citizens than rattlesnakes could be blamed for biting (it was, after all, their declared mission in life), their windows deserved breaking nonetheless. Indeed, Bob reflected with a silent laugh that although he had killed many a rattlesnake in the desert around Hobbs he had not as yet killed a Democrat, although Democrats were an infinitely a greater threat to peace and the Republic. Well, there's a time and place for everything, Bob decided. Tonight, he would merely break their windows.

    And as he stood contemplating the windows at 604 West Broadway, he noted to his satisfaction that they were nice big, expensive plate glass windows. It would cost the Democrats much more to replace these than it would the Republicans to fix their modest, old-fashioned window panes. This, Bob Stone thought, was more than fitting. But the breaking need a bit more preparation. Bigger rocks, perhaps. No, not bigger rocks, just more preparation. Bob fingered the automatic center punch in his work jacket pocket. Yeah, he decided, just the right instrument of destruction for these tempered-glass targets.

    He went to the alley behind the building foraging for ammunition and found two new bricks pre-positioned there by what Bob Stone was now convinced was the hand of the Almighty. It could not have been by accident, of that he was certain. Bob pulled out his marker and wrote, lazy-dazy, winding the letters around the holes in the brick: "Second Amendment-- Shall Not Be Infringed."

    Somewhat stealthier now, he checked the street before sidling up to the windows. To each he gave several preparatory hits with the automatic center punch. Spiderwebs of fractured glass appeared on each window. Then, checking the empty street one last time, he backed away from the windows and heaved the bricks one after the other with all the speed his overage pitching arm could muster. If the Republican window had sounded like an atomic bomb, these sounded like two hydrogen bombs, and Bob gave into his fear just long enough to run across the street. As the last shards of the windows were still falling, giving way to gravity and dropping with lesser explosions, Bob began to control his fear and slowed to a walk.

    And so it was that he walked casually all the way home. As he passed one of the cross streets he noticed blue lights down toward East Broadway. He smiled, and walked just a bit faster. His wife stirred slightly when he eased himself back into bed, but Bob Stone had cured his angry insomnia and, happy now to be a criminal, he fell instantly asleep. Sleeping, he would later say to himself, the sleep of the just.

    It all might have ended there had it not been for an editor at the local paper, the Hobbs News-Sun, who along with his college education had acquired a virulent liberal bias about things such as gun-control. Determined to show-case the "lawlessness" of gunowners, he assigned himself as the reporter on the story and also wrote the first of several (he thought stinging) editorials. The story was picked up by the state Associated Press, and eventually made its way to USA Today and the New York Times.

    As if to prove that the Law of Unintended Consequences was alive and well, it was when the story went national that strange things began to happen. In Marion County, Ohio, somebody who read the USA Today story decided that breaking the windows of Democrats and Republicans was a pretty good idea. So did all his buddies at the Whirlpool plant.

    As a matter of fact, it was about a baker's-dozen Buckeyes who first decoyed the cops, then smashed every window in both party headquarters the next night. Some were broken with nicely inscribed smooth stones that, like little David, they had fished out of a stream. On each was written the entire text of the Second Amendment to the Constitution. "A well-regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." Windows too high, small or inconvenient to reach with stones were finished off with ball bearings fired from slingshots or baseball bats.

    In lightning raids two nights later, the same crew smashed the windows of both party's' headquarters in three neighboring counties. It was bipartisan vandalism, and more news stories were generated. Fearing that the rock-throwers would come to his house, the chairman of the Marion County Republican Party resigned. When his Democrat counterpart did not, someone broke the windows in his house, too. One of the more thoughtful vandals taped the business card of a local glass company to his front door.

    With "The Marion Incident", window-breaking on behalf of the Constitution began to spread. In about four weeks, 194 local headquarters of both parties were "ventilated" with rocks, bricks, concrete blocks, shotputs, lead weights, tire irons, antique civil war cannon balls and in the case of one Democratic party headquarters in Michigan, a twenty-pound brass jackass of unknown origin. Attached to, or written upon, each was the Second Amendment to the Constitution.

    Similar missiles found glass targets at the homes of no fewer than 56 politicians of both parties who had been prominent supporters of gun-control.

    Rewards were offered-- none was collected. Only in a few cases were the perpetrators caught, and most of those were teenage sons of well-known gun owners. In one case in Texas, the windows were broken publicly by a citizen who sought arrest for his civil disobedience. In a jury trial, he was quickly acquitted.

