Weekend Knowledge Dump- January 30, 2026

by Greg Ellifritz in Active Response Training on 2026-01-30T11:47:39Z

Knowledge to make your life better. If you have some free time, check out some of these links this weekend.   Wheelchair Concealed Carry Considerations for People with Disabilities “I was shot and paralyzed from the waist down in a gunfight while serving as a U.S. Marine infantryman during the 2003 invasion of Iraq. I […]
I’m sure that everyone remembers the craptastic, unduplicatable ‘hockey stick’ graph that the climate ghouls used to bludgeon the world and waste billions of dollars to prevent global warming, right? Well apparently it’s not just Mann’s research that is crappy, it’s his legal dealings as well since he just got slapped for ‘acting in bad […]

By Dave Workman Virtually half of Canada—several provinces and two territories—are saying “No” to the federal government’s multi-million-dollar buyback scheme, with the National Post reporting this week that the government of Newfoundland is also refusing to participate. According to the report, “This now means that half the provinces, along with two of the three territorial […]

The post Half of Canada Says ‘No’ to Gun Buyback appeared first on Liberty Park Press.

Preparedness Notes for Friday — January 30, 2026

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2026-01-30T07:04:31Z

On January 30, 1648, Spain and the Netherlands signed the Peace of Munster, ending the Thirty Years’ War. — Actor Eugene “Gene” Allen Hackman born January 30, 1930.  He and his wife both sadly passed away in February, 2025. — January 30th is also the birthday of historian Barbara Tuchman (born 1912, died February 6, 1989). She wrote some very engaging history books. — Jase Medical just updated their affiliate agreement with SurvivalBlog.  All SurvivalBlog readers now get an automatic $10 discount at checkout. Just click on their ad in the SurvivalBlog ad stack, or use this link, to be …

The post Preparedness Notes for Friday — January 30, 2026 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

(Continued from Part 3.) In Part 3 of this series, we reviewed the Antichrist, the False Prophet, the Mark of the Beast, and the One-World Money System. In this installment, we will look at the Merchants of the Earth, the Persecution of the Saints, and the Harvests of the Righteous and the Unrighteous. The Merchants of the Earth One of the most overlooked topics from the Book of Revelation is that of the “merchants of the Earth.” (Revelation 18:11) This term appears repeatedly in Revelation, which shows the importance of certain types of commerce, especially during the Tribulation: “And the …

The post Are You Emotionally Ready for the Coming Collapse? – Part 4, by Peter Cannon appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

Economics & Investing Media of the Week

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2026-01-30T07:02:39Z

In Economics & Investing Media of the Week we feature photos, charts, graphs, maps, video links, and news items of interest to preppers. On Monday (January 26, 2026), spot silver touched $116.59 per Troy ounce in Comex trading. That brought the silver-to-gold price ratio down to 43.3-to-1. (It was 102-to-1 in late May of 2025.)  I expect the ratio to drop perhaps to as low as 28-to-1, in 2026. I was recently asked by a consulting client if he was too late to get into tangibles investing. I told him that it was indeed too late to jump into gold …

The post Economics & Investing Media of the Week appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

The Editors’ Quote Of The Day:

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2026-01-30T07:01:09Z

“The fundamental source of all your errors, sophisms, and false reasoning, is a total ignorance of the natural rights of mankind. Were you once to become acquainted with these, you could never entertain a thought, that all men are not, by nature, entitled to a parity of privileges. You would be convinced, that natural liberty is a gift of the beneficent Creator, to the whole human race; and that civil liberty is founded in that; and cannot be wrested from any people, without the most manifest violation of justice.” – Alexander Hamilton, “The Farmer Refuted,” 1775

The post The Editors’ Quote Of The Day: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

Maybe. It is plausible. Especially so, since this joke has more than a little truth to it: A man had three beautiful girlfriends but didn’t know which one to marry. As a test, he decided to give each woman $5,000 … Continue reading

Pithy Response

by Joe in The View From North Central Idaho on 2026-01-30T04:24:03Z

I don’t know that I have ever seen a comeback as short and powerful as the following. It started out with this lengthy observation and commentary. Which got this response: Dave @snakeeatsapples You’re a conservative cosplaying as a libertarian. Wow. … Continue reading

Threading

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-01-30T02:39:07Z

I tapped the collar on the extension tube for a 1/4"-20 thread but the appropriate thimbscrew did not lock the eyepiece securely. Why?

The collar is about 1/4" thick and thst is not enough threads to clamp down adequately I persuaded myself.  So I did an 8-32 thread and it worked.  8 threads instead of 5.

UPDATE: Another disappointment: the thumbscrew holding the extension tube in the tube interface does not hold it in place square to the interface.   I think the problem is that interface flange is only .5" wide and that is not holding it square even though it is very little difference in ID and OD.  I think the interface should be 1" wide.  I have no 1" thick pieces from which to start.  I do have a  5" thick piece of CFC that I can laminate into a 1" thick piece. 

The Quiet Hand of the Kremlin, the Soviet PB Pistol

by Lynndon Schooler in The Firearm Blog on 2026-01-30T01:00:00Z

In the 1960s, the Soviet Union sought to close the gap between conventional arms and the specialized requirements of clandestine warfare. Reconnaissance teams, Spetsnaz elements of the Soviet Army, and KGB operatives were expected to operate behind enemy lines or when silent work was required during any operation, and this placed a premium on weapons that were not only reliable and compact but also quiet. Out of that requirement came one of the first mass-produced Soviet handguns purpose-built for suppressed, covert work: the PB (GRAU index 6P9). Designed in the mid-1960s and formally adopted in 1967, the PB became the integral suppressed service pistol for Soviet special forces and state security services.
Today’s Photo of the Day takes us to Charlene’s Meadow, where Butch Fjoser set a remarkable new benchmark in the world of pure mechanical accuracy. On June 7th, 2025, Fjoser fired a .445-inch, 10-shot group at 300 yards in the Unlimited Class, surpassing the previous .512-inch record held by Larry Costa. While images of rifles clamped in a vise usually spark a predictable online debate, it is worth noting that Unlimited Class rail guns are purpose-built for equipment testing rather than traditional marksmanship. The goal here is to explore the absolute limits of consistency when recoil, ergonomics, and human input are removed.
Welcome back to another edition of Concealed Carry Corner. Last week, I talked about how to carry in the deep cold of winter. If you happened to miss that article, be sure to click the link here  to check it out. This week, I think it's important to look at when it's better to avoid situations entirely when carrying a concealed firearm versus what people do by carrying a heavier-than-normal loadout. Times are changing and it's really important to look at what situations are worth avoiding entirely and what ones should be approached with caution.

Articles published by Firearms News over the years: Gun Prohibitionists Siding with DOJ on NFA Registration: These actions undermine Trump administration’s 2A credibility. (1/8/26) Duplicitous Bedfellows: Trump Administration and Anti-Gun Organizations (12/17/25) One Big Beautiful Update, Part 1: Trump and Bondi reveal the truth about their anti-Second Amendment agenda. (11/25/25)   Gun Groups’ Warm Welcome … Continue reading "Donald Trump’s 2A Legacy and the “Beautiful Second Amendment”"

The post Donald Trump’s 2A Legacy and the “Beautiful Second Amendment” first appeared on The War on Guns.

Time to Disengage From Antisocial Media

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-01-29T19:05:29Z

1/28/26 Newsweek article about angry conservative attacking Rep. Omar with apple cider vinegar captures how antisocial media feedback loop is polarizing American society.  Rep. Omar is a pretty despicable person and deserves serious criticism.   A syringe of apple cider vinegar is not "serious criticism." It is not free speech. It is a criminal assault that actually accomplishes nothing but gin up sympathy for a member of the Squad.

