Monday, January 6, 2025

Long Term Review of Kore Gun Belts

Kore Essentials make what seems to be a fairly popular line of gun belts that use a ratcheting system for tightening up the belt, and a plastic core that makes it more rigid. They have two basic styles of standard gun belt: (1) A nylon belt with a rubberized backing that I've seen described as the same or similar to the material used in conveyor belts. These are offered in several different colors as well as a few camo patterns. And (2) a faux leather appearing belt that I know is at least offered in brown and black.

    The advantage of the ratcheting system is that it allows for finer adjustments of approximately 1/4 inch when tightening or loosening the belt. The photograph below shows a close up of the ratcheting system on the belt buckle and the "track" that it uses. 

 

Close up of ratcheting system.

     Between my eldest son and myself, we've owned and used several different Kore belts over the past several years, including both the standard nylon models and the dress belts. 

Faux leather dress belt

    The first belt I picked up for myself was a brown faux leather model to use for business wear (pictured above), which I only ever wore two times per week (I alternated it with a black leather dress belt during the work week, and use a different belt for casual wear). I went with Kore because I liked the styling (they looked nice) and the rigid core which I hoped would lessen the holster flop you can get at the end of the day when a gun belt has stretched just a bit. I used it for a year without much issue when I somehow picked up a rather unsightly scratch or scrape on the back of the belt. Over the next couple of years it picked up other scratches and scrapes so that it now unusable as a dress belt.

Close up of some of the scratches/scrapes.

Showing more of the scratches/scrapes.

    Another problem that cropped up is that the plastic core does not extend the full length of the belt, so that the belt did deform over time, as you can see in the photograph below. The stretching and deformation can be managed simply by alternating the direction of the belt, but I bought the belt because of the plastic core that was supposed to prevent that type of thing.

Deformation of the dress belt from use.

And when I was taking pictures for this review, I noticed that even the edges of the belt had started to crack and degrade.

Edge of dress belt.

    Keep in mind that this was not the result of heavy use: I typically only wore it twice per week to an office job. In any event, I switched about 12 months ago to using a brown, genuine leather dress belt. 

Standard nylon style belt.

    I also purchased one of the standard nylon belts about 2 years ago (pictured above). Mine is still in good shape because I've only worn it a couple dozen times at most. But about the time I purchased my faux leather belt, my oldest son picked up a standard nylon one to use for everyday wear. He is now on his third belt of that type (which he has had for about a year), and it is already wearing out. He was kind enough to lend it to me for some photographs, below:

 

The tip of the belt is still in pretty good shape, but you can see some fraying starting to develop.

Extensive fraying and wear on the edges of the belt.

A small matter, perhaps, but when talking the photographs I noticed some discoloration on one side of the buckle where it looked like some of the finish was wearing off.

You can see the fraying from the back of the belt, as well as cracking of the rubberized parts of the belt.

Another view showing how the backing of the belt was deteriorating.

    My son also used one of the faux leather belts, but had to replace it about a year ago even though he typically only wore it for Sunday wear to church (i.e., once per week). 

      Kore's warranty is only for 1 year. Perhaps they envision that people will replace their belts every one to two years. But for about the same price as a Kore belt, one can get a basic leather belt that will last far longer. In short, my experience and the experience of my son is that the Kore belts wear out after about 1 to 2 years even with only moderate use.

Liberal Woman Meets Reality

The Daily Mail reports that Hailea Soares, 31, was picked up in the air and then thrown to the pavement by former football player, Gladior Kwesiah, 26, after a minor car crash

    Soares, who stand at just 5 feet tall and weighs 110lbs, said the violent incident unfolded after Kwesiah harassed her on the highway. He then slammed the brakes while driving, making her car collide into his.

    Kwesiah then approached the mom when she got out of her truck and pinned her to the ground while trying to grab her phone, she said.

    A nearby witness captured the horrific moment as Kwesiah slammed Soares head-first in the middle of the road.

    'When a man picks you up almost over their head and throws you to the ground, yeah, you start questioning if you’re going to wake up again after that,' Soares told Boston 25 News. 

According to a CBS News report, "Kwesiah was arrested and charged with assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon causing serious bodily injury, vandalizing property and unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle."

"I don't know if he was having a bad day, I don't know what that was, but if that's the type of person he is, then I don't think he belongs in society with the rest of us," Soares said.

I'm guessing that Soares is liberal based on her apparently residing in Massachusetts, being a single mother with a nose-ring, and sporting a braided choker in one photograph.

A Couple Last F-You's from Biden

The end of Biden's one and only term as President has finally revealed his ugly side as he has engaged in various last minute acts that seem to have no purpose other than to anger and hurt normal Americans including his commuting the death sentences of 37 of 40 federal prisoners on death row, his attempt to sell off border wall materials, and his award of the the Medal of Freedom to Hillary Clinton and George Soros--two people that have spent their lives undermining the country and the Constitution. 

    His most recent acts are equally as infuriating. First, Biden has decided to sabotage any attempts by Trump to expand oil and gas production by permanently banning future oil and gas drilling in U.S. coastal waters pursuant to the 70-year-old Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act. The ban would stop offshoring drilling in all federal waters off the East and West coasts--including California and Florida--the eastern Gulf of Mexico, and portions of the northern Bering Sea in Alaska. The obvious intent here is to keep the U.S. dependent on foreign sources of energy.

