Bits and pieces 2…

Yesterday, I posted the last of four chapters that ‘set up’ a challenge coin showdown for John Cronin in the first Grey Man, Vignettes.

I wrote the novel because I hated perfect characters that never made a mistake, and always ‘won’ whatever they were involved in. Also, I was tired of so much gun stuff being just flat wrong… And Cronin’s gun is based on one that a friend had at Quantico and he was GOOD with it!

Soooo, this is the chapter that sets up the competition, and also gives some insight to both Cronin and Jesse’s attitudes.

The young deputy guarding the parking lot didn’t quite know what to make of the old Suburban driving past the gate: it had a Texas plate and was dirty as hell and the old man in a grey work shirt driving was probably lost. He decided he’d be polite if nothing else and get the old truck out of the way.

Not even thinking about it, the deputy let his hand rest on the butt of his pistol as the truck pulled up next to him. “Afternoon, sir, can I help you?”

The grizzled, gray-haired old man behind the wheel cocked his head and said, “Yep, you can point me to where the competitors park, son.”

“Sir, you do know this is a restricted competition don’t you? It’s limited to military and law enforcement only?” The deputy said politely, as he casually scanned the truck, and suddenly realized there was a good-looking young girl sitting in the passenger’s seat.

“Yes, I do son, and I’m deputy sheriff out in Texas. That’s why I’m here. Now where can we park?”

Chagrined, the deputy replied, “Oh, well, park over there next to the fence and the check in is in the clubhouse up to the right”, now looking at the young girl and realizing she was wearing what looked like a full-sized revolver on her belt. She just looked back at him and smiled as the old man drove off.

As he rolled the truck across the parking lot, the old man chuckled and glanced at Jesse sitting next to him. “Dammit, I knew this was a bad idea to bring you. This ain’t going to be fun, and it’s gonna be nothing but trouble.”

Jesse rolled her eyes, shook her head and looked over. “Well, Grandpa, who else could you bring? I know how to spot for you, I’m in better shape than anybody else in this truck; and for damn sure nobody else was going to put up with riding with you for three days in this beat up old truck! And all I’ve heard is how I need to get out of Texas and see the big world, and yada, yada.” She rolled up her window. “Besides, I can out shoot everybody but you, anyway.”

“I know, honey, but this is still a man’s game, like it or not. And they’re not going to like you messing with their egos when we start shooting.”

He rolled the truck against the fence, looked around and liked what he saw. This was a really nice range, and it looked like there would be some climbing, probably some running, and the longest ranges would be about 7-800 yards. It was one helluva lot greener than West Texas, and he just hoped the light and shadows wouldn’t be a big problem, since they were used to open shooting. Getting out and stretching, the old man stamped his feet into his boots, shrugged into a light jacket to cover the 1911 riding on his hip, and patted his badge to ensure it was still sitting on his belt.

The old man looked around casually, noting the positions of the range, the hills, and where people were moving in the parking lot. He shook his head, looking at the greenery and hills brought back memories he’d rather forget, but this was really not about him, not now.

Jesse was doing the same thing on the other side of the truck, and making sure her Colt Python was covered, and she reached back into the truck to grab her badge off the seat where it had fallen.

The deputy watched from a distance and saw the badge flashes as they walked to the back of the truck, shook his head and went back to watching the entrance.

“Got your creds?”

“Yes, Papa, I’ve got my creds. Do you have yours?” Jesse asked, sticking out her tongue. “And yes, I’m covered. And I need to pee, and I’m hungry. Does that answer the rest of your questions?” With that, she turned and walked to the back of the truck, checking the rear doors.

Shaking his head, the old man locked the truck, rolled his shoulders and walked after Jesse. Still wondering if he’d done the right thing, or if he really should have even tried this. At sixty-three, there was a chance in hell of him not embarrassing himself and her. But he figured this would be the last chance to do something like this, and yes, she was a damn fine shot, a good spotter, and she needed to see a bigger part of the world than just the West Texas scrub oaks and mesquite. And the assholes that worked at the tire test track out off 103 with her. She didn’t need the job, but she liked having her ‘own’ money; and being a reserve deputy was just Jesse’s way of paying back to the community. I guess she takes after me with that.

