Saturday, December 31, 2011

Absolutely Appropriate...

Another dispatch from the BLNN...

Protester Defends Flag-Burning at Occupy Charlotte
Some members of the Occupy Wall Street group in Charlotte, N.C., are under fire for setting American flags ablaze, but one of the protesters is defending his incendiary actions.

"Those were actions taken on my behalf," Occupy Charlotte member Alex Tyler said at a camp meeting, according to a Charlotte Observer report. "I did it to display my utter contempt for American greed, not (the military)."
He had every right in the world to burn the flag. While I disagree with his actions on a visceral level, I appreciate that it's our enumerated right to speak our mind - especially when it's speech that not everyone approves of. Now, that said, the moron set fire to a field because he was being an idiot while burning the flag - and was charged accordingly. I hope he has to pay for the fire department's efforts to put out the fire as well.

I reiterate: Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.

That is all.

Big Day for the Count...

Wow. There's a lot of goblins achieving room temperature today...

Police: Ga. fast-food worker kills robbery suspect
SAVANNAH, Ga. — Police in Georgia say a fast-food worker grabbed his gun and shot and killed a man suspected of robbing the restaurant near Savannah.

Savannah-Chatham Metropolitan Police say the suspect's body was found in the parking lot of the Wendy's restaurant around 12:50 a.m. Thursday in Wilmington Island.
They herded this guy into the back office and robbed him and the store. He later came out and had a gun pointed at him, at which point he fired his own gun, killing his assailant. Good shootin'!

I hope he took his money back...

Dead Goblin Count: 228

This one's a great one:

Henderson teen shoots man who attempted home invasion

A Henderson teenager shot and killed an intruder Thursday morning, according to the Vance County Sheriff's Office.

When deputies arrived at 586 S. Lynnbank Road, they found a man lying in the yard. Michael Anthony Henderson Jr., 19, had been shot in the chest with a shotgun, deputies said. He was taken to Maria Parham Medical Center where he died.

The shooter was a 14 year old boy protecting his 17 year old sister. The dirtbag taking a dirtnap was 19 and had a lengthy criminal record. He also had an accomplice that ran off after his friend took 00 buck to the chest - two teenaged criminals against two younger teens. Those who favor gun control would have those two children at the mercy of violent predators.

I prefer this outcome instead.

Dead Goblin Count: 229

Fort Worth woman fatally shoots home intruder

FORT WORTH - A Fort Worth woman shot and killed an intruder early Thursday morning, police said.

The woman told police she heard a knocking at the door around 3 a.m. in the 5700 block of Fortune Road. She called her husband, who told her it wasn't him and to go get their gun.

Goblin changed from knocking to actually breaking and entering and got himself shot in the process. Call it an occupational hazard, if you will - break into enough homes, especially in Texas, and you run the risk of an armed homeowner. Much like a carpenter will most likely hit his thumb with a hammer at some point in his career, you know?

Dead Goblin Count: 230


One dead and three injured in East Colfax shooting

AURORA — A botched robbery at an Aurora check-cashing and tobacco store has left one person dead and three injured.

Aurora police spokeswoman Sgt. Cassidee Carlson said two people entered the store and allegedly attempted to rob it.

The interesting part about this is that the owner of this store shot and killed someone trying to rob him just two years ago. How dumb a crook do you have to be to rob a store where the owner has already plugged someone for trying a holdup? One crook dead, another injured, and two people inside the store - including the owner - were also shot.

Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.

Dead Goblin Count: 231

That is all.

Thanks to readers Harvey, Dustin, Cormac, Tim, and Kevin for sending in these wonderful stories!

Friday, December 30, 2011

Sixty Second Blogmeet Update...

Just a quick reminder:

Sunday, January 1st at 1:00 PM at Hilltop Steakhouse in Saugus, MA (look for the cactus on Route 1 South).

Lunch in honor of Paul, who can't make the blog dinner on Saturday, January 7th (which, unless anyone has strong objections, will be at Jillians again since there was no clear favorite and we like playing pool)...

Be there or be, well, a geometric shape!

That is all.

Bummed About Bulbs?

Then go get some 100W Heatballs!
After the European Union banned conventional incandescent bulbs, Rotthaeuser's entrepreneurial spirit was sparked. He started selling another product: heatballs.

What's a heatball? According to this Teutonic Knight of Freedom and Light, it is a "small heating device" that compensates for the loss of heat a home experiences when conventional light bulbs are swapped for more energy efficient ones.
Heh. I love it. Unintended consequences, beeyotch! It's not a light bulb; it's a heat source. Much like your fireplace (which they will no doubt be trying to ban as a source of dioxin and furan emissions), one of the side benefits of the heatball is that it throws off a not inconsequential amount of light. So you derive some side-effect lighting from your heat source.

Free enterprise once again pwns the nanny state.

That is all.

Thanks to FarmDad in Gunblogger Conspiracy chat for the link!

File Under "B" For Bad Career Moves...

Reader Kevin sends in the latest DGC:

Police: Man apparently tried to rob pawn shop, shot dead
A man who apparently tried to rob a pawn shop was shot to death Wednesday morning after exchanging gunfire with a store employee, Metro Police said.

A man entered the Cash America SuperPawn store in the 7000 block of North Durango Drive about 9:30 a.m. in what appeared to be an attempt to rob the store, Metro spokesman officer Bill Cassell said.
Judging from the statement given by the regional VP for the pawn shop, I'd be surprised if the employee who did the shooting was disciplined. The article says that the employee and the robber "exchanged shots" - now that could mean just about anything, but I wonder if the goblin just came in and started shooting, or was agitated that the clerk wasn't moving fast enough, or if the clerk came up with something other than a bag of cash from under the counter - like a 12 gauge.

In any case, the good guy goes home, the bad guy goes to the morgue - and the count clicks over another goblin...

Dead Goblin Count: 227

That is all.

Caution: It's Dusty Today...

I got a little something in my eye when I read this story that Mopar posted on Facebook yesterday:

Slain officer's daughter gets his '69 Honda, 41 years later
SCRIPPS RANCH — The daughter of a San Diego police officer murdered 41 years ago got a little piece of his life back Wednesday.

A handful of officers and family members showed up at the Scripps Ranch home of Tina Lewis and surprised her with the refurbished motorcycle that her father, James Patrick Lewis, had cherished.
Her father was killed when she was two years old. Over forty years passed, but the Honda stayed in the family in various stages of completion. Last month a local Honda specialist started the restoration process and completed it in a month's time - that's some pretty amazing work right there. My father in law has the first motorcycle he ever bought in a shed out back of his property, a 1960s vintage CB360. It'd sure be something to get that little bike up and running...

This is one of the really neat things about being a motorhead - or a gun nut. Being able to use a piece of history, be it a classic car, vintage motorcycle, or antique firearm helps make the past more than something you read about in a history book. My folks recently had their old 8mm films converted to DVD, and it's simply amazing to see how technology has advanced in the 40 something years since the original 8mm was shot. We've gone from a clunky, lunchbox-sized camera that could take ~ 3 minutes of grainy video to a smartphone that can shoot over an hour of high definition color video in just two generations.

And now, because of the dedication of her family and the law enforcement community, a woman who lost her father as a toddler now has a small part of his life back - that's pretty darn neat.

That is all.

Sometimes, The Good Guys Win...

Another dispatch from the BLNN; if this doesn't put a smile on your face your last name might be Brady or Henigan...

D.C. Ordered to Pay $1M in Historic Gun Case
WASHINGTON – The District of Columbia has been ordered to pay more than $1 million in attorneys' fees as a result of a historic gun case that was ultimately decided by the U.S. Supreme Court.
...
A federal judge on Thursday issued an opinion awarding Heller's attorneys $1,137,072.27 in fees and expenses. The attorneys had argued they should be awarded $3.1 million. Attorneys for the city said the figure should be closer to $840,000.
Now, were I Alan Gura, I wouldn't hold my breath waiting for the check, but it's still nice to see the courts siding with the white hats on this one. If I had to place a bet on the outcome, I would have sworn that the court was going to rule against Heller's attorney's getting anything. Of course, whether or not they ever see one red cent from the city remains to be seen.

The Department of Education has some nice short-barreled shotguns - perhaps they could sell some of those to pay the bill...

That is all.

Friday Gun Pr0n #247

Since we had Dennis's VZ-52 last week, reader Jim wanted to showcase his little Yugoslavian friend:

M57

I'll let Jim tell you about her:

Here is a little treasure that popped up in the mail yesterday.

It is a Yugoslavian M57 pistol. Holding nine rounds of 7.62x25, it is the slightly bigger brother of the TT pistol line. It came to me in a leather holster with two magazines and a cleaning rod. It also came smeared and filled (one of the mags was solid) with
cosmoline. After a full disassembly, a nice, hot water bath, toothbrush treatment, and a light baking in the oven, it was re-assembled, lightly lubed and put through some shooting.

She has a nice, light recoil (maybe something similar to shooting my brother's G17 with standard 9mm or maybe some +P rounds) and the bark is quite powerful. The bite tore up all of my wood blocks I shot up. Accuracy is good and the bore looks like a mirror.

I picked it up because it was an interesting 1911-inspired piece. Now if it only had the same grip angle, I'd buy a dozen.
The Yugoslavian improvement to the Russian TT-33 has a Browning (PBUH) inspired safety and 9 round capacity, but is otherwise identical to the TT. It fires the same necked 7.62X25mm round as last week's VZ-52, and as with the VZ-52, 9mm barrels are available for the TT-33 (I would assume it would work in the M57 as well). This pistol - or a TT-33 - is on the long list of "guns I'd like to get someday".

Thanks for sharing her with us Jim!

That is all.

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Surprising News...

I read this on the local news website and was shocked:

Boston Tops List Of Drunkest U.S. Cities Of 2011

BOSTON (CBS) – Red Sox pitchers and thousands of college students and workers in the city of Boston all have at least one thing in common: they drink alcohol.

They drink so much that Boston has topped The Daily Beast’s list of America’s Drunkest Cities of 2011.

Gee, a city populated by Irish and Italian immigrants and host to hundreds of colleges and universities is capable of packin' away the pints? GET OUT. This just in: Water is wet! Interestingly enough, New York City didn't even crack the top 25 list of drunkest cities, so apparently Noo Yawkers aren't drinking enough Appletinis to qualify. But them Southies sure are downin' the boilahmaykahs!

Apparently all those colleges in Boston make up for Ted Kennedy being gone - who knew?

That is all.

Stay Out of Condition White...

The BLNN sends in a report of why you should always be extra-vigilant when dealing with meeting folks from online in meatspace.

2 arrested in Akron robbery of man trying to sell Xbox on Craigslist

AKRON, Ohio -- An Akron man was robbed Tuesday night by three men who went to his Triplett Boulevard home to buy an Xbox video game system that he had advertised on Craigslist.

Akron police said one man went to the victim's house and looked at the gaming system around 6 p.m. He then called a friend to bring him money to buy the game.

Now, this being OH and not MA, once the dude's friends showed up with guns, he pulled his own pistol (he was at least prepared) and defended himself, so he wasn't injured. Being out $85 and an XBox is a small price to pay for learning an important lesson while remaining uninjured... A better plan might have been to have met in a public place - I don't know that I'd invite some random stranger into my home for a quick sale of a cheap consumer electronic... Especially considering that now the goblins know where this guy lives and have a beef with him...

Now, the Mrs. and I have debated about another related point. I've met with folks from online to go shooting, or barter firearms/ammo/gear/etc., and in a few cases I've met them at my house. Generally, my feeling is that someone that has gone through the time and expense to jump through the hoops to get a MA LTC isn't likely to be the type to show up at someone's house to rob them - especially someone they know to be armed.

In any case, there's a lot to take home from this quick story. Don't invite strangers into your home if you know nothing about them except "I have $50 for that game/pair of shoes/widget you're selling on CL". If that's the only way you can make the sale, walk away. Pick a public place if possible; plenty of coffee shops where you can meet and exchange items and cash - I don't even want to think about how many private transfers of firearms I've done in MA over a cup of coffee! Be alert - "Imma call sumdood to come bring me the money" should have resulted in a "thanks but no thanks".

And, of course, carry your damn guns...

That is all.

I'll Take "Bad Ideas" for $200, Alex...

Stretch sends in this head-scratcher out of ol' Blighty...

Watch out for the icebergs... cruise recreating Titanic's fateful voyage is sold out
For some, it might sound too much like tempting fate – and for others, it smacks of "disaster voyeurism". But for more than 2,000 Titanic enthusiasts, the chance to mark the centenary of the maritime disaster by sailing on a large cruise ship to commemorate the sinking on the very spot of the tragedy is proving difficult to resist.

A British company has almost sold out two cruises for people to mark the anniversary on 15 April by following the route of the Titanic to where it struck an iceberg. The booming demand for Titanic-related travel has led to another travel company offering the chance to explore the wreckage of the ill-fated vessel in a Russian-built submarine next summer at a cost of $59,000 (£37,000) per person. Places for that voyage are already "very limited".

Wonder if there will be any tours in Hiroshima or Nagasaki on the 100th anniversary of the dropping of Fat Man and Little Boy? Perhaps a commemorative dirigible voyage to mark the Hindenberg disaster? Will Bhopal, India have tourists in 2086 for the Union Carbide spill? I don't agree with the "tempting fate" part - communication and transportation have improved dramatically in the intervening 100 years for there to be any significant danger - but you do have to wonder about the fascination with the Titanic's ill-fated voyage a century hence.

Don't get me wrong - this is pure, raw, naked capitalism in its purest form. Folks are willing to pay - quite handsomely it appears - for the recreation of the voyage. Cruise ships employ hundreds, and both the departure and destination cities will benefit from the influx of dollars. Now, it would be even more interesting if the ship that sets sail were a faithful recreation of the HMS Titanic, but it seems far-fetched that folks would forgo the creature comforts we've come to expect in our modern age.

The icebergs have been put on notice...

That is all.

DGC: SIG SAUER Addition

Mopar sends in a DGC addition that wasn't committed with a Sig, just my favorite model number...

Pistol Packin' Mama Kills Man Trying to Rob Her Son: Police

A Philadelphia man was shot dead Tuesday night after he made the mistake of trying to rob a man who had a pistol packin’ mama nearby, police say.

A 23-year-old man was in the stairwell of his East Oak Lane apartment building with his girlfriend at about 9 p.m. when a 19-year-old man walked up to them, pistol-whipped the man and shot him in the leg while trying to rob him, according to police.

His mother heard the commotion, grabbed her gun, and shot the dude in the chest when she saw what was happening. One shot. One dead goblin. DO NOT MESS WITH MAMA BEAR. How much you want to bet this guy doesn't argue with mom over curfew any more, either? And on a side note, again, when this dude gets to Hell and is talking with all the other dead goblins, I hope they give him a ration of shit for dying at the hands of his victim's mother...

YOU. GO. MOM.

Dead Goblin Count: 226

That is all.

MArooned Product Review: Peltor Tactical 6S Hearing Protection

So, a while back, on the recommendation of Unc, I ordered a set of the Peltor Tactical 6S hearing protection. I figured at the time that having another set of ears couldn't hurt, and Unc and others gave positive recommendations to Peltors in general and this set in particular. Being that it was all of $35 shipped, I rolled the dice and got these:

New ears

I brought them to the range earlier this week and tested them out. I only hit the pistol range, and we were shooting 9mm, .45 ACP, and .22LR. The pistol range is a covered range with walls and ceiling, so it's almost like shooting indoors. I also brought my standby, a set of Peltor 7s I bought when I first got into shooting:

New and old ears

Obviously, the first different in the two sets of ears is the size. The 6S set is much thinner than the 7s - it was significantly easier to get my eye protection on over the ears (I go up over the muffs themselves so that the ear cups get a good seal). They're also lighter than the 7s by a fair amount (I'd throw them on my scale but I'm lazy...), and pack down a lot smaller.

