Showing posts with label Congratulations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Congratulations. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Congratulations to India's armed forces on a job well done

 

India's military did a good job on Saturday when it stopped pirates who'd taken over the MV Ruen, a cargo vessel.  The combined operation was an intricate affair that would have been a serious test for any first-rank military, and India carried it off in style.


New Delhi says naval surveillance assets were tracking the ship in the Arabian Sea, when the pirates fired on an Indian reconnaissance drone and the naval vessel from which it had been launched, the INS Kolkata.

“In a reckless hostile act, the pirates shot down the drone and fired at the Indian naval warship,” the Indian navy says.

In response, New Delhi launched its operation to liberate the Ruen, which involved additional naval vessels, a Boeing C-17 Globemaster, a Boeing P-8I Neptune maritime patrol aircraft and an unspecified high-altitude remotely piloted aircraft.

The Ruen was forced to stop after the Kolkata took unspecified action that “disabled the ship’s steering system and navigational aids”, according to India. Marine commandos then moved in.

While the hijacked vessel was under surveillance by an Indian navy P-8I, commandos parachuted from an Indian air force C-17 into the water several hundred metres from the Ruen.

The marine force boarded several motorised rigid inflatable vessels, which also appear to have been air dropped into the area, and then boarded the Ruen via a set of hull-mounted stairs.

Images of the operation show a number of commandos descending toward the sea under canopy, while a grey C-17 climbs after a low pass. A cloud of red smoke just off the Ruen’s bow marks the commandos’ aquatic drop zone, where their small boats are visible.

A single Hindustan Aeronautics Chetak helicopter bearing the orange, white and green roundel of the Indian navy is also visible in one photo, providing overwatch of the commando raid.

The marines were successful in boarding retaking the Ruen, according to New Delhi.

“Due to sustained pressure and calibrated actions by the Indian navy… all 35 Somali pirates surrendered,” India says. “All 17 original crew members of MV Ruen were also safely evacuated from the pirate vessel without any injury.”


There's more at the link.

It's been announced that, since they fired on Indian Navy assets, the pirates will be taken to India and tried there under international anti-piracy statutes.  I suspect they'll spend a long time behind bars there.

To co-ordinate and mount such a complex operation at short notice, involving assets from more than one branch of the military over a distance of several thousand miles, would challenge even the best armed forces.  It speaks well of India's that they succeeded on their first attempt.

One hopes that Somali pirates in general, who've been ramping up their activities due to the turmoil in maritime circles caused by the Houthi conflict in Yemen, will learn from this;  but they've been a problem for centuries, and I daresay they'll go on being a problem until they're permanently eliminated, root and branch, from that part of the world.

Peter


Wednesday, February 7, 2024

Give her a medal!

 

Details have emerged of a Druze woman who helped capture five Hamas terrorists and aided Israeli forces to kill or capture more than a hundred others during the terrorist attack on October 7th.  In the process, she fooled another Hamas terrorist over the phone into revealing where his forces were entering Israel and where they planned to attack next.

I'm not going to steal her thunder by trying to summarize the story here.  Instead, click over to one or both of these links for the details:





A remarkable story.  I hope those in her community who lived through the attack have shown, and continue to show, their gratitude.  Now, how about giving her a medal for heroism?  It took tremendous guts to do what she did, in the face of certain (and probably very slow and very painful) death if she hadn't been able to convince the terrorists that she was on their side.

Peter


Thursday, November 30, 2023

Your feel-good story (and video) of the day

 

The BBC reports:


A bride with a rare disorder affecting her mobility surprised her husband-to-be by walking down the aisle on their wedding day in East Yorkshire.

Carrie Redhead, 27, was born with the digestive condition intestinal lymphangiectasia, or Waldmann's disease, which causes the loss of special proteins from sufferers' intestines.

Two years ago her condition deteriorated, leaving her having to use a wheelchair.

But at their wedding ceremony in Faxfleet in October, her fiance, Joel Redhead, had no idea she was determined to walk down the aisle.

With a video of Mrs Redhead's walk having now been viewed online millions of times, she says she wants to inspire and empower people facing similar situations.


The BBC's own video is at the link, but I can't embed it here.  Here's another news report that I found on YouTube, including an interview with the newlyweds.




Amazing courage and determination from the bride.  You can see for yourself in the wedding sequence how her husband had to wipe tears from his eyes as she hobbled towards him on her father's arm.

God bless them both.  May their example help many other people who are facing similar challenges.

Peter


Tuesday, November 14, 2023

The next step in her journey

 

Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the well-known former Muslim activist against Islamic fundamentalism, became a self-professed atheist after learning (the hard way) what that religion's extremists taught and wanted for the world.  However, after many years as an atheist, she's converted to Christianity.


So, what changed? Why do I call myself a Christian now?

Part of the answer is global. Western civilisation is under threat from three different but related forces: the resurgence of great-power authoritarianism and expansionism in the forms of the Chinese Communist Party and Vladimir Putin’s Russia; the rise of global Islamism, which threatens to mobilise a vast population against the West; and the viral spread of woke ideology, which is eating into the moral fibre of the next generation ... we can’t fight off these formidable forces unless we can answer the question: what is it that unites us? The response that “God is dead!” seems insufficient. So, too, does the attempt to find solace in “the rules-based liberal international order”. The only credible answer, I believe, lies in our desire to uphold the legacy of the Judeo-Christian tradition.

That legacy consists of an elaborate set of ideas and institutions designed to safeguard human life, freedom and dignity — from the nation state and the rule of law to the institutions of science, health and learning. As Tom Holland has shown in his marvellous book Dominion, all sorts of apparently secular freedoms — of the market, of conscience and of the press — find their roots in Christianity.

And so I have come to realise that Russell and my atheist friends failed to see the wood for the trees. The wood is the civilisation built on the Judeo-Christian tradition; it is the story of the West, warts and all.

. . .

