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 seceded from 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, Pacific Time. …
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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 …
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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
Yesterday I received the Czech military suplus flap holster that I ordered from an eBay seller for the CZ-82 I picked up two Fridays ago. Like many older European military holsters, it's basically a gun case with belt loops. Unlike every other Euro flap holster, it's ambidextrous and doesn't look like a holster for a pistol. You could probably wear this on a trail where you're likely to encounter earthy-crunchy types and they'd be unaware you're armed.
The holster I got had some sports on it from either water or mildew. I gave it a rubdown with Ballistol to neutralize any mildew and further protect the leather. It's stamped 1989 on the inside, making it one year younger than my CZ-82.
The holster is well made of good quality leather with nice stitching.
With the flap open you can see how it accomodates the gun and a spare magazine. There is a sleeve on either side for a cleaning rod. I'm expecting one in the mail shortly.
The back has belt loops. This shows the stiching for the interior compartments that hold the muzzle end of the gun and the spare magazine. One could put a small oil bottle in between. I may put a small Ziplock back with a few patches wet with Ballistol in that space.
The Falco holster that came with the gun holds my Beretta 81 Cheetah perfectly, but this one won't accept the Cheetah. The Beretta's slide and dust cover are too tall near the muzzle. I'd expect a Makarov to fit fine.
However, the Czech holster does accept my Beretta 71 Jaguar .22 along with two spare magazines.
Now, this obviously is not something we'd want to use for normal CCW around town. However, I could see this being useful if you're carrying out in the wilderness where you want to protect the gun against the environment. That you can carry the gun, a reload, and basic cleaning gear in it is a nice bonus.
I was today years old when I learned about the theory that monster sixty-foot long octopuses might have been the apex predators of the Cretaceous oceans and I am absolutely creeped out by that.
Especially when you remember how smart octopodes are and compare that to the walnut-brained plesiosaurs and mosasaurs with which they shared the seas.
In the ongoing study of how effective handguns are when used as a defense against bears, there are over two hundred documented cases. Of those, 184 involve only handguns. The others are combination situations where other deadly force was used in addition to handguns. Of the 184 cases 161 include information about the number of shots fired. In 23 cases the number of shots is not known.
The data is likely skewed by unavoidable selection bias. The data is limited to cases which are documented. There is a strong selection bias against cases which do not involve dramatic outcomes or human injury, or which happen far from any civil authority. Those cases are not likely to be reported or recorded in a way which is accessible. Consider a hypothetical:
A bear acts aggressively toward a person who is hiking. Not wanting to kill the bear, for whatever reason, they fire a warning shot or shots. The bear runs off. There is very little drama, almost no news value, and virtually no reason to report the incident to any authority. There is a strong selection bias against successful uses of warning shots.
One way to guard against selection bias is to include every documented case where a handgun was fired in defense against a bear. This policy was formulated at the beginning of this study and is in effect.
Of the 161 cases where a handgun has been fired in defense against a bear or bears, and the number of shots is known or reasonably inferred, the distribution of the number of shots fired per case is as follows:
1 shot - 46 cases or 28.6% of the cases where the number of shots is known. 8 cases involved a warning shot. One of the warning shots killed a bear. In one case where one shot was fired, killing the bear, two warning shots were fired with a .22 rimfire rifle. Those shots were not effective. It was decided to include that case with other cases where only one shot was fired from a handgun. The other six warning shot cases were successful.
2 shots - 22 cases or 13.7%. There were 13 cases where warning shot(s) were fired. In seven cases, the warning shots were successful, at least temporarily. In eight cases, the warning shots were unsuccessful. There were three cases where the warning shots were both successful (temporarily) and unsuccessful. In one case it could not be determined if the the shots were effective in stopping the bear; in one case the warning shots were not effective, and no bear or human was injured. Because the warning shots were ineffective, the case, involving a .44 magnum and a polar bear is one of the four failures of the firing of a handgun in defense against a bear or bears.
3 shots - 19 cases or 11.8%. Warning shots were fired in 6 cases. The warning shots were successful in three cases and did not work in three cases. There was one failure, where three shots fired from a .357 magnum did not stop the attack by a grizzly bear. It is likely the bear was not hit.
4 shots - 13 cases or 8.1%. Two cases involved two handguns. Warning shots were fired in four cases. 1 warning shot worked for a while. Warning shot failed in all four cases.
5 shots - 16 cases or 9.9%. Warning shots were fired in four cases. The warning shots worked in two cases, one temporarily, and failed in three cases. There was one case where it could not be determined if the handgun shots stopped the attack, and 1 failure with a .38 caliber revolver and a black bear.
