I Need My Fix
"We think we're here to order the universe instead of participate. Big mistake. Very big." -- jomama
# Chuck Asay - I Believe - my title. Cartoon commentary on saving Social Security. Hehe. [militant]
# Chuck Asay at Gunweek - Rough Neighborhood - cartoon commentary on the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act. Nice. [gunweek]
# Mark Fiore at The Village Voice - Victory Is . . . Not Having to Say You're Sorry - Flash animation commentary on the rhetoric form our emperors with no clothes. Hehe. [root]
# Claire Wolfe - TCF still down/memories of Jasmine - the clairefiles outage is approaching three days now. I need my fix. [claire]
# Christopher Largen - War on Junk - an introduction to Mr. Largen's book, Junk, a dystopian satire in an imagined future world where junk food is illegal. And there's an active blog. Entertaining.
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# Matt Siegel at The Village Choice - Escape from New York 2005 - scroll down to the rant of the week. Mr. Siegel tells the tale of moving out of New York City to Virginia. In the Big Apple, he got a $115 ticket for double parking while loading his car. In Virginia, when stopped for a burned out tail light, the cop ignored his holstered sidearm and, after telling him that the ticket would be rescinded if he sent in proof of fixing the tail light, didn't even give him a ticket when he produced a spare bulb from the glove box and installed it. [villagechoice]
# Penny S. Dean at The Price of Liberty - NH State Trooper Harasses the Wrong Little Lady - a letter that Ms. Dean wrote to the troop commander of the Concord, New Hampshire police, complaining about being stopped and disarmed by one of the boys in blue while jogging near her home. [price]
# R.K. Campbell at Gun Week - Road Test of Ruger P95, A Recent US Army Choice - Mr. Campbell battle tests Ruger's 9mm semi-auto, five thousand of which the Army recently ordered. He fired 3,000 rounds through one, with only liberal sprays of lubricant and a patch through the barrel after the first thousand rounds (to clean out the 500 rounds of lead bullets). It shot two inch 25-yard groups with the best ammo he used for testing. [gunweek]
In short, the test program went smoothly. The firing was enjoyable, and all who handled and fired the P95 gave the pistol good marks. As we neared 2,500 rounds we began to experience sluggish function from built-up lubricant and powder ash. I deployed the heavier full-power loads at this time and the increased slide velocity kept the P95 going until the 3,000-round mark. I find this exceptional. The National Institute of Justice recommends a handgun be cleaned every 300 rounds.
Many handguns easily meet these criteria for reliability, but others will not go 1,000 rounds without cleaning. Hopefully none of our soldiers will be in this position, but this test shows the Ruger has a propensity to give good service even when abused. During the test program, we suffered an unseasonable snow flurry and I took this opportunity to bury the Ruger in a snow drift for an hour or so. Needless to say, the pistol came up firing. (Inspect the bore during such testing!)