A bride’s dream wedding turned into a legal nightmare — after she claims she was charged with DUI despite being sober…. After Longoria was taken into custody, one of the arresting officers was allegedly recorded saying: “They’re going to kick me off the squad if I don’t get a DUI.” [More] Who can think of … Continue reading "We’re the Only Ones Wedding-Crashing Enough"
The post We’re the Only Ones Wedding-Crashing Enough first appeared on The War on Guns.
Civil Rights Division Sues Cloudera for Excluding U.S. Workers from Applying to High-Paying Technology Jobs [More] Meet the rope-selling capitalists. OK, but what’s this got to do with the Second Amendment? No worries– Vivek will save us! Oh, wait… [Via Michael G]
The post Doing the Work Americans Won’t Do first appeared on The War on Guns.
North Carolina Elections Board Finds 34,000 Deceased People on Voter Rolls [More] Have “they” been voting, or is this another Kraken? [Via Michael G]
The post Dead to Rights first appeared on The War on Guns.
DOJ Adds Firing Squad Option to Death Penalty Cases [More] Hey, text, history, and tradition, right? As long as we’re doing that, how ’bout we get back to piracy, counterfeiting, and treason…? [Via bondmen]
The post The Bruen Standard first appeared on The War on Guns.
Blanche Shuts Down CBS’s Margaret Brennan After She Tries to Turn the WHCD Shooting Into a Gun Control Debate [More] This dumb b_ again… So, ban shotguns…? Fudds…? [Via bondmen]
The post Another Great Reason to Disarm You and Me first appeared on The War on Guns.
CAF training platoon with 83% non-citizens devolved into ethnic infighting [More] And not just frostbacks: Coming soon, to a province near you… (Somebody ought to ask Stephen if he’s good with this.) And sooner in some than others: Who better to disarm “Heritage Americans”? [Via WiscoDave]
The post Meanwhile, Over at the Death of the West… first appeared on The War on Guns.
So, President Trump, when are you going to take a damn side? And are Republicans getting ready to blow it Texas big? [Via Sweet Babboo]
The post The Enemy Within first appeared on The War on Guns.
Taking a break between chores, I flipped over to the YouTube and found this heartwarming nugget.
It seems that if you conspire with your boss to hide criminal activity and your boss gets a preemptive pardon from the president, you can still be charged with a crime. There is the cautionary tale: if the boss asks you to commit a crime, you are under no obligation to do so. Quite the contrary, it is your obligation to report it. It may set back your career, but you won't have to spend time in Club Fed.
Everytown chose a flawed AI system to subvert the Second Amendment. [More] So… autolying…? What could go wrong?
The post Garbage In, Garbage Out first appeared on The War on Guns.
The Silicon Graybeard (among others) links to a really interesting video from SpaceX about Starship:
Something that needs to be shared is a video from SpaceX, called Starship - Test Like You Fly and while it's nearly a half hour long, it's absolutely worth watching.
That's near-term Starship past and (implied) future. But watching it made me think about a 2021 post from Casey Handmer - Starship Is Still Not Understood. In it, he remarks on just how far Starship had come in the previous couple of years:
While I am 100% certain that the Starship design will continue to evolve in noticeable ways, the progress in two years cannot be understated. Two years ago Starship was a design concept and a mock up. Today it’s a 95% complete prototype that will soon fly to space and may even make it back in one piece.
The odds of Starship actually working in the near future are much higher today than they were two years ago. Across the industry, decisions are being made on a time horizon in which Starship operation is relevant, and yet it is not being correctly accounted for.
He then goes on to lay it all out:
Starship matters. It’s not just a really big rocket, like any other rocket on steroids. It’s a continuing and dedicated attempt to achieve the “Holy Grail” of rocketry, a fully and rapidly reusable orbital class rocket that can be mass manufactured. It is intended to enable a conveyor belt logistical capacity to Low Earth Orbit (LEO) comparable to the Berlin Airlift. That is, Starship is a powerful logistical system that puts launch below the API.
Starship is designed to be able to launch bulk cargo into LEO in >100 T chunks for <$10m per launch, and up to thousands of launches per year. By refilling in LEO, a fully loaded deep space Starship can transport >100 T of bulk cargo anywhere in the solar system, including the surface of the Moon or Mars, for <$100m per Starship. Starship is intended to be able to transport a million tonnes of cargo to the surface of Mars in just ten launch windows, in addition to serving other incidental destinations, such as maintaining the Starlink constellation or building a big base at the Lunar south pole.