The electronics, well, they're about what you expect for $35. Many reviews of this set complain about the PITA factor in replacing batteries, and there's a good deal of truth to that complaint. You need to pull the ear cups off to replace the AAA batteries (two per ear!), and getting the cups on or off takes a bit of finesse (no "OOG SMASH" here!). The sound, though, is pretty clear, if a little on the iffy side (the right ear would cut out every once in a while). There are dual controls, which really means that you either set them on or off - trying to match the volume on both sides is an exercise for someone with more patience than I.

Overall, I like the Peltor Tactical 6S hearing protection. They're lighter and thinner than the Peltor 7s, and bring the sounds to levels that I couldn't tell apart - in fact, to my untrained ear the new Peltors seemed to work even better. Now, granted, this could certainly be that the 7s are about 15 years old, of course, and the foam isn't what it used to be.

In any case, these are well worth the $35 spent on them!

That is all.

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

TOTD: Typo Of The Day...

Introducing a new segment here at MArooned: The TOTD (Typo of the Day).

Today's typo is "e-mauled".
e-mauled, n: Referring to someone overcome by e-mail spam and/or unwanted forwards. Can be characterized by a distinct lack of returning e-mails due to having abandoned their inbox.
What are some of your favorite inadvertent new words?

That is all.

Words Fail Me, Part ?

Seriously?

Prosecutors: Man Went On Honeymoon After Killing Man On Scooter
ROXBURY (CBS) – More than a year after his death, the family of a college graduate killed in a car crash now has a sense of closure.

Colin Ratiu admitted in court on Tuesday that he was drunk behind the wheel when
he ran over 24-year-old Andrew Prior last year. The 24-year-old Northeastern graduate was riding his scooter near Roxbury Crossing when he was hit last November.
Here's the best part. The family hid evidence from prosecutors for three months after the accident. This piece of shit - no, wait, calling him a piece of shit is an insult to pieces of shit everywhere - killed someone, hid the evidence, then went on with his life while his family helped cover it up for three months. Another family lost a son, a friend, a vital piece of their lives and for three months had no idea what happened, all because some privileged little snotnosed punk couldn't do the honorable thing and 'fess up.

Or, better yet, hang himself in shame.

Ratiu received a five year sentence, which in Massachusetts means he'll be out in 6 months and driving again shortly thereafter. He'll be able to continue the carefree life he had before his little incident like it never happened. What's also interesting is that there's no talk of charging his parents with being an accessory to manslaughter for covering up the accident - from the sounds of the article, his damaged vehicle was hidden at their house for three months. I'd say this rests on their conscience, but it doesn't sound like they have one.

Meanwhile, Andrew Prior's family can only visit him at his grave. Where the hell is the justice in that?

That is all.

Most Transparent Administration...

Another dispatch from the BLNN...

White House Gives Nod to Schumer's Brother-in-Law to Be Federal Judge
Sen. Charles Schumer's brother-in-law was quietly nominated this month to a federal judgeship in New Jersey -- a move that has some in the Garden State crying political foul, The New York Post has learned.

Kevin McNulty, who is married to Schumer's sister, Fran, was named to the U.S. District Court by the White House late on Friday, Dec. 16. According to a boilerplate quote, President Obama believes McNulty is a "distinguished individual" who "will serve the American people with integrity and a steadfast commitment to justice."
Yep. I'm sure that was a nationwide search. Most. Ethical. Administration. Ever. That's why they nominated McNulty under cover of darkness, I'm sure. Nothing to see here, it's Senator Schumer's brother-in-law, he's eminently qualified, nationwide search, distinguished panel of experts, etc. It's only pure coincidence that he happens to be Charles Schumer's brother-in-law.

I mean, it's certainly not a nod towards Schumer's power or anything, right?

That is all.

Remember, We Discourage "Self Help" Here...

Brad_in_MA thinks my blood pressure is too low. He must; otherwise he wouldn't send me stories like this:

Ten murderers hitting street with board OK
Ten of the 11 lifers whose early releases have been green-lighted this year are convicted murderers being set free by the same Parole Board Gov. Deval Patrick assembled to plug a terrifying flow of violent offenders being let loose on the streets. The 11th is serving time for unarmed robbery, said Josh Wall, the panel’s chairman.

“Oh my God. After what’s happened? I’m outraged by this,” said truth-in-sentencing champion Les Gosule, whose daughter Melissa Gosule, a 27-year-old schoolteacher, was raped and murdered on Cape Cod in 1999 by a man convicted of more than two dozen crimes. “I would think they would have erred on the side of being ultraconservative. They acted stupidly.”
Yes, "lifer" means "was sentenced to prison for life" - and they're being tossed back out among us, with the vast majority being violent criminals. This is Massachusetts, where - according to John Rosenthal - "you're more likely to live here" because of our strict gun control laws. Of course, "you" refers to violent criminals released into the general population which is by and large disarmed due to the onerous, arbitrary, capricious, and, oh, unconstitutional gun laws of the Volksrepublik.

If "life in prison" really meant that the convict would actually expire behind bars every single time, I would consider changing my stance on the death penalty. It's cases like these, where hardened criminals sentenced to life in jail are - despite their sentence - being released to walk among us. Ten of the eleven being released are murderers - and while law-abiding MA residents are significantly hampered by the gun control laws to even own a firearm, criminals intent on returning to their old ways are not.

I think in honor of this ruling I am going to get my NRA Instructor's Certificate so that I can better help the people of Massachusetts acquire their permits.

That is all.

Afternoon At the Range...

So, on my day off yesterday, I went to the range with Yankeefried and his 14 year old daughter E. He's been running a steel challenge course at a local range with an eye towards the junior set, and E. is searching for the perfect handgun for steel. Yankeefried knew that I had a couple M&Ps recently find their way into the G. armory and was hoping E. could try them out. I am nothing if not eager to let folks try out new weaponry, so I was happy to acquiesce.

We had 9mms:

To the 9s!

And a couple 45s:

Rare JayG Action Shot!

She didn't care for the trigger of the M&P, which really isn't fair, as it's the terrible MA trigger. The Ruger was a little more amenable to her liking, but the real star was the SIG SAUER P226. The DA/SA trigger was to her liking, and the Crimson Trace laser grips helped get and keep her on target. But her real favorite was the Ruger 10/22 with (pre-ban) 30 round magazines. She went through more than half a 550 round box of Federal bulk 22LR with the Ruger:



I hear that every time a teenaged girl shoots an assault weapon, Sarah Brady gets one step closer to the edge...

That is all.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Well That Was Fun...

Spent a lovely afternoon here:



More to follow in AAR tomorrow...

That is all.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Northeast Bloggers Fourth Annual Winter Social Update, Part II

Now that Christmas is over, and New Year's looms merely days away, it's time to finalize plans for the two (TWO!) Northeast Blogger Winter meets. Original post here; first update here. To avoid confusion, I'm going to split into two separate sections entirely.


Lunch:

What? Northeast Blogger Winter Luncheon.

Who? Any and all bloggers, commenters, readers, lurkers, etc. in the Northeast area, or those passing through, or anyone crazy enough to show up.

When? New Year's Day (January 1st, 21012). 1:00 PM EST.

Where? No one had a clear favorite, but the guest of honor suggested Hilltop Steakhouse. Hilltop it is!

Why? Folks getting together to enjoy good food, great beer, and superlative company. Bring your appetite, a whistle for wetting, and your best stories to tell.

Attendees:
Paul (our guest-of-honor)
Yankeefried
Weerdbeard
Christina & Silver
SCI-FI & Mrs. SCI-FI (possible)
libertyman

That's eight people, should be easily "walk-in" manageable for Hilltop.


Dinner:

What? Northeast Blogger Winter Gathering Dinner.

Who? Any and all bloggers, commenters, readers, lurkers, etc. in the Northeast area, or those passing through, or anyone crazy enough to show up.

When? Saturday, January 7th, 7:00 PM EST.

