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Friday, February 27, 2026

Why Do They Lie To Us? Native American Enslavement

I read a piece published by the New Yorker yesterday, February 26, entitled "The Hidden History of Native American Enslavement" by Geraldo Cadava.  While the facts set out in the piece may be correct, the article overall is a deception because it gives the impression that only Europeans (it focuses on the Spanish) were involved in the enslaving of Native Americans with no mention of the various Native American tribes involved in the slave trade; particularly the Comanche that built a powerful empire based on slavery, the horse trade, and trade in firearms. The article also fails to mention the efforts by the Catholic Church and Spanish authorities to purchase enslaved Native Americans from the Comanche and free them. 

VIDEO: The P38 Can Opener

I don't know if the military still issues the P38, but it was issued to troops through WWII and up into the 1980s at least. They are ubiquitous in Army surplus stores. And they are cheap. Preppers like to keep them stashed in kits and with food stores. Campers will often have them around as well. I keep a few in my kitchen as a backup should our regular can opener break. This video gives a bit of history on the P38, shows how to use them to open cans and how they can be pressed into a few other duties as well. 

 VIDEO: "Not JUST a can opener…| How to use a P38"
Echoes Of The Past (5 min.)

Kristi Noem Stumbles On A Deep State Intelligence Operation

Anonymous Conservative has some X posts from Kristi Noem, the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, that are interesting. AC sums it up:

Kristi Noem’s employee is walking by an unmarked door at DHS, and wonders what it is. They investigate and find it is a SCIF, and inside is a whole secret agency within the agency, with employees with top secret clearances, working on files nobody knew existed. Apparently the employees could not just explain what they were doing, so Noem had all the files seized and given to her lawyers to try and figure out what they were up to[.]

And a couple other X posts reveal that she had, with the help of Elon Musk, discovered spyware installed on her phone and computer by DHS staff. 

Magic Prepper: Things To Make Your AR Better

The Magic Prepper channel has some recommended modifications to a stock, bare-bone AR system. First, if your AR came with a standard A2 pistol grip, he recommends upgrading it something that has less of an angle. Second, is to upgrade the buffer system--assuming you are not running a rifle buffer system, he recommends going with an H2 buffer and a better spring. Third, he recommends a quality sling. Fourth, if you are planning on running a suppressor, that you replace your muzzle device with one offering a quick detach for the suppressor (otherwise stick with the A2 flash hider which is overall a good system). Finally, if you have the standard M4 adjustable stock (he calls it the "cheese grater" stock) he recommends that you upgrade it to one offering better features for attaching a sling, a rubber butt pad, and just a bit better quality.

    Magic Prepper has some suggestions as to brands and models, but there are plenty of choices out there. But these upgrades will just make the rifle easier and more comfortable to use.  

VIDEO: "The Best 5 AR-15 Upgrades Worth Doing"
Magic Prepper (14 min.)

Thursday, February 26, 2026

The Largest Pterosaur

 From Atlas Obscura: "Was ‘Dracula’ the Biggest Flying Creature Ever?" The article begins:

    “It’s just such an awesome image to think about: a giant flying dragon, essentially, coming down and preying on these dinosaurs,” says Ben Thomas, a paleontology graduate student at the University of Portsmouth, England. Earlier this year, Thomas released a video on his paleontology-themed YouTube channel about his visit to the Altmühltal Museum in Denkendorf, Germany. There, he spoke with paleontologist Nizar Ibrahim about one of the museum’s most remarkable specimens. It’s the fragmentary remains of a pterosaur—a flying reptile—that lived in Transylvania, Romania, 66 million years ago, and just might be the largest animal that has ever flown. Scientists have nicknamed it “Dracula.”

    The Altmühltal Museum displays a cast of Dracula’s remains, alongside a model skeleton and a life-sized statue of the creature. At an estimated 11.5 feet tall, with a wingspan of 37.4 to 39.4 feet, Dracula was comparable to a giraffe when standing, or a small airplane in flight. “Seeing it on the ground really gives you a proper sense of scale, that these were absolutely terrifying animals if you ever encountered them,” says Thomas. Members of the Azhdarchidae family of pterosaurs, to which Dracula belonged, are famous for their size, but “generally the accepted wingspan for all of the others is about 10 meters [32.8 feet] at most,” says Thomas, making Dracula a giant even among its relatives.

 Also:

    ... Some paleontologists theorize that pterosaurs launched themselves into flight from all fours, pushing off with their front limbs, a method not seen in any living creature.

    Thomas explains how pterosaur anatomy confirms the theory of “quad-launching.” While birds have enlarged muscles in their wings for flying and in their legs for launching, “with pterosaurs, you have that all sort of contained in one area” in the chest, he says. “It’s essentially a more mass-efficient way of taking off, which is presumably how they got so much bigger than birds.” 

Khyber Optics Mini Dot Optic (MDO)--Initial Impressions

Earlier this month, I happened across a review from the Tactical Hermit about the Khyber Optics Mini Dot Optic (MDO). I hadn't heard of the company before, but based on the Tactical Hermit's post and the website, it is related to NC Scout over at Brushbeater. It costs $199.99 and comes with a green reticle that can switch between a circle-dot, dot-only, or circle-only. I have a multi-reticle circle-dot from Holosun that I really like and that type of reticle has become my preference because it is quicker to pick up than a plain dot. 

    In any event, I was moving my Holosun HS515GM red dot to a different upper and was in the market for a new red dot. I had been looking at getting an inexpensive Holosun model for roughly the same price with similar features (i.e., green circle-dot reticle) to the Khyber MDO anyway, so I pulled the trigger, so to speak, and ordered the Khyber MDO. What tipped the scale for me on this one over the Holosun is that the Holosun model I was looking at has a small tray to hold the battery that uses a couple really small screws to hold it into place whereas this one has a large cap over the battery that can be unscrewed with a coin or regular flatheaded screwdriver, making it much easier to change batteries and less likely to lose critical parts. This model also had a significantly higher shock rating than the Holosun model. 

    I ordered it on a weekend, but the sight promptly shipped on the next business day which I appreciated and took roughly a week to reach me. (You would not believe the number of items I order where "shipping" just means that they printed the shipping label and then it sits for several days or more before it is actually shipped). The sight comes in a fairly sturdy padded plastic box (see below).

 

 

Inside was the optic with a large Khyber Optic logo on the top, already mounted on the higher riser; a battery; a lower riser for rifles or shotguns with traditional drop-comb stocks; a lens cleaning cloth; and a couple tools for mounting the optic on a Picatinny rail and adjusting the sights. There is also a small booklet with instructions and information on the optic tucked behind the foam padding in the lid. There is no cover for the optic. 


Here is a better view of the optic itself:


 

    As you can see from the photos, the optic is roughly 1.25 inches wide and about 2 inches long. 

    Although the website indicates that the optic is "IP67" I believe this might be a typo as the literature that came with the optic indicates that it is IPX7, meaning that it can withstand temporary immersion in water up to 1 meter (roughly 3.3 feet) for up to 30 minutes without sustaining damage. However, if the website is correct, a 6 rating for dust would be pretty good. 

    Many optics come with visible lens coatings, such as a ruby coating, for clarity and protection, but I could find nothing in the booklet about coatings and do not see any visible coating. I did note that looking through the optic that it can catch reflections of brightly lit objects from behind. 

    The controls work fairly well. To turn on the optic, you have to push and hold the + button for a few seconds. Pushing and holding the + button for a moment also allows you to cycle through the reticles. Pushing and holding the - button will turn off the optic. The + and - buttons will also increase or reduce the brightness of the reticle, respectively.

    Because it is  green reticle, it shows up better in bright light than a red reticle and does seem to work better for my slight astigmatism--red colored dots always seem to be slightly smeared in my vision rather than a crisp dot that most people see. The circle on this is much smaller than the Holosun circle-dot that I own. At first this bothered me, but then I realized that the circle was small enough to use by itself to aim the weapon. 

    Brightness is manually set only. I have a few other red dots that automatically adjust to brightness, but this is not one. It does, however, have a "shake-awake" feature that turns off the optic if it doesn't sense movement for roughly 220 seconds per the instructions. This feature is very sensitive. I had a hard time telling if mine was working correctly because just the vibration of opening the door to where it was stored or the vibration of footfalls was enough to light it up. I had to leave the door open and carefully walk up to it to spot whether the emitter had gone off. Whatever sensors it uses would be great for a perimeter alarm!

    The glow from the reticle or emitter is quite visible from the front of the optic. Khyber Optic lists a kill flash for the MDO, but it has been out of stock. If they get more in stock, however, I plan on picking one up. 

    I haven't had a chance to go out shooting and test this in the field. However, I did roughly zero it using the backup iron sights (which were already sighted in) and I have to say that the clicks for the adjustments were very solid and easily felt. 

    Now I just need to get something to keep dust off the optic. I've had to resort to baggy neoprene covers on a couple other optics, so that will probably be what I do on this one as well unless there is a tighter formed rubber cover that will fit.

True Prepper Offers Free E-Book Downloads

 From True Prepper: "Free Survival PDFs, Manuals, & Downloads." Sections or categories include military manuals (including survival guides and skills useful to preppers); survival and bushcraft skills; preparedness manuals for civilians; first aid; a couple books on specific threats like EMP and nuclear winter; surviving nuclear war; a variety of checklists; and a couple useful references on the military phonetic alphabet and testing whether a plant is edible. 

Wilder: Another Lesson On Indian Culture

In his post "Jugaad And The Mumbai Mafia," John Wilder teaches us some more about Indian culture.  And excerpt:

    “Jugaad is the dishonest and deliberate bending of the rules and laws to one’s favor. In India, such underhanded and self-serving behavior is celebrated, especially among the upper/middle classes. It can also mean ‘doing the bare minimum to get by’ which is why Indian coding, craftsmanship, etc., is so terrible.”

    Ouch.  Kicked straight in the Microsoft©.

    But we see jugaad continually exhibited by the Indians who have fled that paradise of the world’s largest trash mountain stunning Mumbai skyline and open sewage the Ganges. They cheat everyone at everything.  And when there are bunches of them, they cheat in organized groups that would make the Mafia blush. 

He also offers some thoughts on why they are so disliked even by the Left. One reason not listed but which is important is that they are moving into economic sectors that were historically dominated by another ethnic group. (See, e.g., "How Indian families took over the Antwerp diamond trade from orthodox Jews"--Quartz). 

Fool Me Twice... Schumer Proposes Another Amnesty For Illegals

The Post Millennial reports that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer wants to pursue an immigration bill that would guarantee citizenship for 11 million illegal immigrants currently living in the United States.

    Schumer made the remarks during an appearance on Morning Joe on MSNOW, where he was asked what kind of immigration agreement he hopes to advance in the Senate. He pointed to a 2013 “bipartisan” framework that had the support of then-Senator John McCain as a model.

    Schumer said that he would back a similar bill that “toughens up the border” while also providing a “path to citizenship” for “11 million people who are here.” He added that such a bill would also allow high-tech workers needed by industries to enter the country. 
 

We've been through this before. The Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) of 1986, signed by President Reagan, granted legal status to an estimated 3 million illegal aliens who had lived in the U.S. continuously since Jan. 1, 1982. As part of the deal for obtaining an amnesty, Democrats promised to increase border security and crack down on illegal immigration and the employers that hire them. The border security never materialized and the "crackdown" on employers was so watered down to be meaningless. As to its effectiveness, the Wikipedia entry states: "Despite the passage of the act, the population of undocumented immigrants rose from 5 million in 1986 to 11.1 million in 2013." 

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Young Leftists Embrace Political Violence

From the Washington Examiner (via MSN): "Politics without restraint: A generational shift toward violence and radicalism is taking place." Samuel Abrams writes:

    I recently walked into my politics class at Sarah Lawrence College prepared to discuss civic protest. The prompt was Minneapolis, where a recent immigration enforcement surge has sparked mass demonstrations, a general strike, and the fatal shooting of two civilians by federal agents.

    I planned to cover basic principles: the right to protest, the obligation to remain nonviolent, the distinction between civil disobedience and coercion. My students rejected the premise almost immediately.

    “What are we supposed to do?” one asked. “Hold signs while people are being shot?”

    “You’re asking us to play by rules that only we follow,” another said.

    They cited the Black Panthers. They invoked Stonewall. They argued, confidently, that throughout American history, violence or the credible threat of it was what forced change. Several endorsed armed confrontation with Immigration and Customs Enforcement as both effective and ethically justified.

    This view dominated the discussion.

    I have spent 20 years studying these attitudes in survey data. But numbers do not argue back. What I encountered that day around the seminar table was the data made flesh: Students who spoke about political violence not with reluctance or regret, but with moral certainty.

Abrams notes this isn't just his class. " Over one-third of students now say using violence to stop a campus speaker is acceptable. Nineteen percent of adults under 30 believe political violence is sometimes justified, compared with just 3% of those 65 and older. Republican and Democratic students increasingly converge in their willingness to excuse force, even as they target different opponents. It is a generational shift." 

    And they aren't learning this just from radical publications, but from the elites (particularly those on the left). Consider:

    Last month, Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner issued a statement that would have been unthinkable from a major American law-enforcement official a generation ago. Speaking about federal immigration agents, Krasner declared: “In a country of 350 million, we outnumber them. If we have to hunt you down the way they hunted down Nazis for decades, we will find your identities. We will find you. We will achieve justice.”

    This was not a call for lawful accountability, but a threat of extrajudicial pursuit with language more suited to revolutionary tribunals than a constitutional republic. His sheriff followed with a blunt endorsement: “You don’t want this smoke.”
    

He continues:

    What I am describing is the erosion of a foundational American norm: The belief that political opponents, however wrong they may be, remain legitimate participants in a shared civic order, and that conflict must be governed by law rather than resolved through intimidation or violence.

    What we are witnessing is not ideological polarization so much as affective polarization, the transformation of political disagreement into moral hatred in which opponents are no longer seen as mistaken fellow citizens but as illegitimate and dangerous enemies. When that norm collapses, politics does not become more just, it becomes more primitive.

Abrams believes there is a peaceful way out, but it involves the middle--which have not radicalized--stepping up their participation. He notes, for instance, that the the election that Krasner a third term only had a 15% turnout. "A small activist cohort selected officials [and] empowered him to speak in the name of the city. The same pattern now repeats across school boards, city councils, party committees, and faculty senates nationwide." 

    Read the whole thing.

Related:

Sarah Elizabeth George, 43, of Boise, is accused of stealing a Canyon County Paramedics ambulance from outside St. Luke’s Meridian around 11 p.m. on Feb. 18, crashing it through the entrance of the Portico North building and pouring gasoline across the lobby floor before fleeing on foot, according to a federal criminal complaint.     

