I’m still trying to figure out what’s constitutional about any of what they do. [Via WiscoDave]
The post For the Record first appeared on The War on Guns.
Top Goldman Sachs lawyer Kathy Ruemmler will leave the investment bank at the end of June. Her announcement follows the release of documents detailing her often chummy conversations with notorious sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. [More] She’s the same one who would not allow House Oversight to interview the National Security Council apparatchik who got Phoenix … Continue reading "It’s a Big Club and Look Who’s In It"
The post It’s a Big Club and Look Who’s In It first appeared on The War on Guns.
Via email: Q: Will the Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act get a vote? I am an original cosponsor of the Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act. Once it passes the Senate Judiciary Committee, it will go to the full Senate. I look forward to voting for this legislation so Idahoans with concealed carry permits can exercise their rights … Continue reading "Thanks for Nothing?"
The post Thanks for Nothing? first appeared on The War on Guns.
A U.S. Border Patrol agent was briefly arrested last week after attempting to bring a flash-bang grenade through security at McAllen-Miller International Airport in Texas, prompting a police response and raising questions about airport security enforcement and prosecutorial decisions. [More] Charges were dismissed against him but not against a “civilian’ who forgot his handgun in … Continue reading "We’re the Only Ones Flashy Enough"
The post We’re the Only Ones Flashy Enough first appeared on The War on Guns.
No Republicans to appear on ballot in 2026 New Mexico Senate election [More] So what do you do when there really is NVOWOOT? [Via Michael G]
The post There Can Be Only One first appeared on The War on Guns.
Why 304 stainless steel is less corrosion resistant than you may assume:
CTRL+PEW Sues California in Federal Court Over 3D-Printed Gun Files [More] Who else aims to misbehave? [Via WiscoDave]
The post You Can’t Stop the Signal? first appeared on The War on Guns.
Ally Kotetsu, who describes himself as “a non-binary transgender woman who is transrace Japanese,” is campaigning both online and in public through an effort he calls Beyond the Plus, which advocates for the rights of “beings who are romantically or sexually attracted to beings who are below the age of 18.” [More] Love is love? … Continue reading "Suffer the Children"
The post Suffer the Children first appeared on The War on Guns.
Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier is defending gun rights [More] Did he do anything at all to try to stop Letitia James from extraditing Lawrence DeStefano?
The post The Best Defense? first appeared on The War on Guns.
Two Lyft drivers killed in Cleveland in separate attacks 36 hours apart [More] But…but…but… The only thing lower than feral retard parasites who prey on the working poor are corporate whores who require their vulnerability. [Via JG]
The post Give You a Lyft? first appeared on The War on Guns.
BREAKING NEWS: AI COULD DESTROY 2ND AMENDMENT [Watch] He makes it sound like we won’t fight and there won’t be human targets. [Via Jess]
The post Rise of the Machines first appeared on The War on Guns.
HOMAN BACKS DOWN, THOSE RESPONSIBLE FOR SEDITION NOT ARRESTED [More] Putting the “bull” in “bulldog”... [Via Wynn A]
The post Advance to the Rear first appeared on The War on Guns.
How Many Guns in the U.S [More] Now do how many “Only Ones” and how many of those are deployable.
The post Quantity Has a Quality All Its Own first appeared on The War on Guns.
America’s Gun Lobbyist Blocked Me [More] What did he say that was untrue?
The post Writer’s Block first appeared on The War on Guns.
Shooting at South Carolina State University leaves two dead [More] Y’ever notice Codes of Conduct work about as well as signs? Am I right in assuming it’s not because the shooter was “woman”?
The post Because Guns… first appeared on The War on Guns.
New congressional map could turn Virginia’s 6-5 Republican edge into 10-1 Democratic advantage ahead of midterm elections [More] If only something could have been done to prevent this…
The post Elections Have Consequences first appeared on The War on Guns.
"The course combines a day of my extreme close range gunfighting concepts with a day of Jeff teaching the long range handgun curriculum he developed for a federal law enforcement agency in the context of active killer/counter-terrorism engagement."
