Tuesday, June 23, 2026

VIDEO: Megalodon

Megalodon was a giant shark that is believed able to grow to a maximum length between 53 and 80 feet long and which is believed to have lived from 23 to 3.58 million years ago. The video mostly focuses on recent research suggesting that the Megalodon's body morphology was different from sharks living today, being longer (thus leaning toward the 80 foot length). But a couple other points that were interesting is it is now believed to have been warm blooded based on its distribution during the Ice Age, and the resultant impact on its hunting strategy.  

 VIDEO: "Scientists Rebuilt the Megalodon From Scratch in 2026. It Was Scarier Than Anyone Expected." - Fernix (23 min.)

Wilder: Teutoburg Forest And Failed Assimulation

Since the average man thinks of the Roman Empire several times per day, most of my readers are probably aware of the Battle of Teutoburg Forest in 9 A.D., where three Roman legions led by Publius Quinctilius Varus were wiped out in an ambush by an alliance of German tribesmen led by a man named Arminius, who also was the leader of the Varus' auxiliaries and a traitor. John Wilder's focus is on Arminius:

Arminius, likely the son of a German nobleman, had been taken as a hostage from a German tribe at around the age of 10.  For 17 years, Arminius had been raised in Rome, gone to Roman schools, been given Roman military training, and was even raised to the social rank of Equestrian, the second highest social rank at the time.   

If anyone would have assimilated into Roman culture, it should have been Arminius. But, as John notes:

    ... Despite being given nearly every advantage that Roman society had to offer, Arminius was never Roman.  He was brilliant, he was exceptional enough to be given military leadership, and he had spent seven more years as a Roman than the ten he had as a German.

    But there was no amount of Rome that would make Arminius less German.  And, rightly, Arminius is a hero to Germans. 

How many like Arminius hold leadership positions in our military, civilian government, or business and financial institutions? Wilder discusses the battle and the implications for the U.S. of modern-day versions of Arminius, so be sure to read the whole thing.

Immigration Is A Strength: Illegals Drive Up Housing Costs And Rent According To Fed

Breitbart quotes the following from a report issued by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas:

     We then turn to the effects of unauthorized immigration on the broader local economy, focusing in particular on the housing market. We start by estimating the effects on house prices, rents, and new housing supply. First, we find that during the boom period an increase in unauthorized immigrant worker flows equal to 1% of a local area’s initial employment increased local house prices by 2.2% and increased local rents by 1.4%. The impact on rents is slightly smaller for single-family units and slightly larger for multi-family units. These magnitudes are similar to those found by Saiz (2007) based on legal immigration over the 1985-1998 period. A back-of-the-envelope calculation suggests that [unauthorized immigrant worker flows] can explain about 30% of the total growth in house prices and 20% of total growth in rents over the boom period for the average local market. [Emphasis added]

This is only looking at the illegal immigration and not the impact of legal immigration and refugees. The article also cites from a HUD report looking at immigration as a whole: 

“This immigration-driven increase in households has contributed to a significant increase in housing demand, thus driving up housing prices,” the HUD probe continues. “In fact, in some markets, immigration has accounted for nearly all of the increase in housing demand in recent years.” 

And this:

Likewise, in 2024, Center for Immigration Studies researcher Steven Camarota revealed a similar statistic to the United States Congress, stating that “a 5-percentage-point increase in the recent immigrant share of a metro area’s population is associated with a 12-percent increase in the average U.S.-born household’s rent, relative to their income.” 

Monday, June 22, 2026

Lost Mayan City Discovered In Mexico

 This is an older article from October 2024 that I came across. The BBC reports:

    A huge Maya city has been discovered centuries after it disappeared under jungle canopy in Mexico.

    Archaeologists found pyramids, sports fields, causeways connecting districts and amphitheatres in the southeastern state of Campeche.

    They uncovered the hidden complex - which they have called Valeriana - using Lidar, a type of laser survey that maps structures buried under vegetation.

    They believe it is second in density only to Calakmul, thought to be the largest Maya site in ancient Latin America.

    The team discovered three sites in total, in a survey area the size of Scotland's capital Edinburgh, “by accident” when one archaeologist browsed data on the internet.

    “I was on something like page 16 of Google search and found a laser survey done by a Mexican organisation for environmental monitoring,” explains Luke Auld-Thomas, a PhD student at Tulane university in the US.

