Author: AW1Ed

  • David Hogg Threatens to ‘Destroy’ Smith & Wesson

    hogg

    The Man with a Mission, David Hogg, apparently hasn’t been receiving his required amount of attention lately, so he’s come out with a new plan- threaten a manufacturing company for funds or else.

    Guns America reports Hogg, while participating in an anti-gun march in Massachusetts over the weekend, the gun-control crusader posted a ridiculous ultimatum to Smith & Wesson.

    Hogg told the popular firearms and ammunition manufacturer, headquartered in Springfield, via Twitter, that it had to fund “gun violence prevention research” to the tune of $5 million annually and cease making certain black rifles or else…

    Hogg and his posse of moonbat millennials would “destroy” S&W.
    “We will destroy you by using the two things you fear most,” wrote Hogg. “Love and economics see you soon.”

    Now, where I came from, this type of activity is known as “Extortion” and is generally frowned upon by Law Enforcement. Be that as it may, I don’t think S&W will pay a whole lot of attention to the attention whore Hogg.

    tip ‘o the hat to AW1 Rod for the link

  • Winter will be ‘teeth-chattering’ cold, have plenty of snow

    snow

    Over the sweltering heat and steamy humidity that’s blanketed much of the country this summer? Get ready for a rough, snowy winter.

    Fox News is reporting the Farmer’s Almanac is predicting a “colder-than-normal” winter from the Continental Divide on eastward, with bitter cold arriving in mid-February in the Northeast, Great Lakes, and even into the Southeast.

    “Contrary to the stories storming the web, our time-tested, long-range formula is pointing toward a very long, cold, and snow-filled winter,” editor Peter Geiger said in a statement on the company’s website. “We stand by our forecast and formula, which accurately predicted the many storms last winter, as well as this summer’s steamy, hot conditions.”

    Included in the frigid outlook is above-average snowfall expected for the Great Lakes and New England, with some snow expected to arrive in the Mid-Atlantic and New England by December.

    As to when the cold may end, the Farmers’ Almanac says that a stormy March could feature a “potent East Coast storm” that could keep snow on the ground into spring.

    The Farmers’ Almanac says it bases its long-range forecast “on a mathematical and astronomical formula developed in 1818.”

    It’s not to be confused with the rival Old Farmers’ Almanac, billed as the oldest periodical in North America, which also issues seasonal weather forecasts.

    If you’re looking for a milder winter ahead, Old Farmers’ Almanac is calling for “above-normal temperatures almost everywhere in the United States,” in addition to more rain instead of snow.

    I miss the crew pre-flight briefs, where the weather guesser would make dire predictions of “Impacted thunder cells along the cold front’s boundary with moderate to severe turbulence from 5000 to 30,000 ft. Have a nice flight!”

    Now what’s winter going to look like? Ask a weather guesser- there’s a 50% chance he’ll get it right. Just like these two Almanacs.

  • Chinese company reportedly hacked Clinton’s server

    hrc

    Reportedly, a Chinese state-owned company hacked into then SecState Hillary Clinton’s personal e-mail server, allowing them to receive a copy of her every message in real time.

    This allegation came from two separate sources, according to The Daily Caller.

    The code was embedded on her server in upstate New York, and sent a “courtesy copy” of her messages and documents. I imagine the irony in that is lost on Hillary and her crew.

    Fox News reports a source confirmed the details of The Caller’s reporting, stating the code was discovered in 2015 by the Intelligence Community Inspector General (ICIG), which in turn alerted the FBI of the hack.

    And then it gets interesting.

    The source told Fox News the hack was from a Chinese company, describing it as a front for Chinese intelligence.

    A second source briefed on the matter told Fox News that officials outside of the FBI indicated code on the Clinton server suggested a foreign source was receiving copies of emails in real time.

    ICIG was so concerned by the revelation that officials drove over to the FBI to inform agents — including anti-Trump agent Peter Strzok — of the development after it was discovered via the emails’ metadata.

    The second source knowledgeable on the matter told Fox News that officials outside of the FBI indicated code on the Clinton server suggested a foreign source was receiving copies of emails in real time.

    The hacking report caught the attention late Tuesday of President Trump, who warned that the FBI and DOJ should act or “their credibility will be forever gone.”

    The Chinese Foreign Ministry responded with, “This isn’t the first time we’ve heard similar allegations. China is a staunch defender of cybersecurity. We firmly oppose and crack down on any forms of internet attacks and the stealing of secrets,”

    The ICIG and the FBI declined to comment.

    Clinton’s office did not respond to a request for comment, but a spokesman told The Daily Caller, “The FBI spent thousands of hours investigating, and found no evidence of intrusion. That’s a fact.”

    Fox News reported in March that Strzok was advised of an irregularity in the metadata of Clinton’s server that suggested a possible breach, but no follow-up action was taken.