Investigators say a man had just left a nearby gun range and was driving home when he was followed by three suspects.
Police said the suspects attempted to rob the man and grabbed a bag containing guns. The victim was armed with two guns, and a shootout ensued involving multiple firearms. During the exchange, the victim shot one of the suspects in the chin area.
The suspect who was shot was transported to a hospital and is expected to survive. Police have not released details about the suspect’s condition or whether any weapons were recovered.
Knowledge to make your life better. If you have some free time, check out some of these links this weekend. The Timer Trap “Use a timer, but remember: your current skill level is what you’ve earned through consistent practice—not your occasional best time.” Top 20 Tactical Training Programs In the US for […]On February 13, 1633, Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei arrived in Rome for trial before the Inquisition for professing the belief that Earth revolves around the Sun. — February 13th is the birthday of Robert Charles “R.C.” Sproul (born 1939, died December 14, 2017), a well-respected American Calvinist theologian — Today is also the birthday of General Chuck Yeager (born, 1923), the first man to break the sound barrier. He passed away on December 7, 2020. — SurvivalBlog Writing Contest Today we present another entry for Round 123 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round include: First …
The post Preparedness Notes for Friday — February 13, 2026 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
(Continued from Part 2.) Water for the Flock For the first several years of raising fowl, I had a 20-gallon rubber water tote in the chicken coop. Every couple of days, I would have to dump all the water out and refill it because the chickens would sit on the edges of the tote and defecate into the water. In the heat of summer, the water would turn green within a day or two, spoiling all the fresh water. I was wasting more water and time than necessary. I began designing a gravity fed water system with a livestock auto-feeder …
The post Raising, Hunting, and Harvesting Animals – Part 3, by Lodge Pole appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
In Economics & Investing Media of the Week we feature photos, charts, graphs, maps, video links, and news items of interest to preppers. This week: A graphic showing countries with the highest levels of household debt. The thumbnail below is click-expandable. (Graphic courtesy of Reddit, based on IMF data) Economics & Investing Links of Interest WSJ: U.S. Budget Hole Set to Deepen by Trillions”. A key quote: The U.S. is projected to run a deficit of $1.85 trillion, or 5.8% of gross domestic product, in the year that ends Sept. 30, and then stay about level …
The post Economics & Investing Media of the Week appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
“It is by no means an irrational fancy that, in a future existence, we shall look upon what we think our present existence, as a dream.” – Edgar Allan Poe
The post The Editors’ Quote Of The Day: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
I used to own a number of belts. Duty belts, dress belts, gun belts, casual belts and everyday belts. This morning, I was down to two. A dress belt I used on dressy occasions, and an everyday belt that held the Model 60 on my waist.
That dress belt was bought, as I recall, sometime around 2004. It hasn't been worn since I retired in 2019. All the other belts that own, (excepting the competition rig that carries my Colt holster), went away over the years. So, I'm down to three belts. The dressy one, the everyday rig, and the competition rig.
Today, I had to go to a funeral. I put on slacks and got out the dress bel. Put it on and when I went to tighten it, broke that sumbitch in half. It had dry-rotted. Just damn. I put on the everyday belt and went to the funeral.
I need to go buy a dress belt, something that looks better than the plain, old everyday rig I normally wear. And that pisses me off to no end. It's just aggravating. Now that I think about it, my everyday belt is about five years old. It might use an update too. I guess it's time to go down to Boot Barn or Cavender's and see what they have hanging in the racks.
And that's where I am with that.
It's been a while since I posted Blues on Thursday. Mea maxima culpa.
So here's what may be the Platonic Ideal of a Blues Ballad. If you don't like the Blues but you do like Pink Floyd* then you'll like this.
* A band with deep roots in the Blues.
Maybe it’s time to stop dousing the fire in gun owner bellies, especially with top administration officials making inane comments that spit in the faces of Second Amendment activists — the very people Republicans need to win. [More] In what reality is making core constituents feel like they’re being used smart politics?
