Friday, June 5, 2026

Does Iran Have A Nuke?

Yesterday, Vox Day linked to this article, "Confirmed — Donald Trump Believes Iran Has The Bomb," by Larry Johnson at Son of the New American Revolution. Supposedly, in a phone call between Iranian President Pezeshkian and Pakistani Prime Minister Shariff was over a non-secure line, Pezeshkian outlined an ultimatum should U.S. airstrikes continue which includes this:

3. The Detonation of a Nuclear Device on Iranian soil—executed not as a weapon of war, but as an undeniable demonstration of sovereign capability and ultimate control over the escalation ladder.   

Assuming this is true, I'm not sure why the Iranian president would say this because it now gives plausible deniability if Israel were to nuke some remote facility in Iran. If nothing else, it will justify to the rest of the world the attacks on Iran. 

Weekend Reading #59

Some longer and more involved reading for the weekend:

  •  First up, Jon Low has published another Defensive Pistolcraft newsletter, so be sure to check it out. A few items that stood out in particular:
    • Jon links to a piece from John Farnam titled "Apex Predator?" which is a reminder to those who go out into the forest and field that there are plenty of animals out there that are more than capable of crippling or killing an unarmed human. The key word, of course, is unarmed. 
    • And another John Farnam article, "Mobs!", discussing mobs and the modern euphemisms like "flash mobs" or "teen takeovers".  Farnam urges that "[t]his summer, when you see people, on-foot and/or in vehicles, coming-together in one place suddenly, it is time to exit without delay, while you still can!" Jon also relates a personal incident:

     Pay attention to crowds forming and immediately leave.

     If you don't, you may end up as I did in Printer's Alley in Nashville, TN refilling an ATM with cash while 50 youths started throwing tables and chairs around.  Not willing to turn my back on them, to close and lock the ATM, I stood facing them with my pistol out.  Not pointing at anyone, just watching.  You bet they were watching me.  Tens of thousands of dollars in 20's, an armed guard in uniform with a pistol in a two handed low ready.  I was surprised no one was taking pictures of me.  Maybe they were.  

     In a few minutes they all left.  But I know I came very close to a lethal force incident.  

     If I had been paying attention, I would have locked up and left when they started congregating.  Should have had two guards on such jobs, but company policy was one man.     

    • Another interesting piece was this from Revolver Dispatch: "Lessons From Argentina’s Collapse--What American Survivalists Still Get Wrong." A couple points raised in Jon's excerpt were (a) most of the violence was due to criminals, not the military, so you needed to be armed at all times; and (b) gold was impractical for day-to-day survival. As the author of the Revolver Dispatch noted: "You cannot shave a few dollars’ worth of gold off a coin to buy bread, fuel, medicine, or diapers." I will note that FerFal, writing about his experience in Argentina's collapse, noted the usefulness of junk gold, such as common jewelry--it could be sold for cash as needed for much smaller amounts than the cold coins or bars. Of course, there is a use for gold coins (or Rolex watches) which is to bribe officials, which might be important when trying to get on that last flight out of some third world revolution.
    • Jon links to a few articles discussing shooting faster, but offers his own thoughts on the danger of shooting too fast or hurriedly, using the analogy of driving a car:  

    ... You learn to drive a car, you practice by driving everyday, eventually you are able to drive with automaticity.  Pushing yourself to do things more quickly than automaticity (not speeding on the highway), as starting the car and pulling out of the parking space, does not serve you well.  Because you will naturally go as fast as you can safely go, as fast as you can comfortably go, as fast as you can competently go, as fast as you can confidently go.  

     To push yourself to go faster, risks going faster than you can see (faster than you can process visual information), faster than you can think.  [Out running your head lights.  (Running past the target in a match and not shooting it because you didn't see it.  Hitting the deer at night because you didn't see it in time.)  Out running your GPS.  (The GPS tells  you to take exit 26, but you've already passed exit 26.)]  

     Operating faster than you can think is not safe.  And the older you get, the slower you go.  A person has got to know their limitations.  If you shoot faster than you can think, you could easily shoot the wrong person.  

Or as Jon comments later in his newsletter: "Never shoot faster than you can see.  Never shoot faster than you can think."

    The reality is that our reflexes and ability to process information is not instantaneous--there is a lag. It shows up sometimes when a defensive shooter shoots a criminal in the back. The general situation is that the criminal turns to flee, but because of the lag time in seeing, processing, and stopping from pulling the trigger, the criminal will have turned before the defensive shooter is able to perceive the changed circumstances and not fire the weapon; with the result being the criminal is shot in the back.  