Walk away from a system that makes money off meanness and hatred! There are plenty of places to get news and commentary that are not feedback loop driven (like your favorite blog).
Most of the new rifles of the past couple of decades have fallen into the following classes: M4geries, long-range “backcountry” hunting rifleS, low-priced entry-level bolt guns or nostalgia-milking lever-actions. But another style of rifle is always lurking in the background, just waiting for a manufacturer to try it again. I’m talking about scout rifles, and this year at SHOT, the Ruger American Gen II Scout was on display in their booth.

Much Ado About WHAT, Exactly…?

by admin in The War on Guns on 2026-01-29T18:37:31Z

I’m urging every Voting Member of the NRA to turn your ballot over and write-in: Charles Rowe, Wadsworth, Ohio. [More] Why? Not only is he a world-class competitive shooter and Captain of the US Rifle Team, he’s also an experienced corporate executive with extensive board experience. Anybody see anything about the Second Amendment? And getting … Continue reading "Much Ado About WHAT, Exactly…?"

The post Much Ado About WHAT, Exactly…? first appeared on The War on Guns.

Any Chair in a Bar Fight

by admin in The War on Guns on 2026-01-29T18:11:38Z

Redirect the conversations Everyclown initiates on social media by accusing them of the cardinal sin of “liberalism.” [Via Tacticool Memes]

The post Any Chair in a Bar Fight first appeared on The War on Guns.

Nosler launched its Whitetail Country ammunition line in October 2024 as factory-loaded ammo only, and at SHOT Show 2026 they're releasing the Solid Base and Straight-Wall bullets as reloading components. The company also expanded the loaded ammunition lineup to include .400 Legend , now shipping with a 215-grain Straight-Wall bullet for $40.95 per 20 rounds.

Will Grab Guns for Food

by admin in The War on Guns on 2026-01-29T17:55:03Z

Ladd Everitt needs a job. [More] I guess times have been tough ever since both CSGV and George Takei parted ways with him, but who wouldn’t want to hire someone with such an impressive record of failures? Won’t YOU be his friend? [Via Tacticool Memes]

The post Will Grab Guns for Food first appeared on The War on Guns.

Baby Wipes for the Shop

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-01-29T17:43:29Z

My hands get pretty disgusting in the shop either from adding oil to the oil dispenser on the mill or carbon fiber dust.  It is hard not to get this stuff on door knobs or light switches.  My wife bought what she calls Baby Wipes for the Shop which clean my hands well enough to safely get to the sink for hand washing. 

Coming Soon, to a Caliphate Near You

by admin in The War on Guns on 2026-01-29T17:24:35Z

We have to start acting as if we have the upper hand because we do. [More] I could say the same thing about 2A advocates.

The post Coming Soon, to a Caliphate Near You first appeared on The War on Guns.

Niche Cartridges

by Pawpaw in PawPaw's House on 2026-01-29T16:58:00Z

I've always had a fondness for niche cartridges. My very first centerfire rifle was a Marlin 336 in .35 Remington.  I preferred the 200 grain Remington load, and I carried that rifle for two decades.  It was my go-to choice for whitetail deer in central Louisiana. That rifle wore a 2.5 scope and was hot medicine for deer in our piney woods and hardwood bottoms. I never had to shoot a deer twice with it.

Ron Spomer talks about another niche cartridge, the 338 Federal.  It's nothing more than a .308 Win necked up to 0.338.  It throws big bullets.  Not far, but hard. It's not in the same category as the .338 Win Mag, nor the .338 Lapua, but it is not meant to be.  It's a cartridge for inside 200 yards.  Truth be told, that is where most North American game are taken.


Before Junior Doughty died, he and I talked about the 338 Federal.  At that time it was a new cartridge.  We thought that a good 200+ grain cast bullet would be the bees knees in this thing.  With hard linotype metal and a gas check, you could push it to 1900fps and get plenty of thump on the other end. In a short action, light bolt gun with a low powered scope, it would take anything we might point it at.

I'm glad to see that Ron highlighted this cartridge.  It is not for everyone, but niche cartridges never are.
European American Armory was back at the SHOT Show for 2026 with a booth full of their usual mix of imported firearms—handguns, shotguns and rifles. And in one corner, they had a few firearms that were both shotguns and rifles at the same time. They’re bringing combination guns into the U.S. market soon, and they should be affordable—a hard thing to find these days.

ICYMI: Pretti Was Not An Onlooker

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-01-29T15:25:00Z

 You can watch BBC News coverage at Mediaite where they explain this video from a few days earlier shows Pretti attacking ICE vehicles and generally acting confrontational, leading to him being shoved to the ground by ICE.  He has a gun on him. If they had arrested him for his crimes a few days earlier, he might well be alive today.

1/22/26 CNN now reports that Pretti's family confirms that is Pretti in the video.

Silencer Shop and the eForm 4 make it faster and easier than ever to get your next can. We'll walk you through it step by step!

And more importantly, which should you not trust? 

This post is the fourth in a series on how to make your home network harder to attack.  Here are links to posts onetwo, and three.  

Now you might think the question in the post title is a bit strange - after all, these are you devices, so you'd think that they're all trustworthy.  You'd be wrong.  There are at a minimum two different categories of trustworthiness:

Your main computing devices.  These are computers (duh) such as laptops and desktop computers, servers (a future post will talk about why these can be useful to you, and your cell phones (which are nothing but tiny hand held computers).

Now I've been in security for long enough that I get a bit twitchy about mobile phone security (I'll address this in a future post as well).  However, that ship has sailed and even a security nerd like me won't bother making a separate network just for these.  So they're computing devices for this discussion.

Then there's everything else.  It's surprising how any Internet-connected thingies there are these days.  Ring doorbells, Nest thermostats, online appliances (fridges, washing machines, etc).  At this point the Borepatch from four years ago would have told you to just walk away from all this nonsense.  Don't Internet-enable anything in this category.

Today's Borepatch sighs and tells you that this is coming to a home near yours.  It's here in my home.  No, not the thermostat (which was installed by the previous owner and which I have not connected to the WiFi).  However, the TVs all come with streaming apps for Netflix, Prime, and Youtube (among dozens of others).  And The Queen Of The World reminds me that the kids like to stream when they come and visit.  She likes it when they come and visit, as do I.  And so we have to do something for these devices.

Fortunately, you don't need any new kit to do this.  If you remember from the last post on water tight compartments, you don't own the Internet box from your network provider.  Basically, you can't trust it, so you install a new firewall box running DD-WRT.  It's trustworthy because you own it and have your own software and configuration on it.

All of your main computing devices connect to it's WiFi.  All of the other devices (doorbells, thermostats, TVs, appliances) connect to the WiFi from your network provider's box.

What you've done is to put a firewall between your computing devices and your untrusted devices.  It doesn't matter if your TV gets hacked because it can't get through your DD-WRT firewall to your computers.

Likewise, your TV is at least somewhat protected from the outside world because it's behind the firewall in your network provider's box. 

The Saddest Sound a Humidor Makes

by David in Musings Over a Barrel on 2026-01-29T14:40:00Z

Those of a certain age will remember the Nestlé Quik commercial from the 1970s that gave us the line, “That’s the saddest sound I know.” That small lament comes to mind whenever I realize I’ve reached the final cigar in a favorite box.



The Oliva Serie V Melanio is very much one of those favorites. I almost always keep a box — or at least one of the Serie V variations — tucked away in the humidor. It’s a reliable, versatile smoke that seems to fit just about any occasion, whether paired with a drink or enjoyed on its own. So it was with some disappointment that, while perusing the humidor inventory recently, I discovered I was down to my very last Melanio.