The post Disparaging Armed Citizens Undermines Trump Administration’s Credibility first appeared on The War on Guns.
Hughes struck that entire response, noting that Solis had admitted he failed to disclose his use of AI in the filing. Hughes also blasted Solis for using “hallucinated and false citations,” online court records show. [More] Who ever heard of such a thing? Y’know, you do that in writing and academia, and it’s considered plagiarism. … Continue reading "Garbage Out"
The post Garbage Out first appeared on The War on Guns.
Mass suicide, coming soon to a refuge near you… [More] Although I’m not sure I’d be including John Cleese in any points I hoped to make… [Via Michael G]
The post Meanwhile, Across the Pond… first appeared on The War on Guns.
OldNFO has an important post about how Microsoft is moving very aggressively to a 100% online subscription licensing model. This is important enough that I won't excerpt any of this; instead, you should go read the whole thing. It's not too long, but if you care about the security of your home network (especially the whole who has access to my data and can I even know thing), go read. I'll wait.
What this means is that you don't own any Microsoft software. Sure, you may think that because you paid them money (most often when you bought your computer - some of that purchase price went to Microsoft in the form of a license fee for Windows). But you actually don't own "your" copy of software. At all.
Rather, you have the right to run the software on your computer. That may not seem like a big difference, but it is. The license agreement (you know, the one you didn't read before you clicked "I Agree") allows Microsoft to change the terms of the agreement at any time, at their pleasure.
Microsoft has just done this in a big, big way. Key new stuff in Windows 11 is:
The proper technical term for that first bullet point is that your Windows operating system is essentially now an "AI Agent" which if you are a regular reader you know is very, very bad security juju.
Combine this enormous security hole with the requirement to essentially be online 100% of the time (bad security) and the liklihood that OneDrive will slurp all your data to some Internet black hole in a Microsoft data center, Windows is simply unsecurable.
Yes, I know that is inflammatory, but there is simply no way that you can get assurance that your security is sane. I say that as someone who has spent decades inn Internet Security (and particularly in security assurance). Not to put too fine a point on it, but I don't think that I could get decent assurance that things aren't going "bump in the Net". For most of the readers here, it's not even worth trying.
So what do you do, assuming that you are not a tech nerd like me?
Interestingly, Microsoft has just flipped the technical script on this. It used to be that it was easier to stay on Windows than to move to alternatives like Linux. Now that's out the window, at least if you want to protect your data from that OneDrive vacuum cleaner and whatever the AI agent will do to you.
But this is admittedly a big step for a lot of people. So as it turns out, you can "kick the tires" on all the different flavors of Linux without installing it. All you need is a web browser.
This is really slick. The Linux equivalent of the Windows Start Menu lets you try all the apps (I use the Office apps which are every bit equivalent to Word and Excel, etc, and will save files in Microsoft format like .DOCX).
Take a few weeks poking around, you will likely see that it's not a big learning curve.

The space-age lever-action rifle is more practical that you might think. With some new upgrades, it's easy to enhance the classics.This guy got arrested at a Christmas parade in Florida for wearing a body armor vest concealed under his shirt. The problem is, that wasn’t illegal. I saw this in the news, with cops taking a victory lap and Karens rejoicing about it, so I put in a request for the footage, and just got … Continue reading "L-a-a-ambert!"
The post L-a-a-ambert! first appeared on The War on Guns.
Only one House Dem voted in favor of voter ID, proof of citizenship in US elections [More] Gee, it’s almost like they have an ulterior motive… Funny, how the number 213 keeps coming up with Democrats. Good thing this has nothing to do with that “single issue”!
The post None Dare Call It Treason first appeared on The War on Guns.
A Pentagon plan to use a high-energy, counter-drone laser without having coordinated with the Federal Aviation Administration about potential risks to civilian flights prompted Wednesday’s unprecedented airspace shutdown over El Paso, Texas, multiple sources told CNN.I'm having flashbacks to that time they shut down the entire city of Boston for a guerilla Aqua Teen Hunger Force ad campaign featuring Lite Brites.