6 shots - 14 cases or 8.7%. Warning shots were fired in five cases. They worked in four cases and did not work in two cases. 1 warning shot worked temporarily. One case was a failure against a polar bear with a .22 rimfire handgun.
Six shots or fewer were fired in 80.1% of known documented cases. There have not been any documented failures were more than six shots were fired.
7 shots - 9 cases or 5.6%. Warning shots were fired in two cases. One worked, one did not work.
8 shots - 7 cases or 4.3%. One case involved two handguns. No cases where warning shots were fired.
9 shots - 3 cases or 1.9%. No cases involved warning shots.
10 shots - 5 cases or 3.1%. Warning shots fired in one case. The warning shots did not work.
12 shots - 2 cases or 1.2%, no warning shots fired.
15 shots - 1 case or .6%, no warning shots fired.
16 shots - 1 case, no warning shots, two handguns involved.
18 shots - 1 case, no warning shots fired.
19 shots - 1 case, no warning shots, three handguns involved.
21 shots - 1 case, no warning shots, three handguns involved.
31 shots - 1 case, no warning shots, two handguns involved.
There were no cases involving 11 shots, 13, 14, 17, 20, 22-30 shots ,or more than 31 shots in the cases documented as of this writing.
There were 23 cases where the number of shots was not reported. Two of those cases involved two handguns. Four involved warning shots. 1 warning shot worked, two did not work, the effect of the warning shot(s) was unknown in one case.
©2026 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.
Gun Watch
The shooting happened shortly before 5 p.m. Wednesday at a home in the area of Southwest 168th Street and Southwest 92nd Avenue.
Miami-Dade Sheriff's Office officials said 47-year-old David Dylan McPeck was shot and killed by 75-year-old David Ronald McPeck.
Officials said there were mental health issues involved and the incident is currently being treated as self-defense.
On April 26, 1777, it is claimed that 16-year-old Sybil Ludington rode all night in a rainstorm for 40 miles to warn her father’s New York militia of the approach of the British army. — April 26, 1937: The German Luftwaffe’s “Condor Legion” destroyed Basque town of Guernica, in Spain. — Just one day left! We are running a two-week-long sale on all of our pre-1899 antique shotguns at Elk Creek Company, with deep discounts. This sale will end on Monday, April 27th, 2026. Please note that some of these guns have been re-sleeved and re-proofed for modern shotshells! — …
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I was introduced to the M14 rifle in Basic Combat Training (BCT) in the summer of 1969, at Fort Ord, California and I fell in love with it. I was only 17 years old and weighed a whopping 135 pounds at the time. But when I graduated from Infantry School in December of 1969. I had beefed up to 165 pounds. I longed for my very own M14 – however it was not to be, you see the US military M14 was a select-fire rifle, capable of fully automatic fire. When I returned to my National Guard unit in Chicago, …
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The latest meme created by JWR: Meme Text: My Wife Asked Me To Surprise Her With an Expensive Dinner Date on Her Birthday. So… That Was Weeks Ago, and She’s Still Mad About It. News Link: The “Taco Bell Index” highlights a hard truth: a chicken quesadilla rising from $1.89 to $6.19 represents a 327% increase. Notes From JWR: Do you have a meme idea? Just e-mail me the concept, and I’ll try to assemble it. And if it is posted then I’ll give you credit. Thanks! Permission to repost memes that I’ve created is granted, provided that credit to …
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“But of the times and the seasons, brethren, ye have no need that I write unto you. For yourselves know perfectly that the day of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night. For when they shall say, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them, as travail upon a woman with child; and they shall not escape. But ye, brethren, are not in darkness, that that day should overtake you as a thief. Ye are all the children of light, and the children of the day: we are not of the night, nor of darkness. Therefore …
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Suspect from California… Now might be a good time to highlight all the Democrats, judges, and media types badmouthing and suing against the ballroom. Check for updates. Cole Thonas Allen… I haven’t confirmed this,but plenty of others are going with it: (Muel, here, is from Africa.) Interesting: Agents fired back at Allen, who was not … Continue reading "Dinner Got Served"
The post Dinner Got Served first appeared on The War on Guns.
One of the most beloved machine guns of all time is finding new life in the fields of Ukraine. As it turns out, it is a useful, low-cost alternative when shooting down drones.
Imagine that, a partial belt of .50 cal is cheaper than using a missile. Who'd a thunk it?
