Friday, March 29, 2013

Megadeth, We The People - Song & Lyrics



From the Th1rt3en album, which was released in 2011, during the Obama administration, not while G. W. Bush was in office.

Secret bureaucracy, it's just a lie
The devil's henchmen, in suit and tie
A sacred brotherhood; an ancient rite
Politicians and the double lives they hide

Violate your rights, no more equality
Surrender freedom, your Social Security
We, the people face unconstitutional lies
In greed we trust, in revolution we die

Our founding fathers are rolling in their graves
The land of liberty needs a regime change
Until you no longer know right from wrong
The constitution isn't worth the paper it's written on

Violate your rights, no more equality
Surrender freedom, your Social Security
We, the people face unconstitutional lies
In greed we trust, in revolution we die

Screams from the future, warn of calamity
The coming plagues of the new disease
The illuminati, one world currency
One world religion, one World everything

Violate your rights, no more equality
Surrender freedom, your Social Security
We, the people face unconstitutional lies
In greed we trust, in revolution we die

We, the people face unconstitutional lies
In greed we trust, in revolution we die

Lyrics from: elyrics.net Megadeth, We The People Lyrics

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Harbor Freight 12-Ton Press Fix

I bought a shop press from Harbor Freight, when they put them on sale.  It's been working fairly well, except for the fact that the ram was free to float back and forth maybe a quarter inch.  I could almost get a beer bottle cap into the gap between the press frame and the ram weldment.  That quarter inch of slop is a problem when you're trying to press out a little pin.

Fortunately not terribly difficult to fix.  I went to the Home Depot, and bought 4 nylon bolts, and nuts to match.  Drilling the holes only took a few minutes with the hand drill (not the drill press shown in the background), but shaving the nylon bolts down to fit just right, took some time.  Here's a quick video to illustrate the problem, and how I fixed it.  Kinda dumb, more of a slide-show really, because I don't have a proper digital video channel, and no microphone.

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Skyfall Movie Review


I missed my window for posting a movie review, but the movie just came out on video.  So here it is.

Bond Tradition?
If you are a long-time fan of the Bond movies, and you're looking for more of the same, you may be a bit disappointed.  Skyfall is not like the Sean Connery or Roger Moore films.  I would say that Skyfall is more comparable to The Bourne Supremacy than any of the other bond movies.  I think you'll discover, as you read this, that I'm a Bond geek, but I thought it was a great movie, even though a lot of traditions were broken.  I saw it twice within a week.  On the other hand, I didn't much like Quantum of Solace, and the last few movies I saw in a theater were pretty crap, so perhaps Skyfall benefited from low-expectations.

The Adele theme-song, I would say, is pretty traditional.  The lyrics are minimal though, and it's not going to be one of my favorites.  The Walkways rock cover is, at least, more interesting.  (Insert Walkways rock cover of skyfall, "Dig the kickin' mullet!)

Characters
As far as Daniel Craig's performance goes. . . eh.  Physically, he did a fine job, but as far as acting goes, Craig is outdone by his female co-stars and the villain, I think.  Not a great Bond performance, in my opinion.  The Bond character in the this film is kind of tired and bitter.  Mostly lacking the class and charm of the Bond of old.  One notable exception is when 007 hops off the bucket of the excavator into the train car and straightens his cuffs, while everyone stares at this guy in the suit standing at the edge of the now ruined car.  (Hey, wouldn't someone have STOPPED the train, as all this mayhem was going on, and why hadn't that chain fallen off the top of that train car)

And, then, of course, there is Judy Dench, once again playing "M."  I think she outclassed Bond in Skyfall. How great was that speech she gave in the courtroom? Great movie, terrific performance by Dame Judy Dench!

"M" and "Q" take much more active roles in Skyfall than in previous films.  Moneypenny reappears, which I think is pretty awesome, but you may be a little surprised to find out who it is.

Field agent Eve, is played by Naomi Harris, who you may remember as Tia Dalma (Calypso), the black-toothed pirate wench from the latter two Pirates of the Caribbean movies.  She looks pretty amazing in that Gold dress.  I thought that Ms. Harris also upstaged Craig, giving several small but very impactful moments.

Raoul Silva, played by Javier Bardem, is the villian.  You may remember Mr. Bardem as the assassin in No Country For Old Men.  Formerly an MI6 agent who worked for M, Silva was taken captive, and tortured.  Politically unable to help him, M had no choice but to leave him be, and he was left phyically and mentally scarred, and blames it all on M, and makes it his mission to get to her and kill her.  It would seem that Silva is homosexual, and there are several creepy moments between James Bond and Silva.  Silva's first real appearance in the film is a rather melodramatic monologue for Bond, about a barrel full of rats.  At one point, Silva tells his goons not to harm M; that they were to leave M intact, for him to deal with personally.  A little cliche, idn't it?