Two people familiar with the matter said later Wednesday that Customs and Border Protection, not the US military, was in control of the laser technology when it was used this week around El Paso to shoot down balloons.
One of the best electronic gun forums for collectors and enthusiasts is www.smith-wessonforum.com. It was there that I found this artifact of the past: https://smith-wessonforum.com/threads/us-post-office-revolver-methods-handbook.788619/ . You will find a US Postal Service manual there, from circa 1967 according to the original poster, showing USPS personnel how to handle revolvers. To this day, postal inspectors […]The National Instant background Check System (NICS) adjusted figures for January, 2026 show a slight drop from those of January, 2025. From the National Shooting Sports Foundation:
The January 2026 NSSF-adjusted National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) figure of 1,198,879 is a decrease of 0.7 percent compared to the January 2025 NSSF-adjusted NICS figure of 207,557. For comparison, the unadjusted January 2026 FBI NICS figure of 2,172,185 reflects a 5.6 percent decrease from the unadjusted FBI NICS figure of 2,299,989 in January 2025.
As noted by the NSSF, the unadjusted NICS numbers, which include checks for various gun permits and re-checks for the same, are down 5.6%. This is likely a reflection of the increasing "permitless" or Constitutional Carry states.
On a positive note, the NSSF’s report on NFA items saw a massive increase compared to 2025. From the NSSF:
“The January 2026 NFA figure of 206,871 is an increase of 121.2 percent compared to the January 2025 figure of 93,518.”
Other than a slight jump up in 2006 - 2008, the rise in firearm sales reflected in the adjusted NICS figures, corresponds to both the Heller decision in 2008 and the election of Barack Obama as President in late 2008. The prominent spikes in sales occurred just after the re-election of President Obama in 2013, the run-up to the election of President Donald Trump in 2016, and the aftermath of the 2020 election during the first year of the Biden administration.
By comparison, the years of the George W. Bush presidency, the first Trump term, the last three years of the Biden Administration and the first year of the second Trump term have been relatively flat. The jump up from 2005 to 2025 has been enormous. 2000 - 2005 sales look flat and similar to 2022 - 2026. When adjusted for population increase, estimated gun sales per capita have increased in January.
The US population 2000-2005 averaged about 287 million, with adjusted NICs about 535,000 for those first of the year months. From 2022 - 2026 the population averaged about 337 million, with adjusted NICS about 1.20 million for those Januarys.
Analysis: Several factors are in play. Foremost are the enormous changes in the political structure since 2008. President Obama, elected to bring closure to race-division in the United State, did the opposite, exacerbating and escalating racial strife to levels not seen since the 1960s. He was able to form a new coalition of single white women, homosexuals, Asians, blacks, and others except white, straight men. His policies were a weak USA, elevation of Iran, a weak NATO, and elevating the climate hoax for the benefit of China. The reaction to these destructive policies was President Donald Trump. President Joe Biden was President Obama's third term. It was disastrous. President Trump, in his Second term, is presiding over a counter revolution to the "fundamental change" President Obama forced on the nation.
Both the Republicans and the Democratic party have been unwilling to take the heat to step away from the crippling and suicidal debt inflicted on the USA. The only solution appears to be extraordinary growth. President Trump has been promoting this potential avenue to survival.
Part of the growth is an tremendous increase in productivity in the United States. It is one of the reasons for the rise in firearm sales. Excellent, practical firearms are historically cheap in the United States, when considered in constant dollars. The primary reason is the cost of making them has dropped due to superior technology. This correspondent grew up with the Savage 99. It is an excellent deer rifle. So are the Winchester 94 and the Marlin 336. They are wonderful examples of the gun-makers art at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the smokeless powder, non-corrosive primer era.