All is not lost, of course. Sitting nearby is an almost full box of the Oliva Serie V 135th Anniversary, a worthy and celebratory cousin that softens the blow considerably. Still, there’s something about seeing that final Melanio resting alone that feels like a small ending.

Nonetheless, I suppose the solution is obvious — and inevitable. Another box of Serie V will be finding its way into the humidor soon enough.


Cheers!


[ This content originated at Musings Over a Barrel ]

SHOTGUN HANDLING REFRESHER

by Mas in on 2026-01-29T14:00:00Z

As promised, a reprint of Backwoods Home’s article on working with shotguns.
In this Sportsman Spotlight, proud father Darren tells the story of his daughter Cassidy Orr's new adventures in the outdoors as a hunter and fisherman.
Today, we’re joined by the minds behind Vortex Optics’ New Product Development team, Ben and Connor, some of the company’s brains behind Vortex’s own “Skunkworks.” This group is responsible for everything from Vortex’s affordable red dots and scopes to the top-secret XM157 Fire Control optic developed for the U.S. Army’s NGSW Program meant to work with the M7 and M250 platforms. Today, engineers Ben and Connor share insight into some of Vortex’s newest 2026 releases - at least the ones they can tell us about for now. Today we’ll be talking about the recently released civilian variant of the AMG 1-10x24 LPVO, the new Triumph 1-10x42 Relay-equipped rangefinding binoculars, and the Vortex Ace portable weather station. Together, these products expand the Vortex Relay ecosystem, giving shooters an integrated and highly capable ranging and weather data suite for more precise, confident shots in any setup. Please give Connor and Ben a warm welcome to the show, and be sure to check out the Vor...

Judicial Lawfare

by Joe in The View From North Central Idaho on 2026-01-29T14:00:00Z

Quote of the Day Let’s talk Judicial Lawfare. Over 4 years of the Biden administration, 9 district court rulings against the administration were later overturned on appeal. About 2.25 per year. In 2025 alone, the first year of President Trump’s … Continue reading

Meme Dump!

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2026-01-29T12:40:00Z




Brrr!

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2026-01-29T12:38:00Z

We’re stuck in an extended cold spell largely because of all snow to the south and west of us.

A couple days of southwesterly wind is what usually snaps us out of these, but wind out of TX/OK/AR is blowing across hundreds of miles of snow covered ground. Until they thaw, we aren’t going to get above freezing.

Depending on whose forecast you believe, it may be as late as next weekend before any of this starts to melt.





Braden Langly of Langley Outdoors Academy has posted a compelling analysis of what appears to be a combination of an unintentional discharge of Alex Pretti's Sig P320,  combined with the predictable response, which lead to his shooting and death in Minneapolis on January 24, 2026. Langly does his analysis on YouTube. There does not appear to be a transcript.

To sum up the action as shown in numerous videos. Alex Pretti is involved in obstructing ICE officers from making an arrest, along with numerous other individuals. Pretti is in the street, and is actively aiding others in obstructing ICE. There are a couple of women working with Alex. ICE agents tell them to leave/get out of the way. Pretti does not do so. An ICE agent sprays him with pepper spray, and about 3-5 ICE agents attempt to place him in custody. Pretti stuggles, resisting arrest. 3-5 ICE agents are involved, taking Pretti to the ground, and attempting to gain control over Pretti.  One of the agents, wearing a grey jacket and grey headgear, reaches into the scrum of struggling men, takes a pistol off of Pretti, which appears to have been in the small of Pretti's  back. It is not clear if there is a holster. At this point, someone yells: Gun!Gun!Gun!, which is what agents are trained to do when a weapon is found during a struggle.

At the Gun!Gun!Gun! warning, at least one of the agents draws his handgun. The  agent in grey starts to step away from the scrum, removing the pistol from the scene, a prudent move. He barely takes a step before a shot is fired. At least two of the agents recoil in response. Then several more shots are fired, which result in Pretti's death.

What Langly has found and shows, is it appears the first shot was from Pretti's Sig P320 as it was being removed from the scene. 

In the detailed analysis by Langly, it is clear the slide on the Sig P320 moves back and forth as the agent in grey holds it down toward the ground, by his side, as he steps away. His hand appears to move, as if from recoil.  There is some evidence of a bullet hitting the ground.

There should be evidence of an impact of a bullet at the crime scene, in the suspected location.This sort of situation has happened before in law enforcement. There is a struggle. A gun is found. A shot goes off. Officers, keyed to the edge in a highly dangerous situation, fire in response.  Langley calls it "Contagious" gunfire. The officers were primed to a deadly threat. They are on the edge of responding with deadly force. Then the gunshot rings out. It is very close. People may even feel splatter or fragments from the bullet hit their feet or legs.

There will be much more investigation. The agent in grey will be questioned. He probably has already written an after action statement. The truth will come out.

It is to be hoped the crime scene is preserved. This is not easy to do when the local police will not assist, the governor and the mayor are telling the proto-insurgents to resist, and the incident occurs in an area where the proto-insurgents are attempting to exert control.

In some cases, confederates of offenders have removed evidence from the scene. Several cartridge cases should be at the scene to be analyzed in a crime laboratory. The local police have been forbidden to assist, so it will have to be at a federal lab.

There are also peculiar things which can happen, and have happened at other crime scenes. A cartridge case may become embedded in a boot tread or vehicle tread, if the crime scene is not very carefully controlled.

A tragedy composed of a series of unfortunate events, triggered by illegal interference with ICE agents, appears to be the most likely explanation of what resulted in Alex Pretti's death.

©2026 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch
 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 


Thursday Meme Drop

by Midwest Chick in Midwest Chick's Place on 2026-01-29T11:30:00Z

“You can’t walk in with guns,” Trump said.

Preparedness Notes for Thursday — January 29, 2026

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2026-01-29T07:04:55Z

On January 29, 1944 USS Missouri (BB-63), the last battleship commissioned by the US Navy, was. launched. It was decommissioned in 1992, and was donated for use as a museum and memorial ship on May 4, 1998. It is now on display near the USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. — Today, we present a guest article from a SurvivalBlog reader. Because it is partially promotional for a published book, it is not part of the judging for Round 122 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. More than $978,000 worth of prizes have been awarded since we started running …

The post Preparedness Notes for Thursday — January 29, 2026 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

(Continued from Part 2.) In Part 2 of this series, we reviewed the Trumpet Judgments, and how the people on earth will be affected by these catastrophic events. I sincerely hope that the pre-Tribulation rapture believers are correct, and that Christians will be gone to heaven by this point. However, what if Christians end up having to endure part or all of the Tribulation? If so, are you emotionally prepared for this possibility? In this installment, we will look at some of the specific events associated with the False Prophet, the Antichrist, the Mark of the Beast and the One-World …

The post Are You Emotionally Ready for the Coming Collapse? – Part 3, by Peter Cannon appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

The Survivalist’s Odds ‘n Sods

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2026-01-29T07:02:20Z

SurvivalBlog presents another edition of The Survivalist’s Odds ‘n Sods. This column is a collection of news bits and pieces that are relevant to the modern survivalist and prepper from JWR. Our goal is to educate our readers, to help them to recognize emerging threats, and to be better prepared for both disasters and negative societal trends. You can’t mitigate a risk if you haven’t first identified a risk. In today’s column, a warning on possible terrorist threats to Starlink. (Pictured above is a Starlink ground station in Ketchikan, Alaska. Photos courtesy of Reddit.) Starlink’s Achilles Heel In a recent …

The post The Survivalist’s Odds ‘n Sods appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

The Editors’ Quote Of The Day:

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2026-01-29T07:01:30Z

“The idea that The State is capable of solving social problems is now viewed with great skepticism—which foretells a coming change. As soon as skepticism is applied to the State, the State falls, since it fails at everything except increasing its power, and so can only survive on propaganda, which relies on unquestioning faith.” – Stefan Molyneux, from “The Stateless Society: An Examination of Alternatives,” The Ludwig Von Mises institute of Canada, January 6, 2011.

