Wednesday, June 30, 2010

The Weekly Sedition Returns to ABQ Ch.27

Starting Thursday, July 1st, at 8PM, The Weekly Sedition returns to Albuquerque Comcast Channel 27.

Your cordial host will be myself, Mike Blessing, with Bill Koehler behind the camera running the technical side of things.

NOTES
  1. Reposted —
    1. KCUF Media — Blogspot / Myspace / Xanga
    2. New Mexico Liberty / The BTPNM Blog / The LPNM Blog / Mike Blessing for State Representative

Friday, June 18, 2010

The 100-Word Challenge

Current mood: amused

New Mexico Turn Around posts a challenge for the rest of us
CHALLENGE: In 100 words suggest a solution for the economic mess toward which we head.

Oh, really?

Here's my response — let's see if I actually need the full 100 words . . .
  1. Cut spending across the board — no special handouts for anyone.
  2. Cut taxes across the board — no special breaks for anyone.
  3. Repeal regulations across the board — no special breaks for anyone.
  4. Repeal bad, wasteful laws across the board — no special breaks for anyone.
  5. Bring the troops home from Iraq, Afghanistan and everywhere else.
  6. Return to a sound money system (gold? silver?) for government transactions.
  7. Repeal legal tender laws.
  8. Repeal any law repugnant to the written U.S. Constitution or Bill of Rights.

I count 80 words.

And I dared to use That Word Which Shall Not Be Uttered In Contemporary Politics — "repeal" — not just once, but four times! Shame on me!

NOTES
  1. Reposted —
    1. KCUF Media — Myspace / Xanga / Blogspot
    2. The BTPNM Blog / The LPNM Blog / Mike Blessing for State Representative

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Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Tom Mullins -- Landmines on the (U.S.--Mexican) Border

Posted to Facebook
Way to go, Tom Mullins!

GOP House Candidate Tom Mullins: Consider Land Mines on Border with Mexico But NOT Canada (Audio)

Landmines on the border, to stop immigrants?

Here he attempts to clarify this a bit — Mullins clarifies land mines comment

Now he said in the KOB interview that he's not advocating this himself, but was suggested by someone he met on the campaign trail.

Still, if you go to the archived audio clip, it does sound at first as though Mullins himself is advocating this very sort of thing —

I think well they need to enforce the law. I actually have a couple of ideas and I received these ideas. We talk about a border fence, and really what we get down to is, it's very difficult to have a fence and have that work. But we have some low-cost, low-tech solutions, and I know it sounds crazy, but we used to have land mines. I know it sounds like a crazy thing, but if we wanted to stop, if we have an attack on the United States, if we have a nuclear attack and we find that they carried the nuclear weapon and the people that harmed us came across the border and we say we have got to secure the border, we could put land mines along the border. I know it sounds crazy, we could put up signs in 23 different languages if necessary . . . .

Now, later on in that clip, he does say that he doesn't actually want to use land mines, and that the National Labs can cook up another low-tech, low-cost means to secure the border, but come on now, how many millions will they spend on developing it?

Am I supposed to believe that some future Administration won't fall back upon the land-mine idea as just the sort of low-cost, low-tech solution? After all, back in 1996, we saw an 18-year-old boy (Esequiel Hernandez) who was herding goats, shot dead by a Marine Corps counter-drug patrol because of the .22-LR rifle that he carried. Between that, the whitewash and coverup investigation of the Waco Massacres of 28 February and 19 April 1993, and plenty of other incidents along those lines, why should anyone trust a Republican of the Lincoln-Roosevelt mold?

We saw just how well the Republican-majority U.S. House members exercised their oversight duties in 1998 looking into the Waco debacle, didn't we? They didn't dig too deeply simply because they knew that they would need the Democrats to return the favor and go easy on their Administrations' . . . indiscretions of using federal power. We saw some of those indiscretions from 2001 through 2009, first at Rainbow Farm, then Afghanistan, then Iraq, the USA-PATRIOT Act of 2001, etc., etc.

What really stymies me is that the clown clique behind Mullins [1] keeps pushing the idea that things will improve "when our people take the reins of power."