The requirements to produce those rifles are not well suited to the more efficient technologies of the 21st century. A new rifle in these models runs over $1200 and up. A new semi-auto based on the AR15 platform performs as well, with better accuracy, for 1/3 to 1/2 the cost. Good centerfire defensive handguns are available, new, for less than the constant dollar cost of a surplus 1911A1 in 1960. A new, semi-auto .22 rimfire can be had for less than a quarter of the constant dollar cost of a semi-auto .22 in 1960. These prices are in spite of increasing, choking government regulation.
At the moment, sales appear to be leveling off. There may be some market saturation. Handguns have become more popular than rifles or shotguns. Serious innovation maybe rewarded, but is a gamble. Rising prosperity may bring more sales. Rising security may inhibit sales. The Trump Department of Justice has declared the ban on mailing handguns by the USPS unconstitutional. How this may affect sales is unclear.
©2026 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.
Gun Watch
A 17-year-old boy who was breaking into a vehicle in Southwest Philly overnight was shot after an off-duty officer with the Philadelphia Sheriff's Office and a family member fired at him, officials said.
According to Philadelphia Police Chief Inspector Scott Small, the incident happened at about 3:30 a.m. along the 7300 block of Bunting Place, in Southwest Philadelphia, when an off-duty officer for the Philadelphia Sheriff's Office spotted someone breaking into his private vehicle.
Small said "for reasons unknown at this time," the officer fired his gun at the the individual inside the vehicle, a Honda Accord. Another member of the officer's family also fired his gun at the teen, Small said.
Navarro, who was known by at least one person at the party, arrived at the scene armed with a gun and started causing a disturbance, authorities said. During the disturbance, Navarro fired at least one round into the crowd inside the apartment, authorities said.
The man who was shot possibly returned fire, striking the shooter, police said. Detectives are continuing to interview multiple witnesses.
More Here
February 12, 1935: The 785-foot long rigid airship USS Macon (pictured above, at Moffett Field, Sunnyvale, California) was downed in a storm off Point Sur, California, with the loss of two lives, and 64 people rescued. — On February 12, 1873 US Congress passed the Coinage Act of 1873, abolishing bimetallism and placing the country on the gold standard. — SurvivalBlog Writing Contest Today we present another entry for Round 123 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round include: First Prize: A Gunsite Academy Three-Day Course Certificate. This can be used for any of their one, …
The post Preparedness Notes for Thursday — February 12, 2026 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
(Continued from Part 1.) The following are the basic tools I use to harvest and butcher fowl: Large stainless steel bowl. I put several quarts of water in the pot (the amount of water varies on how many birds I am harvesting) to keep the meat from drying out and to help keep flies away if they are present. I also butcher where running water is easily accessible to wash my hands when necessary. Sharp knife. My preferred knife for cleaning and butchering is a medium-sized, antique, high-carbon steel butcher knife with a very thin blade. This knife is from …
The post Raising, Hunting, and Harvesting Animals – Part 2, by Lodge Pole appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
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, Washington state’s knife ban legislation. A Knife Ban is Planned in Washington Reader D.S.V. spotted this: Draconian Knife Ban Bill Rises from the Dead in Washington. A pericope: …
The post The Survivalist’s Odds ‘n Sods appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
“Hunting forces a person to endure, to master themselves, even to truly get to know the wild environment. Actually, along the way, hunting and fishing makes you fall in love with the natural world. This is why hunters so often give back by contributing to conservation.” – Donald Trump, Jr.
The post The Editors’ Quote Of The Day: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
Grok has been helping me figure out how to replace CFC with aluminum tube with minimal weight increase. It appears that .5" OD .035" wall is slightly stiffer than the CFC tube that I now use for the axes. This lets me reuse my existing polar and declination housings, bearings, and drive gears.
I have been attempting to learn to use FreeCAD and no tutorial seems to get me over the first step of converting a two dimensional drawing into a 3D object. I know at least one of you has admitted FreeCAD experience. I would be quite happy to pay someone to use Remote Desktop Connection and help me past this obstacle.