To me ... freedom of conscience and speech is perhaps the greatest benefit of Western civilisation. It does not come naturally to man. It is the product of centuries of debate within Jewish and Christian communities. It was these debates that advanced science and reason, diminished cruelty, suppressed superstitions, and built institutions to order and protect life, while guaranteeing freedom to as many people as possible. Unlike Islam, Christianity outgrew its dogmatic stage. It became increasingly clear that Christ’s teaching implied not only a circumscribed role for religion as something separate from politics. It also implied compassion for the sinner and humility for the believer.

Yet I would not be truthful if I attributed my embrace of Christianity solely to the realisation that atheism is too weak and divisive a doctrine to fortify us against our menacing foes. I have also turned to Christianity because I ultimately found life without any spiritual solace unendurable — indeed very nearly self-destructive. Atheism failed to answer a simple question: what is the meaning and purpose of life?

Russell and other activist atheists believed that with the rejection of God we would enter an age of reason and intelligent humanism. But the “God hole” — the void left by the retreat of the church — has merely been filled by a jumble of irrational quasi-religious dogma. The result is a world where modern cults prey on the dislocated masses, offering them spurious reasons for being and action — mostly by engaging in virtue-signalling theatre on behalf of a victimised minority or our supposedly doomed planet. The line often attributed to G.K. Chesterton has turned into a prophecy: “When men choose not to believe in God, they do not thereafter believe in nothing, they then become capable of believing in anything.”

. . .

The lesson I learned from my years with the Muslim Brotherhood was the power of a unifying story, embedded in the foundational texts of Islam, to attract, engage and mobilise the Muslim masses. Unless we offer something as meaningful, I fear the erosion of our civilisation will continue. And fortunately, there is no need to look for some new-age concoction of medication and mindfulness. Christianity has it all.

That is why I no longer consider myself a Muslim apostate, but a lapsed atheist. Of course, I still have a great deal to learn about Christianity. I discover a little more at church each Sunday. But I have recognised, in my own long journey through a wilderness of fear and self-doubt, that there is a better way to manage the challenges of existence than either Islam or unbelief had to offer.


There's more at the link.

This is wonderful news for all Christian believers, of course.  Ms. Ali has been a source for and a center of rational debate and discussion about the meaning of life, the dangers of extremism, and the need for intellectual honesty in confronting the problems around us.  For a deep thinker like that to analyze Christianity and realize that it holds the promise of fulfilling all those things, and explaining them in a rational sense as well as by faith, is a testimony to the abiding, enduring truth of Jesus Christ.  I thank God for this news, and for my new sister in Christ.

It's also a challenge to those of us who take our faith for granted, or never think about why we believe what we profess.  We should all be challenging ourselves.  If we claim to be Christian, why do we do so?  On what grounds?  How do we pattern our lives according to God's revelation in Christ?  Ms. Ali has had to do all of that during her conversion.  We would do well to follow her example, and examine our own faith anew.  We should not believe because that's what our parents taught us, or because that's what's socially acceptable.  We should believe because we really do believe, on the basis of evidence and personal faith.

Kudos to Ms. Ali for giving us renewed grounds for that self-examination.

Peter


Wednesday, August 9, 2023

Great news for Cedar Sanderson!

 

Friend, fellow blogger, illustrator and author Cedar Sanderson has been nominated for a Dragon Award.  For those who don't know the awards, they're conferred by DragonCon every year.



 In a world of the ordinary, the Dragon is most astonishing. Its heart burns with determination and desire as it soars from page to canvas to screen. The Dragon’s inner fire elevates it above the mundane, and once released, inspires respect and awe from all who witness its greatness.

Like the Dragon, our recipients are extraordinary and unique. Fueled by the passion for their art, they have spread their wings and soared above us all. Their inner fire, the burning in their hearts and souls, cannot be restrained. Once set free, their work, their fire, has influenced and inspired countless others, burned into our hearts and minds forever.

In the spirit of the Dragon and with infinite admiration, we created The Dragon Award as a token of their individuality and greatness. We are pleased to present all of our award winners with the essence of the Dragon, its fire, suspended perpetually as a permanent reminder of their contributions.


Cedar's nomination is in the category "Best Illustrative Cover" for her work on the book "But Not Broken".  She also edited the collection.



The blurb for the book reads:


Fourteen stories of surviving and healing from PTSD. Fiction has the power to give us an escape from where we are, and an ability to envision where we could be. None of these are easy stories, but all offer hope, and healing, for those who need to see a path through the fog of pain.


I think Cedar did a wonderful job of capturing in her art the heartbreak and heartache of those who suffer from this disorder.  The book is seriously good, too, as is its predecessor volume, "Can't Go Home Again" (which she also edited and covered).  I highly recommend both to your attention, particularly if you've "been there and done that" and still feel the effects of a high-stress environment.  You're far from alone.

If you have a personal favorite in the "Best Illustrative Cover" category for this year's Dragon Awards, by all means vote for it.  If you don't, remember, voting is open to everybody.  I'd love Cedar to get the recognition her art deserves, so please vote for her.  She's designed the covers for several of my books, and I have more lined up for forthcoming volumes.  Here, for example, is a draft of Cedar's cover for the first book of a US Civil War naval trilogy that I'm currently writing.  (Here's an excerpt.)



Look for it soon, God willing!

Congratulations, Cedar.  We're holding thumbs for you.

Peter


Friday, June 9, 2023

Way to go, Tucker Carlson and Elon Musk!

 

I'm absolutely loving the progressive left-wing melt-down over Tucker Carlson's use of Twitter to reach his audience and fans.  I'm also loving Fox News' ridiculous attempts to threaten him with legal action if he doesn't stop.

