It’s not my problem

I’m in my truck, sitting at a stop light. First in line, with one car behind me.

I see a man cross the street, heading in my general direction. I keep an eye on him.

He moves down the street, ultimately crossing the street behind the car behind me. He continues down the road without incident. I had no reason to believe anything would happen, but better to keep your eyes peeled than risk being caught off guard.

But as he moved, I pulled plans out of my mental file cabinet for dealing with the situation should X happen. It is about being prepared and a little head in my OODA loop in case something does happen, but it’s more about planning and practicing and ensuring there’s something in the file cabinet, perhaps refining what’s in there, perhaps ensuring what’s in there is still relevent, etc..

If he started to directly approach my car, especially in a quick or aggressive manner, right foot gets applied to gas pedal, steering wheel turns to the right so I can enter the flow of traffic (or at least not t-bone a car that might be in the intersection). Basically, get out of there.

But he passed my car and started on a trajectory that looked like it might approach the car behind me.

What then?

If he started something with the driver of the car behind me, what should I do?

I know many good-minded citizens would want to stop the altercation. You see someone getting the stuffing beat out of them and you want to step in. You see someone getting carjacked, you want to do something about it.

And some might think, “I have a gun… and could use it”. True, you could, and here in Texas you could be legally justified to use deadly force in defense of a third party. Maybe. It’ll all depend upon the particular circumstances.

But just because you legally can, does that mean you should?

Some might be motivated by not wanting to be haunted by “after the fact” thoughts of “if I had only done something”.

But I say, you have to figure that out beforehand and come to terms with whatever your decision is. You have to know what you’ll do, where your lines are drawn, and to be sure you can justify and live with your decision.

I’ll admit, I can’t say with 100% certainty what I would do because it will depend upon the specific circumstance. But in general, I may not get involved. I don’t know what’s going on. I don’t know these people, nor what the problem is. The person that looks like the “bad guy” might in fact be the “good guy”, which I just can’t know unless I know the whole story, and that’s something I won’t have nor receive in time. I might be inserting myself somewhere I shouldn’t, and could be causing even bigger problems for myself. Is that worth it? For what it could bring to myself? to my family? the court case, the lawyers, the public muckraking?

Maybe.

For me the question is: is it worth dying over?

Is it worth leaving my wife without a husband? my children without a father?

Maybe.

In general, probably not. If I take the specific situation that could have unfolded behind me, say a carjacking, I probably would have stayed as long as I could to get relevant information like a description (already mentally recording that as I watched the guy walk), perhaps a car description, and dial 911 and let APD sort it out. My feet would have also stayed ready to hit the gas pedal, because if it looked to put me in danger, I would want to get out of it as quickly as possible. If things didn’t get that ugly, I might stay around to help the victim. But it really all depends upon the specifics.

The bottom line: I want to go home. This is a guiding principle for me. Yes it’s selfish of me, but I think Wife and Kiddos appreciate it.

You have to know where your line is, and you need to know it BEFORE the flag flies. Use every day situations and ask yourself “what if?” to help you figure out a playbook, and also find your limits.

2012-03-16 workout – Wendler 5/3/1 program, cycle 7, deadlift 2

Heavy weights are heavy.

“Week 2” – BBB 3 Month Challenge

  • 3 reps – Deadlift (working max: 325#)
    • 1x5x135 (warmup)
    • 1x5x165
    • 1x3x195
    • 1x3x230 (work)
    • 1x3x265
    • 1x3x295
  • Asst. #1 – Squat
    • 5 x 10 x 135
  • Asst. #2 – Ab Wheel
    • 5 x 6 x BW (from the knees)
  • Foam Rolling

Yeah, things are just feeling heavier, but I was kinda happy with how I dealt with it.

On the deadlifting, I usually use double overhand grip for all sets save the last (heaviest) set, which I’ll do mixed grip. Today, since I knew I wasn’t going to do more than 3 reps I just did it double overhand. Worked great! I was happy about that. If I had to do more reps I know I wouldn’t have lasted with the double overhand, but that’s alright.

Squatting was kinda cool today. For some reason I picked a better spot for my eyes to stare at and that made a huge difference in my form, in keeping my chest up, not letting things fall forward. Very cool. I was very happy with how squatting went.

The ab wheel… geez. Deceptively hard. Last time I did them it killed my knees, so I needed padding. The gym has one of those quarter/half sphere things that aerobics people can stand on to help with balance. It’s soft enough, not too high off the ground, perfect padding. It also made the rolling a little tougher since there’s a littl more balance involved and a slightly steeper angle. I only did 6 reps across because I’m still learning the movement and how to do it best. Get all the way down, body parallel to the floor, arms up by the ears, nose almost touching the ground, then really be sure to use the abdominals to crunch back up, not the lats to pull myself back up. I’ll slowly add reps while I get the form right.