UPDATE: Just realized that I do not need to replace existing housing and axes They are already cut
Referencing some recent comments on the previous post.
Harbor Freight, or as I call it, Hobo Freight, is a constant in my shop. I buy a lot of Harbor Freight tools, because they work.
My buddy, Jay, who died in December, had his A&P license and ran a small manufacturing business where he made tools for the helicopter maintenance trade. Jay didn't mind spending money on tools, that is how he made his living. His machine shop had big lathes, mills, all the high-dollar stuff. In the welding room, I happen to notice one day that every bench had a cheap, Hobo Freight angle grinder on the bench.
I asked him about it.
"They work," he said. "And when they quit, I go buy another one for $15.00." He appreciated high quality tools but realized the value in a cheap angle grinder that would work for him for two or three years. Sometimes there is value in cheap tools.
Twenty years ago, I didn't trust battery tools. If I could find a plug and string an extension cord, I could work all day. Nowadays I don't care to work all day. When the battery needs a recharge, I take a break.
I can still do a full days work, it just takes me most of the week.
Any man who is 70 and works as hard as he did when he was 35, didn't do much when he was 35.
Long time Internet Security guy Fred Cohen has some interesting thoughts on how AI can be less obnoxious [PDF]:
The nature of the problem (I think) is that the attempts at safety reflect the behavior of the people who programmed and trained the AI engines, and they are apparently snarky, obnoxious twits that think its better to argue about meta issues than to serve their customers, like me, with the real capabilities they have developed.
Their version of safety is the opposite of mine. If you want children to be safe from AI, don’t let them use it.
If you want adults to be safe from AI, don’t make it available.
If you want a ship to be safe, don’t put it out to sea… but that’s not what ships are for. We trade the utility for the safety, and while making ships that leak like a sieve is a bad idea in my view, making ships that don’t sail is a fruitless effort.
...
Solution
The solution is to put someone in charge of these mechanisms in these companies who is not a snarky, obnoxious twit… and I hope this doesn’t exclude me from the candidate pool.
There are also some rather direct solutions to the problem of providing information to people where the information is not something that should be provided to anybody as a matter of policy. The most obvious solution is not to incorporate any of that sort of policy-violating information in the learning process.
Of course the snarkiness is the same problem. If you don’t teach the LLM to be snarky by feeding it snarky crap, it will probably not behave that way. It’s no different than a child brought up by respectful parents vs. disrespectful parents. They learn from their teachers.
Conclusions
If you don’t want trouble, stop asking for it. If you teach a dog to bite, you are unlikely to be successful at later telling it not to. If you train an LLM with views of pedophiles, fraudsters, and murderers, you are unlikely to get it to not carry that behavior through later on.
I think that Fred's entirely correct here (note that we ignore the very serious problem of AI Hallucinations here). AI training is generally crap layered on top of the hallucination engine*.
But I wonder if this is an opportunity for AI companies? If you did a better job training the AI to be well-behaved (like you'd do with your kids or your dogs) would you have a different - and more attractive AI offer? How about politeand wellbehavedAI.com? That's a branding that would stand out from all the others. You could market it to parents worried about their kids, or to old fuddy-duddies like me who hate everything about AI?
I smell a billion dollars of venture capital here ...
* It seems very likely that the AI algorithms cannot be prevented from hallucinating.
I've run a bunch of chainsaws since my teens. McCullough, Poulan, Husky, Stihl, Echo, you name it, I've run it. As I approach my dotage, I am loathe to crank a gas chainsaw. I'm no longer felling timber or cutting firewood, I'm pruning trash trees on my little acre.
Battery technology has improved over the past decade, and the era of plug-it-in-the-wall power tools is about over.. I have gone almost solely to batter operated tools, and I use the yellow-black brand.. All my batteries are yellow-black.
Last week, I needed to do some pruning, so I stated looking around. As it turns out, Amazon sells chainsaws. Little handy saws that run on batteries and don't need pull ropes. I did a little research and bought this one. It's a no-name Chinese knockoff and uses those familiar yellow-black batteries.
