Showing posts with label Weapons and Military Tech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weapons and Military Tech. Show all posts

6.27.2014

ATF Raids Armory to Seize Private Customer Info (VIDEO)



"This isn't just a second amendment issue, it's not just a firearms issue. It's an issue of an overreaching government that wants to come into your kitchen, that wants to come into your living room, and just see what you're doing," says Dimitrios Karras, CEO of Ares Armor in Oceanside, Calif.

Last week, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) raided Ares Armor to confiscate 80 percent polymer receivers for AR-15s. These receivers are the lower part of the gun that contain the trigger operations when fully completed. The polymer version that the ATF is contesting is not completed and requires the purchasers to finish machining it. The ATF claimed that these are unlicensed firearms, but Karras says otherwise.

"It's an object that's in the shape of a receiver, but it hasn't been completed to a point that it would be considered a firearm," says Karras. "This was a nice way for them to get their arm inside of the business and grab the information that they are actually looking for. To think that this is over a piece of plastic is ludicrous."

Karras says the true reason for the ATF's piqued interest in his shop was his refusal to relinquish the list of customers who had purchased the polymer product. He sat down with Reason TV's Tracy Oppenheimer to discuss why he plans to continue fighting the ATF to maintain his customers' privacy and other Constitutional issues at stake.

"They have trampled on the entire Bill of Rights," Karras says.




10.01.2013

Lawful Open-Carry vs. Lawful Lawman

Stealth Soldier Invisibility Cloak Revealed (VIDEO)





8.30.2013

Rebels vs. Syrian Airpower (VIDEO)

For whatever side you might take, or opinion you might have in this particular conflict, this happens to be a badass piece of video out of the war zone in Syria. Not that we should be celebrating death or anything either, but at the same time I can't help but be impressed with military hardware and this video really puts you in the zone.

((( CAUTION: Some viewers may find this video disturbing, but there is no serious gore factor )))



8.24.2013

US Planned Initial Phase Strike Packages Against Syria

Battle plan for initial strike phase in order to disable Syrian air force.

http://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/required-sorties-and-weapons-degrade-syrian-air-force

Also see:

CBS News

8.07.2013

Drop a Nuke!!! (Nuclear Bomb Simulator Program)

This is the third installment of the nuclear detonation simulator by Alex Wellerstein. An earlier version which is less graphic intense (smoother running for older PC's) has other features which make it still relevant. That earlier version is available on this blog's button keys in the right-hand column.

For this version you will have to be sure your Google Earth is up to date.


Here are some screenshots I took when I decided to nuke NYC. These are simulated air-bursts over downtown Manhattan.

If one were to take the Metro-North Hudson Line train, north out of Grand Central Terminal to the end of the line, you would wind up in Poughkeepsie NY. That city is roughly the halfway point between NYC and the state capitol in Albany. So for these simulations, I decided to stand that far away, in order to get a sense of how large these explosions would be. By highway, it's a distance of about 85 miles from Poughkeepsie, to the foot of Manhattan at Battery Park. 

A great vantage point to see such a spectacle would be from atop the Walkway Over the Hudson, an old railroad bridge which has been converted into a public park. Most of these simulated long-distance images are taken from there.

This first shot simulates a 20 kiloton air-burst nuclear detonation over downtown Manhattan. Keep in mind here, that one single kiloton, is the general equivalent of 1,000 tons of TNT. The "Little Boy" bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima is believed to have detonated with the force of 13-18 kilotons. The "Fat Man" which was dropped on Nagasaki a few days later, was 20-22 kt. So in general, this simulates a bombing of NY about the size of what we did to Japan at the close of WWII.




This is what that same blast would look like if you were on Staten Island at the ferry docks.


And if you were flying over New York in an airliner at an altitude of 30,000 feet it would look something like this.


The following map depicts the general immediate effects of a nuclear blast. Keep in mind that there are many variables when estimating damage in a real world detonation based on the height of the burst, the specific sort of weapon that used, building materials and so forth. Weather patterns will greatly effect secondary radiation fallout patterns as well.

Effects radii for a 20 kiloton bomb (smallest to largest):
Fireball: 660 ft (0.05 mi²)Maximum size of the nuclear fireball; relevance to lived effects depends on height of detonation.
Air blast: 2,510 ft (0.71 mi²)20 psi overpressure; heavily built concrete buildings are severely damaged or demolished; fatalities approach 100%.
Radiation: 0.87 mi (2.4 mi²)500 rem radiation dose; between 50% and 90% mortality from acute effects alone; dying takes between several hours and several weeks.
Air blast: 1.17 mi (4.33 mi²)5 psi overpressure; most buildings collapse; injuries universal, fatalities widespread.
Thermal radiation: 1.52 mi (7.28 mi²)Third-degree burns to all exposed skin; can start fires.



Radioactive fallout could rain down as far away as Long Island is long.



This image simulates a 100 kiloton detonation over downtown Manhattan. This is the yield of America's most popular nuclear warhead, the W76. 8 to 12 of these warheads can be mounted on a single, submarine launched, Trident II ballistic missile in order to shower multiple independent targets. 