Where? Still TBD. For dinner, we've had suggestions of La Carreta or Martha's Exchange in Nashua, KC's Rib Shack or Strange Brew in Manchester, and "someplace" in Portsmouth, NH. I'm amenable to any of these locations; La Carreta is the only restaurant I've been to, but the food was great. The only drawback is that there's little in the immediate area for "after dinner" entertainment, although there's plenty of places we could go.

Why? Folks getting together to enjoy good food, great beer, and superlative company. Bring your appetite, a whistle for wetting, and your best stories to tell. We might find a place to play pool afterwards...

Attendees:
Mopar and Cher
Weerdbeard and Mrs. Weerd
Zeeke42
MedicMatthew
Doubletrouble (& Mrs.?)
libertyman
LWJ
Yankeefried
Ross
JD
TOTWTYTR
Old Windways
Meataxe
Christina & Silver
SCI-FI & Mrs. SCI-FI (possible)

So we really need to make a decision on where we want to have dinner in the next week or so. I can make calls and ask about a table/room - we've got close to 20 people coming for dinner, so we'll need to make arrangements. Any place is fine with me, but we do need to reach a consensus.

Looking forward to seeing everyone again, so let's get crackin'!

That is all.

Hoosier Daddy...

Lokidude sends in the latest addition to the DGC:

Man trying to rob grocery dies after shot in face by Kroger employee
A man who was shot in the face about 6 p.m. Monday inside a Kroger grocery store on Indianapolis’ Northwestside has died.

Police say they suspect the wounded man was trying to rob the store and was shot by an employee.
Dude walks into store. Comes across female clerk. Presses something into her back and starts herding her into the office in the back. Gets shot in the damn face for his troubles. It's unfortunate that this happens so rarely - and that corporate policy tends to frown on this sort of self-reliance. It's a pretty safe bet this employee will be fired for potentially saving his co-worker's life, and that's what's wrong with America. He should be the damn employee of the month - generally thugs don't herd folks into back offices because they want to apologize for the intrusion; they'd just rather there be no witnesses to whatever's coming next.

Instead, we had a much better outcome than pretty much anything else that could have happened - except, perhaps, had the female employee he was terrorizing shot him herself...

Dead Goblin Count: 225

That is all.

Tuesday Campaign Pic, Part 24

If it's Tuesday, it's time to come up with another Øbama campaign poster. Here's a timely one:

Well?

We've got to do our part to get the word out!

That is all.

Gotta Love a Nice Carry Rig...

Reader Adam sends in a picture of his Christmas present:

LC9 undercover

Here's his description:

Attached are a couple pics of my new carry rig. It's a Crossbreed MiniTuck with the horsehide option. I also got a set of J hooks with it. This is the most comfortable holster I've ever worn. The Ruger LC9 just disappears, and I'm 5'7". Highly recommended. This came in a package from my brother along with 400 rounds of practice ammo, so I'm off to the range!
Having had an LC9 to test out, I can attest that it's a great size for both carrying and shooting. It's small and light enough to conceal easily - and this rig looks positively superb for concealing - yet large enough to be able to shoot more than two magazines at a time. I've got a CrossBreed SuperTuck that I originally ordered for my S&W SW99 compact, which also fits my Glock G30 and, as I've found out more recently, the S&W M&P9c. The SuperTuck conceals very well with a double stack compact 9mm; I can only imagine how well it must hide the single stack LC9.

Thanks for sharing Adam!

That is all.

Monday, December 26, 2011

On the Lighter Side...

The BLNN doesn't just send in news of the infuriating. Sometimes there's something to make you smile...

Accomplice Accidentally Shoots Would-Be Robber During Florida Home Invasion
MELBOURNE, Fla. – A man involved in a home invasion in Melbourne, Fla., was inadvertently shot by one of his accomplices who was trying to shoot the resident, police told the Orlando Sentinel Sunday.

Cops said 20-year-old Nathaniel James Clay broke in to a house in the 2800 block of Colbert Circle, about 70 miles southeast of Orlando, about 9:40pm Saturday, along with two other men.
Gotta give the homeowner props - taking on three dudes, one armed with a gun, while you just have a baseball bat? I mean, if that's the only tool in your box you do what you can with it. Fortunately for the homeowner, the thug's accomplices are even worse than minute-of-berm and wound up shooting their friend rather than the intended victim. Relying on luck and bad aim isn't a strategy I care to employ, personally; I prefer the reassuring sight of an M7 bayonet on the end of my Mossberg to a Louisville slugger...

But in the end, a goblin goes to the hospital with a gunshot wound and the homeowner is unscathed - it's still a happy ending!

That is all.

While We Were Celebrating Christmas...

The pointy heads at the UN were celebrating, too - the life of Kim Jong Il...

U.N. Assembly Honors Kim Jong Il With Moment of Silence
The United Nations General Assembly honored Kim Jong Il with a moment of silence, in the latest international tribute to the late dictator who operated one of the most repressive countries in the world.

Nassir Abdulaziz Al-Nasser, president of the U.N. General Assembly, granted the request for the moment of silence Thursday. As the United States and other western delegations boycotted, the rest of the delegates and officials in the chamber stood in silence for about 25 seconds, some bowing their heads.
You are reading that correctly. The UN General Assembly - the same august body that nominated Syria and Iran for the Human Rights Council - took a moment of silence in "honor" of one of the most brutal dictators in recent memory. He starved his countrymen in a game of brinkmanship that lead nowhere, continuing a remorseless regime inherited from his father that continued the oppression of the North Korean people. And they mourn his passing like a lost brother.

These are the people that our pointy-headed "intellectuals" think we should look to for guidance on how to run our country...

That is all.

Thanks to the BLNN and aepilotjim for this lovely story...

Mine All Mine...

Just sent in the last payment on the Dodge Earthf**ker (actually, the last 4 payments; paid it off early with the Xmas bonus). I'm planning on holding onto the Ram for a few years longer, ideally 5 - 10 more if possible. Right now she needs new tires before the winter really cranks up to full speed, and in the next 3-6 months she's going to need new front and rear brakes. With any kind of luck, she won't need any major work for another 50K or so, which should put us well into the time frame of deciding whether we still need a full size truck or not...

It's really nice to own the vehicle you're driving; even better if it's in good shape and doesn't look like it's going to cost you much to operate going down the road (that sound you just heard was my truck ejecting the transmission at the sound of the last payment being made). While I'd love a more fuel efficient vehicle, the fact is that I need something that will haul my camper, tote the various boxes of gear and sundry needed for Scouting, and still seat four people. The list starts at "full size SUV" and ends at "full sized pickup" - there's just not a lot of vehicles out there that can do what I need them to do.

I'd love to pick up a good used (very) small car to supplement the G. fleet, either something I could pay cash for outright or pick up relatively cheaply. I'm under no illusions about saving enough money in gas to cover the cost of the third vehicle, but the wear and tear, combined with the gas price, certainly makes a little econobox more attractive. Add in that neither the Mrs. nor I have a car with a trunk, and that's another reason for a more secure vehicle right there - especially if there are roadtrips on the horizon...

In any case, it'll be great not to have to make that monthly payment for a bit...

That is all.

Christmas in the G. House...

Oh, there was a little something for everyone in the G. household this Christmas.

TheBoy got something of the shootie variety:

Not a Red Ryder

(Yes, I did get him an airsoft M4, and no, he didn't shoot his eye out).

BabyGirl G. got some cuddly bacon:

Breda would approve

And TheBoy got a pet zombie:

I thought of T-bolt

Yes, BabyGirl G. and TheBoy did get ahold of my ThinkGeek catalog; why do you ask?

That is all.

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Merry Christmas!

From our chaotic house to yours...



Hope your day is equally magical...

That is all.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Life Imitates Pulp Fiction

Police arrest 18-year-old in death of 15-year-old found inside van
Police say an 18-year-old man is responsible for the killing of a 15-year-old boy whose body was found inside a van earlier this week.
Gang hit? Drug war retaliation? Robbery gone wrong?