The fact remains that they had those reins of power in the Congress from 1995 until 2007, and in the White House from 2001 until 2009. How much did they actually shrink the reach and intrusiveness of Washington DC? How much did they lessen the costs of Washington DC upon us?

NOTES
  1. I know that Mullins says that he's not part of the GOP Machine, but is the gear in your wind-up alarm clock cognizant of the other gears in the clock, and the other parts that make the hands go around, the alarm go off, and such?
  2. Reposted —
    1. Personal blogs — Blogspot / Myspace / New Mexico Liberty / Tumblr / Wordpress

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Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Upcoming Events for Summer 2010



Thursday, June 3, 6-8 PM: The Libertarian Party of New Mexico hosts Albuquerque Liberty Forum at Fiesta's Restaurant and Cantina (Carlisle & Montgomery NE). Contact Mike Blessing for details — lpbcnm@gmail.com / 505-515-7015



Saturday, June 5 and Sunday, June 6: Gun Show at the Manuel Lujan Building at the Expo NM complex. Enter through the gate at Copper and San Pedro NE.



Tuesday, June 8, 5 PM: Friends of Capitalism hosts a debate between incumbent Attorney General Gary King and challenger Matthew Chandler at the Rio Chama Steakhouse in Santa Fe. Contact Jim McCaughey for details. Also see the Friends Of Capitalism website.



Sunday, June 13, 1-3 PM: Colloidal Silver Antibiotic Class in Albuquerque. Contact Milt Cumiford for more information.



Wednesday, June 16, 5-7 PM: The Rio Grande Foundation hosts Liberty on the Rocks in Santa Fe at the Rio Chama Steakhouse. The guest speaker will be Jim Scarantino of New Mexico Watchdog.



Thursday, June 17, 5-7 PM: The Rio Grande Foundation hosts Liberty on the Rocks in Albuquerque at the Chama River Brewing Company. The guest speaker will be Rob Nikolewski, who will be taking over Capitol Report New Mexico.



Friday, June 18, 12 PM: The Rio Grande Foundation hosts it second annual Lights of Liberty luncheon. This year's featured speaker will be Deroy Murdock of National Review Online.



Saturday, June 26, 1-4 PM: Coordinated National Screening of Don't Tread On Me! Rise of the Republic. Contact Elisheva Levin for more information. Popcorn provided!



Tuesday, June 29, 5-7 PM: The Rio Grande Foundation hosts Liberty on the Rocks in Las Cruces at the Cattle Baron Steak & Seafood Restaurant on the 4th Tuesday of every month. Guest speaker TBA. The Cattle Baron will offer happy hour prices and a full menu for food selection.



Thursday, July 1, 6-8 PM: The Libertarian Party of New Mexico hosts Albuquerque Liberty Forum at Fiesta's Restaurant and Cantina (Carlisle & Montgomery NE). Contact Mike Blessing for details — lpbcnm@gmail.com / 505-515-7015



Thursday, July 1 / 8 / 15 / 22 / 29, 8-9 PM: The Weekly Sedition will be on Albuquerque Comcast Channel 27, hosted by Mike Blessing. For those that don't have ABQ Comcast, the show can be viewed via streaming video on the Channel 27 site (requires MS Media Player!).



Sunday, July 4, 2 PM — whenever: July 4 Cookout. Contact Elisheva Levin for more info. Burgers, hot dogs and lemonade provided. Bring side dishes, desserts, and other drinks to share. NO FIREWORKS ALLOWED due to proximity to the National Forest.



Saturday, July 10 and Sunday, July 11: Pistol Class in Farmington by Cope Reynolds. Contact Milt Cumiford for registration papers and more info.



Wednesday, July 28, Thursday, July 29, and Friday, July 30: The Rio Grande Foundation hosts Dr. Matt Ladner, Vice President of Research at the Goldwater Institute in Arizona for a presentation of "Turning Around New Mexico's Public Schools — The Florida Model" in Albuquerque, Las Cruces and Santa Fe.