It was Fox, of course, who took him off the air while continuing to pay him according to his contract, in a deliberate attempt to keep him off the air until after the elections next year.  Well, that's backfired on them spectacularly.  He's not "on the air" in the sense of being broadcast by a TV or cable news network, and he's not being paid for airing a private podcast on Twitter on a regular basis, so I can't see how Fox can stop him in legal terms.  After all, you or I could do precisely what Tucker's doing:  put together our own private televised podcast and send it out over Twitter, so that anyone who wants can play it back or retweet it.  That's called "free speech".  It's protected under the First Amendment to the US Constitution.  If Tucker's not being paid to do it (he isn't, as far as I know), and he isn't sending it out over media or entertainment channels (and Twitter is neither), and if his contract with Fox News doesn't circumscribe his free speech rights (AFAIK, it doesn't), then what is Fox going to do about it?  The very fact that they didn't immediately seek a court injunction to stop him shows clearly that they're in a legal quandary.  If the law had been on their side, they'd have done so instanter.

Best of all, because Fox is still paying him according to his (very lucrative) contract, Tucker doesn't have to charge anyone to view his work on Twitter.  He can afford to do it free, gratis and for nothing, thanks to the same people who censored him in the first place!  Oh, the irony...

Other pundits have pointed out the reality of the situation.


Brandon Straka pointed out that Carlson's set is precisely what Americans want.

"He writes his 10-15 minute monologues himself - EVERY NIGHT. The guy is a one-of-a-kind genius. Who gives AF if he uses a teleprompter to deliver HIS OWN material?" Straka tweeted.  

Liberal crybaby Taylor Lorenz also tried — and failed — to dismantle Carlson. 

"It's wild to see what a fish out of water he is on the internet: no jump cuts, no background music, no catchy thumbnail or video title. Not sure how he's going to stack up against even an average streamer or Youtuber," she tweeted.

However, Conservative political commentator Benny Johnson explained why Carlson's no-frills show — just good honest reporting — would be a success. 

"Tucker broke the corporate media monopoly matrix tonight & it's never coming back," Johnson tweeted. "Tucker uploaded a 10 min monologue. No ads or interruptions. No pricy subscriptions. Watch on demand. The result? – 17M views – 90K RTs – 25K comments. In under 180 mins. We are the media now."


There's more at the link.

I'm sure Elon Musk, owner of Twitter, is also laughing all the way to the bank.  With one of the biggest names in American news media and political opinion now using Twitter to reach his audience, it's the best boost for Twitter's ratings and advertising draw-power that anyone could possibly have wished.  It's shifted Twitter from being just a social media network to being a major power in shaping and forming the opinions of Mr. and Mrs. Average American - and the powers that be are melting down about that.  The last thing they want is an alternative to the lock-step propaganda served up by our news and social media.  Now, in Tucker Carlson on Twitter, that alternative is alive and well - and its popularity shows very clearly that most of us are fed up with the status quo, and are looking for alternatives.

Thank you, Tucker Carlson, and thank you, Elon Musk.  I'm going to make a lot of popcorn as the next elections approach, and sit back and watch the fun.

Peter


Wednesday, May 3, 2023

A demonstration of terminal ballistics

 

A hood rat in St. Louis recently found out that a police SUV, traveling at a reasonable rate of speed, has terminal ballistics (in this case, an impact energy) rather greater (as in multiple orders of magnitude greater) than the bullets he's firing at the vehicle.



Oops!

If a gangbanger won't stop the easy way, he can - and should - be stopped the hard way.  Amazingly, the gunman (who rejoices in the name of Taiwansley Jackson) survived the double impact, and is in jail pending charges and trial.  Hopefully he'll spend a lot longer behind bars, so that the rest of us don't have to worry about him.

Peter


Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Not guilty!

 

Readers will recall that a few weeks ago, I asked for your support for our blogging, writing friend Lawdog as he faced trial on what all of us who know him were sure were trumped-up, overblown charges.

I'm delighted to report that our efforts paid off.

  • Lawdog was able to raise enough funds, thanks to your generosity, to pay his lawyer and all other expenses.
  • His trial took place yesterday.  It didn't even take a full day before he was declared Not Guilty - an outcome we fully expected.
  • We celebrated his acquittal yesterday afternoon and evening with several bottles of good cheer and BBQ from a local (and extremely good) restaurant.  A good time was had by all.
Some of the expert witnesses who testified on his behalf were dumbfounded that the charges had even been brought in the first place, given the lack of evidence to support them.  I heard a couple of them muttering that a lawsuit for malicious prosecution might not be out of place.  I have no idea whether that will happen.  We'll see what comes out in the wash.

Thank you very much for your support for Lawdog.  I'm delighted that my friend has been freed from this legal weight that's been hanging over him for more than two years, thanks to delays caused by COVID-19 and other issues.  I'm sure he slept well last night, in high spirits (in more ways than one!).

All right, buddy - you've got no excuse any more not to get back to writing!  We want more Lawdog books!

Peter


Friday, October 14, 2022

Owned!

 

Most readers are doubtless aware that author J. K. Rowling has made enemies among the "woke" by refusing to back down on the gender identity question.  (Good for her, say I!)  She's just delivered the ultimate verbal slap in the face to one of her attackers.  Clickit to biggit.






Peter


Thursday, October 13, 2022

Farewell to a little-known aircraft that turned into a scientific wonder

 

NASA has retired its Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA), after eight years of operations.  Data from its missions will continue to be analyzed for years to come.


From the start of its development in 1996, SOFIA required engineering ingenuity. A Boeing 747SP jetliner had to be modified to carry the 38,000-pound, 100-inch (more than 17,000-kilogram, 2.5-meter) telescope provided by NASA’s partner on the SOFIA mission, the German Space Agency at DLR.

Engineers at Ames developed a garage door-like mechanism that rolled up to let the telescope observe the skies. In that configuration, it was “one of the largest open ports ever flown on an aircraft,” said Paul Fusco, a NASA engineer, now retired, who helped design the door system, “and the largest certified to fly at all altitudes and speeds with the door open. It was a really thrilling aviation innovation.”