    It was a Lidar survey, a remote sensing technique which fires thousands of laser pulses from a plane and maps objects below using the time the signal takes to return.

    But when Mr Auld-Thomas processed the data with methods used by archaeologists, he saw what others had missed - a huge ancient city which may have been home to 30-50,000 people at its peak from 750 to 850 AD. 

There doesn’t appear to be anything more recent published about the site. 

Trump Waives Iran Oil Sanctions For Two Months

The New York Post reports that the Treasury Department has issued a waiver on Iranian oil sanctions effective through August 21, "allowing for roughly $10 billion in revenue as nuclear talks continued with Iranian officials in Switzerland."

Your Introductory Offer Has Expired

Vox Day notes that now that developers and creatives are sufficiently accustomed to AI--i.e., are now dependent on it--the pricing has suddenly gone up.  

VIDEO: Backcountry Trauma Care And Improvisation

 VIDEO: "Backcountry Trauma and Improvisation"
University of California Television (UCTV) (1 hr. 20 min.)

Nigel Farage - "Britain is a two tier state - against white people."

Nigel Farage, leader of the Reform UK party, posted an essay about immigration and the racism against white people that is embedded in the UK government and bureaucracy. An excerpt:

    The underlying cause is simple. The British state is no longer working for everyone in this country. Across public and economic life, the power of the Government has been brought to bear on tackling “inequalities”, in a narrow and specific sense. Anything which is seen to disadvantage a minority group is cracked down on. Anything which benefits a minority and damages the White British is likely to be left alone.

    British people fundamentally expect a fair deal. But there is nothing fair about the way White people have been treated by their governments.

    I’m sure you’re familiar with the refrain that this mistreatment is somehow justified - as the activists like to put it, “when you are accustomed to privilege, true equality can feel like oppression”. But equality has nothing to do with it. Let me show you, in the first of many on my new Substack, just how insidious the two-tier system of British government really is - and how deeply anti-White racism is embedded into the heart of the state. 

 And, as an example:

    Equality has nothing to do with it. The intention is to dominate. Employees working in one civil service department were told they should “yield positions of power to those otherwise marginalised” in order to be in the “growth zone”, and “surround [themselves] with others who think and look differently”. Identity network groups focused around race and religion - which can exert staggering power over senior staff members – operate as unelected and unaccountable networks of power.

Their commitment to this doctrine goes as far as directly interfering with the plans of the democratically elected government. Civil servants in the Home Office openly shared their plans to block the deportation of illegal migrants to the safe third country of Rwanda on political grounds. 

Sounds similar to the quiet resistance against Trump's attempts at reform. 

    The difference is that DEI is actually enshrined in UK law. Farage discusses Britain's "Equity Act" which creates a two-tier standard discriminating against white men in employment, housing, healthcare, education, policing, and even the military where political officers--called diversity and inclusion advisers--are stationed in every unit of the military. 

    Be sure to read the whole thing, because this is our future if the Democrats ever again get control of Congress and/or the Presidency. 

Mini Movie Review: "Citizen Vigilante" (A guest post from The Realist)

    I recently learned about the just released movie "Citizen Vigilante" from Black Pigeon on YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=14-8vR-QBes). The film was released June 19, 2026, and so far as I can tell is only available via a few streaming services (Apple TV, Amazon Prime, Google Play, and Fandango). At present, the movie is unrated, but would probably be rated R for violence, sex, and profanity.

    I'm not going to give any spoilers in this review.

    The movie opens with the following blocks of text:

    "ALL BEHAVIOR CAN BE TRACED BACK TO INSTINCTS."

    "WHEN JUSTICE IS DENIED, INSTINCTS TURN TO VENGEANCE. - ANONYMOUS"

    The main themes of this movie are taken right out of the headlines, unless you only consume mainstream media news sources that never deviate from the official narrative. The story focuses on migrant crime in Europe, and a soft-on-crime judiciary that constantly makes excuses for the horrible crimes committed by migrants and refuses to punish those migrants for their crimes. Nothing is sugarcoated. It does not try to talk around the political sensitivities of the "Migrants Welcome" left. It does not avoid the racial and religious characteristics of the migrants committing these crimes.

    The main character, Sanders, is a wealthy American with business interests in Europe. He becomes disgusted with judicial leniency toward migrants and the unwillingness of the politicians to do anything about it. He has the means and ability to take action, so he starts taking action against some of the criminals and the judges who refuse to punish the migrant criminals.