    Second, do you remember how the federal government had tried pushing consumers to start using tankless water heaters (i.e., that heat on demand) in order to reduce energy usage? The Biden Administration has quietly released new rules under which "efficiency requirements for tankless water heaters will increase to levels that effectively ban all non-condensing models - a category that currently makes up 40 percent of the market," and which are "favored by many households, particularly in low-income and senior communities, for their affordability."

    

Saturday, January 4, 2025

Gun & Prepping News #12

  Just some articles that caught my attention for one reason or another:

     Tim Larkin says, pain does not work.  The bad guy won't feel any pain.  (Neither will you.)  And it's not just because of drugs. 
 
     So you must destroy eyes, break joints (Hock Hockheim), break bones, tear ligaments, tendons, and muscles; in order to incapacitate the bad guy.  Because pain doesn't work. 
 
     Often, bullet wounds don't work.  You must hit (destroy) vital organs (brain, spine, heart, major arteries [aorta, carotid, brachial, femoral, etc.], et al).  

     I used to think that full metal jackets were good, because at the time, I was shooting through a lot of barriers.  But, now days in my present job, it is far more likely that I will not be shooting through barriers.  And the need to avoid pass throughs dictates the use of modern hollow point ammo. 

 And:

     Just because you're right handed does not mean you are a right handed combat shooter (and vice versa).  [Similarly for eye dominance.]  I recently had an in depth conversation with a psychologist (Ph.D, M.D., clinical practice, director at a teaching hospital) concerning my experiences and my student's experiences in training.  [He asked me not to use his name because there are political implications that he would rather not have to deal with.]  

     Generally speaking, the left and right hemispheres of your brain are physically connected and communicate.  This connection varies from person to person, as do all things with humans.  (In the past, surgeons would cut the connection between the hemispheres to prevent the signals from bouncing back and forth between the hemispheres as a cure for epilepsy.)  However, in high stress situations things are different.  (I will spare you the technical details, because to properly understand would require background knowledge which would require academic training.)  The left and right hemispheres will not necessarily process the event the same way.  So how the right hemisphere processes the killing of the bad guy may be different from how the left hemisphere processes the killing of the bad guy.  So the physical behavior may be different.  If there is psychological conflict / tension (technical terms in the field, not terms of art) the physical behavior may to miss the shot so as not to hurt the bad guy.  Whereas if the hemisphere is comfortable killing the bad guy, there won't be any inhibitory behavior.  All kinds of thoughts, subconscious and conscious, can interfere / inhibit / excite the behavior.  [I'm not going to mention all of the subtleties because they went over my head.]  
     One hemisphere of your brain may not be able to make the killing shot.  So, you should give the task to the other hemisphere of your brain.  Generally speaking, the left hemisphere of your brain controls the right side of your body and the right hemisphere of your brain controls the left side of your body. 

      Vision is a little different.  The left field of vision from both eyes is processed by the right hemisphere.  The right field of vision from both eyes is processed by the left hemisphere.  

     I'm going to stop writing now before I go off on tangents and because as John
Farnam says, "Make your point and then shut up." 
 

  • Greg Ellifritz has posted this week's Weekend Knowledge Dump. Some of his linkage: carry options for women; lessons on gun fighting from Wyatt Earp; the January 2025 Rangemaster Newsletter; one handed reloading tactics; cleaning airguns; why "Israeli carry" (i.e., loaded magazine but no round in the chamber) is not actually useful; and more. Be sure to check it out.
  • "First Impressions: Henry Repeating Arms LASR"--NRA Family. Lever action rifles have seen quite the resurgence in popularity the last several years, including the introduction of more "tactical" rifles for home defense. While most of the tactical lever actions are simply rifles and carbines with an MLOK forestock thrown on, or provision of a Picatinny rail for mounting optics, we've also seen some that are designed to take AR magazines. This appears to be the case with Henry's Lever Action Supreme Rifle (LASR), which is initially being offered in 5.56 NATO and .300 BLK and ships with  a 10-round PMag magazine and a 5-round limiter so it can be used for hunting. Although the rifle was announced in January 2024, it is now being shipped to dealers. The MSRP appears to be $1,299.
  • Speaking of lever actions:  "A .30/30 Is All You Need (If You Know How to Hunt)" by Richard Mann, Field & Stream. The provocative title aside, Mann makes the interesting observation that at 100 yards using some pretty standard hunting ammunition, the .30-30 will have better penetration and expansion than hunting loads for the .30-06 and .308. That is, he relates, "[a]t that distance [i.e., 100 yards], your typical 150-grain .308 Winchester hunting bullet penetrates about 19 inches and deforms to a frontal diameter of around 0.55 inch. The same conventionally designed but heavier 180-grain bullet from a .30/06 will push to around 22 inches and expand a little wider, to about .6 of an inch." But, a 150-grain from a .30-30 at that same range will penetrate 23 inches and expand as much or more than the .308 or .30-06. Moreover, it will do this with only 13 foot-pounds of recoil energy from a 7-pound rifle. "That’s 6 and 11 foot-pounds less than the .308 and .30/06, respectively." The remainder of the article discusses some .30-30 history, its effective range and using skill to get inside that effective range, as well as the best bullets and commercial loads to use.
  • In the same vein: "Brush-Busters Are Back!"--American Rifleman. The author uses the term "brush-busters" to refer to larger caliber round nose or flat nose rifle cartridges such as the venerable .45-70 and .30-30, or newer “straight-wall” offerings such a .350 Legend, .360 Buckhammer and .450 Bushmaster. The author's primary thesis is:

 So, if “brush-busting” cartridges don’t get through brush much better than anything else, what good are they? Here are a few thoughts: They hit game hard and deliver high-energy payloads. I’ve gotten many letters and emails from hunters who want their deer down on the spot. Often, they hunt smaller properties or hard-hunted public land, so they need to be able to anchor their game. The new, old and resurrected brush-busters can do this. My sense is these cartridges are coming back, along with renewed interest in the all-American lever-action. Effective, yes, but limited in range.

