Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Xavier is a Registered Nurse who specialized in complex wound care. He has practiced for over fourteen years in his community. He often provided nursing service in areas where law enforcement refused to enter without back-up. Xavier now works in surgery. Xavier has been an avid shooter for over 30 years. He strongly supports the 2nd Amendment, opposes gun control of any sort, and carries a weapon 24 hours a day. Xavier is known on various internet gun forums as XavierBreath. He is married with three children, and is moderated by an apathetic one eyed cat, a goofy Golden Retriever, and a stalwart German Shepherd Dog. One day, he hopes to be deserving of them all.
Domari Nolo
Xavier can still be emailed at
treatmewithbenignneglect@gmail.com
He might read your email.
He might delete it on sight.
He might publish it and comment on it.
The Four Rules
1. All firearms are always loaded
2. Never let the muzzle of a firearm point at anything you are not willing to destroy
3. Keep your finger off the trigger until you are ready to shoot
4. Be sure of your target and what lies beyond it
The Five Rules of Concealed Carry
1. Your concealed handgun is for protection of life only.
2. Know exactly when you can use your gun.
3. If you can run away -- RUN!
4. Display your gun, be prepared to go to jail.
5. Don't let your emotions get the best of you.
Gunnie Type Blogs
& Links
-
U.S. Concealed Carry Assoc.
Open Carry.org
The Cornered Cat
Learn About Guns
No Nonsense Self Defense
Armchair Gun Show
Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
Massad Ayoob
Pistol Training.com
Listening to Katrina
Civilian Gun Self-Defense
Front Sight, Press
Revolver Liberation Alliance
Women of Caliber
Sharp as a Marble
View From The Porch
Home on the Range
CarteachO
The Drawn Cutlass
3 Boxes of BS
Oleg Volk
The Thinking Gunfighter
The Lawdog Files
Gun Nuts Media
Expert Witness
Mauser Girl
Gunning and Strumming
The Firearm Blog
N.U.G.U.N.
Squeaky Wheel
The Munchkin Wrangler
Fatal Abstraction
Better And Better
Mauser Medic
The Armed School Teacher
Cowtown Cop
Legally Armed In Detroit
Guns, Crime and Videotape
AnarchAngel
Bloggo
From the Barrel of a Gun
The Shootist
A Keyboard and a .45
Politics, Guns & Beer
Kingside Rook
TFS Magnum
Pretty Pistolera
Gun Pundit
Bayou Renaissance Man
Firearm Fun
Boomers & BS
Armed and Safe
Thoran's Thoughts
Gunner's Journal
Monster Hunter Nation
Curses! Foiled Again!
Alphecca
Women of Caliber
Guns Holsters & Gear
Mr.Completely
Roberta X
Days of our Trailers
Wasted Electrons
Cogito Ergo Geek
The Breda Fallacy
7 Plus 8
Poet n The Pawnbroker
The Real Gun Guys
John Lott's Website
Hell in a Handbasket
Michael Bane
10 Ring
Live from the (upper) Texas Gulf Coast
Geek With A .45
Nursing Type Blogs
+ A Few Docs
Weird Nursing TalesNurse William
Nurse Ratched's Place
Scalpel or Sword?
Pink Warm Dry
Float Floor RN
White Coat Rants
Dust In The Wind
Musings of a Highly Trained Monkey
GuitarGirl RN
Donorcycle
Grunt Doc
Nursing School Insanity
White Coat Underground
Surgeon's Blog
Crass-Pollination
Cut To Cure
Backboards and Band-Aids
Code Blog
Street Watch
Pixel RN
Brain Scramble
Mostly True Stories
Nursing Zen
Angry Nurse
Hot Medical News
Podunk Memorial
March of the Platypi
Medicated Musings
10 Out Of 10
Ambulance Driver
Too Old To Work, Too Young to Retire
Rogue Medic
I Just Call It As I See It
Bicycling Blogs and Sites
Transportational BicyclingBike Hacks
Paul Dorn's Bike Commuting Tips
Classic Rendezvous
Cyclelicious
Sheldon Brown
Jim Langley
Bike Commuters
Commute by Bike
Bike Snob
The Well Run Dry
Lunatic Biker
Old Bike Blog
Sixty-one Sixty
Austin Bike Blog
Ghost Bike
Bike Whenever
Velocipede
The Slow Bicycle Movement
Amsterdamize
Lock Your Bike
Old Rusty Bike
2whls3spds
Chic Cyclist
Velocipete
63xc
Spokes of a Wheel
Bicycling New Orleans
What I Saw Riding my Bike around Today
Velo-Orange
3 Speed Blog
Bikes for the Rest of Us
Alien Bikes
The Bike Geek
Old Ten Speed Gallery
Fixed Gear Gallery
Cyclofiend
Bike Rubbish
Bicycle Design
Bike of Doom
Bike Jax
Industry Outsider
Fat Cyclist
Rogue Mechanic
The Accidental Athlete
Clever Cycles
Copenhagen Cycle Chic
Bike Drool
Grease Monkey
How To Fix Bikes
Bike Fix
Montreal Freak Bike Militia
Freakbike Nation
Bicycle Tutor
Vintage Life Cycles
Where Was My Bike Made?
