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New Generation of Kids Embrace Firearms and Shooting Sports

New Generation of Kids Embrace Firearms and Shooting Sports

Despite the anti-gun rhetoric you've been hearing from some televised children lately, there is another, unheralded story of kids who have no fear of guns. Recent weeks have seen the media promoting a decidedly anti-gun point of view, with children acting as messengers. These kids have targeted the NRA and gun owners as being complicit in the recent deaths of students at the hands of a mass shooter. It's a corrupt narrative that justifiably has gun owners and Constitutional advocates feeling unduly persecuted. Judging by the media coverage one would think that their anti-gun narrative is the pervasive attitude among school children. It's not. There is another side to the narrative, a side that has many kids embracing firearms and the shooting sports.

GLOCK 17 GEN 5

Inspecting the build quality and engineering of a Glock 17 gen 5.

Interesting to see how you can engineer a product to be very reliable out of relatively cheaply machined and manufactured materials. Reliability isn't necessarily based on a quality of material used, but the engineering that goes behind it. That said, some of the ways Ave handled that gun while dissembling it had me nervous, even if it was unloaded.

Dick’s CEO Says Anti-Gun Policy Created β€˜Quarter-Billion Dollar’ Loss

Dick’s CEO Says Anti-Gun Policy Created β€˜Quarter-Billion Dollar’ Loss

One of those brands was Dick's Sporting Goods, a national retailer with a substantial presence in the both the hunting and shooting markets, which has now lost about $250 million after taking a stance less than two years ago.

CEO Ed Stack decided not only to stop selling certain guns and to hire lobbyists to push for stricter gun-control policies, but he also chose to stop selling firearms to customers under the age of 21 and had the company destroy $5 million of rifle inventory.

October 27, 2018 10:05 pm Update

“But this land is still troubled by men who have to hate;
They twist away our freedom and twist away our fate.
Law is their weapon, and treason is their cry,
You can stop them if you try. ”


~ Phil Ochs, The Power And Glory

Planting Tiny Spy Chips in Hardware Can Cost as Little as $200 | WIRED

Planting Tiny Spy Chips in Hardware Can Cost as Little as $200 | WIRED

More than a year has passed since Bloomberg Businessweek grabbed the lapels of the cybersecurity world with a bombshell claim: that Supermicro motherboards in servers used by major tech firms, including Apple and Amazon, had been stealthily implanted with a chip the size of a rice grain that allowed Chinese hackers to spy deep into those networks. Apple, Amazon, and Supermicro all vehemently denied the report. The NSA dismissed it as a false alarm. The Defcon hacker conference awarded it two Pwnie Awards, for "most overhyped bug" and "most epic fail." And no follow-up reporting has yet affirmed its central premise.

But even as the facts of that story remain unconfirmed, the security community has warned that the possibility of the supply chain attacks it describes is all too real. The NSA, after all, has been doing something like it for years, according to the leaks of whistle-blower Edward Snowden. Now researchers have gone further, showing just how easily and cheaply a tiny, tough-to-detect spy chip could be planted in a company's hardware supply chain. And one of them has demonstrated that it doesn't even require a state-sponsored spy agency to pull it off—just a motivated hardware hacker with the right access and as little as $200 worth of equipment.