Feds Sue Coca Cola For Discriminating Against Men

The suit stems from last September when Coca-Cola Northeast Beverages, a New Hampshire-based distributor, hosted a two-day women-only networking event at the Mohegan Sun Casino and Resort in Connecticut.

    About 250 women attended the event, which centered around the theme “Embrace Your Authenticity: Break Barriers, Be Genuine, Inspire Change,” according to the social media post.

    Women were excused from work and paid their normal wages during the trip without needing to use any vacation time, the lawsuit said.

    The company also paid for their hotel rooms, as well as food and beverages during the trip, according to the suit.

    Funding the trip for female employees, but not male ones, “constitutes a denial of equal compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment on the basis of sex,” the EEOC said in its lawsuit. 

We need more suits like this. For too long, liberals and the organizations they control have gotten away with violating laws prohibiting discrimination. 

When Seconds Count The Police Are 45 Minutes Away

A mass stabbing yesterday in liberal Washington has left four dead. The incident occurred in Gig Harbor, just outside of Tacoma. According to the article, one of the victims had called 911 at 8:45 am claimant the suspect was violating a no-contact order. While police were en route, another call to 911 reported that the suspect was stabbing people. The suspect was shot dead by police at 9:30 am. The article elaborates:

    Police have since confirmed the no contact order was not yet valid because it had not been served to the suspect.

    Officer were given a copy of the order to serve the suspect, but by the time they arrived at the scene, he had already carried out his stabbing spree. 
  

The Guardian reports that the suspect "was the subject of domestic violence protection orders recording mental health and substance abuse issues stretching back at least five years."

    The Seattle Times reported that the mother, who has also not been named, had pressed for two protection orders since December 2020. Those early protection orders reported that the woman’s son had been having mental health problems and had threatened her daughter with a knife inside the home.

    In the petition to Pierce county superior court last April, the woman said that her son was delusional and saw himself as “an Egyptian god”. She had returned home to find her cat missing and pictures that had been hanging on the wall destroyed.

    The court granted a protection order requiring him to leave his mother’s house where he had been living and to keep 1,000ft from the property. He was also banned from possessing weapons and told to follow a mental health treatment plan that had been prepared for him involving medication. 

Oldest Writing From Europe And 40,000 Years Old

Everything we thought we knew about the rise of civilization is wrong. From Popular Science: "Earliest known writing dates back over 40,000 years." From the lede:

    New evidence published today in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences indicates humans experimented with symbolic writing as much as 40,000 years ago. If true, the discoveries dramatically recontextualize the history of communication, given the earliest known written languages are Mesopotamian proto-cuneiforms dating back to around 3000 BCE.

    “The artifacts date back to tens of thousands of years before the first writing systems, to the time when Homo sapiens left Africa, settled in Europe, and encountered Neanderthal,” explained Ewa Dutkiewicz, a study co-author and archaeologist at Berlin’s Museum of Prehistory and Early History.

    Dutkiewicz and colleagues have spent years analyzing 260 relics recovered from Stone Age cave sites in the Swabian Jura, a remote mountain range located in southwestern Germany. These include a small mammoth figurine carved from the extinct animal’s tusk along with the Adorant, a famous ivory carving that appears to depict a human-lion figure with outstretched arms. These and many other similar artifacts also feature frequently repeating sequences of lines, crosses, dots, and notches.

 The patterns were found to be similar to early proto-Cuniform writing. 

Big Country Expat Reviews Chinese MRE-Style Meal

From Big Country Expat: "My Thanks, Some Lunch and Lack of Accountability." The article is (mostly) a review of a Chinese MRE-style meal which contained: "Green Bean and Beef Rice for the main, Spicy Beef for the smol snack, 2x duck eggs and some Crisp Cucumbers, with sauce, and Egg Drop soup." Other than the "crisp cucumbers" he thought it was pretty good, and the heater was apparently much more effective than those in U.S. MREs. Nothing on where he sourced it, however. 

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

TTAG: Best Buffer Setup for a 10.5″ Unsuppressed AR Pistol

The author, Scott Witner, notes that there are a lot of reasons people might not run a suppressor on a 10.5" AR, including that even with a suppressor it is still not hearing safe, so why bother? In any event, to slow down the BCG so it doesn't beat the weapon to death (or, I would add, cause feeding issues like the BCG outrunning the speed at which the magazine can push a new round up to be picked up by the BCG), he recommends an H2 buffer and the Sprinco Enhanced Power AR-15 Buffer Spring – Blue, which is a stronger spring "due to running an over-gassed or suppressed rifle." It is also made from "chrome silicon wire and heat-treated for extreme durability, this spring delivers consistent performance across tens of thousands of rounds without degradation or fatigue." 

    I went with essentially the same buffer setup in my 18" AR build because it was overgassed and running too fast as I described in this post where I had to troubleshoot what initially appeared to be a short-stroke problem (it wasn't). I used the H2 buffer (or something basically the same weight) and subsequently replaced the standard AR spring with a heavier flat coil spring. 

Misreading the Room

Breitbart reports that "[o]n Wednesday’s broadcast of MS NOW’s 'Morning Joe,' Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear (D) said that for people of faith 'it is unacceptable to have a body count from ICE’s actions or to see these people injured' and that 'If you’re a person of faith, you don’t want to see people chained at the ankles.'" No. Half the country voted for the illegals to be deported and if that requires ICE to defend themselves and chain up violent criminals, so be it. The only people "of faith" that would find it unacceptable either aren't Christian or believe in "teddy bear Jesus", but I repeat myself. 

More On Susan Rice's Revenge Speech

I had posted last week about Susan Rice's threats of revenge on any company or organization that supported or assisted President Trump, warning that it was a big step toward civil war. Rod Dreher had similar thoughts, comparing it to the dynamics that led to the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s. He writes:

This is important. It signals the kind of dynamic that gripped Spain in first half of 1930s, as the govt of the Republic lurched btw Left and Right. Eventually, both sides hated each other so much that civil war was inevitable. ...

He has embedded the video where Rice makes her threats and suggests a YouTube video on the prelude to the Spanish Civil War.

California Has Paid Leftist Groups Behind Illegal Immigrant Invasion Over $100 Million

From Townhall: "It's True: Gavin Newsom's California Government Has Paid Protestors Over $100 Million." The article states that $115 million went to non-profit organizations whose core function is to organize protests, with the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights (CHIRLA) receiving over $100 million by itself. 

The Retreat Of Civilization: The British Rape Gangs

    At my age, high school is mostly just a dim blur in the rear view mirror with only a few specific memories standing out. One of these was a presentation by a Catholic priest in my humanities class (something that would never be allowed today!) and, specifically, his comments that the concept of "human rights" and respect for women is rooted in Christianity. It doesn't natively exist in other cultures; and where it exists today, it is because of their exposure to Western Civilization. 

    I posted yesterday how with the decline of the influence and power of the West, native cultures are reasserting themselves, using Afghanistan as an example as it has once again legalized slavery and eliminated many protections for wives. But it is happening in the West as Western leadership has abandoned the principles of Christianity even if they still pretend to honor those principles. 

