Saturday, April 4, 2026

The Full Story Of Alan Ritchson's Defense Against Violent Neighbor

Whether you like Alan Ritchson or the Reacher television series, it is clear that Ritchson represents an anomaly in Hollywood because he is a popular white male actor who is not reluctant to proclaim himself as a Christian. Recently, Ritchson was filmed apparently beating up a neighbor. However, that is not the whole story. As the video below shows, Ritchson was twice attacked by that neighbor and acted with commendable restraint. Tom Grieve provides a factual and legal analysis of the incident which goes over aspects of unarmed self-defense, so this is a good learning opportunity. 

VIDEO: "LAWYER: One Bad Decision Changed EVERYTHING (Jack Reacher Actor Fight)"
Tom Grieve (26 min.)

Why Do Liberals Lie?

Shooting News Weekly linked to a recent piece from Janice Turner with the London Times entitled "No, I don’t want to keep a gun by my bed." The gist of her article is that the relatively high murder rates in the U.S. compared to the UK are because of guns. She uses as an example the much higher murder rate in Washington D.C. compared to that of London.

Well, let me offer a counter example.  In Boise, Idaho, where I live, the murder rate is 1 per 100,000 even though rates of gun ownership are very high. Although I can't find statistics for Boise in particular, in Idaho overall, 60% of households have at least one firearm (and the vast majority of those probably have much more than just a single firearm--in fact, I don't believe I know anyone who owns firearms that only has just one). If Turner's hypothesis had any merit, Boise would present a bloodbath instead of having a lower murder rate than even her beloved U.K. 

Similarly, Washington D.C. has one of the lowest gun ownership rates in the United States. Thus, if Turner's hypothesis was correct, it should have an extremely low murder rate compared to the rest of the United States. Instead, in 2023, it has a murder rate of 39.4 per 100,000, although this has supposedly declined in 2024 and 2025. 

The reality is that the correlation between firearms and murder rates is so low that there is effectively no correlation. 

But there is a high correlation between murder rates and certain racial classifications. But people like Turner won't ever discuss that because truth is anathema to them. They would rather push the anti-gun lies because they want to disarm those they consider peasants. 

Friday, April 3, 2026

Minnesota's Fraud Was Chicken Feed Compared To California

From "West Coast, Messed Coast™ — Feds' HUGE Bust in 'Kingdom of Fraud' Leaves King Gavin Big Mad" by Victoria Taft:

An estimated $146 BILLION has been lost to fraud in California Medicaid spending and related programs since Gavin Newsom took office in 2019. According to independent investigator Chris Rufo, Newsom has lost 25% of California's Medicaid budget to fraud. This would mean it is currently losing $50 billion a year to scammers, fraudsters, and organized crime rings.      

The Bill Was Paid In Full

 In "Tetelestai: The Meaning of ‘It Is Finished’," Chris Queen points out that after Christ drank the sour wine on the cross (in fulfillment of Psalm 69:21) He said what is, in the Greek, tetelestai (τετέλεσται), which is often translated as "it is finished." But, Queen goes on, this phrase doesn't merely mean that something is done. Rather, it was written on business documents and receipts in New Testament times to indicate that a bill or debt had been paid in full.  

Weekend Reading #50

 Some longer and more involved reading for weekend:

  •  Jon Low has posted a new Defensive Pistolcraft newsletter. For those of you doing homeschooling or wanting additional resources for university/college courses, he begins by providing a link to OpenStax which has educational resources. Some additional items:
    • He includes an email from Jeff L. Gonzales on situations you might encounter if you are caught up in an active shooter situation and valid responses to each. 
    • Some points from Joe Shahoud on why you need indoor cameras in addition to or before investing in outdoor security cameras for your home. It all comes down to better quality images, more likely to capture the criminals' face, and better information on what the criminals took from your house.
    • Some words of advice for armed defenders: "It's really important to obey the instructions of Law Enforcement Officers.  It's really important to never reach for a gun while being questioned by LEOs.  It really important to never point a gun at LEOs."
    • If you have an opportunity to work on or improve your church's security, Jon has linked to several articles on the issue (a few are grouped together, but there are also others in different parts of the newsletter so do a word search for "church"). He also includes articles on how the Jewish community has organized volunteer defense forces for synagogues and schools. We have admitted too many Muslims willing to engage in violence and persecution; the Left is becoming more violent. We've seen trans killers target Christian schools. The persecution will only get worse. 
    • Jon includes the following quote from Massad Ayoob: "Ineffective and potentially dangerous, point shooting should be avoided at all costs and aimed fire employed in any lethal-force scenario." Absolutes are rarely correct all of the time. Point shooting was taught and practiced for a long time because most handguns had poor sights that were slow and hard to use in the daytime, let alone in the dark. But it took a lot of training and practice to be any good at much more than arm's reach. We have much better sights (or even red dots now) so it much better to use those sights. Nevertheless, we can't assume that just because shooters in the past did something different from today that they were being stupid about it. 
    • I'm not the only with some critique of some points made by Ayood, because Jon explains why Ayood is wrong about the "crush grip" on a handgun: basically, that most people don't have sufficient grip strength or endurance to use a crushing grip. Jon states that shooters "must push with the firing side hand and pull with the support side hand.  This means, they must use the Chapman modification of the Weaver position, because you can't get this push pull effect with the isosceles position." Ayoob selected the isosceles stance because it was easy to teach to police officers. It also has the advantage of centering body armor toward a potential threat. But as noted, it has its issues. My opinion on the "crush grip" is that it is mostly needed when a firearm doesn't fit your hand very well and so you must make up for the poor fit by an excessively strong grip. It was the solution to my issues with my Glock 43X and is probably the reason why Glocks have a reputation for shooting low and to the left for right handed shooters. The interchangeable backstraps can help if your Glock has that option. But it is the reason that I detest handguns with a straight backstrap--they don't fit my hands.  
    • Another good tip:

     Farnam teaches to turn around in a circle when scanning.  After some study and experimentation, I have concluded that this technique is in fact better than the quick check that we learned at Front Sight, which was to turn to the right until you can see behind yourself and then turn to the left until you can see behind yourself without moving your feet.  Because if you have limited range of motion, you can miss several azimuthal degrees behind you.  You may have limited range of motion and not know it, especially in high stress situations.  

     Rotating in a circle ensures you can see all the way around yourself.  Though it does require you to move your feet.   

 I'm okay with moving the feet. Being rooted to one spot can get you killed. 

  •  An a link to "LVNR (Lateral Vascular Neck Restraint)" by John Farnam. Basically, how to choke out someone. 
  • And on the same topic of unarmed defense, Jon has summarized comments in an lengthy email from  Tim Larkin on quickly disabling an opponent.
There is a lot more, so check it out.  
  •  Next up, Greg Ellifritz at Active Response Training has a new "Weekend Knowledge Dump". Some notable links:
    • "how to tell if men will attack you on the street." This is by a woman who Ellifritz describes as " a social scientist, researcher, and sex worker" where she lists some things she looks for to gauge whether the area where she is walking is generally safe. This is obviously directed toward women readers, but the points she raises are generally applicable to men as well.
    • "Turn Practice Into Performance: A Practical Guide to Shot Timers." A guide to how to use a shot timer as part of your practice and training.
    • Speaking of practice: "Your practice is producing rehearsal actors, not competitors." As Greg notes, this article is intended for sports generally but has application to shooting. Basically, it warns of building skill in practicing a drill because the drill does not necessarily transfer to real life (in the context of the article, an actual game meet or tournament; but in our context, a defensive encounter on the street). It has tips on improving your practice. 
    • "INTEGRATED COMBATIVES | Why You Should Always Bring a Knife to a Gunfight." An article about ... you guessed it ... integrating knives into your defensive gun training. 
    • "What is the Perfect Height Red Dot Mount?" Some advice on how high to mount an optic if you are primarily going to be shooting offhand (i.e., standing) or if using night vision goggles.  
    • "Organized Street Crime in Plain Sight". This is a piece by a guy who ran down a thief who had broken the window of an SUV to steal some stuff. A good way to get stabbed, but the author lucked out. He chased the thief down and recovered the property. The 911 operator told him to let the guy go, so he did so, but still trailed the thief to see what happened. The next bit I found interesting:

... But we kept following from a distance so we could continue updating 911 with his location. And once I was no longer right on top of him, the thief stopped sprinting and started operating. That is the part most people do not understand. People imagine smash-and-grabs as chaotic, impulsive crimes, one desperate guy, one reckless decision, one lucky escape. What I witnessed was not chaos. It was choreography. He took off his shoes. Took off his shirt. Cut his jeans into shorts. Within thirty seconds, he looked like a different person. That is not panic. That is a practiced move. That is someone who has done this enough times to have a system.

But that is where things started to get dicey because the thief was not working alone: an enforcer showed up and threatened the author and his friend and told them to stop following; moments later, two seemingly homeless people threw a blanket over the thief; then after calling 911 again to give an update, two other people showed up and attacked them and tried to knock the phone out of their hands; and when the thief suddenly started running again, 5 people surrounded him in order for him to blend in. It reminds me of a similar incident several years ago in Seattle with a guy similarly trying to run down a thief who had stolen a laptop from a car and had a similar series of people intervene and interfere until the thief finally hopped into a vehicle and was whisked away. 

 There is more, so read the whole thing. 

The Wastelands Of An (Almost) Abandoned Mining Town

 

Source: "The barren wasteland of America's uranium ghost towns: Inside the remains of mining outpost Jeffrey City, Wyoming, which was all but abandoned after the end of the nuclear arms race - left with just 24 RESIDENTS, one diner, and a school with two students"--Daily Mail

According to the article, the town of Jeffrey City, Wyoming, was once home to more than 4,500 souls. 

    The rural enclave started out as a single homestead but after uranium was discovered in the area, a mine opened in 1957 and a drove of workers from across the US descended. 

    According to WyoHistory.org, mine owner and prospector Bob Adams helped to establish Jeffrey City at the height of the nuclear arms race, with his company, Western Nuclear, snapping up the land and installing '26 houses, 145 trailers, a dormitory, a restaurant and bar, bathhouses... a combination firehouse and dispensary,' and a multi-purpose community hall. 

[snip]

    According to the 2021 census, there are just 24 residents left in Jeffrey City and the National Center for Education Statistics reveals that two children are currently enrolled at the elementary school.

Acknowledging Mistakes As A Learning Opportunity

In "The Near Miss That Changed Everything" at Backpacker magazine, the author writes of a rock climbing trip with a friend where that friend made a mistake that nearly cost her (the friend's) life. Rather than laugh it off or ignore it, the two acknowledged what had happened and even discussed it with a guide that had also seen the whole thing. The author writes:

    When I first started adventuring, I was sure that if I ever told anyone about the mistakes I made—forgetting to bring water on long hikes, starting up alpine summits too late, refusing to turn back in bad weather, almost getting hit by rockfall—my adventure partners would think me incompetent and never want to do anything with me ever again. So, for years, I kept all my mistakes secret.

    Apparently, so did everyone around me. It was a vicious cycle: Because I never heard about other people messing up, I was certain that I was the only one capable of failure. That made me even more embarrassed and secretive. It was isolating, and it fed my insecurities.

    But on this morning, perched high above Boulder, trading stories with these two women, I finally understood that no adventurer is 100 percent competent all of the time. I also realized that in keeping my mistakes to myself, I’d failed to fully absorb their lessons. After all, it’s hard to learn from things you don’t let yourself think about.

    In this ad hoc group debrief, we were able to talk through all the factors that had contributed to my friend’s slip: her lotion-greased hands, the hot weather, our reckless speed, and our failure to pause and recalibrate when we entered a no-fall zone. This was a kind of debrief I’d never had. Instead of justifying her fall as a random freak accident—or reassuring herself that it was skill and not dumb luck that had saved her—my friend listed her mistakes one at a time. Then, she learned from them. In sharing that process with us, she likely saved not just her own life going forward, but ours, too. 

