"Oh no, baby, what is you doin'?" |
Monday, February 28, 2022
Cargo Cult Car Stop Cult
Defense vs. Offense
Don't hit her again, Lester, and we're all cool.
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) February 28, 2022
Influencer
I look around the industry, the concealed carry space, and the training world and see many places where Todd influenced things for the better. In some cases he helped start or reframe a discussion, generate thought or interest in an area, or spur developments. Many of these things are still timely. However, I wanted to share a few qualities where Todd was exceptional in ways that are perhaps more universal than ‘just’ shooting.You should RTWT.
Sunday, February 27, 2022
Saturday, February 26, 2022
Not bad, for a Metrocon.
In a modern society, where the state has a monopoly on the use of violence, private violence is largely criminalized save in self-defense. If you grew up in such a society—which I assume most of you did—using violence to achieve private benefits is rightly seen as abnormal. Of course, it’s a constant struggle to keep it that way, because humans by nature have a violent streak that can come out among the poorly socialized. This is why calls to abolish the police are so idiotic. Human nature doesn’t change. Fail to tend the garden of civilization, and nature will reclaim it. Because gardens are not natural, they do not spontaneously emerge. They must be cultivated (a word that shares its root with culture). But given human nature, if crime no longer seems like a problem because it doesn’t touch your life, it’s no wonder that some people will think policing has outlived its usefulness. As G.K. Chesterton teaches us, it’s common for people to arrogantly assume a fence serves no purpose just because they don’t know what purpose it serves.(Of course, we're in a through-the-looking-glass world where Goldberg is in some respects more wookie-suited than Rand Paul, who has spent the last half-decade showing a newfound ability to toady to authoritarianism provided it's draped in the right bunting.)
Friday, February 25, 2022
Superfood
QotD: Glowing in the Dark Edition...
This will be on History tests, eventually -- presuming there's anyone around and current events don't eventually poke a hole in history big enough to throw a Dark Ages through.A reporter at the BBC*, sounding a little thick, wondered why... if this was such a humanitarian crisis and an affront to the international order ...Uncle Sam wasn't sending troops.
...that lack of national interest hasn't stopped former presidents from expending blood and treasure on behalf of others in the past. In 1995 Bill Clinton intervened militarily in the war that followed the collapse of Yugoslavia. And in 2011 Barack Obama did the same in the Libyan civil war, both largely on humanitarian and human rights grounds.The real reason we happily intervened in those instances wasn't oil (Serbia didn't have any and we weren't getting any to speak of from Libya) but because neither Benghazi, Belgrade, nor Baghdad had the Strategic Rocket Forces in their hip pocket.
In 1990 George H W Bush justified his international coalition to expel Iraq from Kuwait as defending the rule of law against the rule of the jungle.
Bogus
Some of the livestreams appear to be authentic, showing crowds gathered in major cities to protest Russian aggression. But other TikTok users are pretending to be in Ukraine, using doctored or dubbed footage of other places in an attempt to solicit followers and monetary donations.
One account, which called for donations through TikTok, featured a livestream of a line of houses in a residential area as the sounds of gunshots, sirens and people screaming for help could be heard in the background. But that account hours earlier had posted a different angle of the same street in which cars with U.K. license plates were visible.
Thursday, February 24, 2022
Wars and Rumors of Wars
Those are Mi-8's flying low and slow in the 'burbs of Kyiv and not even taking AAA fire.
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) February 24, 2022
Looks like Russia has air supremacy if they can operate a daylight heliborne assault with impunity like that. https://t.co/MuTDwsFGRl
This might be the year...
Wednesday, February 23, 2022
Beef Tea, But Seriously This Time
Automotif CCLXXX...
In an alternate universe, I flagged this guy down and said "I will trade you everything I own except the clothes I'm wearing, my laptop, my S&W Model 13, and my Nikon D700 for the keys to this car," and he said yes.