The only thing that didn't come in the box was a syringe to put bar oil into the reservoir. A quick trip to the feed store solved that problem. This morning I filled it with bar oil, put in a fresh battery and went out to hairlip a little tree that is in the way. Thirty minutes later, I wondered why I had waited so long to get one. The little tree is on the burn pile, the battery is on the charger and the saw is back it its case.
This little saw is On Time. It may not last as long as the branded saws, but it proves the concept.
It was widely claimed that he was going to wear a dress. I asked Grok:
The idea that Bad Bunny was going to wear a dress during his Super Bowl halftime show (at Super Bowl LX on February 8, 2026) originated as a rumor circulating online in late January 2026, shortly after his selection as the headliner was confirmed.
Reports from outlets like Radar Online (cited in various articles) claimed anonymous sources close to his team—including a stylist and a "pal"—said he planned to wear a dress as a bold statement honoring queer/LGBTQ+ icons from Puerto Rico or drag culture, with quotes like "He is 100 percent going to wear a dress. A political thunderbolt disguised as couture" and "The dress is already being sewn." This fueled speculation and backlash, particularly among conservative circles on social media, where it sparked boycott calls and tied into broader culture-war complaints about the performance.
The rumor gained traction through viral posts on platforms like X (formerly Twitter), including amplified claims that Bad Bunny himself said things like "I'm wearing the dress, if that bothers you… don’t watch." Some posts shared fabricated or satirical images (e.g., AI-generated ones from accounts like Qbanguy on Facebook showing him in a dress in provocative scenarios, later debunked by Snopes)....
That this reported rumor was amplified by conservatives is no surprise. (I mean what would you expect the Colin Kaepernick league to do except offend their audience?) But where did Radar Online get this rumor? Many possible explanations:The rumor appears to have stemmed from Bad Bunny's well-documented history of gender-fluid fashion (e.g., wearing skirts, dresses, or non-traditional outfits in videos, red carpets, and performances), combined with speculation about a provocative halftime statement amid his cultural significance as the first primarily Spanish-language headliner. It spread rapidly in politically polarized online spaces but was never confirmed by Bad Bunny or his team.
1. Someone with Bad Bunny floated this as a way to get publicity. (There is no such thing as bad publicity; people are talking about you.) Someone misunderstand an overheard conversation and filled it in based on previous clothing choices. "How will you be dressed?"
2. Someone just made it up. Reporters do that, especially when chasing the Almighty Clicks.
57.5% of the US population was non-Hispanic white in 2025, with 1.06% being Middle Eastern and North African (MENA), so about 56.4% are non-Middle Eastern whites. With 55.0% of the murderers and victims being non-Middle Eastern whites, whites are slightly below their share of those involved in these attacks.
With all the discussions about the racial motives of shooters, blacks are underrepresented as a share of the victims. Blacks comprise 17.4% of the murderers but only 9.9% of the victims. That 9.9% is less than their 13.7% of the general population.
Hispanics are underrepresented as a share of mass murderers. 11.0% of these mass murderers are Hispanic compared to Hispanics, making up 20.0% of the general population. But their 17.1% share of the victims is close to Hispanics’ share of the general population.
Compared to Middle Easterners at 1.06% of the general population, they are overrepresented as a share of mass murderers (6.4%) and slightly underrepresented in terms of victims (0.9%).
Asians make up 6.7% of the population, but they are overrepresented in both mass murderers (7.3%) and even more overrepresented as victims (9.5%). Interestingly, 50.6% of the Asians murdered in these attacks were murdered by other Asians.
Trans individuals are well over-represented in terms of attacks. There are three estimates of the percentage of adults who are trans (CDC’s Behavior Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) and Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS) finds 0.5% between 2017 to 2020, Gallup shows 0.7% in 2021, and the Census puts it at 1% in 2023). These numbers are clearly increasing over time, so an average for 2018 to 2023 years would probably overestimate the rate, but the average is 0.73%. Trans share of mass public shootings over the 2018 to 2025 period is 6.2 times their share of the population. The Nashville Catholic School shooter in 2023 and the Club Q murderer who identified as nonbinary and used the pronouns they and them in 2022 were transgender individuals.