The "Ivy King" was the largest pure fission nuclear device ever tested by the United States. In November of 1952 it was dropped on an uninhabited Pacific atoll, and exploded with the force of 500 kilotons. (See video). This is what it would have looked like from Poughkeepsie, looking south to NYC.


This image simulates what it would look like if NYC were to be hit by one of China's Dong Feng 5 Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles. Their premier ICBM detonates with a yield of 5 megatons, and can strike almost anywhere on the planet except for South America due to range limitations. China's nuclear arsenal is estimated to be anywhere from several hundred to several thousand warheads. Plans to put multiple warheads on the DF-5 have met with some technical difficulty and it is not believed that any of the missiles have been deployed with MIRV capability.


At 15 megatons, "Castle Bravo" reigns as America's largest ever nuclear detonation. Unfortunately, it was an unexpected achievement, with the yield only expected to be about 4 to 5 megatons. As a result of the unexpectedly large explosion, there was significant exposure to civilian populations from radiation and fallout. The 1954 test created international concern for atmospheric testing of nuclear bombs. (See video)


For better or worse, and perhaps having learned a lesson after getting burned playing with firecrackers, the Unites States appears to have been content enough to leave well enough alone. The Soviet bear on the other hand, felt they had more to prove.

The largest nuclear detonation ever on our planet was the former USSR's Tsar Bomba. That behemoth exploded with the nearly incomprehensible force of 50 megatons. Astonishingly, this test was set to go off with only half of the yield the bomb was actually designed for, an Earth-cracking 100 megatons. The following two images from about 80 miles from Ground Zero barely capture the scope of such explosions.




Now let's do a direct comparison from about 100 miles up, in a low-Earth orbit from space. We will place the marker in Poughkeepsie as a point of reference. In this first image we see the small spot over Manhattan that is the mushroom cloud from a 20 kiloton bomb like the ones that were dropped on Japan.



And here, is the Tsar Bomba, as seen from outer space.


Keep in mind, we human beings have created an explosion that large. Finally, this is what we have built, and are capable of. The 100 megaton blast which the Tsar Bomba was designed for. First in low earth orbit, and then from high above, directly overhead.



Here are the damage maps for the 100 megaton Tsar Bomba. The fireball alone would be nearly 4 miles wide. Anyone standing outside, almost as far away as Poughkeepsie, New York would suffer third degree burns to exposed skin and anything fairly combustible like cloth, paper and leaves would ignite. Stell liquifying firestorms would be widespread. Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Jersey City would be leveled.


If prevailing winds happened to move from east to west, fatal levels of radioactive fallout would reach as far as the Rocky Mountains. Alternately, if a bomb this size were to be detonated over Colorado Springs, deadly fallout would reach as far as New York.



5.10.2013

Internet Gun Blueprints Banned by State Department

This issue cuts not only into the right to bear arms, but right to the core of the freedom of speech and our ability to access information.

Defense Distributed, the firm that had designed plastic guns which could be manufactured with a 3D printer, has announced that their "Liberator" project has gone dark. Cody Wilson, the leader of the company said that he immediately complied with the order to take down the files when he received a letter from the State Department ordering him to do so. 

You can read more details of the story in this article by: The Guardian

Make no mistake folks, this is government censorship of the internet, and opens up a whole lot of questions about just how far the government can go to make it illegal for you to gain access to information. This is also a blow to our right to bear arms as well.

Even if the manufacture of these guns falls under regulations that might make it illegal in a certain country, or even a U.S. state, this should not give the government the power to arbitrarily control your access to information. Another example might be marijuana. Illegal in most states and under Federal regulation, yet it is perfectly legal, as it should be, to look up how to grow marijuana as well as all sorts of other information on the banned plant. Pornography as well. Certain genres of that sort of material may be illegal in one jurisdiction but not another. Should this discrepancy be allowed to be used as the basis by which all internet sex is censored by the Federal government?

We might even make a more mundane comparison. Here in my home state of NY it is illegal for me drive on the roads with a "Cherry Bomb" exhaust system on my automobile. Yet it is perfectly legal for the store to sell them, I can certainly look at one on the internet, and I can even install it on a car as long as I don't drive it on public roadways. This is a similar case with a police light. I can buy one, I can even mount one on my car, I just can't use it in traffic. Or pepper spray. Different jurisdictions have different regulations on the sale, possession, and use of non-lethal weapons like this, but we can still see them on the internet.

But because of anti-gun sentiment, this overstepping by the government will be tolerated, even supported by many people unfortunately. Moreover, this move seems clearly aimed at compliance with the push by the UN to regulate guns globally, and to intrude in the domestic affairs of the United States.

UN Passes Historic Arms Trade Treaty To Media Silence

In short, it is this author's belief that you should be able to view and download blueprints of how to manufacture a gun. This does not necessarily extend to a right to actually manufacture the gun, to possess the gun, or to carry the gun. The debates on each of those regulations are another matter. At issue here is your right to information. It should be no more illegal for Defense Distributed to share their blueprints, than it should be for me to draw you a diagram of a Malatov cocktail.

