They have cast themselves into the camp of “We mustn’t take actions that will topple the government.” Therefore, they have assured the eventual toppling of the government, probably in a bit more dramatic way than it could have been.
For us, the main takeaway is that if you have a bad guy hiding behind a common interior wall, concealment is all it’s really providing. With an AR-15 carbine, there’s a high probability your bullet will perform nearly as well after passing through that wall—even if it hits a stud—as it would if there was no barrier between you and that bad guy at all.
We also learned that the 150-grain 300 HAMR load is rather wicked with regard to terminal performance. Though it may provide deeper-than-desirable penetration in a home-defense setting, from a wound-cavity standpoint you can see why this cartridge is one of the best available for big-game hunting with an AR-15. And finally, do not discount the 125-grain hollowpoint .30-30 Win. load for personal protection. It should not over-penetrate, and it creates a reasonably large crush cavity. It’s clearly a great choice for home defense if your life-saving gun is a lever-action carbine.
If I had to pick one of these cartridges/loads for home defense, I’d probably go with the 110-grain 300 HAMR load because of its consistent 12 to 14 inches of penetration and the lack of over-penetration concern associated with it. The Speer Gold Dot load for the .223 Rem. and the FTX load for the .300 BLK delivered similar, but slightly deeper performance. There are, of course, lots of other loads and carbine cartridges to consider. This test is only a glimpse. But, it does give you an idea of what can be expected with carbines, and even the ancient .30-30 Win., if they must be fired inside a home to save your life.
Well, the .30-30 is a venerable cartridge, and stands today as the load that has probably taken more white tail than any other cartridge. It would be an awesome home defense round. It’s also noteworthy that lever action rifles are very popular within the AR community, and for good reason. Every man should have lever action rifles.
The summary is a bit strange though. The graphs show the 300 HAMR as over-penetrating, and the last thing you want inside a home is over-penetration. Moreover, availability is an issue, as is cost.
I had initially seen this with no direct reference to a name or a report in the field and was just a bit skeptical, deciding that I wouldn’t post it.
But then this report appeared, and it seems to corroborate the report above from someone to whom it happened.
But I’ll say (somewhat tongue in cheek) that the worst of all of this appears to be that they won’t let the lady in the video below buy coffee.
Beyond the fact that they acted like Nazi thugs (and certainly enjoyed it), this is just too far. If you get between me and my fresh ground black coffee, there’s going to be trouble.
As for the first two reports, if they know they can’t really legitimately arrest protesters and they’re simply dropping them off down the road, that seems to me to be a similar criminal offense to false arrest (and maybe worse).
I believe the formal name for this would be kidnapping.
Anyway, I suspect that “support the blue” thing is rapidly evaporating in Canada with this behavior (just as it is in the U.S. with SWAT raids, asset forfeiture, bad treatment of people who carry firearms, indemnification of police in bad shootings, vocal support for gun control and permitting schemes, and a host of other awful things). I also suspect that for every protester they mistreat or kidnap or trample with horses, they create a thousand new ones. As for the lady who wanted coffee, we should all condemn the cops in complete disgust for that offense.
From the perspective of COIN (counterinsurgency) doctrine, they have learned nothing from the misadventure in Afghanistan.
Then again, neither did our doomed elitists. They can talk about COIN all they want to and write pedantic and silly papers until they’re blue in the face. They never understood it then, and still don’t today. They never knew what they were doing.
Quick example: In Afghanistan they gave Viagra to child molester chieftains so they could continue their abuse, thinking they would make friends, while disgusting our own troops and infuriating the Taliban even more. In the end, no one loved the command structure or brilliant “thinkers” and “strategists.” They were hated everywhere and by everyone.
Western nations are one big gaggle of incompetence and stupidity.
Finally, there is this ridiculous, pretentious finger wagging and sermon-preaching by cops while threatening to bust doors down.
The story is in the comments. Basically, this restaurant owner was about to go out of business because of Covid restrictions. The truckers meant new business, saving his livelihood, while they also helped him clean up. He had given interviews about that, and this is the cops paying him back.
What was that I said about bullying one protester and creating a thousand more?
In the offices of Klaus Schwab: “Call on line 3 … the boy king is in a panic and needs assistance and direction.”
The Department of Justice has asked a federal judge to block a Missouri law that allows private citizens to sue law enforcement agencies and officers for $50,000 if they can show their state gun rights were infringed upon. Gov. Mike Parson signed the Second Amendment Preservation Act last year, and since then, counties, cities and dozens of Missouri police chiefs have challenged it.
The law, known as H.B. 85, invalidates in Missouri five specific federal gun law categories, such as ones prohibiting the gun ownership by some felons, confiscation orders, and registration laws.
The complaint filed in federal court in Jefferson City, Mo., on Wednesday says “the overall purpose and effect of H.B. 85 are thus to nullify federal firearm laws and to affirmatively interfere with their enforcement.”
“This act impedes criminal law enforcement operations in Missouri,” U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement. “The United States will work to ensure that our state and local law enforcement partners are not penalized for doing their jobs to keep our communities safe.”
I’m telling you, the FedGov hates this law. Missouri has the strongest such law on the books, and the FedGov is fearful of it spreading.
But the determination to carry through with this (including preventing any LEO who is found to aid FedGov gun control efforts from ever working again in Missouri) is what will win the day versus the determination of a federal judge.
When they can’t win any other way, they go judge shopping.
Finally, I’ll observe that there is no insignia or badges or names on the goons on the line. They have de-personed them just as they’ve tried to de-person the protestors. This is what the Bolsheviks did.
MARIPOSA COUNTY, Calif. — Nearly six months after a Northern California family and their dog died of extreme heat exhaustion and dehydration while hiking, phone data was released on Thursday that shows a text message and several phone calls did not go through due to poor cellphone reception.