    "The Window War" became nightly fodder for the television talking heads. And with more publicity came more broken windows. Commentators on the left condemned "vigilante justice" and "lawlessness" and called for political window-breaking to be classified as a "hate crime." Commentators on the right spoke against lawlessness more softly, pointing out that it was the Clintonistas who had made a business of flouting the rule of law (most recently in the case of Elian Gonzalez), and that destroying windows was probably a lesser crime than destroying the Constitution. And everyone agreed with MSNBC's "Hardball" Chris Matthews, a life-long Democrat, when he observed: "These are all gun-owners breaking the law. I suppose we should be grateful they're using rocks."

    The polls sent the politicians mixed signals about how the public felt about The Window War. Initially overwhelmingly disapproving of such vandalism, the numbers began to shift as the "War" went on, the issues that had prompted the window-breaking became better known and nothing but windows were being harmed. There was a natural sympathy streak in many Americans for those who fought city hall.

    Exactly one month after Bob Stone broke his first window at 509 East Broadway, copy-cat incidents were happening ten or twenty times a night with no end in sight. After two buckets, one containing rocks and the other containing a mixture of tar and feathers, were delivered to the Mississippi home of Senator Trent Lott, the Majority Leader decided, (with the concurrence of "Dubya"), that the political price of Republican gun-control had grown too high. It wasn't the implied threat that got to Lott so much as the fact that the card which accompanied the buckets was signed by some of his campaign contributors, one of whom was a distant relative. With the help of several relieved Democrats, Lott killed the bill.

    With the Window War threatening to muddy up his campaign for President, Candidate "Dubya" called Larry Pratt of Gun Owners of America (it was widely recognized that the "rockers" were not listening to the National Rifle Association, which they regarded as a sell-out organization) and quietly promised that if he was elected he would sign a bill that rolled back all of the Clinton-era gun control laws if Pratt could just guarantee that no more windows would be broken. Since the window-breakers weren't under his control either, Pratt said he couldn't promise anything, but he would try.

    Three days after Senator Lott killed the bill, the last "shot" was fired in the Window War by twenty members of a Veterans of Foreign Wars post in New York who snuck up on the home of the Empire State's virulently anti-gun Attorney General while he was away and peppered it with Revolutionary War musket balls fired from Gamo "Wrist-Rocket" slingshots. Police responding to the alarm found a big folding sign-board blocking the driveway. It read: "Sue this!"

    Across the country, the volunteer soldiers of The Window War read the papers, talked among themselves, and decided to await further developments with a truce. The only Americans who were sad to see the rocks stop flying were the owners of the nation's glass companies.

    The howling of Clinton, Gore, Schumer, Feinstein and Company sounded like a banshee chorus but it could not resurrect the bill. Nor could they make it an effective campaign issue against Bush--he had condemned the vandalism in the strongest terms. After George "Dubya" Bush was elected President, and the Republicans retained control of the Congress, the tide of gun control receded. It wasn't that Dubya and his GOP colleagues had "discovered" any principles, they were simply smart enough to recognize that that particular political skunk was best left in the bucket. The reminder that political decisions sometimes have personal consequences acted like a tonic on Republicans and Democrats alike.

    The Window War was won, and to the astonishment of many gun owners, no one had been killed. It had long been thought that bloodshed would be required to make the liberals understand that God-given rights are not compromisable. All it had taken was a few hundred rocks and other missiles and one brass jackass.

    Many men and women would later claim to have been window-breakers, ten times as many as there probably were. But back in Hobbs, no one ever knew who broke the first window in the gun-control war, and that was just fine with Bob Stone. The only person he ever told was his wife, Amy. Together, they decided to keep Bob's foray into petty crime just between themselves. Neither of them was sure just how they could explain their Daddy's night of window-breaking to the kids.