Also read this article regarind internet censorship by the government and corporations:

Book Burning In The Digitial Age



Download a Machine Gun, Printable 30-Round Mag Now Reality



3.06.2013

Cop Fires Gun In NY High School Hallway by Accident

In the wake of the Sandy Hook tragedy there has been a big push to put armed guards, police, even troops in our schools. Personally, I don't believe that militarizing our school and turning them into prison camps any more than they are now is really the answer. Making a uniformed target for someone looking to shoot up a school is not exactly a well thought out tactic either.

But I am no anti-gunner. I believe the solution is simple. Lift the ban on school employees from exercising their 2nd Amendment rights. There is no need to hire additional resources or enact new laws, when the 2nd Amendment has been there for us since the nation was founded. There is no reason why a person who is legally permitted to own and carry a gun should not be allowed to carry it with them to work. Teachers and staff at schools should not be barred from exercising their rights, but rather encouraged.

Now, when we see indicents like this, there is no reason whatsoever to believe that police are some sort of special superhumans that make them any more qualified than the rest of us to carry a firearm.

In this particular incident, a part-time Town of Lloyd police officer and School Resource Officer for Highland High School accidentally discharged his service weapon in a school hallway.


Print stories are viewable here and here.

Here is another example of how police are not perfect:


UPDATE:

What are the odds of two accidental discharges in a school on the same day? This story out of Manchester, Connecticut now where a SWAT officer was wounded in an unintentional shooting. 
MANCHESTER, Conn. (AP) — The campus of Manchester Community College was locked down Wednesday after a student reported seeing a man with what she believed to be a gun in his waistband, and one of the officers involved in the response was apparently injured in an accidental shooting. -SOURCE

UDPATE 2: The officer in the Highland case has resigned. He does not face any criminal charges.


2.17.2013

Were Meteorites Actually Attacks By Secret U.S. Weapon System?

Just a few hours before U.S. President Barack Obama took to the airwaves with his State of the Union address, he was alerted to a potential crisis in the Pacific.

Two Russian Tu-95H Bear long range strategic bombers were intercepted by U.S. F-15 fighters as the interlopers made a circumnavigation of Guam.

The island of Guam is a U.S. territory that is of key strategic importance in the Pacific region. The bombers were reportedly armed with live nuclear cruise missiles, possibly Kh-55's which can deliver a 200-kiloton fireball on a target up to 1800 miles away. Each bomber can carry six of these weapons.

The incursion comes amid heightened tensions in the Pacific between China and Japan, with Russia signaling that it stands with the red Chinese. On February 7, Russian Su-27 fighters violated the sovereignty of Japan's airspace with an incursion that was intercepted over the northern Hokkaido province. Japan is a close U.S. ally.

The timing of this latest event was clearly meant to be a message directly to the American President. The flight is also unprecedented, in that Russian bombers have never been known to operate that far south and so far away from their bases.

U.S. military officials were relatively tight-lipped about the incident, citing security concerns, but a few more details are available at the following link.

http://freebeacon.com/bear-bombers-over-guam/


The question now becomes, how does the U.S. respond to these threats? Diplomatic protests, tit-for-tat incursions of our own? Or does the U.S. escalate, and send a very clear message that we can and will destroy our enemies? That last option certainly sounds like a better option if we could get away with it, but how does one send such a message without actually escalating events to the point where they get out of hand and a war suddenly unfolds? How does one send a very bold message that will instill fear, without the opponent needing to respond in order to save face?

What if there were a way we could actually attack Russia, with a weapon as powerful as a nuclear bomb, but without doing any serious damage but rather as a demonstration of our capabilities? A show of force, but one that the Russians would never dare accuse America of. Unless of course, they wanted to sound like lunatics, wanted to send their people into a state of utter panic, and basically were willing to start WWIII over it.

What if we could attack Russia with a weapon that would cause a blast 20 times larger than the atomic bombs dropped on Japan at the close of WWII?

Sounds pretty crazy of course, but it would have to, to make the plan actually work. It would have to sound crazy enough for the rest of the world to not even think about it, while at the same time sending a very clear message to those few in Russian leadership who would know better. Who know of secret things and who can read between the lines. They would also be the ones who could examine the debris for tell-tale signs of a deliberate strike, as opposed to an amazingly coincidental falling star.

So coincidental in fact that Cuba, Russia's notorious and key ally in the western hemisphere, also happened to get hit with a powerful meteorite as well, within hours of the Russian event.

But this is still just crazy talk right? We couldn't nuke a country without everyone knowing about it. Someone would see a missile get launched, and it's totally illegal to put nuclear missiles on satellites in space. Not to mention that there would be fallout and all sorts of telltale signs of a nuclear detonation. Unless of course the weapon wasn't nuclear, but still just as powerful. Does any sort of weapon like that actually exist?

It's quite possible actually.

The basic theory is called kinetic bombardment. The US Navy has already been successfully experimenting with various contractors to develop a ship-mounted kinetic energy railgun. Rather than delivering an explosive munition to a target, kinetic energy weapons simply deliver a hunk of inert solid material on a target with such extreme velocity that the impact energy is equal to or greater than that of an explosive device.