  • This was interesting: the Crime Prevention Research Center a poll of voters and found that "[t]hirty percent of likely voters report carrying a permitted concealed handgun at least occasionally, while 13.2% say they carry all or most of the time.  Even in Constitutional Carry states, where a permit is not required, a substantial share of voters carry concealed handguns:  34% report carrying, and 21% report carrying with a permit." 

Jon has a lot more, so be sure to check it out--I can assure you that you will find many useful links, tips, and advice. 

Some thoughts on an after-action scan.  I actually favor the technique taught by Craig Douglas.  Instead of merely looking by turning the head or turning your back on your attacker, MOVE.  Imagine the battlefield as a clock.  You are in the center of the clock.  The down bad guy is at 12 o’clock.  You need to see behind you (six o’clock).  By aggressively moving to either nine o’clock, or three o’clock you will be able to see both the bad guy and the area previously behind you. 

    • An article on "The Allure of Accuracy" which begins by noting:

We should teach shooting in four distinct parts: what is important(safety and manual of arms), how to hit the target (accuracy and precision), how much time it takes (speed and efficiency), and what is meaningful (novel or complex context). Unfortunately, many shooters only receive the first two lessons—or choose to ignore the last two—focusing on safety and accuracy while avoiding the tension between time and information.

    • From an article discussing some of the downsides of AIWB carry:

It saddens me that the gun community has developed its own form of “cancel culture” where a person can no longer express an opinion without being shouted down. It seems social media has brought out the “ugly” in people. These attacks go beyond the opinion itself and attack the person, in some cases trying to ruin their reputation. At a minimum, if you are in my age bracket, you are called a “Fudd” regardless of your training, experience and background. Name calling is easy when you don’t have to face the person, and it’s a tactic often used by folks who lack real experience or who can’t articulate intelligent counterpoints. Let’s just say, I won’t be surprised if it happens to me after this article. 

I have to admit that once I hear or read the word "Fudd" from someone, I tend to be more dismissive of them out because it merely underscores that they are the type of person to tear down a fence without understanding why it was there in the first place.  
    • Greg includes a link to an article on flashlight skills, which is more than just being able run your flashlight with your handgun.
    • A detailed article on what types of construction or objects in or around a house can stop a bullet. Less than you might think.

    Unfortunately, we humans would be powerless against a rare giant projectile many miles in diameter. Unlike the dinosaurs, we might well see the approach of a six-mile-wide killer asteroid, like the one that collided with Earth 66 million years ago. However, stopping it or deflecting its course is out of the question: It would be like trying to stop an oncoming truck by throwing ping-pong balls at it. And although we’ve discovered the vast majority of near-Earth objects (NEOs) larger than about two-thirds of a mile across, finding that none are on a collision course with Earth, astronomers could very well discover an enormous comet next week that will crash into the planet in a few years’ time. And again, there’s nothing we could do to stop it.

    If we do want to protect ourselves from cosmic impacts, we need to focus on medium-sized objects, ranging from about 100 yards to about a half a mile. These are relatively numerous, and they can easily cause many tens of millions of casualties. Earth is hit by a 400-yard asteroid on average once every 100,000 years. If the collision occurs in Europe, a country like France will disappear completely from the map, and the entire continent will become an unimaginable disaster area. Such an impact is, in theory, preventable, so we would be crazy not to explore the possibilities of doing just that.

[snip]

    When it comes to protecting Earth from a fatal collision, there are a number of ideas currently under consideration, ranging from good to bad to very bad.

    For example, blowing an asteroid up with an atomic bomb, as happened in “Armageddon,” is not a smart idea. It is an option that Edward Teller, known as “the father of the hydrogen bomb,” proposed long ago, but it simply wouldn’t help. The numerous fragments created in such an explosion would still be moving through the solar system in more or less the same direction and at the original high speed. As a result, Earth would then have to endure not one big impact but a whole series of smaller ones, with all the attendant consequences.

    A more practical solution would be to slightly deflect the approaching celestial body so that it passes close to Earth rather than colliding with it. Particularly if you can see the impact coming many years in advance, a small nudge can be enough to avert disaster. When astronomers discovered the 1,100-foot-wide near-Earth object Apophis, which for a while looked as if it would wreak havoc on Earth in 2029, they were already calculating that a minimal change in speed of just a few micrometers per second would be enough to prevent that anticipated catastrophe. Luckily, in the case of Apophis, there’s no need to intervene: The asteroid will safely fly by the Earth on April 13, 2029, at a distance of some 20,000 miles.