No. Stupidity:
Detectives said Lovett, Martin and three other people were in the car on Thursday and drove to St. Pete Beach to steal another car. Lovett, armed with a handgun, was in the backseat behind Martin, who was in the passenger seat.

At some point, about 10:45 p.m. police said, Lovett accidentally discharged the gun.

A bullet went through the front seat, striking Martin in the upper torso.
Why am I reminded of this:



There are four rules for a reason, even for gangbanger carjackers...

That is all.

Speaking of SHOT Show and Bloggers...

ExurbanKevin is going to SHOT, and he's taking on the role of community organizer.

Wednesday night is the 3 Gun Nation Shootoff, so that's out. I'm flying back home Friday morning, so of the three nights, I'd prefer Tuesday, but I can do Thursday if needed. Something tells me we can find a place to eat in Vegas.

Go, vote for a day, and let's plan a Vegas SHOT Show dinner!

That is all.

Friday, December 23, 2011

Five Years of Ambulance Driver...

Someone's hitting a blog milestone today.

Wow. Five years in blog time is like 100 in real people years. Ambulance Driver's been putting out the quality funny for half a decade now - that's a long time to go being that funny. Of course, it dawned on me that in less than three months I'll be hitting the same milestone myself - I never realized AD and I started about the same time. Go and wish him well - that's pretty impressive work for a funny man who's doing great work as well.

Just don't be deer when he's on the road...

That is all.

Life Imitates "The Gods Must Be Crazy"

Mysterious metal ball from space falls in Namibia
A large metal ball that fell from space into the Namibian grasslands last month is not alien, officials say, but that's about all they know for certain about the object.

According to a report on The Namibian website, the 13-pound metal sphere with two bumps on its poles was found by a farmer near Onamatunga in the Omunsati region between November 15 and November 20. Explosions were heard in the area before the discovery, but no evidence of an explosion was seen around the area where the object was found.

Here's the object in question:

(image from article)

Really, I got nothing else here; just thought it was pretty darn weird...

That is all.

Vegas Bound...

Let's see...

  • Media credentials? Check.

  • Media Day registration? Check.

  • Hotel booked? Check.

  • Flight booked? Check.

  • Rental car arranged? Check.
Looks like I'm all set for the 2012 SHOT Show.

Now, this is the first time I've gone to SHOT, and everything I've heard is that it's a blast - but a lot of work (walking, etc.). I'm trying to take steps to minimize the downside and maximize the experience - like picking up a murse tactical backpack (any suggestions? I know Unc loves his Maxpedition) to carry all my stuff; upgrading the netbook from the 9" screen Eee; and picking up tips from those what have gone before. I've got a couple of friends who have gone to SHOT in years past and they're giving tips, which is great; I'm always open for more, too!

Who else is going to SHOT next month?

That is all.

For the Rest of Us...

Yes, today is Festivus. I'd air my grievances, but that's pretty much what this blog is for the rest of the year. Feats of strength are a possibility, but only if there's beer involved.



Happy Festivus everyone!

That is all.

Friday Gun Pr0n #246

Today's gun pr0n comes to us courtesy of Dennis, he of the excellent Dragon Leatherworks:

Czech this out!

While you'd be correct in calling it a CZ-52, you'd be more correct using the next letter to the right on the keyboard instead. I'll let Dennis explain:

And yes, according to CzechPoint (a Knoxville importer of CZ firearms) the real designation is VZ 52, not CZ 52.

CZ USA, when they started importing these in 1998, called them the CZ52. The actual Czechoslovakian military designation is the VZ 52. From the importers website:

In the United States, it is common for this pistol to be called, "CZ 52," but this designation is incorrect, The complete name for this pistol is the Česká Zbrojovka vzor 52. "Česká Zbrojovka,," translated into English, means "Czech Armory," The word "vzor" is the Czech word for "model" and is regularly shortened to "vz." The correct name for this pistol is "CZ vz. 52" or just "vz. 52." It is interesting to note that these pistols were not marked with the model name, as typically found on other Czech manufactured pistols, and this omission has certainly contributed to the confusion of its actual model designation.
The CZ-52 was my very first C&R acquisition more than 5 years ago. It's a lot of fun to bring to the range, having a fireball second only to the Snubbie from Hell™. The 7.62X25mm ammo is pretty hot, and if you can score some milsurp, pretty cheap. It's an interesting mechanism, too, with the rollers and all; and from what I hear it's a simple barrel swap to shoot 9mm out of it, too...

Thanks for sharing her, Dennis!

That is all.

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Back Up The Faux Outrage Truck, Mitt...

Romney tells Howie: I’d deport Obama’s uncle
I’m glad I thought to ask Mitt that question about Uncle Omar – that headline looks great on the Drudge Report this afternoon. “Romney: I’d Deport Obama’s Uncle.”

It was a no-brainer. I was just surprised he didn’t know who I was talking about at first. I understand that he wouldn’t read Barack’s narcissistic memoirs, but hey, Uncle Omar’s been in the Boston papers for months now.
Apparently, Boston columnist Howie Carr had RINO Romney on his radio program and asked him about Barack Obama's drunk-drivin', ICE-avoidin' Unkie Omar. Romney stumbled a bit at first, but then said he'd deport Unkie Omar. There's just one problem: Romney doesn't exactly have a stellar track record on illegal aliens... What he does have, apparently, is a talent for saying what he thinks his audience wants to hear.

IOW, one politician, standard issue. No thanks, Mitt.

That is all.

This... Is BLNN

Another dispatch from the Bubblehead Les News Network. I'm certain you will be shocked...

Officials Plead Guilty in New York Voter Fraud Case
A total of four Democratic officials and political operatives have now pleaded guilty to voter fraud-related felony charges in an alleged scheme to steal a New York election.

The latest guilty pleas expose the ease with which political insiders can apparently manipulate the electoral system and throw an election their way, by the forging of signatures of unsuspecting voters that are then cast as real votes.

I said you'd be shocked, and was I right? I mean, because they plead guilty, not because they were Democrats...

Here's another shocker:
Former Troy Democratic City Clerk William McInerney, Democratic Councilman John Brown, and Democratic political operatives Anthony Renna and Anthony DeFiglio have entered guilty pleas in the case, in which numerous signatures were allegedly forged on absentee ballots in the 2009 Working Families Party primary, the political party that was associated with the now-defunct community group, ACORN.

Hmmm. ACORN. Where have I heard of that group before? Oh yeah, that's it!

The Left accuses the Right of being racist for wanting folks to have ID in order to vote. I think we can all agree that the real reason they so vigorously oppose any sort of ID requirement is that they would start losing elections left and right - because they would no longer be able to cheat as badly as they do now.

Of course, if the GOP could field real candidates rather than the current crop of wanna-bes, has-beens and crazies, they'd win outside the margin of cheat...

That is all.

Christmastime in Southie...

Heh. Stickman sends in this wicked pissah vid of life in the Boston 'burbs at Christmas...



If you don't like it, you must be retahded or sumpin'...

That is all.

Wish I'd Thought of That!

Blogson Merlin knows what I like...

Just because it's so awesome, I'll re-post the video from Merlin's post:



Cutting down a Christmas tree with a Mossberg 590 - G-d Bless America.

That is all.

Math Is Hard...

...It's even harder when the taxpayer takes it up the money chute. Bubblehead Les sends in a link from Michelle Malkin with an interesting twist on the Chevrolet Volt from Government Motors.

Analysis: Chevy Volt Costing Taxpayers $250,000 Per Vehicle
Each Chevy Volt sold thus far may have as much as $250,000 in state and federal dollars in incentives behind it – a total of $3 billion altogether, according to an analysis by James Hohman, assistant director of fiscal policy at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy.

Hohman looked at total state and federal assistance offered for the development and production of the Chevy Volt, General Motors’ plug-in hybrid electric vehicle. His analysis included 18 government deals that included loans, rebates, grants and tax credits. The amount of government assistance does not include the fact that General Motors is currently 26 percent owned by the federal government.