Military Video Captures Destructive Power of Navy’s Newest Railgun


The Navy weapons are technically considered to be a siege weapon, or a hyper-tech advancement of weapons like the catapult or trebuchet. To be a true kinetic bombardment weapon, it must be staged on an orbital platform, a satellite. Such a weapon would not violate the treaty which forbids nuclear weapons in space, but could actually be more deadly, less complex, and less costly. It is also something that the US military has been taking an interest in as early as the 1950's.

Check out this sub-entry from Wikipedia on Project Thor:

Project Thor

Project Thor is an idea for a weapons system that launches kinetic projectiles from Earth orbit to damage targets on the ground. Jerry Pournelle originated the concept while working in operations research at Boeing in the 1950s before becoming a science-fiction writer.[1][2]

The most described system is "an orbiting tungsten telephone pole with small fins and a computer in the back for guidance". The weapon can be down-scaled, an orbiting "crowbar" rather than a pole.[citation needed] The system described in the 2003 United States Air Force (USAF) report was that of 20-foot-long (6.1 m), 1-foot-diameter (0.30 m) tungsten rods, that are satellite controlled, and have global strike capability, with impact speeds of Mach 10.[3][4][5]

The time between deorbiting and impact would only be a few minutes, and depending on the orbits and positions in the orbits, the system would have a world-wide range.[citation needed] There is no requirement to deploy missiles, aircraft or other vehicles. Although the SALT II (1979) prohibited the deployment of orbital weapons of mass destruction, it did not prohibit the deployment of conventional weapons. The system is prohibited by neither the Outer Space Treaty nor the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty.[4][6]

The idea is that the weapon would inflict damage because it moves at orbital velocities, at least 9 kilometers per second. Smaller weapons can deliver measured amounts of energy as small as a 225 kg conventional bomb.[citation needed] Some systems are quoted as having the yield of a small tactical nuclear bomb.[5] These designs are envisioned as a bunker buster.[4][7]

In the case of the system mentioned in the 2003 USAF report above, a 6.1m x 0.3m tungsten cylinder impacting at Mach 10 has a kinetic energy equivalent to approximately 11.5 tons of TNT (or 7.2 tons of dynamite). The mass of such a cylinder is itself over 8 tons, so it is clear that the practical applications of such a system are limited to those situations where its other characteristics provide a decisive advantage - a conventional bomb/warhead of similar weight to the tungsten rod, delivered by conventional means, provides similar destructive capability and is a far more practical method.

The highly elongated shape and high density are to enhance sectional density and therefore minimize kinetic energy loss due to air friction and maximize penetration of hard or buried targets. The larger device is expected to be quite good at penetrating deeply buried bunkers and other command and control targets.[8] The smaller "crowbar" size might be employed for anti-armor, anti-aircraft, anti-satellite and possibly anti-personnel use.[citation needed]

The weapon would be very hard to defend against. It has a very high closing velocity and a small radar cross-section. Launch is difficult to detect. Any infra-red launch signature occurs in orbit, at no fixed position. The infra-red launch signature also has a small magnitude compared to a ballistic missile launch. One drawback of the system is that the weapon's sensors would almost certainly be blind during atmospheric reentry due to the plasma sheath that would develop ahead of it, so a mobile target could be difficult to hit if it performed any unexpected maneuvering.[citation needed] The system would also have to cope with atmospheric heating from re-entry, which could melt the weapon.[9]

While the larger version might be individually launched, the smaller versions would be launched from "pods" or "carriers" that contained several missiles.[citation needed]

The phrase "Rods from God" is also used to describe the same concept.[10] A USAF report called them "hypervelocity rod bundles".[11]

Now check out this Wiki entry on the Prompt Global Strike system. Some key points have been highlighted:

Prompt Global Strike (PGS) is a United States military effort to develop a system that can deliver a precision conventional weapon strike anywhere in the world within one hour,[1][2] in a similar manner to a nuclear ICBM. In April 2010, Marine Corps General James Cartwright explained the system's rationale, stating that "Today, unless you want to go nuclear, [the conventional military response time is] measured in days, maybe weeks".[3] A PGS system could also be useful during a nuclear conflict, potentially replacing nuclear weapons against 30 percent of targets.[4]


The PGS system will be designed to complement existing American rapid-response forces, such as Forward Deployed Forces, Air Expeditionary Groups (which can deploy within 48 hours) and carrier battle groups (which can respond within 96 hours).[5] Possible delivery systems include:
In 2010, the United States Air Force prototyped a PGS system based on a modified Minuteman III ICBM.[3] In March 2011, Air Force Major General David Scott stated that the service had no plans to use a sea- or land-based ICBM system for Prompt Global Strike, as they would be expensive to develop and potentially "dangerous." Instead, efforts would focus on a hypersonic glider.[6] However, the following day, Air Force Chief of Staff Norton Schwartz said that an ICBM-based PGS system was still an option.[7]

The administration of George W. Bush considered developing such a weapon in the 2000s, but rejected the idea because of fears that an ICBM-launched weapon would trigger the Russian nuclear-launch warning system, potentially provoking a nuclear war.[8] However, the Obama administration continued development of the system later in the decade.

