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PERRIN LOVETT

~ Deo Vindice

PERRIN LOVETT

Monthly Archives: March 2013

Sunday Night News!

03 Sunday Mar 2013

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes

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Tomorrow I will release a SUPER-POST, a legal and historical column about the true meaning of the Second Amendment!  It ain’t about duck hunting, friends.  It’s a follow-up to several of my recent, very popular articles on related matters.  It may be as long or longer than Posse Comitatus, but it will be well worth reading. 

Earlier today, I added a piece about Top Shelf Cigars, my friend’s business.  Check that out, if you haven’t already.  Many of you have, this is shaping up to be a record-breaking Sunday.  Thanks.

The news?  Uhh…the Queen is sick.  Condolences to her.  John Kerry is running around the middle east giving away our money.  Condolences to us.  That’s about all.  Check in tomorrow!

Sunday Afternoon Update!

03 Sunday Mar 2013

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes

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I just published Top Shelf Cigars, https://perrinlovett.wordpress.com/2013/03/03/top-shelf-cigars/, wherein I sing the praises of my friend, Russell Wilder and his business.  Check it out – on the web and in person!

Also, I have finally started categorizing my posts.  So far I have three.  “Legal/Political Columns” is just that.  These articles are wildly popular.  Go figure.  “Other Columns” are a collection of subjects that do not fall under the law or politics.  “News and Notes” is the home for my updates and such, like this post.  I will try to go back in the archives and move old columns and posts into the appropriate categories.  For now though, only the new posts are guaranteed to be properly categorized; everything else is under “Uncategorized” – the default classification.  This may make searches or something easier in the future.  Anything for my readers.

Top Shelf Cigars

03 Sunday Mar 2013

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ 13 Comments

Tags

America, Augusta, business, cigars, dominos, Esteli, Florida, GA, green space chickens, humidor, libertarian, London, luxury, Masters, New Hampshire, New York, Nicaragua, Nick Perdomo, pipes, poker, Rudyard kipling, Russell Wilder, Southeast, tobacco, Top Shelf Cigar Shoppe

I like to help people.  I also appreciate good people and good services.  So, I have no problem whatsoever writing this column about my great friends at the Top Shelf Cigar Shoppe in Martinez (Evans [greater Augusta]), Georgia.  This is part of my continuing series on good businesses.

My family and I moved to Augusta about six years ago.  I needed to find a top-notch place to purchase and enjoy fine cigars.  There were and still are several tobacco businesses in the area, each unique in its own way.  However, when I first visited Top Shelf I knew I was “home.” 

Just about every city over 100,000 in population has at least one cigar shop.  Some are decent, others are good, some are great.  Top Shelf falls into the rare great category.  If you live in the area and enjoy fine cigars, I highly recommend a visit.  Find them on the web, here: http://www.topshelfcigarshoppe.com/.  If you’re visiting or just passing through, you’ll feel right at home.

Top Shelf is the brainchild and proprietary interest of Mr. Russell Wilder.  After retiring early, Russell knew he wanted to develop a special place dedicated to premium cigars and pipe tobacco.  He has more than accomplished his original goal, having built one of the most recognized and distinctive stores in America.  This has not been am easy process.  Often he reports to work before the sun rises and doesn’t leave until it is dark again.  He goes the extra mile for his customers and with his suppliers and employees. 

0906121812

(Russell and his boss.)

Russell regularly attends national conventions and trade shows and has a personal relationship with most of the major players in the modern cigar market.  Just the other day he returned from a trip to Esteli, Nicaragua and a visit to Nick Perdomo’s growing and production operation.  Nick and other cigar royalty have been quests at Russell’s shop over the years. 

I’ve been to cigar shop’s from Florida to New Hampshire.  The really good one’s are memorable because they get things right.  In addition to maintaining an inventory which works for the local market, owners must follow trends and design their stores to be as comfortable and enjoyable as possible.