    There is nothing subtle about this movie. It was produced to make a point. It makes the point in action, in monologues, and by showing the senseless brutality of violent migrant crime.

    There were only two things about the movie I didn't like. At one point Sanders visits a brothel and employs the services of one of its ladies. This seemed rather gratuitous and I felt like it added very little to the story. The second involved technical defects relating to firearms - a silenced semiautomatic
pistol that was too quiet and never ejected any spent brass.

    If you are disgusted by the the violent migrant crime in Europe and America, and are disgusted by a soft-on-migrant-crime judiciary, I believe you will enjoy this movie. I enjoyed this movie, but the women in your life will probably not like it, and it is definitely not a movie for children to see.

Sunday, June 21, 2026

Gun & Prepping News #86

 Some links that may be of interest:

The receiver is aluminum with a serialized steel chassis. The barrel is steel, 4.5 inches long, and threaded 1/2×28 for direct suppressor mounting. A thread protector ships standard. The gun includes a full-length Picatinny top rail, M-LOK slots on both sides and the bottom of the handguard, a flat-face single-stage trigger, and an AR-15-compatible grip, which means any standard AR grip drops straight in, a detail Taurus got right.

 VZ58 is incredibly lightweight for what it is; it is more accurate than many AKs and has a bolt hold-open mechanism. But the unfortunate reality is - in the 21st century, VZ 58 faced the same problems as AK. Mounting accessories is hard and requires serious modifications.

    Both the 5.56 NATO and .300 Blackout use the same case. However, the 5.56 NATO utilizes a .224-inch diameter projectile, which is noticeably smaller than the .300 Blackout’s .308-inch bullet.

    At close ranges, .300 Blk offers superior ballistics and higher muzzle energy, whereas 5.56 produces higher velocities and less drop, as well as improved performance at distances past 300 yards. Additionally, .300 Blackout delivers retained terminal performance with short barrels (especially between 8 to 11 inches), and it offers close to a 90 percent increase in frontal area.

    The main determining factors that will affect your decision between the two will likely be your intended engagement distance and the overall cost of ammunition. .300 Blackout ammo can typically be twice as much as comparable 5.56, making volume training much more difficult. However, you may decide that the benefits of the .300 Blk easily justify the increase in cost.

    Today, the .300 Blk has excelled in hunting, defensive, and competitive shooting applications, with a wide variety of manufacturers offering ammunition tailored to specific uses. 

    In American Rifleman's 2025 coverage of the new Federal 7 mm Backcountry cartridge, much of the story wasn't as much about the new chambering as it was about the cartridge case itself, a case that Federal called its "Peak Alloy" design. The single-piece, all-steel cartridge case, in the words of Federal Managing Engineer Jake Burns, "acts as its own mini pressure-containment vessel, absorbing some of the energy without cracking or stretching. That’s part of the case’s ability to manage pressure." Now, that design has moved from a proprietary chambering to the mainstream cartridge world with the introduction of Federal's new 6.5 Creedmoor +Peak.

[snip]

     At the heart of this ammunition revolution is the one-piece Peak Alloy cartridge case design, which Federal says can safely handle chamber pressures of 80,000 psi compared with the SAAMI-MAP of 62,000 psi chamber pressures of similarly configured brass cartridge cases. ...

    The Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane has quietly posted one of the more interesting small arms solicitations in recent memory. The Hypervelocity Improved Capability Assault Rifle program, HICAR for short, is USSOCOM's ask for a carbine that can do something current M4-based platforms simply cannot: reach out past 600 meters with a standard 5.56mm package, without making operators carry anything heavier or bulkier than what they're already running.

    The core problem the government seems to be trying to solve is the range gap. The current URG-I (Upper Receiver Group - Improved), which sits on most SOCOM M4A1 lowers today, is optimized for standard 5.56 NATO and tops out at a practical effective range of around 300 meters. That's fine for a lot of situations, but it leaves a hole on the modern battlefield where adversaries can engage from distances where the round simply runs out of steam. HICAR is meant to close that gap by leveraging next-generation hypervelocity 5.56x45mm ammunition, specifically M855A1+ loaded to 82,000 PSI chamber pressure, a significant step up from standard loads.