Tuesday, February 22, 2022
QotD: Woke Edition
This is a great example of one of the key characteristics of wokeness: representation without authorization. The woke present themselves as the spokesmen—excuse me: persons of spoke—for the preferences and agenda of various minority groups, without ever really asking those groups what they want or need.The linked essay is worth a read, as I've watched people turn "woke" into one of those content-free words that just means "person on the other team", like "commie" or "fascist".
"Low" versus "No"
Monday, February 21, 2022
The Paradox of Site Moderation
An iron law of free speech on social media is that any site that allows you to use the n-word and call people homophobic slurs is going to be flooded by people who want to do nothing but use the n-word and call people homophobic slurs.
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) February 21, 2022
It's either jannies, or you're hip-deep in literal Nazis.
.
"Only losers blog."
Blogging well requires a tremendous amount of work, including work along the lines of what the socialists call “emotional labor.” That’s evidenced by the phenomenon of the dead blog: one that simply stops updating one day and becomes essentially abandoned.Do it long enough and don't rigorously and continually curate that blogroll in the sidebar [guilty cough], and it can turn into something of a digital mausoleum, a dead strip mall on a weed-grown offramp of the information superhighway.
When a magazine closes down, it goes out a bit like a restaurant or a store. There will often be a final publishing day, maybe a heartfelt note to the readers about the difficult media landscape, a last hurrah. Many websites of shuttered magazines remain online for years, frozen indefinitely; they look just as they did on their final day. Others see their archives moved over to another site, or simply vanish into cyberspace.
For dead blogs, however, the pattern is usually different. Sometimes they end following a building sense of boredom or despair; other times they just end suddenly, with no acknowledgement or last words. Sometimes, a blog’s death is something a reader must divine, rather than a fact explicitly stated by the writer. Quite often, a blogger will intend to get back to blogging, and may even occasionally take a stab at it—“long time no write,” they say guiltily, promising to “post more regularly now”—so it can be debated whether such a blog is really dead. Often, a years-old unfulfilled promise to write more becomes a blog’s unwitting valediction.
Sunday Dinner Theater
Sunday, February 20, 2022
Hey, look!
For the purpose of defensive shooting, this bladed, slow-fire bullseye stance got supplanted in the early 20th century by various forms of “instinctive” or “point” shooting. There were reasons for this, however, beyond it being some sort of fad or trend.Bullseye and Free Pistol shooters don't hold pistols one-handed because it's more accurate, they hold pistols one-handed because the rules say you can't hold them two-handed.
For instance, W.E. Fairbairn and Eric A. Sykes of the Shanghai Municipal Police, had a large force of officers to train, less than 40 rounds a year to issue them for practice and, as trainer Tom Givens points out, Colt .45 and .380 ACP semi-automatics with rudimentary sights with which to arm them. Given that he was mostly preparing them for close-range gun battles in dark alleys where those thumbnail sights wouldn’t even be visible anyway, it’s probably unsurprising that the program of instruction emphasized coarse pointing techniques. Reflecting this, the qualification course was all at a range of 6 to 12 feet and 50 percent or better of hits anywhere on a silhouette was a passing score.
At about the same time here in the States, the “FBI Crouch” was becoming popular, despite it being a technique employed by Jelly Bryce who was, as Texas firearm instructor Karl Rehn notes, a physical prodigy who could see the traces of pistol bullets in flight. It was like expecting every Little League pitcher to be blessed with the abilities and talents of a Cy Young winner. “Just throw it like Randy Johnson did, kid.”
Shifting Pathologies
"This mix of seemingly good and bad news is no paradox. The good news is often just one consequence of the bad. There are fewer divorces because there are fewer marriages, and so more of those that begin survive. There are fewer abortions because there are fewer pregnancies, and so more of those that happen are wanted. There are fewer out-of-wedlock births because there are fewer births in general. The same pattern is evident beyond sexuality and family too. Fewer teenagers are dying in car accidents because fewer teenagers are getting driver’s licenses. There is less social disorder, we might say, because there is less social life. We are doing less of everything together, so that what we do is a little more tidy and controlled."