Thursday, April 2, 2026

"You're Fired!" Pam Bondi Out As Attorney General

Pam Bondi has reportedly been fired by Trump as the U.S. Attorney General. Trump has been unhappy with her handling of the Epstein files, but the final straw was her allegedly tipping off U.S. Rep. Eric Swalwell (D) that the FBI was poised to release a cache of documents concerning Swalwell's links to a Chinese spy, Christine "Fang Fang" Fang. The Daily Mail notes: "It is unclear why Bondi would have intervened, but it is believed that Bondi and Swalwell have a friendly relationship." In any event, it may have given Swallwell time to lawyer up and for his attorney to threaten legal action against the FBI should it release the documents

Interestingly, Wikipedia notes (footnotes omitted):

In December 2020, Swalwell was named in an Axios story about suspected Chinese spy Fang Fang, known as Christine Fang, who, since at least 2012, had been cultivating contacts with California politicians who the Chinese government believed had promising futures in politics. Axios reported that Fang participated in fundraising for Swalwell's 2014 congressional election bid, met Swalwell at events, and helped place an intern inside his congressional office. ...

The implication is that Swalwell might have been one of those politicians that China believed had a promising future in politics. 

Oops--Having To Rewrite American Prehistory

One of the anomalies in American prehistory were that settlements at the Monte Verde archaeological site in Chile dated back to 14,500 years ago--older than the earliest human settlements found in North America. It sparked huge debates on how South American could have been settled first, from early seafarers traveling across the Pacific Ocean to human settlement leapfrogging down the Pacific Coast before spreading inland. But Popular Mechanics is now reporting that the 14,500 B.C. date may be wrong:

    Monte Verde is certainly ancient, but as it turns out, evidence of human occupation at the site is not quite as ancient as it was once believed to be. Anthropologist Todd Surovell (from the University of Wyoming) and his team of researchers have found that the site was only occupied between 4,200 and 8,200 years ago. 

[snip]

    According to the researchers, several critical observations had been missed. For one, Monte Verde II is actually above an older layer known as Lepué Tephra, which is comprised of rock fragments that were ejected by an erupting volcano. And that lower (and, therefore, presumably older) layer is only 11,000 years old—nowhere close to the original 14,500-year-old estimate for Monte Verde occupation. For another, the original investigation of the site never accounted for the erosion that further separates older and younger strata in the region.

    There is also a significant presence of Pleistocene wood and organic matter near Monte Verde II, which is about the same age as wood at the site itself. Because of geological disruptions in the region during Early Holocene, organic matter dating back to the Pleistocene was exposed, redeposited, and buried in river sediments that Surovell dated to the Middle Holocene. This natural phenomenon convinced previous archaeological teams that the settlement at Monte Verde II was far older than it actually was, even leading some to reject the theory of human migration over the Beringia land bridge. The age of the sediments can only mean that whatever remained of the Monte Verde settlement was from the Middle Holocene, rather than the Pleistocene. While this does not necessarily rule out human presence in the Americas before the Clovis culture, there has not yet been sufficient evidence to confirm that anyone predated them

VIDEO: Wraithworks Polymer AR15

A review of Wraithworks WARP-15, featuring a polymer lower and stock, and a mostly polymer upper as well. The idea is that it is metal only where you need it. It seems to me that is a natural progression of the "what would Stoner do" project. The video indicates a price of $340 for a complete rifle, but the website has a price of nearly $400. But beyond the low price, the other selling point is the weight: their 16" barrel version is barely over 5 lbs. They also sell some other firearms, but at much higher prices. 

 VIDEO: "Super Light, Affordable, And Plastic: Wraithworks WARP-15"
PSR (22 min.)

The Full Story Of Alan Ritchson's Defense Against Violent Neighbor

Whether you like Alan Ritchson or the Reacher  television series, it is clear that Ritchson represents an anomaly in Hollywood because he is...