    A good example of this is Great Britain which is increasingly becoming a bizarre mashup of atheism and Islam. Instapundit linked to an article by Dexter Van Zile entitled "The Rape Gang Crisis: Modern-Day Slavery on British Soil." He begins by noting that sociologist Orlando Patterson, in his 1982 book Slavery and Social Death: A Comparative Study, "defines slavery not primarily as a legal relation of property , but as 'the permanent, violent domination of natally alienated and generally dishonored persons.'" 

    He argues that this condition constitutes social death, a profound form of existential exclusion where the enslaved person is rendered a non-person in social terms. Slavery, in Patterson’s view, entails three key constituent elements:

  1.     Violent domination—the constant, naked exercise of force and total power over the slave, approaching limitless control from the master’s perspective and total powerlessness from the slave’s.
  2.     Natal alienation—the slave is severed from all legitimate claims of birth, kinship, ancestry, and social belonging; they cannot form or inherit independent social ties, rendering them “socially dead” from the moment of enslavement (and often by birth in hereditary systems).
  3.     General dishonor — the slave is degraded, stripped of honor, publicly shamed, and treated as inherently inferior or worthless, reinforcing their exclusion from the moral and symbolic community.

    In the grooming gangs cases (such as those in Rotherham, Rochdale, Telford, and others), thousands of vulnerable young girls—predominantly white and British—were systematically raped, trafficked, and exploited over extended periods by organized groups of men, largely of Pakistani Muslim heritage. The victims were subjected to prolonged sexual servitude akin to slavery.

    Applying Patterson’s framework, it’s clear these girls experienced a modern analogue of social death .... 
 

After discussing how the victims of the grooming gangs meet the criteria for slavery and "social death", Van Zile continues:

    These young women—born and raised as citizens in the UK—were effectively enslaved in their own country, reduced to non-persons whose suffering was tolerated or ignored. This was facilitated by a tacit coalition: the perpetrators who exercised the domination, and elements of native British elites (police, social services, local councils) who, according to multiple official inquiries (e.g., Alexis Jay’s 2014 Rotherham report documenting ~1,400 victims abused 1997–2013), repeatedly failed to act decisively—often citing fears of racism or cultural sensitivities.

    By turning a blind eye or downplaying the crimes, authorities effectively sacrificed these girls to maintain fragile social order. They purchased compliance from segments of the Pakistani/Muslim community, avoiding backlash that might have demanded greater assimilation and a badly needed cultural reckoning with the ideology of Islamism.

    With the rape gang crisis, we see a perverse exchange where the social death of vulnerable girls was tolerated to manage tensions in a multicultural democracy. The result was not chattel slavery in the classical sense, but a grave, organized form of modern sexual enslavement that inflicted profound, lasting social death on its victims. 

He concludes that by tolerating--or, more correctly, covering up--these events, "British elites have likely poisoned intergroup relations in the United Kingdom for a long, long time." It is too bad that Van Zile was not familiar with the research by Robert D. Putnam regarding social trust and social capital, because then Van Zile would have recognized that the destruction of social trust was not caused by the toleration of the rape gangs, per se, but is inherent in a "multicultural" society. Merely having large populations of Pakistanis in the UK destroys social trust even if the Pakistanis had been upright citizens that worked to assimilate. 

    But back to question of why or how was this allowed to happen. Van Zile focuses on the expedient answer: British officials were willing to sacrifice these girls--even though they numbered in the thousands--to maintain civil order. (In other words, they feared if it got out, it would be their heads that would roll--figuratively speaking of course). 

    But there is a deeper reason which is that the strong, confident Christianity that made Britain a great power is gone. British elites, both the elected and unelected, are no longer Christian or patriotic. Many are from alien cultures. 

    Here is an example of how far Britain has fallen from when Britain was great. "In December 1829," this BBC article notes, "Lord William Bentinck, the first governor general of British-ruled India, banned sati, the ancient Hindu practice of a widow immolating herself on her husband's funeral pyre." Violation of the ban was treated as murder and punishable by death. It is from this background that we get the response of Sir Charles James Napier--Commander-in-Chief of British forces in India from 1843–1847--to a Hindu priest’s objection to the prohibition of sati: 

Be it so. This burning of widows is your custom; prepare the funeral pile. But my nation has also a custom. When men burn women alive we hang them, and confiscate all their property. My carpenters shall therefore erect gibbets on which to hang all concerned when the widow is consumed. Let us all act according to national customs. 

Unfortunately, though, that was not the end of the matter, and after the 1857 Sepoy Mutiny, the British softened the law against sati in order to appease high-caste Hindus who had played a leading role in the rebellion. 

    The 1862 regulation repealed both the penal provisions which said that sati would be punishable as culpable homicide and the other imposing that the death penalty in aggravated cases. It also meant that it allowed the accused to claim that the victim had consented to her life being terminated at her husband's funeral, so it was a case of suicide rather than a murder.

    Mr Mitta writes that the dilution of the sati rule was a "response to the simmering grievances against social legislation" - outlawing of sati, a 1850 law empowering outcaste and apostate Hindus to inherit family property and a 1856 law allowing remarriage of all widows.

    But the immediate trigger for pushing through a diluted law was the "outrage among upper-caste Hindu soldiers" who were incensed over reports that cartridges had been greased with cow fat.  

In the first half of the 19th Century, the British confidence and Christian culture led them to ban, at pain of death, the killing of women in India. Within 50 years, that confidence had diluted to the extent that to keep the peace, the British were willing to sacrifice the lives of untold numbers of Indian women to appease the Indian elites. Now, 200 years after the British tried to eradicate the practice of sati, the British culture and its Christianity is so weak the the elites had no compunctions of sacrificing the lives of thousands of native British girls to appease a foreign population on British soil. What next? Jizya taxes? Looking at the benefits that Muslim immigrants receive, that apparently is already in place. Blasphemy laws?  Britain has them. Executing those who dishonor Muhammad? Coming soon to a council near you.  

Are Some U.S.S. Ford Sailors Sabotaging The Ship?

The Anonymous Conservative (AC) has, among other things in his daily report, has reports that suggest that sailors aboard the U.S.S. Ford aircraft carrier have been sabotaging the ship by flushing shirts, socks, and lengths of rope down toilets and clogging the systems.  From NPR:

 Since it's a vacuum system, a problem with one head can cause all of the toilets in that part of the ship to lose suction, making it difficult for the maintenance crews to isolate a problem. The crews find everything from T-shirts to a four-foot piece of rope clogging the system. But the most common problem seems to be a part of the back of the toilet that comes loose.       

The NPR article was from January, but AC also includes information that the Ford has had to dock in Greece because the problem is worse with sewage running throughout the decks, delaying its ability to participate in any attack on Iran.   

One Cartridge, Two Roles?

 I'm on the SOFREP mailing list and received an email 5 or 6 days ago with the subject: "One Cartridge, Two Roles: The Logic Behind the M7 and M250." The M7 is the Army's new automatic rifle and the M250 is a belt fed machine gun, both using the 6.8x51 cartridge. The email touts this as a boon:

    ... One cartridge feeding both the rifleman and the automatic rifleman means the squad is speaking the same ballistic language when the fight stretches across terrain. The rifle is no longer living in one performance envelope while the gunner works in another. Effects downrange start to align.

    That kind of commonality simplifies more than logistics. It stabilizes planning. When ammunition feeds both roles from the same family, resupply becomes less fragile, and leaders spend less time managing caliber mismatches under pressure. The squad carries one core solution instead of juggling two separate ones.

    There are tradeoffs. A higher-energy cartridge brings more recoil and more heat. It demands discipline and training. But it also gives the automatic rifle greater reach and authority while letting the rifleman stay relevant at distances where legacy systems begin to fall off. That overlap is the point. 
 

While simplifying logistics is laudable, I'm not convinced that replacing the multitude of personal weapons used in WWII and Korea with a single heavy rifle, the M14 (which was quickly replaced by the M16) was all that beneficial, and yet that is what we are doing all over again. And I'm not convinced that the M7 and M250 will have the same "performance window"--the belt fed machine gun will always be able to operate at longer distances than the rifle if for no other reason than that the machine gunner can drop bullets onto a beaten zone at far greater distances than a rifleman can deliver accurate shots. Besides which, Afghanistan aside, the trend over the past 60 years has been more and more fighting in built up environments. So I have to ask whether the M7 is trying to bet against the trend.

    I have no problem with the M7 as a DMR or even as a "mountain rifle"--I've always thought that it made sense for troops in certain environments to have rifles capable of longer ranges--but not as a general issue weapon. Moreover, I suspect that something like the 6mm ARC would have met most of the requirements that the Army wanted with the 6.8x51, but could have been done with a simple change of the upper and magazine rather than a whole new rifle. 

    Even the increased lethality argument is suspect. I'm not saying that the lethality of an individual round might not be more, but that compared to the magazine capacity, the lethality is not necessarily increased. I can best explain what I mean by an illustration from an article I recently came across on the .458 SOCOM round.  Discussing the cartridge's backstory, the article states:

    ... The story goes that Marty ter Weeme, founder of Teppo Jutsu LLC, and a member of the U.S. Special Operations world were discussing what they considered the lackluster performance of the 5.56 NATO M855 round during a battle between members of Task Force Ranger and Somali militants. Reportedly, multiple hits with the 5.56 were required to neutralize adversaries. This led to the conception of a large-caliber cartridge compatible with the AR-15/M16/M4 platform in .458-caliber. 

It had impressive ballistics--at least for CQB. But the downside? "With the new follower, a 30-round 5.56 NATO magazine could [only] hold 10 rounds of .458 SOCOM," and the increased recoil made it more difficult to put multiple rounds on target. Also: "A Soldier armed with a 5.56 NATO-chambered AR, carrying 10 pounds of ammo, could carry nearly 400 rounds, while a Soldier armed with a .458 SOCOM-chambered carbine could only carry about 140 rounds." So, even if it took three hits from a 5.56 to put down an enemy versus one shot from the .458, both used 1/10th of their magazine capacity to do so. And from that perspective, there would be no advantage to using the .458 round. 

    In any event, the Marines aren't buying it--"it" being the M7. The Defense-Blog reports that "U.S. Marine Corps rejects switch to M7 rifle." It relates:

    The United States Marine Corps has decided to retain the M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle for its close combat formations rather than adopt the Army’s M7 Next Generation Squad Weapon rifle, a Marine Corps spokesperson confirmed to Task & Purpose.

    “The Marine Corps will retain the M27 for our close combat formations as it best aligns with our unique service requirements, amphibious doctrinal employment of weapons, and distinct modernization priorities, while ensuring seamless interoperability across the Joint force and with coalition partners,” the spokesperson said in an email to the publication.

    The decision keeps the M27 as the Corps’ primary infantry rifle while the Army continues fielding the M7 and its companion M250 machine gun under the Next Generation Squad Weapon (NGSW) program. The Marine Corps indicated it will continue observing the Army’s program before making any future decisions. 
   

Monday, February 23, 2026

Good Photo Of Mexican Nat'l Guard With FX-05 Rifles

Source: "Mexico descends into violence after cartel leader ‘El Mencho’ killed"--Al Jazeera. 

     This appears to be the open-sight version of the FX-05 Xiuhcoatl rifle designed and manufactured by Dirección General de Industria Militar del Ejército (General Directorate of Military Industry of the Army). It fires the 5.56 NATO round using a long stroke piston system. It is a bit unusual in that it is one of only a small number of rifle designs that use polygonal rifling. 

Article: Is Your Church A Sitting Duck?

From Shooting News Weekly: "Hope Isn’t a Plan: Is Your Church a Sitting Duck?" My church is. But I'm old enough to remember when churches didn't need church security teams. John Wilder touches on that era in his piece, "How To Break A Society, Part I." He begins:

    Picture this:  I leave my keys in the truck overnight.  Windows down.  Wallet on the dash.  Next morning?  Still there.  Nothing missing, though a cat might have explored an empty burger wrapper.  No viral TikTok™ of some “youth” doing donuts in my F-150®.

    Absurd?  No.

    And not because Big Brother has cameras up the backside of every squirrel, but because back in the day people just didn’t do that crap.  The neighbors would have known who did it.  Moms would have heard about it at church, and the father of the kid would have heard about it from his boss.

    Shame, accountability, and consequences work better than ankle monitors.

    That was the power of societal norms.  Invisible fences made of “What will people think?”  And the Founding Fathers knew it.  They told us so.

    Benjamin Franklin walked out of the Constitutional Convention and some lady asked what they’d given us. “A republic,” he said, “if you can keep it.” Not “if the government keeps it for you.” Not “if we pass enough laws.” If you can keep it.

    John Adams was even blunter in 1798: “Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”

    They weren’t kidding. 
   

But liberals felt stifled and had to tear the whole thing down. Read the whole thing. 

The Daily Mail's Reporting On The Cartel Violence In Mexico

This appears to be a link with periodic updates. In the past, it was not uncommon to have a cartel leader killed and for the cartel to splinter, increasing the violence as the splinter groups fought one another and other cartels for control. 

Step-By-Step Reloading By Tom McHale

Tom McHale is a professional gun writer, author of a multitude of articles on all aspects of shooting, as well as several books including The Practical Guide To Reloading Ammunition. I came across a series of detailed articles on reloading at American Handgunner magazine (Part 1) (Part 2) (Part 3) (Part 4) (Part 5) but it only covered collecting the brass, preparing the brass, and the resizing the case and expanding the case mouth. In trying to find additional parts of that series, I came across the series of articles on the steps to reloading that he had written for Guns America. 

Part 1: Want to Reload Your Own Ammo? Basic Questions to Consider

Part 2: The Reloading Process

Part 3: The Gear You’ll Need and What It’ll Cost You

Part 4: Brass Cleaning and Preparation to Load

Part 5: Brass Resizing

Part 6: Trimming Cartridge Cases

Part 7: Repriming the Cartridge Case

Part 8: Powder, Propellants, and Pressure

Part 9: All About Primers

Part 10: Projectiles: Materials, Weights, and Styles

Part 11: Seating and Crimping Bullets

Part 12: To Crimp or not to Crimp

Part 13: Final Inspection and Packaging Tips

Civilization Continues To Retreat

In the recent past, Western civilization had strong enough influence so that even if a country wasn't directly under Western rule the native culture would have submitted to Western influence. But with Western civilization in full retreat, the native cultures are reasserting themselves. I hope the Leftist feel proud about what they have done. From Breitbart: "Taliban OKs Slavery, Domestic Violence in Updated Criminal Code."

    Taliban “supreme leader” Hibatullah Akhundzada recently approved a novel criminal code, multiple outlets reported this week, that dramatically expands the legal ability for men to physically abuse women and children and provides for the creation of a formal “slave” class in the country.