Russell has had three different locations, each an improvement over the previous incarnation.  His original shop was in a shopping center.  As is (or was), it was an excellent place.  However, when the opportunity presented itself to move to a larger space where he could upgrade most of the shop’s features, Russell didn’t hesitate.  I helped move some of the stock and furniture from place to place as did most other “regulars.”  A great shop will always have at least a few regular customers on hand to demonstrate the quality of the business.

Last summer Russell made a quantum leap.  He bought his own freestanding building and moved his shop to its current location on Columbia Road.  This provides easy access from Washington and Wheeler roads, both major arteries, as well as access to Interstates 20 and 520.  There are some interior pictures of the new shop at the link above.  You may notice a rounder version of your’s truly in one of those – seated at the domino table with a few other vagabonds.

The new shop is a model of cigar industry environment and decor.  It features a giant, two-room walk-in humidor with dark wood and exposed brick trim.  The rest of the building (even the huge bathroom) is covered floor and ceiling in rich judge’s panelling and tongue and groove Arkansas pine.  The floor is a beautiful faux stone.  I played a small part in the remodeling of the new space, working several nights until late with a crew of other dedicated regulars to help Russell build his dream.  It was well worth it.  And, it says something about a man when so many of his friends and customers will pitch in on a construction project of that magnitude for free.  The greater portion of the credit for the new design goes to one Scott Kirby, who single-handed did about 80% of the interior work.  Everything you see is hand, scratch built.  The design rivals anything I’ve ever seen in the cigar best of any major city.  Think a luxury shop in New York or London.

0829121354

(Kipling in the humidor.)

Any liquor store with a license can sell cigars.  Some lower-rent aficionados go so far as to buy cigars on-line.  A great shop makes for a great experience.  Russell and his staff – wife Sharon (the real boss), daughter Sarah, Gerald, Tom, and Matt – know the business inside and out and can make tremendous recommendations and comparisons. 

Another critical facet of a successful shop is the smoking lounge.  As noted above, Top Shelf’s is trimmed in luxurious wood and stone.  It has three air-cleaners to keep the atmosphere breathable no matter how many cigars are being enjoyed.  There is spacious seating for many friends to gather in comfort.  Russell provides humidified lockers, a giant screen television with cable, a refrigerator, free coffee, and innumerable other services.  The lounge is usually busy any hour of the day, any day of the week.

As part of going the extra mile Russell offers many additional perks.  The shop is home to a premium club with meets at least once a month.  The meetings provide an entertaining opportunity for fellowship and the enjoyment of the latest cigars.  The shop also hosts a friendly poker game once a week (no cash).  Russell also is deeply involved in the community.  From his annual charity golf tournament to providing cigars to local businesses and clubs to keeping the smoke-loving patrons of the Masters happy, Russell is everywhere.

An arch-libertarian, Russell is happy to give his opinion on politics and economics to both his customers and friends as well as the local media.  Russell also has a keen sense for the stock market and is always dropping profitable hints to those who will listen.  This level of personal service is what puts Top Shelf above just about any other store in the Southeast.

Drop by for a visit if you can.  If not, scour your area for a shop with the traits I’ve listed here.  You’ll be glad you did.  Not a cigar lover?  Shame on you.  There is still time!

Saturday Evening’s Post

02 Saturday Mar 2013

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes

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This was the busiest week in site history!  It included the top three best days on record.  Thanks, everyone.  Earlier today I put out A Short History of Gun Control in America, https://perrinlovett.wordpress.com/2013/03/02/a-short-history-of-gun-control-in-america/, to counter the renewed interest of the tyrant class in further disarming ordinary Americans.  Check it out, if you haven’t already.  This is the end of the week and a really slow news day, so I’ll be very brief.  Heck, no news tonight!

As usual there are big developments underway here.  Next week will be informative and fun.  Don’t forget about March 10th.  Now, for something a little simpler.  Here’s what I enjoyed last night (very cold):

0301131949

Perhaps another outdoor fire is in order.  It’s supposed to be colder if less windy than last night but I still have a good supply of excellent ale to help keep me warm.  Happy March everyone!

