Wednesday, August 28, 2019


The Time of Need in the Time of Greed
August 28, 2019
By Jim Culp

This morning I drove to the Veteran’s Hospital for another evaluation. It was a nice little drive. There was a fair amount of traffic, but it was cool enough to have my windows down and give the air conditioner a rest. While waiting for my appointment, two gentlemen (both Vietnam veterans) were talking about their grandkids and how spoiled they are. One man was an Army veteran that served in the la Drang valley in 1965. He was shot twice and sent home. He marveled that his children were mostly like him…pinching pennies and watching their spending to make sure they kept a fair amount in savings for emergencies. He almost broke into tears talking about his grandkids, though. He said they know nothing of poverty, and usually receive $2-3,000 worth of gifts on birthdays and Christmas.
The Air Force guy was ground service technician for a fighter wing. He named some airbase, but neither me nor the other guy knew where it was. He volunteered to return to Vietnam four times; and served a total of 60 months in country throughout the war. He said that his kids were spoiled brats when they were young… but were really good parents when they got older. When grandkids came along, he said he was a “real stickler” about dolling out funds. He wanted the grandkids to learn the value a dollar, and also wanted them to work for it.
We all talked for a while, and I had to break away and get my appointment handled.
As for me, I was tough on my daughter (way tougher than I should have been) but taught her life skills that she can still use today, and that was my gift to her. She received gifts on holidays and birthdays, but I was never one to buy lavish gifts for a kid, because I knew that it made them devaluate money.
I think the old Army guy was upset because children of today rarely know the value of money, nor do they appreciate receiving a plethora of nice gifts on two or three occasions per year. I see it at Walmart very week. Children are screaming in every isle of the store, and Mom is threatening them with a death sentence of never getting another toy again. Dad is still in his grungy work clothes, and just can’t wait until they get to the beer coolers.
When I was a wee lad, I lost my Dad. This was 1969. A couple of years later, my Mom married a railroad man, and he made good money. Birthdays and Christmas were pretty nice, as we would receive several gifts, have a really nice dinner, and have a grand old time. These were not lavish gifts; they were moderately appropriate. A I grew up… I saw kids receive more and more gifts on these special days. One kid up the street from us couldn’t even remember everything he received at Christmas, because he would have needed a camera to remember all of it. I never believed in that, and still don’t.
Going back to Walmart, here’s a few statistics. Walmart earns a whopping $36 Million an hour in sales each day. It makes $34,985 every minute of every day of the year. The average Walmart Super Center takes in a whopping 3000-4500 customers per day. It has 8,500 stores in the USA, and demographically well-placed stores average 10,000 plus customers a day. Get ready for this…Walmart as a whole earns $36,750,000 every hour of every day of the year.
That comes to $882,000,000 per 24-hour day.
How much is that in a calendar year? More than my third-grade math can calculate.
On the other side of reality for this place we call Earth, here’s some really disturbing statistics.
9 Million people die of hunger on our planet every day.
3.1 Million children die or hunger every day.
Forty percent of preschool-age children are estimated to be anemic because of iron deficiency, and anemia causes 20 percent of all maternal deaths. In addition, it is estimated that 250 to 500 thousand children go blind from Vitamin A deficiency every year.
Poverty is the number one cause of world hunger. The World Bank estimates that 10.7 percent of the world’s population, or 767 million people, lived on less than $1.90 per day in 2013.
Over 75 percent of the world’s poorest people grow their own food. This causes widespread food insecurity in developing countries, as drought, climate change and natural disasters can easily cut off a family’s food supply.
One third of the world’s food that is grown for consumption is wasted each year; roughly 1.8 billion tons.
The United States by itself wastes $218 billion in food products per year.
I told you all of that to bring a point across. If you are a person that lives in the world trying to amass fortunes instead of helping people who can’t help themselves, you’re one of this world’s problems. If you have enough money to buy your kids lavish gifts, and keep them ignorant of the world’s declining health, you’re one of this world’s problems. If you believe that people of other colors are “infestations” or “problem people,” you’re one of this world’s problems.
As climate change, corporate greed, and billion-dollar deals keep wars going for 18 years; people in all parts of this Earth suffer, become ill, and die.  
It is time for change. The Earth has become polluted and disemboweled from the love of money. It is a place where less than two percent of her population care about the health of the oceans, or the oxygen levels of the forests. Look at the statistics above and ask yourself why people are starving.
-Jim


Friday, August 9, 2019


“Common Sense”
By Jim Culp
August 9, 2019

I recently read an article (and subsequent petition) called “Common Sense Gun Control.” The article’s author suggests that gun ownership should be regulated much in the same way that automobiles are. That means that things like registration, insurance, and licensing would all come into play.
I would like to suggest how much this type of ideology is based on ignorance. So, I am going to name three ideas that I have heard proposed in the last year and render unto you my gift of knowledge on the subject. If you don’t know me, I am a retied soldier, a veteran of 22 years of military service, two wars, and a former Certified 5th Army Instructor. I am a graduate of two Gunsmithing and Ballistics schools, and a lifetime gun owner and shooter. I am not going to support Democrat or Republican agendas in this blog, because I believe the two-party ideology to be a failed system.
So, let’s talk suggestions by several people that I have heard in the recent past, including two that were suggested very recently (and in light of) the El Paso and Dayton shootings. (“S” is the statement, “A” is my answer)
1.      (S) “We should ban assault weapons, because no one needs them.”
(A)  This is based upon ignorance. The statement should read “ban semi-automatic weapons that I don’t understand very well.” AR-15’s and Semi-Automatic military copies are not assault weapons. An assault weapon is built for combat… and is capable of burst or semi-automatic fire. I have a .22 rifle in my closet that I have owned since I was 12. It has a tube magazine that holds 18 rounds; and is semi-automatic. It can fire those 18 rounds in less than 30 seconds if I want it to. In my hands, it’s a deadly weapon. Is that an Assault Rifle? No, it’s a plinking and hunting rifle in a small rimfire caliber. Can I kill a man with it? Yes. Have I ever? No.
2.      (S) “Guns purchases should require the accompaniment of a license and an insurance policy.”
(A)  You already must show an identification to purchase a gun of any type. Are there some “Gun Show loopholes?” Sure, there are. This is a free society. People are free to sell guns to one another as a free citizen. Yes, those people should be required to see a person’s identification to ensure they are ownership age. It’s the right thing to do. But if a government needs to tell you that, you are someone that needs to attend training at the local police department about gun laws.
I add to this answer by saying that I RE-sold guns at gun shows for 20 years. It’s how I got so much experience. I owned over 70 different firearms in my adult life. Not once did I do anything illegal. I made people show me an ID, and 90% of them happily complied. The ones that didn’t were told to take the train. I didn’t do that for any government rule, I did it because it was the right thing to do.