[snip]

    According to the Times of India, the latest affront to human rights from the Taliban is the publication of a 90-page criminal code, issued as an edict recently, likely in late January. No evidence suggests any public participation in the drafting of the code or legislative debate by certified lawmakers prior to its imposition.

    Citing the British outlet The Independent, the Indian newspaper noted that the code includes the creation of “free” and “slave” categories of Afghanis and different legal punishments for criminals in each category. While it does not explicitly list all women in the country as “slaves,” certain provisions in the criminal code for women appear to treat them as separate from free citizens.

    The code reportedly states explicitly that men can beat women and children in their homes, but only if they do not break their bones or cause extreme bodily harm. The code also effectively strips women of the right to accuse men of extreme physical abuse, as it both requires and bans women from showing the parts of their bodies harmed.

    “They [women] are required to prove they have suffered serious bodily harm by showing their wounds to the judge, while at the same time being required to remain fully covered,” the Independent explained. “They are also required to be accompanied to the court by their husband or male chaperone (mahram) — even though the majority of offenders in such cases are the husbands themselves.”

In the not so distant future, we may see similar before and after pictures of Berlin, Paris, or London. And it will largely be because of what were called, when I was younger, "bleeding heart liberals" who bought the Leftist lies about all cultures being equal and suffered from pathological altruism. 

Related

Serpentza discusses the trajectory of South Africa after black/communist rule:

VIDEO: "Decolonization in Action - They Ruined my Country!"
serpentza (29 min.)

An Epstein In The Making

From Breitbart: "Senior Class President Charged with 300 Felonies for Allegedly Running Sextortion Scheme in Pennsylvania High School." 

    Zachariah Abraham Meyers, an 18-year-old senior at the local high school in Peters Township, a semi-rural town of 23,000 residents 15 miles southwest of Pittsburgh, faces 304 charges ranging from sexual exploitation of and sexual abuse of children to unlawful contact with minors and wiretap law violations, local news outlets reported over the weekend. 

[snip]

    Police accuse Meyers of targeting fellow students ranging from ages 14-17 at Peters Township High School across multiple social media platforms, including Snapchat and TikTok. Some 1,200 students in grades 9-12 attend the school.

    In one case, authorities allege that Meyers, who is listed as a varsity member of the school’s volleyball team, directed a juvenile to have sexual intercourse with two adult men, record video inside a gym locker room, and then send those videos to an account. 

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Gun & Prepping News #69

Just some gun and prepping related links that I thought interesting or useful:

  • In 2024, 1% (438) of all firearm-related deaths (41,656) were due to accidental shootings.
  • 30% (438) of the 1,457 unintentional firearm-related injuries in 2024 were fatal.
  • There is an average of 114 accidental gun deaths among children and adolescents annually.
  • Accidental shootings account for 0.004% of all injuries leading to hospital visits.

What the heck is a dead trigger?  Let’s define that term first:  Anytime you pull the trigger and expect it to go bang, and it doesn’t, that is a dead trigger.  If you are in a situation like the one described in the title of this article, it really doesn’t matter why the rifle didn’t go bang, just that you have a response when it does.  The article that follows discusses your options. 

The reasons for a dead trigger might be something simple like the rifle wasn't made ready in the first instance or ran out of ammo, but could also be due to some sort of malfunction. The article discusses why a weapon transition to a handgun is preferable at short combat distances to trying to troubleshoot the rifle; how to perform a weapon transition; getting the rifle back into action; and suggestions as to (safely) training for a dead trigger.

    The most important lesson I learned and taught as a firearms instructor for the CIA is that your mind is your primary weapon. Weapons evolve, systems come and go, but your ability to assess and respond to a threat ultimately determines your survival. A well-made firearm can be a powerful equalizer, but effectiveness depends on strategy and restraint – knowing  when to reveal your strengths and when to keep them concealed.

    Carrying a concealed weapon is not just about having the right firearm; it’s about being able to transition instantly from a passive state to full combat readiness. Success in a critical moment relies on both mental awareness and physical capability. The way you carry, conceal and present your firearm when a threat arises is determined by your training and skill. Simply owning a good gun is never enough.
 

Good tips for learning and maintaining situational awareness and understanding when a threat arises. Be sure to check it out. 

While training with more and more law enforcement agencies, I have found that a potentially dangerous practice has been implemented into their SOP’s. This being the ignoring of the weapon manual safety. Many tactical teams are moving from the Last Covered and Concealed (LCC) position to the breach point in a linear formation with a straight finger and the weapon on fire. Further, they conduct a great deal of interior movement and room clearing with the weapon on fire and a straight finger. 

The rest of the article goes over why you need to use the safety, the dangers to not using safeties, and why he thinks law enforcement got away from training to use safeties. 

  • Some firearms history: "StG 45(M): The Last Sturmgewehr"--The Armory Life.  This used a roller delayed blowback action and is the predecessor to the CETME Model C and, subsequently, the HK-91 and all subsequent roller delayed firearms manufactured by HK. This is a long and detailed article, but worth your time. 
  • "Your First Suppressor: A Short(ish) Guide for First-Time Buyers"--The Truth About Guns. A look at some suppressors for ARs, 9mm, and rimfire weapons.
  • Of course, you'll want some ammo to go with that new suppressor: "Pairing Your Suppressor With The Right Subsonic Ammo"--The Truth About Guns. Some suggestions on subsonic ammo in 9mm, .300 BLK, .22 LR, .45 ACP, .45-70, and .458 SOCOM.
  • Speaking of handgun ammo: "Brink’s U.S. Selects Liberty Ammunition for Executive Protection"--The Truth About Guns. Specifically, the 9mm Spike load which the article describes as "55-grain, all-copper projectile features an integral spike design that enables deep penetration through barriers while creating a permanent wound channel—critical capabilities when threats may involve vehicle glass, heavy clothing, or intermediate obstacles." The round is supposed to have 1,900 feet per second muzzle velocity giving 441 foot-pounds of energy on target. 
  • And some more on ammo: "Here’s Why the .223 Remington Is the Most Underrated Deer Cartridge"--Outdoor Life. By "deer" the author is probably meaning whitetail.  An excerpt:

The .223 is inherently accurate, ammo is affordable, and modern purpose-built bullets have elevated its effectiveness even further. The key here is that the .223 is fun and affordable to shoot. So deer hunters preparing for the season have no excuse to not practice shooting from field positions.

As far as the ammo to use for hunting, the author recommends "heavier tipped, lead-core bullets that offer dramatic expansion that is controlled by a thicker jacket. These offer the expansion that causes larger wound cavities but will often penetrate deeply enough to pass through a deer entirely," specifically mentioning the 69-grain Sierra GameKing. However, he notes that "[q]uality bullets in the 69- to 80-grain range are more than capable of" providing the necessary 10 to 12 inches of penetration needed to take whitetail deer.

  • And for the deadliest game: "223/5.56 Duty/Defense Ammunition Selection"--Tactical Anatomy. After discussion of the failures of different types of ammunition and why, even with rifles, penetration is king, the author concludes:

    The clear answer is that for general patrol/defensive rifle duty, we want a round that both expands well and penetrates deeply, while maintaining reliable functionality and accuracy. This is the ideal.