    Author's Postscript: The story above is one possible future for this country. There are others far worse. As J.R. Nyquist recently wrote of the Elian Gonzalez federal kidnapping:

    "Specific events, regardless of their actual importance to history, sometimes capture the human imagination. In doing this, they become rallying points for masses of people. They become pivotal to political careers. Such events can bring about the collapse of governments or determine the outcome of elections....Except for clueless and apathetic persons, America has been split into two hostile ideological camps. One is the anti-communist or anti-statist camp, which looks to traditional moral values, the Constitution, a strong family unit and the free market. The other camp is socialist or "progressive" in its outlook, globalist and environmentalist in its policies."
    There is no reconciling the two futures these camps represent. One or the other will win in the end. The war up to now has been waged in the political and social arena. The time is fast approaching when this political and social "war" will spill over into armed conflict-- real civil war. If it does, it will happen mostly because everyone thinks it impossible. For sixty years, the liberals have used our respect for the law against us. Each time they moved the line of law to further their agenda, breaking off a bit of the Constitution, we, as law-abiding citizens have backed up grumbling but complying. And why should they stop pushing us back from our God-given liberties? We've never pushed back to stop them. We have been TOO law-abiding.

    Remember one thing: Adolf Hitler was elected, and the Nazis passed laws justifying every horrible act they later committed. In such a country, law-breaking is not a crime but a virtue. Before we get too far down that road, perhaps a little window-breaking is in order. Waiting too late to oppose tyranny has always led to bloodshed. Let us avoid that if we can. But history holds such windows of opportunity open only so long, and ours is rapidly closing. Perhaps by breaking the window now, we can escape the horrible alternative. And if in the unlikely event my modest story should become fact, somewhere The Sons of Liberty will be smiling.
    More great stuff like this here:

    http://www.keepandbeararms.com/infor...em.asp?ID=1604
    Chris

    "Government ... does not exist of necessity, but rather by virtue of a tragic, almost comical combination of klutzy, opportunistic terrorism against sitting ducks whom it pretends to shelter, plus our childish phobia of responsibility, praying to be exempted from the hard reality of life on life's terms." Wolf DeVoon

    "...Make America Great Again. I'm interested in making American FREE again. Then the greatness will come automatically."Ron Paul



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  3. #2
    Purely as a hypothetical
    Purely as a hypothetical, huh? I've got my eye on you.
    It's all about taking action and not being lazy. So you do the work, whether it's fitness or whatever. It's about getting up, motivating yourself and just doing it.
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  4. #3
    A suggestion if I may. As it's certain you would be on video doing this, I would suggest only loading non-perishables into the cart so Wally World doesn't come after you for the damages for melted ice cream etc..
    "The Patriarch"

  5. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by TheTexan View Post
    Purely as a hypothetical, huh? I've got my eye on you.
    Yeah, I might have to close this thread before it gets out of hand.
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  6. #5
    You could fill up the bottom of the cart with tuna fish cans and then proceed to the auto section and fill it the rest of the way with motor oil. The possibilities are practically endless.
    "The Patriarch"

  7. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by Origanalist View Post
    You could fill up the bottom of the cart with tuna fish cans and then proceed to the auto section and fill it the rest of the way with motor oil. The possibilities are practically endless.
    I'd just go to their hunting section. Load it up with targets, slings, cleaning kits, clothes, have the clerk pull out some knives, Then push the whole cart up to 'customer service' with the note that read "I support and buy from those that support and defend the second amendment. Wal-Mart doesn't." Then walk out.

  8. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by phill4paul View Post
    I'd just go to their hunting section. Load it up with targets, slings, cleaning kits, clothes, have the clerk pull out some knives, Then push the whole cart up to 'customer service' with the note that read "I support and buy from those that support and defend the second amendment. Wal-Mart doesn't." Then walk out.
    I would be even better if you did it with a few like minded individuals.
    "The Patriarch"

  9. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by Origanalist View Post
    I would be even better if you did it with a few like minded individuals.
    It would be about the only thing that would get me in a Wal-Mart. But, could you imagine if ten people did at the same time?



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  11. #9
    Quote Originally Posted by phill4paul View Post
    It would be about the only thing that would get me in a Wal-Mart. But, could you imagine if ten people did at the same time?
    Yes, I can....
    "The Patriarch"

  12. #10
    Another thing that can be done is just print up a bunch of copies of that meme and post them all over town.
    "The Patriarch"

  13. #11
    Quote Originally Posted by Origanalist View Post
    A suggestion if I may. As it's certain you would be on video doing this, I would suggest only loading non-perishables into the cart so Wally World doesn't come after you for the damages for melted ice cream etc..