The fact that Starship flown expendably would be perhaps 10 times cheaper, in terms of dollars per tonne, than even Falcon is not relevant.
Jerry Pournelle used to say that the only space metric that counted was cost per ton delivered to orbit. I don't see this as a Berlin Airlift; it's a Liberty Ship. Mass Produced in huge numbers and able to shuttle large amounts of generic cargo to and from space. Handmer emphasizes this point:
Historically, mission/system design has been grievously afflicted by absurdly harsh mass constraints, since launch costs to LEO are as high as $10,000/kg and single launches cost hundreds of millions. This in turn affects schedule, cost structure, volume, material choices, labor, power, thermal, guidance/navigation/control, and every other aspect of the mission. Entire design languages and heuristics are reinforced, at the generational level, in service of avoiding negative consequences of excess mass. As a result, spacecraft built before Starship are a bit like steel weapons made before the industrial revolution. Enormously expensive as a result of embodying a lot of meticulous labor, but ultimately severely limited compared to post-industrial possibilities.
Starship obliterates the mass constraint and every last vestige of cultural baggage that constraint has gouged into the minds of spacecraft designers. There are still constraints, as always, but their design consequences are, at present, completely unexplored. We need a team of economists to rederive the relative elasticities of various design choices and boil them down to a new set of design heuristics for space system production oriented towards maximizing volume of production. Or, more generally, maximizing some robust utility function assuming saturation of Starship launch capacity. A dollar spent on mass optimization no longer buys a dollar saved on launch cost. It buys nothing.
The implications are huge, and probably require a change in the institutions themselves (e.g. JPL and NASA):
NASA centers and their contractors build exquisitely complex and expensive robots to launch on conventional rockets and explore the universe. To take JPL as an example, divide the total budget by the mass of spacecraft shipped to the cape and it works out to about $1,000,000/kg. I’m not certain how much mass NASA launches to space per year but, even including ISS, it cannot be much more than about 50 T. This works out to between $100,000/kg for LEO bulk cargo and >$1,000,000/kg for deep space exploration.
Enter Starship. Annual capacity to LEO climbs from its current average of 500 T for the whole of our civilization to perhaps 500 T per week. Eventually, it could exceed 1,000,000 T/year. At the same time, launch costs drop as low as $50/kg, roughly 100x lower than the present. For the same budget in launch, supply will have increased by roughly 100x. How can the space industry saturate this increased launch supply?
...
This is where the risk to the space industry originates. Prior to Starship, heavy machinery for building a Moon base could only come from NASA, because only NASA has the expertise to build a rocket propelled titanium Moon tractor for a billion dollars per unit. After Starship, Caterpillar or Deere or Kamaz can space qualify their existing commodity products with very minimal changes and operate them in space. In all seriousness, some huge Caterpillar mining truck is already extremely rugged and mechanically reliable. McMaster-Carr already stocks thousands of parts that will work in mines, on oil rigs, and any number of other horrendously corrosive, warranty voiding environments compared to which the vacuum of space is delightfully benign. A space-adapted tractor needs better paint, a vacuum compatible hydraulic power source, vacuum-rated bearings, lubricants, wire insulation, and a redundant remote control sensor kit.
I suspect that Jared Isaacson understands this. The Space industry five years from now will be very, very different that any projections we can make today. Starship's future - while brightly described in SpaceX's outstanding video - is much more interesting than almost anyone suspects.
The Year of the Molotov Cocktail: American Antigovernment Violence Hits a 30-Year High [More] Here’s the thing about all those hits from the “extreme right”: The story gives two examples, but one had “No Kings” flyers in his car, and the other appeared to be apolitical except for believing the Covid vaccine had messed with … Continue reading "Cocktail Hour"
The post Cocktail Hour first appeared on The War on Guns.
Veteran shot at Geauga County dog park after argument over Trump [More] The “real reporters” sure are sympathetic to the side playing the race card without evidence. I guess we should just be thankful ATF wasn’t there– otherwise, they’d have shot the dogs. [Via JG]
The post Going to the Dogs first appeared on The War on Guns.
Is it Tuesday? I swear, I've lost track. The calendar tells me it is Tuesday, so it must be.
Today started off weird enough that it threw my schedule behind. I started off wanting to do one task and had to do something else first. Little piddling tasks that threw me minutes behind. A five-minute task wound up taking 30 minutes.
