Firearms/Self-Defense:
- Don't get too excited: "Bump Stocks are NOT Machine Guns – 6th Circuit Vacates GOA v. Garland"--The Firearm Blog. The headline and explanation in the article are a little overblown. Yes, a three-judge panel of the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals had upheld the ban on bump stocks. Yes, the 6th Circuit issued an order vacating the three-judge panel decision. But this is only as part of an order for the case to be heard en banc--that is, by all the judges in the 6th Circuit. The en banc panel could still rule to uphold the ban.
- "Mythbusting: Shooting A Tire"--Wideners. Basically, what it comes down to is that if you want a quick deflation, you need to shoot through the treads; hits to the sidewall just result in slow leaks, like a nail stuck in the tire. I watched a video from another source on this same issue, and if you really want to blow out the tire, you want to shoot through the treads so that it strikes the inside of the rim and punches a hole in the rim.
- "Barrel 'Clocking' Issues"--Revolver Guy. By clocking, the author means the barrel not being fitted perpendicular to the frame (not at 12 o'clock) but pointing slightly in one direction or another. He explains:
When a barrel is installed on a revolver frame, the timing of the threads on the barrel extension and the frame itself has to be just right for everything to line up in the right place. A small difference in the thread pattern, or a frame or barrel shoulder that’s not properly dimensioned, can result in a barrel whose shoulder bottoms out against the frame too early or too late. This results in a front sight that’s angled off to one side, instead of being perfectly centered and perpendicular to the topstrap of the frame, at top dead center (TDC).
He goes on to discuss how you can identify the problem, how to fix the problem (hint: this is a job for a gunsmith) and why this is not something to put up with but can cause long term functional problems.
- It depends: ".380 ACP vs. .38 Special: Which is Better for Concealed Carry?"--Shooting Illustrated. Like many of these "versus" articles, there is no clear winner--it just depends on what are your needs and preferences. However, for those using the .380 or thinking about it, there is this to consider:
Federal has recently released two new loads for the .380, and while they will not deliver terminal performance on par with a 9 mm, the terminal performance they do offer is a substantial improvement over current loads for this cartridge. The first is the inexpensive 85-grain Punch load. It will expand to around 1.4 times its original diameter and penetrate about 10 inches in 10 percent ordnance gelatin. The other is the 99-grain Hydra-Shok Deep. This is one of only two .380 Auto loads I’ve found that will meet the FBI’s minimum penetration depth of 12 inches.
- "Sight Picture: What Is It and Why Does It Matter?"--Target Barn (h/t Active Response Training). A good article (and well illustrated) on the different types of sight pictures and what is a proper sight picture. An excerpt:
When discussing iron sighted handguns, the optimal, fundamental sight picture is:
- the tip of the front sight aligned with the top of the rear sights
- equal light on either side of the front sight post
- a crystal clear focus on the front sight
- a blurry target
- the tip of the front sight where you’d like the bullet to impact
That’s the picture perfect bullseye, NRA-and-Jesus-basic-course-approved sight picture. Assuming your gun is sighted in correctly, if you pull the trigger and don’t disturb this sight picture, you’ll hit what you’re aiming at.Once a shooter has mastered the basic sight picture, they can move on to more advanced concepts. This is best exemplified by Brian Enos‘ famous zen koan: “see what you need to see.” What the hell does that mean? It means that you should see as much or as little of the sights as you need to see in order to make the shot at hand.For example: if you’re shooting a giant USPSA target at 3 yards, do you need to have a perfect sight picture? No. But what if you’re taking a head shot at 25 yards with a pistol? Now do you need a well refined traditional sight picture? Yes. At 3 yards, you can use the back of the slide as “sights” and throw that over the target, stay target focused and blast away. At 25 yards you need to see the sights in relation to each other, and see their relation to the target.
- Only police should have guns: "Man Who Shot Arvada, CO Cop Killer Was Shot and Killed by a Responding Officer"--The Truth About Guns. The article relates that "Johnny Hurley was hailed by police as a hero for shooting and killing a gunman they say had killed one officer and expressed hatred for police in a Denver suburb. But when another officer rushed in to respond and saw Hurley holding the suspect’s AR-15, he shot Hurley, killing him, police revealed Friday." At least the responding officer was able to safely go home at the end of his shift. The article continues:
In the video posted Friday, Police Chief Link Strate described Hurley as a hero whose actions likely saved lives. He didn’t offer an apology but called Hurley’s death by a responding officer “equally tragic” to Beesley’s killing.“The threat to our officers and our community was stopped by a hero named Johnny Hurley,” Strate said. “Johnny’s actions can only be described as decisive, courageous and effective in stopping further loss of life.”
Except that Hurley's actions wasn't effective in stopping further loss of life because a police officer shot and killed our hero. Consider the fate of the average CCL holder if he shot an innocent person who had just gunned down a mass shooter--it certainly wouldn't be an information blackout and a muted response stating that the event was "tragic". It would be all over the news and used as an example why private citizens shouldn't be allowed to own or carry firearms.
In response to this shooting, Greg Ellifritz has published his "Post-Shooting Procedures for the Active Killer Gunfight" which provides guidance on how not to be shot by police. He goes into greater detail and breaks down the steps/issues further, but it boils down to this: Don't be standing over the mass killer with a firearm in your hand. So, Greg advises, "If you think you need to cover the downed killer with your pistol, the killer probably needs to be shot again." Otherwise, don't draw or reveal your gun until you need to use it, and then holster it immediately when you are done; don't secure the suspect's weapon, but leave that to the police. Read the whole thing.