Watching the movie, I'm sitting there thinking that "Mallory" is being played by real British badass Ranulph Fiennes, but no, it's just Ralph Fiennes.  Regardless, Ralph does a great job of it.  When you see the movie, watch him stand up out of the cheap office chair, and stick out his chest, as he addresses Bond. I thought that was perfect.

The baddie goons look like stereotypical baddie goons.  MI6 extras are average clean-cut types.

At the Bond family home (more on that later) we meet Kincade, the gamekeeper.  He has a fairly small part, but he gets in a good number of the jokes.  An older man, I kind of wonder if Kincade sort of has a thing for M, or should I say Emma?

Photography and Sets
Bond gets some more time in the tropics in Skyfall.  At the end of the opening scene, Eve takes a shot at Partrice, even though she can't get a clear shot, but she's ordered to shoot by M, and hits Bond.  Bond falls from the train, which is going over a bridge, and falls, unconscious into the river below.  After the theme song sequence, we find Bond in an island setting.  As he's sitting at a beach-side bar, Bond hears of the attack on MI6 headquarters building.  It's at this point that 007 decides to come out of retirement.

Bond makes his reappearance in England at M's flat, where he waits in the dark, with a bottle of her scotch.  In this scene, in M's flat, it looks like the camera was shaking.  I'm not sure if that was actually on the film, or if the theater was having "technical difficulties," with the projector.

There's a scene at the beginning of the movie, in M's office, where we are introduced to Mallory.  There are several, large, British electrical outlets visible in the office.  They stick out like sore thumbs.  I would have either hidden them behind furniture or had them removed entirely.

The new MI6 headquarters may not be as cool as the field office in The Man With The Golden Gun, but I though it was pretty impressive.  If you remember the shooting range scene in Die Another Day, it's more of that kind of thing.

I thought all the blue lighting in Shanghai really popped off the screen.  Not entirely sure what the roof-top pool scene was supposed to accomplish though, and shouldn't the letters of the electronic billboard have been reversed, as seen from the inside of the building?

The Macao casino reminds me of Epcot center.  Over-the-top Asian style, with giant illuminated dragons and fireworks and the whole deal.  A bit tacky for a Bond movie, perhaps, but I think it looks good up on the screen.  The Komodo dragon pit is reminiscent of the shark tanks and pools of piranha in multiple 007 movies (You Only Live Twice, Thunderball, License to Kill).  I suppose you could also compare it to the lion scene in Diamonds Are Forever also.

The abandoned chemical plant town was pretty great.  The toppled statue may remind some of you of Goldeneye, either the video game or the movie.  Add in the music from the Victrola though, and it reminds me of the moments before the battle of Ramelle in Saving Private Ryan.

Toward the end of the movie, M and 007 retreat to the Bond family home. . . in Scotland.  They stop for a moment, shrouded in fog, to look over the mountains, and presumably for 007 to reflect on his childhood.  Perhaps this helps explain the accent of Sean Connery's Bond, but not Daniel Craig's. . . but I digress.  The Bond family home is an old stone mansion, that appears to have been mothballed for decades, presumably since James was a teen, at least.

Silva makes another rather dramatic entrance, flying to the Bond home in a helicopter with music playing through a large loudspeaker, a bit like that scene from Apocalypse Now.  Nobody surfs.

I was a bit disappointed that the flags weren't set to half-staff in the closing scene on the London roof-top.  Show a little respect, eh?

Gadgets
MI6 has another new quartermaster.  The new guy is a hacker, naturally, and commands all the computer gadgets.  All Bond gets is a Walther PPK/S pistol (yup, that's what "Q" said) with a palm reader, and a tiny radio.  Q quips that MI6 doesn't go in for exploding ball-point pens anymore (another Goldeneye reference).

The assassin, Patrice, probably gets the coolest gadgets in the film.

If you've been paying attention, you've probably heard that the Aston Martin from Goldfinger makes a reappearance.  Real Bond geeks will get a laugh out of the scene where "M" is complaining about the car.

Product Placement
When Bond gets into the excavator, and starts to operate it, the camera holds for a little too long on his left wrist, giving you a good look at his watch.  Later in the tube station 007 walks past a couple big wristwatch ads.

Overall
This Bond geek is very happy with Skyfall.