The mission’s pilots couldn’t even feel when the door was open. And the stability of the telescope itself was equivalent to keeping a laser pointer steady on a penny from 10 miles away. SOFIA had achieved a smooth flight and a steady gaze.

And that was only the beginning. By 2014, the observatory had reached its full operational capability, and for eight years SOFIA helped astronomers around the world use infrared light to study an impressive array of cosmic events and objects invisible to other telescopes. 

Magnetic fields observed by SOFIA in the galaxy Centaurus A

“SOFIA’s unique scientific achievements were the result of the ingenuity of the incredible international community that grew up around the mission,” said Alessandra Roy, SOFIA project scientist for the German Space Agency, “which was only made possible by the collaboration of NASA and DLR.”


There's more at the link.

That's pretty amazing technology.  The results of SOFIA's missions were spectacular, both from a scientific and a photographic perspective.  You'll find many of the images here, and they're well worth viewing.  They're every bit as spectacular as those from the Hubble or James Webb space telescopes, taken as they were above the stratosphere.

Congratulations to NASA on a really productive and fruitful scientific mission.  I'd call that taxpayer money well spent.

Peter


Thursday, September 15, 2022

Good old-fashioned entrepreneurship + hard work = teen success story!

 

I was very happy to read this teenager success story.  I wish there were more like them!


Carburetors may represent old-school tech in the automotive world, but don’t tell Riley Schlick, a high school senior in Florida who rebuilds them for a tidy profit. Send your tired, dirty, mucked-up carburetor to Schlick and she’ll return it to you clean, shiny, and ready for duty once again. She has operated her Bradenton-based business, Riley’s Rebuilds, for three years now, and a steady stream of carburetors has crossed her path.

At first, Riley’s Rebuilds was a way for 17-year-old Schlick to buy her first car, which had to meet her parents’ specifications: It needed to have a manual transmission and a roll bar. Within a few months, she made enough money to buy a Jeep. Then, she brought on four friends to work with her. That hiring spree solved two problems, in Schlick’s mind. Her friends make more money rebuilding carburetors than they would working a minimum wage job, and they get to spend time together. 

She learned how to do the work from her dad. “I said to her, ‘You can get a job at Publix or I can show you how to do some restoration stuff in the garage,” says Schlick’s father, Dane Trask, who rebuilds classic cars as a hobby. He showed her how to do it, and also made use of some YouTube tutorials. “She picked it up quick,” he says.

. . .

At this rate, Schlick and her friends aren’t going to need a minimum wage job any time soon.


There's more at the link.  Go read the whole thing.  It's worth it.

God bless them all:

  • The parents who encourage their kids to succeed;
  • The girls who aren't afraid of hard work;
  • The ability of all concerned to recognize a gap in the market, and fill it;
  • The girls' drive to succeed, and build a business that's as much fun as it is work.
That's just great!

Those girls won't have to waste tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars on a worthless degree, and won't have to beg for extra money from their parents.  They're earning their own way in life from a very early age, and setting an example for every one of their peers.  They'll hopefully be able to afford to choose their further education based on what they can pay for out of their own pockets, and what interests them rather than what's politically correct.

Congratulations to all concerned, and thank you.  We need more like you!  I hope Mike Rowe sees this article, and does one of his TV specials about you all.  You deserve it.

Peter


Friday, January 28, 2022

"How the world's deepest shipwreck was found"

 

That's the title of a fascinating article at the BBC about the search for the wreck of USS Johnston, a Fletcher class destroyer sunk during the Battle off Samar in 1944.  For her actions during that battle, her commanding officer, Commander Ernest E. Evans, was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor and the ship was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation, both being the highest awards in their respective classes conferred by the United States.

The search for USS Johnston was aided by recently developed technology, but still presented a monumental challenge.  It lay more than 21,000 feet beneath the ocean surface, which makes it the deepest shipwreck ever surveyed.  Here's a photograph from the article, showing one of the ship's anti-aircraft gun mounts.  Click the image for a larger view.



The article is long and filled with detail, which I found very interesting.  Here's a short excerpt to illustrate how much information it provides.


Most of the world's shipwrecks are found in shallow coastal waters. Ships follow trade routes to ports, and coastal waters offer the chance of sanctuary if the weather turns nasty. So this is where most ships founder and sink. But the waters Johnston sank in are very different. Rather than a smooth decline, they instead drop steeply to great depths.

Samar Island sits on the edge of a vast marine canyon known as the Philippine Trench, which runs for some 820 miles (1,320km) along the Philippines and Indonesian coastline. It skirts around the eastern side of Samar Island, on the seaward side of Leyte Gulf. It is very, very deep. If you were to drop Mt Everest at the deepest point of the Philippine Trench, the Galathea Depth, its summit would still be more than a mile (1.6km) underwater.

No-one knows quite how long it took for USS Johnston to reach the ocean floor. She sank through layer after layer of the Philippine Sea, distinct stages which grow ever darker, colder and inhospitable. Past 100m (328ft) sunlight would have begun to fade. Past 200m (656ft) Johnston would have entered the twilight zone, a vast layer nearly a kilometre deep which marks the end of the effect of the Sun's light on the ocean. The temperature would have plummeted the further she sank. At 1,000m (3,280ft) Johnston's ruptured hull would have would have plunged through waters only a few degrees above freezing into what oceanographers call the Bathyal Zone, also known as the midnight zone.

No plants or phytoplankton grow here as the Sun's light cannot penetrate this far down. The water is freezing cold and this gloomy zone is sparsely inhabited by life. The animals that do live here have evolved to do so in cold and relentless dark. Eyes are useless, and so are fast-twitch muscle fibres, which elsewhere prey might rely upon to escape predators. But down here they consume too much energy to be worth it. The fish that live here look little like the ones that swim near the surface. They are soft and slippery to the touch. Some are blind and others almost transparent. What use are camouflaging scales when your predators – nightmarish creatures that hang suspended in the dark – have no eyes?

