Some longer and more involved reading for the weekend:
- First up is Greg Ellifritz's Weekend Knowledge Dump. Lots of good stuff this week, but a few that stood out in particular to me:
- Since deescalation is one of the best tools in your self-defense kit when out on the street, I will first mention that Greg has included a link to an article from Skill Set Magazine on deescalation. This article runs through an actual encounter that happened to the author and how it was defused. As the author points out, "humble pie tastes better than jail food." And nods to acknowledging that sometimes the best way to deescalate a situation is to control those who you are with.
- Next one up is "Five Rules To Help You Win A Gunfight!" Just some good practical advice.
- A piece entitled "My First Safaris" where the author reminisces about hunting trips when he was young. Nothing tactical--nothing really much about hunting, either--but just some good memories.
- An article on the fastest way to reload a snub nosed revolver (but also applicable to full sized revolvers). The author mentions the standards: a second weapon (the NY reload), speed loaders, speed strips, and then the final which is a variant on the first--having a second weapon, except in this case it being a knife. The author likes the clinch pick.
- A piece entitled "The Lost Intent" which discusses how Cooper's color code had been watered down and changed over time so that it lost is original meaning. (I believe I had linked a similar article not too long ago). Basically, as the author explains:
Cooper was not concerned with whether you were looking around a room. He cared whether you had already made peace with the possibility that you might have to kill someone to survive. His Color Code was a psychological ladder. Each rung brought the mind closer to decisive action, action that most people are deeply unprepared to take.
It is also the reason that the color code originally went to "black" because red meant you were ready to do some killing but black meant you were doing the killing.
- A nice article and video from Lucky Gunner on the M1 Carbine.
- A lesson on what is ballistic coefficient and why it is important, including the difference between the G1 and G7 drag models.
- And while I haven't had a chance to watch it yet, what looks to be an interesting video on the "Principles of the Armed Lifestyle".
- "Novelty vs. Routine: The One Line Every Man Must Guard Or Watch His Life Slip Away"--Wilder Wealthy & Wise. Some deep thoughts on the difference between living and existing. John notes that "Routine is where life goes to die," but "Chaos is where life goes to lose meaning." Be sure to check it out.
- "Mystery of sunken Russian ‘ghost ship’ grows after explosions reported while carrying alleged nuclear reactors to North Korea"--The New York Post. This has to do with the loss of a Russian freighter in December 2024 off the coast of Spain. The article suggests that a Barracuda supercavitating torpedo was used without any explanation about why they think so. The more likely explanation was multiple remote detonated limpet mines with the initial blasts intended to disable the vessel and the remainder detonated after the crew had been rescued in order to sink the vessel. It sank in over 8,200 feet of water so no one will probably ever know.
- "The Doomsday Organism"--Noema Magazine. The article relates:
The organism of concern is an artificially created mirror-image form of bacteria, known popularly as mirror life. For decades, biologists have been trying to imitate what, so far, only nature has been able to do: build a living self-replicating cell from scratch. And many believe they are getting closer. But the work to create mirror life, while adjacent to this field, is different, stranger. Mirror life would be the genesis of an organism that does not imitate nature but contradicts it. It would have a molecular structure opposite to that of all existing life on Earth. It would be something completely new under the sun, and its creation would commence the beginning of a second tree of life.
The road to hell is paved with good intentions. The initial interest in creating mirror biology promised wonderful things: never-before-seen drugs, entirely new biomaterials and profound answers to the origins of life. The U.S. National Science Foundation, the National Natural Science Foundation of China and the European Commission all supported work in this direction. But in recent years, many of the biologists working on its development have come to realize the potential worst-case-scenario consequences of their work. A mirrored organism would be essentially invisible to the immune systems of humans, animals and plants, bypassing the biological defenses that we and other living beings have evolved. Many natural predators, viruses and diseases would be unable to recognize it and therefore powerless to limit its reproduction. As Ariel Lindner, research director of the Systems Engineering and Evolution Dynamics Unit at the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research, or Inserm, told me in an interview: “Living systems know how to deal with invaders, but not with space invaders. Mirror life is a kind of space invader.”
Such an organism has not been created yet, as far as we know. But the article warns it could happen in the near future.