- Mass shooting in Africa: "CHILD soldiers aged 12-14 carried out Burkina Faso massacre which left more than 130 people dead in the country's worst attack in years"--Daily Mail. In the movie Full Metal Jacket, there is a scene where the main character asks a helicopter door gunner how he can shoot women and kids, and the door gunner replies: "Easy! Ya just don't lead 'em so much!" It shows the dichotomy between the person wrestling with the problem as a moral issue, and one who knows women and children can also be combatants and so it has become merely a technical issue. A book I read about the Vietnam War (I don't remember the title) related an experience of an American officer new to the country on a search and destroy mission that had come under fire while investigating a village. A Vietnamese interpreter was accompanying the officer. During the fighting, a young child started walking toward the two. The interpreter was instantly agitated and started yelling at the officer to shoot the child. Finally, with the interpreter practically grabbing at his weapon, the officer made the shot, and the child exploded! The child had been carrying a satchel charge, the VC sure that the Americans would not do anything until it was too late. My point here is that if we ever see a serious SHTF, TEOTWAWKI event, children will be used as human shields, combatants and weapons. Just something to think about.
- Gun control in action: "Suspect in Daytona Beach officer-involved shooting could be in Georgia, police say"--Fox 35 Daytona. A white police officer was shot during an investigative stop of a black man, Othal Wallace. Police later searched Wallace's apartment and found "at least three ballistic vests, multiple ammo magazines, firearms like a rifle and semi-automatic handgun, and boxes of rifle rounds." "FOX 35 looked into Wallace's background. He has five previous felony cases in Volusia County and at least one arrest in Brevard County." In other words, it was illegal for him to own or possess any firearms.
Wallace was arrested in Georgia, Redstate reports, while hiding out at a black nationalist paramilitary encampment. The Redstate article further elucidates:
Wallace was captured at a black nationalist, paramilitary campground, further pointing to the idea that the shooting of the officer was motivated by hate of police and possibly racism, as well. When he was arrested in what is being described as a treehouse, the suspect had multiple guns on him, but guns were also found in the surrounding structures of the campground.The shooting of Raynor pushes back on an assertion made by AG Merrick Garland recently that “white supremacy” is the preeminent “domestic violence extremist threat” in the nation. By the numbers, that never made sense, as drug cartel violence, which clearly includes people with extremist views, is a bigger domestic violence threat by many magnitudes. Yet, Garland’s words were propagated throughout the media — despite the lack of evidence for his claim.
- More gun control in action: Watch this YouTube video of a new story of a shootout in Chicago at an intersection. After the cars stopped, a couple men (looked black to me) jump out of a car and open fire on another car. One of the men was armed with an automatic rifle. Fortunately for everyone else, he was using one of those 100 round drum magazines, and it dropped loose from the rifle forcing him to transition to a semi-auto weapon. Lesson here? That the NFA has done a wonderful job of making sure criminals can't get their hands on fully automatic weapons.
- We can't forget the vaunted gun control laws in effect in New York: "Moment Times Square CD peddler opened fire during argument and accidentally shot Marine, 21, who was in NYC for a baptism"--Daily Mail. Black shooter, white victim. The shooting occurred after an argument broke out between several CD sellers; the victim was just a bystander walking by.
- Elsewhere in New York: "Moment gunman opens fire during wild brawl in upstate New York Walmart parking lot, killing boy, 18, and injuring three others, including a 15-year-old girl"--Daily Mail. The shooting took place during a violent brawl between several black women in the crowded parking lot.
- Meanwhile in the gun free, Democratic run utopia of Chicago: "Two women are killed and at least 15 others including a 15-year-old boy injured in two mass shootings in Chicago"--Daily Mail. A total of 62 were shot this past weekend in Chicago.
- It depends: "Body Armor for Preppers: Yay or Nay?"--Survival Sullivan. The article begins rather dramatically:
- Related: "So you think you need full body armor? Really?"--Greywolf Survival. This author takes the view that the only useful armor (absent a full melt-down, end of civilization event) is armor that is concealable; plate carriers and all that simply will destroy your OPSEC.
- Related: "Body Armor (??) When the SHTF is it an Advantage?"--Readyman. The article begins:
- Related: "Exploring Civilian Body Armor Options For Prepping, Survival, and Beyond" by Samantha Biggers, Backdoor Survival. This article concentrates more on what are the different types of body armor.
- Related: "The best bulletproof body armor when SHTF"--The Prepared. This article also is mostly about educating you about different types of armor and what they are designed to counter. It has more detail than most of the other articles.
- Related: "Prepping , Body Armor or Not?"--The Quiet Survivalist. This is another article looking at the practicality of armor for everyday, with the author recommended concealed armor or armored backpacks or briefcases.
- "9 SURVIVAL LESSONS From a Serial Killer MANHUNT"--The Organic Prepper. The inspiration for this article is an ongoing manhunt in Brazil for an escaped convict with a long history of murder, robbery, torture and rape, with many of his crimes committed in rural areas. At the time the article was written, the man had evaded hundreds of law enforcement and military personnel looking for him for three weeks. The author attempts to take some lessons from both the history and success, if you will, of this criminal. The lessons are:
- An unarmed population is hostage to criminality.
- No one is safe, not in the city and certainly not in rural areas. The author relates, in this regard, that "Smaller towns in rural settings tend to be safer indeed, among other things, because people know each other better, and there’s usually a stronger sense of community. But distant rural properties, like farms, plantations, and remote locations generally present some challenges when it comes to safety and defense." Or, as one of my long time readers put it: In the country, no one can hear you scream.