A Short History of Gun Control In America

02 Saturday Mar 2013

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

14th Amendment, 16th Amendment, 17th Amendment, 1913, 1986, 19th Century, 20th Century, Adolph Hitler, America, ATF, bigots, blacks, British, Browning, citizens, Civil Rights Act, Class III, colonial, Constitution, crime, Europeans, Federal Reserve, firearms, Founders, government, gun control, guns, history, indians, jews, King George, KKK, LBJ, Liberty, machine guns, military, militia, murder, National Firearms Act, National Gun Control Act, Natural Law, Nazi Gun Law, New York City, news, plantation, police, poor, Posse Comitatus, racists, Revolutionary War, Ronald Reagan, Second Amendment, self-defense, slaves, standing army, Tammany Hall, tax slaves, taxes, theives, Thomas Jefferson, tyrants

Guns have been in the news again and again lately.  The guns I am writing about are the privately owned guns of our citizens.  Sadly, these patriotic men and women have not glorified for the millions of lives they save every year, usually without firing a shot.  Rather, the entire institution of gun-ownership has been demonized by the media and the lowlifes of the political class based on a tiny number of sensationalized murder cases.  This phenomenon happens from time to time and is always accompanied by a call for more gun control.

Before I get to control and its history, I want to address the most dangerous guns in America and elsewhere – publically owned or government guns.  These weapons pose a true threat to the health and security of our citizens and potentially pose a dire threat to our civil liberties and freedom.  Governments throughout history have proven themselves to be the least trustworthy possessors of weaponry.  In the 20th century alone governments murdered more than 200 million innocent victims with their military weapons.  I cannot speak for the rest of the world, but in America we need to seriously confront this lethal problem.

The Founder’s were naturally distrustful of an armed government, particularly a standing government army.  That is why they placed stringent restrictions on the army and, at the same time, embedded the right of the people to possess arms as a check against government tyranny.  I am  working on a series of columns along these lines which will compliment my previous article Posse Comitatus, https://perrinlovett.wordpress.com/2013/02/20/posse-comitatus/. 

Ultimately, I will reach the conclusions that we need to abolish all control laws which are directed against private citizens, we need to return to the militia model of defense, we should abolish our standing armies (this is a rather unpopular idea, for all the wrong reasons), and we need to disband or disarm the most of the police forces in America.  Those remaining law enforcement officers which might survive should return to their Natural Law function – protecting the rights of the people, as opposed to carrying out the edicts of the state.  For now, I will concern myself with giving you a brief education about gun control in the United States.

Where did the idea of gun control come from?  I’m not sure when and where it first originated, though I have an idea the concept has been around longer than firearms themselves.  A few gun control advocates are earnestly interested in stopping crime and helping people.  Most are not. Essentially, the majority of gun controllers are the same breed of would-be tyrants who have plagued mankind for eons.  First I imagine they demanded rock control, then sword control and now, gun control.  It is really all a scheme to deprive people of their natural rights of self-defense and self-preservation.  Tyrants do not like armed people.  Armed people are dangerous to tyrants.  Personally, I like the idea of endangered tyrants.  Perhaps we could, in the near future, save a couple and place them on display at zoos.  To hell with the rest.  “When governments fear the people, there is liberty. When the people fear the government, there is tyranny.”  – Thomas Jefferson.

Gun control was present during the colonial period of American history.  White Europeans attempted to limit the availability of firearms to groups like slaves and native American indians.  Just before and during the Revolutionary War, the British attempted to disarm the entire rebellious population.  Their theory was that unarmed people would have a much harder time ousting the red-coat armies. 