Yehuda Moon
National Weather Service
Photography Blogs and Sites
Ken RockwellThom Hogan
Peter Van Nugteren
Lighten Up & Shoot
Vivian Maier
Steve McCurry
Eric Meola
Richard Avedon
Joyce Tenneson
Joe McNally
Edward P. Richards
Roger Clark
Zack Arias
Neil Van Niekerk
Laurin Rinder
Marty Kittrell
Bjorn Rorslett
Michael Fatali
Oleg Volk
Scott Kelby
Dave Black
kelco
Jack Heinemann
Russ Morris
Richard de Stoutz Nikon Collection
Tinker and Wander
Through the Viewfinder
Digital Howie Photoworks
Shutter Fug
Reactuate
50% Chance of Rain
And Then Came the Shot
Strobist
2 Point 8
Stuck in Customs
Stupid Photographer
Digital SLR and Lens Review
Weegee's World
Tokyo Camera Style
Holga Mods.com
1x.com
Studio Lighting.net
Enticing the Light
TimeCatcher
The Online Photographer
Photodoto
Collectible Cameras
The Living Image
Old Cameras
Michael C Liu's
Photoaxe.com
Field Cameras of the United States
Holga
Michael C Liu's
Nikon & Nikkors Resources
Camerapedia
The Photographer's Right (pdf)
Digital Photography School
Other Blogs I Like
The ConsumeristPost Secret
Bent Objects
“Unnecessary” Quotation Marks
Astronomy Pic of the Day
Steampunk
Mental Floss
Gawker
Photo Basement
Dark Roasted Blend
Oobject
Knutz
Life Hacker
Geekologie
Today's Big Thing
Deal Hack
2 Spyware.com
1-800 Numbers
Ilsa's Favorites
Lagniappe's LairAbby K9
ARDA
Schwartze-Hunden
GSD Club of America
Purina
Specific Archives
Idiots with Guns
Range Reports
Self Defense
NOLA Confiscation Video
Patricia Konie Video
Ashton O'Dwyer Video
The Untold Story of Gun Confiscation After Katrina
11 Comments:
it's SAD when the judge knows more about photography than the "professional."
Ok, I've got mixed emotions about this one. I'm a "Professional" Photographer due to the fact that I advertise, and accept payment for my services. I use "entry Level" equipment for some of my shots. Cannon XTI being one of the cameras used, along with an aging 10d. I don't feel that the equipment defines the photographer. As he said, he could take a brownie and get a good shot. You get a certain quality with cheap equipment that differs from "professional" equipment. Yea we'd all like a mark 1 but, I like to eat too. Skill, knowledge, and artistic ability figure into it too. I've seen some really lousy work from professionals who had top of the line equipment. Anyway I think the judge was off base on a lot of what he said, but I also think that the photographer was pretty entry level. She seemed ignorant of the equipment, and the settings used. I think we have lost a lot of the knowledge because the cameras do all the work for us.
Wow, what a disaster! OK, folks, lesson learned? A Canon Rebel + Walmart developing is NOT worth $1300! (And, Judge knows a little about photography!)
Well, Judge Brown is not a show that I would normally watch, but that there was pretty funny. Just goes to show what can happen when the judge actually knows more about the subject matter than the defendant.
