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2 yr. ago

  • Oh, no, I would never be sarcastic about that. Being sarcastic would mean that I was condoning violence directed at democratically elected officials that are surely doing what the people want and expect them to do, and are fulfilling their duty to the country and constitution.

  • That makes sense to me; I think most EU countries that allow private gun ownership require licensing for each firearm, or something similar. I know that it's exceptionally difficult in many areas, and the guns that I shoot matches with--semi-automatic pistols with 15-20 round magazines, and semi-automatic rifles with 30 round magazines--are very tightly controlled in many places.

  • Anything I would have to say would get me permanently banned from the site for advocating violence.

    Remember, as Napoleon Bonaparte said to Wellesley, Duke of Wellington, "Violence never solved anything."

  • I don't use a lot of them regularly, or at all. I use my Canik, Rock Island 1911, and AR-15 for competitions every month. If I don't use it, I don't think about it very often. Like, my Mosin Nagant? That was a gift from my dad. I've shot it exactly once, and realized that 7.62x54mmR from a bolt action, stipper-clip-fed carbine that has a 10#, gritty trigger, and exceptionally poor iron sights is not a fun rifle to shoot. Now it's hanging on a set of deer antlers that I inherited from my grandfather. The Winchester 1894? It's over a century old, and while it's still functional, .38-55 ammunition is somewhat difficult to find.

    Just stuff like that. I don't think about a lot of them very often, so counting them gets difficult.

    Once I get my pistol instructor certification, I'll probably be using my Ruger Mk IV mostly as a gun to let other people learn on. It's .22LR, so it's a very forgiving firearm.

    At this point, I'm getting guns for a specific purpose. For instance, I want an SBR AR-15 and silencer mostly for doing PCSL. I plan on getting a CZ Shadow II Compact as a carry gun, and also using it for IDPA. I need (well, want) to get a Glock 17P to use as a training aid; it does all of the things that a regular Glock 17 does, but it's incapable of firing.

    Hopefully that makes some kind of sense.

  • For many things, yes. Canning can be done for some things (although you want to be really sure about what you're doing; you can kill yourself pretty fast with botulism if you do it wrong), freezing is good for other things (although not great if you have power outages). If you're trying to live off the land, you do need to be aware that certain parasites are not adequately dealt with by salt curing, smoking, dehydration, or even freezing; feral pigs and bear both have trichinosis, and must be thoroughly cooked to be safe. In wild populations, the parasite has been demonstrated to be highly resistant to freezing, etc.

    Dried, etc. things should be vacuum sealed with desiccants and oxygen absorbers for maximum preservation. I test the e.g. apples that I've dried every so often (I live in an area with a lot of orchards; apples can be very cheap when you buy them by the bushel directly from the orchard), and as of this year, the apples I dried six years ago are still good.

    One thing that freeze drying can be very good for is complete meals. E.g., if you make a stock pot full of jambalaya, you can freeze dry it in individual portion sizes, vacuum seal it in 9mil mylar, and you've got a meal that should be good for 10+ years.

    For anyone that's seriously considering a freeze dryer, check this video out. Yeah, I still want one, but seriously, it can take a lot to make it practical. I'm not enamored of the control system that they use; a blended automatic and manual control system would probably work better than something that supposedly takes the guesswork out of it for you.

  • 'Course, the good news about the reciprocal tariffs is that soybeans are gonna be very cheap domestically. You can make a very functional flour out of soybeans with a good grain mill/stone grinder, although you'll want to add gluten to it if you're going to try to make bread. And soy is very high in proteins (compared to most grain flour), so you can live off it when other protein sources are too expensive.

  • Water is the hard one; the amount of water that people go through in a day, even in desert communities where people are very aware of the amount of water they consume--drinking, cooking, cleaning--is quite high. Storing enough for a full year for a household of four is functionally impossible. If I lived in California, I'd be looking for high-volume desalination systems.

  • I'm weird about it. But I've always been weird about it. I'm diagnosed as on the autism spectrum, and it's been a particular interest of mine since i was in elementary school. The only reason I don't have an entire armory is because I'm far, far too poor. As it is, I've got, um, 10?, I think? With three more planned, plus an SBR and silencer(s)? And yeah, I'll talk your ear off about gun rights. And motorcycles (I only have one of those).

    OTOH, I also care about LGBTQ+ rights, and I'm working on an instructor certification specifically to train LGBTQ+, racial/ethnic/religious minority, SW, etc. people that aren't going to feel comfortable in any traditional gun space. If it's uncomfortable to me when an instructor goes off on a Christian nationalist rant, it's gotta be 10x worse for people that can't pass as a cis- het- white person. No one should have to deal with that shit just so they can get basic safety and marksmanship instruction.

  • I will point out that we're right now entering a time when basic foodstuffs are going to become very expensive, and a lot of day to day items are likely going to rise sharply in price, or become unavailable. Having industrial amounts of these day-to-day things is a hedge against that.

  • Fun fact: alprazolam (Xanax) also has a ridiculously high LD50, about 1220mg/kg in female rats. For a human that weighs 57kg, that works out to 69.5 grams, or about 2.5oz of pure alprazolam. The maximum dose for prescription is 4mg, or .004g; you would need to ingest >17,000 4mg bars of Xanax to consume a fatal dose.

    Almost all of the time, "fatal overdoses" of Xanax are in combination with other drugs, like alcohol, which can act as a synergist and depress respiration. But most of the time, you'll just black out for a few days.

    (But. We don't know that actual LD50 in humans, only in rats and mice. It's possible that the human LD50 is either lower or higher.)

  • Well. No, not really. Owning a house is just stressful, period. And sometimes really expensive things happen that you couldn't foresee.

    For ants, you want to get food-safe diatomaceous earth, and a bulb-style dispenser. If you can tell where they're coming from, blow some diatomaceous earth in there. It's completely safe for people and pets, but will kill insects. There's also some non-toxic treatments for wood--Nissin Boracare, for instance--that will help prevent termite, ant, and powderpost beetle infestations.

  • If you have a damp moldy spot on a ceiling, that's likely leaking from the roof. Roof leaks can be very difficult to find; if you have asphalt shingles that are starting to curl at the corners, then it's probably just time to replace them, along with flashing. Thankfully, depending on the pitch of your roof, re-roofing isn't that awful. It gets ugly it you have a really steep roof pitch, or if you have an flat EPDM roof in a brick home.

  • Sure, you're talking about the wet bulb temperature.

    But.

    You'll find a lot of people from the northern part of the US that simply can't function in the south in the summer, when it's >90F. I'm a transplant from the north to the south; I've adapted just fine, by virtue (?!) of not having air conditioning. And it goes the other way too; if you move to a colder climate from a hotter one, you'll eventually adapt to it.

    This is not the case for all people, but most people will be able to adapt.

  • Europe pulled a good one on us [...]

    No, we did that to ourselves, by always cutting taxes instead of raising them to pay for things that are public goods, like single-payer health care, public transportation, public education, and so on. Our taxes are too low, and as a result we pay far, far more for the same things as private services rather than public. You can complain that the gov't is inefficient, but there's no profit; profit takes a far bigger bite than waste, inefficiency, and fraud does.

  • Start by taxing the shit out of the CEOs and board of directors, with a mechanism built into the taxation so that any increase in their compensation is entirely offset by an increase in taxes. Then offer incentives to on-shore labor again.