But, related to this, the author argues that a lot of hunters (perhaps the majority) only need a rifle effective to within 100 to 200 yards due to hunting in thick woods or on small plots of land. And for the same reasons, need something that will quickly drop game so that it doesn't run off into the woods or a neighboring hunting plot and be lost to the hunter. The author then goes into the ballistic considerations (including terminal ballistics) that make these fat, heavy bullets so effective on game, before discussing specific cartridges. 

    Despite what you might assume about it, the .21 Sharp cartridge actually has its own dedicated mission statement that lies outside of simple terminal performance. The new 21 Sharp cartridge is actually purposefully designed to eliminate limitations and problems caused by the standard heeled bullet that the common and affordable .22LR case uses. The parent .22LR case remains the same but the projectile now sits entirely within the inside of the case (a 0.210” diameter). 

    Heeled bullets [used in the .22 LR] pose a number of deficiencies especially when compared to more modern cartridges like .17 HMR and .22 WMR. First and foremost is the aerodynamic efficiency of said heeled bullets. The required shape for .22LR bullets leaves a vast majority of available projectiles with a very poor ballistic coefficient. Not only does this make the bullet bleed off velocity faster, but it also limits both the long-range accuracy of the round, as well as the versatility of bullet design and composition - .21 Sharp has none of these drawbacks and adds a few positives as well.

  • "Ruger SFAR, Small Frame AR-10 Review"--The Truth About Guns. This is another rifle that has been out for a while, but the author is just publishing a review. If you remember, this is a design by Ruger that shrunk an AR-10 type of rifle nearly down to the size (and weight) of the standard AR-15. But beyond shrinking the rifle, Ruger has also made changes to make it a good suppressor host including an adjustable gas black and adding vents in the bolt carrier and barrel extension in order to keep the excess gas away from the shooter’s face. 
  • Senator Mazie Hirono (Hawaii) is ghoulishly using Veterans' suicides as an excuse for pushing a bill that would limit magazine size (apparently for all those suicides that require 30-rounds). Another example of how Democrats are both stupid and evil. 
  • "What to Do When Someone Knocks on Your Door Late at Night"--Ask A Prepper. You don't want to blow off a night time knock completely: emergency personnel from law enforcement, a fire department, or a utility company may have legitimate reasons for waking you up; or it could be someone you or a member of your family knows with a legitimate reason for coming to your door late at night or early in the morning. Conversely, as the author points out, criminals may knock to determine whether anyone is home (or awake) before attempting to force an entry. In any event, the author goes over some tips on keeping you and your family safe as you attempt to ascertain who is there and what they want.
  • "CPAP Battery Solutions 2"--Blue Collar Prepping. This is an article from a few years back. In a prior article, the author had gone over her power requirements, some ways to reduce the power requirements, and a few other considerations, but had not settled on a solution. This article addresses her choices. She has selected a Rockpals Freeman 600 powerbank for storing and feeding electricity to her CPAP machine, and is considering the Rockpals SP003 100W Portable Solar Panel for emergency charging. She acknowledges that one of the main reasons for the Rockpals powerbank was the cost: $500 normally through Amazon (she was able to save over $100 more due to a sale).
  • "Poll Reveals Half of Americans Unprepared for Lifesaving Actions in Emergencies"--Red Tea. The article relates that a poll conducted by the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, which involved 1,005 participants across the United States, found that just 51% of Americans know how to perform hands-only CPR, only 49% felt confident in their ability to help in cases of serious bleeding, and only 56% believed they could assist someone who was choking.
  • "Simple Gas Storage Rotation Plan" by Pat Henry, The Prepper Journal. Although Henry recognizes that fuel requirements will vary, he suggest a minimum of 20 gallons (i.e., a full tank of gas). Henry has six 5-gallon containers for a total of 30-gallons which he rotates through the year. He numbers each container (1 through 6) and at the end of each month when he is down to about a half-tank of gas in his car, he dumps the fuel from whichever container is up in rotation into the gas tank and then refills that container. That way he makes sure that none of his fuel is more than 6 months old. He has other suggestions and tips as well, so be sure to check it out. 
  • VIDEO: "How to Open a Can without Can Opener - Zombie Survival Tips #20"--CrazyRussianHacker (3 min.). Basically, he flips the can over so the lid he wants to remove is on a piece of concrete block, grinds the top on the concrete block for 20 or 30 seconds, flips it right-side up again, and then squeezes the sides just under the lip until the lid comes loose. 
  • "How To Make A Black Drawing Salve For When SHTF"--Ask A Prepper. The author points out that staying alive post-SHTF is more than a matter of food, and brings up the danger of an infected cut or other wound. 
    ... One of the best creams, or salves, as they are sometimes called, to fight infections in wounds, is the “Black Drawing Salve.”