Flintlock pistol from about 1730, courtesy Rock Island Auctions
During and after the American revolution, there was no registration of firearms in the colonies which were to become the United States. There is good evidence handguns were commonly owned during this period. One of the primary sources comes from records during the occupation of Boston by General Gage before and after the battles of Lexington and Concord. The history of these engagements were meticulously recorded by Richard Frothingham in the History of the Siege of Boston, published in 1873. Frothingham uses original sources, particularly of the Boston Town Meeting Minutes of 22-28 April, 1775, for the numbers of weapons.
After the disastrous battles at Lexington and Concord, which are considered the start of the American revolution, General Gage was besieged in Boston. There were about 5,000 inhabitants in the city. Food was running short in Boston. Many people wished to leave. General Gage made a deal with the Selectmen. People could leave the city *if* the inhabitants surrendered their weapons to the town council. They were to identify themselves so the weapons could be returned later. People leaving the city were thoroughly searched. Even small amounts of food, such as a loaf of bread, were confiscated. It would have been difficult to smuggle out even handguns. It is possible some weapons might have been left hidden in the city.
Page 94 from image 118 Frothingham image
The agreement was for "the inhabitants in general", so it was to encompass all the inhabitants, who were not under the control of General Gage. We have the number of the arms which were turned in.
From Frothingham image 119, page 95.
The total number of firearms were 1778 fire-arms plus 634 pistols and 38 blunder-busses or 2,450 total, about one for every two inhabitants. Pistols were almost 26% of the total. This is obviously common, about one for every eight people. All firearms were more expensive in relative terms than they are in the United States in the twenty-first century. The cost of a pistol in 1776 is difficult to find, with the suggestion common flintlock pistols were about 1.7 British lbs, or roughly two weeks of skilled labor. When the American dollar came into being there were 20 dollars per ounce of gold and 4.25 British lbs per ounce of gold, or about 8 silver dollars per flintlock pistol. The term "buck" came from one deerskin being worth about 1 dollar. There are about 540 million privately owned firearms for about 340 million people in the USA, or about 1.6 firearms for every person. It is likely firearms were more common in rural areas and on the frontier. An analysis of Plymouth Colony probate inventories during the 1670s showed 13% of the firearms were pistols.
Analysis: It is the experience of this correspondent that firearms, especially handguns, are often taken from an estate before probate, by members of the family. They are frequently given to heirs before death. The numbers from probate records are very likely considerably lower than numbers owned by the population. The records from the siege of Boston and the probate records show concealable firearms were commonly owned during the immediate period leading up to the ratification of the Constitution. Handguns were not considered "dangerous and unusual weapons". As noted previously, concealed weapons, of which handguns are only one type, were common in the colonies and the early Republic.
©2026 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.
Gun Watch
The post Q&A April 2026: The Good, the Bad, and the Really Dumb first appeared on Forgotten Weapons.
The injured suspect was transported by Memphis Fire Department to Regional One in critical condition.
Officers also spoke with the injured suspect’s girlfriend, who said her boyfriend was pumping gas when he began arguing with about 5 men. One of the men said he was going to get his gun and started shooting.
Officers spoke with the owner of the tire shop, who said that approximately 2 shots were fired from the gas station parking lot and that a customer got out of his vehicle and returned fire.
According to the Medford Police Department, officers responded around 4:55 a.m. to a report of a person in mental distress. A caller reported that a neighbor in an adjacent apartment was screaming and behaving erratically.
While officers were heading to the scene, they learned the person was trying to break into a neighboring apartment using an axe. The person inside that apartment fired a gun, hitting the man.
Mission control, to everyone’s relief, ordered them to come home early. They buttoned up Salyut and climbed into the Soyuz, wearing only their leisure suits. Which became a problem when they prepared to disengage and a warning light began to blink. Sounding nearly hysterical at this point, Volkov shouted at ground control, “The hatch isn’t pressurized! What should we do? What should we do?” Obviously they couldn’t disengage if the hatch wasn’t completely sealed, unless they were in their spacesuits and helmets. They tried various procedures suggested by the techies on the ground. Nothing worked.
Ground control finally advised them to tape a piece of paper over the warning light and proceed. Read that sentence again. Nothing shouts “Soviet space program!” like that single sentence.