The average depth of the world's oceans is 3,688m (12,100ft), more than two miles deep. It is in waters as deep as this that the RMS Titanic sank on its ill-fated maiden voyage in 1912. But Johnston's death dive went far, far beyond this.

Past 4,000m (13,123ft) is the Abyssal Zone, with water temperatures hovering just above freezing and dissolved oxygen only about three-quarters that at the ocean surface. The pressure is so intense that most creatures cannot live here. Those that do differ from their shallow-water cousins in almost every way – fish have antifreeze in their blood to keep it flowing in the intense cold, while their cells contain special proteins that help them resist the intense water pressure that would otherwise crush them. But the ocean goes deeper still.

Drop further and there is the Hadal Zone, another layer found below 6,000m (19,685ft) from the surface. The Hadal Zone is found in the deepest ocean trenches, mostly in the Pacific Ocean, where giant tectonic plates push together far beneath the waves. Danish oceanographer Anton Frederik Bruun coined the term in 1950s, when technology had advanced enough for the first cautious exploration of these submarine chasms. The term hadal came from Hades, the Ancient Greek god of the underworld. It is in complete darkness, temperatures hover just about freezing, and the pressure is around 1,000 times that at sea level.

Finally, this is where the bottom of the Philippine Trench emerges. Many of the points measured along its length are around 10,000m (32,808ft or 6.2 miles) deep and at its lowest point reaches 10,540m (34,580ft) below sea level.

Somewhere within this vast underwater trench, the USS Johnston finally came to rest. But the exact location was very difficult to predict. The ocean's surface is by no means featureless, but its anonymity can make finding the exact locations of naval battles a challenging task. There are no monuments, and no topographical features which aid identification. Underneath the waves, currents and tidal patterns can pull wrecks far from the spot where they sank.

It would be 75 years before human beings saw Johnston again.


There's more at the link.  Fascinating reading for military history buffs and those interested in underwater exploration.

Peter


Friday, November 19, 2021

Let's hear it for Rittenhouse Patrols!

 

Congratulations to Kyle Rittenhouse for his thoroughly deserved acquittal on all charges in Kenosha today.  Any objective analysis of the evidence could lead to no other decision.  I hope he becomes a very rich young man through suing all the news media that slandered and libeled him before and during the trial.  He deserves it.

(Predictably, the moonbats are outraged.  Sucks to be them, I guess.)

Now, let's build on his example.  I suggest that men and women of sound common sense, in every locality threatened by potentially violent riots, should get together and form one or more Rittenhouse Patrols.  For small locations, it could be the size of a fire team, or a squad of two or three fire teams.  For larger ones, a platoon-size patrol would be useful.  For a really big area (say, an entire suburb or a small to medium-size town), a Rittenhouse Company might be appropriate.

The Rittenhouse Patrols would help with neighborhood clean-up and securing their own areas, just as their namesake did.  If a mob comes to visit, they'll continue their neighborhood clean-up in a rather more kinetic sense.  If every member does their best, we might see multiple Kenosha Hat Tricks every night!  I can't think of anything better calculated to make an otherwise violent, predatory, criminal mob decide it would be better to pursue their objectives... elsewhere.

(Oh - and if we can get the local pedophiles to follow the example of the late, unlamented, convicted pedophile Joseph D. Rosenbaum, so much the better.  That'll really clean up the neighborhood!)

I feel rather happier with life this afternoon.  It's nice to see a verdict so thoroughly deserved be reached despite so much politically correct, extremist pressure.  I think I'll hoist a glass in the general direction of Mr. Rittenhouse tonight... and I'll make sure I have spare, loaded magazines to lend to friends who might need them.  I don't think we'll have any trouble around here, but in the not-too-distant Big City, they might have a use for them.  I call such tools an investment in a brighter future.

Peter


Wednesday, October 13, 2021

A good second novel to rival his first

 

A couple of years ago, I mentioned that my friend Jason Fuesting had published the first book in his "Echoes of Liberty" series, a military science fiction novel titled "By Dawn's Early Light".



He's just published the second volume in the series, "Foreign Shores".



The blurb reads:


Eric's escape from Solitude quickly turns into a desperate attempt to leave Protectorate space altogether. Where can they go that takes them beyond the reach of the Protectorate's State Security Bureau? They have only one chance to find out and it's too late to turn back. Eric and his crew will visit exotic, distant locales, meet new people, and kill them. Enemies both old and new will try to stop them every step of the way while newfound friends help from the shadows. Freedom has never been closer, but neither has the SSB.


It's a driving, high-tension novel that I'm finding very enjoyable, with some unforeseen twists and turns that keep me guessing.  It can be read stand-alone, but you'll enjoy it more if you've read his first book, to set the scene.  Recommended reading.

Peter


Saturday, September 18, 2021

Saturday Snippet: Tactically correct love in a combat zone!

 

My wife's latest novel, "Blood, Oil and Love", has just been published.



It's the second in a trilogy that began last year with "Going Ballistic", and will conclude with the publication next month of the third and final book.



I'm really proud of her.  Her first two books, "Scaling the Rim" and "Shattered Under Midnight", were a little tentative:  not bad at all, but short, feeling her way into expressing herself in fiction (rather as I did in my first two books, "Take The Star Road" and "Ride The Rising Tide".  Her third novel, "Going Ballistic", really took off.  It's got plenty of excellent reviews, proving that she can write with broad appeal.  I expect this new book, and the one next month, will be just as successful.

Dorothy writes either in a genre she appears to have invented herself, or has found a niche in an established genre that few others appear to be filling.  I'd call it "tactically correct romances".  Don't let the "romance" fool you:  she's writing about what happens when the right woman meets the right man in a combat situation.  They're hard-edged and very realistic, rather than the usual soppy romance novels one encounters.  Put it this way - we have a number of combat veterans (including yours truly) in our informal North Texas Writers, Shooters and Pilots Association.  All of us enjoy Dorothy's books, and find nothing unmanly or un-combat-veteranly in enjoying a "tactical romance".  They're a lot of fun.