    That being said, and no disrespect intended to any of the runners-up, my personal and professional 5.56 ammunition choices based on the recommendations of true experts like Dr. Roberts–and my own experience on live animals and tissue simulants–tend to run along the lines of Federal TRU 55/62gr bonded, Black Hills/Nosler Partition 65 gr, and Winchester JSP 64 gr. These rounds will defeat intermediate barriers and will penetrate deeply through tissue, and will work accurately in barrels from 1:7 through 1:10. All of these rounds have an excellent record in OIS’s over many, many years, and as such I have no reservation in recommending them. 

    A drill is a shooting exercise that prescribes nearly every element of your shooting. It describes your distance, your accuracy standards, the time you have to accomplish the drill, how many rounds are fired, and more. Most importantly, it has a time and accuracy standard.

    A time and accuracy standard gives you a goal to meet. If you can’t meet these goals, you’ll be able to identify your weaknesses and, hopefully, improve your shooting skills continually. Shooters should never dive too deep or too fast. Attempting the FAST Drill as a new shooter can be a recipe for disaster. 

  • "Daniel Defense H9 9mm: The Hudson Concept, Perfected"--The Truth About Guns.  The Hudson pistol was one that featured a very low bore axis by lowering the recoil spring assembly so it was ahead of the trigger guard. The original design and execution had issues. But according to this review, Daniel Defense has cleaned it up and has a workable pistol. MSRP is $999 but the street price is higher--closer to $1,300, the author writes.
  • "Securing Backyard Fences"--Active Response Training.  Greg Ellifritz writes:

    In my police days, it was very common to see heroin addicts cruising around wealthy residential neighborhoods looking for places to burglarize in the daytime when most residents were at work.

    Their most common MO was to find an attractive house and then knock on the door. If someone answers, they play it off by pretending that they are looking for someone.

[snip]

    If they didn’t get an answer, they would go around to the back of the house where fewer people could see them,  They would then break in to the house via a back door or window.

    I never saw one of those burglaries happen to a residence with a locked back fence. 

    In 2021, amid a global pandemic, warnings that the federal government might repurpose warehouses into detention facilities on American soil were dismissed as speculative, alarmist, or even conspiratorial.

    Five years later, what was speculation is a blueprint for locking up whoever the government chooses to target.

    According to investigative reports, the Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement are actively purchasing warehouses, factories, and industrial buildings across the country for use as detention centers—often with little public notice, minimal oversight, and virtually no accountability. 

We saw this happen in Australia to those who refused to take the vax, and many elites here in the United States expressed a wish that those who refused the vax be rounded up and imprisoned, so this seems likely if there is a real pandemic. 

  • "Wheat Grinders 101"--Blue Collar Prepping. While you can use whole wheat corns, they will be more useful ground into flour as you need it (wheat can store for decades, but flour only for months). This article discusses the three basic types of grinders--manual, electric, and hybrid--as well as some advice on accessories and using the grinders. 
  • "Power Outage? What Size Generator for a Freezer (And How Long to Run It)"--Modern Survival Blog. From the article:

Most chest freezers use 80–150 running watts, but need 600–1,200 starting watts for a brief moment when the compressor turns on. A 1,000-watt generator or larger is usually enough to run a freezer. If running both a refrigerator and freezer, a 2,000-watt inverter generator provides comfortable capacity.

And:

 You don’t need to run a generator continuously. A full chest freezer can stay frozen 24–48 hours without power. During an outage, many people run a generator about 1 hour every 8–12 hours to maintain safe freezer temperatures. Use a thermometer and keep food below 32°F (0°C).

The goal is to cool the freezer back down before food temperatures rise above freezing.

  • Basic Knot Lingo
  • Square Knot (Reef Knot)
  • Bowline Knot
  • Jam Knot (Canadian Jam Knot)
  • Clove Hitch 

More importantly, and unlike many other articles or books on knots, it also tells you what each knot can be used for.

  •  And from Survival Blog: "More Inflation Ahead: At Best, Plan on Semi-Retirement." Congress has spent so much of the Social Security Trust Fund as a backstop to its other profligate spending that there is not nearly enough money coming in to maintain current payouts. So the government will likely resort to inflating itself out of debt, devaluing personal savings and investments. Consequently, Rawles warns:

... Inflation will deeply degrade the purchasing power of savings, annuities, stocks, mutual funds, CDs, bonds, ETFs, pension funds, and Social Security payments. Even the best contrarian hedge fund won’t fully protect you when the dollar itself is wiped out. Day-to-day living will soon become very expensive. So, at best, we need to plan on semi-retirement in the latter decades of our lives.  ... 

I suspect that if it weren't for the massive fraud of which we are barely scratching the surface, there would probably be plenty of money for Social Security. But when some elderly immigrant steps of the boat and immediately races to the Social Security office, it becomes unsustainable. 

This list is broken down into two major sections: medications to stock, and situation specific kits you would ideally keep in your home. Both these sections then have particular subsections in them, though because it’s only two main sections, we’ve decided to just number these subsections straight through as though they were in just one group. If you’ve got a little bit of everything from each of the subsections, I’d say you’re pretty set. Certainly pick and choose what you feel is best to have for your own peace of mind at home. As I said, I know not everyone will want to keep everything here in stock (though I will be aiming for hitting as many items on this list personally), I just wanted to make sure this list was as comprehensive as possible so that in case you’re redoing your traveling first aid kit, or your at home first aid kit, you can look over this list and know you probably haven’t missed much if you’ve got all you want off of this behemoth. 

The list includes not just what to buy but what it is used for. 

    A former Bush administration official has made a shocking claim that the US government is secretly preparing for a mass extinction event on Earth. 

    Catherine Austin Fitts, who was the US Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development for Housing, joined Tucker Carlson on his podcast this week, saying she found $21
trillion in unaccounted funds was diverted to covert projects between 1998 and 2015.

    'One of the things I've looked at in the process of looking at where all this money is going is the underground base, city infrastructure and transportation system that's been built,' Fitts said.

It's interesting speculation, but the more likely explanation is that the missing money went to fraudulent payouts. 

Saturday, February 21, 2026

The Great Replacement: 8% Of Nicaragua Invaded U.S. Under Biden

 From Fox News: "DHS says 8% of Nicaragua's entire population illegally entered US under Biden." The population of Nicaragua was approximately 6.6 million in 2020, meaning approximately 528,000 came to the U.S. ... that we know of. DHS says that, additionally, 7% of Cuba, 6% of Haiti, and 5% of Honduras came to the U.S. during the same time period. Cuba population in 2020 was approximately 11.2 million; that of Haiti was also around 11.2 million; and Honduras' population was 10.1 million. That means some 784,000 came into the U.S. from Cuba; 672,000 from Haiti; and 505,000 from Honduras. The total from just these four countries alone, then, was roughly 2.5 million people ... that we know of. That is more than the entire population of the state of Nebraska. 

    Comparing this to other countries, this number of people would be 3.6% of the total population of the UK,  3.6% of the population of France, and 2.9% of Germany. This is equal to 42% of the population of Denmark or roughly half of the population of Finland! In just 4 years from just 4 countries. 