    In the annals of Deep State WTF-ery, is there a stranger case than CIA officer David Rush turning up with $40-million in 303 one-kilogram gold bars, plus $2-million in cash, plus a stash of 30 mostly Rolex watches? Well, yeah, the stranger story is how the guy got hired by the CIA in the first place.

    Rush was arrested on Monday, May 18, by an FBI SWAT team at his home in Loudoun County, VA. Agents searched the house all day long and found the stash. Rush is currently charged with theft of public money and allegedly falsifying his military and academic credentials to obtain federal employment benefits, including roughly $77,000 in improper military leave pay. He’s scheduled to make a federal court appearance in Alexandria today.

    Rush first applied for a job at the CIA in March 2006. He claimed to have a bachelor’s degree in math from Clemson University and a master’s from the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI). He was rejected. He reapplied later that same year. Bumped again. He reapplied again in 2009, adding a new credential: that he’d been a US Navy test pilot and flight trainer. This time, he was hired. 

But as Kunstler goes on to relate, Rush's background was a fabrication: his college credentials were fake; he had never been a pilot for the Navy. So how did he pass the rigorous vetting process needed to be hired and given a security clearance? Rush was hired at the start of the Obama Administration when Leon Panetta was the newly appointed director of the CIA. Panetta, if you remember, was one of the  51 former intelligence officials who signed an October 2020 ⁠Public Statement on the Hunter Biden laptop falsely claiming it was Russian disinformation in order to interfere with the outcome of the 2020 Presidential Election. So is this evidence of more Deep State shenanigans?

 Beginning with the stimulus of a cup or two of strong coffee, fifteen-year-old Columbia College sophomore George Templeton Strong started a diary in 1835. He continued to make entries until his death in 1875, toting up to around four million words, an extraordinary document of life in mid-century America as seen from the commercial and cultural capital of New York. Especially for the terrible years of the Civil War, Strong’s job as Treasurer of the U.S. Sanitary Commission, a charity dedicated to fighting the “third army” of disease, gave him a wide perspective on the war, making his diary one of the most visceral portals into understanding the destruction of American slavery.

Wilder: Why We Are Getting Poorer

Why are we getting poorer as a nation? If your first thought was "inflation," that is only part of the story. John Wilder's latest piece, "Singapore Got Rich on a Tiny Rock. We’re Getting Poor on a Vast Continent. Here’s Why" explores the factors that allow a country to become rich and explains how the U.S. has taken the wrong course. The factors are:

  • Raw materials (whether your country has them or easy access to them from another country)
  • Cheap energy.
  • Capital investment (e.g., factories and infrastructure)
  • Drive and ingenuity
  • Skilled labor and physical craftmanship
  • The right kind of legal environment
  • A scoring system that rewards the productive

And as John points out, the U.S. has squandered its advantages in every category. For example:

    Capital investment?  We offshored it to China and called it “globalization.” Factories, machine tools, entire supply chains are all gone.  Sure, some capital flowed back in the form of stock buybacks and McMansions, but the productive kind?  That’s building Chang’s future now. 

    Drive and ingenuity?  Our schools turned into indoctrination camps.  Merit is racist, excellence is oppressive, and every kid gets a participation trophy.  The spark of genius gets smothered under layers of “equity.”  Steve Jobs couldn’t get hired at Apple™ today and with the regulations, couldn’t even start Apple© today.

    Labor and craftsmanship?  We imported millions of low-skill workers who consume more in services than they produce in output, while our own kids rack up six-figure debts for gender studies degrees.  The skilled trades?  Stigmatized as “dirty jobs” for decades.  Now we wonder why nothing gets built on time or on budget.  Welding productivity is half what it was in 1960.

John also discusses why the it was allowed to happen (it has enriched those in charge) and warns that our opportunity to turn it around will be painful.

    John doesn't discuss what it will take to turn things around, however, but I suspect that it will take something akin to a revolution or the rise of a Caesar. 

    For instance, as to the legal environment, John observes that we need "[e]nough government to stop anarchy, not so much that you end up with Pol Pot’s people party. ... Too little law and warlords loot your factory.  Too much and the bureaucrats loot it for you." But what we have is "more government than ever [with] regulations thicker than a Manhattan phone book ..., agencies with SWAT teams, and a bureaucracy that treats citizens like the enemy." 

    John is underestimating the amount of regulations. Just the federal regulations--the Code of Federal Regulations ("CFR") was 190,260 pages spanning 245 volumes at the end of 2023, and more is added every year." And these figures don’t even account for the unknown number of guidance documents issued by agencies that, although not legally binding, direct the interpretation of their rules," the cited article adds.