- It doesn’t take a big group or gang to terrorize the population of an area.
- Knowing your area or neighborhood is an excellent advantage for survival (as evidenced by the criminal's success in evading capture).
- Buschcrafting skills are a huge differential in the wilderness, and perhaps even in the city.
- Takes a hunter to hunt down another.
- Survival can become a war of attrition.
- Self-defense requires preparation and strategy.
- Radicalism and hysteria can lead to social breakdown (the author noting that a vocal minority are rooting for this criminal).
- In a similar vein, check out this article at Vox Popoli, "A Balkan perspective" where the author gives some advice and warnings of what could happen in the U.S. based on the breakup of Yugoslavia. Some of the points raised in the article:
You’re sitting at home, then all the sudden you see a news broadcast saying the economy has collapsed. You’re shocked, not quite sure what exactly is about to take place. Then, you change the channel and see mass panic in cities. There’s riots in the streets, people looting to get supplies, stealing electronics, absolute chaos.This is it, this is what you’ve been prepping for. You’re nervous, but excited to see all of your hard work finally put to good use. You call your family and tell them to meet you at the house.You start getting your gear ready, bringing it out to your car. All of your BOBs, INCH bags, and medical bags, all piled into your BOV. Your family arrives, and once you finish gathering all of their necessities, you head out to your BOL. You can see your beautiful BOL as you pull up, and you tell your family to wait in the vehicle as you stop. You get out, walk cautiously up to your BOL as you get ready to clear it, then you hear a loud bang. You’ve been shot in the chest by a looter who’s already claimed your BOL as his own.Now, you must watch your family scream and cry from the vehicle as they try to run to help you. What happens to them is now at the mercy of the looter that’s set his defense up in your BOL. All of this could have been avoided if you had saved money and invested in body armor, instead of that $5 coffee you get on your way to work every day. There’s a saying when it comes to body armor in the Infantry, “it’s better to have it and not need it, then need it and not have it”.
The remainder of the article dispels some common misconceptions regarding body armor, discusses plate carriers, SAPI plates, helmets, and gloves, before moving on to unnecessary body armor (i.e., stuff that will unnecessarily weigh you down without little or no added benefit), different types of pouches, war belts, first aid kits, etc., for rounding out your set up. The author has also provided recommendations as to specific products he likes.
ReadyMan Challenge One, Mike Simpson of Phoenix, Arizona showed up with his BugOut bag and his BugOut kit. True to his training and practice, Mike went into the challenge with the exact stuff he’d take into the Apocalypse.Part of his kit was ceramic body armor plates and Mike faithfully wore them for two days, going up and down some serious mountain terrain. Ultimately, they “saved his life” in a shooting scenario where a sniper got the drop on him.But, Mike paid the price to have those plates. He trekked over hill-and-dale cooking inside his ceramics like a cup of coffee.Tye, his opponent in the Challenge, ran around footloose and fancy free, with just his tie-dyed T-shirt and his six-gun. But, in the end, when he and Mike came together to fight, Tye had to hang back, since any “hit” on Tye would be the end of him.Without a clear answer on body armor from the ReadyMan Challenge, we decided to put it to the ReadyMan cadre. Is body armor worth the cost, weight and hassle if the SHTF?
The rest of the article are the thoughts and opinions of four people (three of them SOF) who had used body armor in combat.
Read the whole thing.
- There are no white hats.
- Your country is collapsing because there is not enough money to keep the system working.
- Nobody has a plan, good or evil. Nobody is in control.
- All foreign powers are helping accelerate the collapse.
- Your country will be robbed before, during and after the war.
- The robbing starts with hyperinflation.
- There will be international “peacekeepers” on your territory.
- Do not try to change the internal state borders, it does not work.
- Ethnic cleansing actually works
- "Did a comet strike 13,000 years ago change human civilization as we know it?"--Space.com. Not even five years ago this theory was being dismissed out of hand by many so-called experts in the field. Apparently not so now:
The researchers investigated the theory that a comet struck Earth 13,000 years ago, analyzing geological data from the areas where they think it may have hit, namely North America and Greenland. They found high levels of platinum, evidence of extremely high temperatures that could have melted materials at the site and nanodiamonds, which scientists know can be created from explosions and can exist inside comets.This work builds on previous research that has suggested that a significant impact may have preceded the beginning of the Neolithic period, the first part of the Stone Age in which a number of major developments in human civilization took place, including notable steps forward in agriculture, architecture and stone tools.At this time in history, humans in the "Fertile Crescent," which encompassed countries we know today as Egypt, Iraq and Lebanon, were moving away from nomadic, hunter-gatherer lifestyles to more permanent settlements."This major cosmic catastrophe seems to have been memorialized on the giant stone pillars of Göbekli Tepe [in Turkey], possibly the 'World's first temple,' which is linked with the origin of civilization in the Fertile Crescent of southwest Asia. Did civilization, therefore, begin with a bang?" Sweatman said in a statement.
- The collapse of complex societies: "Blackouts Loom in California as Electricity Prices Are ‘Absolutely Exploding’"--The Daily Signal. From the article:
Two inexorable energy trends are underway in California: soaring electricity prices and ever-worsening reliability—and both trends bode ill for the state’s low- and middle-income consumers.Last week, the state’s grid operator, the California Independent System Operator, issued a “flex alert” that asked the state’s consumers to reduce their power use “to reduce stress on the grid and avoid power outages.”The California Independent System Operator’s warning of impending electricity shortages heralds another blackout-riddled summer at the same time California’s electricity prices are skyrocketing.