Thursday, August 5, 6-8 PM: The Libertarian Party of New Mexico hosts Albuquerque Liberty Forum at Fiesta's Restaurant and Cantina (Carlisle & Montgomery NE). Contact Mike Blessing for details — lpbcnm@gmail.com / 505-515-7015



Thursday, August 5 / 12 / 19 / 26, 8-9 PM: The Weekly Sedition will be on Albuquerque Comcast Channel 27, hosted by Mike Blessing. For those that don't have ABQ Comcast, the show can be viewed via streaming video on the Channel 27 site (requires MS Media Player!).



Thursday, September 2, 6-8 PM: The Libertarian Party of New Mexico hosts Albuquerque Liberty Forum at Fiesta's Restaurant and Cantina (Carlisle & Montgomery NE). Contact Mike Blessing for details — lpbcnm@gmail.com / 505-515-7015



Thursday, September 2 / 9 / 16 / 23 / 30, 8-9 PM: The Weekly Sedition will be on Albuquerque Comcast Channel 27, hosted by Mike Blessing. For those that don't have ABQ Comcast, the show can be viewed via streaming video on the Channel 27 site (requires MS Media Player!).

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Monday, May 31, 2010

Thoughts on the Debate from the Peanut Gallery


Current mood: amused



On Thursday, 20 May 2010, I attended the debate between Republican gubernatorial candidates at UNM's Rodey Hall in the Popejoy Arts Center. The debate was hosted by Channel 4 (KOB-TV), the local NBC affiliate, and sponsored by the Rio Grande Foundation. The hour-long forum was moderated by Nicole Brady and Tom Joles.



Don't take my word for any of what I've typed below. Here's the video of the debate — click here to see for yourself.



First, a disclaimer — I'm a Libertarian and a libertarian, so my presence was mostly for entertainment purposes. I haven't considered myself a conservative for 14 years now, and I'm not in any hurry to revert to doing so. For the most part, this debate simply confirmed what I was already thinking about the candidates.



After the candidates took their spots and gave their opening statements, the fun began.



All of the candidates hit on some common themes throughout the hour —

  • They all cited corruption (pay-to-play, backroom / insider deals, etc.) as one of the State's main problems. Can't disagree there.

  • It sounded (at least to me) that all of them wanted to drastically cut, if not shut down, the elephante blanco known as the RailRunner, citing fiscal irresponsibility as another big problem in State government. Again, can't disagree there.

  • Each of them said they wanted the State to adopt a more pro-business attitude — be friendlier towards the private sector, in other words.

  • Secure the borders, with the National Guard if Obama won't reinforce the Border Patrol.





Pete Domenici Jr. stayed on track for what he wanted to say and didn't get involved in sniping at the others. Still, he pointed out his family connection to New Mexico, which is something I expect to see from Democrats. Not saying that's bad per se, but given the former Senator's fiscal wimpiness and apparent closeness to the Busheviks . . . .



Janice Arnold-Jones disappointed me a bit. Bob Cornelius told me that Arnold-Jones came across strongly, and I would disagree a bit — she seemed a bit frazzled at times, especially during the Weh-Martinez sniping, as Weh took a potshot at her, too. That, and as a legislator, she has done her share of citing "emergency circumstances" as the reason that public project funding is necessary. Sorry, but the word "emergency" to me means someone got hurt or could get hurt, lots of police cars, fire trucks and ambulances with their lights and sirens going full blast. Whether some community center gets built in the next decade does NOT to me constitute any sort of emergency.



Allen Weh provided some comic relief for the libertarian-minded in the audience, with his pissy complaints insider deals within the GOP, and the attack adverts ran against him by the Martinez campaign. Poor boy Allen! I still remember reading how in 2008, when he was the GOPNM's State Chairman, he ruled the Ron Paul delegates to their State Convention in Las Cruces as being "out of order," saying that "We don't operate by Robert's Rules but by pleasure of the chair." Aside from that, just a typical Republican, promising tax cuts and spending cuts.



Also from Weh —

  • "Everybody hungers for leadership — leadership with integrity"

  • On the issue of using military force to secure the border — "No one understands the operational issues like I do . . . ."