    It’s called black because of the charcoal used in it and the word “drawing” refers to its job, i.e. to “draw out” the infection from wounds it is applied to.

    The Black Drawing Salve can be used to neutralize toxins and ease out splinters and other foreign objects that find their way under your skin. This salve can also help you survive by reducing inflammation from cactus spines, embedded glass shards, bee stings, tick bites, spider bites, thorns, and even ingrown hairs.

The article then goes on to discuss the ingredients and the recipe for the salve.

Thursday, January 2, 2025

Two Attacks--Two Electric Vehicles

While news is still dribbling out about what appear to be terror attacks in New Orleans and Las Vegas, there was one detail that struck me about both suspects: they used electric vehicles in their attacks.

    First, the Las Vegas incident. Per Red State, "Matthew Livelsberger, a 37-year-old Army veteran, allegedly rented a Cybertruck in Colorado Springs, where he resides, before driving it to Nevada. Authorities report that he loaded the vehicle with firework mortars, gasoline cans, and other flammable materials." 

    And news reports concerning Shamsud Din Jabbar, the terrorist behind the New Orleans' attack, indicate he used a Ford F-150 Lightning pickup truck, also rented. Jabbar had apparently placed two explosive devices (or possibly three) in the French Quarter of New Orleans, but there was at least one recovered from his vehicle. The Guardian reports, as to the latter: "Investigators discovered a corresponding remote in Jabbar’s truck, which also had mason jars containing a clear liquid consistent with explosives in his truck."

    We've all probably seen some of the horrific fires associated with electric vehicles when the batteries are ruptured and ignited (see, e.g., this video), although EV makers have made significant strides to make their batteries safer. Did Libelsberger and Jabbar specifically rent electric vehicles and stow explosives and/or flammables in them hoping it would result in an intense fire?

The Enrichment Report #15

 A selection of articles showcasing the benefits of diversity, equity and inclusion:

In addition to the accusations of quid pro quo sexual favors and sex harassment that led to the Friday evening retirement of Chief of Department Jeffrey Maddrey, Lt. Quathisha Epps alleges in a complaint a wide-ranging scheme to manipulate overtime-reporting procedures dating to the tenure of Police Commissioner Edward Caban.

She says that Maddrey exploited her emotional and financial vulnerabilities and her history of childhood trauma to coerce her into performing unwanted sexual favors in exchange for overtime opportunities.

  • "Hollywood loves #diversity — except when it comes to Israel and Jews"--New York Post. From the headline, you would think that Jews were being passed over for acting roles, director and producer positions, or forced out of positions as film and television executives. But, no, it is just a complaint that not enough Oscars are going to Jews. But, as my next entry shows, they have no one but themselves to blame.
  • "Who said Jews run Hollywood?"--The Times of Israel. Yes, from Israel's top newspaper: 

    The most influential person in Tinseltown is Jewish. Or so says The Hollywood Reporter. Bob Iger, the chairman and CEO of the Walt Disney Company, tops an inaugural list of 100 prominent players that the show biz publication released this week.

    Iger captured the title for his savvy leadership at the helm of the world’s largest media company, according to THR.

    And if Hollywood’s many other most powerful Jews were ever a secret, they certainly aren’t now. This “nachas parade” of creative and financial influencers is an insider’s look highlighting everyone from execs and producers, to directors, creatives, stars and their reps.

    Packed with familiar surnames, it might be considered at least a partial Jewish “Who’s Who.” It also includes brief interviews and highlights specific achievements as “big wins” and “big bets,” because, as every macher knows, that’s what it takes to make it in Hollywood.

    The USS Liberty incident was an attack on a United States Navy technical research ship (a spy ship), USS Liberty, by Israeli Air Force jet fighter aircraft and Israeli Navy motor torpedo boats, on 8 June 1967, during the Six-Day War. The combined air and sea attack killed 34 crew members (naval officers, seamen, two marines, and one civilian NSA employee), wounded 171 crew members, and severely damaged the ship. At the time, the ship was in international waters north of the Sinai Peninsula, about 25.5 nautical miles (47.2 km; 29.3 mi) northwest from the Egyptian city of Arish.

    Israel apologized for the attack, saying that USS Liberty had been attacked in error after being mistaken for an Egyptian ship. Both the Israeli and U.S. governments conducted inquiries and issued reports that concluded the attack was a mistake due to Israeli confusion about the ship’s identity. Others, including survivors of the attack, have rejected these conclusions and maintain that the attack was deliberate. Thomas Hinman Moorer, 7th Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, accused President Lyndon B. Johnson of having covered up that the attack was a deliberate act.

    The brutal DZ Mafia has taken over Marseille's drugs network and asserted its dominance on the city's streets through merciless contract killings, cementing its status as one of France's most feared and powerful gangs in a matter of months.

    The highly successful crime syndicate has employed an 'expansionist agenda', officials have warned, often recruiting children, including from middle-class backgrounds, through social media platforms like Snapchat to help carry out the hits.

    Attracted by the high earning potential, one boy, who was recruited as a driver, reportedly helped the gang with several killings in exchange for cash which he spent on a car and clothes. 