Independent American gun control first began after the nation was freed of King George.  In early America gun control was first initiated in against blacks, both slaves and free men.  Racist tyrannical whites did not want the downtrodden slaves or free blacks to defend themselves.  Armed slaves might just free themselves, after all.  This process derived from various State laws which outright forbid blacks from owning guns.  The KKK was an early gun-control advocacy organization (a fomer-day Brady campaign, if you will).  The injustice was nominally cured by the Federal Civil Rights Act of 1866 and the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (1868).  I say nominally, because the States found clever ways to circumvent the new Acts.  The favored trick was to tax gun sales so as to price the poor (which usually included blacks) out of the gun market.  As I will demonstrate shortly, rather than stamp out this hideous policy, the feds later adopted it.

So far in our history gun control has only affected “undesirable” populations – slaves, blacks, and the poor.  In the late 19th Century New York City enacted a ban on the concealed carry of firearms by just about everyone.  This new law was designed to protect pick-pockets and thieves, key constituents of Tammany Hall and the Democrats of the city (birds of a feather…).  It seems Boss Tweed’s cronies got too many complaints from their thieving electorate about people with concealed weapons thwarting robberies.  As far as I know, this was the first color-blind ban on concealed weapons.  New York has ever been a nest of nobility.

In the early 20th Century most Americans (except blacks and the poor here and there) were free to own whatever type of weapons they both desired and could afford to purchase.  I have read the true statement that any child who wanted one and had the money to pay for it, could mail-order a Browning .50-caliber machine gun and have it delivered to their home.  Yet, mysteriously, there was little crime in this far away “wild west” America.  Crime seemed to come along later with heavy federal regulation of firearms.  Numerous studies have definitively linked the two. 

As I noted earlier, the federal government enacted legislation which imposed a tax and registration on the ownership of certain types of firearms.  This first occurred with the National Firearms Act (NFA) of 1934, 26 U.S.C. 53.  This law was part of the overall scheme to deprive Americans of fundamental civil liberties.  I have previously noted the dread year of 1913, with the creation of the Federal Reserve and the ratification of the 16th and 17th Amendments.  Like plantation slaves, tax slaves with weapons pose a risk to their masters.  Americans may have seen a rise in violent crime through the 20th Century because their “leaders” emulated the gun laws of well-known criminals. 

“The most foolish mistake we could possibly make would be to allow the subject races to possess arms.”  – Adolph Hitler.

adolf-hitler

(Adolph Hitler, gun control proponent.  Google Images.)

On November 11, 1938 Hitler and his government enacted sweeping gun-control legislation, the Weapons Act of 1938.  This Act was aimed at a particular subject “race” – jews.  “Jews … are prohibited from acquiring, possessing, and carrying firearms and ammunition, as well as truncheons or stabbing weapons. Those now possessing weapons and ammunition are at once to turn them over to the local police authority.”  1938 Nazi Act, Section One.  The rest of the Act made possession of weapons by jews criminal, with proscribed punishments. 

On October 22, 1968 President Lyndon “Bane of Freedom” Johnson signed into law the National Gun Control Act (GCA) of 1968, 18 U.S.C. 44.  This Act imposed additional infringements on the ownership of guns.  It was allegedly imposed as a crime-fighting measure however, it was obviously intended to further limit the availability of weapons to the law-abiding members of society.  Crime exploded in tis aftermath.  Many scholars have properly analogized the GCA to the Nazi Act of 1938, with “Jews” being removed.  The GCA was also pushed into law by racists who wanted to further discriminate against blacks.  By this time, the bigots knew better than to simply switch the word “black” in place of “jew.”  The result was the same – more disarmed Americans.

Both the NFA and the GCA are policed by the Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (the AFT).  Both are blatant violations of the Second Amendment.  Every year, when not supplying military weapons to the Mexican drug cartels, the ATF wasted millions or billions of taxpayer dollars setting up sting operations in order to oppress otherwise innocent Americans through enforcement of these illegal laws.  I have represented several of these poor persons in court.