A potential enemy cannot be certain that a launched ICBM contains only a conventional warhead, not a nuclear one. It is thus currently unclear what design features or precautions could convince China and Russia, two countries with launch-detection systems and nuclear ICBMs, to ignore their early-warning systems. Current ideas include a low-trajectory missile design, or allowing Russian and Chinese inspection of PGS missile sites.[3][5]

On 11 April 2010, United States Secretary of Defense Robert Gates indicated that the United States already had a Prompt Global Strike capability.[9] This coincided with the New START disarmament treaty signed on 8 April 2010, which set new, lower limits on ballistic missiles and their warheads. The treaty does not distinguish between conventional and nuclear versions of weapons, meaning any ballistic PGS missiles and warheads would count toward the new limit. However, the U.S. State Department has stated that this does not constrain plans for PGS deployment, since current plans do not come near the limits.[10] Nonetheless, in December 2010, Russian military experts indicated that the forthcoming S-500 missile defense system would include anti-hypersonic defenses.[11]

So as bizarre as the it sounded at first, we now see that the technology is actually there for such a strike on Russia (and Cuba) as the one just theorized. It is not science-fiction at all, but may have been the first real word application of such a radically advanced weapon platform.

Obviously the United States is never going to admit to launching a non-lethal but destructive show-of-force attack on another country. So that leaves it up to Russia to examine the debris and make the determination. Then of course, they will have clearly gotten the message in no uncertain terms, but it would not be in their interests either to accuse the United States of such an attack.

Therefore, this little conspiracy theory is something that will probably be never proven in my lifetime, but something interesting to consider just the same. And maybe in a hundred years from now, when a bunch of documents come to light and the world is a very different place, some historian will read this what I have written here today and say "Gee, that Captain Six really had his thinking cap on."

Or maybe I'm just off my nut, lol.

Here is a video of the meteorite strike in Russia. Note the strange "twin" tail coming off of it as it descended. Doesn't really seem to fit with what one would expect from a space rock tumbling into the atmosphere. On the other hand, this twin plume could be a sign of this "rods of the gods" weapon.



UPDATE:

'That's no meteor, it's an American weapon test': Russian politician's bizarre claim about 10 ton space rock as Cuba claims it was also hit earlier in the week

UPDATE 2:

Video appears to show object striking "meteor" causing it to explode. Some conspiracy buffs are saying that it was a UFO/aliens intervening to help mankind. I'm not really buying that, but I certainly would not rule out that perhaps the Russians intercepted the inbound traffic with a railgun of their own. Or perhaps it was part of the US plan to shoot down their own weapon as part of the demonstration and in order to make the threat that much more acute? Hard to say, but the video certainly does show a collision between two objects. Check it out.



...The local newspaper Znak reported the meteorite was intercepted by an air defense unit at the Urzhumka settlement near Chelyabinsk. Quoting a source in the military, it wrote a missile salvo blew the meteorite to pieces at an altitude of 20 kilometers.

Regnum news agency quoted a military source who claimed that the vapor condensation trail of the meteorite speaks to the fact that the meteorite was intercepted by air defenses...

SOURCE














 

2.09.2013

Little Girl Opens Fire with Machinegun, Shotgun, Pistol


Like her on Facebook: Katelyn Francis


2.08.2013

Firearms Manufacturer Restricts Law-Enforcement Sales to Civilian Standards

As of today, LaRue Tactical will no longer sell firearms to law-enforcement or government agencies that surpass the legal standard for what civilians are allowed to own and operate. For example, if you are a NY State Trooper, you can no longer purchase a rifle with pistol grip, 10-round magazine, or other common "assault rifle" style features from this company.

This news release comes from their Facebook page:
NEWS RELEASE:
02/08/2012 LEANDER, TX.

Updated Policy for State and Local Agency Law Enforcement Sales:

Due to the recent and numerous new Anti-gun/Anti-2nd Amendment laws passed and/or pending across our country, LaRue Tactical has been forced to reconsider how we provide products to state and local agencies.

Effective today, in an effort to see that no legal mistakes are made by LaRue Tactical and/or its employees, we will apply all current State and Local Laws (as applied to civilians) to state and local law enforcement / government agencies. In other words, LaRue Tactical will limit all sales to what law-abiding citizens residing in their districts can purchase or possess.

State and local laws have always been a serious focus of this firm, and we are now dovetailing that focus with the constitutional rights of the residents covered in their different areas by the old and new regulations.

We realize this effort will have an impact on this firm's sales - and have decided the lost sales are less danger to this firm than potential lawsuits from erroneous shipments generated by something as simple as human error.

Thanks in advance for your understanding.

Mark LaRue
And a little gun porn for my S6U friends who love the 2nd Amendment of America:




1.30.2013

BREAKING: Israel Attacks Syria

WWIII might have just started. Iran has said unequivocally that they will defend Syria. Russia has shown bold support as well. This attack could illicit a brutal response within hours now, perhaps even nuclear.