Jesse looked around. “You know, Papa, I don’t think I’ve ever seen this much green in one spot! Everything has been green the last two hundred miles, and these hills look like they’re worn down nubs of what they once were. I’d hate like hell to try to chase a cow through this, much less a bad guy!”

The old man chuckled and didn’t say anything as they walked up to the old white clubhouse; he was mentally cataloging the players. Seeing a number of police cars: Suburbans, Explorers, Excursions, and a couple of vans with military tags his hopes were realized, the good shooters were here. Opening the door for Jesse, she slid in and to the left, he did the same to the right. It was like a hundred other clubhouses: one big room, a kitchen to the left with a coffee pot going on the counter, a hint of wood smoke from the fireplace that centered the back wall, various animal heads hanging on the wall and down a hallway off to the left, the bathrooms.

As he scanned the room, it was readily apparent there were some serious competitors here, and every damn one of them was at least twenty years younger than he was.

Jesse interrupted his recriminations. “Pa, I’m going to the little girl’s room, I’m pretty sure I can find you when I come back,” she joked. She’d noticed they were the only two folks in the room not wearing tactical clothes.

Jesse walked off, drawing stares from most of the men in the room as she crossed to the rest rooms. The old man shook his head, knowing she was putting on a show, and walked up to the line at the registration table. The shooters in the room looked from Jesse to the old man, then looked again, as they realized there was something about this old man dressed all in grey work clothes and a beat-up old cowboy hat that said this was not an old man to fool with.

He finally got to the front of the line, and the harried gent behind the table looked up. “Can I help you?” he asked.

“Yep, here to check in for the competition, John Cronin, shooter; Jesse Cronin, spotter. Pecos County, Texas,” the old man said laying his credentials on the table so the registrar could see them.

Scanning down his list, the registrar checked off their names, reached behind him and grabbed a packet out of a box and slid it across the table. “Sighting in, doping and safety checks on range one for the next couple of hours. Maximum one hour on the line. Be back here at five pm for COF safety brief. There’s a night shoot tonight and starting at oh seven thirty tomorrow there’s a couple of presentations prior to the competition if you’re interested. Y’all are team twenty-three.”

“Thanks, what’s the altitude here?”

“Twelve hundred, but the density altitude will vary depending on the weather, figure around thirteen hundred for the match.”

The old man turned and scanned the room, looking for Jesse. Not seeing her, he walked over to the coffee pot, dropped fifty cents in the can, got a Styrofoam cup, poured himself a cup, and headed for the door. Jesse came out of the rest room area and met him at the door.

“Are we in?” she asked, opening the door and holding it for the old man.

As they walked back toward the truck, he said, “Yep, but I don’t think they know you’re my spotter yet.” He chuckled. “We can go sight in in thirty minutes, and this is about a thousand feet lower than where we are, so we’ve got maybe an inch of difference, but it’s quite a bit cooler up here. Let’s go get the guns and go check the zeros and see if we’ve got any problem.”

Back at the truck, the old man unlocked the rear doors, reached in and flipped the blanket aside, revealing two gun cases and two ammo cans. Popping the lid on his ammo can, he reached in and grabbed one of the plastic cases, opened it and took out five rounds. Dropping them in his pocket, he turned to Jesse, “How many rounds to you want?”

Cocking her head, Jesse thought for a minute. “I guess five, since I don’t think we’ve bounced them around and screwed up the scope alignments.” Reaching in she slid her gun case out of the truck, and took the rounds he handed to her.

After re-locking the truck, they trudged back up the parking lot to the side of the clubhouse and walked through the gate down to the line, finally seeing range one all the way at the right end of the ranges.