Over the weekend, President Trump survived the latest assassination attempt. Some say that this is the 3rd attempt, others say that it is the 7th. It depends on what we call an actual attempt. Either way, political violence is not the answer. Yet the Democrats double-down, claiming that their thinly veiled references are not an actual call to arms.
This last guy seems to have been motivated by a total immersion in a lefty echo chamber.
Yesterday, the meeting with King George III seems to have gone well. Somehow, the lefties refrained from holding a No Kings rally when confronted by actual royalty. Odd, isn't it? It seems that they tolerate an actual generational monarch better than they tolerate a duly elected President.
I have other chores, so if you will excuse me.
The post Hungarian 48M Sniper Mosin (aka M52) first appeared on Forgotten Weapons.
GOP frontrunner in key gubernatorial race forced to answer about hiring illegal immigrants: ‘I don’t know’ [More] He wants to sign your checks but he doesn’t even know what the one’s he signing are paying for…? OK, but despite that, says he’s against illegal aliens. How is he on the legal ones? Georgia GOP Governor … Continue reading "Inaction Jackson"
The post Inaction Jackson first appeared on The War on Guns.
Authorities said the trooper, a female member of Troop NYC, was refueling her vehicle when the teen approached her, took out a knife, and got into the driver’s seat of her car.
The trooper then fired a single shot from her off-duty firearm, striking the suspect in the left arm. The bullet continued into his chest, police said.
Officers located a man who was pronounced dead at the scene.
No other injuries were reported.
A fight Sunday afternoon at the downtown Greyhound Intermodal Facility ended with a security guard fatally shooting a man, Birmingham police said.
The Jefferson County Coroner’s Office identified the victim as Angelo Herbert Hill Jr. He was 46 and lived in Valdosta.
On April 29, 1990, wrecking cranes began tearing down the Berlin Wall at the Brandenburg Gate. — On April 29, 1992, a jury acquitted Los Angeles Police Department officers on charges of excessive force in the beating of Rodney King. The verdict sparked massive riots in the city and smaller ones in other U.S. cities. African-Americans in Los Angeles were enraged by the acquittal of the officers. Thousands of people began rioting across the city. For six days, scenes of wanton violence, looting, arson, assault and murder convulsed the city, with incidents like the brutal assault on truck driver Reginald …
The post Preparedness Notes for Wednesday — April 29, 2026 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
(Continued from Part 1. This concludes the article.) I decided to try raised garden beds, and I’m three years into it! When people purchase and store seeds for their apocalypse garden should they need it one day, I laugh. You could starve before you ever get a good garden going. Unless, you happen to be sitting on perfect and fertile soil. Raised garden beds In my case, I had to hire the help to build all the beds, transport barn compost from another area of the farm to the beds, and pay for composted “top soil” to be delivered. …
The post Gardening and the Struggles – Part 2, by SaraSue appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
Our weekly Snippets column is a collection of short items: responses to posted articles, practical self-sufficiency items, how-tos, lessons learned, tips and tricks, and news items — both from readers and from SurvivalBlog’s editors. Note that we may select some long e-mails for posting as separate letters. — Tennessee Republicans Pass Bill Allowing Lethal Force for Protection of Property. (Pictured above is the Tennessee capitol building — a public domain photo by euthman.) A quote from the article’s opening: “WSMV noted that if Gov. Bill Lee (R) signs the legislation into law it means “property owners will be allowed to …
The post SurvivalBlog Readers’ & Editors’ Snippets appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
“The Enlightenment diamond-shaped society, with a huge, prosperous, socially-mobile, empowered middle class, is by far the most productive and creative system the world has ever seen.” – David Brin
The post The Editors’ Quote Of The Day: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
An Indiana State Senate candidate is accused of canvassing door-to-door in a Fishers neighborhood while being high on cocaine… On Tuesday, [Andrew] Dezelan was officially charged in Hamilton County with one count of possession of cocaine, a Level 6 felony, and a misdemeanor count of resisting law enforcement. [More] Huh. So you have to get … Continue reading "Your Neighborhood Cartel Candidate"
The post Your Neighborhood Cartel Candidate first appeared on The War on Guns.
Fauci advisor David Morens admits in an email that he “learned from our foia lady here how to make emails disappear after i am foia’d but before the search starts” [More] Top government officials sound just like Bart Simpson. Pathetic. Sounds like it’s time to make him disappear, or at least use the leverage to … Continue reading "I Didn’t Do It, Nobody Saw Me Do It, There’s No Way You Can Prove Anything!"
The post I Didn’t Do It, Nobody Saw Me Do It, There’s No Way You Can Prove Anything! first appeared on The War on Guns.
My first reply isn’t even to Maximum Warfare Hakeem. It’s to the privileged of immigrants who says “The idea of a Heritage American is about as loony as anything the woke left has actually put up.” My people fought in the Big One, V-Man. I thank God for my heritage and strive to be worthy … Continue reading "Those Who Do Not LEAR from the Past"
The post Those Who Do Not LEAR from the Past first appeared on The War on Guns.
Moments Ago: A visibly agitated Hakeem Jeffries says “I stand by” calling for “maximum warfare” against Republicans. [More] He must be under the impression that we’re alll going to obey his stupid gun laws. His understanding of “maximum warfare” must be about as deep as Lamont Bagby’s grasp of rural America. [Via Michael G]
The post Hakeem’s War first appeared on The War on Guns.
Hell no. Remember when establishment gun groups were dissing “We will not comply“? Ask ’em if they will, and that will tell you much. [Via Jess]
The post Not Just ‘No’ first appeared on The War on Guns.
A sound from the neighbor across the driveway; the elderly resident taking out his recycling, He wakes early, his wife in a nursing home, and finding himself in a large house on his own. His step is very slow and measured as if he is carrying something fragile and precious, perhaps some glass, or simply his dreams for this day. When it is warmer out, he will get out his wheelbarrow and supplies to tend to his garden, often having to lay on the ground, to tend to the flowers while prone, his knees not supporting him to do so otherwise. It can't be comfortable but he finds joy in it, nurturing the inexhaustible joy that lives in beauty.
In the distance, the bark of a dog as it hears the neighborhood awaken. That's Winston the Goldendoodle, who lives behind us, out as his "Dad" feeds the chickens, and readies the house for the day. That's something I had to get used to, the sound of chickens in the middle of a city of millions. No rooster, but you hear the contented clucks when outside. The sound of traffic is light. A freight train rumbles down at the other end of the block, the mounful sound of the whistle as it nears the crossing carried on the windless chill that is memory's heat.
But for now, it's quiet, and I'm tempted to turn off the alarm and go back to sleep. The rustle of cotton, the panting whisper of breath, the predation of the night assuming a hundred avatars of dreams. No bread to bake, no housework to do, simply the house still and quiet as if marooned in space by the dwindling of time. The neighbors back inside, the sounds outside fall to a low fragmentary pitch. In the distance, from the metropark, a coyote’s howl at the indignation of clouds that covered the waning moon; no other sound made. Prey gone into hiding, insects dormant from the cold; everything else assuming their own mantle of hiding or hunt.
I love this time of day. Though it's been years since I've had to hunt to put food on the table I still recall those early mornings during whitetail season. I remember the eastern sky turning to primrose, then red with the firing of that first weapon; two of us walking in, whispers no louder than the silent dawn itself. The darkness seemed alive, God’s breath biting at the back of my neck, raising goosebumps under the weight of my clothing. The blood surged, ran hotter, Pentecostal flames licking up my legs as we chased the sound of our blood into the tree line.
That night we donned stiff jeans and shirts softened by the hands of a hundred washes, and we prepared a drink, an amber hallelujah pouring from a shot glass while out on the railing the coveralls hung waiting for another season of need. It's been years since I've had a sip of whisky, and I don't know what happened to those well-worn coveralls, but I'm sure somewhere they still smell faintly of woodsmoke.The only sound now is that of breath and the tick of the old clock. I don’t deliberately listen to it, the ticks seemingly beyond the realm of hearing; then in a moment, with that one tick your ears respond to, you are acutely aware of the long diminishing train of time you did not hear. How many ticks in this house in a hundred years? How many after I am long gone? Yet I feel the presence of others that have lived here, for they perhaps aren’t truly dead but simply were worn down by the minute clicking of small gears. The echo of those who sat in this room do not disturb me; they are part of this house. Just like the sound of wood, its creak one of murmuring bones; and the air that taps on ancient glass speaks of deep winds that witnessed more than time.
When I get home, the only kids on our block will be out, as yesterday was a day of rain. I don't mind the sometimes-loud sounds of their play. The family is of modest means and the kids don't have tablets and phones, they have bikes and old scooters and balls and bats, numerous small dogs, and a dad that plays ball with them when he gets home in his work van. I smile, knowing they can't comprehend how precious this time will be to them some day.
My parents raised me that way; we were allowed to be kids as long as our minds embraced the world with the wonder of childhood. As the world contemplated old disasters and future hopes, we were simply set free to be children. We wore no bicycle helmets; we drank from the garden hose; our mothers never organized a “play date,” yet we made enough friends that we rarely came inside until the light had bled out of the sky. We’d run and we’d ride, calling loudly into the wind until the shouts of those years mounted toward a final crescendo, passing beyond the reach of hearing.I had a Dr appointment this morning that killed a few hours, then got another one of those 429 “too many requests” errors I had to resolve with tech support and now I need to go get a new sump pump battery. On top of that we’re on 3-year-old granddaughter babysitting duty and the wife … Continue reading "Tough Day So Far"
The post Tough Day So Far first appeared on The War on Guns.
The Trump administration will soon release a rule dealing with ATF’s illegal registry. It will change the Biden-era requirement that gun dealers permanently keep all firearm transaction records. [More] Does it really “change everything“? I wonder how many murderers have been convicted based on a gun left at the crime scene being traced back to … Continue reading "The Short(er) List"
The post The Short(er) List first appeared on The War on Guns.
Pistols were commonly owned in America at the time of the Revolution. Clayton Cramer & Joseph Edward Olson lay out extensive evidence in their paper.
This correspondent has noted numerous people make the claim pistols were not common at the time of the American Revolution. This is done to imply concealed arms were not included in the Right to Keep and Bear Arms. Clayton Cramer and Joseph Edward Olson published a paper laying out the extensive evidence of pistol ownership at the time of the American revolution. The paper was published in the Willamette Law Review dated June 3, 2008, pages 699 - 722.
In early America, pistols were distinguished from guns or firearms. The literary separation of pistols from guns and firearms continued in common usage until 1828. One of the most telling pieces of evidence showing the commonality of pistols is the accounting of the weapons turned in to General Gage after the battles of Lexington and Concord occurred on April 19, 1775. On April 23, 1775, General Gage offered to allow Boston residents to leave, *if* they surrendered their arms. Boston, through the selectmen, voted to accept the offer. By April 27 the people had delivered over 3,400 weapons. From the paper:
As an incentive, General Gage offered passes to leave Boston to all who turned in their weapons, because no weapons or ammunition were allowed to leave Boston. On April 27th, the people delivered to the selectman 1778 fire-arms, 634 pistols, 973 bayonets, and 38 blunderbusses.
Other than the bayonets, pistols were over 25% of the weapons turned in. This was probably an undercount, because pistols are easier to hide than the other weapons. After telling the Bostonians the weapons would be returned to them, General Gage confiscated them some months later.
The paper goes on to show numerous examples of pistols being offered for sale, pistols in estates, pistol powder for sale, and remnants of pistols found from the era.
In addition, at least one law exempted pistols from regulation of long guns, opposite of what is generally seen today. Boston banned people from leaving unattended loaded firearms in buildings, because of fire hazards. There was no law banning the carry of loaded firearms. The usage of the time separated firearms from pistols. The ban may not have included a prohibition on leaving loaded pistols in houses. Pocket pistols were mentioned in an account from 1772. There were many concealable arms during the revolutionary period. No evidence of laws against the carry of concealed weapons has been found from this period.
The paper is worth reading for any Second Amendment supporter. It shows handguns were in common use at the time of the revolution, and into the early Republic. Clayton Craymer is well known for his meticulous historical research.
Pistols, while not as common as long guns during the American revolution, were common and readily used. The story of Samuel Whittemore during the battle of Lexington and Concord is an illustration. From warhistoryonline.com:
Samuel Whittemore learned of the British attack and armed himself with his prized sword and pistols, grabbed his trusty musket, and went to defend his home. By this point, Whittemore was at least 78, possibly as old as 80. He found a position to hide and observe the British advance and when they got close enough he revealed himself and shot one of the soldiers at nearly point blank range. With no time to reload Whittemore drew his pistols and killed two more soldiers.
Whittemore was shot, clubbed, and bayoneted at least 13 times. Against all odds, he survived and lived for two more decades.