Jerusalem Post

RT - Question More




This attack comes just as this news was breaching the mainstream media...

Hacked Documents Show Plan For US-Backed False-Flag Chemical Attack in Syria




1.28.2013

Hacked Documents Show Plan For US-Backed False-Flag Chemical Attack in Syria

Several days ago British defence contractor Britam came under cyber attack and went offline. A hacker going by the handle "JAsIrX" has uploaded a cache of documents stolen in the attack, and they are now being circulated online.

The documents are considered to confidential and secret, but at first glance appear to be rather mundane. Reports of employees getting in trouble for being drunk, passport information, things that might rightly be considered confidential but nothing particularly newsworthy.

But there is a very serious exception.

One uncovered document shows plans for what is known as a false-flag attack. That is, to make a military strike under the guise of being someone else.

In this case, Qatar is making an offer to the British contractor to participate in and help orchestrate a false flag attack in Syria using chemical weapons. The document states that the operation has the backing of the United States. The plan is/was to have the contractor deliver a chemical weapon to Homs, Syria. The weapon itself to be acquired from Libya so that it would be the same Russian-make and therefore the same sort that Assad would be expected to have in his own arsenal. Ukranian mercenaries under contract with Britam already, would then be used to actually carry out and document the attack, speaking Russian, and giving the appearance of being Russian military.

Specifically, one email reads:

Phil
We've got a new offer. It's about Syria again. Qataris propose an attractive deal and swear that the idea is approved by Washington. 
We'll have to deliver a CW to Homs, a Soviet origin g-shell from Libya similar to those that Assad should have. They want us to deploy our Ukrainian personnel that should speak Russian and make a video record.

Frankly, I don't think it's a good idea but the sums proposed are enormous. Your opinion?
Kind regards
David

Here is a screenshot of the actual email, click to enlarge.


For more technical data including the full cache of documents, please visit:

Cyber War News

For a more detailed article related to this information visit:

Land Destroyer Report


1.27.2013

Liberal Lies On Gun Control

As regular readers here know, we aren't very interested in towing some party line or supporting any political persuasion or another without question. On many issues we will support liberal ideals, while on other issues we take a decidedly conservative stance. The point here is that it all comes down to the truth. Rhetoric, propaganda, falsehoods cannot be tolerated from whichever side of the political divide it comes from.

When it comes to the 2nd Amendment though, mainstream liberalism would have us believe that there is plenty of room for debate, that the Amendment is rife with ambiguity, or that it is outright invalud. Today we are going to have a look at a Huffington Post blog editorial that is typical of the liberal argument when it comes to the right to bear arms. We will point out how the author has spun the facts into falsehood to suit his anti-Constitutional agenda. It might also be noted here, that not all liberals support the recent attacks on the 2nd Amendment and won't fall for this sort of flawed rhetoric either. But let us have a look now at the article in question before it gets torn to pieces.

Overcoming Delusions About the Second Amendment
by Jeffrey Sachs Director, Earth Institute at Columbia University; author, 'The Price of Civilization'
The 2008 Supreme Court case District of Columbia v. Heller shows definitively that the Second Amendment is about an archaic issue relevant to 1790, not to 2012. The Second Amendment reads as follows:

"A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed."

The purpose of the Second Amendment was to prevent the new Federal Government established in 1789 from disarming the state militias and replacing them with a Federal standing army. It was a concern that was relevant perhaps for a few years around the birth of the country. It is irrelevant today. Americans do not rely on state militias in 2012 for our freedom from the federal government. 

Though Justice Antonin Scalia tried in the majority opinion to use the Second Amendment to defend gun rights, the many sources that he cited are clear that the purpose of the amendment was to protect state militias. One source, for example, declares, that the purpose of the Second Amendment is "to secure a well-armed militia... ." Another source Scalia cited indicates that the amendment covers only arms that "have some reasonable relationship to the preservation or efficiency of a well regulated militia."

Therefore, Scalia acknowledges that the Second Amendment -- even in his pro-gun interpretation -- only protects arms that would be used in a militia, not the weapons of a formal army. He makes clear that "M-16 rifles and the like" have no Second Amendment protection and may be banned.

There is thus no constitutional protection whatsoever for the semiautomatic rifle that killed the kids in Newtown. Even Scalia is explicit on that point.

The Second Amendment is a relic of the founding era more than two centuries ago. Its purpose is long past. As Justice John Paul Stevens argues persuasively, the amendment should not block the ability of society to keep itself safe through gun control legislation. That was never its intent. This amendment was about militias in the 1790s, and the fear of the anti-federalists of a federal army. Since that issue is long moot, we need not be governed in our national life by doctrines on now-extinct militias from the 18th century. 

More basically, the idea that unregulated private gun ownership and trade protects us against tyranny, or that gun controls would threaten tyranny to us all, is baseless. Democracies around the world regulate guns, preserve their freedoms, and achieve firearm murder rates that are a tiny fraction of the rates suffered in the United States. Other countries, like Australia, have made themselves much safer from gun massacres. Only the U.S. has a political class, on the take from gun manufacturers owned by Wall Street, that stands by while the nation's children are slaughtered. Yet perhaps the stench is getting even too great for some on Wall Street. 