I've enjoyed Dorothy's creative writing process, because she treats me as her first-line subject matter expert when it comes to the nitty-gritty.  (I can't imagine why.)  We also have other experts like Lawdog, Old NFO and others, who've all "been there and done that" on more than one occasion.  When she writes an action sequence and distributes it for comment, boy, does she get comments!  Everyone who's ever done anything vaguely resembling the action in question chimes in with suggestions, advice, "No s*** - there I was" stories, and all the rest.  She enjoys it, and incorporates our responses into her own storyline.  I think the result is outstandingly realistic.

Without further ado, let me throw at you one of the action scenes from "Blood, Love and Oil".  Enjoy!


The Fed plane felt like a hawk about to stoop, circling noisily overhead as they ran like flushed prey beneath it. The sound of its engines hit Lizzes right between the shoulder blades, and she fought not to hunch over so much it affected her speed, nor to look up at it instead of where she needed to keep her attention focused, on where next to put each foot. They’d crossed two creeks, and were working their way out of the trees into the grassland when Mikey fell back next to her.

“What is he waiting for?” She didn’t have to point skyward to explain the question.

“He’s guiding troop transports in.” Mikey paced alongside her, providing a steady, solid presence at her right shoulder. If she could somehow ignore the screaming noise above and the burning exhaustion and chemical energy warring in muscle and bone, she could almost pretend this was one of Twitch’s too-early morning runs at some random crazy place he’d found.

But this wasn’t the empire, and Mikey wasn’t the man she desperately wanted here instead. And the end of this run wasn’t going to be a picnic lunch over the lake or a tiny hole-in-the-wall noodle joint, it was going to be… something bad, but her imagination failed her. Memory only came up with chilling silences in conversation, significant looks that were never explained, and the gory scenes in horror sensies that nobody believed were true. “And when they get here?” she asked.

“If our rendezvous gets here first, no factor. If not, when they get here, we’re going to be in a firefight. This time, don’t stop to shoot back. You need to get off the X, to zig-zag so you’re a harder target to hit. Just keep running. Don’t stop.” His voice dropped, and got harder, commanding. “No matter what else happens, don’t stop.”

“Don’t stop. Don’t stop.” She nodded, and he picked up his pace and moved forward again. The words were the opening lyrics to a song Twitch loved to play, and the beat matched the pace of her feet hitting the earth, making a pounding rhythm to the earworm echoing inside her skull. If Twitch were here, he’d be singing it aloud, and the more she objected, the more deliberately outrageous and off-key he’d get, bouncing around just out of reach and daring her to put on a burst of speed to smack him.

Thinking of him hurt more than her lungs or her legs did. She wanted desperately to believe they had a plan and would survive this, but this wasn’t the way Mikey had been heading before, and she couldn’t see a way out. The ache in her heart made the world blur with tears, and Lizzes put her head down and concentrated on following the feet in front of her, hoping they wouldn’t notice.

As they made it out into the grasslands, the heat of the late afternoon hit like a hammer, and the sun’s glare off waves of dead grasses bleached bone-white beneath the open, cloudless skies above made her eyes ache. The salt pans ahead were blindingly pure white. Even with the sun behind them, the pans ahead were so bright her sunshades couldn’t totally overcome the glare. The land was far less flat than it looked; the rippling waves of grass blended together and hid rises and dips deep enough to lose sight of the trailbreaker in front. It wasn’t all grass, either; they were running through playas with rings of different vegetation by the lingering levels of rainwater. What seemed a straight-line distance turned into a much longer run, and she could have sworn they were on rising terrain. Which made sense; the same brine-laced water from subterranean salt deposits that fed the Saline river had to flow the other way on the far side of the grasslands, to evaporate and trap the salt at the surface in the pans.

She wondered what it’d be like to be caught out on the pan in a storm, and for a moment, thought she could almost hear the thunder. No, it was more engines inbound – two planes still small by distance, but she recognized the bulkier cargo-style, flying together toward them. For a moment, she wondered if they were the rescue Mikey was running for… and then the swearing around her crushed that hope. She’d never felt as alone as she was now, found by the Feds and left with nowhere to go, and no way out.

Penn finished a truly anatomically impossible string of swears with, “Here they come.”

“Run!” Mikey barked. “Get to the salt flats now!”

The command in his voice got her legs pumping before her brain could catch up. It didn’t make sense; they’d be completely open and exposed. Why weren’t they stopping in the grass where at least they had some concealment? Lizzes concentrated on breathing for maximum oxygen without hyperventilating, and opened up her stride as they started downhill, letting her legs fly. Why didn’t matter; like the Landing Day Ball, all that mattered was she had to trust them, and stay as close as she could, and run. And if she had boots instead of running shoes, well, at least it wasn’t fashionable heels this time.

As they hit the shores of the ancient lake, the grass dwindled to little clumps scattered among cracked earth by loose rocks limned with salt. The troop transports grew larger and louder, screaming toward them. Lizzes wondered if the salt sea was still too muddy under a crust of salt for the Feds to land safely, but when they ran out on it, the dirty salt was firm and hard as concrete underfoot. The strange, acrid tang to the dust kicked up ahead of her burned at her nose and coated her mouth and skin as they continued to run across the dead remains of a sea.

“Think they’ll airdrop ’em?” AJ spoke up, and she realized she hadn’t heard them communicating by tacnet.

Ryan replied. “Saltpan like this? Probably just land ’em. But if not, you’re welcome to take ’em out on the way down. Just remember you’re fighting gravity with ballistic arc and bullet drop; it’s not like micro-g.”

“I’ll leave that to you. I’m used to close quarters combat, or very long-range shots. Midrange with winds in a gravity well… No point wasting ammo.” His lips were pulled back in a grin, for all he was sucking wind to keep up.

Miguel spoke up, and she could hear his own black humor. “It’s all right. They’ll get on the surface sooner or later, and then there’ll be enough for everybody.”

