… with feline telekinesis:
… with feline telekinesis:
Bet these won’t get a whole lot of national airplay:
“…22-year-old Jewayne M. Price, who was one of three people initially detained by law enforcement as a person of interest, remains in police custody …”
And this one is brand-new, with little detail. Yet I get the feeling we won’t get bombarded with news stories about this:
“The shooting happened around 12:30 a.m. during a party at a short-term rental property where there were more than 200 people inside – many of them underage… Police said as many as 50 rounds were fired inside and several more were fired outside. Shell casings from rifles and pistols were found at the scene, Pittsburgh police commander John Fisher told WTAE-TV. Police are processing evidence at as many as eight separate crime scenes spanning a few blocks around the shooting scene, police said.”
I’ll bet a nickel that neither one of these stories will end up involving 3D printed guns, or”ghost guns” manufactured from kits, or even legally owned firearms wielded by CCW license holders. Neither story will end up being perpetrated by Trump voters or NRA members. Neither story will end up being useful for The Narrative, and thus neither story will end up being much more than a momentary local news story. One or both stories will likely end up being less of a “gun err bad” story and more of a “criminals should be removed from the streets” story, and we can’t have that.
Ummm…
Errr… no.
One of the “arguments” used here is that the works of Virgil and Horace are known from manuscripts written more than four centuries after their deaths. Thing is, though: the fact that the manuscripts exist indicates that they had authors. Occams Razor would have it that if the author claims to be named “Virgil,” then, great, attribute the work to Virgil.
Additionally: if you claim that you had oatmeal for breakfast… sure. I’ll believe you. If you tell me that you miracled oatmeal out of thin air and that the bowl was made out of Adamantium and the spoon from Vibranium and that the oatmeal tasted so good that it gave everyone in a five meter radius eternal youth… I’m gonna have to Press X To Doubt. The nature of your claim weighs on the believability of your claim. This Virgil talking about the goings-on of politics? Believable. Someone discussing miracles? Gonna need some evidence.
The writer if this dubious screed also claims that:
Additionally, the apostles’ willingness to die for their claims has tremendous evidential value, also confirming the truth of the resurrection. No one will die for something he invented or believes to be false.
Uh-huh. A belief in something that isn’t so is not proof that the thing is in fact so. Joseph Smith, after all, the inventor of Mormonism, died for his beliefs, as did a bunch of other first-generation Mormons… and I’d bet a nickel that the author here does not believe that Mormonisms claims about Jesus wandering around North America are factually accurate. “Heaven’s Gate.” “Nazism.” “People’s Temple.” “Solar Temple.” History is jam-packed with founders of nonsensical movements who were willing to die for their objectively wrong beliefs. And in fact a vast number of Muslims and Hindus are more than happy to die for their beliefs: does the author think that this lends weight to the factual accuracy of their beliefs?
The author claims that there are many “manuscripts [that] preserve the deeds and teaching of Jesus in the New Testament (about 25,000 total).” Maybe… but only the Bible can be considered even close to a primary source document. I often see Flavius Josephus used to back up the historicity of Jesus… but Josephus lived around 37 AD to 100 AD. He wrote about encountering Christians around 93 AD, and described their beliefs. That *they* believed that Jesus had been resurrected is hardly surprising. But there is little evidence that Josephus believed it, and an important bit of evidence that he didn’t: he was Jewish before he met the Christians, and he was Jewish afterwards. A Jew who believes in the New Testament is generally considered a “Christian.”
In the end, the terribly bad reasoning on display in the article linked above does not surprise me: the author is a “senior fellow at Discovery Institute.” The Discovery Institute spends a great deal of time and effort pushing the “Intelligent Design” myth. Anyone who uses the “watchmaker” analogy for how evolution works should never, *ever* be taken seriously.