Not a bad workout. Looking forward to next deadlift tho… I’ll PR at 315# and 3 plates on a side. That’ll be cool. 🙂

But when we’re doing the hating, it’s acceptable.

A friend posted a picture on Facebook. Some of the comments made me shake my head and against my better judgement I commented. The replies were as I expected them to be. I opted to move this to my blog because I didn’t want his Wall/Comments to become a big battleground.

So here’s a screenshot, with names and profile pictures removed/blurred.

My comment is in the middle, “So free speech…”

First, my personal reaction to the bumper sticker. Wow… that’s pretty blatant. Takes a lot of guts to put it on your car too for the whole world to see. Racist? Yes it is. Does the person have a right to say it? Yes they do. Yeah, it shocked me a bit to see it, because it takes a lot of balls to do such a thing. But it doesn’t totally surprise me because I know humans are humans and will always have strong preferences. We’re a country that’s growing very divided, very angry. This is just manifestation of that.

And I’d say, the comments are also manifestation of that.

As you can see, my first reaction was surprise to hear the call for violent response. OK, kinda passive-aggressive violent response, but still a violent response. Destruction of property. A call for criminal behavior, but (apparently) it’s justified because the car owner was being hateful first, amiright? Hrm. So violence is OK if someone is being hateful, but me possibly using violence (i.e. carrying a gun) so I could stop someone from manifesting their hate all over me is not and must be banned. *sigh*

I brought up “free speech” because that’s one they always love to parade about. Well, “free speech” and 1A is all about protecting unpopular speech. If that bumper sticker is anything, it’s unpopular speech. Is it racist? Yes it is. But the car owner still has every right to say it. Just like you have every right to voice your opinion that the sticker is revolting. One difference is the car owner isn’t advocating violence.

Then my favorite comment was the second to the last. The commenter starts off by looking down on a group of people. But I thought we were all equal? Why this air of superiority? It’s almost as if you believe you possess characteristics or abilities that distinguish you as superior (and them as inferior), and that your discrimination and hate is justified — you know, racism but without the skin tone. And if these people are not acceptable, what are you suggesting be done with them, because they exist… so what to do? Round them up? Extinguish them? Why no effort to help them? Where’s the compassion for those of lesser-brain than you? No effort to educate them? No effort to lift them up and help them become better? No… they’re just “asking for it”, apparently… and I guess by “it” you mean violent response? That’s what the other commenters were calling for.

And we cap it off with stereotyping. I reckon this person wasn’t from California, right?

I’m not defending what the car owner is saying; I find it tasteless and hateful. But what I find more disappointing is how these “progressives” can’t see the log in their own eye.

Improvised weapons

A tape dispenser as an improvised weapon

Man comes in to store, pulls knife, clerk attempts to foil the robbery but doesn’t quite get it, but when the robber comes close enough, he gets whacked in the head with the closest object — a tape dispenser. And runs away.

A few things to learn:

  • It’s not about the tool, it’s about the person in the fight. The clerk wasn’t willing to just roll over and “give him what he wanted”. He was willing to fight and protect that which was important to him.
  • Large objects applied to the head hurt. 🙂
  • Granted I’d rather have a better tool than a tape dispenser, but he made do with what he had available. Far lot better than an empty hand. So while it’s not about the tool, the tool sure helps give you a leg up. The better the tool, the better the leg.
  • Stay cool. Notice how cool and collected the clerk was the entire time?
  • Watch their hands. Hands kill.

(let’s try this reblog thing…)
We’ve homeschooled our kids their entire lives. When she talks about:

“I didn’t realize the pressure we were under until we were set free of the educational “mess” of which they were part: The prepackaged curriculum, the one-size-fits-all model, the bullying and the negative socialization. Homeschooling allowed us to discover and experience pure, superior learning and a customized learning environment.”

I know what she means. And she’s right when she says “we, as parents, must exert a powerful influence in determining the quality of life we want for our children.” It shouldn’t be left up to the whims of some budget crisis, or politics, or really, what some else wants to indoctrinate into our children’s heads. We don’t shelter our children — we know they have to enter the real world someday and we want to ensure they are best prepared for it, not just to survive, but to excel. It requires a lot of sacrifice of our time, our money, our quality of life in some ways… but in so many others, it leads to a far greater increase in quality that it’s well worth it.

Ain’t it funny how that money rots your brain?

First I read James Whittaker’s posting on why he left Google. In short?