The Range Officer met them at the line, and confirming their event number said they could take any station they wanted. The old man wandered down to the very end of the range, and picked a station that didn’t have any tables, since he figured there wouldn’t be any nice benches to shoot off of the next couple of days.

Using the bench at the back of the station, he and Jesse uncased their rifles, and Jesse took the old Bausch and Lomb 7 X 50 binoculars out of their case and wiped the lenses down with her shirttail.

It all reminded the old man of when Jesse was about eleven or twelve and he’d let her shoot a 30-30 for the first time. They’d shot at one hundred yards, and he’d shown her how to use the binocs to check the hits. She’d been a little thing in pigtails, boots and blue jeans with her shirttail hanging out, and she’d done the same exact thing. She’d hung on his every word about shooting, and pretty much everything else back then, but now she was an adult with her own life. Shooting was about the only time they really connected, like they’d done back then.

Shaking his head, the old man walked back down to the RO[1] and found out they would be going cold range in about five minutes, and he was free to grab any of the various types of targets stacked on the RO’s table to use for sighting in. He picked up a couple of the gridded orange sighter targets and with temps in the low sixties and 1300 feet of altitude; he mentally ran the numbers and figured that he would be within ½ inch or less of his point of aim at 100 yards.

When the RO called cold range, he grabbed a stapler off the back bench and walked down range to post the targets. He got a chance to look at the other ranges, and see if there were any wind or potential wind tunnels that he couldn’t see from the line. After putting the targets up, he stood for a minute looking back at the line and what the terrain was behind the range, noting the hills and the one valley they’d driven up to get here.

When he got back to the line, Jesse was talking with two military shooters and smiling so he just went on by and sat down at the back bench. He reached into his pocket and pulled out his earplugs and reached over and picked up his glasses from the gun case.

When the RO called the line hot, Jesse immediately excused herself put on her eye and ear protection and came back to him. “Are we both shooting or just you, Papa?”

“Let’s carry both rifles to the line, and if I didn’t beat the gun up, I should be good to go in a couple of rounds, then you can check your zero, too,” the old man said as he grabbed his rifle out of the rack and patted his shirt pocket to make sure he had the five rounds in there.

Jesse looped the binoculars over her head, grabbed her rifle and followed the old man up to the line. He dropped to his knees, opened the bolt on the rifle and loaded three rounds into the magazine, and then got into the sling. Jesse laid her rifle down making sure the chamber flag was in it and the action was facing up. She laid down and propped herself up on her elbows and adjusted the binoculars to focus on the targets.

The old man dropped down into the prone position, snugged the rifle down and looked over at Jesse. “You ready?”

“Yes, Papa, right target, no wind, center sighter,” Jesse replied.

“Sure,” he said, throwing the bolt closed and shifting to put his natural point of aim on the target.

“Target.”

“Send it,” Jesse said.

The boom of the rifle seemed to relax the old man, now he was in his element. Working the bolt without ever coming out of the hold, he waited for Jesse’s call.

“Dead on windage, two and a half high Papa,” Jesse repeated.

“One more, target.”

“Send it.”

Another boom, and he was on the bolt even as the recoil ended.

“Still dead on windage, two and a half high touching the first one Papa, where are you holding?” Jesse asked.

“Dead center, both shots; one more and I’m done. Target,” the old man said.

“Send it,” Jessie replied.

Boom. “Last round.” As he opened the bolt, inserted the chamber flag and shrugged out of the sling.

Jesse passed over the binoculars and he quickly scanned his target, and smiled a little bit. The shots weren’t all through the same hole, but they were a nice little cloverleaf with all three rounds touching.

Settling in on the other target he asked, “What’s your zero, girl?”

“Uhf… Ah, 200, Papa, so if this is 100, I should print three inches high,” Jessie said as she pushed three rounds through the loading gate of the Winchester. Levering a round into the rifle, she wiggled into a position she liked and said, “Target.”