- Related: "California, Facing Power Crisis, Frets Over Electric Car Charging Routines"--Newsweek. Because of the increased reliance on solar power, Californians are being asked to charge their vehicles during the day when there is sunlight for the solar power stations, rather than at night when drivers are at home.
- "Inflation and the Fall of the Roman Empire"--Joseph R. Peden, Mises Institute. A lengthy read, but an interesting look at how monetary and spending policies doomed the Roman Empire. Essentially, the constant devaluation of the currency (inflation) combined with ever increasing costs to support a large military and bureaucratic state led to unbearable taxation (including payment in kind rather than with the debased currency) with a resulting loss of desire to be part of the Empire.
There was, obviously, flight from the land, massive evasion of taxes, people left their jobs, they left their homes, they left their social status. Now, Diocletian's final contribution to this continuing disaster was to issue his famous Edict on Maximum Prices, in 301 AD. This is a very famous instance of a massive effort by the government to limit inflation by price controls.You have to realize that there was a little problem: the Roman Empire was a vast region running from Britain in the West to Iraq in the East; from the Rhine and the Danube to the Sahara.It included areas of very sophisticated and very primitive economies, and thus the cost of living varied considerably from province to province: Egypt seems to have had the lowest cost of living; Palestine had a cost of living twice that of Egypt, and Roman Italy had a cost of living twice that of Palestine."The Roman people, the mass of the population, had but one wish after being captured by the barbarians: to never again fall under the rule of the Roman bureaucracy."
COVID News:
- "'The government is not being transparent about the risks': Inventor of MRNA vaccines says people should not be forced to take experimental COVID vaccines because risks aren't known and under 18s and those who’ve had virus shouldn’t take it"--Daily Mail. Per the article:
During the podcast, Malone said he sent 'manuscripts' months ago to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration claiming the spike protein used in the COVID-19 vaccine posed a health risk.
'And their determination was that they didn’t think that that was sufficient documentation of the risk that the spike was biologically active,' he said.
But of course the information was censored:
The podcast was uploaded to YouTube which was flagged as sharing misleading information about the COVID-19 vaccine and removed.
In particular, YouTube flagged statements about how the 'spike protein' used in the COVID-19 vaccine, which is how mRNA vaccines work, are toxic.
- "CIA-developed influence strategies kept showing up in the last 18 months" by Jack Wedam, American Thinker (h/t Marcus Wynne). The article looks at the fear sowed by authorities during the pandemic, mixed with the message to trust those same authorities. Wedam then discusses the CIA's history researching brain washing, a recent patent on influencing operations supposedly based on Mk Ultra research that wasn't destroyed, and then writes:
According to a former CIA insider, “‘Everything you have in that cellphone,’ she says, pointing to an iPhone, ‘is what we were working on for our whole careers.’” It’s an interesting coincidence, to say the least, that the same smartphones that constantly pump information into us through social media and news apps came from the same CIA that created the original “influencing strategies.”There is absolutely no way of knowing whether Democrats across America – in the government, the social media arena, the mainstream media, etc. – know a single thing about MKUltra. It is, though, noteworthy that they’ve inundated America with “influencing strategies” that have succeeded in turning the gullible among us into fanatics. These fanatics often rage at others who dare to disagree with the information they’ve internalized – even when much of that information reliably proves to be wrong and the remainder can be intelligently and reasonably rebutted.
- "New Harvard Data (Accidentally) Reveal How Lockdowns Crushed the Working Class While Leaving Elites Unscathed"--Foundation for Economic Education. From the article:
A new data analysis from Harvard University, Brown University, and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation calculates how different employment levels have been impacted during the pandemic to date. The findings reveal that government lockdown orders devastated workers at the bottom of the financial food chain but left the upper-tier actually better off.The analysis examined employment levels in January 2020, before the coronavirus spread widely and before lockdown orders and other restrictions on the economy were implemented. It compared them to employment figures from March 31, 2021.The picture painted by this comparison is one of working-class destruction.Employment for lower-wage workers, defined as earning less than $27,000 annually, declined by a whopping 23.6 percent over the time period. Employment for middle-wage workers, defined as earning from $27,000 to $60,000, declined by a modest 4.5 percent. However, employment for high-wage workers, defined as earning more than $60,000, actually increased 2.4 percent over the measured time period despite the country’s economic turmoil.
- "We Just Got Even More Proof that Stay-At-Home Orders Lethally Backfired"--Foundation for Economic Education. An excerpt:
In a new paper, economists from the University of Southern California and the RAND Corporation examined the effectiveness of “shelter-in-place” (SIP) mandates, aka stay-at-home orders, using data from 43 countries and all 50 US states. The experts analyze not just deaths from COVID-19, but “excess deaths,” a measure that compares overall deaths from all causes to a historical baseline.The authors explain that lockdown orders may have had lethal unintended consequences in their own right, such as increased drug overdoses, worsened mental health problems, increased child abuse, deadly delays in non-COVID medical care, and more. So, to find out whether stay-at-home orders truly helped more than they hurt, examining excess deaths, not just pandemic outcomes, is key.The results aren’t pretty.“We fail to find that shelter-in-place policies saved lives,” the authors report. Indeed, they conclude that in the weeks following the implementation of these policies, excess mortality actually increases—even though it had typically been declining before the orders took effect. And across all countries, the study finds that a one-week increase in the length of stay-at-home policies corresponds with 2.7 more excess deaths per 100,000 people.The lockdowns simply didn’t work.“We failed to find that countries or U.S. states that implemented SIP policies earlier, and in which SIP policies had longer to operate, had lower excess deaths than countries/U.S. states that were slower to implement SIP policies,” the authors explain.
