Blog

  • Thought for the day

    Last year, Wayne LaPierre held a press conference and declared, “The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.” He was mercilessly mocked for proposing such a “crazy” idea.

    The Bloombergs of the world dusted off their playbooks, set the faux outrage meter to 11, and ran to Colorado to pass some of the most sweeping gun control legislation that state had ever seen. They banned standard capacity magazines and private sales saying that would prevent these mass shootings.

    It didn’t.

    Facts are still coming in, but it appears that the latest shooter used a low-capacity shotgun and bought it through a licensed FFL. Police say that he was “intended to injure many people” and had homemade Molotov Cocktails in addition to his firearm. He had a bandoleer full of shotgun shells and a machete, too.

    But he only shot one person, and it was over 80 seconds later.

    Why?

    Because there was a good guy with a gun on premises, and just like every other mass shooting the shooting stopped when the bad guy was confronted.

    This works. Every. Single. Time.

    But, please: Let’s just continue to make it harder for people to defend themselves from nutjobs like this guy. For the children.

  • Gun Porn: 10/22 Takedown Tactical

    Mine. Alllllll mine……

    Ruger 11140
    Ruger 11140

    IMG_3674

    I picked it up this weekend from my friend Reese at The Nashville Gun Company. Not a fan of the Mossy Oak stock, but colors are about the least important feature of a tool.

    Two cool things about this particular catalog item (11140, if you’re interested–and I think it’s a distributor exclusive to AcuSport) is that the bag it comes with is brown instead of black, and it came with a BX25 magazine instead of the standard 10 round rotary magazine.

    IMG_3673

    Included: BX25, receiver lock, scope base, carry strap
    Included: BX25, receiver lock, scope base, carry strap

    When I was picking it up, I casually mentioned that I was going to need to pick up a scope base for it, and Reese informed me that it came with one from the factory. Since I was planning on using the PEPR and Sweet-22 combo I took off the M&P15-22 when I realized it wasn’t going to work out on that rifle, that was great news.

    Unfortunately, as has been the case several times, things didn’t work out the way I planned:

    Ruger scope base next to underside of PEPR mount
    Ruger scope base next to underside of PEPR mount

    As Oddball put it: “That’s frustratingly close.” So now I need to decide if I’m going to buy a picatinny base or another set of $20 QD rings.*

    One thing about the rifle that kinda surprised me was that the barrel band is…plastic:
    IMG_3678

    And the screw that clamps the barrel band is clearly much longer than it needs to be:
    IMG_3680

    And of course the reason I bought this model was BECAUSE THREADED BARREL:
    IMG_3676

    So I’ll need to take that off and get a thread protector. Also I need more magazines because the answer to “how many magazines do you need” is always “More.” I have two from my Tec-22 that will work but I’m going to need more than that.

     

    *As it turns out, Ruger’s base is Weaver and the PEPR is Picatinny so it would’t fit anyway. Weaver rings will fit in a Picatinny base, but Picatinny rings won’t fit on a Weaver Rail.

  • Gives “Black Friday” a whole new meaning

    From IRC:

    16:43 <+wizardpc> Things I learned today: .300blk subsonics won’t penetrate soft body armor
    16:43 <@daniels> really
    16:44 <+wizardpc> but the body armor will deform about 4 inches into “whatever” is behind it
    16:44 <+wizardpc> so, ribcage broken in many pieces
    16:44 * oddball is glad he didn’t go black friday shopping with wizardpc.

    This is where I learned that, by the way.

  • Black Friday!

    Being the crass consumerist I am, the only thing I’m buying today is this.

    For me.

    Because I want it.

    (Meanwhile, Mrs wizardpc is braving the hordes shopping for actual Christmas presents. I’m at home with lilwizard and tacticaldog.)

  • What I’ve been doing instead of blogging…

    Building furniture 😀

    I turned these:
    IMG_2512

    Into this:
    IMG_3576

    When we bought this house, it had thick, blue carpet everywhere. The previous owners had cats, and all of us are allergic to some degree so we had to pull it all. We replaced the carpet on the main floor with Pergo XP flooring (because toddler and TACTICAL DOG). A coworker’s husband installed the flooring and also put in some beautiful stairs:

    IMG_2582

    The old stairs were, according to him, “paint grade” and unsuitable for staining so he pulled them out. I saved them for a later project which ended up being this entertainment center.