In the name of the children, let us wake from the trap of ancient history and the gun-manufacturers.

The author begins his piece by stating a downright ridiculous opinion that is in no way supported by the SCOTUS decision he cites. The only reference that the court makes to the era when the 2nd Amendment was created, is to hold the following decision which has been maintained for hundreds of years.
The “militia” comprised all males physically capable of acting in concert for the common defense. The Antifederalists feared that the Federal Government would disarm the people in order to disable this citizens’ militia, enabling a politicized standing army or a select militia to rule. The response was to deny Congress power to abridge the ancient right of individuals to keep and bear arms, so that the ideal of a citizens’ militia would be preserved.

There is nothing written in that decision which in any way invalidates the 2nd Amendment, or "definitively" renders it "an archaic issue relevant to 1790, not to 2012" as Sachs puts it. The threat of a politicized standing army is as valid today as it ever was in the past. Tyranny, despotism, totalitarianism, these are not threats that suddenly became outdated with time. We can look at the military forces of Germany, leading up to World War II to see how a national military with a long history can rather suddenly be politicized, under the Nazi banner in that instance. Or even as in Russia, the republics of the USSR, and eastern Europe under the Communist party up until the fall of the Iron Curtain.

The 2nd Amendment is as essential today to our Constitutional Republic, as the balance of power between the Executive, Legislative, and Judicial branches of our Federal government. From the Revolution to this very day, the 2nd Amendment protects our right to maintain the tools of an actionable will of the people should government fail us. And that is what the 2nd Amendment is really all about, the balance of power between the people and the government. To insure that the government can be ejected should we so choose.

What Sachs is telling us here is that this balance of power is "irrelevant today" as if tyranny ceased to exist in the world at some point within a few years after this nation was founded. As if somehow magically here in the United States we are immune from the threat of our government being subverted, or otherwise acting contrary to the will and best interests of we, the people. To say that the 2nd Amendment is no longer relevant today is to say that the entire Constitution should be thrown out.
"Before a standing army can rule, the people must be disarmed; as they are in almost every kingdom in Europe. The supreme power in America cannot enforce unjust laws by the sword; because the whole body of the people are armed, and constitute a force superior to any band of regular troops that can be, on any pretence, raised in the United States. A military force, at the command of Congress, can execute no laws, but such as the people perceive to be just and constitutional; for they will possess the power, and jealousy will instantly inspire the inclination, to resist the execution of a law which appears to them unjust and oppressive" -Noah Webster, An Examination of the Leading Principles of the Federal Constitution (Philadelphia 1787).
 ~ ~ ~
“The strongest reason for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government.” -Thomas Jefferson

Sachs then tells us that we do not rely on "state militias" in 2012 to protect us from Federal government. No one ever said we did. These so-called state militias are not mentioned at all in either the court's decision which he cited, nor in the 2nd Amendment itself. It is clear from all interpretations of the 2nd Amendment, by those who drafted it, by those who ratified it, and by the Supreme Court itself which has upheld it, that the militia is the people, not the state. Sachs continues to interject this myth about state militias though, as being the basis of the right to bear arms. 
"I ask, Sir, what is the militia? It is the whole people. To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them." -George Mason, Co-author of the Second Amendment during Virginia's Convention to Ratify the Constitution, 1788

Sachs then goes so far as to misquote Justice Scalia, and imposes his own erroneous interpretation as if it was that of the Justice himself. Sachs writes:
Therefore, Scalia acknowledges that the Second Amendment -- even in his pro-gun interpretation -- only protects arms that would be used in a militia, not the weapons of a formal army. He makes clear that "M-16 rifles and the like" have no Second Amendment protection and may be banned.

Scalia has made no such acknowledgement, nor does he mention anything about "M-16 rifles and the like."  Sachs has interjected complete falsehoods in order do make his opinion appear factual. He even makes an entirely baseless comparison between militia and a "formal army." Nowhere is any such distinction made except in Sachs' own mind. Or, alternately, is he telling us that our state National Guard units may not have the same rifles as the regular army? The only specification made in the court's decision as to the type of arms which are protected by the 2nd Amendment, was stated thus:
Miller’s holding that the sorts of weapons protected are those “in common use at the time” finds support in the historical tradition ofLondon youth stabbings increase by 30% in three years prohibiting the carrying of dangerous and unusual weapons.
One such historical tradition is the following statement:
"Who are the militia? Are they not ourselves? Is it feared, then, that we shall turn our arms each man gainst his own bosom. Congress have no power to disarm the militia. Their swords, and every other terrible implement of the soldier, are the birthright of an American...[T]he unlimited power of the sword is not in the hands of either the federal or state governments, but, where I trust in God it will ever remain, in the hands of the people." -Tenche Coxe, The Pennsylvania Gazette, Feb. 20, 1788.

