I just finished reading “Gunfight” by Ryan Busse, a former vice-president of Kimber. The subtitle is “My Battle Against the Industry That Radicalized America.” Busse was happy to be in charge of sales for a company that manufactured high-end bolt action sporting rifles and 1911 pistols, but had no use for polymer pistols, handguns that held more than ten or so rounds, and AR15s which he, who should know better, insists on calling “assault rifles.” Sort of like a beer and wine salesman bemoaning the availability of hard liquor to the public. He mentions that many gun rights activists call people like him “Fudds,” named after Elmer, the cartoon hunter who unsuccessfully stalked Bugs Bunny, and seems resentful that he fits that profile.The tl;dr? Mas isn't impressed.
Saturday, April 30, 2022
Never takes sides against the family.
Friday, April 29, 2022
You know it's true.
The fact that this comes on the heels of an actual billionaire buying an actual social media company is an absolute coincidence, I'm sure.
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) April 29, 2022
Christ, what an amazingly insecure, faux-gold-tone prat. https://t.co/J63bPTrTRl
Automotif CCXCIII...
The fifth generation of the Mustang, like the Roush-ified convertible above, looks a lot bulkier than either the SN95/New Edge cars before it or the Sixth Gen "S550" cars that followed. I blame Euro pedestrian safety regs.
Links...
- Amazon posts a $4B loss for Q1 of '22, causing its share price to go on a "10% off!" sale, in case you wanted to get mom a few shares of AMZN for Mothers Day. (It's still nearly three grand a share, so you'd have to really like mom to do that.)
- What is it about tsars and kooky prophets?
- Private spaceflight is still pretty cool. Here's video of the first rental capsule returning. I hope Axiom gets their deposit on Crew Dragon Endeavor back.
Thursday, April 28, 2022
Return of the Bogeyman
Even the demonstrative use of a lower-yield tactical nuclear weapon by Russia would mark the end of the postwar order through which, under U.S. leadership, most of the world enjoyed relative and increasing levels of prosperity, freedom, and peace. It would augur the beginning of an era more like that of 1914-45, scarred by the Great Depression, totalitarianism, genocide, and world wars that included the use of chemical and nuclear weapons of mass destruction and killed as many as 100 million people.
Sacred Space
Wednesday, April 27, 2022
Another loss.
Automotif CCXCII...
Fuji X-T2 & 16-80mm f/4 OIS WR |
Nikon D800 & 24-120mm f/4 VR |
Tuesday, April 26, 2022
Awkward...
This is always awkward for me.
The internet likes dog pictures, right?
Monday, April 25, 2022
Automotif CCXCI...
A groovy-looking 1980-'82 Corvette with aftermarket side pipes. These years were the last hurrah of the C3 body style that debuted on the '68 'Vettes.
Hard to say what's under the hood. Stock engine options for these model years ranged from a 190bhp L-48 350, through the 200bhp L-83 with its notorious twin-throttle-body "Crossfire" injection setup, to the 230bhp L-82.
1980 marked the debut of the federally-mandated 85mph speedometer, with "55" highlighted. My '81 Kawasaki GPz550 had one of those speedos.
Automotif CCXC...
Taken with Fuji X-T2 & 16-80mm f/4 R OIS WR |
Sunday, April 24, 2022
Saturday, April 23, 2022
Decade of Decadence
Before jumping out of the plane, the agency said, Mr. Jacob made no attempt to contact air traffic control on the emergency frequency, did not try to restart the engine by increasing airflow over the propeller and failed to look for a place to safely land, “even though there were multiple areas within gliding range in which you could have made a safe landing.”This whole searching for fame on the internet thing has gotten completely out of hand.
After the crash, Mr. Jacob also “recovered and then disposed of the wreckage,” the F.A.A. said.
“You demonstrated a lack of care, judgment and responsibility by choosing to jump out of an aircraft solely so you could record the footage of the crash,” the agency said. “Your egregious and intentional actions on these dates indicate that you presently lack the degree of care, judgment and responsibility required of a certificate holder.”
Friday, April 22, 2022
I kinda miss Mitch, too...