Oh, the humanity!
The VB-10,000 is literally chainsawing the ship into pieces. |
Saturday, February 19, 2022
Peak PJ...
"By midnight Humphrey and I were stinking drunk, and we fell to talking with a fellow named Jack who was only twenty-two but looked a lot like he robbed gas stations and shot liquor-store owners to get his heart started in the morning. He had one of those sharp Appalachian faces with a row of missing teeth and some scars, and he'd recently shot himself in the stomach over something to do with an estranged wife. He showed us where the bullet had come out. Now he was living in a trailer with another lady and her five kids but they were all off at her mother's canning something, so he invited us to stay with him. We were sure he was a homicidal psychopath and we'd be torture-murdered in the night, but it was that or sleep in the car.The man was a titan of letters.
Actually, Jack turned out to be a perfectly amiable guy. And it was all we could do to keep him from persuading us to take a little vacation and spend a week down there fishing for razorback pigs, or whatever they do on vacation in the piney woods. But we didn't know that until morning, and by then we were much too hung over to apologize properly."
1957 Buick Special |
Friday, February 18, 2022
Same Planet, Different Worlds
Ouch
to be a writer in 1967 meant getting paid the equivalent of $30,000 for an article called “Ballin’ Out The Boredest Babes In The Riviera” and hanging out in a restaurant 19 hours a day. today it means $200 to write the worst idea you can think of so people rage share your article
— 30 year old man saying he is homesick (@ByYourLogic) May 4, 2021
While I haven't yet started chasing those $200 internet writing gigs, my first column a dozen years ago, writing about computer stuff for an internet site that was mostly a labor of love for the site owner, paid even less than that. Plenty of people will churn out content for free in return for exposure, and if all you want to do is keep a content farm churning, that and a bit of editing for SEO is all you're really looking for.
Thursday, February 17, 2022
Explosion and Aftermath
Hiding the Light
Automotif CCLXXIX...
Olympus E-3 & Zuiko 14-35mm f/2 |
War Stories
We were now on a rutted dirt track, with trees closing in on us. It was pitch black, and inside the car, there was a nervous air. The column pulled onto another, parallel, track, but we continued straight on, our driver worried about being spotted. Our car bounced and ducked, flashes of red from the vehicles’ tail lights appearing occasionally through the trees. Eventually, we came out onto a bigger track and curved back towards the column. To our right, we could just make out the small, rickety barbed wire fence that marked Russia’s border with Ukraine. And about 20 yards ahead of us, we saw an astonishing sight.On the other hand, veteran photojournalist Lucas Jackson had some advice on Reddit for an aspiring freelance war correspondent:
"...The big reason is that it’s a bad idea to go in by yourself (no-one will pay for you to go w no established relationship) is that if the shit hits the fan you have no one to help you. Ransom (journalists are often seen as walking ATMs), injury (I know someone in Syria who was captured and had all his teeth kicked out) or even repatriation of your body..."
Wednesday, February 16, 2022
QotD: Economics Edition...
"It's a much better time to buy a set of wrenches than a new car." -Roberta XSpeaking of which, I have about a month to get the Mustang roadtrip-worthy. Hopefully everything I need is in stock.
The other shoe dropped.
After giving away a copy of Parliament of Whores yesterday, I wound up dragging my own copy down from the attic and re-reading it for what must be at least the sixth time. Despite having vast swatches of it memorized, it's still laugh-out-loud funny. Every bon mot to ever spill from my fingertips is due to reading lots and lots of P.J. O'Rourke and Florence King.I recollected it in January of 2016 when Florence King passed away.
Tuesday, February 15, 2022
Backup...
Pattern Recognition...
Monday, February 14, 2022
Daaaaaaamn, that's gotta sting.
So sorry to hear
— TireSlashingHat (@Popehat) February 14, 2022
Your love hit the skids
Report them or else
We’ll set fire to your kids https://t.co/hpU8NSTvwC
Since we're piling on...