On April 25, 1644, the last Ming Emperor Chongzhen hanged himself from a tree on Jing Mountain, Beijing, rather than be captured by the forces of Li Zicheng, the Chinese peasant rebellions leader — who soon after ruled over northern China briefly as the Yongchang Emperor. Thus ended the Ming Dynasty. — Today is the birthday of physicist, inventor, and entrepreneur Guglielmo Marconi (1874–1937). He was known for his pioneering work on long-distance radio transmission as well as for the development of Marconi’s law and a radio telegraph system. He is often considered the inventor of radio. — Just a …
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As a public service, I’d like to share my ham radio antenna designs with SurvivalBlog readers. We handed out these antenna-building diagrams, free of charge, at Hamfests. We sell laminated copies of wall charts and pocket band charts. Below, I am including drawings for Fan Dipoles and OMTA Verticals. (The original idea was Robert Wilson, a nice guy, we shared several ideas, but, after improving on his “math-inspired idea”, we designed and built many iterations of a more practical design.) For the Fan Dipoles we sell a kit without wire, or a complete build. Please note that the Fan Dipole …
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To be prepared for a crisis, every Prepper must establish goals and make both long-term and short-term plans. In this column, the SurvivalBlog editors review their week’s prep activities and planned prep activities for the coming week. These range from healthcare and gear purchases to gardening, ranch improvements, bug-out bag fine-tuning, and food storage. This is something akin to our Retreat Owner Profiles, but written incrementally and in detail, throughout the year. We always welcome you to share your own successes and wisdom in your e-mailed letters. We post many of those — or excerpts thereof — in the Odds …
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“The wicked flee when no man pursueth: but the righteous are bold as a lion. For the transgression of a land many are the princes thereof: but by a man of understanding and knowledge the state thereof shall be prolonged. A poor man that oppresseth the poor is like a sweeping rain which leaveth no food. They that forsake the law praise the wicked: but such as keep the law contend with them. Evil men understand not judgment: but they that seek the Lord understand all things. Better is the poor that walketh in his uprightness, than he that is …
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Millionaire US big game hunter, 75, is trampled to death by five elephants while hunting antelope in central Africa [More] I didn’t know and AI couldn’t answer my question either. Why not? Looks like he was fine either way. Now look at all the celebratory comments. Every one I’ve seen, to a man (!) is … Continue reading "Sporting Chances"
The post Sporting Chances first appeared on The War on Guns.
U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) is facing fresh accusations after Republicans flagged her reported push to direct more than $1 million in federal taxpayer funds to a small Somali-led nonprofit whose listed project address matches a Minneapolis restaurant.
The nonprofit, Generation Hope MN, describes itself as providing addiction recovery services, peer support, job training, and mental health support for the East African community. The address tied to Omar’s earmark request - 326 Cedar Ave S / 411 Cedar Ave S - matches Sagal Restaurant and Coffee, a Somali eatery. Conservative investigator Angela Rose documented the site in a video, using Google Street View archives and on-site footage to show minimal or no clinic signage over years, with the building primarily operating as a restaurant. The owner has confirmed Generation Hope uses upstairs space in the multi-tenant property, but critics highlighted the optics amid Minnesota’s fraud history. ..
Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) and other Republicans flagged multiple concerns: the restaurant address, three directors listing the same residential home address in filings, and the organization’s limited demonstrated capacity for large-scale treatment services. House Republicans stripped the earmark from a FY2026 spending package in January 2026. GOP senators later requested a formal DOJ fraud investigation into Generation Hope MN.
I wonder hown much of that million plus was going into Rep. Omar's pocket. 4/18/26 New York Post:
Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar blamed an accounting “discrepancy” for errors in a financial disclosure that listed her net worth at up to $30 million – while doubling down that she is not a millionaire, a report said.
She says it is more like $95,000. I have a pretty clear picture of my net wealth. I would never accidentally misstate my net wealth as $50 million.
A petition launched by a freshman at Harvard University argues that campus leaders’ efforts to reform grade inflation at the Ivy League institution is racist.
The lobbying comes as a Harvard faculty consider capping the number of A grades they give out in each class. That proposal came after a report published last fall found that 60 percent of all undergraduate grades are now As.
The petition calls on Harvard to reject the proposed reforms, arguing they are “flawed” and “racially harmful in effect.”
“We center racism as a core concern, contending that although the policy is framed as neutral ‘differentiation,’ it functions as a system of ranking and sorting that mirrors and reinforces existing racial and socioeconomic hierarchies,” the petition states.
Yes, this guy is arguing that BiPOCs can't make it without grade inflation. In 1955, you could find Americans who believed that blacks lacked the intelligence to compete with whites. In the 19th century, even many abolitionists supported returning blacks to Africa (one that most had never seen) because they were thought unlikely to be able to compete on equal basis with whites.