Here goes ...
Don't piss off the judge.
Don't insinuate that the judge is too old and out of date.
Don't piss off the judge.
Don't use cheap equipment and materials and call it professional.
Don't piss off the judge.
I imagine that applies to more than Judge Brown.
Lots of lessons, here, X.
Regards.
So if it is "a poor workman who blames his tools". Apparently there is now some judicial precedent for that poor workman. I don't know about you but I would hire by artistry, not gear bag. Poor Def, never got a word in edgewise. I wonder if she had a valid defense?!? Good bet those negatives are now burned.
It was over the second they didn't know their lens. I know that my Canon S70 (a point/shoot) had a 28-100mm f2.8-5.x lens 3 years after it was stolen.
Judge Brown is the typical camera equipment hobbyist. He's got all the marketing material front-to-back, but since he makes his living behind the bench, there's really no proof at all that he's a "photographer".
At least one sane opinion has prevailed:
http://www.lighting-essentials.com/throwing-other-photographers-under-the-bus-may-be-great-fun-but-is-it-a-good-thing/
To our host, I apologize for this bit of negativity, but there's a pervasive cliquishness in the camera hobbyist community, where purchasing the "right" equipment indicates your status in the group.
TJ,
That's kind of what I was thinking. We all seem to enjoy watching a smack down, but heck, I use not one, but TWO obsolete Nikon D200s. I shoot with other obsolete equipment, albeit the equipment was top of the line in it's day. I'm a firm believer that equipment doesn't matter, that good equipment just gets out of your way. However, judging by the few shots I saw on the video, I'm thinking a relative of the couple could have done as well. The problem was not lack of equipment, it was lack of vision. Still, I have to agree with the article you cited.
That's why I don't and won't shoot weddings, Bar Mitzvahs or senior portraits for pay. I simply don't feel I can please those who ask.
I have my Uncle as a good bad example of this. He used daylight flash bulbs and tungsten film for my parent's wedding and my mother remembered this and held it against him for 50 years. She came out darker than an American Indian in Summer, and she has a coloration something like Kate Jackson!
That's why I refused to run the video camera for my friend at his wedding. Besides, I already paid some good money for a nice gift.
While I agree that you should hire the photographer and not the gear, any photographer who responds with, "I don't know," when asked about the speed of their lens simply isn't a competent professional. I can't help but find myself questioning the ethics (or, if we want to be more charitable, the self-awareness) of someone who advertises as a professional wedding photographer with only kit lenses. Without an f/2.8 option you're up one hell of a creek if the minister forbids flash (and many do). Sure you can push the ISO to 3200 or beyond and you might get passable 8x10s if you don't need to make any exposure adjustments, but it's ridiculously limiting.
More importantly, however, is that _none of that matters at all_. From a purely legal standpoint, this seems like an open and shut case of caveat emptor and the "judge's" ranting was unwarranted. In any real courtroom the question would simply have been whether the photos of this particular wedding were of comparable quality to the photos offered by the photographer as a portfolio prior to being hired for the wedding. Frankly, I sincerely doubt that the photos in question were any worse than the photos seen by the plaintiff prior to hiring the photographer. For this reason, the "judge's" ruling was, strictly speaking, legally incorrect.
The fact that the ruling is legally incorrect takes us into an important tangential area though: "Judge" Joe Brown is not an acting judge. While Joe Brown does hold a law degree and was formerly a judge, he is not currently a judge and the show does not depict a courtroom. The show is actually a form of binding arbitration in which both the defendant and plaintiff waive their right to pursue the matter in actual courts and agree to abide by the "judge's" ruling. As with other shows of this ilk (e.g. Judge Judy), the "award" is paid out of the show's budget (except in cases where disputed property is under consideration, in which case the disputed property must be returned).
Because of this, the show is effectively a "risk-free" venue for defendants; even if they "lose" the "case", the monetary judgment is not coming out of their own pockets. On top of this, both parties typically receive a small payment (~$100) and a per-diem along with having travel and hotel expenses paid by the show as well. Mr. Brown knows this, and is therefore free to play to the gallery and ignore reasoned argument for the sake of ratings without worrying about unduly burdening a defendant though his choice of theatrically-harsh judgments.
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