Susana Martinez is the front-runner in this race, and according to some sources, the Anointed one by the GOPNM insiders. Still, she doesn't seem to be taking this race for granted, considering that the same person I got the link in the last sentence from also said that the reason that Susana is running as a Republican is that she lost the primary as a Democrat the last time and switched affiliations to avoid losing power. Bad, BAD sign there, if true. Of all of the candidates, Martinez harped on the border "issue" the most[1], taking a potshot at Weh for his previous support of a guest-worker program[2].



Doug Turner came across as the clear winner, at least to me, and also to a (non-scientific) online poll of viewers by KOB staff. He deviates from the libertarian party-line with his support for an expanded Drug Prohibition and closing the border. Still, he stayed above the Weh-Martinez pissing contest during the debate, and throughout the campaign. Still, he did say to me, "I'm a libertarian," when all of the other candidates would have blown off the very idea of libertarianism, even if I had explained how the Non-Aggression Principle doesn't disallow the defensive use of force.



After the debate, I met Lance and Patrick from the local Ron Paul Campaign for Liberty group. Patrick was verbally arguing with some of the Weh supporters, who allegedly had gotten belligerent with him over his "NO WEH" sign. Leaving UNM property, we met again at the Nob Hill Bar and Grill, where Doug Turner was partying with his supporters.



Finally, a good note — the guy directly in front of me was wearing a M1911-style pistol on his belt in open-carry mode. Good for him! Though I am surprised that no one in the audience called UNMPD out to have him "proned out" facedown and cuffed for "violating UNM policy" and such.


NOTES

  1. Susana seems to be operating under the assumption that EVERY person crossing the border sans approval from the Imperial Washington DC imbecilocracy is intent upon robbery, assault, kidnapping, rape and murder, when the exact opposite seems to be true.

  2. As I was exiting Rodey Hall, one of Martinez's supporters handed me a text-only reprint of an Albuquerque Journal op-ed piece dated 3 October 2007, allegedly by Allen Weh, citing support for some sort of guest-worker program.

  3. Original posting




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Clarke and Dawes on the 2010 EuroCollapse


Current mood: amused






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Clarke and Dawes on the 2010 EuroCollapse


Current mood: amused





H/T to Allen Cogbill for posting a link to this clip.


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Saturday, May 22, 2010

Skipping on Horowitz


Current mood: cynical



I've been getting repeated emails from the Albuquerque Tea Party reminding me about the upcoming speech, dinner and book-signing by anti-libertarian neo-con David Horowitz:

Click the picture for the full-size version


Some examples of his potshots at Ron Paul in particular and libertarians generally in the past few years —



David Horowitz: "Ron Paul...is a Disgrace"

David Horowitz and a Guided Tour of the “Ron Paul Revolutionary” Mind



Check out this video clip from the Glenn Beck Show from 2007 —



The gems from that video clip —
". . . strain of isolation and anarchy in the American tradition which Ron Paul is tapping into


Washington and Jefferson weren't isolationists, they were non-interventionists, and there IS a difference, despite comments to the contrary from the neo-cons:
Friendship and commerce with all, entangling alliances with none.


Here's the part that really sets me off — I see NO evidence from Horowitz that he's changed from this tune in the past three years:

". . . plenty of unfortunately libertarian websites indistinguishable from the anti-American left — lewrockwell.com and others like that . . . totally in bed with the Islamofascists and turned against this country"


In addition, Horowitz seems to me to be the neo-con version of Morris Dees of the Southern Poverty Law Center, headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama.



What Dees (allegedly) does is pick out some Aryan Airhead, then portray that idiot as being ready to take over Washington DC — "but YOU can stop this with your donation! And buy my book, too!" Dees also has a habit of smearing anyone in the militia movement, tax honesty movement, etc., etc., who's ever come into contact with the Airhead. It doesn't seem to matter that said Aryan was kicked out of the militia meeting immediately after showing his "SS" runes tattoo to the membership. It also doesn't matter that the Aryan has no actual hope of gaining any sort of political power over anyone than other Aryan Airheads in their little (infiltrated with federal agents through and through) group.