Kinda puts that $46K price tag in perspective, doesn't it? The Volt's not exactly flying off dealer floors at a shade under $50K; imagine if that price was closer to $300,000... Now, granted, the math is a little fuzzy - they're using every penny spent developing the batteries for the Volt as part of the development for the car, for example. While this is technically true, it's also simplistic - those batteries are now available for all electric cars going forward.

Although at a whopping 35 miles per charge, I'd say someone got ripped off big time on those batteries...

It's just funny. The greenies love to hate on SUVs and trucks for not having to conform to passenger car regulations, inferring that it's some sort of special loophole or legal trick responsible. Certainly it can't just be that {gasp} regulations are different for cars and trucks, could it? Yet factor in the staggering costs, incredible amounts of government grants, loans, and tax deferments, and the hybrids *still* cost a significant amount more than their gasoline counterparts, and that's the cost of R&D. Right.

The problem I have is that these imbeciles want to use this crappy technology to force the rest of us to conform to their whim. Cars that can't go more than 30 miles on a charge that cost more than my truck and my camper - combined - are held up as some sort of magical green panacea for our energy woes. This conveniently ignore the environmental risks associated with the battery production, the power generation needed for pure electrics or the need for a gasoline motor anyways in the hybrids. The Geo Metro, with a 1.0L inline 3 cylinder, got well over 50 MPG on the highway back in the early 1990s - and the fanciest hybrid available now, some 20 years later, can barely match that even with a battery.

This is progress?

That is all.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Oh That's NEAT!

Chance reviews a compact cleaning kit for on-the-spot cleaning.

I'm one of those guys Chance and Caleb like to give grief - I have this thing about cleaning my guns. After each range trip, I'll fire up an episode of "The Simpsons" on Hulu, sit down at the kitchen table (amply covered with towels, mind you; I won't make THAT mistake twice...) with the guns of the day, and scrub away all the dirt, grime, and accumulated garf from shooting. I've tried to go without cleaning; for T&E guns I consider it a necessity to let them get real dirty to see how non-OCD folks might experience things (i.e. let it get so dirty it starts having issues).

But I love having me a big ol' box of cleaning supplies. Now, in my range bag I've got a handful of commone bore brushes and a small box of patches as well as a cheap bottle of solvent and a bottle of oil. For 99% of my applications this is fine, but they're strewn about the range bag (it's actually a nylon tool bag and the cleaning stuff is in the outside pockets. Don't put cleaning supplies inside your range bag. Trust me on this). The kit that Chance reviews looks like it could take the place of all the miscellaneous cleaning stuff tucked in various pockets.

My only gripe with the review is that he didn't post it earlier so I could put it on my Christmas list!

That is all

PSA: Own Every Bullet...

Both Bubblehead Les and mopar sent me this very sad story out of OH:

Ohio Sheriff: Accident Led to Amish Girl's Shooting Death
FREDERICKSBURG, Ohio – A man cleaning his muzzle-loading rifle shot the gun into the air, accidentally killing a 15-year-old Amish girl driving a horse-drawn buggy more than a mile away, a sheriff said Tuesday.

Rachel Yoder was shot in the head Thursday night while traveling to her home in Wayne County, between Columbus and Akron. She had attended a Christmas party for employees, most of them under 18 years old, at an Amish produce farm and was riding home alone when she was shot, Wayne County sheriff's Capt. Douglas Hunter said.
A quibble, first. This was no accident. This was negligence, plain and simple. The four rules do not stop being applicable simply because it's a blackpowder firearm. The fourth rule is very much needed for cases like this - this imbecile decided that the best way to clear his firearm was to shoot it. Now, you or I would either a) Clear it that way before leaving the range to be safe; b) unload it the correct way (which, I will admit, may not be possible/easy to do with a BP firearm; or c) fire the damn thing into the ground where you know it won't hit anything vital.

Secondly: A mile and a half. From a black powder weapon. Think about that the next time you're tempted to launch one up in the air because "we're out in the middle of nowhere". There's still an ongoing investigation, so more evidence may come to light proving or disproving this idea, but right now it looks like one dumbass a mile and a half away killed someone completely accidentally. Had he been obeying the four rules, this young woman would still be alive. The story says no charges have been filed; I certainly hope they can pin an involuntary manslaughter charge on him at the least.

Because, you know, you do something as stupid as fire your gun randomly in the air, you deserve to be out a good $10K for a legal defense and/or a felony conviction...

That is all.

Countin' Up to Xmas!

Reader herbie sends in the latest DGC addition, which is a head-scratcher:

Under new law, shooting may be OK, DA says
A man who fatally shot a teenage boy and wounded the boy's father Saturday night in Montgomery County may have been justified in the shooting after the two came at him with baseball bats, according to the district attorney.

Under the "stand your ground" provision of the newly enacted Castle Doctrine, a person has the legal right to use deadly force if he believes it is necessary to protect himself from death or serious bodily injury, District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman said.
Let me see if I've got this straight. The shooter is the boyfriend. The deceased is the son of the husband. Woman was living with the boyfriend, had a falling out, called her husband to come get her? He shows up with his teenaged son, they get out with bats to rough the boyfriend up, he retreats but is cornered and winds up shooting the kid. Who was poking him with the bat. While he had a loaded gun in his hand. My head hurts.

There's a reason for the expression "Play stupid games, win stupid prizes"...

Dead Goblin Count: 224

That is all.

Okay, Now This is Cool!

Ross sends in this very interesting product that we need to get ahold of RIGHT NOW for testing:

Tactical Bleeding Zombie Targets
Each Zombie is manufactured in the USA and is hand painted to accurately resemble an infected human that just finished gnawing your neighbor Zed’s leg, to give you that realistic look so you really feel the hate. What makes our Zombie’s so special? They’re filled with biodegradable matter, which makes clean up a wee-bit easier…(are you happy, mom?) …and oh yah, let’s not forget, they bleed and burst into little pieces of blood soaked, Zombie matter when you shoot them!
Go check out the different models. I think I may have to contact these guys about receiving a unit for testing. In the name of science, of course; I think the gun blogosphere needs to know just what kind of real world damage these targets can take before they're unusable, and will selflessly arrange for multiple range visits if needed using different longarms, shotguns, and handguns if needed.

Plus I want to do a bayonet charge on one of these so bad I can taste it...

That is all.

Discount Stabby!

Wow. Stumbled across a serious bargain for an EDC knife:

Another Kershaw

I found this, a Kershaw Crown, at Wally World this past weekend. It was on clearance for $10, so I picked up the last two knives on the shelf. I'm a huge fan of Kershaw knives in general, with Blur, Barrage, and Leek models already in the burgeoning G. pocketknife rotation. At $10, it falls into the "disposable if needed" category and still have a back-up. Or I can have a handy gift for the discriminating gunnie if needed...

And besides, new knife!

That is all.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Another Victim of the Economy...

Bankruptcy drives Saab to end of road
Swedish automaker Saab filed for bankruptcy yesterday after major stockholder General Motors blocked the company’s sale to Chinese investors.

“It looks like it’s over,” said Boston car baron Ray Ciccolo, who owns Norwood Saab and Watertown’s Charles River Saab — two of Massachusetts’ roughly 10 remaining Saab dealerships.
The writing has been on the wall for Saab ever since GM did nothing more than rebadge their crappy cars and SUVs as Saabs rather than let Saab engineers continue their work. Just like GM's aggressive re-branding cost them Saturn, Saab is the latest gangrenous appendage to be cut off and left to rot. A combination of stagnant design and lackluster reliability doomed the premium car company to the junk yard of history.

You could say it's a real Saab story...

That is all.

Remember, Only the Police Should Have Guns...

Because, you know, you want only cops to be armed when they're escorting their prostitute girlfriends to engagements in their marked cruiser or intimidating witnesses...