- "CDC Reports 51% Increase in Suicide Attempts Among Teenage Girls"--Foundation for Economic Education. Another result of the lockdowns.
- "Behind the Vaccine Veil: Doctor cites ‘whistleblowers’ inside CDC who claim injections have already killed 50,000 Americans"--WVW Broadcast Network (h/t Vox Day). From the article:
McCullough is professor of medicine and vice chief of internal medicine at Baylor University and also teaches at Texas A&M University. He is an epidemiologist, cardiologist and internist and has testified before the Texas State Senate related to COVID-19 treatments. He holds the distinction of being the most widely cited physician in the treatment of COVID-19 with more than 600 citations in the National Library of Medicine.In the video, recorded by Oval Media, McCullough said:“The first wave of the bioterrorism is a respiratory virus that spread across the world, and affected relatively few people—about one percent of many populations—but generated great fear.”He said the virus targeted primarily people over 50 with multiple medical conditions. It poses almost no risk to children.He said 85 percent of the more than 600,000 U.S. deaths could have been prevented with a multi-drug treatment given in the early to mid-point of the disease.Instead, people were told to stay home and not return to the hospital unless their symptoms got worse, such as severe breathing problems. By then it was too late for many. They were placed on ventilators and died.The vast majority of doctors jumped in lockstep to follow these erroneous “guidelines” handed down by the World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. Those guidelines neglected to place any focus on the treatment of sick patients and, from the beginning, as early as April 2020, started emphasizing the need for a vaccine as the only real hope of beating back the virus.The federal Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System [VAERS] logged 5,993 reports of deaths of people injected with the COVID vaccine between Dec. 14, 2020, and June 11, 2021. That’s more than all the deaths reported to VAERS from all other vaccines combined over the last 22 years.But these numbers, as shocking as they are, don’t scratch the surface of the actual number of dead Americans, said McCullough.“We have now a whistleblower inside the CMS, and we have two whistleblowers in the CDC. We think we have 50,000 dead Americans. Fifty thousand deaths. So we actually have more deaths due to the vaccine per day than certainly the viral illness by far. It’s basically propagandized bioterrorism by injection.
- I guess a certain judge didn't get the memo: "Shocker: Lisbon court rules that only 0.9% of 'verified cases' attributed to COVID in Portugal actually died of it"--American Thinker.
- Of course he did: "Hunter Biden's Firm Funded Company That Partnered With Wuhan Lab on Bat Research"--PJ Media. You'll recognize another American aristocratic family name as well:
Rosemont Seneca Technology Partners (RSTP) was one of the main financial backers for a company called Metabiota, which partnered with the Wuhan Institute of Virology. Potty-mouthed Hunter Biden was one of RSTP’s co-founders and managing directors. He co-founded it with John Kerry’s stepson Christopher Heinz. Hunter’s company gathered $30 million for Metabiota in 2015. Both of their influential daddies have been linked to shady deals involving RSTP.
- The magic 8-ball predicts that more lockdowns loom in our future: "Delta variant will cause 'very dense outbreaks' in states such as Arkansas and Mississippi and that the US is only 'a month behind' experiencing explosion of cases like in the UK"--Daily Mail.
- Related: "Australia's Covid success crumbles: Country was hailed for closed-borders zero-virus policy that let Aussies live a normal life but now cities are in lockdown as Indian variant spreads through population with just 5% vaccination rate"--Daily Mail.
- Related: "U.S. pauses distribution of Eli Lilly's COVID-19 antibody drug after data show it is ineffective against variants from Brazil and South Africa"--Daily Mail.
- Hear, hear! "The Wilder Response To Mr. Biden"--Wilder, Wealthy & Wise. A response to Biden's laughable comments that it would take nukes and F-15s to defeat the U.S. military (or fight them to a standstill which is the same thing). An excerpt:
No, Mr. Biden. The only one who needs F-15s and nuclear weapons for control is you, you disgusting pile of fake hair, fake teeth, Alzheimer’s degraded brain, who gets his only Father’s Day card encrusted in cocaine dust and whore DNA.The united States governs only, let me make this clear, only by consent of the governed. As citizens, we’re generally pretty good. But we are horrible, horrible at taking instruction from tyrants. It’s in our DNA.No, literally. This is not an exaggeration. My family line came across an ocean to tame a continent. That was their resume. That was their job description as they rocked back and forth on little wooden boats in the midst of Atlantic storms. We didn’t come here because we were weak. We came here to fight and die and bleed and make this land our own.We came here because we were strong.We came here because we yearned for freedom.Mr. Biden, your butt-sniffing and shoe-licking parents and your degenerate sons and personal weaknesses are abhorrent to every fiber of my body. Mr. Biden, you are disgusting. Mr. Biden, your forefathers were horrible. Mr. Biden, you and your weaknesses represent everything wrong with this country, and everything that has led to where we are today.How dare you threaten me?
- "Why corporations are buying up America's houses"--Bayou Renaissance Man. Certain investments companies, such as Blackrock, have been buying up houses en mass at above market prices. Why? As a hedge against the high inflation they are expecting.