Of course, gun control has grown by leaps and bounds in and out of the federal government in the ensuing decades.  There has been a great deal of push-back against these laws, but the main pillars of disarmament still stand.  Things keep getting worse.  In 1986, arch-“conservative” Ronald Reagan signed into law a tax reform bill which, among other things, capped the supply of “class III” firearms.  Class III weapons are those such as fully automatic guns and destructive devises (military-grade weapons).  This, again, has had the effect of pricing these weapons beyond the means of most people.  It also deprives us access to modern weaponry.  It is virtually impossible to obtain a post-1986 weapon without spending hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars (one must become a dealer or a manufacturer to do so). 

Thus, Americans are denied access to the very weapons we need the most, those which can be effectively used to thwart government aggression, including mis-use of the standing army.  The Founders were on to something.

m4

(The Second Amendment is not about duck hunting.  Google Images.)

I could run on for another 1500 words or more with this subject.  Instead I will stop here and provide more information in my upcoming columns on the Second Amendment and related articles. In the meantime, do not heed the siren’s call for more gun controll, we need a good deal less.  Guns Up!

Friday Night News

01 Friday Mar 2013

Posted by perrinlovett in Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on Friday Night News

Just one post today – my Top Ten TV Shows of all time.  Check below this post.

I’m tired and a little sick, so this will be short.  I should go to bed but I have wood for a fire, a good cigar and some great ale.  Hmmmm.

The news:

No cave on THE SEQUESTER [getting old, I know…].  Barak “Not a Dictator” Obama rambled on for a while on this subject and others today.  I caught it on CNBC.  He seemed to talk but I could not get what he was saying.  Sounded like an adult from Charlie Brown.

The news is a bit dry today.  Family incomes and spending power have fallen to lows not seen since the 1950s and we continue to hemorrhage jobs overseas.  Not to worry, Michael Doomberg says the U.S. can just borrow forever.  He’s right; the Federal Reserve has set up a perpetual debt machine.  It won’t last forever, and when the S–t hits the fan it’s going to be bad, but for now they will keep buying treasuries like mad.  Really mad, insane.  Anyway, I’m tired.  Have a good weekend, my friends.

Perrin’s Top 10 Television Shows Of All Time

01 Friday Mar 2013

Posted by perrinlovett in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

This is a decidedly offbeat subject for me, but I’ve been in an offbeat mood all day.  I feel kind of sniffly and wobbly.  I suppose I have a case of Wobbly Sniffles. 

I don’t watch much television anymore.  In fact, I think it has been years and years since I last sat down intent on watching the tube.  My life is pretty exciting and I don’t feel the urge to watch someones else’s unfold according to a “reality” script.  Maybe TV has taken a turn for the worse these days.  Maybe I’m too busy.  Maybe it doesn’t matter.

On occasion I find my self watching a football game, golf tournament, or the “news.”  This is usually the result on walking into a room where a television is already on.  One sad thing: I haven’t seen most of my favorite shows in a while as most are now ancient history.  I don’t mean to show my age, but most of the following names are pretty old.  maybe you remember some of them.

1.  Sanford and Son, NBC, 1972 – 1977.

sanford

(Esther, you ugly!  Google Images.)

Sanford and Son is by far the greatest show in TV history.  It was just too funny.  If you don’t find Redd Foxx almost unbearably hilarious, there is something wrong with you.  For the younger crowd, this was a show about the misadventures of a nutty Watts junk-man and his down-to-earth son.  The supporting cast was amazing.  My favorite episode?  Every one in all seven seasons.  Okay, it may have been the episode where Fred’s newphew-in-law “stole” his money.  “YT!”  Or, it could be the lottery contest with no winner episode.  “The police!”  It was all of them.

2.  All in the Family, CBS, 1971 – 1979.

bunker davis kiss

(Funniest TV moment ever!  Google Images.)

Another show so “outrageous” it probably couldn’t be a pilot concept these days, All in the Family followed the hijinks of bigoted cab-driver Archie Bunker and his wacky family.  Archie was politically incorrect and proud of it!  He also got just about everything wrong, but his true good nature usually kept him straight in the end.  Favorite episode?  The Sammy Davis, Jr. kiss episode – possibly the single funniest moment in television history.