“If you don’t want to leave any for me, I’m okay with that. Really.” She gasped out, and Ryan laughed.

The troop transports roared overhead, and she instinctively cringed. “Where are they going?”

“Setting up for a landing.” She looked over, and found that AJ had switched from having his gun slung over his back, out of the way, to holding it with the barrel pointed out and low, away from her or Ryan. The others, too, had gotten ready. Her stomach was cramping in fear, as her own hands felt all too empty.

As the transport planes turned around to face the team, their engine’s scream seemed curiously doubled, and she saw the pale flash of a face as Penn looked back above her and burst out, “Oh, thank God!”

“What?” Lizzes looked back, and saw another plane coming in, seeming to barely crawl over the mountains and approach at a snail’s pace. As it slowly, ever so slowly got closer, she could make out the much sleeker shape of a Fed ballistic, all out of place. She’d seen them in sensies and once at the airport, all glossy white curves and looking like they were going a million miles an hour even when parked, but a ticket to the exotic destinations all over the globe had always been far outside of a grad student’s budget.

A hand yanked at her upper arm, and she looked over to find AJ pulling her along, his face flushed red with heat and exertion. “Stop looking back! Slows you down!”

“Why is it flying so slowly? They’re going to get us before it gets here.” She panted, words broken as she tried to match his pace.

AJ still had enough breath for a bark of laughter.”Not slow. It’s that big. Go!”

The surveillance plane stopped circling, blasting them with a deafening roar as it started clawing for altitude, trying to go almost straight up, popping bright points of light in a waterfall of smoke like a tail of some strange fireworks strewn out below and behind. The Fed transports were pulling up sharply, too, from where they’d been coming in to land. Mikey stumbled to a halt, breathing raggedly, and she swung around to see what he was staring at. The ballistic’s wings had changed shape, almost like something had fallen off. Before she could ask, she saw flickering lights under each wing.

There was something there… but she couldn’t track it. Two smoke trails streaked across the sky like lightning, too fast for her to see the source, and she’d barely turned her head when there was a… two slams, like when she’d seen a large lorry barreling full speed into a commuter car that had ignored the lights, sudden and shocking at the violence of it. Only this wasn’t a wreck; these were explosions, and the surveillance plane disintegrated in a fireball and billow of smoke. One moment it was there, and the next the only things left were smoke and fire and metal rain showering down.

The transport was less fireball and more… almost comical. An entire wing had come off and was fluttering, gently drifting down like an autumn leaf. As for the rest of the plane, it was spinning like a pencil being sharpened, while tumbling end over end and flopping in the most amazing way. The nose and tail were bending at the break from the missile, almost folding, and things were falling out of the break. She squinted, and recognized, suddenly, the shapes. The knowledge hit her, freezing her in horror. “Oh, God, those are people!”

She didn’t realize she’d said it out loud, but AJ spun and pulled her into a rough hug, turning her away from the sight as the rest of the team formed up around them. Softly, in a voice so guttural she almost didn’t recognize it, he said, “Sooner them than us.”

The third transport had peeled away, running flat out for the hills and safety far away from the ballistic that passed overhead and came back, pitching up, way too far up compared to what she expected, and landed far enough away it was small enough to cover with her thumb. She wondered why they’d have to walk so far, when she realized it was still slowing down, dust cloud billowing up behind it like a farmer’s flatbed on a dirt road, only so much, much bigger. The closer it came, the larger it got, until it was passing close enough she realized each wheel rolling along dwarfed Twitch’s oversized truck. It passed them and started to turn. Her world disappeared in a dust storm whipping at her clothes as she heard the engines get even louder, vibrating her body and bones and compressing her chest even as she coughed and choked on dust.

There was a bruisingly strong grip on her arm, hauling her forward again, and she looked over through squinting, teary eyes to barely make out AJ, ducking and running. Her brain caught up with their feet, realizing their ride was here, and she needed to get the hell on board before the Feds came back. She ran for all she was worth, but her legs were toast. Her quads were burning, quivering, and she felt like she was tangled in that damned ballroom dress again. Worse, like that dress was soaking wet, making each step start with the intention of a running stride and come out as a shuffling stagger.

Strong hands caught her up, then, and she was upended, lifted and slung over a broad set of shoulders. At first she thought it was AJ, but he was next to her, running head down against the wind and dust. And then the feel of their footfalls thudding into salted dirt changed to metallic slam, as they were running up a loading ramp, into the darkness of the airplane’s cargo bay. She couldn’t hear herself think over the roar of the engines, much less anyone else, and wished again she had a tacnet so she could find out what the hell was going on.


I'll stop at that point, so as not to reveal one of the plot's major turning points.  Suffice it to say that it's a tightly written action novel with a twist, that draws you in and keeps you turning the pages.  Highly recommended.

(Yes, of course I'm a biased reviewer.  I'm her husband, dammit!  What did you expect?)



Peter


Thursday, September 16, 2021

Another last-minute "Hail Mary" pass seals another game

 

I'm not much of a football fan, at least not in America.  I played English-style rugby, where the object is to play the ball.  As far as I can tell, in American football the object is to fold, spindle and mutilate everyone on the field except the guy with the ball!  Yeah, I know, that's not accurate - but it still looks that way to the rest of the world.

Be that as it may, I do enjoy some of the come-from-behind, underdog-beats-top-dog moments that one sees from time to time.  The most recent was last weekend, in the college football match between Jacksonville State University and Florida State University.  It was won after the clock had counted down to zero, by a "Hail Mary" pass from Jacksonville's quarterback.  (For the benefit of overseas readers, in American football, the game isn't over when the clock reaches zero, but when the play in progress at that moment is complete and the ball goes "dead".  Only then will the game end.)

(If the video below won't play, see its page on YouTube.)




That play reminded me of the famous "Miracle in Miami" in 2019, when the Miami Dolphins defeated the New England Patriots with a "Hail Mary" pass, also in the dying moments of the game.  (Video link here if it doesn't play.)