    The new house has a living room on the main floor and a theater room upstairs, whereas the old house just had one huge room on the main floor. We put all the entertainment center stuff from the old house in the theater room and decided after a couple of months of searching that I was just going to have to build one. The problem we were running into was that we couldn’t find one that fit in the space available and could hold the Home Theater PC I built last year*.

    Each of the sides and shelves are made from three of the toekicks from the stairs. I had to shave about 3/4″ from each side to get rid of glue and to make them straight. I then joined them with dowels.

    Let’s see so there were 6 panels made of 3 toekicks which each required 3 cuts. That’s 54 separate cuts. Then the dowel joining was three dowels per. So that’s 6 dowels per panel. That’s 12 holes that had to be drilled. Again, 6 panels so that’s 48 precision holes.

    That was a pain in the ass. Bad choice for a first project.

    The top was just two of the stair treads cut to length and merely glued together. Easy.

    I assembled the thing with glue and the nailgun I just bought because I was fed up with dowels by that point.

    Oh, and I did about a million coats of paint and primer, plus sanding.

    It was a big project. I’m glad I did it because I learned a lot. I’ve already started on my second project and after working on it for about 3 hours it already looks like this:

    IMG_3575

    I cheated this time by having Lowe’s make all the cuts for me and using a Kreg K4 Jig to join them. It needs more work but it’s going a lot faster and this time I’m going to go with stain instead of paint.

    *The HTPC can’t go in the theater room because the room was finished about 10 years after the house was built and isn’t tied into the HVAC system. It uses a PTHP that is either On or Off, so it effectively has no climate controls.

  • So… someone took a dump in Larry Correia’s Cherrios…

    Short of it is that random person emailed Larry Correia telling him that he should push his publisher to pressure Amazon to stop selling books by a now dead member of Al Qaeda.  Larry responds by going on a rant about the first amendment.

    I think it’s the proper response.

    By the way, if you haven’t already read his Monster Hunter International or Grimnoir Chronicles books, I highly recommend them.  Probably will never be considered high literature, but very fun reads.

  • Play stupid games, win stupid prizes!

    Man decides to break into the local Masonic Lodge in the middle of the afternoon in front of a restaurant full of people.  Gets attacked by K-9 units and is going to jail (after the hospital stay from the dog bites) for his troubles.

    linky

  • My month without a cell phone.

    My parents got the family’s first cell phone in around 1994. I got a pager in 1996 around the same time I got my driver’s license (so my parents could randomly ask me where I was). In 1998, I bought my first cell phone for me, but gave it up shortly after that mostly because I didn’t use it enough to justify the cost difference between the phone and the pager. In 1999 I got another one after my mother reported me missing because she called my dorm room at 7pm on a Friday night and I didn’t answer. True story. Cops were not pleased.

    I’ve had at least one cell phone on me at all times since then. I think I’ve had three or four numbers, but a few years ago I signed up for Google Voice and I’ve been using that number ever since. More on why this is important in a minute.

    A few things happened this summer that made me think about ditching my $75/mo cell phone entirely. First, there was the realization that I don’t really use the phone part. A review of my bill shows an average of around 30 minutes per month.

    Secondly, I heard about a family in Canada living like it’s 1986. I’ve had a cell phone for a long time, but I do, in fact, remember the days without them. Somehow society survived and things got done. Surely it wouldn’t be very hard to go back to that, right?

    Lastly, there’s that whole thing with tracking the movements of every American based on cell tower records. If you’d told someone in 1985 that twenty years later not only would they willingly keep a tracking device on them at all times, but that they’d gladly pay for the privilege, you would’ve been thrown in the nut house. Now they just call you a racist. 😀

    So I decided to do an experiment. For the month of October, I simulated not having a cell phone. Simulated, mind you. I still have a contract on this thing until July so I’ve got to pay for it until at least then.