“Send it, Jesse.” The crack of the rifle and the hole in the target were almost simultaneous.

“Three and a quarter high quarter left, give me one more,” the old man rattled off.

“Target.”

“Send it.”

Crack. Jesse looked over as the old man concentrated on the binoculars, finally rolling off and looking at Jesse. “Give me one click right, and let’s see if that is it,” the old man suggested.

Jesse reached up, put in one click right windage and got back into position, “Target.”

“Send it,” the old man replied.

Crack. “Okay, that was dead on windage, elevation looks good. You want any more shots?”

“If that was on, why screw with success? Papa, let’s just leave it where it is,” Jesse retorted. Rolling over and levering the spent case out, she inserted the chamber flag and picked up her spent cases. The old man, doing the same, got up slowly and rolled his shoulders. He reached down and picked up both rifles, and the RO called cold range, so Jesse went down range to pick up the targets. When he turned around, the same two gents were standing there watching them.

The older of the two waited until the rifles were back in the rack and stuck out his hand. “First Sergeant Matt Carter Sir and this is Sergeant Aaron Miller. We’re out of the schoolhouse at Quantico and former Two MEF.”

The old man shook hand with both and said, “John Cronin, and my granddaughter Jesse. We’re out of Texas.”

“Mr. Cronin, I’ve gotta ask, what are you shooting?” Matt asked.

The old man smiled and said, “Well it’s a mongrel, it started life as a Winchester model 70, and I added a Schneider-bull barrel, and did my own bedding job and it’s running an old US Optics SN-9 up top. And it’s a 30-06 too. The action is about sixty-years-old, the rest of the rifle dates to the late 80s early 90s. And Jesse is shooting my 94 Winchester 30-30, and it’s got a Redfield up top. Nothing fancy, just comfortable old guns.”

Just then, Jesse walked back up with the targets. Handing the targets to the old man, she smiled at the two Marines. “Hi, guys, y’all bored or what?”

Sergeant Miller, looking at the targets, whistled and asked. “Well, I was just wondering who your spotter was, but now I know. But I can’t figure out how she can spot for you since this is supposed to be a military and law enforcement only shoot?”

The old man just shook his head and said, “Jesse, show the man.”

Jesse grinned and pulled out her credentials and flipped them open. “I’ve been spotting for Papa for about as long as I can remember, and yes, I really am a Deputy Sheriff, and yes, I do carry a gun, and yes, I am a girl, too.”

The young sergeant just goggled at the credentials, and Matt shook his head, smiling.

Once Jesse was back from the targets, the RO strolled over and said, “Okay, if y’all are done sighting in, you can restow your rifles. After the barbecue late this afternoon and COF brief, we’re going to do a bonus shoot in low light if you’re interested. It’s not required, but folks seem to like the challenge.”

The old man nodded and finished stowing the rifle in the case. Jesse cased her rifle, and they carried them back to the truck in a companionable silence.

Aaron looked at Matt as they walked back into the clubhouse. Matt just shook his head, saying, “Don’t mention a word of what we saw out there. I think some folks are in for a bigger surprise than they think.”

“I won’t, but she is a real cutie!”

“Down, sergeant, we’re here to shoot not chase skirts; besides, she’d probably kick your ass.”

“Maybe, but in her case, I think I’d like it!”

Laughing, they headed back to the clubhouse, as Aaron glanced back over his shoulder one more time at Jesse.

(C) 2014 JL Curtis All Rights Reserved

 

 

Revenge…

And justice are best served cold!!!

In 2016 and 2017, the left vented its shock and fury at Donald Trump’s unexpected victory by, among other things, protesting the construction of an oil pipeline in North Dakota. The “mainstream” media claimed that Energy Transfer was ramming its Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) through all sorts of sacred Native American lands and that no one wanted it.

