Shipping Boxes

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-07-19T13:38:47Z

The next time you buy something expensive that comes in a custom box, save that box! We are trying to pack some expensive, oddly-shaped items: HP LaserJet, Canon PRO-300. If you put them in a box that is wide enough, it is likely so tall that any weight on top will crush the box down.  You do not want anything heavy in the box on top of the printer.  If you put anything soft on top of the printer, it needs to be compressible enough to absorb weight without transferring it to the printer. 

Monitors, at least are standard sizes and shapes. Boxes for them are surprisingly expensive, especially when you get the 33" monsters that I have on my desk.  The 65" TV seems to not be a common moving box size.

We have historically discarded these boxes because of storage space.  Next time, I will find space. 
Quote of the Day Elon Musk just told the highest-paid profession on earth it was never a skill. It was a workaround. AI no longer needs programming languages at all. It writes machine code directly. Raw binary optimized beyond anything … Continue reading

Meme Dump!

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2026-07-19T13:00:00Z




OK: Tulsa - Intruder Shot During Home Invasion

by Dean Weingarten in GUN WATCH on 2026-07-19T12:18:43Z

Police say a person in a house shot the suspect in self-defense during a home invasion near West 46th and Union around 7 p.m. on Wednesday. Officers say the people in the home and the suspect knew each other.

TPD says they found the suspect in a pickup truck at I-44 and Union.


More Here


When deputies arrived, they spoke to a homeowner who said a man came onto their property, threatened to steal his truck and told him he would kill him if he resisted.

The homeowner said he turned to go back inside his house, but the man followed him into the home.

At that point, the homeowner said he grabbed a baseball bat and hit the suspect.

The struggled continued outside where the homeowner said the man charged at him. That's when the homeowner pulled out a gun and shot the suspect in the leg.

More Here


Automotif DCXXXI...

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2026-07-19T10:56:23Z


A Mercedes-Benz SL class of the latest (2022-present) R232 generation, photographed with a Nikon Z fc and an 18-140mm f/3.5-6.3 zoom lens.

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Don't Judge Someone by "Their Worst Day"

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-07-19T04:56:40Z

 7/15/26 KTSP:

Gov. Tim Walz is defending his vote to pardon a man convicted of molesting a 10-year-old child more than 20 years ago.

Last week, the Trump administration deported Tou Lue Vang despite a pardon approved by Walz, Attorney General Keith Ellison and Supreme Court Chief Justice Natalie Hudson in their role on the Board of Pardons...

Walz questioned whether Vang’s removal improved outcomes in Minnesota.

“I guess the question I would as is, did that make us any safer? Did that make the children that are left behind any more stable? Did it improve the idea that we can’t all be judged by our worst day?” Walz said.

I think Walz just had his "worst day." 

Vang defended his multi year molestation of a 10-year-old as part of his culture.  

A new "hybrid solar plant" in the Gobi Desert has people claiming that the Chinese are more advanced than the evil Americans and Western Powers. But is that really the case? Continue reading

The Butcher's Tale

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-07-18T21:38:41Z

By Helmut Walser Smith. This is what historians call "post hole history." To say that is a very deep dive is an understatement. The sources are interrogations, court transcripts, and census records associated with Konitz, a small town in what was then German East Prussia. 

The crime was horrendous: an 18-year-old boy was suffocated or strangled and then dismembered expertly and wrapped and tied as though he was coming from a butcher. Bad enough, but rapidly this turned in the popular imagination of the town into a Jewish sacrifice of a Christian for blood to make matzohs. Antisemitic journalists soon arrived to throw liquid oxygen on a gasoline fire. 

This book examines not only the crime itself but how the assumptions of the locals spun this positively medieval blood libel into a widely believed story. While some local prosecutors pursued the blood libel idea, responsible aristocrats and bureaucrats recognized it as an absurd claim and provided troops to protect Konitz's Jewish community when local police were overwhelmed by numbers. Amazingly enough, it did not turn into a pogrom.