Horowitz appears to do the same sort of thing where the Islamists are concerned — portray them as just a few steps away from carrying out their dreams of making sharia (Islamic religious law) the core of the American legal system — "but YOU can stop this with your donation! And buy my book, too!" Never mind that, like the Aryan Airheads, the sharia pushers have little to no chance of gaining any sort of actual power in America.



As with the Aryan Airheads, the best answer to the Islamists is to respond with better speech. I prefer to tell them that there's nothing stopping them as individuals from setting the example for the rest of us, and adhering to the tenets of sharia personally. If they want to make it into American law, there's an amendment process all spelled out for them in the Constitution. Until they get 2/3 of the House, 2/3 of the Senate and 3/4 of the State legislatures, it's a no-go[1]. If they choose the Hamas / al-Qaeda route (suicide bombers, etc.), I look forward to taking corrective action via the Second Amendment.



So what is Horowitz's answer to the prospect of Islamic terrorism here in America? Does he invoke the right of private citizens to own and carry weapons? Nope — for him, it's a reason to expand the reach of Imperial Washington DC, with police-state agencies (DHS, for example) on the domestic side and long-term occupations of other countries for the foreign-policy side.



So Horowitz might have left Marxism back in the 1970's, but I suspect that Marxism never truly left him.



So I'm going to skip seeing Horowitz when he shows up here in Albuquerque tonight — why pay Ø60 to hear this sort of thing when I can get it for free over the net?[2]





NOTES

  1. Not that this seems to be stopping the Congress lately on anything else.

  2. My attending this event would be a double-hit on me financially — not only would I be out the Ø60, but I'd ahve to take a day off to attend, and thus come up short on next week's paycheck.




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Friday, May 21, 2010

Zbigniew Brzezinski -- People are Politically Awake Now





Aww, poor Ziggy — now he and his ilk actually have to be up front with us about their plans for us. The horror of it all!


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Thursday, May 20, 2010

Armed Citizens in New Mexico, 1959-1979

Current mood: pleased
  1. The Tribune, Albuquerque, NM, 7/10/79 / American Rifleman Issue: 10/1/1979

    When two men entered an Albuquerque, N. Mex., convenience store demanding money, night clerk Reno Petrucci thought they were joking. One of the thugs, however, punched Petrucci and two companions. At that, Petrucci pulled a .38 and held the assailant until police arrived; the second man fled the scene.
  2. The Journal, Albuquerque, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 9/1/1979

    The man who held up an Albuquerque, N.M., food store, got a rude surprise. As he approached the fourth checkstand, he found himself face to face with a lady shopper holding a .25 cal. automatic. To enforce her demand that he put down his gun and surrender, the woman told him that she was an undercover policewoman. With that, the thief gave in, dropped his revolver and waited patiently at gunpoint until the real police arrived to make the arrest. Albuquerque police have since offered the housewife a position on the city force.
  3. The Tribune, Albuquerque, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 3/1/1978

    Albuquerque, N. Mex., pharmacist Ron Bunt was in his drugstore when two armed robbers entered and demanded narcotics. Bunt filled a small bag with the drugs and handed it to one of the pair, then pulled a cal. .25 pistol and shot one of the thugs to death. The other fled and is being sought by police.
  4. The News-Journal, Clovis, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 11/1/1977

    Mrs. Cleo Ainsworth saw two young thugs attack her husband outside their farmhouse near rural Dora, N.M. After calling for help, she got her husband's pistol and fired a warning shot. The men fled.
  5. The Tribune, Albuquerque, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 10/1/1977

    When a young robber entered his Albuquerque, N. Mex., pharmacy and demanded narcotics, Delbert Swindle drew a pistol instead and held the man for police.
  6. The Albuquerque Journal, Albuquerque, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 7/1/1976

    Two men, one armed with a knife, entered Sidney McQueen's Albuquerque, N.M., gun shop, grabbed up some firearms and then bolted for the front door. But one of the thugs turned and pointed a gun at McQueen. The shop owner fired first, killing one robber and wounding the second.
  7. The Alamogordo Daily News, Alamogordo, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 9/1/1974