- "India deploys another 50,000 troops to its disputed border with China - as tensions between the nuclear-armed sides remain high after deadly mountain battle"--Daily Mail. From the article:
India has deployed another 50,000 troops on its disputed Himalayan border with China - a significant display of power to its nuclear rival.The two sides clashed in a high-mountain battle last year that left more than 20 soldiers dead in the bloodiest days since the Sino-Indian War of 1962.Over the last three months, India has dispatched soldiers and fighter jets to the border, bringing its total up to 200,000 troops, an increase of 40 per cent on last year, sources told Bloomberg.
It is not clear what numbers China has but it has bolstered its infrastructure across the tundra with runways, bomb-proof bunkers for fighter jets, howitzers and outposts.
Beijing has also sent long-range artillery, tanks, anti-aircraft missiles and fighter jet squadrons over the last few months, Bloomberg reported.
- They really do hate you: "Biden Executive Order Mandates Divisive, Unscientific Race ‘Training’ At Every Level Of The Federal Government"--The Daily Caller. It's always on Friday: "President Joe Biden signed an executive order on Friday that ensures that every part of the federal government will conduct race-conscious diversity training and engage in race-conscious hiring."
The executive order “establishes an ambitious, whole-of-government initiative that will take a systematic approach to embedding DEIA [diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility] in Federal hiring and employment practices,” according to a White House fact sheet. In practice, it will ensure that federal agencies employ tenets associated with Critical Race Theory (CRT) within their hiring practices and day-to-day activities.
Translating the Newspeak, diversity means a lack of ideological diversity, i.e., no conservatives; equity, as I've discussed before, means equality of outcome, which is just a nicer way of saying that people will be hired and promoted based on how many victim boxes they can check off; inclusion means that white people will be excluded; and accessibility means that there will be waivers for people unqualified or unable to meet the objective qualifications for the job.
- They really, really hate you: "National Archives' racism task force says its own Capitol Rotunda is an example 'structural racism' because it 'lauds wealthy white founders': Calls for 'trigger warnings' on nation's founding documents"--Daily Mail. Just a second! I thought the term "trigger warning" was too triggering because of its association with guns. In any event, report from the racism task force concluded that historical documents like the Magna Carta and Declaration of Independences, is an example of "structural racism" and paintings of those events were also racist because they portrayed white men in too positive of light. Yes, yes! Let's include the important founding documents drafted by Africans, Arabs, or Chinese ... [crickets] ... anyone?
- I don't think there are words to describe their hate: "Portland Police Reassure Antifa That Man Shot by Police Was White to Avoid Riot"--Summit News. Antifa was ready to riot when they thought it was a black guy, but didn't care after they learned it was a white guy even though no other facts had changed.
- Liberal logic in action: "Too Many Black Folks Break the Law? Get Rid of the Law! (Portland, of Course)"--PJ Media.
Bail reform and lenient sentencing just weren’t enough “reparations.” Portland police are no longer pulling people over for expired plates, broken headlights, failing to signal, etc. Why? Because too many black folks are getting pulled over and searched.
- On the other hand, when it comes to those that obey the law: "School Board Members Want Public Schools To Push For Gun Bans, Requirements For Parents"--Daily Wire. Fairfax County, Virginia, School Board is using public funds to lobby the legislature to enact “comprehensive gun violence prevention legislation,” including universal background checks, a ban on assault-style weapons, and increased funding for gun dealer oversight. They also want to require parents to disclose what guns they have in the household. Sounds to me like a school district that has too much money if they can afford to waste it on this frivolous crap.
- Refugees welcome! "Man Screaming ‘Allahu Akbar’ Stabs 3 to Death, Says It’s His ‘Jihad,’ Cops Search for Motive"--PJ Media.
German authorities are baffled: a knife-wielding man, identified in the German media as “Jibril A.,” stabbed three people to death and injured five others in Würzburg, Germany, on Friday. Police and intelligence officials have no idea why he did it. Yes, he was screaming, “Allahu akbar!” during his attacks, and yes, he told police interrogators after he was arrested that he had now carried out his “jihad,” but really, what does that even mean? The German-language Tagesspiegel reported Saturday that “the motive for the fatal knife attack in Würzburg on Friday has still not been fully clarified.” Of course it hasn’t. After all, Islam is a religion of peace!
- "Curiously incurious: Where is the media coverage of China's defector?" by Ed Morrissey, Hot Air. In probably the greatest intelligence coup for the United States in the last 50 years, Dong Jinwei, a senior member of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and was in charge of its overseas intelligence apparatus, including supervision of all Chinese spies or agents overseas, defected to the United States. You would think that this would be a huge story in the major media and there would be extensive coverage of the incident.
- More: "Chinese Defector's Identity Confirmed, Was Top Counterintelligence Official"--Red State.
Chinese-language anti-communist media and Twitter are abuzz this week with rumors that a vice minister of State Security, Dong Jingwei (董经纬) defected in mid-February, flying from Hong Kong to the United States with his daughter, Dong Yang.
Dong is, or was, a longtime official in China’s Ministry of State Security (MSS), also known as the Guoanbu. His publicly available background indicates that he was responsible for the Ministry’s counterintelligence efforts in China, i.e., spy-catching, since being promoted to vice minister in April 2018. If the stories are true, Dong would be the highest-level defector in the history of the People’s Republic of China.
Also:
RedState’s sources say that Chinese officials did demand [during the Sino-American Summit held in Alaska in March 2021] that the United States return Dong, but Blinken didn’t exactly refuse; at that time Blinken wasn’t aware that Dong was with the US government, the sources say, and told China that the US didn’t have Dong.