Now, if this student wanted to argue that kids coming from poverty were going to have trouble competing, that might be an interesting argument, but not every BiPOC is coming from poverty and there are white Harvard students who also come from poverty and underprivileged backgrounds. (At least I hope so; there are plenty of J.D. Vances out there.) But no, this/student is playing the white supremacist tune, saying every black is inferior.
I’ve been wasting time I don’t have deleting spam comments, mostly for porn and foreign language hackers, and I noticed name and email address were not required in settings so I changed that. I thought I’d set it up that way originally, but for whatever reason it’s set now. I just tested it and I … Continue reading "Some Changes Around Here"
The post Some Changes Around Here first appeared on The War on Guns.
Blue state residents ‘fleeing in droves’ after ‘insane’ progressive takeover, says top state attorney [More] How they gonna vote in their new home? Anybody hear this guy include “citizen disarmament” among his reasons for leaving…? Good thing the “Great Replacement” has been debunked!
The post Off to Unfouled Nests first appeared on The War on Guns.
He didn’t commit a crime, but Flock cam alerts keep getting him pulled over [More] That it happened was inexcusable. That it hadn’t been corrected is unforgiveable. I hope he sues all involved, including rope-selling capitalist Garrett Langley. He can afford it. [Via Michael G]
The post We’re the Only Ones All Flocked Up Enough first appeared on The War on Guns.
Kellogg: Arming the Iranian People ‘a Good Idea’ [More] Hey, how about “America First“? [Via bondmen]
The post A Better Idea first appeared on The War on Guns.
The official cause of death has not been determined, but officials don’t suspect foul play, according to the office. Officials are conducting an internal review. [More] Sounds like what’s needed is an EXTERNAL review. If the guy did it, hang him after full due process. Regardless, the state has an obligation to keep its prisoners … Continue reading "We’re the Only Ones Self-Checking Enough"
The post We’re the Only Ones Self-Checking Enough first appeared on The War on Guns.
Sometimes I miss the old days. [Via bondmen]
The post Speaking of ‘A Holes’… first appeared on The War on Guns.
And just happened: I’m sure more will be forthcoming, so if you want to know more, I suggest you follow his feed. [Via Andy M] Related UPDATE [Via bondmen]
The post Menace to Society…? first appeared on The War on Guns.
Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick Says He Would Leave GOP if Pennsylvania Had Open Primaries [More] So, he’ll just make it official? He’s running unopposed? Probably because he’s got a f_ton of money, with the top donor being AIPAC. Any gun owner who votes for this traitor because “he’s not a Democrat” is a willing dupe. Republicans … Continue reading "Promises, Promises"
The post Promises, Promises first appeared on The War on Guns.
“Because machine guns are not protected by the Second Amendment as weapons in common use for lawful purposes, we affirm,” wrote Chief U.S. Circuit Judge William Pryor, adding the 11th Circuit joins “several sister circuits in holding that the Second Amendment does not protect the possession of machine guns.” [More] Don’t believe him? How ’bout … Continue reading "Pryor Restraint"
The post Pryor Restraint first appeared on The War on Guns.
His mom, Selma Allen, claimed it was actually the victim had bullied her son at school and described him as a “humble” Christian. “She was being a bully to him, that’s it,” Allen told The Post after her son’s court appearance. [More] Everything you need to know right here about the victim/entitlement/reparations mentality that the … Continue reading "R-E-S-P-E-C-T, Find Out What It Means to Me"
The post R-E-S-P-E-C-T, Find Out What It Means to Me first appeared on The War on Guns.
A Virginia state senator told colleagues he understands rural America because he grew up watching “The Dukes of Hazzard.”
Democratic state Sen. Lamont Bagby made the claim during a floor debate on the state’s gerrymandering amendment, according to video posted by WJLA reporter Nick Minock. Bagby pushed back on Republicans who argued Democrats have no grasp of rural life.
“I grew up watching the Waltons. I grew up with Opie. I even watched the Dukes of Hazzard. I think I know a little bit about rural America,” Bagby said, apparently referencing “The Waltons” and “The Andy Griffith Show” alongside the hit CBS series. He then rattled off characters from urban-set sitcoms to argue he fights for all Virginians. “I’m not just here for Theo. I’m not just here for Arnold or Willis. I’m here for Opie, John Boy. Blossom, Topanga.”
The post Model 1867 Trapdoor: A Unique Rifle for West Point Cadets first appeared on Forgotten Weapons.

From stone-age man to modern EDC, the fixed blade knife has served humanity well! Here are just a few of our favorites and what we carry daily!