Thursday, December 5, 2019

A Quick Run Around the Web (12/5/2019)

The host demonstrates his magazine fed, repeating bow.

         If the enemy is far enough away that you need to use your sights to aim your pistol, you need to extend your arms to bring your pistol up to your line of sight. (Don't bend your neck to move your eye inline with your sights.  Your head must remain erect, otherwise you will disturb your inner ear balance. Rotate your arms at your shoulders to move your pistol up to your line of sight.) 
            If the enemy is close enough to grab your pistol, you need to keep your pistol in close to your body in a compressed ready or close contact position. Both forearms should be firmly pressed against your rib cage.  Tilt the top of the pistol away from your body, so the slide doesn't get fouled on your shirt. If your breast will get in the way of slide when it reciprocates, pull your pistol further around to the side of your torso, or tilt the top of your pistol further away from your body.
             If you only have a one hand grip on your pistol, pull the firing side elbow as far back as possible, press the bottom of the grip or your hand firmly against your rib cage, and tilt the top of the pistol out away from your body to prevent the slide from getting fouled on your clothing or breast.
               When shooting with a flashlight, push the emitting end of the flashlight out in front of anything that you are using for cover.  If you have the flashlight too far back, the light will reflect off the cover and illuminate you.  Yes, this exposes your gun and hands to an enemy hiding around the corner, so be careful. If you don't push the flashlight out in front of the cover, the reflected light can blind you, or kill your night vision for several seconds. ....
                 When shining a flashlight though a window, press the emitting end against the window.  Even a small gap will generate glare that will inhibit your view through the window. 
            How fast is the Second Amendment Sanctuary movement growing in Virginia? So fast that even as I was talking with Philip Van Cleave of the Virginia Citizens Defense League for today’s show, another county in the state was adopting a resolution. More than 40 of the state’s 95 counties have adopted the resolution, with at least 20 counties signing on just this week.
                  There is a resistance movement taking place in Virginia. There is a deep divide between the rural red areas that held power for a long time and the urban communities that now dominate. The mountain folk have figured out that their vote is now worthless. They will never be able to out vote the big cities. They are now looking to secure the place where they live. Virginia is fracturing.
                   NC, SC and GA will be the next to fall. We have been inundated with these Democrats and they have weaseled their way into our politics and have screwed us all.
              You have no idea how many opponents you’ll be facing, what they’re armed with, what sort of training or equipment they may have, or where exactly they’ll be coming from (assuming your house, like most, has multiple entrances). Your home-field advantage dissipates quickly the minute you find yourself creeping through the kitchen and realize there are bad guys both in front of and behind you.
              He continues:
              Sometimes you’ll have no choice but to move from one room to another during a break in: You’ll need to get to your family and your firearm. Once you’ve got both, don’t bother moving through the house like Solid Snake trying to take down the bad guys one by one. Instead, put yourself in a solidly defensible position, keep your family around the corner, out of sight, and behind whatever cover you can find. Call the police and keep them on the line. Then, if need be, open fire to keep the home intruders from entering the room you’re all hiding in. The best place for you to take cover is somewhere that allows you as clear a line of sight of their approach as possible, while allowing for as little exposure to your opponents as possible. Stake out your house ahead of time and identify spots like that so you can more easily locate them when the adrenaline starts pumping.
              • ".308 Versus .30-06"--Sporting Shooter. For factory loadings, there may not be a significant difference, but for the handloader there are considerable advantages to the .30-06, especially using 180 grain bullets, according to the author. For one thing, as the author notes, "Case capacity in grains of water is 56gn for the .308 against 68gn for the .30-06." He notes, for instance:
                In fact, I experienced no difficulty in driving the 180gn bullet in the '06 to 2800 - 2900 fps using slow powders like RE-22 and Re-25, and pressures were mild enough to permit reusing the cases up to ten times. In general the .308 Win. shines with medium burning rate powders and its advantage is for target shooting. I'd choose the .30-06 any day over the .308 for hunting big game.
                  And although the author does not go into bullet weight much more, one of the primary advantages to the .30-06 for the hunter is the ability to launch heavier bullets than can be used in the .308.
                  When you finish shooting a break-barrel air rifle for the day, take care to leave it un-cocked after firing your last shot. Most manufacturers strongly recommend not storing a break-barrel, spring or piston air rifle under pressure. It takes a bit of planning to reach a safe storage condition because most manufacturers also recommend you don’t dry-fire a spring or piston-powered air rifle. They’re designed to operate with a pellet in the chamber to offer the right amount of resistance. So, take the last “real” shot and pack up your rifle immediately after so it doesn’t get cocked again.
                  • "Measles outbreak spurred by anti-vaxxers shuts down Samoan government"--Ars Technica. The article reports that "[o]f the 53 dead, 48 are children aged 4 and younger."
                  • Back in 2014, Melody Lauer of Limaunes' Range Diary published a three-part article on the subject of using force to stop someone from snatching/kidnapping your child, "Realities and Legalities of Child Snatching" (Part 1) (Part 2) (Part 3). Part 1 focuses on the legal aspects of whether you are justified to use force, referring to the laws of Iowa. Part 2 examines using verbal skills and less-than-lethal options and why you might want to use them ("I, for one, would GREATLY prefer washing pepper spray out of my child's face than trying to treat him or her for a gunshot wound."). Part 3 looks at lethal force. In that article, the author suggests contact shots to minimize the risk to your child; head or neck shots might be the most effective. 
                  • "The Survival Mindset"--Beans, Bandages, Bullets and You. Money quote: "If you are convinced you’re going to die, odds are you will."
                  • "Hill People Gear Longhouse Instructional Series"--Jerking the Trigger. The author recommends the Hill People Gear videos on backcountry/off-trail hiking, explaining:
                  It can be extremely difficult to find backcountry travel advice that works for me. Much of the prominent outdoor gear advice outlets have been hijacked by ultralight hikers. I actually like ultralight gear and appreciate their minimalist approach. However the gear and skills necessary for ultralight through-hiking on established, well traveled trails often has little to do with backcountry travel on remote, unsupported trails or off trail completely.
                  The Hill Gear videos fill this gap, he writes.