    He told police that he decided to leave the gang when he had earned enough money - a staggering €20,000 - adding that by that point he felt by that 'a little too many' people had died.

    Prosecutors believe DZ was behind as many as 40 drug-related murders in 2023 - 80 per cent of the total number that year - as it waged war against a rival gang, the Yoda.

    While the number of killings almost halved in 2024, prosecutors have claimed that this is because the group had already established its authority by striking fear into its enemies.

    DZ, short for Dzayer, meaning Algeria in the Berber language, has openly claimed violent attacks as their own since they first gained public and police attention for a gruesome murder in March 2023.

    The gang posted pictures of the burning body of a victim in the Busserine housing estate in northern Marseille, proudly displaying their tag - DZ Mafia - alongside it. The gang's campaign of terror has continued since.

An internal memo being circulated within Newsom’s administration calls for the “creation of an Immigrant Support Network comprised of regional ‘hubs’ to connect at-risk individuals, their families, and communities with community systems — such as legal services, schools, labor unions, local governments, etc,” according to Politico.
    German law enforcement officials were repeatedly warned by Saudi Arabia that a man who drove into 200+ people at a Christmas event in Germany on Friday night was dangerous — warnings that Germany’s leftist government ignored.

    CNN reported that the chief of the Magdeburg Public Prosecutor’s office, Horst Walter Nopens, said that 50-year-old doctor Taleb al-Abdulmohsen may have been “disgruntlement with the way Saudi Arabian refugees are treated in Germany.”

    He is accused of driving a car down a road that was completely packed with people who were at a Christmas market in Magdeburg. At least 5 people have died and more than 40 had life threatening injuries.

    Saudi Arabia sent three warnings about the suspect to the German government, warning that he had posted extremist views online and was a threat to their security. Saudi Arabia first warned Germany about the man in 2007, just one year after he entered the country, and requested in 2007 and 2008 that he be extradited back to Saudi Arabia.

Monday, December 30, 2024

Gun & Prepping News #11

  Just some articles that caught my attention for one reason or another:

  • "Weekend Knowledge Dump- December 27, 2024"--Active Response Training. This is Greg Ellifritz's collection of articles and videos that had impressed him in one or another, including a couple articles on revolvers, what to do if someone is following you, how to use the "what if?" game to prepare your family for a home invasion or other emergency, and more.
  • "Smith & Wesson 629 .44 Magnum Mountain Gun"--Cold Bore Miracle. The S&W "Mountain Gun" is a version of the 629 .44 Magnum revolver that has only sporadically been offered by Smith & Wesson over the past few decades. Basically, it is a 629 sporting a light-weight (i.e., a tapered) barrel that is 4-inches in length with a slight chamfer of the front of the cylinder, probably intended to further reduce the weight, and a few other slight changes. It was intended to a be a lighter-weight carry gun for the backwoods (hence, it moniker). However, the overall weight savings appears to have been very slight, only shaving off two or three ounces from the 42.8 ounces of the standard 4-inch version of the 629. (Update: my Mountain Gun comes in at 39.5 oz. unloaded). The primary draw of these firearms seems to be the aesthetics of the "pencil" barrel and chamfered cylinder.
    • More: "The Mountain Gun"--Revolver Guy. This article goes more into the history of the Mountain Gun.
  • "Browning SA-22 Challenge Semiauto Rimfire: Its History and a Review"--Rifleshooter Magazine. The standard Browning SA-22 is a take down rifle that uses a tube magazine that fits up through the buttstock, and ejects through the bottom, making it a handy rifle and particularly well suited for left-handed shooters. I suspect that its cost was the only reason that it did not see the sales volumes of the Ruger 10/22 or Marlin Models 60 and 70. But although providing a bit of history of the standard SA-22, the article is primarily about a new model of SA-22: the "Challenge." It is designed to be a target rifle and, therefore, sports a bull barrel and scope rails. Unlike the standard SA-22, it is not a take down, however. 
  • "Ruger Speed Six: A Medium-Framed Workhorse Revolver"--Handguns Magazine. Another popular revolver from back in the day. The Ruger Six series of revolvers were .357 Magnum (generally) revolvers manufactured in the 1970s and '80s using a medium sized frame somewhere between the S&W K and N frames in size and a half-under lug. This made the firearm smaller and lighter--and thus easier to carry--than the GP100 revolvers. Per this article, the three primary variants were the Security Six (which had an adjustable rear sight), the Service Six (a fixed sight version of the Security Six), and a the Speed Six (a round-butt version of the Service Six). 
  • "Is .22 Mag Overrated?"--Gun Digest (warning: auto-play with loud, obnoxious music). A more realistic title to this article would have been "circumstances when the .22 Mag is better than the .22 LR," but I suppose that would have been too long. The author runs trap lines and lists two general reasons he carries a scoped .22 Magnum rifle: (i) to deal with skunks that get trapped; and (ii) incidental predator control (basically shooting predators when he chances across them as opposed to specifically going out to hunt them). In the latter regard, the author notes that "[t]he .22 WMR is the perfect cartridge for incidental varmint work because it offers more effective range and power than the .22 LR without the ear-ringing report and fur-wrecking properties of a .22 centerfire."
  • "How to Hunt Safely Into Old Age"--American Hunter. An excerpt:

There is no doubt the hunting population is aging and that folks today are active much deeper into their golden years than in generations past. Still, it simply makes sense to use a little self-sufficient practicality to try to head off any problems. Older hunters are more prone to falls and other accidents, and they are less able to physically deal with major issues and injuries. They may also experience cognitive issues more often. It could be something as simple as forgetting to take along some gear they need or they could become disoriented and lost. Regardless, a little pre-planned safety can go a long way to ensure a good outcome.