    It’s safe to say that the regulatory burden on everyday Americans is not alleviated in any meaningful sense as long as the code keeps increasing. This breadth and complexity makes it nearly impossible for any normal citizen to know what the law requires.

    The Framers understood the threat posed by an ever-changing, ever-increasing mass of laws. Such legal metastasizing “poisons the blessing of liberty itself,” as James Madison wrote in The Federalist No. 62. And the purpose of representative government is defeated, according to Madison, “if the laws be so voluminous that they cannot be read, or so incoherent that they cannot be understood; if they…undergo such incessant changes that no man, who knows what the law is today, can guess what it will be tomorrow.”

    Are we truly free if we have no reasonable way of knowing the laws to which we’re subject, when the overwhelming majority of them come from unelected bureaucrats instead of our elected representatives in Congress? With a six-figure code, the ominous maxim “Show me the man and I’ll show you the crime” becomes a reality for too many Americans.

How will this change? Congress isn't going to engage in mass repeals of law; nor will the bureaucracy willingly eliminate their regulations. And even if they did, the individual states similarly have their administrative codes and regulations. 

    We've never seen governments as complex as today's which complexity is only possible because of the immense wealth of the country to afford it. There is no historical precedent. Nevertheless, Joseph Tainter's The Collapse of Complex Societies argues that societies collapse when the costs of maintaining their complexity outweighs the benefits. So one resolution is that our society collapses. This could be mass uprisings where the elites are simply killed (e.g., the Mayans) or disintegration from wars or revolution (e.g., the Bronze Age Collapse).

    Or the government could be forcibly reformed such as through Caesarism: the rise of someone with the military and political power to simply cut through the Gordian knot of the bureaucracy and regulations. Oswald Spengler noted that every great civilization goes through a period of rule by a Caesar type figure who wields the necessary force to change the laws and control competing factions, and predicted it would be the end stage of democracy. 

    Obama's comment in the face of Congressional deadlock--"I've got a pen, and I've got a phone"--is an example of an attitude of Caesarism. Even Trump's aborted attempt to use DOGE to uncover and stop government waste and corruption is an example, even if it stalled in the face of opposition from the judiciary, Congress, and the bureaucracy. 

    But perhaps there will come a President that will have sufficient support that he or she can simply ignore Congress, the courts, and/or the bureaucracy.  We saw this recently in El Salvador where President Nayib Bukele and the Salvadoran Legislative Assembly removed corrupt judges that prevented any meaningful reform and control of criminal gangs. Bukele tweeted, for instance

If you don’t impeach the corrupt judges, you CANNOT fix the country.

They will form a cartel (a judicial dictatorship) and block all reforms, protecting the systemic corruption that put them in their seats. 
   

We may live to see "interesting times".      

Thursday, June 4, 2026

VIDEO: "Stop Racking The Slide"

Some advice for better dry-fire practice with your handgun--particularly striker-fired or single-action semi-auto pistols. 

VIDEO: "STOP RACKING THE SLIDE: A BETTER WAY TO DRY FIRE YOUR HANDGUN"
ConcealedCarry dot com (15 min.)

VIDEO: Recoil Management In Single Action Revolvers

While modern gunfighting techniques emphasize two-handed shooting with a fairly tight grip on the weapon, in the past both shooting techniques and the designs of the firearms were based around a revolver being a hand (singular) gun. Here the author demonstrates shooting both regular and heavy loads out of a single-action revolver with the traditional plow handle grips, and how to mitigate the recoil by allowing the revolver to roll upward (which also helps with a fast cocking of the gun for the next shot) and/or allowing the whole arm to rise to deal with particularly heavy recoil. Not only does it mitigate recoil making it more comfortable to shoot the weapon, but the author's tests showed that he was more accurate than with a tight grip (what he calls the "death grip") on the weapon. 

I don't have a big bore single action revolver, so I probably would not be able to use this technique with any of my handguns. But those of you that have old-West style single action revolvers might be able to make use of this.  

 VIDEO: "Recoil Management With Heavy Six Gun Loads"
The Shooters Apprentice (16 min.)

The Manhattan Institute Wants To Hand The Left New Tools To Punish The Right

As gun owners, we are aware of the propensity of the political class to pass unnecessary gun laws to combat "gun violence" even though there are already laws on the books that could be used if only they were enforced. Of course, the new laws are not really intended to combat crime, but to further restrict the rights of lawful gun owners. 