                  "Dark Energy might not exist after all"--Sabine Hossenfelder (7 min.)
                  The idea of "dark matter" has pretty much been debunked: all searches for "dark matter" has failed, and the steady stream of research revealing vastly larger quantities of intersteller dust and other matter seems to have eliminated the need to make up imaginary particles. Next up is "dark energy" which is the energy driving cosmic inflation. Except, as a recent research paper shows, even the very idea of cosmic inflation may be based on false data. Basically, the researchers only used a small selection of nova in a single direction and found that they were moving away from us. But more recent data looking at nova in all directions does not show uniform movement, which suggests that there is no cosmic inflation and, hence, no need for "dark energy."

                          Jeffrey Epstein’s private wealth banker, who brokered and signed off on untold multiple millions of dollars in controversial Deutsche Bank and Citibank loans spanning two decades for the convicted pedophile, has died from a reported suicide.
                            The news of yet another mysterious Epstein-linked death comes shortly after the FBI was seeking to interview the bank executive about loans he approved for Epstein and the indicted child trafficker’s labyrinth of US-based and offshore companies.
                             The Los Angeles County Medical Examiner confirmed Thomas Bowers died by an apparent suicide by hanging at his home before Thanksgiving.
                               Epstein likewise died from a reported suicide by hanging, according to the New York City Medical Examiner.
                                 Bowers headed the private wealth banking division for Deutsche Bank and signed off on millions in loans to Epstein. Bowers, prior to taking over the private banking arm at Deutsche Bank, served in the same top position at Citibank, as the head of the bank’s private wealth arm. Citigroup also made massive loans to Epstein, according to records and banking sources who spoke to True Pundit.
                                    The NSC was meant to be a forum in which the heads of existing agencies would coordinate foreign policy and national security options. Instead, the NSC’s staff tends to set the foreign policy. What was once a support structure turned into a think tank and a policy shop. And then its very own deep state.
                                     The very worst example of this was Ben Rhodes, an aspiring novelist who evolved from a speechwriter to deputy national security adviser for communications, and, in that capacity ran our foreign policy. War and diplomacy weren’t run by the cabinet members accountable to Congress, but by political operatives.
                                      The NSC had become a state within a state, a rogue organization reporting directly to Barack Obama.
                                         This wasn’t Eisenhower’s military-industrial complex or the deep state, it was something worse. It allowed a gaggle of political operatives to take control of national defense and intelligence, and retool them to spy on political opponents, to manufacture cases against them, and then to act as moles within future administrations with the aim of subverting them and perpetuating their old political agendas.
                                          The NSC violates constitutional checks and balances. It undermines the rule of law. Its current function is an absurd perversion of the simple and straightforward purposes that it was meant to serve.
                                      The reality is that, even though the media loves to talk about “right wingers” (although never left wingers), there is no “left wing” versus “right wing” in America, at least as those terms are understood in the rest of the world. Instead, we only have liberty versus tyranny, along with the supporters of both those ideologies.
                                      He goes on:
                                              On the left ... is absolutist, totalitarian government, something with which we are all familiar. It exists under many names – monarchy, socialism, communism, democratic socialism, fascism, theocracy, etc. – but it always plays out the same: maximum government control; minimum individual liberty.
                                                Meanwhile, on the right side of the continuum..., is the political system that has limited government and maximum individual liberty. At its extreme, it’s anarchy. Otherwise, it’s . . . well, it’s really only the American experiment. Everywhere else in the world, government control is the standard.
                                            In addition, I would add, the Right/Left continuum is only applicable to the general population: the elites have their own goals and agendas.
                                                   If you want a good comparison between Left and Right, though, the following two articles are illustrative: 
                                                Early this month, Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D-N.Y.) signed SB 660, the so-called "Boss Bill," which prohibits New York employers from firing, demoting, or taking other action against employees based on "reproductive health decision making." The law also bans any "waiver" or code of conduct preventing an employee from making "reproductive health care decisions" — code for getting an abortion. Finally, the bill requires employers to cite this law in any employee handbook and allows employees to sue if this "right" is infringed.