    If someone were to actually do something like this, that would be an excellent suggestion. But we're purely hypotetical here. You know, like a libertarian book club. Besides, @TheTexan has his eye on me.
    Chris

    "Government ... does not exist of necessity, but rather by virtue of a tragic, almost comical combination of klutzy, opportunistic terrorism against sitting ducks whom it pretends to shelter, plus our childish phobia of responsibility, praying to be exempted from the hard reality of life on life's terms." Wolf DeVoon

    "...Make America Great Again. I'm interested in making American FREE again. Then the greatness will come automatically."Ron Paul

  14. #12
    Quote Originally Posted by CCTelander View Post
    If someone were to actually do something like this, that would be an excellent suggestion. But we're purely hypotetical here. You know, like a libertarian book club. Besides, @TheTexan has his eye on me.
    Yes, yes, (cough, cough) of course.
    "The Patriarch"

  15. #13
    Quote Originally Posted by Origanalist View Post
    I would be even better if you did it with a few like minded individuals.
    It's the Alice's Restaurant En-Tire Massacree Movement.
    “Civilizations die from suicide, not by murder.” - Arnold Toynbee

  16. #14
    The loss of Mike Vanderboegh, Will Grigg and Shem Kellogg hurt me the most.

    While that $#@! Kissinger will live to 120 on fetal grindings, just for example.
    “Civilizations die from suicide, not by murder.” - Arnold Toynbee

  17. #15
    There is no reconciling the two futures these camps represent. One or the other will win in the end. The war up to now has been waged in the political and social arena. The time is fast approaching when this political and social "war" will spill over into armed conflict-- real civil war. If it does, it will happen mostly because everyone thinks it impossible. For sixty years, the liberals have used our respect for the law against us. Each time they moved the line of law to further their agenda, breaking off a bit of the Constitution, we, as law-abiding citizens have backed up grumbling but complying. And why should they stop pushing us back from our God-given liberties? We've never pushed back to stop them. We have been TOO law-abiding.
    “Civilizations die from suicide, not by murder.” - Arnold Toynbee

  18. #16
    Quote Originally Posted by phill4paul View Post
    It would be about the only thing that would get me in a Wal-Mart. But, could you imagine if ten people did at the same time?

    It starts with ONE person. Hypothetically, of course.
    Chris

    "Government ... does not exist of necessity, but rather by virtue of a tragic, almost comical combination of klutzy, opportunistic terrorism against sitting ducks whom it pretends to shelter, plus our childish phobia of responsibility, praying to be exempted from the hard reality of life on life's terms." Wolf DeVoon

    "...Make America Great Again. I'm interested in making American FREE again. Then the greatness will come automatically."Ron Paul



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  20. #17
    Quote Originally Posted by Anti Federalist View Post
    The loss of Mike Vanderboegh, Will Grigg and Shem Kellogg hurt me the most.

    While that $#@! Kissinger will live to 120 on fetal grindings, just for example.

    Sometimes there's just no justice in this world.
    Chris

    "Government ... does not exist of necessity, but rather by virtue of a tragic, almost comical combination of klutzy, opportunistic terrorism against sitting ducks whom it pretends to shelter, plus our childish phobia of responsibility, praying to be exempted from the hard reality of life on life's terms." Wolf DeVoon

    "...Make America Great Again. I'm interested in making American FREE again. Then the greatness will come automatically."Ron Paul

  21. #18
    Hypothetical bump.
    Chris

    "Government ... does not exist of necessity, but rather by virtue of a tragic, almost comical combination of klutzy, opportunistic terrorism against sitting ducks whom it pretends to shelter, plus our childish phobia of responsibility, praying to be exempted from the hard reality of life on life's terms." Wolf DeVoon

    "...Make America Great Again. I'm interested in making American FREE again. Then the greatness will come automatically."Ron Paul

  22. #19
    Good example of why anarchists are not for liberty. No it is not okay to break windows or vandalize property. Ever. It is literally the worst possible thing that could happen to further liberty. Acting like Antifa will win no reasonable person to a cause.

    And don't fill up shopping carts full a crap that you won't buy. It is immoral. It is stealing. Someone has to restock that stuff which costs money. People who are for liberty aren't thieves. You have no constitutional or moral right to open carry (or even carry) a firearm into private property. Their property. Their rules.

    And frankly open carry in most private businesses is insane. If I owned a business, I would ban it. The amount of people who will be turned off by some goober with a visible gun vastly outnumbers the people who will protest a business. You can still concealed carry. No one is a sitting duck. This is an infringement on freedom in the same way that banning people from showing their penis in a store is an infringement on freedom. I was just talking about this with my dad who carries everywhere this weekend. And he was saying what embarrassments so many of the fringe gun nuts are.