The author concludes with this question: "Do you think there is any currently available carbine platform genuinely built to handle sustained fire with ammunition loaded to 82kpsi, or will every vendor need a clean-sheet bolt and barrel design to compete?" Perhaps this is a program that can benefit from the Peak Alloy case. 

When it comes to being comfortable long-term while carrying a handgun, the real culprit is how much your handgun weighs. Having an all-steel or metal-framed firearm can speed up how fast you become fatigued, rather than the overall size of your handgun. Looking at the Glock 43X versus the longer Glock 48 variant, both feel almost identical to carry, with the Glock 48 having a longer barrel than the smaller Glock 43X. Everyone likes to stress about overall size, but the weight of a handgun will make you fatigue and become uncomfortable faster than anything else.  

I can guarantee that if the something the same weight as the 43X or 48 was a foot long, size would matter. 

    According to the report, China has already moved beyond prototypes and into early deployment of a handheld electromagnetic small arm, with adjustable power levels that can range from non-lethal applications up to armor-penetrating capability, including the ability to punch through 10mm steel at 50 meters in high-power mode.

    Performance-wise, it’s pushing 1,000–2,000 rounds per minute, minimal recoil, low noise (around 65 decibels), and no visible muzzle signature, features that would clearly matter in specialized operations. 

  • "Front Line Friday #20: In-Car First Aid and Trauma Kit Configuration"--The Firearm Blog. Aimed at law enforcement, but of obvious interest to preppers, the article describes going beyond the IFAK to something that can be used to treat a number of people, such as victims of a mass shooting or a multiple casualties from auto accidents. As the article explains:

    The issued IFAK solves a specific problem: one officer, one patient, one acute hemorrhage or airway event, immediate intervention. It is sized and configured to be carried on the body, which means the contents list is constrained by what fits on a belt or a vest panel and what an officer can access one-handed under stress. Those constraints are correct for the problem the IFAK is designed to solve. They are the wrong constraints for what a patrol vehicle medical kit needs to do.

    The vehicle kit operates in a different scenario envelope. It is not a backup IFAK. It is a second-tier capability that extends the officer's ability to manage trauma before EMS arrives, support multiple patients, supply arriving officers or bystanders rendering aid, and hand off organized resources to EMS so they can move faster upon arrival on scene. A vehicle kit that is just a larger IFAK is missing the point. A vehicle kit that is organized around that handoff function, stocked for multi-patient scenarios, and configured so items can be located and retrieved in low light and under stress is doing what it is supposed to do.

    CPM stands for counts per minute, but CPM alone is not a universal “safe” or “dangerous” number. It depends on the detector, tube size, calibration, radiation type, distance from the source, and exposure time.

    Still, if your meter uses the example conversion used in this article, 120 CPM ≈ 1 µSv/hr, then 500 CPM ≈ 4.2 µSv/hr, 1000 CPM ≈ 8.3 µSv/hr, 4000 CPM ≈ 33 µSv/hr, and 10000 CPM ≈ 83 µSv/hr. Those readings are elevated compared with typical background dose rates and should be taken seriously, especially if sustained.

The author presents a chart addressing different CPM levels and when it becomes worrisome or dangerous. He also goes into more detail on how radiation exposure is measured, health risks, shielding for different types of radioactive radiation and more. 

  • "How to Maintain and Care for Your Field Jacket So It Lasts for Years"--Propper. Specific instructions for caring for, cleaning, and proper storage of the M65 field jacket. For instance, for storage, the article says to avoid "[p]lastic vacuum bags that crease fabric Damp basements or unventilated closets." Best practice for storage: "For long-term storage in garages or sheds, use a sealed metal container with red cedar shavings. This will keep the insects and rodents away."
  • "VHF vs. UHF Handheld Radios: Which Is Better?"--Modern Survival Blog.  Short answer:

    VHF handheld radios generally have an advantage for longer-distance communication across open outdoor terrain, especially in rural areas and over water. UHF handheld radios generally work better around buildings, inside structures, and in urban environments because their shorter wavelengths are better suited to passing through or around many common obstructions.

    In the woods, there is no universal winner. Forest density, hills, antenna quality, radio height, and line of sight can matter more than the frequency band alone.

    For hiking, hunting, or property communications, the best approach is to understand the general tradeoffs and test both bands in your actual environment.

VIDEO: Megalodon

Megalodon was a giant shark that is believed able to grow to a maximum length between 53 and 80 feet long and which is believed to have live...