Sunday, February 15, 2026
Saturday, February 14, 2026
Automotif DCXII...
A 1971 Ford F-250 Custom Styleside in Grabber Blue with aftermarket decals and partly blacked-out grille. Photographed using a Nikon 1 V3 and 1 Nikkor 10-100mm f/4.5-5.6 VR zoom lens.
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Friday, February 13, 2026
Tab Clearing...
- I had somehow made it this far in life without ever stumbling across the etymology of "dungarees".
- Gallup organization ends nine decades of monthly presidential approval rating polling.
- Ring's expensive Super Bowl ad inadvertently woke a lot of Americans up to the realization that they'd paid to build an Orwellian surveillance network to spy on themselves.
Shoot Gooder
There's a neat training opportunity in Texas at the end of the month. The class is called "Near and Far: The Complete Handgun Fight", co-taught by Greg Ellifritz and Jeff Gonzales.
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Greg describes it thusly:
"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."
Labels:
Boomsticks,
Gun School,
Preparedness
Thursday, February 12, 2026
Death Ray Spray-and-Pray
Apparently the valiant men and women of the United States Customs and Border Protection agency were using borrowed Army anti drone lasers to protect us from the scourge of children's mylar party balloons (or, since I suppose they could have drifted north from Ciudad Juarez across the Rio Grande, los globos).
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.
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Labels:
News,
planes,
Stupid Cop Tricks,
WTF?
Revolver mods and what they're good for...
I wrote a piece enumerating the various modifications that one can perform to a carry revolver to make it more useful, and which ones may cause more trouble than they're worth.
Labels:
Boomsticks,
gun wrenching,
revolvers,
writing
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Incompetence or Malice?
In today's episode of "Government: Incompetent or Malicious?", the FAA announced late yesterday that it would be shutting down El Paso airport and the surrounding airspace below 18,000 feet for ten days due to unspecified national security reasons.
The only thing I do know for sure that it means is that the airlines are going to be burning cubic yards of money with ELP idled for over a week, and a lot of execs for Fortune 500 companies with offices in El Paso, the 22nd most populous city in the United States, are going to be scrambling to rebook flights via Albuquerque*.
Amazon’s probably not happy either, nor will any manufacturing companies located there who use just-in-time supply chains.
*I mean, ABQ is a pleasant little airport, but you literally have to traverse the Jornada del Muerto to get there from El Paso.
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There was no advance warning, nobody seems to know why (as of this writing), and even Biggs Army Airfield at Fort Bliss is affected.
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.
The only thing I do know for sure that it means is that the airlines are going to be burning cubic yards of money with ELP idled for over a week, and a lot of execs for Fortune 500 companies with offices in El Paso, the 22nd most populous city in the United States, are going to be scrambling to rebook flights via Albuquerque*.
Amazon’s probably not happy either, nor will any manufacturing companies located there who use just-in-time supply chains.
UPDATE: Santa Teresa, NM airport, too. Also, gosh, I hope nobody needs to get airlifted to University Medical Center in El Paso, which is the only Level 1 trauma center in the region, in the next ten days.
UPDATE 2: And now the FAA has lifted the closure.
*I mean, ABQ is a pleasant little airport, but you literally have to traverse the Jornada del Muerto to get there from El Paso.
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Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Moral Panics...
We're in the middle of a couple of moral panics right now and one of them is centered on allowing minors access to social media.
Discord is the latest app to implement age verification requirements to allow full access to the app's functionality.
One problem with this is that different jurisdictions have such different protocols they require app publishers to follow. The UK has one, the EU is fixing to roll out a different one, and the various US states that have passed legislation... I'm not sure how many that is, but I know it's into double digits ...all have their own.
Some require the data collected, usually face scans or ID scans, to be deleted, while others require it to be stored. There are third party providers popping up with varying degrees of legit-ness and sincerity regarding data security. It's all a mess and it's based on something that's about as scientific as the love child of The Salem Witch Trials and Blackboard Jungle.
Add in VPNs and the fact that IP location has an error rate of at least 5% trying to figure out what state a user is in, and this is all just pushing rope uphill for no good reason.
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Monday, February 09, 2026
Weirdos.
I see the thought leaders on the Right are yet again rolling a critical failure on their "Can You Just Be Normal For Once In Your Life?" saving throws.
Conventions be damned, I ain't cheering for them.
With Indianapolis being an AFC city, it would be conventional sports fandom to cheer for the AFC team in the Super Bowl if the Colts weren't in it, but... yeah, there's no way I'm cheering for the Pats.
As a kid growing up in Atlanta when the Braves were still in the NL West the joke went "Who are an Atlanta baseball fan's two favorite teams? The Braves and whoever's playing the Dodgers."
So last night's manhandling of New England by the Seahawks was pretty tasty, if vicarious, revenge on our home team's nemesis.
I only caught the second half of the game, which means I watched it devolve from a slightly one-sided 9-0 affair into a 29-13 curb stomping. Seattle fans looked happy about getting sweet vengeance for Super Bowl XLIX.
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Labels:
bread and circuses
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