    Google Voice is neat in that you can tell it which phones your GV number forwards to based on a schedule. So, Monday through Friday from 730AM until 530PM, my Google Voice number calls my desk at the office. It always calls my cell phone number. I also get texts through my GV number which can be picked up through the android app, the web site, or I can set them up to go to an email account. During the experiment period, I left the cellphone redirection turned on, but decided to just not answer my phone unless I was at home or at the office. No one knows my actual cell number, so I know that all calls come through GV. I also only made calls either at home or at the office.

    What I mostly use my cellphone for is mobile data. That’s easy enough to shut off. They all have wifi on them, too, so I’d just have to cope with that somehow.

    Now, some of you are thinking this is silly from a cost-savings standpoint because if I used my cell phone at home, that means I’ll need to get a landline. That’s where this little box comes in:

    That’s an OBi100 VoIP Telephone Adapter and Voice Service Bridge. It’s a $40 box that plugs into your router on one side and a standard telephone on the other. It connects to Google Voice and will ring when someone calls your GV number, and will use Google Voice to make outgoing calls. It’s a one time fee that’s half my monthly cell phone bill. (Caveat: No 911)

    The idea was that if my test went well, I’d buy one of these and cancel my plan when my contract is up. Instead of a cell phone, I’d carry a wifi-only tablet like a Nexus 7 or perhaps even an iPad mini.

    I’d get voicemail and text notifications when I was on wifi, which is available practically everywhere now. I’m not so important as to be needed immediately to anyone and any “emergency” at work would have to wait for me to get home to my laptop anyway.

    So on October 1st, I turned off mobile data and wondered what the hell I was doing.

    Turns out….I can totally live without it. The results of my experiment were very positive. I only even received two calls while I was out–one from a dog groomer who accidentally called my cellphone instead of my wife’s, and one from my brother (while I was driving and wouldn’t have been able to answer anyway).

    The mobile data was a little harder. I “cheated” once when I foolishly tried to find an address in a confusing part of town without looking at a map before I left. I did have to temporarily turn on data in order to find out how to get to where I was going. This would be easily remedied by either looking at a map beforehand or by buying a dedicated GPS. I could also, perhaps, get a GPS App for the tablet.

    I did get in trouble once with mrs wizardpc for not effectively communicating travel plans, but that was early in the month and taken as a lesson learned. Easy fix.

    I also noticed that I didn’t get Google Voice notifications if I happened to be off a network when the text or voicemail originally came. Unlike the email applications on Android, you’d have to go into the GV app to see if you missed anything. This can be “fixed” by having GV send notifications to email.

    There were also benefits! I actually had conversations with people while I was out instead of reading news feeds! CRAZY! I paid more attention to my wife and son while in public! INSANITY!

    All in all the experiment went very well, and I’d be all over dumping my cell phone when my contract is up.

    Except.

    That new position I just accepted may require me to be highly available. I’ve got six months to see.

  • The man who killed my friends is finally dead

    Sadly, it appears it may have been due to natural causes. I can hope his medical condition was something that was long and painful, but I’m not optimistic. I’d also be okay with “shivved” or “beaten to death.”

    He was on death row for almost as long as my friends were alive. He’s also the reason I’m such a strong advocate for self defense.

  • The Daily Show hits it on the head

    I know a bunch of you don’t particularly like Jon Stewart due to his view on gun control, and his generally leftest views, but I think he hit it out of the park last night talking about the NSA.

    [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9W9hWJROeRs&w=420&h=315]

    Those whose jobs it is to oversee the NSA are either claiming “oh… we didn’t know” (either complete BS, or complete failure to do their jobs), or, in the case of the chair of the House Intelligence Committee, not only doesn’t believe that there’s not a problem, but, and I quote, believes that “you can’t have your privacy violated if you don’t know your privacy was violated.”  Yes.  I looked up the context.  He actually believes that you didn’t do anything wrong if you don’t get caught.

    By the way, Jon does blame both sides of the aisle for this one.

    Oh… and his explanation of Obama’s reaction to all of this?  You have to go back to two days ago for that bit.  Apparently nobody tells Obama anything.