Over the period from 1998 to 2025, 50% of mass murderers have seen mental health care professionals before their attacks.
The post Bannerman, the Father of Gun Collecting: Tales from the Golden Age of Surplus first appeared on Forgotten Weapons.
The restriction encompasses a 10-mile area around El Paso, and includes the neighboring community of Santa Teresa, N.M., but does not apply to aircraft flying above 18,000 feet, the F.A.A. notices said. They did not detail the security reasons that prompted the restriction.Of course everybody's engaged in wild speculation on social media, but anyone who claims they know anything for sure at this point is talking out their ass.
The airport issued a travel advisory on social media saying that all flights to and from the airport had been grounded, including commercial, cargo and general aviation. It told travelers to contact their airlines for the latest flight information.
Investigators found that the woman came to the gas station carrying a knife and approached a Jeep parked at one of the pumps, where a man was pumping gas, and his wife was inside the vehicle. The woman then began hitting the Jeep with the knife, police said.
The man went to another vehicle parked nearby, and the woman followed him and began striking that vehicle with a knife, the release states.
The man then retrieved a gun and warned the woman, who continued to move toward him, police said. The man then shot the woman in the leg, officials said.
The man and his wife were uninjured and remained on the scene, the release states. No charges have been filed as a result of the incident.
Lackawanna County District Attorney Brian Gallagher said that Zantowsky, "who was showing signs of intoxication" at the time of the shooting, had "brandished a firearm and pointed it at his son and other members of the family, including an eight-year-old child."
Gallagher stated that Zantowsky's son fired his own weapon once, striking him.
On February 11th, 1812, Massachusetts Governor Elbridge Gerry signed a redistricting bill. This was the origin of the word “Gerrymander”. — February 11, 2016: Confirmation of gravitational wave theory (through the observed collision of two black holes) announced by physicists from the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO). — SurvivalBlog Writing Contest Today we present another entry for Round 123 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round include: First Prize: A Gunsite Academy Three-Day Course Certificate. This can be used for any of their one, two, or three-day course (a $1,095 value), American Gunsmithing Institute (AGI) is …
The post Preparedness Notes for Wednesday — February 11, 2026 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
In late 1929, when the stock market crashed and the Great Depression began, the population of the United States was around 121.7 million people. All through the Great Depression, it was unheard of to leave roadkill on the side of the road left to rot. With high unemployment, the hunting pressure was heavy. Small game, like rabbits and squirrels, nearly went extinct in large parts of the United States from being over-hunted, to feed desperate families. Today, in 2026, the estimated population of the US is 348.3 million. If animals were being hunted to near extinction when the population was …
The post Raising, Hunting, and Harvesting Animals – Part 1, by Lodge Pole appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
Our weekly Snippets column is a collection of short items: responses to posted articles, practical self-sufficiency items, how-tos, lessons learned, tips and tricks, and news items — both from readers and from SurvivalBlog’s editors. Note that we may select some long e-mails for posting as separate letters. — Reader M.B. mentioned this Stars & Stripes article: Navy pilot who shot down four Soviet fighter jets during Korean War to receive Medal of Honor. Royce Williams will celebrate his 101st birthday on April 4th, 2026. Here is an excerpt: “On Nov. 18, 1952, Williams was piloting an F9F-5 Panther when he …
The post SurvivalBlog Readers’ & Editors’ Snippets appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
“Resolve not to be poor: whatever you have, spend less. Poverty is a great enemy to human happiness; it certainly destroys liberty, and it makes some virtues impracticable, and others extremely difficult.”- Samuel Johnson
The post The Editors’ Quote Of The Day: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

CANCON A Fully Suppressed RECOIL Range Day! We're moving to an all new location this May for a weekend of cans, guns, and fun!