The post The Editors’ Quote Of The Day: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

Deliberate Deception

by Joe in The View From North Central Idaho on 2026-01-29T04:55:58Z

Via The Redheaded libertarian @TRHLofficial, who wrote: It appears MSNBC gave Alex Pretti a tan, a stronger jawline, better teeth, shorter forehead, and a nose job to make him look hotter for the AWFLs. They broadened his shoulders, thickened his … Continue reading
1911s run the entire price gamut. Buyers can choose anything from an inexpensive Filipino gun up through a matched pair of Cabot pistols made of meteorite . In recent years, the new family of Turkish 1911s imported by SDS has started to earn a reputation as good values at a moderate price point. Of special note are the Tisas clone pistols like the Raider, which mimic the classic lines of the M45A1 CQBP. New for this year is a version of the Raider with an optics cut and threaded barrel. Join us as we put it through its paces.

by TPOL Nathan in The Price of Liberty on 2026-01-29T01:00:00Z

Not what was intended? Hidden agenda? Some other reason? Now that we are a year into Trump 2.0’s regime, we should ask (again and again) what is going on. As lovers of liberty, we of course seriously applauded The Donald’s … Continue reading
Photo Of The Day: Panzergrenadier Battalion 122 in Oberviechtach has officially received the first G95 rifles, marking an important step in the Bundeswehr’s transition to a new standard service weapon. The G95 is a Bundeswehr-specific variant of the HK416 and retains the familiar AR-15 layout while using a primarily metal construction said to improve durability, stability, and overall precision. I’d love to do a comparison with Sweden’s Sako Ak 24 version, and a few others, of course.

External USB Drive Not Showing Up in DISKMGMT.MSC

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-01-28T23:34:00Z

 Whenever I upgrade a hard disk, I pop the old one into an external case for use as a USB drive.  This is really a nice use for drives that might otherwise need something more thorough than FORMAT.  I am looking at a drive that is one of the early such transplants.  The USB cable has two USB-A connectors on the far end from the drive enclosure. When I plug this into a USB port, it is invisible to Windows DISKMGMT.MSC program.  Any suggestions to figuring out if this drive is just finished?

Warning: Cape Does Not Enable User to Fly

by Unknown in Home on the Range on 2026-01-28T21:38:00Z

The cold this last week has been brutal, with temps in the minus 40s with the wind chill. Even on a calm day, it was in the minus numbers.  Not unheard of in Chicago, but it's been about 3 years since we had a January this cold.  The streets are empty but for the occasional passing car, only one brave dog walker out, stopping for a moment in the bitten shadow as a little dog in a Cubs dog hoodie stops to leave a message for a White Sox fan on a frozen tree. 

I grew up in a very small town near the Washington coast (in reality, we could be in Oregon in a few minutes by just driving across a bridge). Snow in the lower elevations was unusual; if there was any at all, school would be canceled.  I don't remember any days below 30, but we would have been out anyway. Snow was not cold; it was not working or worrying. It was a divine benediction that spread itself out onto the world where we waited with glee. Grabbing an inner tube to ride down the cleared foothills, shoving a couple of cookies in our pockets, we would head out into the dazzling white, heeding the siren call.

There, I would simply wait my turn with my tube on a small slope at the lake we called the "widow maker", content to just sit and look up into the wonder as we waited our turn. That tube was not my transport to the stars; it was a defiant gesture against the mortality that grew closer to the edge of our vision every year.  It wasn't a simple inner tube.  It was a defiant shout.  It was my superhero cape and my shield. 
Then, I'd launch myself with abandon out into it, flinging my form down onto an inner tube that was traveling downhill much faster than my dad would ever approve. There was nothing but movement and emotion, snow in the amber fire of my hair, my cheeks flushed, body arching up into the air, trying to maintain the moment that I knew would come crashing down much too quickly. At the bottom of the hill, chest heaving, I'd simply look up into the sky and say thank you, for that moment, as time gathered itself back up and started ticking again.

Face flushed with anticipation, I'd pat my pocket to make sure my cookie was secure, and I'd trudge back up the slope again to join my brother at the top.  As I peered down into the void, I'd say, "I probably shouldn't do this." Then we'd launch ourselves off yet again into space, remorseless and laughing, flying down the slope, potent, strong, as free as an eagle, not knowing yet as a child, that even for the eagle, all space can still be a cage.
Then we'd come inside for hot cocoa and maybe a little TV. My brother loved The Rifleman; I loved The Adventures of Superman, which was in syndication at the time. Mom even got me a Superman costume for Halloween once, and I was so disappointed when I saw the little warning tag that said "Warning - Cape Does Not Enable User to Fly. I loved the show, but the junior scientist in me probably wasn't the first nerd to notice that Superman's home planet was Krypton, and the fictionalized mineral from that place, kryptonite, was his undoing in many an episode, as it rendered him weak.  I knew Krypton was an inert mineral. Inert bodies do no harm, seek no revenge, provoke no hostilities. They shouldn't be of any concern. Yet sometimes those inert things, those small things, are the ones that hurt you the most. For lurking out there for Superman, Kryptonite was just waiting, biding its time (or another episode) until it would weaken the hero. 

Once adulthood hit, snow days were simply known as "work days". My flying had me based in Los Angeles on the West Coast for the most part. I do NOT miss flying out of LAX. The layout of the airport was so large and discombobulated the first time I landed there; my copilot told the tower we were "student pilots and needed progressive taxi instructions to the United Gate". He laughed and got us there, but it was never my favorite airport. But just being able to sit outside by the pool on a layover when it was snowing somewhere in the Plains was magic.

But it was no surprise that people actually get on airplanes to go places OTHER than LAX, so it wasn't a surprise that I spent too many nights flying into airports in Montana, Idaho, Colorado, and Nevada when it was brutally cold and snowy. You'd start out thinking "oh this won't be so bad", then the sky would go from clear to a menacing outburst of fury, as if all the air had turned on you in confrontation, the tenuous earth only a memory beneath you.  Superman managed this with just a cape - we had computers and radar and jet fuel, and the weather was kicking us to the curb. In what seemed like just minutes, the wind would pick up further, the ice would start hitting our windshield as the copilot hurriedly told the flight attendants to be seated, and we'd look at each other with that "I could have been a mild-mannered reporter" look as Mother Nature whacked our backside with a stick.

But soon, we'd be on the ground, using differential power to SLIDE into the gate as thundersnow growled in the distance, the ramp a growing ice rink, while, once stopped, the passengers lined up like cattle trying to get inside to the barn where it was warm. But we got out and made sure our aircraft was safely in for the night, knowing we'd be back in 8 hours (yes, back in the day, your time spent traveling to and from the hotel to sleep was part of your legal "rest"). The airplane wasn't any warmer in the morning, but that was our job.

So, winters in the Midwest were not the surprise for me that many thought they would be. When I bought my first home here, my family said, "Oh, she'll move back out here in a year". But 30 years later, I'm still here, waiting for yet another major winter weather system coming down from the north with a lofty and mighty sigh. Like death and taxes, you are not exempt. Winter will arrive, not with a whimper, but a howl. It’s usually preceded by a trumpet of doom from the news channels, which are often wrong. I usually just check the radar on my computer to see what the weather is actually like out there. At least that way I could see the severe weather coming while Accu-Hunch was predicting another six inches of sunshine, while on sunny days, they’re predicting doom and gloom.