  23. #20
    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    And frankly open carry in most private businesses is insane. If I owned a business, I would ban it. The amount of people who will be turned off by some goober with a visible gun vastly outnumbers the people who will protest a business. You can still concealed carry. No one is a sitting duck. This is an infringement on freedom in the same way that banning people from showing their penis in a store is an infringement on freedom. I was just talking about this with my dad who carries everywhere this weekend. And he was saying what embarrassments so many of the fringe gun nuts are.
    I disagree:

    “Civilizations die from suicide, not by murder.” - Arnold Toynbee

  24. #21
    Quote Originally Posted by TheTexan View Post
    Purely as a hypothetical, huh? I've got my eye on you.
    I'ma just vote really hard. And maybe write some SWLODs to my elected representatives.
    The Bastiat Collection · FREE PDF · FREE EPUB · PAPER
    Frédéric Bastiat (1801-1850)

    • "When law and morality are in contradiction to each other, the citizen finds himself in the cruel alternative of either losing his moral sense, or of losing his respect for the law."
      -- The Law (p. 54)
    • "Government is that great fiction, through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
      -- Government (p. 99)
    • "[W]ar is always begun in the interest of the few, and at the expense of the many."
      -- Economic Sophisms - Second Series (p. 312)
    • "There are two principles that can never be reconciled - Liberty and Constraint."
      -- Harmonies of Political Economy - Book One (p. 447)

    · tu ne cede malis sed contra audentior ito ·

  25. #22
    Quote Originally Posted by Occam's Banana View Post
    I'ma just vote really hard. And maybe write some SWLODs to my elected representatives.
    +rep a proven effective strategy.

    Thanks for keeping our movement respectable
    It's all about taking action and not being lazy. So you do the work, whether it's fitness or whatever. It's about getting up, motivating yourself and just doing it.
    - Kim Kardashian

    Donald Trump / Crenshaw 2024!!!!

    My pronouns are he/him/his

  26. #23
    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    And frankly open carry in most private businesses is insane. If I owned a business, I would ban it. The amount of people who will be turned off by some goober with a visible gun vastly outnumbers the people who will protest a business. You can still concealed carry. No one is a sitting duck. This is an infringement on freedom in the same way that banning people from showing their penis in a store is an infringement on freedom. I was just talking about this with my dad who carries everywhere this weekend. And he was saying what embarrassments so many of the fringe gun nuts are.
    Exactly. It's a common courtesy to not bring a visible gun to public places.

    Except when hunting of course then it's OK. A weapon is safe to carry as long as deer are nearby
    It's all about taking action and not being lazy. So you do the work, whether it's fitness or whatever. It's about getting up, motivating yourself and just doing it.
    - Kim Kardashian

    Donald Trump / Crenshaw 2024!!!!

    My pronouns are he/him/his

  27. #24
    Quote Originally Posted by Anti Federalist View Post
    It's the Alice's Restaurant En-Tire Massacree Movement.
    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    Good example of why anarchists are not for liberty. No it is not okay to break windows or vandalize property. Ever. It is literally the worst possible thing that could happen to further liberty. Acting like Antifa will win no reasonable person to a cause.

    And don't fill up shopping carts full a crap that you won't buy. It is immoral. It is stealing. Someone has to restock that stuff which costs money. People who are for liberty aren't thieves. You have no constitutional or moral right to open carry (or even carry) a firearm into private property. Their property. Their rules.

    And frankly open carry in most private businesses is insane. If I owned a business, I would ban it. The amount of people who will be turned off by some goober with a visible gun vastly outnumbers the people who will protest a business. You can still concealed carry. No one is a sitting duck. This is an infringement on freedom in the same way that banning people from showing their penis in a store is an infringement on freedom. I was just talking about this with my dad who carries everywhere this weekend. And he was saying what embarrassments so many of the fringe gun nuts are.
    Quote Originally Posted by Anti Federalist View Post
    I disagree:
    He stopped me right there and said, "Kid, I want you to go over and sit down on that bench that says 'Group W' ... NOW, KID!!"