Jonathan Gerrish’s phone showed the family took multiple photos throughout their hike from 7:44 to 10:29 a.m., according to the release. At 12:25 p.m, they took a screenshot of their location on the trail map.
A single text message at 11:56 a.m. saying, “Can you help us. On savage lundy trail heading back to Hites cove trail. No water or ver (over) heating with baby” did not go through due to not having cell service in the area, the release said.
Five calls were also found to have been attempted but were not successful due to the same reason. The first was at 12:09 p.m. and the last four were attempted within one minute of each other at 12:36 p.m.
First of all, remember the necessary life-saving kit that MUST be carried in the bush: Rubberized poncho, parka, redundant fire start, large bore handgun, food energy, cordage, tactical light, knife, water and means of water filtration. This might have saved their lives.
Beyond this, I was commenting to my oldest son not too many days ago that the biggest enemy of survival in the bush is panic. If you carry the right kit, you can be in the position where you say to yourself or loved ones, “I don’t know where we are, but it’s getting dark and we need warmth, shelter, water and rest. We have the right kit for it, so we camp here for the night and get a safe, good night sleep, and carry on at first light.”
If you panic, adrenalin rushes into your system, you expend way too much energy, your judgment is clouded and you’re more likely to do stupid things, you get exhausted, the exhaustion makes you cold, and you risk hypothermia.
In the bush, panic is your enemy. It sounds as if they didn’t have the right kit, and they panicked.
My suspicion was right. In the bush, panic is your enemy and will kill you. Always be prepared for things not to go as expected. That’s the only way to avoid panic. Even if he had not carried the proper kit, they could have always stopped and gotten out of the sun until dusk, and he could have hunted for water (or found a muddy spot and dug a hole) that evening and the next morning.
If it’s over 100 degrees and you have no water, walking in the noon sun to find your way out isn’t a good idea, and rather than deal with the situation and stopping in favor of a primitive shelter, he panicked which made matters worse.
The boy king got his way. The police followed orders – of course – and so the Trudeau regime has demanded that this go to the next phase. They’ve picked a fight. This was an unwise decision.
Some people are just slow to learn, but learn they eventually will. Mike Vanderboegh used to call it “losing the mandate of heaven.” The constitutional sheriff and constable is replaced in favor of a standing army to suppress the citizens, whose only goal is to maintain the power of the regime. The main point to be made here is that tyranny is ungodly and an afront to the Almighty and therefore cosmic treason. It is a violation of God’s holy laws. Tyrants attempt to usurp the authority God Himself has over family, church and state (see here work done by Rousas J. Rushdoony) in favor of the great savior of all mankind, whom they want people to believe is the regime. Many people do believe such a thing, but enough people still don’t that it will cause massive problems for the boy king.
They’re cops, and cops will follow orders regardless of the morality of them.
“This is now a secure area”.
Police checkpoint at Metcalfe/Laurier in Ottawa. It seems they are only allowing drivers to pass if they live in the area or for work/medical purposes. https://t.co/8hpC710hZKpic.twitter.com/JSzpRfdrhb
THE BOUNDARY WATERS— A young woman from Duluth is pitting her tenacity and desire for outdoor adventure against whatever Mother Nature serves up over the next month here, along the U.S.-Canadian border. With the help of her canine companion, named Diggins, Emily Ford left Crane Lake last Friday at the start of a 210-mile trek through the wilderness to Grand Portage.
She headed into the wilderness just ahead of some of the coldest temperatures of the winter. Thermometers around the area dropped to the mid-40s below zero on Sunday, with daytime highs struggling to reach above zero. But Ford, who spoke to the Timberjay just hours before embarking on her adventure, was confident she had the ability to meet the challenge.
Ford has spent much of the winter working at the Wintergreen Dogsled Lodge, near Ely, where she started as an intern. “But she was so competent, we just put her on staff,” said Wintergreen owner and operator Paul Schurke. She helped lead dogsled trips into the wilderness, where she learned winter survival methods from some of the most experienced polar explorers anywhere.
“It was awesome,” said Ford of the experience.
She’s road-tested her gear in the weeks leading up to her adventure and she’ll get some assistance from Diggins, who has learned to skijor, so he’ll be providing an assist as Ford propels herself and about 145 pounds of gear she’ll pull in a sled, known as a pulk, behind her. Ford couldn’t really predict what the trail conditions will be like over the next month. She expects to be able to follow snowmobile tracks for a portion of the route that’s outside the Boundary Waters wilderness boundary. She also expects to find trails broken by mushers in other locations. But she’ll likely be breaking trail at points along the way. On large lakes, where the wind helps to pack the snow, the going may be relatively smooth. But with about two feet of snow on the ground, the going is likely to be challenging on untracked portages or smaller lakes. She expects to average about seven miles a day.
Ford will be traveling without a heated tent. Her new four-season tent includes a vestibule, where she’ll be able to cook meals, which is likely to provide a least a little break from the winter’s chill. Overnight, she’ll rely on a zero-degree-rated sleeping bag, a heavy quilt and the warmth provided by Diggins, who will sleep under the quilt, to stay warm.
I predict a difficult go of it. That dog is going to be taking a heavy load during the trek, or she is. Or both. That’s a heavy sled too.
She may need to drop some of that weight, but the question is, what? She needs the food, she will need the lights she’s carrying, she needs to bring a Garmin with her, she needs to carry a large bore handgun, and she needs medical supplies. She needs the tent, she needs the quilt (I’d carry more than one), and she’ll need food for the dog too. She’ll need a stove to thaw her water and water for the dog. She’ll need fuel for the stove. Isobutane doesn’t work very well in such cold temperatures or at high elevations.