The Google I was passionate about was a technology company that empowered its employees to innovate. The Google I left was an advertising company with a single corporate-mandated focus.

That’s sad. I remember when every geek wanted to work at Google because there was such a passion to innovate. The 20% time to develop projects. We saw so many neat things that came from Google Labs, and sure some were failures but that’s how it goes. It seemed like a great place to work. Now? Not so much. If this is what the Google culture is like, it’s the first sign of a failing company. A giant that has lost its way and now will only struggle to maintain its relevance.

The following day, Greg Smith publishes a similar missive in the New York Times about why he’s leaving Goldman Sachs.

To put the problem in the simplest terms, the interests of the client continue to be sidelined in the way the firm operates and thinks about making money. Goldman Sachs is one of the world’s largest and most important investment banks and it is too integral to global finance to continue to act this way. The firm has veered so far from the place I joined right out of college that I can no longer in good conscience say that I identify with what it stands for.

It might sound surprising to a skeptical public, but culture was always a vital part of Goldman Sachs’s success. It revolved around teamwork, integrity, a spirit of humility, and always doing right by our clients. The culture was the secret sauce that made this place great and allowed us to earn our clients’ trust for 143 years. It wasn’t just about making money; this alone will not sustain a firm for so long. It had something to do with pride and belief in the organization. I am sad to say that I look around today and see virtually no trace of the culture that made me love working for this firm for many years. I no longer have the pride, or the belief.

Again, a case of losing sight of doing good things in the world, putting people first, caring about the customer… all in the name of money.

I have no problems with money. I really like it, and would love to have more of it. But money cannot be the goal, for this is what it does.

Two quotes come to mind:

Virtue does not come from money, but rather from virtue comes money, and all other things good to man.

– Socrates

and

Ain’t it funny how that money rots your brain?

– Corrosion of Conformity, “Señor Limpio”

Something to think about.

Congratulations Randi!

Saw a few days ago on her Facebook page that Randi Rogers was leaving Glock, both as a team shooter and an employee.

Of couse you wonder where she was going to end up…

And the wait is over.

According to today’s The Shooting Wire, she’s joining Comp-Tac!

Awesome!

Congratulations, Randi!

Boy… the competition shooting world has been seeing a lot of changes lately. Keeps things interesting for sure.

2012-03-14 workout – Wendler 5/3/1 program, cycle 7, press 2

“Week 2” – BBB 3 Month Challenge

  • 3 reps – Press (working max: 155#)
    • 2x5x45 (warmup)
    • 1x5x65
    • 1x5x80
    • 1x3x95
    • 1x3x110 (work)
    • 1x3x125
    • 1x3x140
  • Asst. #1A – Bench Press
    • 5 x 10 x 115
  • Asst. #1B – Chinups (supersetted with Bench Press)
    • 3 x 3 x BW
    • 1 x 2/1neg x BW
    • 1 x 1/2neg x BW
  • Asst. #2 – Face Pulls
    • 1 x 10 x 50
    • 2 x 10 x 60
  • Asst. #3 – DB Hammer Curls
    • 3 x 10 x 30
  • Foam Rolling

Chugging along. Today went alright. Still feels weird to not rep out. I did rush today’s workout some, not resting much between sets because 1. I need to be somewhere this morning, so I left to get to the gym early but 2. the gym opened late. Ugh. Oh well. So I moved pretty quick through the workout.

I was happy to get 1 more chin. 🙂

On face pulls, 60 seems like a good weight to work with now. It’s giving enough resistence that it affects form, but it’s not really all that hard. Still, I’ll stay here a bit, tighten things up, then progress up from there.

Not too bad a day.

KR Training March 2012 Newsletter

The KR Training March 2012 Newsletter is up!

The 3 classes (Defensive Pistol Skills 2, AT-2 and Low Light Shooting) scheduled for March 10 were rained out and rescheduled to this Saturday, March 17th. We have slots available in these classes!

Advanced Training 6, rained out in February, is back on the calendar April 7, 1-4 pm.

Lots more in the newsletter. Go read!

Don’t be like them

As Daughter progresses in her drumming, she gets exposed to more bands, more dummers.

And more opportunities to talk to her about drug and alcohol abuse.

John Bonham? Don’t be like him.

Steven Adler? Don’t be like him (still alive, but still…).

Jeff Porcaro? Don’t be like him.

John Panozzo? Don’t be like him.

Keith Moon? Don’t be like him.

Jimmy Sullivan? Don’t be like him.

Stuart Cable? Don’t be like him.

Sure, play drums like these guys — especially Bonham — but that’s where you should stop emulating them.

She gets it. I hope she will never forget it.