    And ... and I walked over to the bench there, and there's, there's Group W, where they put you if you may not be moral enough [...] after committin' your special crime. There was all kinds of mean, nasty, ugly-lookin' people on the bench there. There was mother-rapers, father-stabbers, father-rapers! Father-rapers sittin' right there on the bench next to me! And they was mean and nasty and ugly, and horrible [...] guys were sittin' there on the bench, and the meanest, ugliest, nastiest one, the meanest father-raper of them all, was comin' over to me, and he was mean and ugly and nasty and horrible and all kinds of things, and he sat down next to me and said, "Kid ... what'd you get?"

    I said, "I didn't get nothin'. I had to pay fifty dollars and [put the groceries back on the shelf]."

    He said, "What were you arrested for, kid?" and I said, "[filling up shopping carts with crap that I didn't buy]."

    And they all moved away from me on the bench there, with the hairy eyeball and all kinds of mean, nasty things, till I said, "And creatin' a nuisance" and they all came back, shook my hand, and we had a great time on the bench talkin' about crime, mother-stabbin', father-rapin', all kinds of groovy things that we was talkin' about on the bench, and everything was fine [...]
    Last edited by Occam's Banana; 09-09-2019 at 01:19 PM.



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  29. #25
    Liberty is lost through complacency and a subservient mindset. When we accept or even welcome automobile checkpoints, random searches, mandatory identification cards, and paramilitary police in our streets, we have lost a vital part of our American heritage. America was born of protest, revolution, and mistrust of government. Subservient societies neither maintain nor deserve freedom for long.
    Ron Paul 2004

    Registered Ron Paul supporter # 2202
    It's all about Freedom

  30. #26
    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    Good example of why anarchists are not for liberty. No it is not okay to break windows or vandalize property. Ever. It is literally the worst possible thing that could happen to further liberty. Acting like Antifa will win no reasonable person to a cause.

    And don't fill up shopping carts full a crap that you won't buy. It is immoral. It is stealing. Someone has to restock that stuff which costs money. People who are for liberty aren't thieves.
    What is your opinion of the Boston Tea Party?






    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    And frankly open carry in most private businesses is insane. If I owned a business, I would ban it. The amount of people who will be turned off by some goober with a visible gun vastly outnumbers the people who will protest a business. You can still concealed carry. No one is a sitting duck. This is an infringement on freedom in the same way that banning people from showing their penis in a store is an infringement on freedom. I was just talking about this with my dad who carries everywhere this weekend. And he was saying what embarrassments so many of the fringe gun nuts are.
    You are the embarrassment to America, you suffer from hoplophobia and cater to those who likewise suffer from it.
    Your attitude is why the left has been so successful at demonizing guns.
    Never attempt to teach a pig to sing; it wastes your time and annoys the pig.

    Robert Heinlein

    Give a man an inch and right away he thinks he's a ruler

    Groucho Marx

    I love mankind…it’s people I can’t stand.

    Linus, from the Peanuts comic

    You cannot have liberty without morality and morality without faith

    Alexis de Torqueville

    Those who fail to learn from the past are condemned to repeat it.
    Those who learn from the past are condemned to watch everybody else repeat it

    A Zero Hedge comment

  31. #27
    Quote Originally Posted by Swordsmyth View Post
    What is your opinion of the Boston Tea Party?
    I'm a fan.


    Quote Originally Posted by Swordsmyth View Post
    You are the embarrassment to America, you suffer from hoplophobia and cater to those who likewise suffer from it.
    Your attitude is why the left has been so successful at demonizing guns.
    You rabidly support Orange Man and demonize a liberty champion like Mark Sanford. You support regressive taxes on Americans in order to prop up failing industries with tariffs. You think government laws against prostitution are legitimate. You have anti-First Amendment rants against private businesses like Facebook and want to use government violence against them. See. You are not principled. This issue has nothing to do with freedom. The problem with unprincipled people (like you) is they are rabid when you don't take an interest in their cause. Gun guy, vape pen guy, marijuana guy are all the same guy. It isn't liberty they are after. It is making people care about their pet issue to the point of not just allowing something but having to be an active cheerleader for it.

    I support concealed carry and am fine with open carry laws. That is the only part that matters. That's the freedom part. I have no interest in guns whatsoever. Don't own one. Will never own one. Have no interest in being around them. There is no reason to open carry in a store or a restaurant. That has nothing to do with liberty. It is a personal choice. My life is not better or safer with some hayseed walking around with an AR-15 over his shoulder. And if a place wants to ban that. Good. I am slightly more likely to go there.
    Last edited by Krugminator2; 09-09-2019 at 06:25 PM.