It’s only in the last three to four weeks that anyone outside DIA knew about the defector, according to RedState’s sources. Prior to that time, DIA was vetting the information provided and confronting Langley officials with what they’d learned without divulging the source.
And some more:
Dong has provided DIA with the following information:
- Early pathogenic studies of the virus we now know as SARS-CoV-2
- Models of predicted COVID-19 spread and damage to the US and the world
- Financial records detailing which exact organizations and governments funded the research on SARS-CoV-2 and other biological warfare research
- Names of US citizens who provide intel to China
- Names of Chinese spies working in the US or attending US universities
- Financial records showing US businessmen and public officials who’ve received money from the Chinese government
- Details of meetings US government officials had (perhaps unwittingly) with Chinese spies and members of Russia’s SVR
- How the Chinese government gained access to a CIA communications system, leading to the death of dozens of Chinese people who were working with the CIA
Dong also has provided DIA with copies of the contents of the hard drive on Hunter Biden’s laptop, showing the information the Chinese government has about Hunter’s pornography problem and about his (and Joe’s) business dealings with Chinese entities. Some of the files on Dong has provided shine a light on just how it was that the sale of Henniges Automotive (and their stealth technology) to Chinese military manufacturer AVIC Auto was approved.
Again, according to sources, Dong told DIA debriefers that at least a third of Chinese students attending US universities are PLA assets or part of the Thousand Talents Plan and that many of the students are here under pseudonyms. One reason for using pseudonyms is that many of these students are the children of high-ranking military and party leaders.
- More: "Here's What the Chinese Defector Has Reportedly Given Us About COVID...But Also on Joe and Hunter Biden"--Town Hall.
- More: "Defector Claiming Chinese Military Responsible for COVID-19 Identified as Top Counterintelligence Official"--PJ Media.
- Related: China trying to cover up news of the defection: "China spymaster Dong Jingwei makes first public appearance since rumors he 'defected to US with Wuhan lab secrets'.... but social media speculates the image could be photoshopped"--Daily Mail. "Chinese officials have published an image purporting to show Dong Jingwei attending the 16th meeting of the Security Council Secretaries of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization Member States on June 23," the article relates.
- Tucker Carlson was warned that the NSA had been spying on him; the whistleblower was able to confirm private details of a story on which Carlson has been working.
- Related: "Tucker Carlson: US military is intensifying a political purge of the ranks"--Fox News.
- Related: "NSA Reveals in FOIA Response that the FBI Involved in “Improper Surveillance” of 16,000 Americans"--Gateway Pundit.
- More confirmation of Anonymous Conservative's r/K theory of politics: "Planned Parenthood sex-ed flyer telling 11-year-olds they could have sex, as long as the partner isn't older than 13, distributed in WA public school"--The Post Millennial. One of the hallmarks of the liberal mindset, according to AC, is the early sexualization of children.
- Related: "Tacoma middle school teacher is condemned for handing out flyers telling children they can have an abortion at 11 without parental consent and buy condoms at any age"--Daily Mail.
- Related: "Recent FBI Crime Spree Involves Murder, Rape, Blackmail, Spying, Child Molestation, and Conspiracy"--The DC Patriot (h/t Anonymous Conservative). More r behavior, this time among the praetorians.
- "For More Than 150 Years, Texas Has Had the Power to Secede…From Itself"--Smithsonian Magazine. Long story short, when Texas was admitted to the Union, because of its size, it was admitted with the proviso that it could be split into several smaller states. Creation of new states out of existing states requires the approval of the state legislature and Congress. Scholars contend that the law admitting Texas to the Union served as Congressional approval for Texas to subdivide into additional states, and so the issue is now wholly one for the Texas legislature.
- "Why Do So Many Hate George Soros?"--Haaretz. According to documentary film maker Jesse Dillon (son of Bob Dillon), its complicated, but a key factor is his use of money to influence the direction of society. The article notes:
The billions that Soros, 91, still has are just a small part of the fortune he has amassed over the decades through his international investments and foreign-currency trading. Forbes calls Soros the “most generous” philanthropist of all the billionaires who donate to charity: He has given away 64 percent of his original fortune, distributing more than $15 billion to liberal organizations and initiatives largely identified with the left. He does this via the Open Society Foundations – formerly called the Open Society Institute – that he founded to promote peace, education, public health and an independent media.
- And the people bowed and prayed to the neon god they made: "A giant, shape-shifting statue that talks could be coming to Phoenix. Here's what we know"--AZ Central.
A company in Ireland is hoping to bring the world's tallest moving statue to 21 cities in 2021, including Phoenix.Called "The Giant" it's a programmable, moving statue that's 10-stories tall and covered with millions of LED pixels that allow it to take the form of any person — even Spider-Man.According to a press release, The Giant's arms and head can move in multiple directions and would change shape every hour as crowds gather below. The Giant can take on any image so you could even find yourself featured, talk about the ultimate selfie. The statue can also sing and speak.The project's website calls it an "exciting digital art gallery," "the world's most captivating billboard" and, of course, "fun for the entire family."