Sometimes the weather was boring, and dressing it up with doom and gloom might have boosted ratings. I don’t think it does the unwary any good when an unreality was made a possibility, probability, and then a matter of fact, for no other reason than fear becoming words. Perhaps it's just from all my years aloft, but I've learned to read all the markers in the sky. When this last system came in - it did not look comforting. The summer storms, I've learned to predict. You might get a heads-up in a monotone voice on the radio that warns of “rotational potential” in a tone that could just as easily be saying, “We’re going to have to break that bone again.” Other times it was simply “surprise!” as the sky became an angry mob of clouds. The radar usually gave you a pretty clear forewarning. But winter here was nature's crapshoot, and I learned to prepare.
This last storm, there was de-icing salt by the back steps in a pet-safe bucket, and shovels for both the front and back porch. The flashlights were set out in easy reach, the beeswax candles available in each room, and an extra blanket was out for the bed and the dog's crate, should the power go out. Night soon descended, and the snow began to fall in heavy drifts. As it did, the sounds around me changed. I couldn’t hear it within the house, but from the porch, as I let the dog down the steps to the fenced yard, the town’s main street a block away went almost silent. What few cars are still out are enveloped by the snow, their sounds muted to a few ponderous thumps as they drive over what was either a Village road repair or a trap set by Wile E. Coyote for the Roadrunner.

The freshly shoveled driveway had a patina like an old wall plastered by hand. The trees were bare but for a brace of foliage that clung on with a death grip, screaming into the wind without words, plucked with a cold hand that tosses their cries to the ground like colorful scraps of paper.

After shoveling, salting, tending to the house and the dog, I'd like to think I was Superman, but inside the house, I know there will be those reminders of things that have flown far away - three small wooden containers with dog toys or collars resting on them, my brother's favorite mug for hot drinks, photos of so many I've had to say goodbye to, and a house empty tonight but for myself and a pile of books. A good night to read something; to savor the fire that flowed from a writer’s mind through fingertips to be burnt upon the page, then doused with the water of laughter or tears and wrung out again. My mom always said there was no interrupting me when I was immersed in a book I loved. The house could burn down around me as I embraced the words even among the flames. I remember Mom saying, “She’ll love everything that hard. That will be both her blessing and her curse." My own personal kryptonite - I'm not quite sure why, standing out in temps that would cause frostbite in 20 minutes, I'm thinking that, but I couldn't help it.
I looked up before letting the dog back in. A snow-charged mass of clouds hung unbroken over Lake Michigan, darkening the sky.  By contrast, the air around the house's lights held a crystalline clarity, the sheen of a glass dome, which the merest movement of air might shatter.  Another light is seen through this starry night, a night of wonders and far-away mysteries revealed for just a moment as the clouds break, a low crevice in the glittering, ice-cold that was space; a place where the earth was just one tiny fallen leaf whose cries only God could hear.

I couldn’t help but think that I’m in some kind of cosmic snow globe, and as the porch shuddered slightly in the wind, I wonder if heaven had tilted the earth just a little to watch the flakes swirl around the lone form of one of its humble creations. I wonder if God could look down through that tiny fissure in heaven and see me down here, wearing my brother’s old coat, pulling it around me for warmth that was beyond fabric or insulation.

I squeezed the salt out of my eyes as the light disappeared. For just a moment, there was no snow, no wind at all, just a single star that sparked from the break in the clouds, like a single spark expelled from a soul's fire. A lull had come, the holding of a stormy breath, and I knew I had better get in the house now, the door now only a beggar’s prayer against the incoming cold and wind.
The warmth is but a memory, as are most treasured things, but I no longer resent or reproach it for its passing, for I hold in myself the imprint of something so rare and precious, that of the experience. For all that I have lost, I have memories of so many adventures, and God willing, more to be made.  

Back inside, I shook the snow off my boots onto the entryway rug, the warmth wrapped around me even as the wind outside began to howl. I heard a sound outside the window as the neighbors two doors down let their dog out before the worst of the storm. I heard the bark of their dog as it was released, then the shouts as it was called back in from the yard, tattered shreds and remnants of voices snatched past the ear, followed by silence. 

As water heated for tea, I picked up a book from the stack, the black cover well-worn with use, the simple title imprinted in gold.  I read as I waited for my husband to call while the dog snored happily on the couch. Just as I did as a child, I looked upwards and said thank you, for this moment, as time gathered itself back up and started ticking again. 

Today, the cold seems omnipotent, but soon there will be warmth, new life, and new memories. I can' help but think back to the words Superman said of the letter displayed on his chest - "It's not an S, on my world it means hope". 
 - Brigid

Health Update

by admin in The War on Guns on 2026-01-28T19:23:56Z

As you can see, I’m back. Still not 100%, so please don’t load me up with news tips. I have more article work that takes precedence, and I’m not going to overtax myself. Matter of fact, I have to skip elder feral son Uday’s birthday dinner at a favorite restaurant tonight because I’m just not … Continue reading "Health Update"

The post Health Update first appeared on The War on Guns.

Received via email notification; A user with IP address 172.98.32.190 has been locked out from signing in or using the password recovery form for the following reason: Exceeded the maximum number of login failures which is: 20. The last username they tried to sign in with was: ‘720media’.The duration of the lockout is 4 hours.User … Continue reading "I Hear You Knockin’, But You Can’t Come In"

The post I Hear You Knockin’, But You Can’t Come In first appeared on The War on Guns.

Youth Must Be Served

by admin in The War on Guns on 2026-01-28T19:11:39Z

Providence man dies after assault by group of 11- and 12-year-olds [More] Let me guess: None of them had names like Beaver, Wally, or Eddie Haskell… I wonder how many are already fathers… We’ll never know because the poor dears who are an obvious menace to the lives of peaceable citizens are too young to … Continue reading "Youth Must Be Served"

The post Youth Must Be Served first appeared on The War on Guns.

The Ring is on the Weld

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-01-28T19:09:45Z

The ring that I cut last night needed a little cleanup on the lathe.   I cut a 1.6" OD ring from a 1.55" wide pieces so when it reached the few thousandths of depth it ceased to hold solidly and produced a less than perfect bottom.  The lathe cleaned the outer edge nicely and I bored about  03" from the interior to get a loose fit on the extension tube.

The CFC supplier recommended 3M ScotchWeld for gluing CFC.  The ring and tube are sitting on a Release Agent wet piece of paper so it does not stick. I understand this might take a couple hours to complete curing.  At that point I will tap a 1/4"-20 hole for holding the eyepiece. 

Never ones to stay still Olympus Arms, the Montana company that brought you the long-stroke Vulcan rifle, have announced that they have developed not just a new carbine but also a new round for the carbine. Olympus have spent a year and a half working on the new project.

Elections Have Consequences

by admin in The War on Guns on 2026-01-28T18:56:30Z

The proposed map would have given Democrats a 10-1 edge for the House of Representatives. Right now, Democrats have 6 seats, while Republicans have 5. [More] They’ll get there. I get a genuine kick out of NRA trotting out their resident expert to “explain… the implications of these proposed infringements and what gun owners can … Continue reading "Elections Have Consequences"

The post Elections Have Consequences first appeared on The War on Guns.

Biting Off More Than You Can Chew

by admin in The War on Guns on 2026-01-28T18:46:02Z

Why Soldiers Chewed C4 Like Gum! [Watch] Reminds me of the time I taught feral infant sons Uday and Qusay how to make masks out of plastic bags… [Via David O]

The post Biting Off More Than You Can Chew first appeared on The War on Guns.