While there is a lot of good advice in the article, it doesn't mention heart attacks, even though I generally see at least a couple articles every fall of hunters that have died of heart attacks. Generally this is due to being is such poor physical condition that sometimes the physical exertion can be more than they can handle. For instance, this year I read of an incident in a state in the mid-west where a hunter had a heart attack simply lugging his gear from his vehicle to a tree stand. The solution is, of course, to get regular check-ups and, if you do not regularly exercise, ease into hunting by practicing some physical activity in the lead up to hunting season, such as walking and climbing steps.
  • "Prepping After 60"--The Prepper Journal. The author is a single, senior woman living on 7.5 acres in Southern California. She offers good general advice on prepping, no matter your age, along with advice about having a good attitude for those more advanced in years.
  • "How To Charge a Car Battery, Step by Step"--Get Pocket. Has step-by-step instructions as well as an embedded video.
  • "Ways to Prepare for the New Year 2025"--Apartment Prepper. Some of the points raised in the article:
  1.   Review and Update Your Emergency Plan
  2.   Restock and Rotate Your Emergency Supplies
  3.   Set Financial Goals for Prepping
  4.   Organize Your Living Space

 And more.

Friday, December 27, 2024

Temple Mount Is Not Where The Temple Stood

 

 VIDEO: "The Temple | Bob Cornuke"--Koinonia House (31 min.)

    What if everything you have been told about the location of Herod's Temple was wrong? That is what I experienced when I read "Holy Irony! Israelis Wailing at the Roman Fort" by Laurent Guyénot (h/t Vox Popoli). 

    As any student of the Bible knows, Christ had predicted that a day would come when the Jewish Temple would be cast down and torn apart so no stone would be left standing atop another. That day turned out to be in 70 A.D. and was recorded by Josephus:

According to Josephus, every stone of the Temple was overturned because it contained huge amounts of gold, which melted during the fire and descended into the cracks of the stone foundations. The Tenth Legion had the Jewish captives dig up every stone to recover the gold (Jewish War, VI, 6, 1). All the gold recovered from the Temple and from various hiding places (64 according to the Copper Scroll), was instrumental to the ascension of Vespasian and Titus on the imperial throne.

 Which leaves us with a conundrum. If the temple was torn apart, what are the more than 10,000 stones that comprise the Western (or Wailing) Wall? 

    The answer is that the Wailing Wall are the remains of the Roman fort called Fort Antonia, which was the only structure left intact after the Romans retook Jerusalem in 70 A.D. And, as the article points out, we know that it survived because it continued to house "the Roman Legion X Fretensis until 289 AD, when the Legion was transferred to Ailat on the Red Sea." Moreover, the "alleged Temple compound, the Haram esh-Sharif on which now stand the Dome of the Rock and the Al-Aqsa Mosque, fits the standard design and size of the Roman forts scattered throughout the empire, and built after the pattern of the Praetorian Camp in the northeastern part of Rome." This also solves the question of why archeologists have never found any remains of the Roman fort (although it survived the destruction of Jerusalem) but there are plenty of ruins associated with the Temple (although it was utterly destroyed). 

    There are other pieces of evidence that fit. For instance, both the Old Testament and other classical age historians noted that there was a spring of water located in the Temple precincts. Yet the only spring extant is "[t]he Gihon Spring is situated below the southeast ridge of Jerusalem, 1000 feet away from the Haram esh-Sharif which has always needed citterns [sic: cisterns] for water supply." This is illustrated in the photograph below:

The article goes on to briefly discuss other evidence, so be sure to read the whole thing. The video, above, also addresses this theory.

More:

Yet Another Reason To Reform Or Abolish The Intelligence Agencies

The New York Post reports that "Spy bosses ‘silenced’ Defense Department, FBI scientists from briefing Biden on COVID lab leak evidence."  The story has to do with an assessment Biden ordered in May 2021 on the origins of Covid 19. According to the article:

    The analysis was conducted by John Hardham, Robert Cutlip and Jean-Paul Chretien, three scientists in the Defense Intelligence Agency’s National Center for Medical Intelligence, which is tasked with examining potential biological weapons threats and dangerous infectious diseases.

    Among their damning findings:

  •     The COVID virus contained a feature allowing for easier transmission to humans that was constructed in a manner similar to that described in a years-old Chinese study
  •     A Chinese military researcher applied for a patent for a COVID-19 vaccine just weeks after the virus was first sequenced in 2020. (He later died after falling from the infamous Wuhan Institute of Virology’s roof, according to US investigators.)
  •     WIV researchers worked with US researchers who trained them to construct viruses without leaving a trace of them being engineered.

Rather than amplifying these findings, they were all but ignored as Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines was preparing her report on COVID origins — which Biden ordered in May 2021.