  32. #28
    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    I'm a fan.




    You rapidly support Orange Man and demonize a liberty champion like Mark Sanford. You support regressive taxes on Americans in order to prop up failing industries with tariffs. You think government laws against prostitution are legitimate. You have anti-First Amendment rants against private businesses like Facebook and want to use government violence against them. See. You are not principled. This issue has nothing to do with freedom. The problem with unprincipled people (like you) is they are rabid when you don't take an interest in their cause. Gun guy, vape pen guy, marijuana guy are all the same guy. It isn't liberty they are after. It is making people care about their pet issue to the point of not just allowing something but having to be an active cheerleader for it.

    I support concealed carry and am fine with open carry laws. That is the only part that matters. That's the freedom part. I have no interest in guns whatsoever. Don't own one. Will never own one. Have no interest in being around them. There is no reason to open carry in a store or a restaurant. That has nothing to do with liberty. It is a personal choice. My life is not better or safer with some hayseed walking around with an AR-15 over his shoulder. And if a place wants to ban that. Good. I am slightly more likely to go there.
    You think Facebook is a "private business?" Really?
    Pfizer Macht Frei!

    Openly Straight Man, Danke, Awarded Top Rated Influencer. Community Standards Enforcer.


    Quiz: Test Your "Income" Tax IQ!

    Short Income Tax Video

    The Income Tax Is An Excise, And Excise Taxes Are Privilege Taxes

    The Federalist Papers, No. 15:

    Except as to the rule of appointment, the United States have an indefinite discretion to make requisitions for men and money; but they have no authority to raise either by regulations extending to the individual citizens of America.

  33. #29
    Quote Originally Posted by Danke View Post
    You think Facebook is a "private business?" Really?
    Yes. Because... Well.. They are a private business.

    Saying they aren't is like saying no business is private because you have public sidewalks and public parking and public roads. And if no business is private then the government can regulate it however they want. So yes. Facebook is a private business and restricting speech is never okay. Facebook and Twitter and Youtube and Google can ban whomever they want.

  34. #30
    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    I'm a fan.
    It was "vandalism" and destruction of private property.



    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    You rapidly support Orange Man and demonize a liberty champion like Mark Sanford.
    Sanford got corrupted, his voting record decayed and I posted examples, he can't be trusted since his "hiking" trip.

    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    You support regressive taxes on Americans in order to prop up failing industries with tariffs.
    WRONG.
    I support defensive tariffs to counter foreign government market manipulation to destroy viable industries and prop up their failing industries.


    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    You think government laws against prostitution are legitimate.
    I said local communities have a right to decide about that kind of issue because immorality brings corruption and the curses of GOD.

    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    You have anti-First Amendment rants against private businesses like Facebook and want to use government violence against them.
    That's nonsense, they are government sockpuppets and I said they can do what they want if they tell the truth about it or they can play fair to get the immunity they claim.


    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    See. You are not principled.
    LOL


    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    This issue has nothing to do with freedom. The problem with unprincipled people (like you) is they are rabid when you don't take an interest in their cause. Gun guy, vape pen guy, marijuana guy are all the same guy. It isn't liberty they are after. It is making people care about their pet issue to the point of not just allowing something but having to be an active cheerleader for it.
    WRONG.
    This is part of the campaign to ban guns and we should make ourselves heard opposing it.

    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    I support concealed carry and am fine with open carry laws. That is the only part that matters. That's the freedom part.
    So is opposing the culture of demonizing guns.

    Quote Originally Posted by Krugminator2 View Post
    I have no interest in guns whatsoever. Don't own one. Will never own one. There is no reason to open carry in a store or a restaurant. That has nothing to do with liberty.
    That's the problem, you don't think people need to be able to defend themselves and you are fine with the attempt to create a hoplophobic culture that WILL end up banning guns.
    Never attempt to teach a pig to sing; it wastes your time and annoys the pig.

    Robert Heinlein

    Give a man an inch and right away he thinks he's a ruler

    Groucho Marx

    I love mankind…it’s people I can’t stand.

    Linus, from the Peanuts comic

    You cannot have liberty without morality and morality without faith

    Alexis de Torqueville

    Those who fail to learn from the past are condemned to repeat it.
    Those who learn from the past are condemned to watch everybody else repeat it

    A Zero Hedge comment

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