Preparedness Notes for Tuesday — September 2, 2025

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2025-09-02T07:04:02Z

September 2, 1798: The first reported bank robbery in the US: Bank of Pennsylvania robbed of $162,821 at Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia. The wrong man — blacksmith Patrick Lyon (pictured) — was accused of being one of the perpetrators. — September 2, 1969 was the day that the first automatic teller machine (ATM) made its first public debut, dispensing cash to customers at Chemical Bank in Rockville Center, New York. — The prepping Paratus holiday — an invention of our friend Commander Zero — is observed on the third Friday in September.  I recommend giving very practical preparedness-related gifts. — Today’s …

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The Art and Science of Tool Making, by Grandpappy

by SurvivalBlog Contributor in SurvivalBlog.com on 2025-09-02T07:03:38Z

Introduction The rule of “Two is one, one is none” applies to almost all preparations. But what happens if once we’re safely in our shelter, we discover we’re missing a tool? In a WTSHTF situation, with no way to go out to a hardware store or have an online store deliver it to your doorstep, this situation would be catastrophic unless you had basic tools and knew how to build your own. With makeshift materials (as some military manuals call them) when there isn’t anything else suitable available, you can build a tool for yourself that will do the job. …

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SurvivalBlog’s News From The American Redoubt

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2025-09-02T07:02:36Z

This weekly column features news stories and event announcements from around the American Redoubt region. (Idaho, Montana, eastern Oregon, eastern Washington, and Wyoming.) Much of the region is also more commonly known as The Inland Northwest. We also mention companies located in the American Redoubt region that are of interest to preppers and survivalists. Today, news about an accident at Shoshone Ice Caves.  (See the Idaho section.) Idaho Three injured during walkway collapse at the Shoshone Ice Caves. o  o  o A television news segment: Gun ban sparks Idaho Caldwell Night rodeo controversy. o  o  o Idaho 2nd Amendment Alliance wants …

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The Editors’ Quote of the Day:

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2025-09-02T07:01:34Z

“Political language… is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.” – George Orwell

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From the FFL guy’s kitchen table to Michelle Cerino’s, find out what impressed both of them about the Springfield Armory SAINT Victor 2.0.

The !0th Circuit strikes down a New Mexico "cooling off" law.

But the 4th Circuit upheld Maryland's handgun purchase permit requirement. The 4th also rejected a facial challenge to a Fairfax VA ordinance forbidding firearms in certain places, including parks.

And a Delaware trial court cited the state constitution in striking down the state's ban on possession of handguns by young adults.

On the side (I don't have a link) the government withdrew its appeal of a ruling invalidating the ATF ruling against stabilizing braces for handguns. Plus, it withdrew its appeal of a successful challenge of the ban on carrying in post offices.

Springfield Armory® is proud to announce the launch of a collection of newly redesigned SAINT Victors.

Liquid Paper Trivia

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2025-09-02T00:48:00Z

Over at Chicago Boyz:
"Long before word processors and printers came along there were typewriters. And typing mistakes. In 1956 a secretary named Bette Nesmith Graham (yes, Michael Nesmith’s mom) came up with a solution to that problem, a white paint of sorts suitable enough to use on paper and to cover up typed print."

I knew the story but not the Monkees' connection. 

The Dancer From Atlantis

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2025-09-02T00:16:00Z

I am not sure when Poul Anderson wrote this novel. I am using a airline WiFi that behaves as though I have Internet service but the browser refuses to search.  Internal evidence suggests 1970. (UPDATE: Published in 1971.)

It is a novel that seems designed to appeal to someone as unique as me.  It is a time travel historical fiction set in late Minoan times as Thera prepares to erupt.  The protagonists are an American architect, a Dark Ages Hun, and medieval Russian (okay more precisely Kievan) and a bull dancer from Crete.

A malfunctioning time machine snatches them up from various times and places and dumps them with dying pilots on the North African coast.  (If you are old enough to remember the regrettable 1960s series It's About Time,  feel free to start singing the theme song, the only part of the show that showed any cleverness.)

Can Duncan get home?  Can he save his future and past girlfriend's Minoan civilization of Atlantis?  The plot is complex.  It shows an imaginative although not impossible interpretation of why Linear B replaced Linear A script on Crete.  It also does present an interesting way of resolving the known problems of explaining Minoan collapse not matching Thera destruction. 

Great fun.  Make sure you can click words in Kindle. Anderson stretched my vocabulary as usual. 


East Tennessee Looks Good

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2025-09-01T21:16:00Z

We ended up on Rush Minute near Johnson City.  It reminds me of Boise traffic jams in 2001.  Admittedly, it was Labor Day weekend but there was no traffic, no crowds.  

We stopped for lunch in Knoxville which is roughly equivalent to Boise in traffic density and fancy restaurants.  Homeless people everywhere.   At the offramp one guy having ferocious fistfights with invisible enemies. 

Going to Wal Mart

by Pawpaw in PawPaw's House on 2025-09-01T15:59:00Z

 I should have known better.  That store is virtually un-shoppable

I was looking for drawers.  You know, Men's Boxer-briefs.  Yeah, those.  I thought I knew where they should be, and I was wrong.  I wandered a bit, then found them.  Locked in a case, so I went looking for help.  I couldn't find any help, but walked back tot he locked case.  Found a button.  Pushed same.

A woman showed up with keys, so I asked her, "How long have they been locking up the drawers?"

"Since they started stealing them."

I grabbed a 6-pack of Hanes (I buy underwear like I buy beer) and headed over to the blue jean rack.  I found a pair I liked, and the first pair I picked up (regular ol' Wranglers) were my size.  "That", I thought, "Was too damned easy".

I was right.  It was too damned easy.  I spent the next 30 minutes looking for another pair.  No luck.

So, I headed to the register for the final insult.  Wal Mart had three registers open, which I thought was odd.  But I got behind a woman who could not figure out how to work a debit card.  

I hate Wal Mart.  I'm starting to understand why so many people like Amazon.

Trading Up

by admin in The War on Guns on 2025-09-01T15:26:47Z

The Commission should support this effort by rooting out and helping to remedy any activities by the Biden-era FTC that may have improperly aligned the agency with anti-Second Amendment non-governmental organizations (“NGOs”) or otherwise infringed upon Second Amendment rights. [More] I’m all over Larry Keane and NSSF when they suck up to tyranny, so I … Continue reading "Trading Up"

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There Once Were Some Dolts from Nantucket

by admin in The War on Guns on 2025-09-01T15:09:36Z

Wealthy enclave’s sewage reveals higher than average cocaine levels in the water [More] What, “overwhelmingly” Democrat Nantucket? So, well-heeled “liberals” who vote for “gun control” help finance violent criminal terror cartels and employ criminal illegal aliens…? Reminds me of another overprivileged hypocrite I wrote about after he thoughtfully demonstrated the real world effects of his … Continue reading "There Once Were Some Dolts from Nantucket"

The post There Once Were Some Dolts from Nantucket first appeared on The War on Guns.

It Just Doesn’t Matter

by admin in The War on Guns on 2025-09-01T15:05:25Z

Minnesota has red flag laws…. But because the killer’s family affirmed his mental illness, there was nothing a gun shop could do. So unless you’re prepared to make transgenderism a diagnosed mental illness, none of that will matter. [More] Not that red flag laws would stop a determined psycho predator from victimizing others, and the … Continue reading "It Just Doesn’t Matter"

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Psycho Tropical Storm Builds Up

by admin in The War on Guns on 2025-09-01T14:52:07Z

RFK Jr Dismisses Gun Control Calls, Will Examine Psych Drugs In Mass Shooting ‘Health Crisis’ [More] Am I naïve for hoping growth and change are possible? Does he also dare look at flooding developing systems with estrogens, anti-androgens, and testosterone not natural to host bodies? Enquiring minds want to know. [Via Michael G]

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‘A Principled Conservative’

by admin in The War on Guns on 2025-09-01T14:44:15Z

Hypocrisy was on full display on Wednesday’s Morning Joe as New York Times columnist David French joined the MSNBC show to discuss how Democrats should respond to President Trump on crime. Despite all the claims that Trump would be abusing his authority if he deployed the National Guard to blue cities, French, who, despite endorsing … Continue reading "‘A Principled Conservative’"

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Under the Illusion

by admin in The War on Guns on 2025-09-01T14:38:04Z

Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) is kicking off the new school year with safety as its top priority and a new layer of security. The school district announced that it will begin implementing its weapon detection screening program at school board regular business meetings. [More] Because nothing says “safe spaces” like a “gun-free zone”! And … Continue reading "Under the Illusion"

The post Under the Illusion first appeared on The War on Guns.

For the Children

by admin in The War on Guns on 2025-09-01T14:28:59Z

The children, who do not have a parent in the US, were in the care of the Health and Human Services Department. The Trump Administration worked with the Guatemalan government to devise a plan to safely return the children to their families at home. [More] That’s one hell of a qualification, bringing “much needed diversity” … Continue reading "For the Children"

The post For the Children first appeared on The War on Guns.

Pushing Back

by admin in The War on Guns on 2025-09-01T14:12:43Z

The gun lobby claims it is “winning” the fight against Australia’s longstanding crackdown on firearms, pointing to a sharp increase in licensed gun owners and weapons since laws were introduced in the aftermath of the 1996 Port Arthur massacre as a sign of its strength. [More] I wish them luck. They gotta work on that … Continue reading "Pushing Back"

The post Pushing Back first appeared on The War on Guns.

“It scrapes the internet 24/7 using an Israeli grade ontology to pull specific threat language and then routes it to local law enforcement. It’s a 24/7 detective that never sleeps and it’s going to get us in front of these attacks.” [More] And we already know who the algorithm considers to be the greatest threat. … Continue reading "Meanwhile, Over at the Department of Pre-Crime…"

The post Meanwhile, Over at the Department of Pre-Crime… first appeared on The War on Guns.

Harris County Approves Nearly $470K for Gay Softball World Series – The approval came in spite of a projected budget deficit of $220 million. [More] This will continue until we return to a standard of text, history, and tradition. Except voters parasitic and dumb enough to empower Al Green have an affinity for malfeasance in … Continue reading "Speaking of Democrat Government in Action…"

The post Speaking of Democrat Government in Action… first appeared on The War on Guns.

My Kind of Town

by admin in The War on Guns on 2025-09-01T13:59:01Z

Chicago shootings: At least 43 shot, 7 fatally, in Labor Day weekend gun violence, police say [More] Note the url says “32 shot,” and we still have today to get through. Forget it, Jake, it’s Chi-Town. Pritzker and Johnson, of course, say they got this. If Trump does deploy the National Guard, I hope “law … Continue reading "My Kind of Town"

The post My Kind of Town first appeared on The War on Guns.

Speaking of Tolerance…

by admin in The War on Guns on 2025-09-01T13:43:22Z

A Christian worship leader will hold a concert in Seattle this weekend, even as LGBTQ activists urge city leaders to revoke his permit. [More] Did anybody really believe vengeful totalitarians would stop at the Second Amendment? Tangentially related, now that he’s self-destructed, is it OK to call Robert Westman by his “deadname”?

The post Speaking of Tolerance… first appeared on The War on Guns.

Trump previously attempted to impose voter ID via an executive order earlier this year in a wider election integrity action. In April, Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia struck down the portions of that order that related to voter identification requirements. [More] That’s because she’s a treasonous anti-gun … Continue reading "Democrats to Scream ‘Racist Disenfranchisement!’ in 3…2…1…"

The post Democrats to Scream ‘Racist Disenfranchisement!’ in 3…2…1… first appeared on The War on Guns.

A Los Angeles Democrat

by admin in The War on Guns on 2025-09-01T13:34:17Z

LA councilmember accuses Home Depot of being ‘complicit’ with ICE raids, opposes new store over ‘silence’ – Ysabel Jurado told Home Depot to ‘take your orange aprons somewhere else’ [More] Because that’s a politicians job, to drive out business and prosperity (or a Marxist’s job, to eradicate the bourgeoisie). And her constituents who would be … Continue reading "A Los Angeles Democrat"

The post A Los Angeles Democrat first appeared on The War on Guns.

The Reload Unloads

by admin in The War on Guns on 2025-09-01T13:27:41Z

Dismissing valid arguments by calling their proponent “racist” is a tactic of the left. [More] I can’t say it surprises me.

The post The Reload Unloads first appeared on The War on Guns.

Registered Bolt vs Registered Receiver Uzis

by Ian McCollum in Forgotten Weapons on 2025-09-01T13:27:40Z

Most of the transferrable Uzis in the US are not factory original guns, but rather semi autos that were converted and registered as machine guns in the US before 1986 (when such activity was legal). [...]

The post Registered Bolt vs Registered Receiver Uzis first appeared on Forgotten Weapons.

New Beginnings

by admin in The War on Guns on 2025-09-01T13:23:56Z

Sangre de Cristo Sentinel is under new management. [More] You made it happen, George.

The post New Beginnings first appeared on The War on Guns.

Non-Resident CCW Permits for California

by Dean Weingarten in GUN WATCH on 2025-09-01T13:19:00Z


On July 1, 2025, United States District Court Judge Cathy Ann Bencivengo granted summary judgement to Firearms Policy Coallition members to obtain California Concealed Carry Permits. Judge Bencivengo ordered the Plaintiffs and Defendant to submit proposed orders within 30 days. From the order

For the above reasons, the Court grants Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment as to their facial challenge pursuant to the Second/Fourteenth Amendment and denies the request for relief pursuant to the Privileges and Immunities Clause. The parties are ORDERED to meet and confer and submit a proposed order for an injunction consistent with this order within 30 days. 


It is SO ORDERED.

The California Attorney General submitted a proposal whereby applicants would have to attest, under oath, they intended to spend time in a California jurisdiction within the next 12 months. It includes four pages of explicit instructions about how non-residents can apply, and what laws they must observe.

The plaintiffs submitted an order which simply says California licensing authorities are permanently enjoined from enforcing Penal Code sections 26150(a)(3) and 26155(a)(3). Judge Bencivengo chose the Firearms Policy Coallition's order. Here it is:

Defendant Attorney General Rob Bonta; Defendant’s officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys; and any other persons who are in active concert or participation with Defendant, are hereby permanently enjoined from enforcing California Penal Code sections 26150(a)(3) and 26155(a)(3) as to CCW applications submitted by Plaintiff Firearms Policy Coalition’s members who are not residents of California, including the named Individual Plaintiffs.

The order took effect on August 21, 2025.

California vests the issuing of concealed carry permits with sheriffs and police chiefs. The issuance of permits varies enormously between jurisdictions. 30 years ago, Sheriffs and police chiefs could issue permits to anyone they chose. This became a way for people who desired a permit to escape the horribly restrictive polices of sheriffs or police chiefs in large cities. Some counties were issuing thousands of permits to people who did not reside in their jurisdiction.  The California legislature passed a statute forbidding the issuance of permits to people who did not live in the jurisdiction of the issuing authority.

The permanent injunction applies only to non-residents of California who are members of the Firearms Policy Coalition. This effectively makes it easier for non-residents of California to obtain California concealed carry permits than for residents of some restrictive areas in California. For example, only 100 to 200 permits were expected to be issued for San Francisco in 2024.

The order does not limit what jurisdiction an applicant may apply in. Placer County California already lists a process for obtaining a non-resident concealed carry permit. It is not clear how non-resident applicants may qualify with their personal handguns.

In the next few months, there will be many applications for non-resident concealed carry permits in California. The process may vary significantly by county.

Those counties which cater to non-residents are likely to reap the rewards of their efforts. California concealed carry permits are currently valid for two years. At the Crime Prevention Research Center, the cost of obtaining a California permit was summed up at over a thousand dollars for the initial permit, and over $600 for renewal, in 2023.  Some jurisdictions, such as Placer County, appear to charge a couple of hundred dollars less.

 

©2025 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch
  


 


VA: Hampton - Attempted Robbery Gunfight, Suspect Killed

by Dean Weingarten in GUN WATCH on 2025-09-01T13:15:00Z

Around 12:50 a.m., authorities received a call about an attempted robbery in the 400 block of Marion Road. Police said a delivery driver had returned to his vehicle when an armed suspect approached him. The victim pulled out his own firearm, and the two exchanged gunfire. The driver was not injured and is cooperating with detectives.


More Here


Welcome to TFB Weekly Web Deals 153 and happy Labor Day! We’re back with more deals on guns, gear, ammunition, and accessories from some of our most frequented online retailers like Primary Arms, Natchez Shooters Supply, Palmetto State Armory, Brownells, and more. Whether you’re looking for deals on new or used guns, ammo to add to your reserves, or specific accessories like flashlights, range bags, optics, bipods, and magazines, each week we’ll have new sets of deals that might fulfill one of those needs and save you a few dollars.
Quote of the Day It’s easy to talk about “sensible gun control” when you don’t actually lay out what that means. spf4000August 31, 2025What “Meaningful Gun Control” is this author talking about? : r/liberalgunowners You see this all the time … Continue reading

None Dare Call It Treason

by admin in The War on Guns on 2025-09-01T12:39:41Z

In this bizarre and deeply flawed decision, the Court effectively said governments could ban every handgun make and model but one. [More] And the cowards in the Senate approved Obama appointee Denise Jefferson Casper of Massachusetts by a voice vote. [Via Jess]

The post None Dare Call It Treason first appeared on The War on Guns.

Dad Joke CCCLVIIII

by Borepatch in Borepatch on 2025-09-01T12:33:00Z

Why aren't any boys born on Labor Day?

There's no male delivery. 

Apparently an agency of the Federal Judicial branch called the Federal Judiciary Center is at the center of a new investigation. Because, to no one’s surprise, it’s biased against fossil fuels. According to a letter to Bondi from Power the Future, the Federal Judiciary Center (FJC) is engaged in a secretive effort to bias judges as part of […]

Holiday Memes Workin’ Hard!

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2025-09-01T10:04:00Z




Preparedness Notes for Monday — September 1, 2025

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2025-09-01T07:05:13Z

On September 1, 1752, Pennsylvania’s new State House bell (known today as the Liberty Bell) arrived in Philadelphia from Whitechapel Foundry in London, England. — On September 1, 1836 Narcissa Whitman, one of the first white women to settle west of the Rocky Mountains, arrived at Walla Walla, Oregon Country (now US state of Washington.) On November 29, 1847, Dr. Marcus and Narcissa Whitman and twelve others were killed by members of the Waiilatpu band of the Cayuse tribe. This heinous massacre has recently been the subject of massive revisionism, mostly at the hands of National Park Service historians/apologists.  To …

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Bear Knuckles G305 Hybrid Driver Gloves, by Thomas Christianson

by Thomas Christianson in SurvivalBlog.com on 2025-09-01T07:04:17Z

I was making good progress untying some difficult knots. The wind had taken down a tree in a marshy area in the woods by our home. I had used a block and tackle to pull the tree to drier ground so that I could process it for firewood. Now I was busy tidying up my ropes. Suddenly, I realized that something was different. I was wearing gloves. Usually shedding my gloves is the first step in the process of untying difficult knots. The Bear Knuckles G305 Hybrid Driver Gloves that I was wearing provided such good grip and dexterity that …

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Recipe of the Week:

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2025-09-01T07:03:15Z

The following seasonally apropos recipe for Roasted Summer Squash is from SurvivalBlog reader J.P.V.. Ingredients 1 pound summer squash (two medium-sized ones) 1 tablespoon olive oil 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese 1 tablespoon bread crumbs 1 teaspoon lemon pepper seasoning ½ teaspoon paprika ½ teaspoon kosher salt or to taste Directions Pre-heat oven to 400 F. Cut squash into ½”-thick slices. Toss with olive oil. Combine remaining ingredients in a small bowl and toss with squash. Place squash on a baking pan and roast 12-14 minutes or until squash is tender. Broil 1-2 minutes or until crumbs are lightly browned. …

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SurvivalBlog Graphic of the Week

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2025-09-01T07:02:47Z

Today’s graphic: Time of First Permanent European/European Descendant Settlement Within Modern-Day State Boundaries. (Graphic courtesy of Reddit.) The thumbnail below is click-expandable.       — Please send your graphics or graphics links to JWR. (Either via e-mail or via our Contact form.) Any graphics that you send must either be your own creation or uncopyrighted.

The post SurvivalBlog Graphic of the Week appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

The Editors’ Quote of the Day:

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2025-09-01T07:01:29Z

“To sit on a ranch horse that’s been broken in, it’s like getting in a Porsche.” – Sam Shepard

The post The Editors’ Quote of the Day: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

This is to all those people who claim Trump is a pedophile and demanding the release of the “Epstein Files” to confirm it. You should consider the following: By claiming that Trump is a pedophile, you are setting yourself up … Continue reading

What a Surprise

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2025-08-31T22:15:00Z

8/31/25 CNN:
"Billings, Montana
AP — 

A man suspected of killing four people at a Montana bar and evading capture for a week while hundreds of law enforcement officers searched for him in the nearby mountains faces four counts of murder, according to court records....

"Authorities have not commented on a potential motive for the 45-year-old former soldier. His niece has said Brown long struggled with mental illness."


U.S. v. Harrison (10th Cir. 2025)

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2025-08-31T21:56:00Z

Upheld ban on marijuana users (ever used) possession of firearms overturning district court. Cited article by me and Don Kates. 

They used Test Acts passed nearly contemporaneous to state RKBA provisions as evidence that persons potentially dangerous could be disarmed. What they neglected is that all these Test Acts were repealed almost immediately after the war. Some, such as Pennsylvania, only disarmed non-Associators to arm militia. North Carolina did not disarm of pistols and provided for disarming of anyone if arms were needed by militia. 

More Tennessee

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2025-08-31T21:53:00Z

July and August are hot and humid.  Not hot by Boise standards but both together are not so pleasant.   Of course in summer in Boise, I am uncomfortable outside except in the morning or after sunset.  This is no different.   I do feel like I am breathing cotton, perhaps because of allergic reaction.   Others in my family group are having similar reactions. This may be something my body learns to handle or become dependent on antihistamines. 

Bristol in the far northeastern tip of Tennessee is a nice little town with a cut late 19th century downtown.  There would seem to be nothing to create sky glow here.  Houses are much cheaper than not only Boise but even Johnson City.  This is in danger of being, "Buy two; they're cheap."

People are friendly in Bristol.  We walked across the street into Bristol, Virginia for barbecue and it was very good and not terribly expensive. 

Male-only staff bathrooms in Virginia

by Midwest Chick in Midwest Chick's Place on 2025-08-31T18:30:00Z

In the same school where two male students got a ten day suspension for commenting on a girl being in the boy’s locker room and where a boy in a skirt was allowed into girls’ restrooms where he sodomized a girl, there is a sign on the Men’s staff restroom that says ‘Male Staff Only’. […]
In 2019 Erin Burnett wanted to make sure that there was no way for Paul Manafort to escape the seriousness of the mortgage fraud charges. In 2025 it's mortgage fraud, really? This is CNN. pic.twitter.com/8be4cNK6IF — MAZE (@mazemoore) August 30, 2025

Tab Clearing...

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2025-08-31T13:49:00Z


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MI: Wilson - Domestic Defense, Man with Knife Shot, Killed

by Dean Weingarten in GUN WATCH on 2025-08-31T13:25:00Z

Authorities say their preliminary investigation indicates a physical assault between the victim and his domestic partner took place at the home prior to the shooting.

 "The man then assaulted another member of the home with a knife and was shot. The shooting appears to be self-defense," officials said in a news release.

More Here


CA: Elk Grove - Gunfight at Gas Station, Victim Wounded

by Dean Weingarten in GUN WATCH on 2025-08-31T13:23:00Z

When officers arrived, they found a man on the ground near the gas pumps with gunshot wounds. Officers provided immediate medical aid until fire personnel arrived and transported him to a local hospital. He is expected to survive.

The investigation revealed the shooting began as an argument between the victim and the suspect. During the dispute, the suspect and the victim exchanged gunfire. The suspect then drove away from the scene.

This morning, August 28th, detectives were notified that the suspect, 33-year-old Joshua Cash of Sacramento, had turned himself in to a Bay Area law enforcement agency. Elk Grove Police detectives transported Cash back to Sacramento County and booked him into the Main Jail on charges of attempted murder (Penal Code 664/187 (A)), and felon in possession of a firearm (Penal Code 29800 (A)(1)).

 

More Here 



Quote of the Day By using an electron beam, or e-beam, to remove and deposit the atoms, the ORNL scientists could accomplish a direct writing procedure at the atomic level. “The process is remarkably intuitive,” said ORNL’s Andrew Lupini, STEM … Continue reading

Meme Dump!

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2025-08-31T12:22:00Z




Sunday Meme Drop

by Midwest Chick in Midwest Chick's Place on 2025-08-31T10:30:00Z

When you think of legendary 9mm subguns, names like the Uzi, the MP5, or the Beretta PM-12 probably come to mind. What almost never comes up is Poland’s own answer: the PM-98 Glauberyt . Despite being one of the smoothest, most controllable 9mm designs ever built, this firearm has lived in relative obscurity.

Preparedness Notes for Sunday — August 31, 2025

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2025-08-31T07:04:39Z

90 years ago today, August 31, 1935, the first national skeet championship was held.  This tournament match ran from August 26th to 31st, 1935. A roster of 113  participants was hosted by the Solon Skeet Club, near Cleveland, Ohio. — August 31, 1911: The unconstitutional “Sullivan Act” requiring New Yorkers to possess licences for firearms small enough to be concealed went into effect. — SurvivalBlog Writing Contest Today we present another entry for Round 120 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round include: First Prize: A Gunsite Academy Three Day Course Certificate. This can be used …

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Review: Ramen Bae Topping Mix, by Mike in Alaska

by SurvivalBlog Contributor in SurvivalBlog.com on 2025-08-31T07:03:03Z

DISCLAIMER: I paid out of my own pocket for this food and Ramen Bae did not sponsor this review article in any way. Some folks love Ramen, but others say if you eat it you’ll die a horrible, painful death. Well, maybe that’s a bit of a stretch; bottom line is that as food it’s not the same as say a prime rib dinner. But then it doesn’t need you to take out a second mortgage to buy, either. After all the years I’ve eaten food that some might call questionable, ramen isn’t anywhere near the top of the list …

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JWR’s Meme Of The Week:

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2025-08-31T07:02:24Z

The latest meme created by JWR: Meme Text: What’s the Difference Between a Conspiracy Theory and a Conspiracy Revelation? About Six Months News Links: Vaclav Havel, Klaus Schwab, Prince Charles – World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 1992. 2020: Klaus Schwab and Prince Charles on why we need a Great Reset. Prince Charles flew 16,000 miles in just 11 days using three private jets and one helicopter before proudly posing with Greta Thunberg in Davos Notes From JWR: Do you have a meme idea? Just e-mail me the concept, and I’ll try to assemble it. And if it is posted, then …

The post JWR’s Meme Of The Week: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

The Editors’ Quote of the Day:

by James Wesley Rawles in SurvivalBlog.com on 2025-08-31T07:01:12Z

“Finally, brethren, pray for us, that the word of the Lord may have free course, and be glorified, even as it is with you: And that we may be delivered from unreasonable and wicked men: for all men have not faith. But the Lord is faithful, who shall stablish you, and keep you from evil. And we have confidence in the Lord touching you, that ye both do and will do the things which we command you. And the Lord direct your hearts into the love of God, and into the patient waiting for Christ. Now we command you, brethren, …

The post The Editors’ Quote of the Day: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.

Eastern Tennessee

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2025-08-31T04:34:00Z

Beautifully green.  No traffic.   People generally friendly.  Houses are far less expensive than Boise area.  I have some misgivings still about dark skies.  We have a quarter Moon tight now so I really have no idea how dark the sky is.

Lots of cute little towns with gobs of history and charm like Elizabethton.
Jonesborough is the oldest city in Tennessee.   Washington County courthouse. 
Once you subtract the murders and population of Tennessee's big cities (Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville, Chattanooga, and a couple of others), Tennessee's murder rate is only about 50% higher than Idaho. Rape, burglary, and aggravated assault rates are similarly higher.  Gun laws are generally similar to Idaho, so moving here will just mean carrying more consistently.

Gasoline is definitely cheaper: $2.44/gallon is typical.  Meals out are cheaper and obviously so.  Electricity is no cheaper. 

A blow against local tyranny?

by TPOL Nathan in The Price of Liberty on 2025-08-31T00:00:00Z

From Florida comes word that a State legislator is attempting to outlaw HOAs – Home Owners Associations. Juan Porras, a Miami Republican, is pushing to liberate nearly half the population of Florida who live in communities with HOAs. Over the … Continue reading
Photo from the Instagram account of Dr. Demetre Daskalakis, former Director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases at the Center for Disease Control. Following news of CDC director Susan Monarez’s ouster by the Trump administration, Dr. Daskalakis resigned along with three other CDC senior officials. None of these people went quietly. Susan […]

The Dems are self-centered little snots…

by Midwest Chick in Midwest Chick's Place on 2025-08-30T20:30:00Z

They leave when they are supposed to be doing their jobs and have to be threatened with firing to come back and the ones that are fired, lawyer up and refuse to leave. For the former, they had to spend taxpayer money to keep the eyes of the law on them. For the latter, it […]

CO2 Storage in Permafrost

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2025-08-30T18:35:00Z

More precisely, the evidence shows thst permafrost assists in storing carbon in plants in less.  8/30/25 Phys.org:
"Carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere vary naturally between ice ages and interglacial periods. A new study by researchers at the University of Gothenburg shows that an unexpectedly large proportion of carbon dioxide emissions after the ice age may have come from thawing permafrost."

If you look at long-term graphs of CO2 and global temperature, you often see temperatures rise before CO2 increases.  So CO2 may be the symptom not the cause. 

Nashville Honky Tonk Row

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2025-08-30T18:32:00Z

We walked down Nashville Honky Tonk Row.  I could only think of the Pottersville segment of It's a Wonderful Life.  Worldly, unhappy, and even more depraved.   Lots of police and security guards at 4:00 PM.  Every bar/restaurant blaring country music at high volume, overwhelming each other in a cacophony. 

A fair number of homeless/mental ill people.   A number of beggars, some with signs so vulgar that I can only euphemize them.  Carnal pleasure purchase "ain't cheap." 

I cannot imagine bringing your children there.

What Do You Hear in the Quiet?

by Unknown in Home on the Range on 2025-08-30T17:33:00Z

Last night I cooked a whole chicken I'd retrieved from Freezer Camp to prep for soups and casseroles, along with a batch of bone broth for the winter. I thought back to being a kid and eating chicken noodle soup when I was sick.  I was actually a pretty tough child, breaking my arm twice in the course of the summer one year, the first, running and tripping on a tree root (while likely carrying scissors), the second a major spill off of my bike while my brother and I were playing "Man from Uncle", 3 days out of the first cast (Mom was NOT happy).

But if my brother or I got a cold or the flu, we were kept in bed, snug and warm, and left with a little bell to summon Mom if we needed anything.  We didn't abuse that, not bothering her unless we needed to, but something was comforting, knowing that if we needed a drink or just a hug, she was there. Mom herself was battling cancer, and we had that intuitive sense, even that young, that our troubles were little compared to hers, and we tried to be quiet and considerate.

For on such mornings, there would be no noise in the house, but for Mom's labored breath, and occasionally the little tinkling chime of an etched metal bell.

That bell is one of the earliest memories of sound I have.  There were others; the sounds of the kitchen filled the air as Mom baked something. I remember the sound of the front door, a heavy hardwood door that shut with the announcement of "Dad's home!" Dad would walk in and kiss my Mom. Not a peck on the lips, but a long kiss, and she'd giggle, there with flour on her face, and that is the sound I first remember.

As I prepare something to nourish me again, I think of such sounds - from here within the silence. When I think of "quiet," I think of being out in the woods. Morning in the forest, the world is silent but for the draw of your breath.  People talk of the quietness of the wilderness. But is it? Is any place? Indeed, not the city, from which we shout our way home each day, automobiles yielding not by law or logic, but by some order of survival of the fittest.

When I was first drawn to the woods, seeking quiet and perhaps sustenance, I never realized the varied depths of sound in the woods. First, there was my own sounds, body defying that bitch that is gravity, hauling myself up the tree stand with all the tactical grace of a draft horse. My breath came in hot, wet bursts, and every step seemed a kettle drum in the darkness. When I got up and settled, I expected only quiet, my senses tuned to anything that would indicate a whitetail was headed my way.

The first sound you'll hear when you are in the woods is the birds. A woodpecker off in the distance, the sound stopping as abruptly as it started, as if it were only an echo you heard. Then, the soft chirps and peeps as the sun first comes up. The sounds of that time when the owl ceases flight, passing the baton to the predators of the day as the wet, grey light illuminates their flight. Then silence, as overhead the form of a hawk passes, the sparrows cry but a dinner bell of a feathered hors d'oeuvres. It's a melody of life, gone silent in fear as the whoosh of wings sweeps overhead. The hawk is gone, riding an updraft away to a tune only he can hear. As quickly as it was hushed, the sounds are back, as I settle back into the blind to the chorus of hungry birds.
But morning passes, and the birds twitter off into the serene efficiency of food gathering. The quiet hangs pensively between trees and rocks that alight with small creatures, freed as prey of the night, searching for food. Rivers move in the distance, the streams complain, a fish jumps, the sound at the limit of your hearing as the forest floor, green with calm, pools around all.

Sounds emerge and fade -

The wind through the treetops as a thunderstorm does a drive-by.

A dying tree tapping its own chest, then falling into sleep as the wind finishes its work, leaving without notice.

The slick of a knife as it cuts into the apple that is lunch.
It's not easy sitting still, sitting in what others would call silence, listening only to the hearts' whispered confidences, conversing silently with your own regrets.

But if you are patient and completely still, you may hear it in the distance. Not the birds nor the brook, but the soft crunch of leaves, scarcely a sound yet, almost sound anticipated, yet to reach the ear. There it is again, drifting into your hearing, then ebbing away again, sound dying softly on a trail that's leading away from you. It's gone.

You tell yourself it was a three-legged, one-eyed, scrawny button buck not worthy of the shot, while down inside you have a mental picture of tines with a spread of two and a half feet and a form that blots out all sound.

You knew there were deer here. Creatures living in the shadowy limbo from which time began, moving around and away from time, away from you. Forms moving right around you, as your heart sounds out that beat of time, going too fast. If only you could see with the eyes that all hunters have. You know they are close, moving in and out of the sun's glare, flirting with you with grunts and snorts, hot air from soft muzzles, challenging you to the duel that only one of you will win. They drink from quiet pools in which autumn leaves slowly die, drifting on the cold waters with the motion of sleep.
You've seen the signs, the rubs, the scrapes, those measured indentations made of testosterone and bold youth. Signs of the whitetail, rising out of the deep quiet and the sleep. Look quick, listen close, for soon the marks would be gone, disappearing with astonishing speed as leaves blew past, as if relinquishing themselves back to the earth, where you, the hunter, are but a transient.

Do they hear me? The sharp intake of breath in the cold air, the hammering of my heart that to me sounds like a cacophony. That sound that pounds in your ears, and you imagine every creature in the forest can hear it. When the hunter's urge comes on full, strong, legs, arms, and muscles, ready. Memories from the times before memory existed, wired into us, come from those who survived. The moment passes, and the sound is but a tree limb coming down; you are left with the clear lucidity that adrenaline brings, resting your hand and quieting your heart. Be still, so we are not heard. Be still so no one notices the trembling of your form, the tear as it forms in quiet pools, still, as your body trembles with anticipation.
You're only a few miles from a road, and if you listen, the tiny intrusions of civilization are heard; the sound of a train, way off, a laboring sound of groaning metal; later in the afternoon, a plane overhead, small sounds that seem foreign out here, and you brush them away with the flies. That world can wait; this is your world, now, all that you need as you hear the sound of your watch and the sound of the train dying away, running through another world that you know exists, but you do not occupy.

The outside world fades back to hush, rising only to the occasional stammering of an angry squirrel, who doesn't stop even with cross hairs pointed at him. Do not fire, you tell yourself, as the sound would clear out everything around. Stop, look, wait. Listen.

Then you hear it. The sound is but the slightest of soft breaths in your ear, a tug at your heart, the course of blood through your cold hands, the mute tremble of your thighs. There, upwind, the slightest of pause amongst the leaves, as if something was also listening for you before advancing. The sound stops. The tiny hammer of your heart is an ocean in your ears. The sound starts. Crunch. Crunch. A snort. Testing the air, testing you.

You can not hear his heartbeat, only your own, but as he comes into view, you can see the flinch of muscle and hide. Flesh driven by a heart that is insular, standing with a form that, without sound, infers weight and speed. It's speed that will take him far from you if he senses that heart of yours which beats too loudly, with strength born by rending it and building it back up again.
Then, as suddenly as the sound comes into your field of view, it stops. Stops, as everything- animal, vegetable, mineral, the trivial uproar of a squirrel and the sun, coalesce into one sound of shuddering breath inward. There he is, fixed in the hot, philandering wind, a beam of sun against the massive rack, as he turns, sniffing, listening for danger. One more moment, one more breath, and he'll have you. Instinct draws up the gun.

The birds explode into flight, the noise shattering the lie of silence. The whitetail bolts with a clamor, faint and fading as he breaks the barrier of life, moving on with a boom heard across heaven.. . .

.. . that boom, the sound of a truck door outside, slamming shut, bringing me back from the forested recesses of my daydream to the room around me.  The world has gone back silent again, but for the sound of my breath,  Up on the shelf, sits a metal bell, the ancient etchings upon it dusty; coalescing, into a sense other than sound, a scent, a touch, the whisper of comfort and the smell of hot chicken broth, there in a room only fierce with the sound of alone.

I pick up a little framed photo of a red-haired woman and child, as outside, the melodic chime of birds in the trees calls upwards to heaven.
 - Brigid
My Friday began with some long-overdue work clearing downed brush and trees in the woods around the house. Back issues over the past 20 months have kept me from keeping up with routine maintenance, so it felt both satisfying and exhausting to finally be out there again — even if only for a couple of hours. By evening, I was more than ready for a well-earned “sip and smoke” on the screened porch.

I had been eyeing the Perdomo Legacy Nicaraguan Maduro resting in my humidor for about four weeks, waiting for the right moment. Having now reached the minimum rest I like to give new arrivals, it was time to light one up. Figuring a full-bodied cigar deserved a bold companion, I poured a glass of Pikesville Rye.



The Perdomo Legacy Nicaraguan Maduro was created by Nicholas Perdomo III as a tribute to his father. It features a 10-year-aged Cuban-seed Nicaraguan Maduro wrapper that spent an additional 14 months aging in bourbon barrels. A shade-grown Nicaraguan binder — a hybrid of Cuban and Cameroon seeds from the family’s Finca Natalie estate — holds fillers from Perdomo farms in Estelí, Condega, and Jalapa Valley.

The wrapper on the 5 x 54 Robusto vitola is oily, smooth, and shines in the evening sunlight. The cigar is flawlessly rolled and dressed in an ornate gold, red, and blue band. Eventually I force myself to stop admiring the cigar and actually light it up.



From the first draw, the blend’s complexity shines. Notes of semi-sweet chocolate, espresso, caramel, and spice greet the palate. As the cigar develops, espresso deepens into black coffee, while a chocolate-covered almond nuance teases in the background. Cedar and pepper linger pleasantly on the finish.

The pairing could not have been better. Pikesville Rye, one of my favorite bold ryes, offers dark cocoa, baking spice, and molasses — a perfect match that stands confidently alongside the Maduro’s intensity.



The Perdomo Legacy Nicaraguan Maduro is a full-flavored, complex, and thoroughly rewarding smoke. Even halfway through, I was already considering grabbing some larger vitolas to stretch out the experience. At the end of the surprisingly long 80 minute burn, I lamented its finish.

The combination of rich cigar, bold whiskey, and a clear evening made for a truly satisfying close to the day — even if I was contemplating the remaining brush cleanup that still needed to be dealt with in the future.

Cheers!


[ This content originated at Musings Over a Barrel ]

Spam Callers

by Pawpaw in PawPaw's House on 2025-08-30T14:45:00Z

 My buddy, a CFDA club member has a home range in his shop.  He practices fast draw out there so that he can place consistently in club matches. Last week, he reported that he was shooting in his home range when He got a spam call. The conversation went like this.

Phone rings, he answers it.  "Hello"

He listens for a few seconds, determines it it a spam call, then speaks in a frantic tone. " Who are you?  What are you doing in here?  I'll shoot you.  

He then fires two shots into a target.  Pow!  Pow! "Oh, damn.  Look at all that blood"

He says at that point, the call dropped.  Imagine that.

M2 Carbine vs MP44 Sturmgewehr (w/ John Keene)

by Ian McCollum in Forgotten Weapons on 2025-08-30T13:27:47Z

Today we are considering two late World War Two rifles: the American M2 Carbine and the German MP-44 Sturmgewehr. Which would you take into combat? The Sturmgewehr is certainly iconic, with a more powerful cartridge, [...]

The post M2 Carbine vs MP44 Sturmgewehr (w/ John Keene) first appeared on Forgotten Weapons.

Clayton Cramer has the story. The link to the story he cites is now here.

The story is from the BBC: I doubt we'll see it in the US media.

Quote of the Day You are supposed to fight terrorist. Republicans are legit terrorist. Look up the definition of the word. Would you not fight SHitler? Mike @xxdaddycoolxx91Posted on X, September 16, 2024 See also: The Immortal on X: “@libsoftiktok … Continue reading

I’ve known about Big Horn Armory out of Cody, Wyoming, for a long time. From the moment they hit the scene, I fell in love with their big-bore lever-action rifles. They made a massive splash in the firearms world by building rugged, hard-hitting lever guns chambered in .500 S&W Magnum and .460 S&W Magnum—cartridges previously […]

The post Big Horn Armory 500 Automax Review Field Artillery Support first appeared on Day At The Range.

Silencer Saturday #395: BOE Mod 1 Silencer

by Daniel Y in The Firearm Blog on 2025-08-30T12:30:00Z

Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome back to TFB’s Silencer Saturday, brought to you by Yankee Hill Machine, manufacturers of the YHM R45 Multi-Host Suppressor . This week we are looking at the full-size Mod 1 silencer from BOE Suppression. It is a unique design that puts up some impressive performance.

No-hit shooting – 900 block of Gladys Avenue: On August 26, 2025 at approximately 7:48 p.m., officers responded to the 900 block of Gladys Avenue regarding a shooting. Upon arrival, officers located evidence indicating a shooting had occurred. The preliminary investigation indicates that two male adult suspects were attempting to burglarize a male adult victim’s home when the victim fired a gun, and the suspects fled in a vehicle. As they fled, one of the suspects fired a gun back. The suspect vehicle collided with another vehicle, and the suspects fled the scene on foot. No injuries were reported. The investigation is ongoing.

Source  


Meme Dump!

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2025-08-30T11:16:00Z




.45 vs. 9mm?

by SLG in pistol-training.com on 2025-08-30T11:00:00Z

Does anyone really think small projectiles are as good or better? How about one these coming at you? Of course, we can’t carry those with us, but it does make the point. In the meantime, high standards for accuracy are the only way to hedge our bets.

Saturday Meme Drop

by Midwest Chick in Midwest Chick's Place on 2025-08-30T10:30:00Z

The P320-series of guns has been in the news lately, particularly those used by the US military. Investigations ensued after the death of an Airman involving one of the guns, which were immediately pulled from service. Well, the M18 is back in service and another Airman has been charged criminally in connection with the incident. We spoke to SIG Sauer to get their views on the situation.

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