Sunday, February 13, 2022
Looking back on Friday...
You might be a nerd if...
Words Mean Things
"We argued over who had the better policies, and over whose view of human nature and the right order of society should prevail. But I didn’t think he was a Communist and he didn’t think I was a Nazi.
Now we use these terms all day long and no one knows what they mean. I was talking with my friend Preet Bharara, the proprietor of a newsletter on politics and justice, and we were frustrated (as many of us are) by how much of our public discourse is short-circuited by people who don’t understand basic terminology."
Saturday, February 12, 2022
As reported...
Thursday, February 10, 2022
It's not junk science, it's just junk.
[T]he system Maryland bought created images so imprecise that when an investigator submitted a crime scene casing, the database software would sometimes spit out hundreds of matches. The state sued the manufacturer in 2009 for $1.9 million, settling three years later for $390,000.The bigger problem is that "ballistic fingerprinting", like many other forensic techniques, relies on pattern matching and is highly subjective, despite being presented to juries as "science".
Alicia Carriquiry is director at the Center for Statistics and Applications in Forensic Evidence at Iowa State. She and her team have been assembling a database of the ballistics marks left on bullets. Their research thus far has indicated there’s little support for the claim that every gun leaves unique marks on the bullets it fires—or least not in a way that’s useful for distinguishing one gun from another.(Archive Link)
Controlled studies have also shown that the entire field of forensic firearms analysis is inherently subjective. The Houston Forensic Science Center is one of the few crime labs in the country to take a strictly scientific approach to forensics. Director Peter Stout regularly administers blind proficiency tests to his analysts. He first gave his ballistics analysts “sensitivity tests,” in which they were asked to determine whether two bullets were fired by the same gun. The analysts reached the correct conclusion about 76 percent of the time—leaving a lot of room for reasonable doubt.
Stout also gave his analysts “specificity tests,” in which they were asked to determine whether two bullets were fired by different guns. Here, the success rate dipped to 34 percent.
Carriquiry points to another recent sensitivity study—funded by the FBI itself—in which the analysts’ success rate was just 48 percent. “A dispassionate observer would say that they would have made fewer mistakes if they had flipped a coin,” Carriquiry says. “Given that astonishingly low accuracy, it seems pure hubris to be recommending to examiners to ‘push back.’”
Wednesday, February 09, 2022
Yes, this...
https://t.co/iT4bPHhIYM pic.twitter.com/WmNP1XNUdL
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) February 9, 2022
Tuesday, February 08, 2022
Automotif CCLXXVIII...
Bentley Flying Spur V8 in, I believe, Old English White rolling down College Avenue yesterday. I was on the way to Fresh Market for sodas on foot. I still haven't attempted backing the Z3 out of the garage, but I'll have to brave the alley tomorrow or Thursday. We're supposed to get a good ten degrees of thaw every day for the rest of the week, though.
Monday, February 07, 2022
The Truman Show
After graciously turning over the controls of government to his successor, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Truman and his wife Bess left Secret Service behind and went on a road trip in his new 1953 Chrysler New Yorker, with Harry at the wheel virtually the entire time. Visiting friends in DC, doing the tourist thing in New York City where their only child Margaret lived, and eventually back to their home in Independence, Missouri, the Trumans were in touch with ordinary Americans the whole time. There are some who argue that they were the last “ordinary American” first family to occupy the White House.This sounds right up my alley, so it's next in my reading queue.
Safari
Red-bellied woodpecker in a tree across the street. |
Sunday, February 06, 2022
Greatest Hits
Saturday, February 05, 2022
Friday, February 04, 2022
Yelling at Clouds
With the confirmation of a Ferrari truck in the offing, the automotive universe of my childhood and adolescence has officially crossed some sort of event horizon from which there is no returning.
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) February 4, 2022
This is somehow weirder than electric Porsches and Mustang station wagons. https://t.co/OV5tBwB7mA
Classic Movies
The worst kind of snow...almost.