                                                  The consequence?
                                                          "The Boss Bill tells employers they have to be willing to employ people whose beliefs and behavior as to 'reproductive-health decisions' run counter to their own," she wrote. "That’s bad enough if you run a family-owned restaurant. It is intolerable if you run a church, a Catholic school or a pregnancy care center — and now are required by your own state government to hire people who have no ­respect for your faith and who ­oppose your pro-life convictions."
                                                           It would be bad enough if the government were merely requiring pro-life employers to hire women who had abortions or support abortion. Yet since the bill does not bother to define "reproductive health decision making," Harle argued that it may restrict employers' ability to set rules on a whole host of complex moral and sexual issues, such as "sexual conduct, procreation, pregnancy, contraception, surrogacy, in-vitro fertilization or sexually transmitted disease."
                                                             "Under SB 660, an employer can’t even require workers to sign a code of moral conduct. Adding insult to injury, employers are forced to ­include these reproductive-health rights in their employee handbooks — effectively compelling them to communicate the government’s ideological message," she lamented.
                                                          This is also an example of Gleichschaltung--a term used by the Germans, prior to WWII, to describe the close cooperation between segments of the economy (represented by large cartels and business and labor organizations) and government bureaucracies, but also the control exerted over those business and labor interests by the bureaucracies. In other words, the erosion of the separation between the private and the public, and the coercion of businesses to advance government policies. Since government policy in New York is to encourage abortions, private entities will be forced to support this policy.
                                                                   For religious people, when science and Nature crash into each other, or crash into religion, it’s religion which, even if it’s not a practical guide, offers moral guidance. For Leftists, though, who operate without that moral religious foundation,* when science and Nature clash, they look not to God, but to politics — and, more specifically, to identity politics as their guide.
                                                                    It’s this abandonment of an overarching morality that leads to the self-styled party of science and Nature taking ridiculous stands, such as saying that a person’s sex exists on a continuum largely affected by external factors, never mind that genetically there are only two sexes. Likewise, politics also assures Leftists that the fetus is totally unrelated to a baby. Neither science nor Nature dictate either of those stances. Only politics does.
                                                              • For those of you that remember the movie Cannonball Run, or the superior Gumball Rally, Road & Track reports that a new Cannonball record has been set: "These Guys Just Drove an E63 AMG Across America in a Record 27 Hours 25 Minutes." Average speed was 103 mph. The car was equipped with brake light and taillight kill switches, and a vinyl covering was used to cover the fancy trim and change the shape of the brake lights. As the article describes, the drivers of this vehicle had an impressive array of electronic warfare devices to spot speed traps: radar detectors, laser radar detectors, radio scanners to listen for traffic, gyroscopic stabilized binoculars, thermal imagers, even an aircraft collision avoidance system to detect aircraft. But the drivers credit their success to boots on the ground:
                                                                       What really made the difference between previous record runs and theirs, though, was the human component. The team had a lot of help from their extensive network of car nerd friends and business associates. Toman is the co-founder AMS Performance, and although he no longer works there, he still knows a lot of performance car enthusiasts and Gumball 3000 devotees. Tabbutt, founder and owner of Switchcars, sells used performance and exotic cars for a living and knows all sorts of people who would much rather be driving fast than doing anything else, if not supporting other people who are driving fast.
                                                                        "There were a lot of phone calls where I'd say, 'Hey how's that car I sold you three years ago? By the way, what are the cops like where you are?'" Tabbutt said. "There's no replacement for boots on the ground and we had lots of information from people everywhere—stuff you can't get from the Internet."
                                                                          In all, they managed to rustle up 18 lookouts along the run. These were people who drove hundreds of miles in many cases just to scout the road ahead of the fast-moving AMG for a stretch and let the team know of any police activity or other hazards ahead. Carl Reese, a one-time holder of the coast-to-coast motorcycle speed record who also set an autonomous-car record with Roy, guided them through part of California on his BMW motorcycle.