- Tolerance was never going to be enough: "Hello Idaho: How to be an ally during Pride Month"--KTVB. From the article (underlines added):
Moyer said that even those who are straight can take steps to be an ally to the LGBTQ+ community. Avoiding assumptions, speaking up, and being an advocate is important, he said."Show your support openly with a commitment, encourage respect and dignity, so if you see something that is not respectful taking place in the community stand up and be a voice to that. Create a safe space for communication. That includes listening respectfully and invite open conversation," he said. "For example, if you are a parent talk to your children about sexual orientation and gender identity and gender expression. What are those, what do they mean, and how are those potentially different. Educate yourself, learn how to talk to and advocate for the LGTQ+ community in language that is unbiased, non-discriminatory and non-judgmental. And lastly, put the person first. Choose your words carefully to ensure that you're respecting the individual and not just an aspect about their life. Your actions and words have meaning and are understood by others, so set a good example, lead with compassion and respect, and enjoy the warm weather in June and join in the pride celebration."
I've spoken to my kids about sexual orientation and gender identity, but probably not in the way this man/woman/thing would like.
- "EXPLAIN THIS: If the Disciples Made it All Up About Jesus, Why’d They Make Themselves Look So Bad?"--Hill Faith. This is a point that is explored in detail in J. Warner Wallace's book, Cold-Case Christianity: A Homicide Detective Investigates the Claims of the Gospels. In any event, from the article:
It’s difficult to read the four Gospels — Matthew, Mark, Luke and John — without coming away thinking Jesus’ disciples were, before His resurrection from the tomb, dense, stubborn, lacking in faith, and outright cowardly on more than a few occasions.After all, Peter denied even knowing Jesus three times before the cock crowed as the Lord was suffering through his six trials that led to the cross, horrendous suffering and total humiliation. It also prompted all of the disciples, except Judas Iscariot whose betrayal led to his suicide, to hide in fear they would be crucified next.But all of that raises a crucially important question for anybody trying to sort out whether they accept the Gospels as credible: If, as skeptics often suggest, the disciples made up the whole Jesus-was-God thing after His death, why did they make themselves look so bad in fabricating the story?For that matter, why would they include material indicating Jesus’ brothers thought He was a nut case prior to the resurrection?Or that they would have women be the first witnesses of the Resurrected Jesus, at a time when women’s testimony was not viewed as credible.
- "Intensifying Thunderstorms Today Echo an Ancient Pattern at Least 50,000 Years Old"--Science Alert. The difference is that today's patterns are, according to the researchers, due to anthropogenic global warming, while 50,000 years ago the cause was ... at this point, what does it matter?
- And yet another intelligent hominid species that went extinct: "Meet 'Dragon Man': Newly-identified ancient humans who lived 150,000 years ago and had SQUARE eye sockets and a wide mouth may replace Neanderthals as our closest relative, researchers say"--Daily Mail. The article indicates that "H. longi had a brain comparable in size to that of modern humans, but sported big, almost square eye sockets, thick brow ridges, a wide mouth and larger teeth." Just spit-balling here, but larger eye sockets might suggest an adaptation to better allow nocturnal activity.
- "New molecule found in chestnut leaves disarms dangerous staph bacteria"--Phys.org. The researchers were inspired by the historical use of chestnut leaves as a folk remedy in Italy. Per the article, the molecule, dubbed Castaneroxy A after the genus of the European chestnut, Castanea, "disarms Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus by knocking out the bacteria's ability to produce toxins."
- "Giant comet found in outer solar system by Dark Energy Survey"--Phys.org. The comet, named Comet Bernardinelli-Bernstein, was discovered following a comprehensive search of data from the Dark Energy Survey (DES). It is believed to be 100-200 km (62-124 miles) across. It's apogee is believed to be at 40,000 AU. It is currently at about 20 AU (roughly the distance of Uranus). "[I]t will reach its closest point to the Sun (known as perihelion) in 2031, when it will be around 11 au away (a bit more than Saturn's distance from the Sun)—but it will get no closer."
- And a story from the Twilight Zone: "Boat carrying 20 dead people found floating off Grand Turk island"--New York Post. The Grand Turks are located north of the island, Hispaniola (Haiti and the Dominican Republic). The article reports that "Takara Bain, a communications officer with the Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force, said investigators had ruled out foul play but are still working to determine how the deaths occurred." They also believe that the boat originated outside the Caribbean. Just a wild guess, but I'm going to guess it was a boat of North Africans trying to make it to Europe.
- A reminder that we live in the 21st Century: "Report: Space Force has to prepare for operations beyond Earth’s orbit"--Space News. From the lede: "A new report published by the Air Force Research Laboratory suggests the U.S. Space Force has to prepare for a day when the moon and the volume of space around it could become the next military frontier."
- Another reminder that we live in the 21st Century: "Airspeeder says it had the first successful test flight for its electric flying racecar"--The Verge. The article reports:
Airspeeder says its electric “flying” race car, the Alauda Mk3, has had its first unpiloted test flights in southern Australia. The craft, an electric vertical takeoff multicopter (abbreviated eVTOL for electric vertical take off and landing) was remotely controlled and the test flights took place under the supervision of Australia’s Civil Aviation Safety Authority.The ultimate goal for Airspeeder and Alauda Aeronautics (the former is the racing series, the latter is the manufacturer), both founded by entrepreneur Matthew Pearson, has been to build flying vehicles for the purpose of racing them, which the companies say is the next step. According to Airspeeder’s website, the “successful execution of these flights means that uncrewed electric flying car Grand Prixs will take place in 2021 at three soon-to-be-revealed international locations.”
12,000 year old meteor/comet impact: heard that one on Art Bell in 2002 or so. Seemed very plausible then. Related: I miss Art. He was engaging.
ReplyDeleteUnrelated: heard a theory that Neanderthals were . . . covered in fur.
Re: Neanderthal. That’s funny because I’ve been gathering articles about that very topic for my next Docent’s Memo.
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