New from Woox comes a premium Walnut stock option for lever-guns, shotguns, and bolt-action rifles! High Grade is a must-see.

We’re the Only Ones Tireless Enough

by admin in The War on Guns on 2026-01-28T18:32:15Z

Weapons cache, secret bunker found in California home of conservative activist… an investigation was launched after [CHP} received a tip about a suspected illegal marijuana grow operation… The combination of a hidden bunker and an alarming cache of illegal weapons and ammunition highlights the threat posed to public safety,” CHP Northern Division Chief John Pinoli … Continue reading "We’re the Only Ones Tireless Enough"

The post We’re the Only Ones Tireless Enough first appeared on The War on Guns.

Scumbags and Technicalities

by admin in The War on Guns on 2026-01-28T18:08:49Z

Court Punts on Gun Rights Question in Jury-Instruction Appeal … Salas-Martinez’ case highlights how a retired statute—particularly one that may now be considered unconstitutional under subsequent U.S. Supreme Court decisions—could still be written into a defendant’s jury charge if it governed at the time of the offense.[More] Fine, give him that. And then apply the … Continue reading "Scumbags and Technicalities"

The post Scumbags and Technicalities first appeared on The War on Guns.

Barrett has long been a player in the US Army’s developing Precision Grenadier System program. They took part in some of the precursor competitions which helped refine the program requirements and engage with industry. Barrett previously worked with Mars Inc. who were successful in the xTech Soldier Lethality competition early in 2025 . But now it appears they’ll have two horses in the race.

Today’s Low-Hanging Fruit Report

by admin in The War on Guns on 2026-01-28T17:50:17Z

Alleged Ilhan Omar attacker hinted at town hall plans in cryptic texts to neighbor: ‘I might get arrested’ [More] And isn’t this convenient? Man Who Sprayed Ilhan Omar at Town Hall Was Huge Fan of Trump The “Republican” reaction would be comical if it weren’t so predictably pathetic.

The post Today’s Low-Hanging Fruit Report first appeared on The War on Guns.

But Wait! There’s More!

by admin in The War on Guns on 2026-01-28T17:40:05Z

There’s ways to say things and ways to say things. Herschel shares his way, along with a critical indictment of our countrymen I fear is on target.

The post But Wait! There’s More! first appeared on The War on Guns.

New FN 309 MRD: Budget User Friendly 9mm

by Luke C. in The Firearm Blog on 2026-01-28T17:18:49Z

⁨@BallisticAviation  stops by the curiously vacant FN booth to grab a quick, unsupervised look at the new FN 309 MRD. As staff rushed out ahead of Winter Storm Fern, Luke swooped in for one last peek at what could be a great contender for the best new budget compact 9mm pistol. This budget-friendly 9mm internal hammer-fired pistol delivers user-friendly features like an easy-rack slide (25% less effort), softer grip texture for better control, optics-ready direct mount for Shield RMS/DeltaPoint Pro patterns, and 16/20-round polymer magazines, all for a street price of around $450. Multiple passive safeties and a green fiber front sight make it approachable for new shooters while maintaining FN reliability for EDC carry.

“You gotta win the midterms ’cause, if we don’t win the midterms, it’s just gonna be – I mean, they’ll find a reason to impeach me,” [More] You’d think “a very stable genius” with so much skin in the game would know better than to let his people douse the fire in gunvoter bellies.

The post DOJ Filing on Forced Reset Triggers Contradicts Pledges and Complicates Midterms first appeared on The War on Guns.

Gumbo

by Pawpaw in PawPaw's House on 2026-01-28T17:12:00Z

 We successfully dodged the bullet of the ice storm.  Awoke this morning to clear skies and cold temps.  Belle said that she wanted some kind of soup or stew for lunch, and I started diffing in the freezer.  I found two partial packs of good Gulf shrimp that we could cook, so I chopped some onions and bell peppers and decided to make a shrimp gumbo.

Seafood gumbo is not my forte.  I am much more comfortable with a chicken/sausage gumbo, but I gave it a shot anyway. Toward the latter part of the process, I knew it needed something, but my palate would not give me the clue.  I had Belle taste it and we decided that a bit of red pepper flakes would help it.


Wehn the rice is done, we will get a bowl.

It was only a matter of time before someone tried to sell us plastic crack—and it finally happened when Hammy showed up at SHOT Show 2026. ⁨@BallisticAviation⁩  sits down with  ⁨@hammy3dprints  to check out some of his latest and most thoughtful 3D-printed gun parts and accessories. A one-man show in the most literal sense of the word, Hammy3DPrints is a company that’s consistently updating its catalog, refining its designs, and keeping up with the latest trends in the firearm world.
Luke C. ( @BallisticAviation )is back at SHOT Show 2026 to have a quick sit-down with Surefire’s Andrew Wright to dig into the new SOCOM RC4 suppressor and what sets it apart from previous generations. They break down how the RC4’s updated unique design cuts back pressure, reduces gas to the face, and tames flash without adding unnecessary length or weight.
Some years SHOT Show becomes defined by a particular trend - in the past we’ve seen lever actions and 5.7mm pistols dominate. While SHOT Show 2026 was definitely the year of the suppressor with many new manufacturers entering the game following changes to the NFA, for me, SHOT 2026 was the year of the clone.
When I was five years old, if you told me that my opinions on Spaghetti-O's (actually Chef Boyardee products in general) and naps would swap places entirely, I would have thought you were fibbing.

These days, I'm a big fan of naps and not so much so with the Spaghetti-O's.



Double Tap  launched their SnakeShot Magnum line at SHOT Show 2026, combining #9 shot with hardcast wadcutter projectiles in five magnum revolver calibers. These defensive loads ship February 2nd and deliver substantially deeper penetration than traditional snake shot by stacking a solid projectile behind the shot charge.
Primal Pioneer serves up the perfect dish for Superbowl Sunday, in this featured recipe for venison sausage dip.
Quote of the Day A few Trump Admin officials said some very dumb anti-2A things over the weekend. They got criticism and walked back those statements today. On the actual substantive policy and law, the Admin has generally been very … Continue reading

Meme Dump from the Frozen Wastes!

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2026-01-28T13:57:00Z






The Ross model 1912 Cadet rifle was introduced in 1912 as a diminutive rimfire companion to the 1905 and 1910 military Ross rifles. It was a single-shot straight pull rifle, with a somewhat unusual locking [...]

The post Ross 1912 Cadet: Straight Pull .22 Rimfire Training Rifle first appeared on Forgotten Weapons.

I’ll admit, I’ve never really been a fan of doctors as an adult. A necessary evil at best when things were really bad. But that got exacerbated in 2019 forward with the China Flu, the strongarm tactics to get untried and untested shots, masking, and the further meddling in things non-medical. The Hippocratic Oath means […]

Benefits and Drawbacks of AIWB

by SLG in pistol-training.com on 2026-01-28T12:00:00Z

All concealed carry holster positions have one overriding aspect that they must meet. They must conceal the gun. Beyond that, people tend to be interested in fast access with one or both hands. The holster should retain the gun reasonably well. Comfort can be important as well. That’s really about it though. AIWB, in the […]

NH: Campus Carry Bill has Good Chance of Passage

by Dean Weingarten in GUN WATCH on 2026-01-28T11:19:00Z


The New Hampshire legislature is considering a Campus Carry bill, HB1793, to restore rights protected by the Second Amendment to public colleges and universities in New Hampshire. The bill has been introduced by Rep. Sam Farrington, R-Strafford. Here is the heart of the bill.  From legiscan.com:


I.  Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, no public institution of higher education shall enact rules, policies, or similar prohibitions restricting the possession, carry, storage, or lawful use of firearms or non-lethal weapons on campus.