                                                                           "Having that many spotters is something we all would have dreamt of," Bolian said. "Their greatest success was in inspiring that many people to go out in the middle of the night, drive into the middle of nowhere, and help them beat something everyone said was impossible."
                                                                        A lesson for those interested in the subject of 4th generation warfare.
                                                                               In a video released by IntelliTimes, which is reportedly of the Syrian missile system launching rockets at the Israeli Air Force last night, one clearly sees Syrian missile after missile become “confused”, turn around, and return to the ground and explode…
                                                                                 The blog estimates that this may indicate a loss of radar lock after the launch, or another proactive action that prevented the missiles from starting their course toward the target.
                                                                                   Security sites reported in the past that Israel wanted to install radar blocks on its F-35 aircraft which would enable the aircraft to bypass enemy radar systems. Similar reports have suggested that the IAF F-35 planes are equipped with a system that prevents its detection by enemy radar.
                                                                              The other article is from MIT Technology Review and is interesting because it involves criminal organizations. The article is "Ghost ships, crop circles, and soft gold: A GPS mystery in Shanghai." The article is about the pervasive spoofing of automatic identification system (AIS) transponders on ships and boats in Shanghai's busy harbor and river estuary, and which ship captains use to track the location of other vessels. Location data about ships is being changed to show ships in different locations. The mystery is not only how this is being done, but who is doing it.
                                                                                      One possibility is that the crop circles are an escalation in a simmering electronic war in Shanghai that has put thousands of sailors, passengers, and even the river itself at risk. For years, the MSA has been tracking and seizing ships that, while not jamming or spoofing GPS signals, have been hacking the AIS transponders that help keep Shanghai’s rivers and ports safe. These ships have been cloning the AIS identities of other ships in order to slip in and out of the harbor unmolested by authorities.
                                                                                        The reason they’re doing this has to do with the cargo the New Glory was carrying when it ran aground: plain, everyday sand.
                                                                                         Chinese builders call it “soft gold.” Sand dredged from Yangtze River, which has the ideal consistency and composition for cement, helped fuel Shanghai’s construction boom in the 1980s and 1990s. By the turn of the millennium, reckless sand extraction had undermined bridges, trashed ecosystems, and caused long stretches of the riverbank to collapse. In 2000, Chinese authorities banned sand mining on the Yangtze completely.
                                                                                           The trade continued illicitly, however, expanding to include the illegal dredging of sand and gravel from the Yangtze estuary and the open seas near Shanghai. By day, such ships look innocuous. By night, they lower pipes to the riverbed to suck up thousands of tons of sand in a single session. A full hold can be worth over $85,000. So far in 2019, police along the Yangtze River have seized 305 sand-mining vessels and over 100 million cubic feet of sand—enough to fill over a thousand Olympic swimming pools.
                                                                                            The Shanghai MSA says illegal sand and gravel ships caused 23 wrecks along the Yangtze river in 2018, accounting for over half of all major accidents and killing 53 people.
                                                                                              For much of his 22-year CIA career, Gottlieb ran mind-control projects designed to help America defeat Communism. In the ’50s and ’60s, Kinzer writes, Gottlieb “directed the application of unknowable quantities and varieties of drugs into” countless people, searching for the narcotic recipe that might allow him to mold his human test subjects’ thoughts and actions.
                                                                                               Gottlieb and a network of medical professionals gave LSD and other drugs to prisoners, hospital patients, government employees, and others—many of whom had no idea they were being dosed. A CIA staffer died in highly suspicious fashion after Gottlieb had his drink spiked with LSD. Meanwhile, when his bosses considered killing a foreign leader, Gottlieb developed custom-made poisons. Numerous people were harmed by Gottlieb’s work, but because he destroyed his files on the eve of his 1973 retirement, it’s hard to quantify the carnage he wrought.
                                                                                            Anonymous Conservative observes: "Also note how there were assets all throughout the medical community, even entire hospitals, doing things to their patients at the behest of a secret conspiracy. Do you think that has changed? If so, when do you think it changed, and why?" 