    Further, a May 2016 email from Strzok, obtained by Fox News earlier this year, said “we know foreign actors obtained access” to some Clinton emails, including at least one “secret” message “via compromises of the private email accounts” of Clinton staffers.

    Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, asked Strzok in a House Oversight Committee hearing in July whether he was briefed about an anomaly on Clinton’s emails found by ICIG officials.

    “You were given that information, and you did nothing with it,” Gohmert told Strzok in July.

    Strzok said he remembered meeting with the ICIG officials, but did not remember the contents of the meeting and that every allegation was forwarded to experts who looked at it carefully.

    “It’s critically important,” he said, when asked about the significance of the server revelation. “There are countries that would pay a tremendous amount of money to know what Clinton was saying, doing and thinking through her emails, what she’s doing, who she’s going to meet, what she thought about meetings, not necessarily classified but critically important and those emails were compromised and people like Strzok, when they were briefed, knew this would devastate her chances of being elected and they weren’t about to do anything to hurt those chances.”

    And to tie it all up with a bow, then FBI Director James Comey concluded that he would not recommend charges to the DOJ.

    It has been said, over and again, had you or I been so careless, we would be under the jail.

  • Eastern Germany Hit by Riots after Deadly Stabbing Spree

    riot e germanyDemonstrators chant “Merkel must go” and “Close the borders”

    The fatal stabbing of a German by a group of migrants triggered riots in the eastern German city of Chemnitz. Several thousand demonstrators took to the streets on Monday night calling for an end to Chancellor Merkel’s open borders policy, media reports say.

    Around two thousand right-wing protesters clashed with a thousand left-wing counter-demonstrators on Monday evening, according to German media reports. Earlier, hundreds gathered in the city center on Sunday after a 35 year-old man died after being stabbed at the town fair. Two men, of Syrian and Iraqi origin, were arrested in connection with the killing.

    Legal Insurrection reports:

    The local newspaper Thüringer Allgemeine covered the clashes on Monday:

    The protests carried out by right- and left-wing demonstrators in the Chemnitz inner city on Monday evening left at least two people injured. The police didn’t rule out that the number [of causalities] could rise. Fireworks and objects were reportedly hurled. The eyewitnesses talk about an aggressive atmosphere.

    On Sunday, a spontaneous demonstration after the death of a 25 year-old German at the town fair turned against immigrants. Bottles and stones were thrown at the police. Video footage in internet show how migrants were attacked and “down right hunted.”

    Germany has often seen demonstrations against the government’s open borders policy, but the level of violence and anger witnessed in Chemnitz took both the police and politicians by surprise.

    Police initially underestimated the public outrage over the killing and was unprepared to handle the thousands of demonstrators who in their thousands chanted “Merkel must go” and “Close the borders”. “We were shocked by the size of the crowds that passed us by,” Robert Gruner, spokesman for the city of Chemnitz told reporters.

    True to form, Chancellor Merkel condemned the “right-wing violence,” but did not mention the brutal murder that led to the rioting. Seems the term “cause and effect” is meaningless, at least for Chancellor Merkel.

  • ACLU Defends The NRA Against Andrew Cuomo’s ‘Blacklisting Campaign’

    NRA
    The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) defended the National Rifle Association (NRA) by opposing New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s attempts to put the gun advocacy group out of business.

    The ACLU has submitted an amicus brief in federal court, weighing in on the on-going battle between the Democrat Governor and the NRA.

    Wait, what?

    The Daily Caller reports the NRA filed a lawsuit against both Cuomo, and the state’s financial regulatory bureau contending that the agency instituted a “blacklisting campaign” by threatening insurers and other financial institutions that interacted with the organization. The bureau warned that by continuing to do business with the NRA, banks and insurance companies could face regulatory action.

    The NRA has subsequently been deprived of basic insurance and may be “unable to exist as a not-for-profit or pursue its advocacy mission.”

    While the ACLU has disagreed with the NRA on the meaning of the Second Amendment, the friend-of-the-court brief supported the NRA on behalf of the First.

    “Those allegations [made by the NRA] represent a blatant violation of the First Amendment,” the ACLU states. “Although public officials are free to express their opinions and may condemn viewpoints or groups they view as inimical to public welfare, they cannot abuse their regulatory authority to retaliate against disfavored advocacy organizations and to impose burdens on those organizations’ ability to conduct lawful business.”

    Cuomo has been a voracious critic of the NRA and has admitted to “proudly” trying to strong arm the group out of existence.

    “When an organization that is normally on the opposite side from you, joins you in a huge fight against a devout enemy, you know the gun-hating, gun-banning, bullying, anti-Second Amendment, enemies of Freedom are way out of control,” Marion Hammer responded on behalf of the NRA.