II.  No state or institutional permit or license shall be required for such carry on campus.


159:30  Remedies.  Any individual aggrieved by a violation of this subdivision may bring an action against the public institution of higher education and its employees responsible for the violation and seek appropriate relief, including injunctive relief, monetary damages, reasonable attorneys' fees, and court costs.  Total damages awarded in an action brought under this subdivision shall be at least $10,000.  


159:31  Severability.  If any provision of this subdivision or the application thereof to any person or circumstances is held invalid, such invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications of the subdivision which can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this subdivision are declared to be severable.  

4  Effective Date.  This act shall take effect January 1, 2027.

There are ten sponsors of the bill in the New Hampshire House, and four sponsors in the Senate.  Republicans have a supermajority in the Senate, with 16 Republicans and 8 Democrats. In the House the numbers are closer, with 221 Republicans and 177 Democrats. In the Dartmouth, David Meuse, D-Rockingham, stated he believed the bill has a good chance of passage.

 Meuse said that he believes that the Protecting College Students Act has a “pretty good chance” of passing due to the Republican control of the legislature and the governorship in New Hampshire. He noted that gun rights was a “Republican pet cause” and that pro-gun groups in the state usually send a “raft of emails” to legislators whenever gun legislation is coming up.

The sponsor of HB1793, Representative Farrington, is a senior at the University of New Hampshire. He has skin in the game. New Hampshire has been a Constitutional Carry (permitless carry) state since 2017. Most college students in New Hampshire can legally carry openly or concealed in most places in New Hampshire. There are very few problems, if any. It is difficult to see how the rights of the students, and anyone else who travels onto public colleges or universities, may be legally restricted on campus facilities. The power of universities to act as parents ended with the passage of the 26th Amendment in 1971, when 18-year-old citizens were given the power to vote by the amendment.

As recent scholarship has found, 18 year old people had the right to keep and bear arms in the early republic and at the time of the ratification of the Bill of Rights. Some early private colleges banned the possession of arms as a regulation of their students, not as a governmental entity.  Their regulations did not apply to educators, administration, or people who were not students of the colleges and universities. United States Courts have long recognized deprivation of rights is a a serious harm.

New Hampshire, as with most states, has kept the regulation of weapons and weapon carry strictly to its own power. This has been done to prevent local political entities, such as public colleges, from depriving people of rights protected by the Second Amendment and the State Constitution. This bill makes clear: public colleges and universities which receive state money are not allowed to deprive people of their right to arms.

New Hampshire has one of the lowest murder rates of the states in the United States.

 

©2026 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch
 


 


Ill: Chicago - Armed Victim Shoots, Wounds Armed Robbery Suspect

by Dean Weingarten in GUN WATCH on 2026-01-28T11:17:00Z

The incident occurred at about 2:40 a.m. in the 5200-block of West Montana Street.

Police said a 39-year-old man was getting out of his car when two male suspects approached on foot. One of the suspects took out a gun and demanded the victim's belongings, police said.

The victim, who is a licensed concealed-carry holder, took out his own gun and shot one of the suspects, police said.


More Here


Tajauna Thomas, 38, and Richard Mouton, 34, were arrested after allegedly breaking into a home in the 4000 block of Lockwood near Calvacade at about 1:30 a.m. on Monday, Jan. 26.

Police said both masked suspects and the 72-year-old woman exchanged gunfire before HPD was dispatched to the scene.

HPD said officers arrived and found Thomas, Mouton, and the woman injured. Paramedics with the Houston Fire Department confirmed the 72-year-old died at the scene.

More Here


Preparedness Notes for Wednesday — January 28, 2026

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2026-01-28T07:04:47Z

On January 28, 1754, British writer Horace Walpole (pictured), in a letter to Horace Mann, coined the word serendipity. — January 28, 1915: The first US ship lost in WW I, William P. Frye. It was sunk by cannon fire from the Imperial German Navy raider SMS Prinz Eitel Friedrich. The William P. Frye had been carrying wheat to the UK. — And on January 28, 2014, DNA analysis confirmed that the 6th Century Plague of Justinian was caused by a variant of Yersinia pestis (the same bacteria attributed to the Black Death.) — A USB Archive Stick Update: All …

The post Preparedness Notes for Wednesday — January 28, 2026 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

(Continued from Part 1.) The Trumpets In part 1 of this series, we reviewed excerpts from my book “Revelation: Illustrated and Explained”. I discussed the Seal judgments upon the earth. Now we will discuss the Trumpet judgments, the difference between the Seals and Trumpets; the Tribulation, the Great Tribulation; and finally, the timing of the Rapture. “And when he had opened the seventh seal, there was silence in heaven about the space of half an hour. 2 And I saw the seven angels which stood before God; and to them were given seven trumpets.” (Revelation 8:1-2 KJV) The Seventh Seal introduces …

The post Are You Emotionally Ready for the Coming Collapse? – Part 2, by Peter Cannon appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

SurvivalBlog Readers’ & Editors’ Snippets

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2026-01-28T07:02:34Z

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. — A century in the Siberian wilderness: the Old Believers who time forgot. Here is an excerpt: “The Lykovs were proud of their ability to read their smoke-stained Bible, though it was so thoroughly blackened that the words were no longer visible. Akulina had taught her children to read and write in Old …

The post SurvivalBlog Readers’ & Editors’ Snippets appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

The Editors’ Quote Of The Day:

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2026-01-28T07:01:03Z

“He that would make his own liberty secure, must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty, he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself.” – Thomas Paine, from The Writings of Thomas Paine, edited by Moncure D. Conway, 1795

The post The Editors’ Quote Of The Day: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

National Museum of Industrial History

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-01-28T03:11:18Z

Have any of you visited it?

Precise Date of Viking Settlement in Newfoundland

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-01-28T02:15:00Z

 10/21/21 Nature:

Transatlantic exploration took place centuries before the crossing of Columbus. Physical evidence for early European presence in the Americas can be found in Newfoundland, Canada1,2. However, it has thus far not been possible to determine when this activity took place3,4,5. Here we provide evidence that the Vikings were present in Newfoundland in ad 1021. We overcome the imprecision of previous age estimates by making use of the cosmic-ray-induced upsurge in atmospheric radiocarbon concentrations in ad 993 (ref. 6). Our new date lays down a marker for European cognisance of the Americas, and represents the first known point at which humans encircled the globe. It also provides a definitive tie point for future research into the initial consequences of transatlantic activity, such as the transference of knowledge, and the potential exchange of genetic information, biota and pathologies7,8.

Come on, folks – use some common sense

by TPOL Nathan in The Price of Liberty on 2026-01-28T02:00:00Z

After the recent attack on the Cities (Southern Baptist) Church in Minneapolis on Sunday, the Rapid City Post put out this story. Many people chimed in to support this idea. Christian leaders urge protecting worshippers’ rights after protesters interrupt service … Continue reading

Social Media is a Disease

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-01-28T01:28:00Z

 1/26/26 WDTV:

Jackson County woman arrested for recruiting people on social media to assassinate Trump.

Apparently a librarian. This surprises me not at all.  Librarians have been at the forefront of sexually explicit books on the shelves for children.  