He examines in detail the underlying questions of how neighbors turn against neighbors and why the blood libel persisted into remarkably recent times in Europe, in spite of strong papal opposition.  Much of this discussion is not spectacularly interesting to me, but as detective story, it works well. 

Fortunately, Democrats are looking for other ways to demonize the Jews; blood libel is even too much for MSNOW.

Rules to Live By

by Joe in The View From North Central Idaho on 2026-07-18T19:08:28Z

Via Lazy Memes Of Summer – According To Hoyt: As Sean is fond of saying, “That will come up at your trial.” Similar things can be said about rifles. Sign up for Boomershoot 2027 and see for yourself. We have … Continue reading

When Britannia ruled the waves

by Borepatch in Borepatch on 2026-07-18T15:30:53Z

OldAFSarge is (like me) fighting blogger burnout.  He's been posting for 16 years which is quite an accomplishment.  Unlike me, he's put his hand (quite successfully) at military history fiction which takes a whole lot more effort than the Dad Jokes and stuff I put up here.  Besides, OldAFSarge's co-blogger Tuna sends me half of the Dad Jokes anyway.

So I understand what he's going through.

But one thing he posted recently was a straight (non-fiction) account of the run up to the Battle of Waterloo, to set the scene for his fiction.  This tickled my memory

But every time [the French] ended the war, the British would dig deep and come up with more money to finance yet another coalition to fight Napoléon. They had the advantage of their island and the most powerful navy on the planet between them and the French.

As much as Napoléon wanted to be done with those pesky islanders, he couldn't get to them. The Royal Navy had smashed the combined French and Spanish fleets (huh, the Spanish, I thought the French were their enemies) at Trafalgar. Napoléon was a master of land combat, never did understand the sea. A big advantage the British had was that their navy was constantly at sea, blockading the French and cutting off their trade from the rest of the world. The French mostly sat in port, plotting to drive the Brits off but never getting quite there. Though, for the most part, French ships were better, it ain't the ship, it's the crew. And the Royal Navy had some excellent sailors.

People don't realize just how much better the Royal Navy was than anyone back in the day.  And yes, it wasn't the ship, it was the crew and especially the leadership.  Nelson's captains were justly famous for their independence and their aggression.

Heck, half a century earlier Admiral Byng had been shot, not for losing a battle, but rather for not winning it.   Voltaire immortalized this miscarriage of justice in Candide, famously writing "in this country, it is wise to kill an admiral from time to time to encourage the others." Dans ce pays-ci, il est bon de tuer de temps en temps un amiral pour encourager les autres.  The Royal Navy flag officers learned from that.

Nigel Calder wrote about just how amazing the Royal Navy's performance was in his fantastic book The English Channel. I cannot recommend this book more highly, and it's the book that I have re-read more than any other.  In it, Calder (who was quite an accomplished yachtsman) sailed his ketch all the way up the English channel on the French side, crossed over the Dover Straight, and then sailed it back down the English side.  Along the way he wrote about the geology, seascape, history, and current events (from 1986) all along the way.  The book is a complete delight.

He starts off in Brittany at the far Atlantic end of the French coast.  The great French port of Brest was there, but Calder points out that in the age of sail the port was a trap for the French fleet because the prevailing wind was from the west.  Because of the difficulty of a sailing ship sailing against the wind, the Royal Navy was able to blockade the French for years.  Calder describes just how amazing a feat of seamanship this was:

The Revolutionary and  Napoleonic wars spanned eighteen years, with only two short breaks.  During most of that time there were British warships off Brest.   To begin with they were only frigates, but later the British fleet remained at sea off Ushant winter and summer, in a patient demonstration of seamanship.  When the wind blew hard from the west, the British ships beat their way out into the Atlantic, or even ran for shelter in Tor Bay on the English coast, confident that the French could not leave harbour against the wind.  But whenever the weather was suitable for a breakout, the blockading fleet closed to within sight of the French shore.