    “The scientists who had the subject matter expertise were silenced,” the source said, noting that Biden and others remained “completely unwitting” about the evidence that SARS-CoV-2 likely leaked out of a lab.

    The spy chiefs further forbade the scientists from sharing the information with Congress — even after Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) expressly requested them in a March 2021 letter — or from rebutting a since-disgraced May 2020 paper — prompted by Fauci — that sought to discredit the lab leak theory.

If the intelligence community alters important information and conclusions to cover up for a foreign power widely considered to be an enemy, why should they be trusted to deliver any useful intelligence? And if they can't be trusted to deliver useful intelligence, why have them?

Explaining the Wealth Pump

 If you have followed my blog for awhile, you will have seen me mention Turchin's theory of elite overproduction and the wealth pump. I recently came across an article published in June 2023 which explains the wealth pump. Entitled "Interest rates have broken the global wealth pump," the author, Edward Chancellor, writes:

“Everybody knows that the dice are loaded … the poor stay poor, the rich get rich.” In the 35 years since Leonard Cohen wrote these words, the rich in the United States have become even richer and the poorest have stayed resolutely poor. In the past, periods of widening inequality have often ended in civil conflict. We have reached another such crisis point, says the complexity theorist Peter Turchin. ...

He continues:

    Turchin uses big data to reveal historical patterns – what he calls “cliodynamics”, after Clio, the Greek muse of history. In his latest book, “End Times: Elites, Counter-Elites and the Path of Political Disintegration, opens new tab”, Turchin argues that complex societies go through repeated cycles of internal peace and harmony, interrupted by occasional outbreaks of internal discord. The turning point comes after long periods of stagnating or declining incomes, growing inequality, declining public trust and an explosion of public debt.

    As the rich multiply in numbers, the social pyramid becomes inverted [ed: Turchin does not argue that it becomes inverted, but that the top becomes too heavy from a greater number of people at the top or aspiring to be in the top of the pyramid], resulting in what Turchin calls “elite overproduction”. When there are more aspirants for positions of power than there are places, the elites start fighting among themselves and so-called “counter elites” emerge who threaten to bring down the system. Over the centuries, many countries have witnessed this pattern. Turchin cites examples from medieval France to mid-19th-century China, when a failed applicant for the civil service, Hong Xiuquan, launched the Taiping Rebellion, the bloodiest civil war in history.

    Elite overproduction arises when economic conditions favour the rich at the expense of everyone else. Turchin calls this a “wealth pump”. For instance, rapid population growth tends to depress real wages, raise food prices and boost land rents, benefitting landowners. Large-scale immigration boosts corporate profits, as does the widespread emergence of monopolies. The Gilded Age in the United States followed the 1864 Immigration Act which was intended to ensure an adequate supply of cheap labour for business. In the late 19th century many industries consolidated. These developments lined the pockets of robber barons such as Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay Frick, whose business operations merged to form U.S. Steel, eventually fuelling a popular backlash.

    We have been living through a second Gilded Age, says Turchin. In the United States, immigration and the offshoring of manufacturing has undercut the power of labour. American business has undergone another round of consolidation. Corporate profits have risen to their highest level (relative to GDP) since 1950. Meanwhile median wages stagnated and unskilled workers experienced a drop in real incomes. Even before the pandemic, the rise in U.S. life expectancy had gone into reverse due to increased drug overdoses and other so-called “deaths of despair”.

    Elite overproduction is visible in the increasing number of college graduates who are over-qualified for the jobs on offer. The unseemly competition to enter top colleges came to public notice in 2019, when investigators found rich parents had paid bribes to get their children into the best universities. Elite infighting has broken out: Turchin describes former President Donald Trump as a typical “counter-elite” who capitalised on popular discontent. We have now entered the pre-crisis phase. “Many observers were taken aback by the intensity of ‘cancel culture’ that appeared out of nowhere. But such vicious ideological struggles are a common phase in any revolution,” Turchin writes.

Chancellor goes on to discuss how monetary policy has also favored the elites and contributed to elite overproduction; but his article gives a thumbnail of the general issue.

    Key to the wealth pump, is to keep the wages of non-elites as low as possible to maximize income for the elites (especially those at the very top of the pyramid). (The flip side of low wages is coming up with new and better ways of extracting wealth from the non-elites; and the two are often related. The coal fields of the late 1800s had their company towns and stores; today, illegals push up housing prices which are further exacerbated by investment from the elites, whether it is Chinese buying residential properties in British Columbia and Australia, or Black Rock buying up homes in the United States).

    And, as Chancellor notes, the wealth pump is dependent on encouraging mass immigration (legal and illegal) and offshoring jobs. 

    And while the counter-elites (such as Trump and his wealthy and/or politically connected supporters) may use popular discontent to get power, we cannot assume that these counter-elites will ultimately do anything to destroy the wealth pump. Rather, we should assume that they merely want to get control of the wealth pump for themselves. For instance, much as I like what Elon Musk has done with SpaceX and disrupting the entrenched elite's media echo chamber, Musk is very much for continuing the flow of legal migration, including increasing the number of H1B visa holders. 

    The basic problem with H1B visas is that the program is used to undercut the wages of American tech and skilled workers. A 2017 article in IEEE Spectrum highlights this issue. Responding to an article that spoke favorably of H1B visas, the authors note that most H1B visa recipients do not receive wages commensurate with Americans doing the same jobs. 