In fact, Energy Transfer went out of its way to work with natives and locals, and most were glad of the opportunity and prosperity DAPL would provide. Nonetheless, environmentalist activists co-opted a protest by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, making it into the face of the spurious claims. Professional protestors from near and far got into the act, throwing sand into the project’s gears at the construction site, at funding sources, and in the PR sphere. In the end, these actions delayed the project by five months and added approximately $350 million to the cost, Energy Transfer claimed in a lawsuit it launched in 2019. 

Energy Transfer named three Greenpeace entities — Greenpeace USA, Greenpeace International (based in the Netherlands), and Greenpeace Fund — as the organizers and funders of this sabotage. And on Wednesday, a North Dakota jury found that the infamous non-profit must pay the price for its actions.

Full article HERE from PJ Media.

Greenpeace was bragging in various media about how they were ‘shutting down’ the pipeline.

Well, guess what… They got caught, and pending who knows how many appeals, will now pay the price! And if that means their extinction, so much the better!

$660 million in damages for defamation and other charges just ‘might’ be the end of them… In any case, they will be greatly reduced, and will probably be pulling their horns in and thinking twice about attacking already approved projects!!!

I find it supremely ironic that their ‘protests’ against Trump’s 1st term comes to a conclusion as his 2nd term starts.

Now, if they can just get the rest of the Earthfirsters and get them taken care of, we’ll all be better off.

 

They’re bacckkkk…

Nine months after their 8 day tour, Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore are back on terra firma at 5:57 EST yesterday.

I can see it now… “Hi, honey. I’m home… It’ll be a few days while I get my land legs back.”

There has obviously been a lot of ‘soul searching’ at NASA over what mighta, coulda, shoulda been done, but all of that has pretty much been kept out of the media. The bottom line, is they are back safe.

THAT is what counts. Space is much more unforgiving than aviation in general, where the smallest thing can literally kill you and everyone around you. FWIW, I happen to agree with not bringing them back on Starliner. That was, to me, a gamble not worth taking with human lives.

The plan, which Musk had input to, made sense, with Williams and Wilmore filling in for the two Crew 9 astronauts they replaced on the station, they were kept busy and weren’t just sitting there twiddling their thumbs. Also, Musk et al had suits made up for them so they could come back on Dragon safely.

Although I will admit I’m not sure ‘why’ Boeing and SpaceX were allowed to design a non-standard sets of suit connections, which forced the need for ‘new’ suits. NASA had always been all about ‘standardization’ on suits/fittings/etc up to that point.

Yes, Musk’s Dragon is different, along with different suits, but he did that development outside NASA’s perview.

This does bring up the question of what is next, as the current plan is to deorbit the ISS in 2030, at which point it will be right at 30 years old and continuously occupied. The plans for ‘various’ replacements is apparently still being hashed out…

I guess it’s time to start rooting for the Mars mission!!!

A little ‘humor’…

To start your week!

Why Jewish Daughters Need Psychotherapy

Jewish  Mother:  “Hello?”

Daughter: “Hi Mom. Can I leave the kids with you tonight?”

Jewish Mother: “You’re going out?”

Daughter:  “Yes.”

Jewish Mother: “With whom?”

Daughter: “With a friend.”

Jewish Mother: “I don’t know why you left your husband. He is such a good man.”

Daughter: “I didn’t leave him. He left me.”

Jewish Mother: “You let him leave you, and now you go out with anybodies and nobodies.”

Daughter: “I do not go out with anybody.  Can I bring over the kids? ”

Jewish Mother: “I never left you to go out with anybody except your father.”

Daughter: “There are lots of things that you did, and I don’t.”

Jewish Mother: “What are you hinting at?”

Daughter: “Nothing, I just want to know if I can bring the kids over tonight.”

Jewish Mother: “You’re going to stay the night with him? What will your husband say if he finds  out?”

Daughter: “My EX husband. I don’t think he would be bothered. From the day he left me, he probably never slept alone!”