I-Team: MBTA Police Officer Suspended For Mailing Dead Rats
BOSTON (CBS) – An MBTA police officer is suspended after he was caught mailing dead rats. The I-Team has learned it stemmed from possible involvement with prostitutes.
Yeah. You read that correctly. But wait, it gets better!
Sources say Officer Thorpe’s girlfriend offered her personal services on Craigslist.com and that the uniformed officer would drive her and her friends to appointments in his marked MBTA cruiser during his midnight shift, offering protection.
On the job. In uniform. In a marked cruiser. And he's bringing his prostitute girlfriend to meet johns - and some idiot stiffed her (Lord, forgive me for these jokes...) But yeah, he's one of the Only Ones that's trained and careful enough to be allowed to carry firearms. That's what our intellectual superiors who push for radical gun control want us to believe - that the magical police badge automatically makes someone a better, smarter, more careful person with judgement far superior to that of us mere mortals.

Rather than just normal, fallible men and women tasked with a specific job...

That is all.

Tuesday Campaign Pic, Part 23

If it's Tuesday, it must be Øbama campaign poster time!

What could possibly go wrong?

We've all got to do our part to help Øbama gets his message out to the people while he's on vacation in Hawaii. Again...

That is all.

I'm Going To Hell...

...but when I saw this link title:

Jobs That Died in 2011

My first thought was, Um, Steve?

(Sorry Alan)

That is all.

In Support of Diversity...

Over the weekend, Unc kicked over a hornet's nest with this post. Unc has a variety of carry guns, and chooses which gun to carry based on concealment options and other factors.

Kinda like me:

Carry Diversity!

(I'll point out that I am even more diverse than Unc, as I have wheelguns as well as polymer and steel pistols...)

The Colt and the L-frame Smith & Wesson ride on the belt when a good cover garment can be worn. Oversized chamois shirt, fleece pullover, etc. - basically whenever I can get away with something to cover an OWB holster. Could I drop this to one firearm? Certainly. The Glock is my go-to gun for IWB carry - while it is sizable, the Crossbreed carries it well and there's 10 rounds of .45 ACP goodness with 13 backing it up. Might change this over to the S&W M&P9 compact after the reviewing is done, though - same capacity, much smaller and lighter package.

The pocket guns boil down to either a J-frame Smith & Wesson revolver or the Smith & Wesson Bodyguard 380. Again, could this be one single firearm? Certainly. But again, much like the Colt vs. the 242, somedays I feel like a revolver, others I feel like the semi-auto. I shoot both about the same (again, same as the Colt/ S&W 242); often it boils down to which fits best in the wardrobe of the day - pants with looser pockets will get the J-frame whereas the Bodyguard gets the nod in more restrictive wear.

Realistically, once you make the decision to go > 1 firearm for self-defense, the field is wide open. Those that have one gun for CCW only and practice with it religiously will have an edge over those of us that rotate firearms - there's just no getting around that fact. If you're not comfortable carrying a full-sized handgun, whether because of concealment options, physical constraints, or whatever reason, then logic would dictate that you only ever carry a small gun in a moderate caliber. We're capable of multi-tasking; as long as we plan and prepare and train with different platforms, we'll be fine.

As a wise man once wrote: "Specialization is for insects"...

That is all.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Go. Read. Laugh.

CHRISTMAS NOUN 4: OCCUPY CHRISTMAS NOUN

Larry Correia is a genius. An insane, slightly unbalanced genius. It is not by coincidence that he lives in UT, which is also not coincidentally really damn far away from Massachusetts. No, neither of us can explain Mitt Romney. Anyways, Larry's got the fourth installation in the CHRISTMAS NOUN series, and you need to go read it right now or mind control rays will shoot out of the Tickle Me Elmo doll you got your niece for Christmas and rot your brain.

Or Wendell the Super Manatee will drive over your foot in his monster truck. One of the two. I forget which. Something bad will happen if you don't read Larry's latest. Like a plague. Of incontinent fruit bats. Or armadillos with really bad BO. Think of something bad. Then light it on fire. With sterno. And that smell from melting plastic. Yeah, that bad. Times two.

Go, read, laugh, and have a Merry Christmas!

That is all.

Too Good Not To Share...

Man, I have GOT to get over the border soon. I love New Hampshire.

NH may warn drivers they're entering MA
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) - Some New Hampshire Republicans are proposing that signs be set up along unmarked roads leading into Massachusetts, saying: "Warning: Massachusetts Border 500 Feet."
What an awesome state. Looking out for their residents and everything... Not to mention giving the Volksrepublik a nice little poke in the eye at the same time. It does bring to mind a post that Mike did a while back, as well as Weerd's follow-up, with regards to the illusory nature of state boundaries. I noticed this at the Northeast bloggershoot this past summer in ferrying folks around the state of NH. The route taken from the nearest hotel in NH to the sooper seekrit range involved dipping into and out of Massachusetts - even when we deliberately avoided the major highways. Now, all firearms were unloaded and in locked cases, and we were all legal in our start and end points, so FOPA applies and all, but still. Someone could very well have meandered across the line without even realizing it.

I've noticed this on the motorcycle when I take off on a "where does this road go" type ride. I can be following some backroad in northeast MA, follow it for a period of time, see no signs other than street signs, when all of a sudden I find myself in a town in NH. I've seen guys coming back from motorcycle weekend inadvertantly get a few miles into MA without realizing they needed their helmets on. While the onus is certainly on the individual to make sure they're obeying the laws of the state they're in, sometimes it's not cut-and-dry as to where free state N ends and occupied territory M begins.

At least good ol' Live Free or Die land is looking out for her citizens...

That is all.

Or, As I Like To Call It, My Range Bag...

Scott sends in a good case of ZOMG PSH! from inside my state (shocking, I know...)

Police seize stash of weapons from home
FALL RIVER, M.A (WPRI) - A local man is arrested after police seize a stash of weapons from a Fall River home.
...
Once inside, police discovered a loaded handgun and shotgun, a sniper rifle and
semi-automatic rifle, and more than 600 rounds of ammunition.

ZOMG! 600 rounds! Or, as I like to call it, a short day at the range... Look, I know it makes good copy to scare the white people (thanks for that one Unc!), but I buy my .22LR ammo in boxes of 550 rounds. It is entirely possible that I might have 750+ rounds of just .22LR in my range bag alongside another 2-300 rounds of centerfire ammunition. 600 rounds of anything isn't news - well, maybe 10mm, but that's for another reason entirely.

And go look at that picture. There's four long arms and one sorry-looking handgun. Of the longarms, it appears that one is a semi-auto shotgun, one is a banged-up break-top H&R shotgun, one Marlin model 60, and what might be a Rem 700 - the aforementioned ZOMG SNIPER RIFLE... Got that, Fudds? Your beloved deer rifle is now a sniper rifle... And, not for nothing, but four out of five of those weapons could be purchased with the MA "shall issue" FID card.

Perspective. MA has none.

That is all.

Suppose It's Worth Mentioning...

By now everyone's seen the news that Kim Il Jong has shuffled off this mortal coil joined the choir invisible snuffed it.

I'm not a foreign policy wonk. Were I sitting in the Oval Office, the Department of State would have one function, and that would be to remind foreign potentates that we still have the biggest stick around, and it's in their country's best interests not to do anything that would require us to use the stick. We also have a pretty damn big carrot, as well, for countries that don't muck around with things that concern us. Don't start none, there won't be none.

What jumped out at me was that the new heir apparent, Kim Jong Un, is somewhere in his late 20s. He's half my age and supreme potentate of a country. Wow. I'm lucky if I can get all 10 kids on my basketball team to pay attention for a half an hour, and this guy's younger than me and running a country. Hat's off to you, brother, you're gonna need it. Now, granted, he kinda had it handed to him like some Ivy League legacy, but he's still in command of an army and allegedly some nuclear weapons. I'm pretty glad I don't have access to that...

"May you live in interesting times" indeed...

That is all.

Merry Gunnie Christmas!

You may have seen this before, but it's so awesome it's worth seeing again...



"Jingle Bells" performed by St. Nick himself using a 1911. Brilliant!

That is all.

Something Nice for Your Pocket...