Full marks to Jacksonville last weekend, and to the Dolphins in 2019.  It's plays like those that make the game memorable.  Sadly, the NFL has become so politicized that many (including myself) no longer watch its games;  but college football is still focused on sport rather than politics, and is gaining many viewers as a result.

Peter


Friday, July 23, 2021

And the winners are...

 

We have two winners in our recent raffle for two Glock pistols.

  • The Glock 45 and Swampfox Optics Kingslayer sight were won by A. J., who hails from a city in or near the Atlanta, Georgia metroplex.  They're on their way to his local firearms dealer as you read these words.
  • The Glock 19 and ammunition were won by a lady who doesn't even want her initials used, and says she lives "within 50 miles" of Allentown, Pennsylvania.  She's apparently going through a divorce at present, and doesn't want anyone to know that she will shortly have the means to defend herself;  so she's asked me to send the firearm to a dealer in a town some distance from her home.  She'll collect it there and go through the necessary background check, in the hope that others won't find out about it unless and until she needs it.  Of course, I was happy to oblige.

My grateful thanks to everybody who participated in the raffle.  You've helped pay off medical bills and keep our financial heads above water.

Peter


Monday, June 7, 2021

Raffle results, and some blog news

 

I mentioned last week that a winner had been drawn for our AR-15 pistol raffle, but that I was waiting for him to indicate whether or not he wanted his name, location, etc. to be mentioned before publishing them.  I can tell you that 82 tickets were sold (out of a possible maximum of 100 tickets, as previously announced).

Sadly, it turns out that the winner, an elderly man, had died (of natural causes) in the interval between sending in his entry, and the close of the raffle.  That's why he hadn't replied to my e-mails or telephone messages.  His widow eventually got back to me, and explained the situation.  I told her I'd either send the pistol to her as part of the winner's estate, or give her its monetary value and re-raffle it here - her choice.

She doesn't want the pistol herself, but indicated that her eldest daughter, who lives in Oklahoma, would like to have it for her son, the original winner's grandson.  She was OK with this, and it seems fair enough to me;  therefore, I'm going to be sending it to that state for processing through the daughter's FFL.  The daughter would prefer not to be identified, and her mother feels the same way, because this is (obviously) a difficult time for the whole family.

There will be another raffle, this time for a Glock pistol with a slide-mounted reflex sight.  Look for details here later this week.  Drawing will be in mid-July.

On a different matter, yesterday morning I woke up to find two blog posts from 2009 (!) had been flagged by Google's automated "community standards" bot as not measuring up to requirements.  The precise reason wasn't specified, and both posts were innocuous in content, so I submitted them for an appeal.  In both cases, the appeal was upheld, and the posts were re-published;  but they appeared on this blog with yesterday's date, rather than their original dates of posting.  Those of you who were puzzled by their appearance, then disappearance (when I reset the date to the correct one) . . . well, now you know what happened.

I woke up this morning to find that exactly the same posts had been zapped again by the bot.  This is ridiculous, and I don't have time to waste on the matter;  so I simply deleted them.  I'll be writing to Google to ask what the heck is going on.  I've no idea why those posts tripped the bot, because there was nothing rude or salacious in them at all.  If it happens with more posts, I'll begin to suspect that an SJW employee at Google is playing silly tricks again, as has happened to more than one conservative blogger in the past.

Oh, well.  I have multiple full backups of this blog, and I've made preliminary arrangements to move it to a safer server if that should become necessary.  If ever you can't find it here, try bayou renaissance man (all one word) DOT com (although there's nothing there at present except a placeholder).

Peter


Tuesday, May 25, 2021

Congratulations to Commander Zero!

 

Congratulations are due to Commander Zero, who blogs at "Notes From The Bunker".  He's just graduated with a Bachelors degree from the University of Montana system.

He says:  "For those of you who are curious, it's a Bachelors of Science in Amateur Gynecology with a minor in Lingerie Stress-testing. Exams were tough but the practical course was fun."

I look forward to seeing how his new qualification improves his already very knowledgeable commentary on preparedness and survival.  I never considered lingerie to be an important part of the process;  but clearly, he's been thinking outside the box.



Peter


Thursday, April 29, 2021

Yay parents!

 

I was delighted to read that the parents of schoolchildren in Vail, Arizona didn't let their school board get away with undemocratic shenanigans.


On Tuesday, the Vail School District in southern Arizona was scheduled to discuss its mask policy after Gov. Doug Ducey enacted a new executive order that lifted the state’s order to require face masks in schools.

In response to the meeting, more than a hundred parents rallied for the Vail School District to drop the mask mandate.

But just moments before the meeting was scheduled to take place, school officials abruptly decided to cancel the meeting, citing safety concerns over the parents’ protest.

A throng of parents later pushed their way into the board room while refusing to wear masks and demanded to speak with their elected officials.

. . .

Emotions ran high as parents confronted law enforcement, demanding to know why the board canceled the meeting. “They [school board] have the audacity to leave when we come here as peaceful parents to talk to them,” one parent passionately asked.

Following the adjournment, the parents, under Robert’s Rules of Order, voted in a new school board. Then, the new members voted to end the mask requirement in Vail Schools. Whether this procedure to install new board members is legally valid remains in contention.

But a Facebook account posted video of the meeting with this summary explaining the parents’ position:

“Vail School Board violates Arizona open meeting law, refuse to hear from the people, and goes home. So, the People hold quorum, call their own meeting to order, elect a new School Board, and immediately vote to CANCEL the mask mandate – along with voting to disallow any medical procedure being forced on the children or employees. This is how you take back power from a tyrannical government.

Great work to the parents of the students in Vail School District.”


There's more at the link, including a video clip.

It's great that bureaucrats, even elected ones, were called to account for their overreach.  They're supposed to be public servants, not public masters - and the parents knew it, and acted accordingly.

Peter