                                                                                            5 comments:

                                                                                            1. I've long thought that dark matter and dark energy are the aether of our time. It's a construct that that has no basis in reality.

                                                                                              For dark matter, there is clearly gravitational lensing where there is no observable matter. My thought has long been that this is a natural consequence of the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics - gravity leaks via nearby dimensions that are close to, but not exactly like ours. Thus, Dark Matter.

                                                                                              Dark Energy is probably just a math error.

                                                                                              Of course, I've been wrong before.

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                                                                                              1. As I understand it, "dark matter" arose as an explanation as to why there was more mass in galaxies than there was observable mass. Observable, when the idea arose, was limited to those seen by conventional telescopes using the visible spectrum, and radio telescopes. Since then, better telescopes able to sense matter and energy in other wavelengths increasingly show a universe filled with much more dust and particles than previously believed. In addition, we've discovered that planets are common around other stars, that there are more small, dim stars than previously believed, and so on. Essentially, it was a theory born from a lack of evidence coupled with the belief that we had all of the evidence.

                                                                                                Dark energy arises from a similar situation. The universe was expanding faster and farther than could be explained by the Big Bang, and, in fact, appeared to be expanding at ever increasing velocities, and this expansion was uniform in all directions. Ergo, there must be some unrecognized force, which was dubbed "dark energy", to explain it. However, as the video explains, this expansion is not uniform and was, in fact, based on observations of only one section of the sky.

                                                                                                And yes, I agree that it the theories fill the same role as the aether of the late 19th energy: something made up to explain poorly understood phenomena.

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                                                                                              2. I had a similar idea after reading a book called Endless Universe: Beyond the Big Bang. But, the evidence just seems to be leaning toward normal matter and, applying Occam's razor, the correct solution should be the dust and other matter. But, since a lot of the dust seems to show up as filaments of ionized or charged material, it is interesting how the structure of the "cosmic web" looks like collections of neurons.

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                                                                                            2. http://www.astronomy.com/news/2019/12/astronomers-find-19-more-galaxies-missing-their-dark-matter

                                                                                              I'm still holding up for my theory - in this case, these would be "unlikely" galaxies - galaxies that exist in only a few realities, thus, have little dark matter.

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                                                                                            The Age of Underpopulation

                                                                                            I took my title from an article at Watts Up With That entitled " The Age of Underpopulation is Here " by Steve Goreham. I've w...