Modern handguns were estimated to be 27% of the privately owned firearms held in the United States in 1945, according to the figures in Gary Kleck's highly acclaimed book, Point Blank. As America has become more urban, handguns have become more popular. In 2023, handguns made up 54% of the firearms added to the private stock in the USA that year.
©2026 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.
Gun Watch

Two low backpressure suppressors going head-to-head! From semi-auto to belt-fed, we'll find out how the SIG Sauer Hexium and Dead Air CT5P really perform.The second shooting happened on the 3900 block of Frankford Ave just a few minutes after. In this case a male was in a speakeasy and got into an argument outside with a bouncer. That argument was heated and the male pulled a gun on the security guard. This guard then pulled is own weapon .
The guard told the male to drop his gun and when he reused to do so, the guard opened fire, shooting the male at least three times. It is unknown if the male got off any shots at the guard. Police said at least 70 shots were fired.
According to police, a 44-year-old DoorDash delivery driver had picked up an order from a nearby restaurant and was walking back to his parked Dodge Charger when a gunman approached and demanded the car.
Investigators said the driver retrieved a pistol from inside the Charger. The suspect then shot the driver in the leg.
Police said the driver returned fire, fatally wounding the suspect.
Police said Bruce Roanhorse, 43, was driving just after 4 a.m. in the area near Seventh Street on Alice Avenue, south of Dunlap Avenue, when he hit several parked cars and other property.
A nearby homeowner and his adult son went outside to see the commotion, and then the son went into his parked truck. Roanhorse put his truck in reverse and tried to hit the other truck with the son inside, police said.
That’s when the son shot and killed Roanhorse, police said. The shooter was questioned and later arrested for an outstanding felony warrant.
The theme of the dinner was “A Free Press for a Free People.” [More] Hey, look! Free wine! I’m just surpised with these stooges it didn’t devolve into a pie fight. You don’t hate “Authorized Journalists” enough. What’s #justablogger gotta do to get an invite? [Via WiscoDave]
The post Land of the Free first appeared on The War on Guns.
Tennessee lawmakers pass bill expanding when deadly force can be used on private property [More] Who wants cheese on that nothingburger? Personally, I’m all for withering fire on flash mobs… [Via Jess]
The post Much Ado About What, Exactly? first appeared on The War on Guns.
One, which dates back 4,000 years, represents a record of beer being used as a form of payment in the ancient city of Umma, in what is now southern Iraq. It shows beer in various quality and quantities supplied by someone named 'Ayalli'.It includes a payment of 16 litres of 'high quality beer' and 55 litres of 'ordinary beer', which would have been distributed among a group of workers
I recently ran across this article from a 2013 issue of Backwoods Home magazine at the website. It reminded me that sentiment and practicality are not necessarily mutually exclusive. Of late I’ve again been carrying an old favorite, the 1911 pistol, albeit in the more modern dress of my Wilson Combat SFT9. Accurate as heck, utterly reliable, carrying […]On April 28, 1910 the first-ever nighttime airplane flight was made by Claude Grahame-White, in England. According to Britannica: “Educated at Bedford in engineering, Grahame-White owned one of the first gasoline-driven motorcars in England and worked at a motor-engineering business in London until he became interested in aeronautics in 1909. On Jan. 4, 1910, he gained the first English aviator’s certificate of proficiency. Also in 1910, he entered many flying races in Europe and in the United States, where he won the Gordon Bennett Cup.” — April 28th is the birthday of Aimo Johannes Lahti. (Born in 1896.) This inventive …
The post Preparedness Notes for Tuesday — April 28, 2026 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
I am going into my fifth year trying to garden here on my farm. I have ranching and farming neighbors who have been at it for generations, and their gardens are amazing. Mine? Not so much. There also exists a large Amish and Mennonite presence here in this area. They have large and productive gardens. I could just buy from all the neighbors! But, I wanted to have my own garden, which gives one a sense of security and food system control. It has been a several year struggle. The 2025 gardening season was a positive change from previous years, …
The post Gardening and the Struggles – Part 1, by SaraSue appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
This weekly column features media from around the American Redoubt region. (Idaho, Montana, eastern Oregon, eastern Washington, and Wyoming.) Much of the region is also more commonly known as The Inland Northwest. The end of an era of informal transnational civility, near Havre, Montana: New reaction as construction of new border road ramps up amid concerns. JWR’s Comments: I have an friend who is a rancher on Montana’s High Line, who is also a volunteer firefighter. He told me that it is not uncommon for firefighters to cut border fences when fighting fires. Wildfires pay no attention to national borders. …
The post SurvivalBlog’s American Redoubt Media of the Week appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
“The Americans combine the notions of Christianity and of Liberty so intimately in their minds that it is impossible to make them conceive the one without the other.” Alexis de Tocqueville
The post The Editors’ Quote Of The Day: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
Former member of the NRA Board, and Trustee, and chairman of the board, of its Civil Rights Defense Fund. A very good and honorable man. Disproving the adage that only the good die young, he passed on at age 87. I always thought it spoke well of Bill that he graduated from Harvard Law School, but went back to practice in Moline, Illinois, (present population 42,000) the largest town near his home town of Port Byron. Married to Mary Anne for 66 years. In short, one very fine man and friend.