Here’s a non-exhaustive snapshot of the kind of America I’d like to see. I want to live in a country where most people don’t think very much about the federal government or national politics. To the extent the federal government is involved in our daily lives, I’d like it to reject metaphors about it being our mother, father, or nanny. In fact, I’d prefer if people didn’t look at the federal government metaphorically at all. But if they had to, maybe think of it as your neighbor. It’ll chip in to help in a dire circumstance or emergency, but its generosity and patience are not inexhaustible, at least not for people who can help themselves. But oldsters, shut-ins, the disabled. Maybe neighbors agree on a plan to help on a more permanent basis.
I want to see a broadly tolerant country where minority rights are protected. I also want a country where majority values are respected. The only way to have that kind of country, by the way, is to have more federalism–under which national minorities can live as local majorities. I want America to remain the strongest country in the world and the leader of the free portions of it. And I’d like us to do what we can, where prudent, to see the free world expand. I want government, at every level, to recognize that spending and borrowing have natural limits.
That’s probably enough on government. One helpful heuristic: Ask yourself “What would Mitch Daniels do?” and whatever the answer is you can be pretty sure I’ll say, “That. I want that.”
Automotif CCLXXXIX...
Wednesday, April 20, 2022
If I'd known then what I know now...
Automotif CCLXXXVIII...
Tuesday, April 19, 2022
Glub.
Lines on the map...
Yesterday's country was Lithuania. |
Monday, April 18, 2022
Hidden Masterpiece
Today, of course, we’re in the age of digital photography. Back in the eighties, I remember reading that six billion photographs were taken each year, a number that seemed as big as the ocean; currently, although exact numbers can’t be known, the world probably collects that many images every three and a half days. There’s a new way in which we can miss out on great photographs: they can be buried forever in the digital tsunami.It's a great piece and you should go read the whole thing.
Many of us are now like those National Geographic photographers. Almost without trying, we can find ourselves with twenty-three thousand pictures on our camera rolls. Unfortunately, we don’t have picture editors to do the work of sifting and culling and considering. No one helps us discover which shots “have legs” and stay interesting the more we look at them; no one shows us which photographs say what we mean to say; and no one tells us how to identify the best and leave aside the rest. Many of us have also stopped printing our photos. It used to be that we were constrained by our physical photo albums, that we had to choose which pictures to keep and which to leave out. “Redaction is what transforms a quantity of images from a heap to a whole,” the photography critic A. D. Coleman once wrote, referring to the process of culling. The cloud is big, so we don’t redact. We live with our heaps.
Redacting takes time. You can’t edit pictures by thinking; you have to do it by looking. The more pictures you have, the more you have to look.
Sunday, April 17, 2022
Variation on a Theme
Sec. 2 . (a) A person who recklessly, knowingly, or intentionally performs an act that creates a substantial risk of bodily injury to another person commits criminal recklessness. Except as provided in subsection (b), criminal recklessness is a Class B misdemeanor.Dude is fixin' to spend a ton of money to try and stay out of jail. A Level 6 felony could be as much as a 2½ year sentence and a ten thousand dollar fine.
(b) The offense of criminal recklessness as defined in subsection (a) is:
(1) a Level 6 felony if:
(A) it is committed while armed with a deadly weapon; or
(B) the person committed aggressive driving (as defined in IC 9-21-8-55 ) that results in serious bodily injury to another person; or
(2) a Level 5 felony if:
(A) it is committed by shooting a firearm into an inhabited dwelling or other building or place where people are likely to gather; or
(B) the person committed aggressive driving (as defined in IC 9-21-8-55 ) that results in the death or catastrophic injury of another person.
Saturday, April 16, 2022
Automotif CCLXXXVII...
The D-Team
Friday, April 15, 2022
Summoning a Higher Power
It’s only when placed side-by-side with an original Hi-Power that the differences in the High Power become readily apparent, like parking a new Dodge Challenger Hellcat next to a 1971 original.You can click to RTWT.
The High Power is a beefier handgun. It’s slightly…but only slightly…larger in every dimension. The grip feels the same in the hand, but the mag well dimensions have been reshuffled to allow a capacity of 17 rounds with flush fit mags (alas, not interchangeable with the originals; sacrifices had to be made.)
The new pistol is just shy of a half-pound heavier than the original and it feels like most of the weight increase is in the nose of the slide. The new High Power shoots flat. If they make a slightly longer-slide version intended for gaming it would shoot super flat and…wait… (checks IDPA rule book) …huh, whaddaya know, this new pistol squeaks in at one ounce under the allowable weight for Enhanced Service Pistol. A remarkable coincidence, I’m sure.