Spinning Death: The GAU-2 Miniguns Over Vietnam

by Lynndon Schooler in The Firearm Blog on 2026-01-28T01:00:00Z

On my last trip to Vietnam, I decided to explore the country from the South to the North, from the chaotic, motorbike-packed streets of Saigon and Hanoi to the quieter stops in between. I ended up seeing a vast swath of the country, its lush river valleys, crowded markets, and small towns that felt like time capsules. Along the way, I kept noticing remnants of the war, old South Vietnamese and U.S. aircraft and weapons displayed in museums, which gave a glimpse of the past. There were also more guns and military relics scattered around than I’d expected, little reminders of a complicated past that still seems to linger in the landscape. The contrast between everyday life and those metal ghosts was striking; it turned the trip into something equal parts beautiful and thought-provoking. One of those thoughts was about the abundance of Miniguns I encountered.
Today’s images come from the Canadian Armed Forces Photo of the Year competition. Each year, military photographers submit some of their most compelling work, capturing everything from training and field exercises to daily life in uniform.

 1/27/26 Washington Examiner:

EXCLUSIVE  The Department of Homeland Security told the Washington Examiner it was investigating a woman from Kenmore, New York, who allegedly sought to kill Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers.

Think about this for a second. You go into a gun store, which even in New York is a reliable blue enclave. Even if the gun store owner does not care about your goals, he is going to assume that this is some sort of ATF sting operation. So you claim you want a gun to commit a federal felony? 

Colt brought two new AR pistol SKUs to SHOT 2026, both launching in 5.56 NATO with different lower receiver options. We stopped by the booth and got details on what separates these variants and what's coming down the pipeline for color options.

How Cold Is It In My Shop?

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-01-27T18:19:25Z

Outside temperature is finally out of the teens but it is not much warmer in the garage even with an electric heater running. When trying to pick up small tools or parts with numbly cold hands, it is unpleasant. If I planned to stay here another year, an A/C would make sense.  I had one in the last house and it was very nice.

My last 1/8" carbide endmill broke a week or so ago so I have been using a 3/16" carbide endmill with fewer broken tragedies.  I needed to use 1/8" again to make best use of a scrap 1/2" thick piece of CFC. Even 5 inches/minute was a bit much at .01" cutting depth.  Fortunately, it broke right at the holder so I was able to salvage the lower half. (Now using 1 inch/minute.  Slower but surer.)

I had made the part that I needed yesterday but after polishing it on the lathe is realized it was cut from a 3/8" thick piece not 1/2".  So I am trying again.

The CFC extension tube is a very thin wall.  Thick wall CFC tube is scarce and expensive.  I need to put a thumbscrew in the wall to lock an eyepiece in place. This wall would not thread well so I have made a CFC ring with a 1.6" diameter and a 1.345" interior hole to epoxy onto the CFC extension tube. Then I can tap this 1.6" diameter assembly to get a nice thread for the thumbscrew with a similar appearance to the extension tube.

UPDATE: This was the first attempt at the ring.  When first out of the mill, it was a bit too small.  I bored it in the lathe just a bit too large 
Here you can see it has cut the 1.345" ID hole into which the extension tube goes.  Now it is cutting a 1.60" OD circle  

Night vision is the hot new ticket for preppers and other people who like serious tactical equipment, but sometimes you need a visible light too. And what if you’re running either option? The Princeton Tec Ghost X aims to please by offering something to both types of users.

Son Of Tabuk: Exploring Saddam’s Strange Guns

by Vladimir Onokoy in Recoil on 2026-01-27T17:21:24Z

A mad dictator, a golden gun, and a strange tale. 24k gold AKs might not be pratical, but they do make a statement!

Main Character Syndrome Out of Control

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-01-27T16:12:00Z

Meet Melinda, a healthcare worker at @VCUHealth. She posted a series of videos encouraging people to inject ICE agents with succinylocholine, a temporary paralysis drug, and spray poison on them. She also encourages woman to go on dates with agents and drug their food.

Any… pic.twitter.com/CMJN12GhOc

— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) January 27, 2026

I am not surprised an unhinged leftist would think such things.  But her willingness to record herself saying these dark fantasies (giving her the benefit of the doubt) and in a way that made her, and thus her employer, identifiable is just bizarre.

I will not call this Toxic Femininity.  Toxic Masculinity is a dangerously exaggerated set of traits that are at least stereotypically masculine.  These dark thoughts do not exaggerate caring for others to the point of regarding convicted child rapists as victims in need of protection from a cruel and uncaring system.  That might qualify as Toxic Femininity.  This is just brainwashing to the point of real evil.

It just occurred to me as I was vacuuming: if a peace officer (or anyone else) saw someone brandishing a syringe in a hostile setting, assuming poison would be reasonable. Deadly force is now justified.

CZ celebrated the 51st anniversary of their iconic CZ 75 at SHOT Show 2026 by announcing the CZ 75 Legend , a one-to-one reproduction of the original 1975 pistol built on modern machinery. The Legend replicates the pre-B model from before CZ added the firing pin block, and it's scheduled to ship late spring 2026 for $1,399 MSRP.

Still Sick

by admin in The War on Guns on 2026-01-27T15:30:00Z

I’m just not ready to return.

The post Still Sick first appeared on The War on Guns.

Seecamp is one of the nichest of niche firearms manufacturers in the U.S.; they make tiny hideout pistols, some of the smallest autoloaders on the market until recent years (it’s been the company’s specialty since its founding as a weapons customization shop). They still make their handguns in New England, when many of the region’s firearms manufacturers have moved away for greener pastures where there’s less trouble with the state government. And now, they’re back to making a .25 ACP pistol, right back where the company started, in an age where this old-school self-defense round is mostly forgotten.
Quote of the Day Is the Hobbesian fear truly rooted in reality? If not, what happens to politics when we allow fear, not cooperation, to become foundational to our framework? Robert Nozick asked these same questions in Anarchy, State, and … Continue reading
In this installment of our popular column titled “Gal Gab,” Madeleine Golob interviewed Michelle Scheuermann, who owns her own public relations firm. Find out more about how Michelle views success and working in the outdoor, or any, industry.

SHOT SHOW 2026

by Greg Ellifritz in Active Response Training on 2026-01-27T13:42:17Z

If you have been vacationing off the planet, you may not realize that the world’s largest trade show for shooting enthusiasts was held in Las Vegas last week.  The Shooting, Hunting and Outdoor Trades (SHOT) show is one of the largest trade shows in Las Vegas every year.    In pre-pandemic times, 70,000+ shooting industry […]
Available directly from Vickers Guide: https://www.vickersguide.com/purchase/heckler-koch-vol-4-standard The fourth and final volume of the Vickers Guide to Heckler & Koch covers the post-roller-delayed long guns made by H&K. This begins with the G11, and then the [...]

The post Book Review: Vickers Guide to H&K Volume 4: Rifles & Machine Guns (and more) first appeared on Forgotten Weapons.

"At least it's an ethos..."

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2026-01-27T13:00:00Z

Employees at the surveillance company Palantir are apparently uneasy about one of the company's high profile clients:
In a Saturday thread on Slack discussing Pretti’s killing, Palantir workers questioned both the ethics and the business logic of continuing the company’s work with ICE.
I mean, given the company's entire portfolio is creepy-ass panopticon data mining stuff, it feels a little weird that this is the bridge too far.
“I mean, I’m proud to serve the White Hand,” said Ugluk the Uruk Hai, “The pay’s good and we get double rations of hafling tenderloin on Fridays, but nobody said anything about doing contract work for Sauron.”

This DEI fail gets people killed

by Midwest Chick in Midwest Chick's Place on 2026-01-27T12:59:01Z

Via Not the Bee in a New York Post op ed by Daniel Huff: I analyzed every US commercial flight crash attributed to pilot error since 2000: Women and minorities represent less than 10% of pilots yet were factors in four out of six crashes (66%). The sample size is small. But precisely because crashes are so rare, […]

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