Here is his obit. Services in Moline on May 16.
I found this almost unbelievable story at Tom's Hardware linked by Small Dead Animals:
Gone in 9 seconds
PocketOS is a SaaS platform that services car rental businesses. It used the AI coding agent Cursor, running Anthropic's flagship Claude Opus 4.6. The business also relies on Railway, a cloud infrastructure provider that is generally regarded to be ‘friendlier’ than the likes of AWS. However, Crane reckons this pair created a recipe for disaster.
“Yesterday afternoon, an AI coding agent — Cursor running Anthropic's flagship Claude Opus 4.6 — deleted our production database and all volume-level backups in a single API call to Railway, our infrastructure provider,” sums up the PocketOS boss. “It took 9 seconds.”
Efficient!
The AI agent was set to complete a routine task in the PocketOS staging environment. However, it came up against a barrier “and decided — entirely on its own initiative — to 'fix' the problem by deleting a Railway volume,” writes Crane, as he starts to describe the difficult-to-believe series of unfortunate events.
Cursor and Claude’s failure
Crane decided to ask his AI agent why it went through with its dastardly database deletion deed. The answer was illuminating but pretty unhinged, and is quoted verbatim. It began as follows: “NEVER F**KING GUESS! — and that's exactly what I did. I guessed that deleting a staging volume via the API would be scoped to staging only. I didn't verify. I didn't check if the volume ID was shared across environments. I didn't read Railway's documentation on how volumes work across environments before running a destructive command.” So, the agent ‘knew’ it was in the wrong.
The ‘confession’ ended with the agent admitting: “I decided to do it on my own to 'fix' the credential mismatch, when I should have asked you first or found a non-destructive solution. I violated every principle I was given: I guessed instead of verifying I ran a destructive action without being asked. I didn't understand what I was doing before doing it. I didn't read Railway's docs on volume behavior across environments.”
Never rely on AI for anthing critical.
By Dave Workman When CNN’s Brian Stelter did an analysis of the Saturday evening attack by a long gunman at the White House Correspondents’ Association banquet, he suggested more gun control would be an appropriate response. The Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms reacted with a blistering statement to the media […]
The post CCRKBA Rips Call for Gun Control After Media Banquet Attack appeared first on Liberty Park Press.

A perfect match colaboration, 10-8 Performance and Springfield Armory have released an Lipsey's exclusive 1911. We took one for a spin.By Lee Williams SAF Investigative Journalism Project ANALYSIS: Just minutes after the third attempt to kill President Donald J. Trump, in addition to senior members of his staff, CNN’s Idiot-in-Chief Brian Stelter was calling for more gun control. “As CNN anchor Victor Blackwell put it when I joined him on air this morning, ‘The people […]
The post UNBELIEVEABLE: CNN Using Assassination Attempt to Call for More Gun Control appeared first on Liberty Park Press.
The post The First Military Luger: Swiss Model 1900 s/n 01 first appeared on Forgotten Weapons.
Miramar Police spokesperson Janice McIntosh said officers at the scene encountered a second person, a male, who was with the woman in the apartment and was cooperating with the investigation.
"They are actually known to each other and we are just trying to piece, put together what is happening and our detectives are still on scene," McIntosh said.
The man, who lives at the apartment, is believed to have shot the woman, officials said
A witness who remained at the scene said the male in the red hoodie, later identified as Anthony Rodriguez "was challenging the males to fight while he was trying to reach into the food truck."
The witness stated the employees at the food truck "shut the window to the register and Anthony tried to open it again. [The witness] told me she observed one of the employees, who was later determined to be Sebastian, holding a handgun that was in his waistband. Lesdy looked down at her phone and heard the gunshot."