Friday, February 20, 2026

Trump's Other Options Under The IEEPA

As I noted earlier this morning, the Supreme Court struck down the tariffs that the President had enacted pursuant to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), holding that the IEEPA did not authorize the President to enact tariffs. It is important to realize that, as one article put it, "[t]he court did not say the president lacks authority to impose tariffs. It said this law doesn’t authorize these tariffs." But, as I mentioned in my earlier post, the President has authority to enact tariffs under other laws. For instance, Pres. Trump has already imposed a new 10% global tariff under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, which "unilaterally impose up to 15% tariffs to remedy balance-of-payments issues or prevent 'imminent and significant' depreciation of the dollar." Moreover, "Section 301 of the 1974 law allows Greer to impose tariffs on countries with economic policies that are discriminatory against the US or in violation of trade agreements." So even though the Supreme Court's ruling eliminated the global 10% tariff that had been imposed under the IEEPA, it is already back up under another law. And authorization for tariffs shows up under other laws, according to the article:

    Other options available to the administration, but not cited at the press conference, include Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, which allows tariffs to regulate imports on national security grounds following investigations by the Commerce Department, though duties are meant to apply only to individual economic sectors rather than entire countries; and Section 338 of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930, which allows the president to impose tariffs of up to 50% if he finds “as a fact” that countries have imposed unreasonable charges, restrictions or otherwise discriminated against US imports. 

    Section 201 of the Trade Act of 1974, another option, allows the president to impose tariffs of up to 50% above existing tariff rates on products that threaten “serious injury” to US manufacturers following an investigation by the US International Trade Commission. 

    And the elimination of the fentanyl-specific tariffs on China, Canada and Mexico may give rise to something more draconian than a simple tariff. Breitbart notes, for instance (bold in original):

    Here’s the thing the trade establishment doesn’t want to think about: IEEPA doesn’t just let the president regulate imports. It lets him prohibit them. And it lets him issue licenses as exceptions to that prohibition. Those aren’t implied powers or creative readings. They’re right there in the text of the law: the president may “prevent or prohibit” importation and may act “by means of instructions, licenses, or otherwise.”

    That language points to a mechanism that could reshape the global trade landscape even if every tariff the administration has imposed gets struck down. 

The author envisions a system whereby "Treasury offers to sell Import Authorization Certificates directly to the governments of countries running bilateral trade surpluses with the United States. The purchase price equals a percentage — 20 to 50 percent — of the country’s prior-year bilateral surplus. The foreign government pays Treasury. That’s the transaction. There is no ambiguity about who is writing the check." 

    The real question is why previous presidents did not use these powers to prevent the offshoring of American manufacturing.  

Weekend Reading #44

Longer and more involved reading:

     "Get this straight in your head.  Terrorists are not criminals out to support their drug habit, or a drunken bully looking to throw you a beat down.  This isn’t a parking lot dispute, a road rage incident or a conflict you can solve with de-escalation.  These are ideologically committed killers determined to use violence to achieve global religious/political change.  Killing as many as they can to maximize the terror impact of their acts is their goal.  Do NOT underestimate these people.  Take careful note not of just the mass beheadings that were once in vogue overseas, but the artful way they were staged and recorded, with high production values throughout.  That is highly evolved messaging leveraging modern technology with ancient terror tactics.  More recent attacks from various evil parties have even been “livestreamed” to an eager international audience.  Remember that dying for their cause is considered the ultimate reward.  They won’t be dissuaded and they won’t be bargained with.  They will be heavily armed and adequately trained for their task, which is to slaughter unarmed innocents to further undermine governmental authority.  Unlike your typical criminal crew, a few shots won’t send them into flight.  They’re on a mission."  

     "So, with that in mind, the rules change.  Back shoot them without hesitation or warning.  The cheaper the shot, the better.  To ensure there’s not a threat from behind as you move past their bodies, “anchor” shoot them through the brain and from a position of advantage.  While these methods of engagement are illegal and inappropriate for a criminal encounter and would likely see you charged with murder in that context, I suspect a citizen acting this way against a terrorist threat will be given a pass.  (Differentiating between the two, at that time could be difficult.  Choose wisely.)  This will essentially be participating in no notice infantry combat in your hometown."   

While he suspects that a citizen acting this way against a terrorist threat will be given a pass, I have my reservations--particularly if this were to occur in a Democrat controlled jurisdiction. To them, you would not be killing a terrorist, but an ally. Moving on, commenting on an article encouraging women to take responsibility for their safety, Jon adds:

     In the real world, no one is coming to your rescue, not the bystanders, not the police, not even your friends and relatives who are with you.  I know this is a horrid depressing thought, but it's true.  Accept it and prepare accordingly.  Because gouging the bad guy's eyes is not something that you will do automatically, unless you have practiced, a lot.  The highly trained will not gouge and pull their hand out.  Rather, they will drive their fingers through the eyes into the brain, curl their fingers to grab the cheek bones from the inside, and drive the bad guy's head to the ground, hard in order to crack the skull.  As Tim Larkin says, the ground is your best impact weapon, and it is always available, and gravity is always helping you.   

Jon has a lot more, so be sure to check out his newsletter. 

  • Greg Ellifritz at Active Response Training has a new Weekend Knowledge Dump. His linkage includes, but is not limited to, cover and concealment around vehicles, examining your target to try and analyze shooting errors, levels of eye contact (and what they mean),  info on the AK and shooting one, advantages and disadvantages to having a weapon mounted light on a concealed carry pistol, and advice as to concealed carry belts. I'm glad that the author mentions that is possible to have too stiff of a belt. Given my experience with several gun belts with the stiffened cores, I've gone back to just wearing a good leather belt. 
    And special mention goes to the video "Crazy Oakland Pawn Shop Gunfight Caught on Camera" where a group of thugs is admitted through a locking security door, then tried to rob the place. When the owners of the pawn shop got weapons and start shooting, the criminals turned to hightail it out of the place ... but couldn't because the security door had locked behind them. Consequently, they feel obliged to enter into a gun battle with the owners of the pawn shop in which at least one of the owners is wounded. During the gun battle, the criminals found at least one weapon that the pawnshop owners had stashed, fully loaded, in the event of a break in. I think that the primary lesson here is that sometimes it is better to give criminals an opportunity to flee than risk a prolonged fight.

During the time we called Alaska’s North Slope home, from 1990 to 1997, Native hunters killed approximately 110 polar bears annually in Alaska, with most being taken in the dark winter months. Male polar bears are active throughout the winter, unlike pregnant females that seek dens to enter their deep winter sleep and give birth. That year in Point Lay, the pack ice created an open lead very near shore. Seals hauled out on the edges of the open water. During winter in the Arctic, where there are seals, polar bears will be nearby. 

In a collaboration between Rajarata University of Sri Lanka and the University of Tsukuba in Japan, researchers used LANDSAT data to examine surface temperatures in Colombo at different moments during the decades-long process of rapid urbanization. Using temperature measurements from 1997, 2007, and 2017, the study tells the story of a cooler city by the sea, and how it went from a pleasant 25–27°C (77-80.6°F) to a staggering 31°C (87.8°F), or more. The heat maps created by the authors for 1997 are dominated by calming hues of green, but by 2017, a sprawling fungus of red heat spreads its tendrils in every direction. The old-timers weren’t just being nostalgic; in their time, it would indeed have been much, much cooler. 

In the new study, published in June 2025, a team of astronomers from Caltech and the Harvard Center for Astrophysics studied 69 fast radio bursts using an array of 110 radio telescopes in California. The team found that 76% of the universe’s normal matter lies in the space between galaxies, with another 15% in galaxy halos – the area surrounding the visible stars in a galaxy – and the remaining 9% in stars and cold gas within galaxies.