Jewish  Mother: “So you’re going to sleep over at this loser’s place?”

Daughter: “He’s not a loser.”

Jewish Mother: “A man who goes out with a divorced woman with children is a loser and a parasite.”

Daughter: “I don’t want to argue. Should I bring over the kids or not?”

Jewish  Mother: “Poor children with such a mother.”

Daughter: “Such a what?”

Jewish Mother: “With no stability. No wonder your husband left you.”

Daughter: “ENOUGH!!!”

Jewish Mother “Don’t scream at me. You probably scream at this loser too!”

Daughter: “Now you’re worried about the loser?”

Jewish Mother: “Ah, so you see he IS a loser. I spotted him immediately.”

Daughter: “Goodbye, mother.”

Jewish Mother: “Wait! Don’t hang up!  When are you bringing them over?”

Daughter: “I’m not bringing them over!  I’m not going out!”

Jewish Mother: “If you never go out, how do expect to meet anyone?

Is it actually humor? I dunno…

Practice makes perfect…

Take note of not only the ages of the shooters, but the quality of the rifles and some of the ‘attachments’ to them. These folks are SERIOUS!

And if you want to know ‘why’? This is another one that can be laid at the feet of the Brits and their British Indian ‘Empire’, HERE.

Which is just the ‘latest’ iteration of battles that have been going on since the 7th century!

These people are serious shooters, and obviously have a long and detailed ‘history’ of that when you look at the rifles. Some appear to be box stock, including the sights; others have custom peeap sights, all of them have the hoods on the front sight, and not a single scope is seen.

I don’t know about anybody else, but I sure wouldn’t want to go up against them in their home territory…

Of course, the lack of technology isn’t helping them, as I’m sure someone will point out, but 1300+ years and they still exists says something about their staying power…

h/t ERJ for the link!

Stuff…

Well, Dragon Crew 10 is on their way to the ISS, so the marooned astronauts will FINALLY get to come home from their 8 day voyage, NINE months later…

Now some quotes-

The fatal fallacy of gun control laws in general is the assumption that such laws actually control guns. Criminals who disobey other laws are not likely to be stopped by gun-control laws. What such laws actually do is increase the number of disarmed and defenseless victims. [Thomas Sowell]

When immigration is done by single individuals, it is immigration. When done by groups, it is invasion.” [Nassim Taleb]

But test and prove all things until you can recognize what is good; to that hold fast. [1 Thessalonians 5:21]

I would sooner be governed by the first two thousand names in the Boston telephone directory than by the two thousand members of the faculty of Harvard. [William F. Buckley Jr]

In politics, never assume that because something is insane, it will not be done. [Thomas Sowell]

If the path before you is clear, you’re probably on someone else’s. [Carl Jung]

Brains never yet moved the masses, but emotion and earnestness will not only move the masses, but they will remove mountains. [Admiral of the Fleet (British) John A. Fisher]

You should never forget that the airplanes don’t fly, the tanks don’t run, the ships don’t sail, the missiles don’t fire unless the sons and daughters of America make them do it. [General Norman Schwarzkopf]

All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident. [Arthur Schopenhauer]

There is one phrase in the Bible repeated 365 times. 365 is no coincidence. Be not afraid. [Richard Grenell]

Even the smallest things ought to be directed toward a goal. [Marcus Aurelius]

When we try to pick out anything by itself we find it hitched to everything else in the universe. [John Muir]

I got nothin’ against mankind. It’s people I can’t stand. [Archie Bunker]

Carry On: Verbal order which means, resume doing nothing. [Murphy’s Laws of Combat, Marion F. Sturkey]

Lord, Lord, how subject we old men are to lying! [Falstaff, in Shakespeare’s Henry IV]

I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure. [Clarence Darrow]

If it’s worth doing it’s worth doing with class. [Bob Fiegel]