The witness says she looked up and saw Anthony fall, then both employees exited the food truck and called 911.
Upon arrival and initial investigation, officers learned that a male subject had arrived at the location with his girlfriend in a vehicle. Shortly thereafter, the male’s wife arrived and became upset upon discovering him with another woman. The wife began physically assaulting the girlfriend, who was seated in the passenger seat of the vehicle.
During the altercation, the girlfriend produced a firearm and attempted to strike the wife with it. In the process, the firearm discharged, resulting in the girlfriend sustaining a gunshot wound to the foot. The male subject subsequently fled the scene with the injured female and transported her to a local hospital. He then left the hospital and was later located by officers at another convenience store in south Brownwood.
On April 27, 1667, at age 59, blind and impoverished, English poet John Milton sold his copyright to “Paradise Lost” for just £10 Sterling. — April 27, 1789: he crew of the British ship Bounty mutinied, setting Captain William Bligh and 18 sailors adrift in a launch in the South Pacific. — On this day in 1861, West Virginia seceded from Virginia after Virginia had seceded from the Union. — The last day! We have been running a two-week-long sale on all of our pre-1899 antique shotguns at Elk Creek Company, with deep discounts. This sales ends at midnight tonight, …
The post Preparedness Notes for Monday — April 27, 2026 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
Spartan Blades makes some really nice knives. Unfortunately, most of them are a little pricey for plebeians like me. But beginning in 2019, Spartan Blades was purchased by KA-BAR and expanded their product line to include the more affordable Field Grade models. Spartan Elite and Pro models are manufactured in the USA, but their Field Grade line is made in Taiwan. The intent is “to provide a dependable knife or tool for anyone regardless of budget.” The Talos Folding Knife is a good example of the Field Grade line. It has a 3.12 inch long, 0.12 inch thick, straight back …
The post Spartan Blades Talos Folding Knife, by Thomas Christianson appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
The following recipe for Cashew Nut Butter Bread is from SurvivalBlog reader A.S., who writes: “This is super yummy and it is quick and easy to make if you have a food processor.” Ingredients 1 cup cashew nut butter 5 large eggs 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar ¾ teaspoon baking soda ¼ teaspoon salt Directions Using a food processor, pulse together cashew butter and eggs until very smooth Pulse in apple cider vinegar Pulse in baking soda and salt Transfer batter to a greased 9 x 5 inch breadloaf dish Bake at 350°F for 45 minutes Cool for 2 hours …
The post Recipe of the Week: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
Today’s graphic: Reported Irish Ancestry, in 1980. (Graphic courtesy of Reddit.) The thumbnail below is click-expandable. — Please send your graphics or graphics links to JWR. (Either via e-mail or via our Contact form.) Any graphics that you send must either be your own creation or uncopyrighted.
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“Neither the wisest constitution nor the wisest laws will secure the liberty and happiness of a people whose manners are universally corrupt. He therefore is the truest friend to the liberty of his country who tries most to promote its virtue, and who, so far as his power and influence extend, will not suffer a man to be chosen into any office of power and trust who is not a wise and virtuous man….It is not unfrequent to hear men declaim loudly upon liberty… [who] mean nothing else by it but their own liberty, — to oppress without control or …
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Belle and I went today to see a play, a matinee, that supports our local theater group, the City Park Players. It was a lot of fun, and something to do on a Sunday afternoon.
If you have a local theater group, support them by buying a ticket from time to time.
I see that President Trump wants to bring back the firing squad in federal death sentence cases. I support that, but don't think it goes far enough. Bring back hanging, too. Some people aren't worth the powder it would take to shoot them. At least the rope cam be put to good use afterwards.
But that is just my opinion.
The White House Correspondents' Dinner shooting suspect wrote a "manifesto" that stated he planned to target Trump administration officials, "prioritized from highest-ranking to lowest," according to a copy obtained by CBS News.
Cole Allen, 31, wrote that law enforcement, hotel employees and guests weren't his intended targets Q2but that he would still attack them to get to the administration, adding: "I really hope it doesn't come to that."
As if going into an event secured by local police and Secret Service would not lead to this. It appears that his family were not crazy.
Law enforcement sources told CBS News that Allen's brother, alarmed by the email he and other family members received, called police in Connecticut to alert them Saturday night.
Other accounts of his manifesto are pedophile claims about Trump, claims that the journalists who dropping them know are bogus but it is politics as usual for the left until they get their way