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Fiction is not keeping up with reality
When John Ross wrote his seminal Unintended Consequences, people accused him of being overly dramatic. After all, ATF agents wouldn’t frame people or commit murder, right? When Matt Bracken wrote Enemies Foreign and Domestic series, most readers thought the idea of ATF committing and facilitating mass murder far-fetched, and certainly didn’t expect militarized TSA roadblocks all over America.
The trouble with fiction is that it has to remain plausible. Stupidity and abuse of power have no such restrictions. We have plenty of examples from other countries to suggest that this misconduct will escalate until they either run out of victims (Rwanda and Burundi in 1993-94), get killed by people acting in self-defense (the fate of quite a few redcoats around 1780s) or rescued by foreign invasion (as was the case with Pol Pot’s Cambodia, 1979). I wonder how this will play out with ATF and TSA. It’s already disturbing that the only reason their depredations came to light was the killing of another Fed. The press paid no attention while only regular people were being murdered or wrongfully imprisoned.
Posted in book, civil rights, rkba, weapon
Tagged ATF, books, fiction, gun control, history, thugs, TSA
15 Comments
For added Christmas cheer, American STASI is here
Old news, but well put: TSA = STASI.
Posted in civil rights, dangerous, self-defense
Tagged Civil War, danger, fascism, oppression, TSA.STASI
Comments Off on For added Christmas cheer, American STASI is here
In this case, you’d use the rifle to hold out till you can draw the pistol.
With the rifle being a fun .22 Henry and the pistol being a serious .45ACP. I wonder if a 45ACP lever action is possible — it would fit almost twenty rounds and have minimal report and muzzle flash even un-suppressed.
Major Lawrence?
Pity nobody makes the Webley these days. To me, its ergonomics are just about perfect for a revolver.
Posted in pistol
Tagged .455, desert, dunes, Lawrence of Arabia, revolver, sand, shemag, Webley
14 Comments
Thumbs up for Henry
It’s strange that such awesome rifles come from one of the crummiest states in the country. But I am quickly becoming a fan of these.
New is well-forgotten old
New on CTD blog: bullpup revolvers with low bore axis…naaah, old hat!
Anna with a Saiga
Posted in interesting people, rifle
Tagged 7.62x39, AK47, black, cute, dark, girl, pin-up, Saiga, Tech Sights
9 Comments
Production RMR30 carbine arrived
Anna doesn’t like heavy rifles. To her, even an AK clone is too heavy, so this little carbine is much more to her liking. Loaded with 30 rounds of 22wmr, it weighs 2.3kg (4.2lbs). The production version differs from the prototype in several details:
- The non-reciprocating charging handles are larger and slightly concave, so the hand can’t slip off them
- The stock has three positions for adjusting to shooters of different height
- The rear sling swivels are now machined metal instead of shaped wire
The rest of this carbine is as it was before, which is great because the prototype was reliable, had a great trigger and excellent accuracy. It would be a great backpacking rifle for small game hunting or varminting…but my interest in almost any firearms is primarily defensive. 2.7g bullet at 610m/s (40gr at 2000fps) isn’t a great man-stopper, but it gives a fighting chance to those who cannot handle weapons of greater weight, bulk or recoil. This is the whole idea behind the PDW class of firearms. Most PDWs are submachine guns and unavailable to honest Americans, but RMR30 has most of the functionality in a very handy package. Commonality of magazines between RMR30 and PMR30 pistol is a bonus. Fit and finish are excellent.
(Background pattern is by Yascine)
Posted in interesting people, rifle, self-defense, weapon
Tagged 22WMR, carbine, dark, girl, keltec, pattern, semi-auto
10 Comments
A contemplative shooter
Today, several of my friends went for a shooting walk out to another friend’s farm. I love being able to continue chatting without plugs or muffs being required, shooting at clays and targets of opportunity all the while.
Substance and style
I think the appeal of lever actions is similar to the appeal of Steampunk and Victorian/Edwardian styles — functional enough to be useful, and intricate enough to be interesting. This one is a Henry carbine with really nice wood and mechanics.
Posted in interesting people, rifle, weapon
Tagged 22LR, carbine, girl, leather, lever action, Steampunk, Tirzah
6 Comments
He’ll be back.
Makeup by Tirzah. Converted Saiga with Tech Sights — even a Terminator likes the long sight radius.
Posted in humor, interesting people, rifle
Tagged 7.62x39, AK47, aperture sights, make-up, Saiga, Tech Sights
5 Comments
Color-matched weapons
It seems to me that companies making pink guns for adults are missing the larger point. Sure, some women who buy guns are also into pink accessories. But many more are after color-matched weapons and that could mean black, tan, blue or purple furniture, magazines and slings to match any outfit…or even hair color.
Doublestar lightweight carbine with their BUIS, Primary Arms 3x prismatic scope and micro red dot. Ace stock, Magpul sling and magazine with a Ranger plate. The hair color is all Red McCord‘s.
Posted in humor, rifle, weapon
Tagged 223, AR15, Doublestar, fashion, magpul, primary arms, scope, tan, woman
6 Comments
Zombies, young and old
It’s never too late to turn into a zombie…or too early. Certain public schools may have this condition as their end goal.
Arbitrary government mandates are arbitrary.
Do you know how much water each toilet used per flush before 1994? Just enough to make them function reliably. Toilet, like other appliances, were designed by people who understand how such things work.
Since 1994, US toilets were restricted to 1.6 gallons per flush. Why such a specific number was picked by government officials who were not experts in toilet design? My best guess is that they merely picked an arbitrary number. That’s what they did when designating minimum barrel length for shotguns.
Governments are good at setting up arbitrary restrictions and then enforcing them viciously. Remember that any time you think that “there ought to be a law about this”.
Out of buckshot, pushing on!
“Кончится картечь, не пропадём…”
Winchester 1897(12ga), Savage 1915(32ACP).
Background photo from http://www.wallchan.com/wallpaper/2447/
Posted in interesting people, pistol, self-defense, shotgun, weapon
Tagged 12ga, 32ACP, girl, kimono, pump action, red
9 Comments