Maybe Jesus existed, I dunno. Maybe he was nailed to a cross, died and came back. Dunno. Maybe when he died a great big earthquake wiped out a good chunk of Jerusalem, and that somehow got left out of the records. Dunno. Maybe when he died the graves in the area opened up and a whole bunch of zombies clambered out and started spooking the locals, and that rather startling detail somehow got left out of not only all the Roman records but also three out of four of the gospels. Dunno. Maybe it’s all true. But using fraudulent logic and outright lies is not a great way to convince some people.
So… Happy Easter I guess.
D’oh. My “gotta save money” goal just took some substantial hits… I bought some vintage *original* art, the *actual* paintings, on ebay.
Send help.
First: A 1980’s idea for a small unmanned hovercraft to help an F-15 lift off from a damaged runway:
Second: a 1970’s Bell concept for a C-130 with four turbojet engines as a demonstrator for the AMST program:
My credit card just went “WTF are you *doing?*”
Feel free to hit that “tip jar” or subscribe in order to do you part in enabling this sort of financially dubious aerospace history collection and preservation. What I think would be best is to scan the bejeebers out of these then donate them to a good archive or museum.
There’s another much more interesting piece I’m hoping to hear something good on regarding an offer I made.
If you would like to help fund the acquisition and preservation of such things, along with getting high quality scans for yourself, please consider signing on either for the APR Patreon or the APR Monthly Historical Documents Program. Back issues are available for purchase by patrons and subscribers.
Some videos of a feller restoring some old, rusted guns. I’m always interested in seeing craftsmen do their thing, especially if they’re using techniques I’m unfamiliar with.
I now have an urge to try to de-rust and re-blue some ancient crapped-out firearms.
So, who knew… apparently you can make a living doing nothing but taking commercial flights and posting videos about them on YouTube. Sometimes this means taking the most expensive and luxurious flights from one continent to another; sometimes it means taking a puddlejumper from one tiny airport to an even smaller one. And sometimes it means trying to take a Greyhound bus from LA to NYC. In February. If you aren’t from the US, maybe “road trip across the USA in February” sounds reasonable. If you’re hopelessly optimistic, perhaps “road trip on a bus” makes you think “what could go wrong?” So this British feller decides to give it a shot. It does not go to plan… but it still goes *way* better than it could’ve.
As the blog post says, though, the comments make it worthwhile:
First tanks, then ships, now cities:
Heavy fire tonight in Belgorod city, Russia as the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations stated that the situation is under control… pic.twitter.com/TGo3XWSdwe
— CaucasusWarReport (@Caucasuswar) April 14, 2022
Belgorod seems to be about 25 miles from the border of Ukraine. Gee. I wonder what happened.
Two weird things. First this headline…
… is exactly the same text as the complete article:
The Russian military says the damaged Moskva missile cruiser sank while being towed to a port.
So… there ya go, I suppose.
Second: more than a day later and not a single verified image of the thing. How can *nobody* have taken photos pf video of it? Surely there were at least a few commercial satellites passing roughly int he area that took a look. No doubt more than a few recon planes were in the area. The Russians must have had ships in the area, taking pictures to prove it was still on the surface; and doubtless Ukrainians with drones or navalized farm tractors video’ed it to prove that it wasn’t doing so great. But so far as I’ve seen… squadoo. A number or mis-attributed photos and videos of other ships, one craptacular “night vision” video showing… *something.*
Whoopsie:
The Moskva was (*was*) the most important Russian naval vessel in the Black Sea, until it’s ammunition caught fire. Stories differ about *why* it caught fire… the Ukrainians claim to have struck the ship with missiles, the Russians claim… well, not much.
A day or so ago, the Moskva was going to be a giant threat to the Ukrainians. Now it’s apparently a burning hulk.
A week ago:
Yeah, maybe operating in a predictable pattern isn’t the best idea, especially when you’re in range of people you have pissed off.
The large format rocket & submarine scans I mentioned HERE are starting to come in. The first ~60 scans clock in at a total of about 1 gigabyte… the remaining forty – scanned, but not yet sent to me – total something like 23 gigabytes. Giant full-color blueprints. Woo.
For a limited time, if you would like copies of these scans, the whole batch is $175. If interested, send me an email: