King Charles won’t release Easter message but did honor Ramadan [More] Give it a few generations, they said. They’ll adapt to our way of life and embrace our values, they said.
The post Who’s Changing Who? first appeared on The War on Guns.
Whoever he picks will have to go through the Senate Judiciary Committee, where Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., said in an interview with CNN that the next nominee must align with his views on the Jan. 6, 2021, riots at the U.S. Capitol. “The threshold for somebody following Pam Bondi ends the moment I hear they … Continue reading "A Clear-Eyed View"
The post A Clear-Eyed View first appeared on The War on Guns.
A former staffer to Joe Biden shot and killed his girlfriend on March 24 in San Francisco… Nation Wood, 25, claims he was dry-firing a firearm, which led to the shooting. [More] Biden, you magnificent bastard, he read your book! [Via Michael G]
The post Dry Up and Blow Away first appeared on The War on Guns.
FORENSIC BREAKDOWN: NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s and First Lady Rama Duwaji’s Wikipedia pages have been systematically sanitized, with praise for terrorists softened, endorsement of deadly attacks minimized, and verified racial & homophobic slurs blocked. [More] Wikipedia commits lies of omission? Who knew? [Via Michael G]
The post Sanitized for Your Protection first appeared on The War on Guns.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres warns the organization faces collapse without continued U.S. funding… [More] So… what’s scrap metal going for these days…? [Via Michael G]
The post Promises, Promises first appeared on The War on Guns.
We're headed back to the moon, after all these years. The ship launched on Wednesday, with a crew of four, to circle the moon and come back, testing systems along the way.
You can track the mission here.
Godspeed, Artemus.
In other news, today is Good Friday, a huge day in the Christian calendar. Fasting and reflection is the order of the day. Sunday, we celebrate the Resurrection, the fact that all of Christianity is based on.
Y'all have a great and blessed weekend. Celebrate Easter in your own style, and chick on those brave astronauts who are crewing a tiny spacecraft in a vast universe. They are going only to the moon, but we have to start somewhere.
Any potential acquisition by Italian Beretta would place a major US defense and firearms manufacturer with operations in three key battleground states — under foreign ownership. [More] So the concern is for the standing army, not the militia of the whole people? Why does Ruger’s main concern not being the Second Amendment not surprise me? … Continue reading "No Dog in This Fight"
The post No Dog in This Fight first appeared on The War on Guns.
“It’s the same Constitution.” [More] I wish that f_r’d remember that. [Via Henry Bowman]
The post Brave New World first appeared on The War on Guns.
One. Only One. [Watch] [Via WiscoDave]
The post We’re the Only Ones Licensed to Kill Enough first appeared on The War on Guns.
In 2023, 320,000 children were born to unauthorized or temporary immigrant mothers inside the US, granting them automatic Citizenship — This Accounted for 9% of ALL AMERICAN BIRTHS that year [More] Give ’em a generation or three, right, guys?
The post Birth of a Nation first appeared on The War on Guns.
The post Ambient Arms EXO 5.56 Suppressor: Does it Really Stay Cool? first appeared on Forgotten Weapons.
According to the report, Hudson informed officers that he was carrying a firearm and voluntarily handed over a 9mm Smith & Wesson handgun. [More] Stupid. Stupid. Stupid. Just what Minnesota needs to take the focus off Democrats. “Poor choices were made” …? These guys never stop being politicians, do they? Charge Engen with falsification/obstruction, or … Continue reading "The First Rule of Fight Club"
The post The First Rule of Fight Club first appeared on The War on Guns.
One of the country’s best armed defense instructors is retiring. Here’s the official announcement: David Maglio has been a student of the gun for the past five plus decades, starting in 1975. His first accomplishments were earning the Rifle Expert and Pistol Expert awards in the U.S. Marine Corps. After his Honorable Discharge, he was hired as […]From Saving Grace - A Story of Adoption by LB Johnson
It seemed like those childhood years were a blink. Our dog Pepper had crossed the Rainbow Bridge; Dad was getting ready to retire. Before I knew it my brother was off to the Navy, going to submarine school, myself already in college, working toward my commercial pilot’s license. I ultimately wanted to major in science or criminal justice, perhaps both—but as a teen I got a second job at the local airport pumping gas. I could get flying lessons at a reduced cost, so I was working toward my license while cramming in way more classes than I had hours in the day. For that kind of overextending, there is a “complete breakfast”—which for me was Hostess Sno Balls and coffee, grabbed when a parent wasn’t looking. Unhealthy yes, but just the taste of them took me back. It was that and the big bowl of Captain Crunch before every flight check. I was glad years later when I got my nickname as a pilot that it was “Shake and Bake” and not “Captain Crunch.”Still—all good memories. Memories of childhood are so different for many people. I am lucky that mine were good. Laughter and exploration wrapped in a warm blanket of sight and sound and tastes that are still on my tongue. Memories of the past are like that; often having an impossible quality of perfection we frequently give to material things, a favorite book, a favorite tool or firearm; sometimes to a whole relationship we can never get back to.
If we could only get there again, have that again, hold that again, our lives would somehow be better; as if some cold case crime was finally solved, the reminders of things that hurt us left behind, held in our mind never to be freed again.
We’ve all talked about it, some small trivial thing from the past that appears to contain the sublime, and there’s no explaining it to anyone, try though you might. Still, in your mind’s eye it’s there and always will be as clear and as sure as if it were yesterday. For me one such memory is opening up the lunch box as a kid and finding my Hostess treat next to my peanut butter and honey sandwich, apple, and carrot sticks.
Mom’s cancer was one of those things that will stay with me for a lifetime. She was first diagnosed in the early ’60s. The long term survival rate for her type of cancer then was only one in seven. When she was first diagnosed, she was only in her forties. I was not even in school yet, my brother only a couple of years older. She came home after Christmas that first time, chemo shunt in place, and did everything in her power to make our life normal. I don’t recall her initially leaving for the hospital, only the worried look in my dad’s eyes. But the photos bring it back, like the one of my brother at her hospital bed with a little aluminum tree on the nightstand—as she holds up a flannel nightgown Dad picked out and bought “from us” that she opened from her hospital bed.I remember her making our school lunches with homemade cookies if she was up to it, and our Hostess treats when she wasn’t. It was Ding Dongs for my brother, Sno Balls for me. I’d eat one at lunch and take the remaining one to the playground after school, eating it perched on top of the biggest, tallest pieces of playground equipment I could find; defying gravity, feet dangling in the air, Mom watching carefully from a distance. Then we’d go home to start supper, eager to tell both Dad and Mom about our day, and we’d listen to her laugh—that sound, the stored honey of her spirit, carried on wings whose load was heavy, delivered to us, her children, to make us whole.Before cancer, our list of should-dos was really quite long. And like other families that cope with disappointment or disease we quit using the work “should” quite so much. The house may have been be a bit messier; but given the choice of cleaning or building a snowman with her kids, doing that ironing now or joining us in a snowball fight, her choice went toward those small joys.
Still, Mom maintained her discipline as a mother; and for every sweet snack we got there were still those family dinners where you had better eat your vegetables. She and I had a doctrine of mutually assured destruction involving acorn squash. She refused to not make it, and I refused to eat it—sitting at the table long after everyone else was excused, the squash growing as chilly as that Veggie Cold War; until finally she gave up and sent me to my room without dessert, something that was not easy on either of us.
Watching us spread our wings, knowing she would likely be gone before we were grown with families of our own, had to have been so hard. Like any mother she was concerned with our safety, but never to the point where we were wrapped in bubble wrap, spoiled, and coddled, or given everything we wanted without effort. We worked hard for our allowance, doing chores; but when the chores were done, we were encouraged to go explore the world around us.Myself, I’d get on my bike and go ride the dusty gash of a roadway near the railroad tracks, where I could see and hear the trains go by—the engine passing in hissing thunder, sparks flying up like fireflies let loose from the rails, dust coiling behind it like a tornado in trail. Such began my adventures, my love of motion and machinery.
We crammed a lot of life into those short childhood years, as did our mom. More than we expected her to have, but not nearly enough. It’s been a lifetime since she left us, and all that remains are the memories—memories that come on the wings of a snowfall; that raise a smile every time I see an acorn squash at the grocery store; that rumble into life with the roar of a locomotive or the soft crackle of a little cellophane package being gleefully opened by eager hands.
It was five in the morning. In a few hours I would have to get up and go to the airport to fuel the aircraft for the morning students, cram in some studying, and then ride my bike to the community college for class. The alarm went off much too early, my hand slapping it even as it gently touched a photo of my brother and me as children, Pepper the wiener dog lying between us as we watched Johnny Quest.Limbo
The ancient greyness shifted suddenly and thinned like mist upon the moors before a wind.
An old, old prophet lifted a shining face and said:
“He will be coming soon. The Son of God is dead; He died this afternoon.”
A murmurous excitement stirred all souls. They wondered if they dreamed
save one old man who seemed not even to have heard.
And Moses, standing, hushed them all to ask if any had a welcome song prepared.
If not, would David take the task?
And if they cared could not the three young children sing the Benedicite,
the canticle of praise they made when God kept them from perishing in the fiery blaze?
A breath of spring surprised them, stilling Moses’ words.
No one could speak, remembering the first fresh flowers, the little singing birds.
Still others thought of fields new ploughed or apple trees all blossom-boughed.
Or some, the way a dried bed fills with water laughing down green hills.
The fisherfolk dreamed of the foam on bright blue seas.
The one old man who had not stirred remembered home.
And there He was, splendid as the morning sun and fair as only God is fair.
And they, confused with joy, knelt to adore
Seeing that He wore five crimson stars He never had before.
No canticle at all was sung. None toned a psalm, or raised a greeting song,
A silent man alone of all that throng found tongue — not any other.
Close to His heart when the embrace was done, old Joseph said,
“How is Your Mother, How is Your Mother, Son?”
-- Sister Mary Ada, OSJ
| Michelangelo's Pieta, via Wikimedia Commons |

Ohio Statehouse
Ohio Senate Bill 392 was introduced into the Ohio legislature on March 23, 2026. It is a long bill of 182 pages which reforms and rationalizes much of the Ohio code involving the possession and carry of weapons. Here is the summary as listed in legiscan. Summary:
To amend sections 9.68, 109.69, 109.731, 311.41, 311.42, 311.43, 1547.69, 2921.13, 2923.11, 2923.111, 2923.12, 2923.121, 2923.122, 2923.123, 2923.124, 2923.125, 2923.126, 2923.127, 2923.128, 2923.129, 2923.1210, 2923.1211, 2923.1212, 2923.1213, 2923.16, 2923.17, 2953.35, 4511.19, and 4749.10 and to repeal section 1533.04 of the Revised Code to enact the Freedom to Carry Act to rename a concealed handgun license a concealed weapons license, to allow a concealed weapons licensee to carry a concealed deadly weapon other than an exclusive deadly weapon,
and to allow the possession or transportation of a loaded firearm while in a motor vehicle or vessel.
There are many parts to SB 392. Much of the bill consists of changing the word "handgun" to deadly weapon. This appears to be because Ohio law, at current, only allows the carry of handguns under a concealed carry permit, and does not allow, or is unclear about other deadly weapons. It makes no sense to be able to carry a handgun, but not a knife, a fist re-enforcer, or nun-chucks.
The bill continues to prohibit some weapons which may fall under the category of "dangerous and unusual" as used in Second Amendment jurisprudence following the Heller, MacDonald, Caetano, and Bruen decisions. For example, it appears destructive devices are still banned from carry if they are not owned in accordance with National Firearms Act provisions. Short barreled rifles, short barreled shotguns and silencers appear to be removed from the list of prohibited weapons in this bill. Here is the definition of "exclusive deadly weapon" in the bill. Underlined words are new words. Strike thru words are words to be removed. The weapons meeting the definition are a very short list:
(2) "Exclusive deadly weapon" means a deadly weapon that is an exclusive firearm or that is a deadly weapon that any law of this state or the United States prohibits the subject person from acquiring, possessing, having, or carrying.
(3) "Exclusive firearm" means a firearm that is dangerous ordnance or that is a firearm that any law of this state or the United States prohibits the subject person from acquiring, possessing, having, or carrying.
The number of weapons which fall under the above definitions has been considerably reduced.
In addition, SB392 changes the age requirement for obtaining a concealed carry permit from Twenty-one to Eighteen. From SB392:
(2) "Qualifying adult" means a person who is all of the following:
(a) Twenty-one Eighteen years of age or older;
The bill changes the definition of prohibited weapons from a very specific reference to the National Firearms Act (NFA) provisions to a general provision. This is likely put in place so that if the courts strike down the parts of the NFA, the Ohio legislature will not be required to revise Ohio laws again. From the bill:
(b) Not legally prohibited from acquiring, possessing, or receiving a firearm deadly weapon under 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(1) to (9) or under section 2923.13 of the Revised Code or any other Revised Code provision the law of this state or the United States;
There are changes which remove some of the restrictions on the carry of weapons in vehicles and vessels.
SB392 is one of the longest state bills this reporter has encountered in decades. It has a significant chance of being amended if it is passed. The provisions appear to be clear rationalizations and clarifications in light of Supreme Court decisions involving the Second Amendment.
The Ohio Legislature has a super majority of Republicans in the Senate, 24 of 33. The Ohio House of Representatives has a super majority of Republicans in the House, 65 of 99. The Ohio Governor is Mike DeWine, a Republican.
Analysis: SB392 has a good chance of passage. Its provisions are reasonable and likely to resonate with conservatives in Ohio. This could boost electoral prospects for Republicans in Ohio in the 2026 elections. This correspondent is not a lawyer. This article is not legal advise.
©2026 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.
Gun Watch
Two men had reportedly gotten into a car accident at the intersection, after which an argument started. The two men then shot each other.
Also Monday night, police responded to another double shooting in southwest Atlanta. That shooting happened near 3540 North Camp Creek Pkwy. SW, the address for The Preserve at Camp Creek apartments, located just outside the perimeter.
There, they found two people with gunshot wounds. One was pronounced
dead on the scene. The other was alert, conscious and breathing and was
taken to a hospital.
Knowledge to make your life better. If you have some free time, check out some of these links this weekend. Hegseth Authorizes Off-Duty Service Members to Carry Private Firearms on Installations This is a very positive initiative. Let’s hope the base commanders are supportive. how to tell if men will attack you […]By Dave Workman The number of active concealed pistol licenses in Washington state has taken a sharp turn downward over the past four months, according to data provided to TGM by the state Department of Licensing, and part of the reason may be gun owners are fleeing the state due to increasingly restrictive gun laws. […]
The post Wash. CPL Numbers Decline; Gun Owners Join Exodus, Others Refuse to Renew appeared first on Liberty Park Press.
On April 3, 1910, the highest mountain in North America, Alaska’s Mount McKinley (aka Denali) was claimed to have been first climbed by four local men. They climbed McKinley’s North Peak, not knowing that the South Peak is actually 850 feet higher. — This is the birthday of Washington Irving, an American author, essayist, biographer, historian, and diplomat of the early 19th century. He is best known for short stories like Rip Van Winkle and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, but he also wrote several biographies and served as the US Ambassador to Spain from 1842 to 1846. — A …
The post Preparedness Notes for Friday — April 3, 2026 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
My Prepping Journey began in 1967 when I moved to San Francisco. Spots on the radio urged us to prepare for an earthquake, The Big One. So one day while I was grocery shopping, I threw a flashlight in my cart and then put it in my trunk. On another trip I threw a cardboard box into my trunk. In the ensuing months, I added some bottles of water, a knife, some Power Bars, and cans of soup. I later learned that the heat of the trunk would destroy the soup, so I replaced it with beef jerky and peanuts. …
The post My Prepping Journey, by Big John appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
In Economics & Investing Media of the Week we feature photos, charts, graphs, maps, video links, and news items of interest to preppers. Today, a map showing where ancient Roman coins have been found. JWR’s Comments: I must mention that the price of most ancient Greek and Roman coins collapsed in the late 1980s and early 1990s, as large hoards were dug up in Eastern Europe and in the former Soviet Union. The demise of the Soviet Bloc opened up western markets. This was coupled with faltering economies that were transitioning to free market capitalism. The result was that a …
The post Economics & Investing Media of the Week appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
“In the coming era of manned space exploration by the private sector, market forces will spur development and yield new, low-cost space technologies. If the history of private aviation is any guide, private development efforts will be safer, too.” – Burt Rutan
The post The Editors’ Quote Of The Day: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
Hegseth announces military can apply to carry guns on post [Watch] Past time. Now do military cemeteries. Let’s ask him.
The post A Good First Step first appeared on The War on Guns.
Obviously, I'm a couple of days late.
Sure, NASA spends taxpayer money like a drunken sailor. Sure, Congress is using this program to throw taxpayer money at favored corporations.
But today, no other country can do what we are doing, just like what Old America did half a century ago. And no other country has a SpaceX waiting in the wings to drop mission cost by a factor of 40.
Considering the epic amount of fraud from California's (and other states) Medicare programs (not to mention Learing Centers), all I can say is that this is waste I can get behind.
Here are my upcoming open enrollment classes for April and May. I also have two new classes in October for which I just opened up registration. Here we go… Next weekend is the only remaining instructor class with available slots that I’m offering this year. It’s in Louisiana about halfway between Baton Rouge and […]I spoke with him in detail a few days back and submitted the results of our talk to Firearms News. My editor tells me it will be online either today or tomorrow and has gotten in under the wire to make the print version, going to press Monday and should in subscriber mailboxes/on news stands … Continue reading "Plain Talk, Long Overdue"
The post Plain Talk, Long Overdue first appeared on The War on Guns.
Pam Bondi already fired as attorney general, Cabinet official teed up as replacement: sources [More] He’s NRA A- rated and endorsed… Not that that’s always a good indicator… UPDATE Looks like it’s Todd Blanche. He says the right words about 2A. He could have picked a better example. I’m wondering if there’s another reason…
The post Not On My Bingo Card first appeared on The War on Guns.
The Dumbest Self-Defense Advice On The Internet [More] Careful you don’t limit options there. Ain’t that right, Rex? [Via Tacticool Memes]
The post One Man’s Expert… first appeared on The War on Guns.
Muslim woman complains that there are too many Finnish people in Finland. [More] I’d say something, but you all know how important prominent gunfluencer approval has always been to me. [Via Michael G]
The post When in Rome Do as the Visigoths Do first appeared on The War on Guns.
‘No Kings’? No, a King is exactly what they want [More] Hawaii commies even changed theirs to “No Dictators.”
The post I Don’t Suppose ‘No Commissars’ Would Get a Vote…? first appeared on The War on Guns.
ActBlue May Have Misled Congress on Vetting Foreign Donations, Its Lawyers Warned [More] Sorry, it’s paywalled and when I try to access it through Internet Archive, I get this: If I were, why would they talk to me like I’m a person? Now we see what the GOP is made of. [Via Michael G]
The post To Whom They Are Beholden first appeared on The War on Guns.
Democrat-led states threaten to sue Trump over voter database executive order [More] If I were a Democrat and I knew that voter fraud claims are truly baseless, I’d want to let him walk into this self-made trap. What did Napoleon supposedly say…? [Via Michael G]
The post Adventures in Baselessness first appeared on The War on Guns.
‘Virginia Dad’ Who Allegedly Killed Three-Year-Old Daughter is an Illegal Alien [More] So her birthright to life didn’t matter… Like I say, we don’t hate “Authorized Journalists” enough. [Via Michael G]
The post Redefining the Terms first appeared on The War on Guns.
People Aren’t Complying With Canada’s Gun Grab. Could It Get Ugly? [More] One can always hope. I wonder how much Heritage Canadaian blood will be enough for Gary… [Via Michael G]
The post We Never Had These Problems in Sri Lanka… first appeared on The War on Guns.
We have this huge pin oak tree in the front yard. Some call it a white oak, others call it a water oak, but around here, it's a pin oak. It's a beautiful tree, but it drops acorns.
When Belle and I moved into the house, we wanted a crepe myrtle in the front yard, so I planted one. Crepe myrtles are odd, decorative, flowering trees. When they are young, or when they are stressed, they are spindly. Some old-time growers would weave the spindly trunks together. Others would choose the strongest trunk and cull the others. It's a choice.
Back to my plight. The pin oak was close enough to the crepe myrtle that acorns would fall amongst the spindly trunks of the crepe myrtle. Some took root and over the past several years, the oak saplings grew into the crepe myrtle, choking it out. It looked like hell, and I needed to get a handle on it. But, I have elevated procrastination to an art form.
Yesterday I hooked the utility trailer to the lawn mower and got out that little chainsaw that I bought in February. Went out in the yard and started doing surgery on those oak saplings. The utility tailer is a 4X10 and over the next hour or so, I loaded it with oak saplings. I dragged it over to the burn pile. I was amazed at how muck oak I had cut our of that crepe myrtle. The trailer was stacked five feet high.
I was also amazed at how capable that little 6" chainsaw proved to be. That little saw had plenty of power and I could wield it like a scalpel. No complaints whatsoever. The crepe myrtle is unharmed, and the pin oak is feeling decidedly unwelcome.
If you are looking for a little battery chainsaw, click on the link above. This link will take you to the Amazon page. If your preference is for another type of battery, they have them for Milwaukee, or others. just use the appropriate search terms.

Need to bring your MP5 into the modern age? Midwest Industries has a new night vision mounting system just for you!Quality assurance and control measures – including wearing gloves when handling laboratory materials and samples – seek to reduce overestimating microplastic abundance. However, commonly used laboratory gloves release non-volatile residues, including stearate salts, that exhibit vibrational spectra similar to microplastics. In this work, we illustrate that dry surface contact with nitrile and latex laboratory gloves can cause overestimations of microplastics (mean 2000 false positives per mm2) when using traditional library matching approaches.
Mathis said Owens was shot in the left leg when a male subject at the skate park, an 18-year-old who was identified, returned fire at the Toyota.
He said officers learned while investigating that a male subject (Owens) was receiving treatment at Atrium Wilkes Medical Center for a gunshot wound he stated occurred on Chestnut Street.
Mathis said investigators interviewed multiple witnesses, identified two persons of interest and located the Toyota Highlander, unoccupied and with multiple bullet holes, on Fairmount Drive in North Wilkesboro. Mathis said no one else was injured or has been charged.
On April 2, 1792 The Coinage Act passed, establishing the United States Mint and authorizing the $10 Eagle, $5 Half-Eagle, $2.50 Quarter-Eagle gold coins, as well as the silver dollar, half dollar, quarter, dime, and half-dime. Although gold was removed from circulation by President Franklin Roosevelt, our silver coinage remained undebased until 1964. — April 2, 1968, Stanley Kubrick‘s 2001: A Space Odyssey had its world premiere in Washington, D.C.; it became a classic, setting the benchmark for modern sci-fi films. The film also gave one of the first cinematic warnings about artificial intelligence. — The staff of SurvivalBlog wish …
The post Preparedness Notes for Thursday — April 2, 2026 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
Editor’s Introductory Note: This article was posted in SurvivalBlog in September, 2007. Given the recent spike in fuel prices, I thought that it would be apropos to re-post it. – JWR — When Rudolph Diesel invented his internal combustion engine, he used refined peanut oil as fuel. The reasoning behind it was that farmers could essentially grow their own fuel for their tractors. Diesel cars have been widely manufactured and used all over Europe, but never really caught on in the United States. Diesel pickup trucks and Big Rigs are common in the US, and are renowned for their torque …
The post Converting Diesel Vehicles to Run on Waste Vegetable Oil, by Polar Bear appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
SurvivalBlog presents another edition of The Survivalist’s Odds ‘n Sods. This column is a collection of news bits and pieces that are relevant to the modern survivalist and prepper from JWR. Our goal is to educate our readers, to help them to recognize emerging threats, and to be better prepared for both disasters and negative societal trends. You can’t mitigate a risk if you haven’t first identified a risk. In today’s column, Oracle’s big layoff. — Oracle Has Fired 30,000 Employees Oracle fired up to 30,000 people with a 6 a.m. email signed “Oracle Leadership”. JWR’s Comments: I was an …
The post The Survivalist’s Odds ‘n Sods appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
“Quite often, I’ll be sent a script for a movie. And I find that I like it, so I say I’ll do it. But then they rewrite it for me. They make it quirky. Odd. I find that rather annoying. I call it Walkenising.” – Christopher Walken
The post The Editors’ Quote Of The Day: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
Employees who are impressed by vague corporate-speak like “synergistic leadership,” or “growth-hacking paradigms” may struggle with practical decision-making, a new Cornell study reveals.
Published in the journal Personality and Individual Differences, research by cognitive psychologist Shane Littrell introduces the Corporate Bullshit Receptivity Scale (CBSR), a tool designed to measure susceptibility to impressive-but-empty organizational rhetoric.
“Corporate bullshit is a specific style of communication that uses confusing, abstract buzzwords in a functionally misleading way,” said Littrell, a postdoctoral researcher in the College of Arts and Sciences. “Unlike technical jargon, which can sometimes make office communication a little easier, corporate bullshit confuses rather than clarifies. It may sound impressive, but it is semantically empty.”
Although people anywhere can BS each other – that is, share dubious information that’s misleadingly impressive or engaging – the workplace not only rewards but structurally protects it, Littrell said. In a work setting where corporate jargon is already the norm, it’s easy for ambitious employees to use corporate BS to appear more competent or accomplished, accelerating their climb up the corporate ladder of workplace influence.
Corporate BS seems to be ubiquitous – but Littrell wondered if it is actually harmful. To test this, he created a “corporate bullshit generator” that churns out meaningless but impressive-sounding sentences like, "We will actualize a renewed level of cradle-to-grave credentialing” and “By getting our friends in the tent with our best practices, we will pressure-test a renewed level of adaptive coherence.”
He then asked more than 1,000 office workers to rate the “business savvy” of these computer-generated BS statements alongside real quotes from Fortune 500 leaders. Divided into four distinct studies, the research verified the scale as a statistically reliable measure of individual differences in receptivity to corporate bullshit, then, through use of established cognitive tests, made connections between receptivity to BS and analytic thinking skills known to be essential to workplace performance.
Near-weightlessness “causes [sperm] to flip around, to go upside down.… They don’t really know which way is up or down,” Nicole McPherson, a study co-author and a biologist at Adelaide University in Australia, tells the Guardian’s Tory Shepherd. The cells do “not really understand or know which direction they’re going in.”
LOS ANGELES — The case of a lifetime started with a putrid smell and a green garden hose sticking out of the side of a supposedly vacant warehouse in California farm country.
Inside the sprawling building on I Street in Reedley, code enforcement officer Jesalyn Harper found vials filled with liquid — some marked in English or Mandarin, others with just a code — that bore frightening labels such as “Malaria,” “COVID-19” and “HIV.” Refrigerators, lined up in columns along a wall, had labels that read “blood” and “Ebola.”
As she walked deeper into the warehouse, passing lab workers filling pregnancy test kits, she located the source of the smell that had brought her there — droppings from 1,000 lab-tested mice, she told The Times during a recent interview. The workers were nice enough, she said, but when she started asking questions she could feel the mood change.
“I realized I’m in trouble, and I need to get out of this building without tipping them off that I’m scared,” Harper said.
Her discovery blew open an elaborate criminal case with ties to California, Las Vegas and China. The investigation in Reedley found that the lab was part of an elaborate scheme to import COVID tests from China and pass them off as American made.
But there are some who fear the operation was much more complex than that. A congressional committee uncovered payments topping $1 million made to the operator of the Reedley business from banks in the People’s Republic of China.
Kickstarter is trying to drum up funding for "The first garment that tracks your sleep."
My BiPAP does that already, thank you very much.

Top-tier American manufacturing at its finest! Take a tour of Douglas Barrels to see how legendary barrels are made.The post Conch Fritters & Cuban Bread: Arms of the Conch Republic first appeared on Forgotten Weapons.
By Lee Williams SAF Investigative Journalism Project Special to Liberty Park Press Brandon Herrera, the GOP’s official candidate for Texas’ 23rd Congressional District, may know more about guns and gun rights than any member of Congress. Herrera, who’s known as “The AK Guy,” has millions of followers on X, YouTube, and Instagram, who tune him […]
The post An Interview with The AK Guy, GOP Candidate for U.S. House, Brandon Herrera appeared first on Liberty Park Press.
The manhunt continued, the perimeter was secured, and checkpoints were set up throughout the area.
Multiple drones were deployed, along with an MHP helicopter.
A search warrant was executed on Hughes’ home; however, the home was found to be empty.
Shortly after, gunshots were heard, and units went toward them to find that Hughes had attempted to break into a homeowner’s back door.
The homeowner fired a weapon, striking Hughes.
On April 1, 1515, the Portuguese fleet under Afonso de Albuquerque recaptured the Persian fortress of Hormuz and renamed it the Fort of Our Lady of the Conception. — April 1, 1863: US Congress passed the first wartime conscription law, calling for the registration of all 20 to 45-year-old males. — And on April 1, 1873, the British White Star steamship SS Atlantic sank off Nova Scotia, Canada, killing at least 535 people. The same shipping company later owned the ill-fated RMS Titanic and RMS Britannic. — Today’s feature article is by SurvivalBlog Editor “Avalanche Lily”, the wife of JWR. …
The post Preparedness Notes for Wednesday — April 1, 2026 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
We’ve announced the winners of Round 123 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest, which ended yesterday. Note to the top three prize winners: Please contact me and let me know your UPS and USPS address(es), for your prizes. Thanks. – JWR The top three prize winners will each receive some great prize packages. The winners for Round 123 are… First Prize Winner: First Prize goes to Lodge Pole, for Raising, Hunting, and Harvesting Animals. It was posted Feburary 11-16, 2026. See: (See: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, and Part 6.) He will receive as prizes: A …
The post Writing Contest Prize Winners Announced — Round 123 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
Today is Passover (“Pasach”). So this is an appropriate day to discuss The Appointed Times. The Bible teaches that God has specific Appointed Times (מועדים — transliterated Moedim), which are to be kept in perpetuity (“throughout your generations“), by His People. Failure to observe the Appointed Times offends God. Gen 1:14 And God said, Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days, and years: וַיֹּאמֶר אֱלֹהִים יְהִי מְאֹרֹת בִּרְקִיעַ הַשָּׁמַיִם לְהַבְדִּיל בֵּין הַיּוֹם וּבֵין הַלָּיְלָה וְהָיוּ לְאֹתֹת וּלְמוֹעֲדִים וּלְיָמִים …
The post Keeping God’s Appointed Times, by Avalanche Lily appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
Our weekly Snippets column is a collection of short items: responses to posted articles, practical self-sufficiency items, how-tos, lessons learned, tips and tricks, and news items — both from readers and from SurvivalBlog’s editors. Note that we may select some long e-mails for posting as separate letters. — It is time to contact your U.S. House and Senate members again, to encourage them to get both the Hearing Protection Act (HPA — de-regulating suppressors) and the SHORT Act (de-regulating SBRs and SBSes) into the pending budget reconciliation bill, and pass them! Please phone their offices several times. o o o …
The post SurvivalBlog Readers’ & Editors’ Snippets appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
“When a man says he is building a house for himself and his posterity, he does not mean to be understood as saying that he has any thought of binding them, nor is it to be inferred that he is so foolish as to imagine that he has any right or power to bind them, to live in it.” – Lysander Spooner
The post The Editors’ Quote Of The Day: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
By Dave Workman The Washington Times is reporting on Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon’s efforts to root out unconstitutional gun control laws, which is likely to make her unpopular with the gun prohibition lobby and their allies on Capitol Hill and in state legislatures. The Times quotes Dhillon explaining, “I’m hiring up and staffing up […]
The post REPORT: DOJ’s Dhillon Targeting Unconstitutional Gun Control Laws appeared first on Liberty Park Press.
By Dave Workman Two ranking congressional Democrats are asking for information regarding firearms exports, claiming in a news release that “U.S. firearm exports are responsible for over 37 percent of crime gun traces globally outside of North America.” In a letter to Jeffrey Kessler, undersecretary of Commerce for Industry and Security Department of Commerce, U.S. […]
The post Dems Target Firearms Exports as ‘Crime Guns’ appeared first on Liberty Park Press.

RecoilTV just had the chance to sit down with Randy Couture! Watch the full interview here!