Sunday, December 23, 2012

How To Convince a Socialist


You can view the video here also, or download it in mp3 audio format if you like.  You won't miss much listening without video.  He's really just standing there, the whole time, without any visual aids.

Okay, so I've been greatly troubled by the fact that I'm having difficulties talking about gun control with leftists.  I think their main argument is that the government needs to ban guns for the greater good.  I have tried using facts and logic to argue that gun control just doesn't work, but that really just doesn't work.  I believe that the universe may have delivered what I needed in the form of this lecture on video.

Perhaps instead, I appeal to the desire of the leftist for greater government control, and try to paint a picture where they are a victim of government control, for the greater good,
Far more people are killed and injured by car accidents, than with firearms.  Shouldn't the government have direct control over what you can drive, how many miles you can drive, how far from work you are allowed to live?  Can it mandate that you take a bus or a train because, statistically, they are safer modes of transportation, regardless of how much time you'll waste waiting for the train, or waiting for your shift after your train arrives where you are going?  Can the government decide that, for the greater good, it needs you to work in Kansas, and that your spouse is badly needed in Washington?  Can the government decide that the skills you have aren't right for a teaching job, and for the greater good, we need you to work in a factory that produces the wheels for train cars?  I don't want to be limited to what guns I own, or told that I can't own any.  Why shouldn't government be able to tell you where you can live, or what you do for a living, regardless of what you want?  Can you still be happy living under government control, where the greater good demands that you must make sacrifices?  Do you really not believe that humans, Americans, have free will and property rights, than government has more power over your life than you do, regardless of what you want?
There may be something to this. 

Sunday, December 16, 2012

All I Want For Christmas Is. . .


(From the Three Percenters FaceBook page)

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Kickass Christmas Music Mix

Some Favorites:
Greensleeves by The Rock Heroes - amazing guitar track

Silent Night/Holy Night Jam by Joe Satriani - The Satch is awesome.

A Mad Russian's Christmas (instrumental) and Christmas Cannon Rock by Trans Siberian Orchestra

Deck the Halls by Ted Nugent - Uncle Ted, 'nuff said?

Christmas Blues (Live) by John Popper and Eric Clapton - Popper is the big Blues Traveler guy

Back Door Santa by John Popper and B. B. King

Jingle Bell Rock by Thousand Foot Krutch

I Won't Be Home For Christmas by blink 182

All by The Vandals - Oi To The World, A Gun For Christmas, Thanx For Nothing, Christmas Time For My Penis, I Don't Believe In Santa Claus, Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairies, and C-R-I-S-T-M-A-S

Oi To The World by No Doubt

The Twelve Pains of Christmas by Bob Rivers


Also very good:
Carol of the Bells by Al Di Meola

From The Brian Setzer Orchestra - Jingle Bells, You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch, Angles We Have Heard On High, White Christmas, Let it Snow!  Let it Snow!  Let it Snow!, and Take a Break Guys

Christmas is Here by Buckcherry

Silent Night by Faster Pussycat

Auld Lang Syne by Girlschool - okay, so it's a New Year's Eve Song

Christmas is Here Again and Jingle Bells by Helix

Rockin' Round the Christmas Tree by Jaymes Reunion

Santa Claus is Back in Town by Jonny Lang

Run Rudolph Run by L.A. Guns

God Rest Ye Merry Gentleman and We Three Kings by Los Straighjackets - not as weird as you would think for guys that wear Mexican wrestler masks

O Come, O Come Emmanuel by Neal Schon

Making Christmas by Rise Against

All by The Rock Heroes - Winter Wonderland (with and without vocals), White Christmas (Instrumental), Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree (Instrumental), Merry Christmas (I Don't Want To Fight Tonight), and Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer (With Vocals)

The Little Drummer Boy by Sean Kingston - to break the Rock monotony a bit

Jingle Bells by Skid Row

Rudolph, the Red Nosed Reindeer by The Smithereens

Chrismas is the Time to Say I Love You by SR-71

Joy to the World - Steve Morse

I'll Be Home for Christmas - Twisted Sister and Lita Ford - !!

All by Weezer - We Wish You a Merry Christmas, O Come All Ye Faithful, O Holy Night, The First Noel, and Hark!  The Herald Angels Sing

Merry Christmas Baby by Wyclef Jean and Stevie Wonder - Wyclef is a little annoying, but. . .

White Christmas by Zakk Wylde - Pretty sedate for Zakk.  Acoustic guitar.

Auld Lang Syne by Me First and the Gimme Gimmes

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Redistribution


One funny.


One, not so funny.

Credit to MaddMedic for finding them first.