...

In 1805 the conquest of England was Napoleon's first priority.  The main responsibility lay with the fleet at Brest, and its commander Honoré-Joseph-Antonin Ganteaume.  The duty of preventing the adventure belonged to William Cornwallis, who was in charge of the Channel Fleet blockading Brest.  Cornwallis was known as Blue Billy because of his determination to remain at sea.  If a gale forced his ships to run for shelter and replenishment in Tor Bay, the fleet was no sooner anchored than the flagship Hibernia would run up the blue signal flag denoting an imminent departure.

The preparations for the invasion were grandiose.  Shipyards from The Netherlands to western France built nearly 2000 barges to carry 100,000 troops, complete with their guns and horses.  The naval plan required all the fleets, from Brest, Rochefort in Biscay, Ferrol in Spain, and Toulon in the Mediterranean, to break out and rendezvous in the West Indies.  The idea was to draw the British fleets to the wrong side of the Atlantic and to mass the French and Spanish ships for a dash back to the undefended English Channel.

...

On July 22 an inconclusive battle took place in fog off northern Spain, between a British force under Robert Calder [no relation to the author Calder - Borepatch] and Villeneuve's stronger fleet.  Calder was court-martialed for capturing only two ships.  Villeneuve received exhortations from Napoléon to free the fleet from Brest and sweep all before him.

If you give us control for three days, nay, even for twenty four hours, your task will be done: all is ready, Europe awaits breathless on this great event.
Villeneuve chose instead to retreat to southern Spain, and the Brest fleet stayed put.  During these alarms, the British blockading force was reduced to fifteen ships of the line as compared with twenty five in Brest.  Ganteaume thought he could shoot his way out but he was forbidden to sail because a major naval battle was not what Napoleon had in mind.  While the British sacked Calder for failing to wipe out a superior force, the French would not let Ganteaume take his chance with a weaker one.  Different attitudes to sea power, evolved in hundreds of years of warfare in the English Channel, decided the outcome.

...

A week later the truth dawned on Napoleon that Villeneuve was timid and Ganteaume was never going to get out.  The Emperor ordered the Grand Army to march from the English Channel to the Danube where British diplomats had stirred up trouble for him.  The small craft of the invasion fleet were docked and the crews disbanded.  The attack on England had been called off.    The blockading fleet's task lacked the drama of a major sea battle like Camperdown where the British had crushed the Dutch eight years earlier, but it decided the final contest at sea between the British and the French.  The American naval historian Alfred Mahan [yes, that Alfred Mahan of "fleet in being" fame - Borepatch] wrote:
Never in the history of blockades has there been excelled, if even equaled, the close locking of Brest by Admiral Cornwallis, both winter and summer, between the outbreak of war and the battle of Trafalgar.  It excited not only the admiration but the wonder of contemporaries.

If you like OldAFSarge's military history fiction, you will like Calder's book.  It's part tourist guide, part history, part sailing log.  Like I said, I've re-read this book more than any other I own.  Highly, highly recommended.

And go leave OldADSarge some commenty love

Quote of the Day So, what to do? I have a suggestion. The Supreme Court should consider summarily reversing some of our wayward Second Amendment decisions. To put it more colloquially, it’s time for some benchslaps. Nothing less will give … Continue reading
Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome back to TFB’s Silencer Saturday, brought to you by Yankee Hill Machine, manufacturers of the new Victra 20-gauge shotgun suppressor . This week we are looking at the BOE Suppression family of IncoLite silencers. These are unique cans that are both light weight and constructed from Inconel, which is not a common combination.

Meme Dump!

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2026-07-18T11:23:20Z




3rd Circuit heard an appeal by New Jersey to a district court ruling that the Second Amendment protects AR-15s but not LCMs (magazines greater than ten rounds). To my shock and pleasure they broadened the ruling to protect all the militia appropriate firearms as well as the LCMs. And yes, this is a case on which i worked. 

This and that – commenting on commentaries

by TPOL Nathan in The Price of Liberty on 2026-07-18T01:00:00Z

Professors and other staff and faculty at government-run, tax-funded educational institutions have little leg to stand on to complain about a lack of academic freedom. And the States' current homegrown Communists (aka Democratic Socialists of America) are also both somewhat honest about their politics _and_ still a fringe group. Continue reading
As Mark Smith prophesized: Court Strikes Down NJ AW Ban & Mag Ban As Unconstitutional! – Association of New Jersey Rifle and Pistol Clubs July 17, 2026. Today, a middle level federal appeals court threw out New Jersey’s longstanding “assault … Continue reading
In a market dominated by striker-fired pistols, you are always hearing about Glock, Smith & Wesson, but rarely Beretta. At times it feels like the Beretta APX series doesn’t get the same limelight as other pistols in the same category, and I can't figure out why. When many Americans hear Beretta and think of the U.S. Army’s last-generation service pistol, the M9, maybe that's the problem. Is it possible that the M9 is so well known in pop culture that Beretta hasn’t been able to dethrone the old king? With that being said, I think the APX series is well worth consideration!
Taran Tactical Innovations has built its reputation on limited-edition exclusivity, and this Viper set represents that philosophy distilled into its most literal form: two pistols, one box, thirty examples worldwide. Photographed at EnforceTac 2026, this particular pairing presents the stark contrast TTI favors in their collector-tier releases. One pistol wears a polished silver finish, the other a high-luster gold, each occupying a custom-fitted space in the presentation case.
Weatherby Inc. has a long, long history of building high-end hunting rifles, but all those rifles have something in common. They’re chambered for the modern cartridges of their era because Weatherby was built to innovate from its founding. That’s changing now, kind of; Weatherby has announced its first muzzleloader, the Model 307 MZY. But is it really a step backwards, or a step sideways, then forward?

My Wife Was Skeptical of the View From Our Yard

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-07-17T21:14:04Z

 So I asked Google Earth:



By Dave Workman The Third U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Friday ruled that New Jersey’s ban on so-called “assault weapons” and “large-capacity magazines” is unconstitutional under the Second Amendment. Reuters is reporting that this is the first time a federal appeals court had ruled against the Garden State’s semi-auto rifle ban. It comes less […]

The post 3rd Circuit Blockbuster: New Jersey Rifle, Magazine Bans Unconstitutional appeared first on Liberty Park Press.

Pool in New House

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-07-17T19:00:15Z

 


Buyer For Caldwell House Finally

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-07-17T18:39:01Z

I was hoping to close here before close on new house but it will only be a week or two of short-term financing.
When EAA announced they’d acquired the production facility, they didn’t mince words. They very much plan to establish manufacturing operations in the U.S. As their PR puts it:
We all have a broom or shoe closet at home that houses all of our firearm cases. Big, small, medium, large… you probably own countless sizes, but how well do they actually fit? Were they made with any purpose in mind? [Federal Premium enters the chatroom] Federal has created mindful cases for suppressor use and quick-slip covers for fast transport that were crafted with intention. Now, they are shipping to dealers for our future purchase!
Leupold's new LCO Pro F2 represents the kind of iterative leap that happens when a company has the confidence to walk back to the drawing board with a successful product. The original LCO won devotees for optical clarity and build integrity, but the F2 isn't a tweak; it's a redesign that addresses what serious shooters actually ask for.

Do’s and Don’ts of Overland Truck Modification

by Chris Denison in Recoil on 2026-07-17T14:16:07Z

overland truck dos and donts cover
overland truck dos and donts coverNot sure where to start with your truck mods? These simple Do's and Don'ts will help get you started the right way!

Now it can be told...

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2026-07-17T13:51:16Z

The reason I was in Nebraska last month was for a product launch event for a new Leupold optic, the LCO Pro F2. The format of the event was a 1½ day class, followed a mini carbine match, during which I had the opportunity to put several hundred rounds downrange using the new dot.

Hornady hosted the event at the excellent Heartland Public Shooting Park just outside Grand Island.

Kyle Lamb instructed us media types in the use of the carbine...

...aided by Doug Koenig.

I'll expand further in print elsewhere, but in short, Leupold is gearing up to go hard into the high-end duty grade electro optics biz again, since they're one of a small handful of companies who can credibly play in that end of the pool.

Chris Cerino lighting up a target.



. 

Testing 9×39 SP6 AP Ammo Against Body Armor

by Ian McCollum in Forgotten Weapons on 2026-07-17T13:27:32Z

Today I have a chance to test out a couple rounds of SP6 armor-piercing 9x39mm ammo, using an ex-Russian AS Val rifle. First I’ll try an MNIJ Level 3A soft vest, which is rated for [...]

The post Testing 9×39 SP6 AP Ammo Against Body Armor first appeared on Forgotten Weapons.

Quote of the Day The federal government has filed a motion to voluntarily dismiss its appeal in a case challenging the ban on possessing and carrying firearms in U. S. Post Offices, making the Second Amendment Foundation’s (SAF) win final. In September, … Continue reading
Platform selection for concealment, the holster and print-management realities that separate a workable off-duty setup from one that stays in a drawer, and the mindset differences that matter more than the hardware when an off-duty officer encounters a threat.

MAGAZINES

by Mas in on 2026-07-17T13:00:00Z

If you have firearms that work with detachable box magazines, you darn sure want more than one. The magazine is one of the major causes of malfunctions. If you only have one and it goes belly up, your gun just became a single shot. Going to a shooting match? You probably want to bring a […]
The International Game Fish Association (IGFA) has expanded its record and recognition programs with the addition of a new Trophy Fish Club species and two new All-Tackle Length World Record categories.

VA: Lynchburg - Domestic Defense? Man Shot, Car Crashed

by Dean Weingarten in GUN WATCH on 2026-07-17T11:34:17Z

First responders found a man and a woman, the only occupants of the vehicle involved in the crash. The man, Corey Beaddles, 32, was found to be suffering from an apparent gunshot wound, according to police. He was transported to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

The woman was checked for injuries by medics on scene.

Police say they determined that just before the crash, Beaddles was driving recklessly while reportedly assaulting the woman. He was apparently shot during the incident, according to police, who haven’t revealed specifics.

Beaddles is charged with assault and battery, reckless driving, abduction and attempted malicious wounding.

Police say they found a gun at the scene and they are not seeking anyone else believed to be involved. They say there is no ongoing threat to the community.


More Here


Rochester police said a disturbance broke out inside Condado Bar and Grill around 1:30 a.m. The man was removed by security and left the area.

Police said the man then went to a parked vehicle, retrieved a handgun and returned to the bar while holding the weapon. As he approached the entrance, security confronted him and attempted to stop him from re-entering.

Multiple verbal commands were given, but police said the man ignored them, pointed the gun at a security officer and opened the entrance door. The security officer then fired multiple rounds from a legally possessed handgun, striking the man.


More Here


Friday Memes!