3.  This Old House, PBS, 1979 – Present.

norm

(Norm, Master Carpenter.  Self-described most popular Jewish carpenter since Jesus.  Google Images.)

Hey!  A PBS show.  I always loved watching the cast and crew renovate some old derelict of a house into a thing of impressive beauty.  Something about the productiveness and the incredible craftsmanship speaks to me.  This is the grand-daddy of all home improvement shows.  I will still watch new episodes if I get a chance.  They have some spin-offs too.

4. The Dukes of Hazzard, CBS, 1979 – 1985. 

daisy d

(Maybe I watched for Daisy.  Daisy…  Google Images.)

Yeeeeeeee – Haaaaaaaw!  What child didn’t love this show?  For a boy down South it was mandatory viewing.  Bubba Watson liked it so much, he bought the original General Lee (1st one from the pilot).  I wonder how many Chargers they destroyed jumping all those ponds.  The “outlaw” Duke boys were the heroes while the law, Sheriff Roscoe and Boss Hogg, were they (lovable) bad guys.  That doesn’t happen too often on film.  Show like this don’t happen much either.

5.  Sesame Street, PBS, 1969 – Present.

sesame-street

(The old 123 gang.  Google Images.)

Another PBS show and a kid’s show.  Friends, I’m talking about Sesame Street before the arrival of Elmo, the Destroyer.  The old show that you and I watched in the 70’s and early 80’s.  The old show featured grown-ups that acted like it and instilled values in the kids and muppets.  Favorite episode?  The Christmas special with Bert and Ernie and Mr. Hooper (Gift of the Magi).  Elmo and his thugs ruined the whole thing.  I used to watch it with my daughter.  Thank God she’s outgrown it!  Hooper must be rolling in his grave.

6.  The Jeffersons, CBS, 1975 – 1985.

The-Jeffersons

(I’ve had it up to here…  Google Images.)

The Jeffersons was a spin-off from All in the Family.  George and Louise (“Weezy”) Jefferson hit the big time thanks to George’s dry-cleaning business and move to Manhattan.  They used to be Archie’s neighbors.  The show lasted so long because it was genuinely funny, like Sanford and Family.  The character interaction was superb; the play between George and maid Florence was priceless.  Throw in the zany neighbors and you had a perfect show.

7.  Little House on the Prairie, NBC, 1974 – 1982.

little house

(Classic TV.  Google Images.)

Little House was the ultimate family show and Michael Landon’s finest work.  Landon played Charles Ingalls.  The show followed his adventures with his family in rural Minnesota during the 1870s and 1880s.  It highlighted the best qualities in human nature, every story came with a lesson.  The show also is one of the few to feature an active and positive Christian congregation.  It had dignified humor, humble “manly” characters, strong women, and precocious children.  It was America.

8.  Married With Children, Fox, 1987 – 1997.

bundy

(Al “Born Loser” Bundy.  Google Images.)

This show was as irreverent as Little House was pious.  It centered on the life of women’s shoe salesman and former high school football standout, Al Bundy, and his dysfunctional family.  Like Sanford and Family it was funnier than heck and as politically incorrect as conceivable.  Unlike most sit-coms, Married usually ended on a funny sour note with no lesson learned.  It was just pure entertainment.  Favorite episode?  Pete’s potato.

9.  Hee-Haw, CBS and syndication, 1969 – 1992.

hee-haw

(Pick’n n Grin’n.  Google Images.)

Hew Haw was a country-themed variety show which caught on with a national audience.  Set in fictional Cornfield County, it featured popular recording artists, comedy skits, and original hilarity not seen since.  Favorite episode?  All the “Where Oh Where” skits, especially with celebrities.  Just good, clean fun.

10.  ?

Did I mention I don’t watch a lot of TV?

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Perrin Lovett

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