    I’m not a litigious type, normally. But I hope, after the NRA wins this court battle its lawyers sue the crap out of Cuomo and New York’s financial regulatory bureau for this egregious misuse of power.

  • Iran says it has control of Gulf, Strait of Hormuz

    SoH

    The Mad Mullahs and their lackeys in the Revolutionary Guard’s Navy are rattling their sabers again, followong a large scale naval exercise in the Straights of Hormuz (SoH). The strategic waterway provides the only access to the Indian Ocean, and nearly 1/3 of the world’s sea-borne oil passes through.

    Fox News reports the head of the navy of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, General Alireza Tangsiri, said on Monday that Iran had full control of the Gulf and the U.S. Navy did not belong there, according to the Tasnim news agency.

    “It’s a very contentious area,” retired Lt. Col. Bob Maginnis told Fox News’ “Your World with Neil Cavuto” earlier this month.

    “The blockage of the Strait of Hormuz, even temporarily, could lead to substantial increases in total energy costs,” the agency said in a 2012 report.

    At the beginning of August, Iran began a large-scale exercise in the Strait of Hormuz involving more than 50 small boats, practicing “swarming” operations that could potentially shut down the vital waterway if ever deployed for real. The drill came after President Trump pulled the U.S. out of a landmark nuclear accord with Iran and leaders of both countries exchanged fiery rhetoric.

    “They’re causing problems once again, as predicted, in the Strait of Hormuz,” Maginnis said. “This is something we’ve grown accustomed too.”

    But if Iran were to follow through with any bluster to close down the vital shipping channel, a potential U.S. response would be swift.

    Gen. Joseph Votel, head of U.S. Central Command, said earlier this month that Iran was showcasing its military capabilities and has the ability to plant mines and explosive boats in the waterway, as well as use missiles and radar along the coast. He stressed the U.S. and allies routinely train for that possibility and are prepared to insure that freedom of navigation and commerce continues in those waters.

    President Obama’s former National Security Adviser Jim Jones, a four-star general, said in an interview earlier this month the Iranian Navy should be “wiped out” if any action is taken to block maritime traffic.

    “I personally would like to see, if they ever did something in the Strait of Hormuz, I would like to see their navy disappear,” Jones told The National.

    Color me impressed- an Obama advisor with some stones. As for the Iranian regime, this bluster is a result of Trump’s disengaging from the ludicrous nuclear deal. and slapping the sanctions back on. They need a refresher in Operation Praying Mantis.

    Operation Praying Mantis

  • Lessons from the Loud Music Murder Trial

    Px 4
    Ammo Land describes the event and trials (yes, trials) of one Michael Dunn, who, during an altercation with a group of youths over their music, shot and killed seventeen-year-old Jordan Davis. Dunn then fled the scene, and was arrested at his home the next day.

    I know I for one look forward to the daily “Feel Good Stories” posted here, and I’m sure I’m not alone. But there is a flip side, too, where a situation occurred that could have been avoided if some common sense was applied, and tempers checked. This is one of those.

    USA – -(AmmoLand.com)- Michael Dunn is one of the relatively rare criminal defendants who endured two trials and faced two juries for the same incident.

    Dunn fatally shot seventeen-year-old Jordan Davis at a convenience store parking lot after an argument over the loud music Davis and his friends were listening to in their red Dodge Durango. While Dunn claimed Davis made death threats, displayed a shotgun, and attempted to get out of his car to attack him, no evidence or witness testimony corroborated his account. Dunn fled the scene and failed to contact law enforcement. A witness memorized Dunn’s license plate number, and detectives apprehended Dunn at his home the next day. He was eventually charged with one count of first-degree murder for the shooting of Jordan Davis, and three counts of first degree attempted murder for firing at a car full of teenagers as they sped away. The state threw in a charge of throwing or firing “deadly missiles” for good measure.

    During the first trial, scrappy criminal defense attorney Cory Strolla, operating on a shoestring budget, made an impassioned argument that the state failed to disprove, beyond a reasonable doubt, Dunn’s claim that he shot Jordan Davis in self-defense. According to a juror who spoke to reporters after the trial, Strolla convinced two members of the jury that the state had not met their burden. They refused to convict Dunn on the murder charge and forced a mistrial on the central count. The jury was unanimous, however, on the three counts of attempted murder, although he opted for the lesser charge of second degree, telling the state they believed the act was done in the heat of the moment, not as a premeditated plot to kill. They found him guilty for the “deadly missile” charge as well.

    The mandatory minimum sentence for second-degree murder in Florida is 20 years — each. Dunn would get 60 years in prison for the shots he fired that hurt no one, and he’d have to stand trial a second time to resolve the question surrounding the shot that took Jordan Davis’ life.