...is the new Dragon Leatherworks Wyvern:

Bodyguard 380 Wyvern

Dennis sent this little beauty to me to see what I thought about it. I've been bugging the hell out of him for a pocket holster for ages now, and he's finally seen the light and come up with the Wyvern. I've felt bad about the beautiful holsters Dennis has sent in the past, as they only see true OC once in a blue moon when I visit America for blogshoots and such. The rest of the time they're hidden away, either concealed under layers of clothing or left in the holster drawer when it's too warm for a cover garment.

But this little baby I can use all the time:

Perfect for pocket!

Yes, that is what you think it is in the corner:

VC Wyvern!

I'm going to be putting this little beaut through it's paces over the next few weeks and posting a full report later. I've only had a brief few moments to try it out so far; initial impressions are quite favorable so far. I'll have much more to say once I've had a chance to use the holster all day every day for a few weeks - and with the Wyvern, even those of us in states that don't allow OC can make the most of Dragon Leatherworks' holsters.

Lastly, don't forget you can win a Wyvern over at Linoge's place!

That is all.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

No Blog Today, Sorry...

Wound up finishing my Xmas shopping...




It's a tough job, but someone's gotta do it...

That is all.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Saturday Circle...

Vicious Circle #118: Quick, Say Something Funny is up for your listening pleasure.

Please join alan, Barron, Weerdbeard, Roadkill and your humble host as we discuss a cornucopia of topics including but not limited to the MA cop who "lost" his rifle, me dual-wielding Apple devices, Officer Roid Rage, the OC brouhaha, events in NY, and other current events that happened to catch our interest. Oh and SQUIRREL.

Vicious Circle: Remember, you get what you pay for.

That is all.

Friday, December 16, 2011

Outdoors... To The Extreme!

Huh. It's interesting that I stumble across this at the same time as my outdoor experience post. Here's a look at some of the first attempts to explore Antartica:

Captain Scott and Captain Shackleton: A 100 Year Old Expedition
If there is a land above the seas that remains a last frontier for mankind, it’s Antarctica. A recent GPS mapping conducted by the British Antarctic Survey provided a reminder of how uncharted and unknown the vast white continent still is. When Antarctica’s hulking glacial landmass—icy and inhospitable—was spotted by 18th century British Captain James Cook, he remarked: “I make bold to declare that the world will derive no benefit from it.”
The slideshow alone is worth the read, like this shot:

(image from article)

If I could pick one place on this planet to visit for a week or two, Antartica would be very high on the list indeed. Something about the sweeping panorama; the austere, beautiful landscape; the extremes at which man needs to push himself simply to survive in that environment just stir the explorer wanderlust hidden deep down beneath the meek suburban dad exterior.

Of course, it could also be that there are very few people there, meaning a lot less stupidity to put up with...

That is all.

Poodleshooter Addition...

Ruth sends in the latest addition to the count:

Burglary suspect had lengthy arrest record
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - A homeowner shot and killed a burglary suspect after a fight Tuesday night, Jacksonville police said.

Police said Patrick Jones, 24, was looking for homes and cars to break into while roaming a Westside neighborhood near Dayton Road and Lane Avenue South at about 5:30 p.m.
According to the (brief) report, Jones got into a struggle with one of the homeowners whose house he was burglarizing, and was shot dead for his troubles. At just 24 years of age, Mr. Jones had run up a serious list of felonies, including drug possession and resisting arrest, which naturally just shows how he was on the verge of turning his life around. Unfortunately, he met up with a homeowner who disavowed Martha Coakley's plea to resist "self-help" and wound up on the wrong end of a gun...

It's sad when one so young loses their life in such an avoidable manner. But what's even sadder is that there's a homeowner out there who had to make the ultimate decision to drop the hammer on another human being, all over what? A handful of cheap electronics? Maybe some petty cash? Jewelry? Jones was willing to risk his life for a few dollars worth of items as opposed to working, and he paid the price for betting wrongly. To the forces aligned against freedom, they decry that someone would be willing to kill over their possessions. To those of us who cherish freedom, we shake our heads at someone willing to die over someone else's possessions.

It's a matter of perspective, to be sure, but it's rather telling, isn't it?

Dead Goblin Count: 223

That is all.

Camping With TheBoy

5.11 Gear is sponsoring a contest asking us to write about a great outdoor experience:




Here's mine.

Every year our Cub Scout pack has a weekend-long camping trip to our Scout Reservation in New Hampshire. The older Scouts arrive Friday night and help set up camp; the younger boys show up bright and early Saturday morning and stay through lunch on Sunday. This past year was no different, except for one thing: It was my son’s last time as a Cub Scout. He’ll be crossing over to Boy Scouts before this season’s camping trip, so this was the last trip that we took where my presence was required – although I’ll camp with him as long as he’ll have me along.

We arrived somewhat late Friday afternoon; I took the day off work so that I could make a supply run and be home before he got home from school. We made it to the Reservation a couple hours before dinner time, and upon arrival it was my son and I, my Committee Chair, and another dad and his Scout at the Reservation. After offloading our gear, we quickly got to work making camp:

Tent Sweet Tent

Set up the tent, two cots inside (I don’t do sleeping on the ground, not after a couple bad car wrecks), a small table with a lamp, and sleeping bags and blankets. A couple camp chairs out front to rest our legs, ax and saw safely placed in the ax yard, wood gathered, and our campsite was ready to roll. We set up the carport for our eating area (along with dragging several 500 pound picnic tables [they felt that heavy!] over…) and got the grill set up for our dinner. Next we sent the boys out to gather wood, set up for dinner, and the evening’s festivities were well underway.

After dinner, with our bellies full, our camp set up, and night rapidly falling, we built a good-sized campfire with the wood the boys had gathered and settled in for the night. Folks were arriving family by family, and we took turns holding flashlights, bringing lanterns, and helping everyone get squared away. Having the right gear is crucial to a good camping trip – in this case, a Coleman lantern made before I was born, a relic from a simpler time was a main source of light. It was interesting to see the contrast between the lantern I inherited from my dad casting light bright as day right next to a fancy LED flashlight no larger than a box of matches with a similarly powerful light.

As the night wore on, and the temperature dropped, it because more evident how necessary having the proper gear would be. After getting the boys ready for bed, wrapping them up in blankets and tucking them in their polyfiber sleeping bags, the dads (it’s always dads) gathered around the fire for an impromptu planning session for the next day and to keep warm. Again, the contrast was amusing – the high-tech flashlights next to the white gas lantern, dads checking their smartphones around the campfire, the oldest gathering place known to man.

Later that night, the fire all burnt down and safely put out, we retired to our tents to find that the temperature had dropped well below freezing. I checked on my son, he was cold but still adamant about staying in the tent (there are cabins on site for family members that don’t do the tent thing). Bundling up a little more, we decided to tough it out in the tent – we had our sleeping bags, blankets, and several layers of clothing – we’d be all set, right? Well, about three o’clock in the morning we both woke up shivering. The temperature had dropped into the low 20s, and a light wind was blowing through the campground. We made the decision to finish the evening in the windproof cabin – which also had a stove – and found the rest of the Pack inside the cabin getting a fire lit in the stove!

The rest of the weekend was uneventful – and warmer. Saturday we welcomed the younger Scouts and their families who arrived after breakfast and sent the boys off to different stations for the day. They shot BB guns, ran obstacle courses, learned how to shoot a bow and arrow, and had fire building competitions. We took a hike together as a Pack, then finished the evening with a roaring campfire down at the Reservation Council ring. Saturday night was much calmer, and the rest of the camping trip was uneventful.

What did I learn from this trip? Well, the right gear makes all the difference - thermals and an extra blanket are good, but a roaring fire in a warm stove is better. The old standards still work - but the new tech is pretty cool, too. My 40 year old lantern throws light a good ways, and runs for quite a long time on a tank of fuel, but my LED flashlight doesn't glow red hot at the end of the day and can be used inside the tent. Things don't need to be replaced just because they're old, but sometimes the new stuff replaces the old because it works better.

Oh, and any time spent camping with your kid is a right good time!

That is all.