Well, the same may soon occur to laws regarding protests. Wired reports that "The Manhattan Institute Helped Kill DEI. Now It’s Coming for Protests." The article explains:

    “Today’s left-wing agitators deploy random acts of lawlessness designed to inconvenience and disrupt as many civilians as possible, hoping to pressure them to get the government to change course. This tactic is reasonably described as a form of terrorism, though the activists aren’t murderous like al-Qaida or Hamas—they don’t use guns, bombs, or threats of unpredictable bloodshed. Instead, they engage in civil terrorism,” wrote Manhattan Institute legal policy fellow Tal Fortgang, a recent New York University law graduate who lambasted students protesting against Israel’s war on Gaza for “Jew hatred.”

    Fortgang, who’s spent his career at right-wing think tanks, appears to be the main proponent of the “civil terrorism” theory, beginning with a February 2025 Wall Street Journal op-ed that argued acts of nonviolent disobedience like blocking a road was something far more sinister. More recently, he authored a piece in City Journal, the Manhattan Institute’s in-house magazine, targeting the Answer anti-war protest network’s “central role in organizing an act of civil terrorism and its advocacy on behalf of Venezuela, Iran, and China [which] are reason enough to believe that its actions may be unlawful under statutes like FARA,” the Foreign Agents Registration Act.

    In response to WIRED’s questions, Fortgang claims that he focuses on anti-war, pro-Palestinian, and Black Lives Matter activists in his writings justifying the novel “civil terrorism” theory “because they constitute the overwhelming majority of groups engaged in this behavior.” Asked why states should step up protest-related crimes from misdemeanors to felonies, he wrote: “When hundreds of people gather to commit disorderly conduct together, we are dealing with something completely different. That is what I call civil terrorism: mass commission of minor crimes to intimidate or coerce a population into adopting certain policies.”

Utah has already passed legislation similar to what Fortgang wants to see adopted across the country, while Arizona's legislature is apparently considering it as well.

    I have three issues with this:

  • First, we don't need new laws to deal with the issues of which Fortgang wants to address because there were already laws that could have been applied if the political class had wanted. For instance, declaring a riot or an unlawful assembly and sending in the police or requesting that their state leadership call in the national guard. Moreover, if the political class was unwilling to use the tools already at their disposal to stop the BLM riots and street takeovers because they agreed with the aims of the protestors, why would you expect the same people to use these new laws.
  • Second, these laws will just hand a new tool to our political opponents to potentially use against us. Because some day it may need to be conservatives out on the street protesting. Just look at the recent protests in England over the death of Henry Nowak while in police custody as he bled to death from multiple stab wounds as the police mocked him and bantered with Nowak's murderer. It is that type of protest that these types of laws would be focused on.
  • Third, I generally object to the trend of over criminalizing activities. It is why you read of parents being charged with crimes for letting their kids play outside or walk to a local grocery store. It is nanny statism at its worse. 
What Fortgang is proposing is simply another tool that won't be used by Leftist politicians against their Leftist allies, but will be wielded as a sledge hammer against those on the Right. These proposed laws cannot be allowed.  

Big Country Expat's Kilt Story

Some more "just for fun" posting: Big Country Expat has a humorous account of working in a call center with substandard air conditioning, which was tolerable under a relaxed dress code. But then a new dress code was enforced ... leaving our resourceful hero no choice but to force the company to live up to its own rules. Check it out: "Chinese Curse: 'May You Live In Interesting Times'." The story is near the bottom of the post, after his account of some recent "interesting times" events in his life. 

Just For Fun: Calvin and Hobbes Dance

 

VIDEO: "Calvin and Hobbes Dance"
prettylittlesomeday (30 sec.)

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Awaken With JP: News Update

From JP's summary:

We cover a variety of crazy news stories in this episode, most notably: Congress has moved to integrate the US military with Israel. And Don Jr marries daughter of Epstein’s personal banker. That’s right ladies and gentleman, the son of the biggest Epstein criminal protector has married the daughter of Epstein’s personal banker. We have all the details in this episode.

 VIDEO: "It Doesn't Get Any Crazier Than This! - News Update"
AwakenWithJP (12 min.)

VIDEO: Don't Forget These Items In Your Medical Kit

Now that many in the self-defense and prepping community are packing around IFAKs to deal with serious trauma, a reminder that not every injury needs a tourniquet, pressure bandage, or a 5-foot roll of gauze. The author reviews a few pre-made kits of lessor items--"boo boo" kits--packaged and sealed that you can slip into an IFAK, a backpack, or into a pocket.  

VIDEO: "The Medical Layer Most IFAKs Are Missing: Field Austere Medical"
PreparedAirman (6 min.)

Does Iran Have A Nuke?

Yesterday, Vox Day linked to this article, " Confirmed — Donald Trump Believes Iran Has The Bomb ," by Larry Johnson at Son of the...