3.      (S) “Our streets will be safer if we enact more gun laws.”
(A) Absolute ignorance and nonsense. Outlaws don’t work by your rules. Drug dealers don’t check the law books before they buy illegal guns to protect their shipments. We hear a bunch of talk about Chicago and Baltimore these days. The fact is, they are down the list for murders. Detroit has 316 murders annually. That’s doesn’t even touch the amount of rapes and assaults, and most of them without firearms. Next on my list is New Orleans. It has a staggering 156 murders per year, and that is insane for a state of its size.  Again, that doesn’t even count all the rapes, robberies, and assaults.
Furthermore, I am going to tell you my final thoughts on all of this. Taking a responsible citizen’s firearms away is a colossal mistake. Can it happen? You bet it can. But making some better laws for punishment of criminals would serve us way better. Bring back chain gangs. Re-enact laws that use criminals for cleaning up highways and storm damaged areas.  Stop sending all these countries (like Israel and many others) taxpayer’s monies. We don’t pay taxes for our government to squander it on other countries. Now for my pet peeves. People who commit savage crimes need to executed in no more than 30 days. People who molest children (especially priests) need to be publicly crucified. Governments and politicians are 100% reactive, and mostly never proactive. The governments of our 50 states (and that District where all the idiots run our country) do not have the best interest of the working American citizen in their plans. The two-party system that has dragged our country closer and closer to revolution is a failed state… and will most likely lead to some idiot like Trump or Biden declaring Martial Law, then declaring themselves a dictator. If you are naïve enough to think that something like that is impossible, just study history. No one thought it would happen in Italy, German, or Russia. Just read a book or too and see how that worked.
Finally, I’ll end with a short sentence that was written in 1791 and called the Second Amendment. It was included in the first ten of the Bill of Rights.
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.
-Jim
Follow me at jimculp/blogspot.com



Sunday, August 4, 2019


“Too Close to Home”
August 9, 2019
By Jim Culp

Yesterday was another scene on the news that warranted two or three views to get your head around it. A lone shooter was arrested for killing and wounding innocent shoppers as they went about their daily lives. This shooting hit home for me. I was raised to age eleven in El Paso, and my brother Dave and our neighborhood cronies would walk two and a half miles to the Cielo Vista Mall about every other Saturday. We didn’t shop for anything (we rarely had any money) but we walked around in the air conditioning and went into stores to salivate over the stuff they were selling.
The shooting that occurred yesterday is at a Walmart that (nowadays) is just about two football field’s distance west of the mall. It’s one of the large ones (a Super-Center) that has everything under one roof.
But just like many places where these shootings occur, there was no armed security, and the gutless piece of garbage wielding a semi-automatic rifle did some incredible damage before the police grabbed him. He was a 21-year old kid… and must have had a fair amount of ammunition.
El Paso is a crowded city, it has grown to immense proportions since I was a kid on Candlewood street playing with my Johnny West and Geronimo figures. When I was a little kid, there wasn’t much on the East side of except one shopping center and a lot of desert. The turn to where our cousins, aunts, and uncles lived was out in the middle of nowhere. Nowadays, you’re not out of the city much until you reach Horizon City.
As a former soldier, I always look at these shootings for signs of things that could have gone worse, and things that could have been prevented. In the military, we called these After-Action Reviews (AARs), and you learn a great deal from them…good or bad.
The shooter yesterday was in a Target Rich Environment, an area that (in the military) a shooter (or gunner) is looking for his most dangerous targets and prioritizing them for his next shot. If there were systems in place to hinder or detour him, there would not have been so many dead or wounded. This guy, like many others before him, freely moved about and shot at least thirty people with a 7.62 X39 rifle. Businesses in our country need to start taking precautions and hiring armed security. If this guy would have been worried about opponents instead of victims, he wouldn’t have been so free to indiscriminately slaughter people.
Do you think these shootings will stop? Think again. This country is quickly descending into anarchy, and these kids that are doing these shootings are being groomed to do them by someone, some organization, or some government entity. If companies don’t take precautions to defend themselves from random shooters, citizens are going to pay the price.
One last thing. Another shooting has happened since I have started writing this page. Tomorrow, ignorant people will start asking for more gun laws. They’ll rant and rave about “children with machine guns,” and “no one needs an AR-15.” Please don’t go down that path. We don’t stop selling cars when people get ran over by them, and we don’t ban cutlery when butchers work too fast and cut a finger off. We need to get to the root of a problem, and get it fixed. Congress won’t do it…they are too busy taking 30-day vacations.
Meanwhile, arm yourself. Protect yourselves. Be aware. This isn’t going to over for a while…
-Jim