    Awakened by the sounds of a prowler in her Alamogordo, N. Mex., home, Mrs. Teresa Middlestead got her husband's shotgun from the bedroom closet and shouted down the hallway, "I've got a gun." Although Mrs. Middlestead didn't see the intruder, she heard him dash through the kitchen and out the front door. Nothing was stolen.
  8. The Albuquerque Journal, Albuquerque, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 9/1/1974

    Three youths, one armed with a knife, walked into Mike Seargent's Albuquerque, N. Mex., store intent on robbery. Seargent noticed that the knife was apparently their only weapon, so he took his gun from beside the cash register and held the thieves at bay until police arrived.
  9. The Albuquerque Journal, Albuquerque, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 5/1/1974

    As he walked his dog near an Albuquerque, N. Mex., apartment development late one night, E.K. Van Aernam and his sister were stopped by two robbers, one armed with a pistol. Van Aernam clutched a handgun in his coat pocket and asked the armed man to "put his gun away." When the attacker refused, Van Aernam slapped the assailant's gun downward and fired six shots at the thugs through his pocket. The men fled, one of them possibly wounded.
  10. Hobbs Daily News-Sun, Hobbs, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 6/1/1973

    A man began pounding on the front door of Evelyn Burkey's Hobbs, N. Mex., home and refused to identify himself or say what he wanted. When he started pounding on the back door, Mrs. Burkey got a small revolver and threatened to "blow his head off." At this the prowler dove over a back fence and disappeared.
  11. The Albuquerque Journal, Albuquerque, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 2/1/1973

    Spotting two suspicious men wandering around his Albuquerque, N. Mex., drugstore, owner Carl De Alderete kept a close watch on the pair. When one man reached for a gun, De Alderete drew his own first. One suspect escaped, but the storeowner held the second for police who took the would-be robber's gun in evidence.
  12. Aztec Independent Review, Aztec, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 1/1/1973

    Brian Blacklock, an Aztec, N. Mex., pharmacist, was working late in his store when a rock smashed through the skylight above him. Blacklock ran outside, got a rifle from his car, and ordered the man on the roof to come down. Police arrived and arrested the rock thrower, along with his less-than-successful lookout man.
  13. Tribune, Albuquerque, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 7/1/1967

    When 3 men pounded on his back door, laundry owner James Self, Albuquerque, N. Mex., answered and found himself confronted by a robber holding a .410-bore shotgun. Dropping to the floor, he fired a shot from his .22 revolver. The trio fled. Police later got a hospital call — "man with a gunshot wound" — and arrested the wounded man and 2 accomplices on charges of attempted robbery.
  14. Tribune, Albuquerque, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 11/1/1961

    Armed with a cal. .22 revolver, a thief three months out of prison after serving a 10-year term for armed robbery, entered John Waldrick's Albuquerque, N. Mex., store, forced Waldrick to hand over his wallet and empty the cash register. As the robber reached the door, Waldrick drew his own weapon and felled him.
  15. Journal, Albuquerque, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 12/1/1959

    Thomas H. Myrick was in the back room of his Albuquerque, N. Mex., liquor store when he heard his wife pleading with a holdup man rifling the register. Myrick rushed out with shotgun in hand. As the bandit fled, Myrick fired 4 blasts over his head. When police arrived, they found Myrick standing over the bandit who cowered on the ground, his pistol and robbery loot beside him.
  16. The New Mexican, Santa Fe, NM / American Rifleman Issue: 7/1/1959

    In Tierra Amarilla, N. Mex., shopkeeper Albert Wheeler called on neighbor Jack Taylor to cover the front when the intercom alarm rang in the store owner's bedroom. Wheeler went to the rear office where he surprised an armed burglar who attempted to escape. Neighbor Taylor's 12-ga. shotgun dropped him near the door.


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Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Ronnie James Dio, RIP (1942-2010)


At about 7:45 AM on Sunday, 16 May 2010, we lost one of the good guys:
"Today my heart is broken, Ronnie passed away at 7:45am 16th May. Many, many friends and family were able to say their private good-byes before he peacefully passed away. Ronnie knew how much he was loved by all. We so appreciate the love and support that you have all given us. Please give us a few days of privacy to deal with this terrible loss. Please know he loved you all and his music will live on forever."