If every Jewish and anti-Nazi family in Germany had owned a Mauser rifle and twenty rounds of ammunition and the will to use it, Adolf Hitler would be a little-known footnote to the history of the Weimar Republic. [Aaron Zelman]

Remember that the people that hid Anne Frank were breaking the law and the people that took her to the camps were enforcing it. [Your conscience]

The weak grow strong by effrontery. The strong grow weak through inhibition. [Henry Kissinger]

The person who says he knows what he thinks but cannot express it usually does not know what he thinks. [Mortimer Adler]

Those whom God would destroy, He first makes mad. [Sophocles’ Antigone]

The Second Amendment makes more women equal than the entire feminist movement. [unknown]

Knowing yourself is the beginning of all wisdom. [Aristotle]

If at first you dont succeed, call in an air strike. [Unknown]

Turns out the guy who made a boatload of money investing in Apple was guilty of in cider trading. [No one Will Claimit]

I am a soldier. I fight where I am told and I win where I fight. [George S. Patton, Jr.]

It is well that war is so terrible, otherwise we should grow too fond of it. [Robert E. Lee]

I don’t make jokes… I just watch the government and report the facts. [Will Rogers]

The government is like a baby’s alimentary canal: a happy appetite at one end and no responsibility at the other. [Ronald Reagan]

A lion uses all its might in attacking a rabbit. [Chinese proverb]

The cause doesn’t have to be righteous and battle doesn’t have to be winnable; but over and over again throughout history, men have chosen to die in battle with their friends rather than to flee on their own and survive. [Sebastiab Junger, author]

When in a position of power I felt I had to pass the daily truth to the mirror test — Am I doing it for myself, or am I doing it for the enlisted corps I am responsible for? [Bob Fiegel]

Good writers are those who keep the language efficient. That is to say, keep it accurate, keep it clear. [Ezra Pound]

America is a great playpen of civilization filled with toddler adults who have never experienced the violent brutality of life outside the safe confines of our political borders. [George Strong]

And I hope everyone came through last night’s weather okay! It was windy/dusty/as hell all day here, but never got over 65 kts of wind (that I know of).

Lawfare…

Seems to be the ‘only’ thing the leftist/dems/et al can do, and the administration can only fight back in the courts against these judges…

The Trump administration asked the Supreme Court on Thursday to rein in lower court rulings that have prevented a ban on birthright citizenship from taking effect nationwide.

Judges should not be able to govern “the whole Nation” from their courtrooms by issuing universal injunctions that block policies across the entire country while litigation is pending, the administration told the justices in its application.

Full article, HERE from Daily Caller.

I’ll ask the same question I did back in 2017, HOW can a district court judge from ‘somewhere’ overrule the executive branch???

We know the players are going to judge shop to get what they want (see 9th Circus), which is only going to delay actions, since most of the time (see 9th Circus) it is overturned on appeal or SCOTUS sends it back and tells them to do the right thing…

Which still doesn’t answer the basic question. Three branches of government is what we are ‘supposed’ to have. The US Constitution is the governing document. Article 1 sets up congress, article 2 sets up the presidency, article 3 sets up SCOTUS.

I have always been taught they were co-equal, with each providing checks and balances on the other two.

But, what we’re seeing, IMHO, with this lawfare, is that these judges think they outrank the president, and can set all kinds of policies, spending, etc!!!

Also, I ‘thought’ judges were supposed to follow the Constitution, not make their ‘own’ interpretations of that Constitution…

Am I that out of touch???

Smackdown…

Doug Collins brings the smackdown to a reporter!!!

A reporter’s story about DOGE regarding Veterans Affairs did not sit well with Doug Collins. The Veterans Affairs secretary opted to whip out the receipts while being interviewed with reporter Patricia Kime of Military.com over the “rumor” piece she peddled regarding DOGE having people at the department. She could’ve asked Mr. Collins directly, who was incensed as it caused a panic among his staff and the veteran community. The VA has a DOGE liaison; that’s not a secret. Collins warned that he wasn’t going to tolerate reporters who spread fear and mass panic via fake news. 