    For example, Wipro, a large outsourcing company, paid its 104 program analysts in San Jose exactly $60,000 each in 2016.  Brocade, in contrast, paid their programmer analysts $130,000 in the same city. 

    Similarly, Infosys, the largest user of H-1B visas, paid their 158 technology analysts in New York City, one of the most expensive cities in the world, $67,832 on average last year, not enough to rent a closet in that city.

    A close look at H1BPay.com’s data shows that, as you move past the Googles and Microsofts of the IT world, H-1B salaries tend to cluster around the $65,000 to $75,000 level.  There is a reason for this.  If outsourcing companies pay their H-1B workers at least $60,000, the company is exempted from a number of regulations designed to prevent visa abuse.

    But $60,000 is far below 2016 market rates for most tech jobs.

    In 2014 (the last year we have good data), Infosys, Cognizant, Wipro, and Tata Consultancy used 21,695 visas, or more than 25 percent of all private-sector H-1B visas used that year. Microsoft, Google, Facebook, and Uber, for comparison, used only 1,763 visas, or 2 percent.

    What’s the difference? Infosys, Cognizant, Wipro, and Tata are all outsourcing companies. Their business model involves using H-1B visas to bring low-cost workers into the United States and then renting those workers to other companies. Their competitive advantage is price. That is, they make their money by renting their workers for less than companies would have to pay American workers.

    This is the real story of the H-1B visa. It is a tool used by companies to avoid hiring American workers, and avoid paying American wages. For every visa used by Google to hire a talented non-American for $126,000, ten Americans are replaced by outsourcing companies paying their H-1B workers $65,000.

But this isn't all. Bringing in foreign workers who do not share American values about meritocracy has led to Americans being cut out of the job market entirely even when they are willing to take the lower wages as certain groups (notably, the Chinese and Indians, although not limited to them) favor hiring others from the same nationalities over Americans, and slowly take over whole departments and, ultimately, whole companies, just as we've seen with another group that strongly practices this type of quasi-nepotism. 

    Sarah Hoyt, who as a Jewish-immigrant from Portugal and generally has no problem with giving American jobs to foreigners, even has a problem with the threat posed by the in-group loyalty shown by Indians and Chinese in hiring. She favorably cited a post on X from Eric S. Raymond that succinctly sets out the issue:

    Today's big beef is between tech-success maximizers like @elonmusk and MAGA nationalists who think the US job market is being flooded by low-skill immigrants because employers don't want to pay competitive wages to Americans.

    To be honest, I think both sides are making some sound points. But I'd rather focus on a different aspect of the problem.

    When I entered the job market as a fledgling programmer back in the early 1980s, I didn't have to worry that some purple-haired harpy in HR was going to throw my resume in the circular file because I'm a straight white male.

    I also didn't have to worry that a hiring manager from a subcontinent that shall not be named would laugh at my qualifications because in-group loyalty tells him to hire his fourth cousin from a city where they still shit on the streets.

    It's a bit much to complain that today's American students won't grind as hard as East Asians when we abandoned meritocracy more than 30 years ago. Nothing disincentivizes working your ass off to excel more than a justified belief that it's futile.

    Right now we're in
[an] everybody-loses situation. Employers aren't getting the talent they desperately need, and talent is being wasted. That mismatch is the first problem that needs solving.

    You want excellence? Fire the goddamn HR drones and the nepotists. Scrap DEI. Find all the underemployed white male STEM majors out there who gave up on what they really wanted to do because the hiring system repeatedly punched them in the face, and bring them in.

    Don't forget the part about paying competitive wages. This whole H-1B indentured-servitude thing? It stinks, and the stench pollutes your entire case for "high-skill" immigration. You might actually have a case, but until you clean up that mess Americans will be justified in dismissing it.

    These measures should get you through the next five years or so, while the signal that straight white men are allowed to be in the game again propagates.

    I'm not going to overclaim here. This will probably solve your need for top 10% coders and engineers, but not your need for the top 0.1%. For those you probably do have to recruit worldwide.

    But if you stop overtly discriminating against the Americans who could fill your top 10% jobs, your talent problem will greatly ease. And you'll no longer get huge political pushback from aggrieved MAGA types against measures that could solve the rest of it.

There are some arguing that the problem is with the H1B visa program itself, because it encourages only temporary workers, and suggest that the solution is expanding the number of green cards. But I don't see how making the foreigners taking the plum jobs permanent residents rather than temporary residents is going to help--in fact, it will make it worse because suddenly they will be eligible to bring their whole village with them. 

    So what is the solution? I think it is three-fold. First, squeeze off immigration and kick out as many we can.  That means not just shutting down the flow of illegal immigration, but a moratorium on green cards and work visas. This needs to be coupled with real punishment, including criminal liability, for companies and their officers that employ illegals. Second, in order to deal with off-shoring, we need to punish companies that offshore production, such as through tariffs, loss of intellectual property rights on technology exported out of the U.S. to facilitate the offshoring, or some other means that has the potential to ruin a company that offshores jobs or production. And third, loose a storm of civil rights investigators and lawyers on companies that discriminate against Americans in favor of foreign workers.

Long Term Review of Kore Gun Belts

Kore Essentials make what seems to be a fairly popular line of gun belts that use a ratcheting system for tightening up the belt, and a plas...