    During the second trial, experienced public defender Waffa Hanania represented Dunn and worked methodically to convince the jury that “Jordan Davis escalated this situation until he ended up dead.” The jury didn’t buy it. After a short deliberation, they gave the state exactly what they asked for: a guilty verdict for first-degree murder. The verdict meant that the jury didn’t just reject Dunn’s self-defense claim — they felt that at some point in the argument, Dunn made a deliberate decision that he was going to kill Jordan Davis, and then he did.

    Don West, veteran criminal defense lawyer and National Trial Counsel for CCW Safe said that the Dunn trial provides a “list of how not to act” as a concealed carrier.

    Here’s a list of some of Dunn’s biggest mistakes:

    When Dunn pulled into the convenience store, he heard the loud music. He could tell it was coming from the red Dodge Durango, and he chose to park right next to it anyway. Had he chosen any other parking spot, Davis would be alive, and Dunn would be free.

    Dunn chose to confront the teenagers in the SUV about their loud music. While it was within his rights to do so, a grown man shouldn’t be surprised that cocksure teens out with their friends might take umbrage at a request to turn down the radio. Dunn invited the argument that ensued.

    Once Jordan Davis got angry and started shouting obscenities, Dunn could have disengaged. He could have looked away or moved to a different parking spot. Instead, he rolled down his window and, stealing a line from Robert De Niro in the film Taxi Driver, he said, “Are you talking to me?”

    Dunn told investigators, “I went over this a million times, and what I should have done is put the car in reverse . . . it was fight or flight. I don’t think there was any time for flight at that moment.” Dunn did have enough time, however, to reach across the passenger seat, open the glove box, grab his holstered pistol, draw the weapon, and rack the gun before firing.

    Dunn fired too many times. The fact that the first jury failed to convict on murder says that the first round of bullets Dunn fired could have been considered justified. But everyone agreed that the final burst of gunfire was without justification.

    Dunn fled the scene and failed to report the shooting to investigators, Don West says there was no plausible scenario to explain why Dunn left the scene without reporting the shooting to authorities — unless he had done something wrong.

    Dunn spoke to police investigators without the advice of an attorney. His voluntary testimony was used against him in court.

    Clearly, there are many lessons here for the concealed carrier, but perhaps this is the most important: don’t confuse anger for fear. No one could present any solid evidence or witness testimony to bolster Michael Dunn’s claims that Jordan Davis produced a shotgun and was starting to get out of the SUV to attack him. Without such evidence, combined with that fact that Dunn fled without calling the police, it must have appeared to most jurors that Dunn was inventing facts to justify the shooting.

    The second jury, with their first-degree conviction, said that Dunn’s actions amounted to pre-meditated murder. Perhaps that’s true. The jurors with dissenting votes on the first jury must have felt that Dunn’s fear could have been reasonable. Perhaps that’s the truth.

    Or perhaps the truth is somewhere in between, in a murky gray area where fear and anger mix. Self-defense is a matter of life and death, but it’s not often black and white. Should you ever find yourself suffering the tragedy of having to defend yourself with deadly force, people are going to look into your heart to determine whether its filled with fear or anger. Before you ever pull the trigger and take a life, you’d better be sure about what those people will find.

    A lot to think about, but the real lesson is don’t look for trouble.

  • John McCain Passes at 81

    mccain

    Arizona Sen. John McCain, a war hero who survived five years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam, served three decades in Congress and went on to become the Republican Party’s nominee for president in 2008, died Saturday. He was 81 years old.

    In his last hours, McCain turned down further treatment, his family announced in a statement.

    McCain was diagnosed with brain cancer in July 2017. Doctors discovered the tumor during a medical procedure to remove a blood clot from above his left eye. He remained upbeat after the diagnosis, flying back to Washington days after surgery with a large scar visible above his eye to partake in the Senate’s health care debate.

    “I greatly appreciate the outpouring of support – unfortunately for my sparring partners in Congress, I’ll be back soon, so stand-by!” McCain tweeted on July 20 after his diagnosis.

    On Friday, his family issued a statement saying,“Last summer, Senator John McCain shared with Americans the news our family already knew: he had been diagnosed with an aggressive glioblastoma, and the prognosis was serious. In the year since, John has surpassed expectations for his survival. But the progress of disease and the inexorable advance of age render their verdict.”

    They added, “With his usual strength of will, he has now chosen to discontinue medical treatment.”

    McCain’s wife, Cindy, tweeted that her “heart is broken” following her husband’s death.

    My heart is broken. I am so lucky to have lived the adventure of loving this incredible man for 38 years. He passed the way he lived, on his own terms, surrounded by the people he loved, in the the place he loved best.

    Read the article in its entirety here-> Fox News

    Fair winds and following seas, Captain McCain.

    Navy Hymn