Video of the interview-  https://x.com/townhallcom/status/1899811073684914628

Full article, with transcript HERE, from Town Hall.

Just as a reference, NONE of the Military Times, Navy Times, Marine Times, etc. are actually ‘friendly’ to the military! When they were owned by Gannett, they loved to spread rumors, played gotcha games with personnel and commands, and in some cases, probably violated security rules… In other words, nothing has changed.

So, other than that, buyer beware of anything you read there. Sadly, the Military Times organization used to be a good, honest organization, originally formed from the Army Times paper in the 1940s.

But, IMHO, we are headed in a MUCH better direction, not only with the people now in charge, but the openness of the information we’re now getting from this administration!

YMMV and that’s fine, because ‘I’ am willing to listen and actually discuss different points of view…

 

 

If I’ve said it once…

I’ve said it a hundred times…

Tarlogic Security has detected a hidden functionality that can be used as a backdoor in the ESP32, a microcontroller that enables WiFi and Bluetooth connection and is present in millions of mass-market IoT devices. Exploitation of this hidden functionality would allow hostile actors to conduct impersonation attacks and permanently infect sensitive devices such as mobile phones, computers, smart locks or medical equipment by bypassing code audit controls.

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In the course of the investigation, a hidden feature was discovered in the ESP32 chip, used in millions of IoT devices and which can be purchased on the world’s most famous e-commerce sites for €2. It is this low cost that explains why it is present in the vast majority of Bluetooth IoT devices for domestic use. In 2023, the manufacturer Espressif reported in a statement that one billion units of this chip had been sold worldwide to date.

Tarlogic has detected that ESP32 chips, which allow connectivity via WiFi or Bluetooth, have hidden commands not documented by the manufacturer. These commands would allow modifying the chips arbitrarily to unlock additional functionalities, infecting these chips with malicious code, and even carrying out attacks of identity theft of devices.

Full article, HERE, from Tarlogic h/t Stretch for the link

If you’re ‘connected’ to the Internet of Things (IoT) in ANY way, you no longer have any privacy, and probably not much security, unless you’re a security expert and are running multi-levels of security and never connect your phone (knowingly) to your computer.

So, now that you ‘know’, what do you do?

Hope, pray, delete everything? I can’t tell you what to do, that is up to you, but I will say you should ‘always’ be careful about what you post, what you have on your phone, or saved on your computer. You never know when ‘sumdood’ is going to hack you, one way or the other and steal everything. I do routine backups, one of which is always kept offsite, and the other is unplugged unless I’m actively using it.

Be careful out there folks, it’s NOT a ‘friendly’ place on the Intarwebz…

A new broom…

Is apparently ‘sweeping’ out a bunch of stuff in LA!

Los Angeles District Attorney Nathan Hochman told reporters Monday that he is seeking to withdraw his predecessor’s motion to have a resentencing hearing for the Menendez brothers – two convicted killers, Erik and Lyle – who hope to be freed from life imprisonment without parole.

He said the brothers have failed to come clean about a motive or display meaningful self-reflection that would warrant a resentencing.

“The self-defense defense was a fabrication,” Hochman said. “They need to admit to that.”

Full article, HERE from Fox News.

Some folks I know out on the left coast were saying Gascon was doing a resentencing on the Menendez for votes. Whether or not that was true, Hochman isn’t buying it and is NOT going through with the case.

I’m old enough to remember the original trial in 1993, and how much of a horror story it was. The original coverage from Court TV is HERE, if you want to go look (I don’t recommend it).

BLUF- They were, IMHO, two spoiled kids who got cut off and decided to off the parents for the estimated $14M the parents had. Were there issues? It’s LA, what do you expect? Even back then the Hollyweird types were…different even from the typical LA crowd.

Frankly, I don’t think they deserve freedom, not after what they did.

Your thoughts???