They'd shoveled and salted the walk once already... |
Chicago Combo: ½ beef + ½ Italian sausage, hot peppers, dipped roll |
Thursday, February 03, 2022
I guess it's the thought that counts?
Although some of these structures are not yet a decade old, my data shows that only six remain in reasonably good shape. Most either have had partial repairs or have been completely renovated because of structural problems. Two were demolished because of severe mold problems.This sequel to The Ugly American could be called The Ugly Angeleno, I guess?
Many of the houses lacked ordinary, essential features such as rain gutters, overhangs, waterproof painting or covered beams – all of which are necessary to withstand New Orleans’ subtropical climate and heavy rainfall.
Purse Fight
The Times spent an undisclosed figure on the game, but described it in the “low-seven figures.” The company said in a statement that “at the time it moves to The New York Times, Wordle will be free to play for new and existing players, and no changes will be made to its gameplay.” The migration will happen “very shortly,” a spokesman said.
It’s a notable acquisition for the news organization, which has a goal of reaching 10 million digital subscribers by 2025 and has singled out the games and cooking parts of its business as “a key part” of its strategy. As of December 2021, New York Times Games and Cooking had 1 million subscribers each.
Automotif CCLXXVII...
Even though I own a 5.0, I ain't mad. That's a cool car, and a clever plate. |
Wednesday, February 02, 2022
Settle down, Tod Lubitch.
You'll see Extremely Online people (both Left and Right) occasionally post things that make you think "Wow, you spend so much time in an ideological echo chamber hugbox that you have no idea how that shit sounds to normal people, do you?"
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) February 2, 2022
"You encounter a mugger. Roll for initiative."
One thing I find interesting is that average consumer/shooter has an idea of projectile velocities that doesn't have a lot of correlation with the real world. It's not their fault, because it's entirely encouraged by the ammo manufacturers. (It's why I joke about "Velocity as measured at the cartridge box flap".)That particular batch of Ranger-T, with a ~40fps velocity spread across a ten-shot string, was actually pretty consistent, especially for +P+ ammunition. (High pressure loads in 4" and shorter barrels can be a crap shoot. Is everything gonna combust good before the bullet leaves the barrel or not?)
As a for-instance, I have here on my desk a box of Winchester's 127gr +P+ Ranger-T ammo. Winchester's web page says its velocity (out of a test fixture) is 1250fps at the muzzle and 1236fps at five yards. I measure pistol velocities at nine feet from the muzzle, and when I chrono'ed that lot out of my M&P it averaged 1206fps over a ten-shot string, with a velocity spread from 1190fps to 1230fps. Adding a quarter or half inch of barrel length might boost the velocity...by an amount small enough to get lost in the statistical noise.
Mr. Boberg's written reasons behind the [XR9 pistol] design (increasing velocity in hopes of better expansion from 9mm bullets) always struck me as a very...well, simplistic grasp of terminal ballistics. "I will add .5" of barrel length which will add 25fps of velocity which will increase damage by 1d8+1" when all of it is just picking fly poop out of pepper.
Gun Culture 2.0
Tuesday, February 01, 2022
Judging a Book by its Cover...
Bullpup
And before you hit me with "But Hiram Maxim...!", he died when ships and planes still had reciprocating engines and had to inefficiently waste energy yanking pistons to a halt and hauling them back to the starting point.
Barriers to Talent
Nikon D3 |
Fuji X-T2 |
Fuji X-E1 & XF 23mm f/2 |
I’m the photography equivalent of that shooter who brings a big case full of half a dozen guns to the range and cheerfully blasts a box of ammo through each just for the joy of messing with them, rather than grinding through a dedicated practice regimen with that one gun they’re trying to master…
…and I’m okay with that.
Shattered
Not gonna lie, my attention span has been shattered by social media. It worries me.
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) February 1, 2022
I'd say more, but I have new messages in a FB group. BRB. https://t.co/4zcmnQlV0s