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2026-07-17T11:21:11Z




Weekend Knowledge Dump- July 17, 2026

by Greg Ellifritz in Active Response Training on 2026-07-17T10:31:58Z

Knowledge to make your life better.  If you have some free time, check out some of these links this weekend.   Not Just The Big Booms – Repeated Blast Pressure A very interesting article about how a relatively minimal amount of gunfire can cause brain-harming overpressure events under some circumstances.     Defensive Shotgun Selection: […]

It’s like ebonics, but lazier

by Midwest Chick in Midwest Chick's Place on 2026-07-17T10:30:00Z

In California, naturally, there is a push to normalize black slang in the classroom. Black Californians United for Early Care & Education (BlackECE), a nonprofit advocacy organization, is promoting what it describes as an effort to challenge “harmful language hierarchies and affirm black English as a legitimate, rule-governed language rooted in black history, culture, and community.” […]
Ghost gun company ordered to pay $100M in death of Kentucky teen in historic verdict – ABC News: A ghost gun company has been ordered to pay more than $100 million in the death of a Kentucky teenager who had purchased the … Continue reading
GRPC is the annual Gun Rights Policy Conference. I have been three times. Two of those times were as a speaker. I highly recommend it. With Benitez as the keynote speaker even more so.

Sound money?

by TPOL Nathan in The Price of Liberty on 2026-07-17T01:00:00Z

Sound money - is this another dream or wish? Or can we hope for better than what we have? Continue reading
If you have been following along, you know I have already put time into both the Beretta 21A Bobcat Covert  in 22LR and the Beretta 3032 Tomcat Covert  in .32 ACP over on our sister site AllOutdoor. Both came factory-threaded with dark walnut grips and both were a pleasure to review. Something always nagged at me about stopping at two, though. The original Beretta pocket pistol, the one that started all of this, was the 950 Jetfire in .25 ACP. The 21A carried that torch for a while before Beretta pulled the plug on the chambering, and they did that well before the Covert lineup existed. Nobody is rushing out to buy a .25 ACP as a primary carry gun. “Better than nothing” does not exactly move product. Still, there is no Beretta 21A Bobcat Covert .25 ACP. Beretta never made one. So I did.
Few firearms carry as much cultural weight as the MP5K. Its silhouette is immediately recognizable to anyone who has paid attention to special operations units over the past four decades, and the SP5K-PDW is HK's answer for those who want the genuine article in a civilian-legal configuration. Manufactured at Heckler & Koch's factory in Oberndorf, Germany, on the same production lines and by the same workforce that has been building MP5s for years, it shares the roller-delayed blowback operating system that defines the platform's reputation for smooth shooting and mechanical precision.
Welcome back to another edition of Concealed Carry Corner. Last week, we discussed the basics of printing and how to avoid printing. If you happened to miss that article, be sure to click the link here  to check it out. This week, I want to take a closer look at some of the unique challenges of riding a motorcycle that are different from riding in a vehicle or other options. Let's take a deeper dive into concealing on a motorcycle.

Free Books- Part 341

by Greg Ellifritz in Active Response Training on 2026-07-16T18:53:26Z

Amazon has a tremendous number of FREE ebooks on their website.  You can find thousands of free kindle books on Amazon’s site every day.  These books can be downloaded to a Kindle reader or a free App on your phone or personal computer.  Even if you don’t have a Kindle, you can download a free […]

Court Day

by Pawpaw in PawPaw's House on 2026-07-16T17:35:18Z

 Back in May, I got into a little fender-bender.  Got a ticket.  I called the Sheriff's office to see whart I owed them.

"Oh, no, PawPaw" says the lady on the phone.  "You have a mandatory court date."

I admit I was a bit baffled. No one injured, just a little bent sheet metal which the insurance covered, and I had to be in court.  So, this morning I showed up in court.  I waited about an hour for my name to be called, then went to the bar and told the judge what happened. She asked if insurance had covered it, and I said Yep.  she gave me a small fine, which I happily paid. Court costs are exorbitant, but I still got out of there for under $250.

The lady collecting the fines seemed a bit surprised that I wanted to pay it all at once.

I was a cop for 37 years.  The first 20, I spent a lot of time in the court room.   Today was the first time in maybe 15 years I had been inside a court room.  After the Oyer we said a pledge of Allegiance and Her Honor got down to business. The bailiff was a bit Foghorn Leghorn, but that is part of the job. All in all, it was not totally unpleasant.

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