Thursday, April 14, 2022
Not Helping
The French Correction
The first morning there, Oleg and a few others were heading out to go do some shooting. Having just finished a good long stretch of six-day workweeks at an indoor range, I begged off. "I'll just chill here and read, if it's all the same to you guys. If you want to shoot anything I brought, feel free to drag it along."
Among the guns they elected to take was the MAS-49/56. I handed Oleg a couple boxes of Portuguese FNM-branded full metal jacket ammunition and told him to knock himself out.
He asked where to hold on the target at a hundred yards.
"How the hell should I know?" I replied, "I've had it a couple years, but never got around to shooting it."
I spent a pleasant couple hours in silence with a book, and when the crew came trooping back in from the range, Oleg had an unhappy look on his face and was nursing his right thumb.
"What happened?"
"The rifle tried to break my hand."
Yikes. The internet wouldn't be happy with me if I broke their photographer, no matter how indirectly.
It turned out that Oleg let the bolt fly forward to chamber the first round, and the rifle promptly slamfired, kicking up a gout of dirt a few yards in front of the line and pranging the base of Oleg's thumb with that big round nylon knob on the MAS charging handle.
A bit of research on the internets turned up the fact that this is what we would call a Known Issue with some ammunition, since the MAS has a large, heavy firing pin meant to deliver a healthy lick to a hard French military primer.
The two solutions for this I uncovered at the time were to either have a 'smith lighten the factory pin, which seemed pretty iffy, or to track down one of a small number of titanium firing pins someone had allegedly made in unicorn-like quantities a few years earlier.
The importance I assigned to this task can be assessed by the fact that I finally got around to it last month...
Wednesday, April 13, 2022
Big Interest
"Subtle Plans are Here Again"
The last time I saw a plan backfire as badly as Vlad's anti-NATO offensive, it involved a coyote, a road runner, and an ACME catalog. https://t.co/2WekFYxfan
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) April 13, 2022
Gratuitous Gun Pr0n #212...
On the Brain...
Tuesday, April 12, 2022
Act now! Spaces go fast!
We are all Tod Lubitch now.
The most reliable cure for confirmation bias is interaction with people who don’t share your beliefs. They confront you with counterevidence and counterargument. John Stuart Mill said, “He who knows only his own side of the case, knows little of that,” and he urged us to seek out conflicting views “from persons who actually believe them.” People who think differently and are willing to speak up if they disagree with you make you smarter, almost as if they are extensions of your own brain. People who try to silence or intimidate their critics make themselves stupider, almost as if they are shooting darts into their own brain.Eventually social norms will evolve to catch up to the technology, provided we don't devolve into TurboYugoslavia before then.
Monday, April 11, 2022
Coincidence? Well, actually yes.
"I’d like [France] to have two armies: one for display with lovely guns, tanks, little soldiers, staffs, distinguished and doddering Generals, and dear little regimental officers who would be deeply concerned over their General’s bowel movements or their Colonel’s piles, an army that would be shown for a modest fee on every fairground in the country. The other would be the real one, composed entirely of young enthusiasts in camouflage uniforms, who would not be put on display, but from whom impossible efforts would be demanded and to whom all sorts of tricks would be taught. That’s the army in which I should like to fight."The reason I recalled that passage is that Colonel David Hackworth used it to close out his memoir, About Face, which I'm currently re-reading for probably the fifth time.
Pupper!
Sunday, April 10, 2022
Automotif CCLXXXVI...
Down at the club, Piggy Tremalion and Bucko Penoyer and all their twit friends buy shrieking little 2-seaters with rag tops and skinny wire wheels, unaware that somewhere, someday, some guy in a BMW 2002 is going to blow them off so bad that they'll henceforth leave every stoplight in second gear and never drive on a winding road again as long as they live.
In the suburbs, Biff Everykid and Kevin Acne and Marvin Sweatsock will press their fathers to buy HO Firebirds with tachometers mounted out near the horizon somewhere and enough power to light the city of Seattle, totally indifferent to the fact that they could fit more friends into a BMW in greater comfort and stop better and go around corners better and get about 29 times better gas mileage.
Mr. and Mrs. America will paste a "Support Your Local Police" sticker on the back bumper of their new T-Bird and run Old Glory up the radio antenna and never know that for about 2500 bucks less they could have gotten a car with more leg room, more head room, more luggage space, good brakes, decent tires, independent rear suspension, a glove box finished like the inside of an expensive overcoat and an ashtray that slides out like it was on the end of a butler's arm—not to mention a lot of other good stuff they didn't even know they could get on an automobile, like doors that fit and seats that don't make you tired when you sit in them.
Saturday, April 09, 2022
Fight The Power
I mean, this is what the 2A is about when you get down to brass tacks. https://t.co/qFfKHItJ5q
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) April 9, 2022
Friday, April 08, 2022
Deep State Hauler
They warned us that the New World Order was gonna take us to the FEMA camps and here they come! https://t.co/ysXUTdnT0c
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) April 8, 2022
The Bear and the Dragon
Putin continued to do what his imperial and Soviet predecessors had always done. Instead of looking to the East and absorbing the implications of this new reality, he focused on the West and neglected the East. Marx might have said that Putin suffers from “false consciousness.” From the long-term perspective, both the prizes and the threats lie in the East. Yet Putin—together with the hydrocarbon-based oligarchy that surrounds him—continued to focus on Europe. In rhetoric, he talked about a “pivot to the East,” but in practice Europe remained his chief market.
An irony here is that the Russians had already begun diversifying away from gas transit through Ukraine before the war. Nord Stream 2 is actually the last of five new bypass pipelines to Europe; another decade and the gas divorce would have been final.
But Europe is declining and China is rising. Putin is focused in the wrong direction.
Propaganda
In which I don't do as I say...
Canceled Culture
5) Like a lot of social media--and texting & IM--Tweeting occurs in a strange liminal space between oral and written culture. The short format encourages people to treat it like they're chit-chatting with friends (an illusion encouraged by the fact that all their friends are on!)There's the ever-present risk of being dog-piled by an outraged mob of danger-haired SJWs with non-binary pronouns or a brigade of edgelord internet anime nazis that adds a frisson of danger to Twitter posting, although it's more like playing Russian roulette with one of those French twenty-shot pinfire revolvers and hundred-year-old ammunition; it seems pretty scarce and random if one is capable of a modicum of netiquette. (Now there's a quaint term!)
5a) People say a lot of stuff that is totally fine and appropriate in the context of chatting with their friends, like hyperbolic ranting ("People who drive the speed limit in the left lane should be *shot*) or mean-girl gossip (OMG WHAT is wrong with Jodi Ernst's HAIR?)
5b) Only it's written, so it doesn't stay local and in context. Out of that context, it looks somewhere between unprofessional and psychopathic, damaging you and your colleagues, and forcing your institution to either defend the undefensible, or discipline you.
6) Unless you are always uber-careful getting on Twitter is like playing Russian roulette. Most days, nothing happens, but ...
Thursday, April 07, 2022
QotD: Pulp Friction Edition
"It feels like I'm living in the 1930s, a Doc Savage story or something, only without the Man of Bronze, without the radio dramas or pulp magazines, no soda fountains or amazing technical advances in radio, none of the good stuff. Just the quack medicine and worrying disease outbreaks, just the economic uncertainty, cynical political demagogues, bloody-handed dictators and a horrifying civic hunger for authoritarianism."For an optimistic note, I'll point out that D.D. Harriman's fleet of tail-standing rockets is science fact now, unlike the science fiction it was then.
I can't get mad at that.
I'd say that the employee handbook allows a fifteen minute cat photography break after every two hours of documenting charred corpses. I can't be mad at that. https://t.co/1HEAHInzk1
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) April 7, 2022
Wednesday, April 06, 2022
Cool & Rainy
Hard truth about baseball.
Opening day of the Major League Baseball season, which falls on Thursday after being delayed for a week by a labor dispute, is as good an occasion as any for fans of the game to come to terms with certain hard facts. I am talking, of course, about the inevitable future in which professional baseball is nationalized and put under the authority of some large federal entity — the Library of Congress, perhaps, or more romantically, the National Park Service.RTWT in all its Swiftian glory.
Like the Delta blues or Yellowstone National Park, baseball is as indelibly American as it is painfully uncommercial. Left to fend for itself, the game will eventually disappear.
<snip>
We need to stop pretending that baseball has a broad-based enthusiastic following and begin to see the game for what it is: the sports equivalent of collecting 78 r.p.m. records. Baseball is America’s game only in the sense that jazz is America’s music or that Henry James is America’s literature. It is time that we acknowledged this truth by affording baseball the same approbation we reserve for those other neglected cultural treasures.
It might be a hard sell for some fans, but ultimately a world in which the game not only continues but also does so free of commercial pressures would be a merrier one. Among other things, the league could abandon its doomed attempts to attract more viewers by mucking with the rules for extra innings and introducing impure practices like pitch clocks, signal transmitters for catchers and the universal designated hitter.
Tuesday, April 05, 2022
Worth a Read...
Roundup
He notes:
"I started writing about TacCon back in 2014. It’s interesting looking back. My 2014 TacCon Roundup post had 15 article links. As late as 2019, I had 12 links. This year there are six links. I miss the days when folks blogged about their experiences. In a couple years, I might be the only one writing about this excellent training resource. Yes, the art of blogging is dying."Hey, I haven't even finished processing all the photos I took yet, dude.
Monday, April 04, 2022
Automotif CCLXXXV...
I saw it out of the corner of my eye and at first it didn't trip my early warning radar...and then I thought, "Wait, that's way smaller than it should be." I wound up grabbing the camera off the table and jogging to the corner. Stupid Ricoh GXR with the A16 module booted up too slow to get more than one shot before the light turned green and I missed focus.
(Earlier I'd missed a BMW 3.0 CSi.)
Sunday, April 03, 2022
Round Tuit
Photo by Oleg Volk |
Saturday, April 02, 2022
...I mean really through the looking glass.
I am trying to explain to 1994 me that Herschel Walker, the GOP senate candidate backed by ex-President Donald Trump, is hiring Newt, who has been out of office 23 years, as a campaign advisor.
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) April 2, 2022
1994 me wants to know when drugs were legalized and which ones I'm on. https://t.co/NvSjBdA9Qt
We are through the looking glass, people...
The event wasn’t a Putin apologia like those found in some corners of the right. Instead, the phrase of the day seemed to be “Putin is bad, but …” The attendees, who included paleocons, libertarians, and hard-core MAGA acolytes, offered variations on that tune according to their policy preferences: Putin is bad, but we don’t want a nuclear war. Putin is bad, but why should we trust the American foreign-policy establishment? Putin is bad, but the media is in thrall to the U.S. intelligence apparatus. The broad consensus: Putin is bad, but why is that our problem?We're all warred out here at home. Our military's in need of rebuilding and reorienting.
“This is not an ism-based movement. There is a specific policy outcome motivating the type of factions we brought here today, which is that we don’t want another war,” Sharma said. “And people have their own isms that they bring to the table.” The result was a conference of the right where Tulsi Gabbard was invited but figures such as Ted Cruz were absent.
In fact, Cruz was the target of a jab onstage from a fellow Republican senator, Rand Paul, who suggested that the Texan’s advocacy for sanctions on Russian energy was simply intended to boost the bottom line of the energy industry in his home state. President Joe Biden, though, received some praise for his comparatively restrained response to the crisis. Saagar Enjeti, a conservative pundit and podcaster, went so far as to say that Biden’s “79-year-old ailing heart may be the only thing standing in between us and World War III.”
Friday, April 01, 2022
C'mon, man...
Past the Peak?
HOUSTON, March 31 (Reuters) - U.S. oil prices fell 7% to close just above $100 on Thursday as President Joe Biden announced the largest ever release from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve and called on oil companies to increase drilling to boost supply.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures for May delivery settled down $7.54, or 7%, at $100.28 a barrel, after touching a low of $99.66.
Brent crude futures for May, which expired on Thursday, closed down $5.54, or 4.8%, at $107.91 a barrel. The more actively traded June futures were down 5.6% at $105.16, after falling by $7 earlier in the session.
Both benchmarks posted their highest quarterly percentage gains since the second quarter of 2020, with Brent soaring 38% and WTI gaining 34%, boosted mainly after Russia's Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine which Moscow calls a "special operation."