In other words, whatever guns the government uses are indeed those same guns which are "in common use at the time" whether it be the muskets of the Revolution or the M-16 of a modern-day infantryman. On the other hand, by this interpretation, things like chemical or biological weapons might be considered to be uncommon weapons, and therefore not protected by the 2nd Amendment. Essentially, any weapon that is issued to a regular army infantryman should be seen as protected by the 2nd Amendment for carrying by citizens who are in fact the militia.

Sachs goes in the complete opposite direction though, not only lying about the court's decision and ignoring all historical context of the right to bear arms, but then making an ignorant leap from a soldier's rifle to that used in the Connecticut school shooting. He writes here:
There is thus no constitutional protection whatsoever for the semiautomatic rifle that killed the kids in Newtown. Even Scalia is explicit on that point.
Quite obviously there is in fact constitutional protection for rifles, and saying that Scalia is "explicit" to the contrary is a complete lie.

Moreover, the rifle that was allegedly used by the shooter was not a military rifle at all. It was a semi-automatic rifle no different than any other semi-automatic rifle owned by citizens for an array of purposes including sport competition, hunting, home defense, and more. Even a rifle that only has two bullets in it might be built as a semi-automatic rifle. The term semi-automatic is not synonymous with select-fire or fully-automatic. For details on the sort of weapon we are talking about, and the distinctions between military and civilian grade rifles, see this article:

Bushmaster AR-15 Menace?

The blogger then goes on to once again claim that the Constitution is "moot" and a "relic" and so forth, which we have already shown to be otherwise. The right to bear arms is an integral part of our particular brand of democracy and a defining boundary of government itself in our Constitutional Republic. The 2nd Amendment is not there to protect the states from federalism, but to protect the people from tyranny. Nonetheless, despite all historical reference and the interpretations of the Supreme Court, Sachs calls this conclusion "baseless." He continues then:
Democracies around the world regulate guns, preserve their freedoms, and achieve firearm murder rates that are a tiny fraction of the rates suffered in the United States.
If democracies from around the world are taking away the guns of their citizens, then they are not in fact preserving their freedoms. You simply cannot preserve freedom by taking it away, yet this is the twisted logic we are meant to accept by the subversives bent on undermining the bedrock of freedom. As to murder rates, that too is not so simple an interpretation as mainstream liberals would like us to believe.

It is true that Britain has a lower murder rate with firearms than the United States, but that is not really very much proof of anything at all. Their overall violent crime rate makes Britain the most dangerous country in the European Union. This stands in stark contrast to Switzerland, who has one of the highest gun ownership rates while enjoying some of the lowest crimes rates on the planet. Furthermore, while the United States has the highest gun ownership rate in the world, many countries like Honduras and El Salvador who have far fewer guns per capita, have much higher murder rates.

Crime Stats by Reality Check (VIDEO)

Statistics also show that when harsh gun-control measures are enacted, crime rates soar. Here in the U.S. some of the most dangerous places to travel are in cities with the strictest gun laws. Cities like Chicago and Washington D.C. often top the lists of the most murderous cities in the country despite a near outright ban on citizen ownership. In places like Australia and Britain, crime rates skyrocketed immediately following their gun bans. 
It has now been 12 months since gun owners in Australia were forced by a new law to surrender 640,381 personal firearms to be destroyed by our own government, a program costing Australia taxpayers more than $500 million dollars.

The first year results are now in:

Australia-wide, homicides are up 6.2 percent,
Australia-wide, assaults are up 9.6 percent;
Australia-wide, armed robberies are up 44 percent (yes, 44 percent)!


SOURCE

In Britain, and particularly in metro areas like London, stabbings and knife crimes have reached unprecedented highs. Headlines declare stats like, London youth stabbings increase by 30% in three years. One such case was the tragic murder of young actor Robert Knox, who was stabbed to death just before the release of a Harry Potter movie which he played a role in.

In comparing a disarmed Britain to a well-armed United States, many numbers stand out in favor of an armed citizenry. According to this source, the British are 133% more likely to be the victim of assault, 125% more likely to be raped, and 25% more likely to be a victim of crime in general. And while it is true that the homicide rate by firearm is much higher in the U.S. it is also true that you are more than twice as likely to be the victim of a knife crime in the UK than you are of being the victim of a gun crime in America.

So even with the Constitutional issues aside, and just looking at the issue from a safety standpoint, the anti-gun position still fails to maintain a logical basis. Besides...
"Timid men prefer the calm of despotism to the tempestuous sea of liberty. " - Thomas Jefferson
Finally, and at long last now we come to Sachs' coup de grace. A lame but typical tactic of propagandists to illicit emotional appeal rhetoric rather than fact-based good sense. He concludes:
In the name of the children, let us wake from the trap of ancient history and the gun-manufacturers.

One could probably convince a good number of fools that it was a good idea to crap in their hat if you told them it was for the sake of the children. While he may argue that the 2nd Amendment is "ancient history" and therefore somehow invalidated by the centuries, there are also some lunatics out there who say the same thing about the Ten Commandments, and murder.

For the sake of our children, teach them wholesome values, teach them how to be free and to never live in fear of evil men.
"Whereas, to preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of the people always possess arms, and be taught alike, especially when young, how to use them." - Richard Henry Lee, The Pennsylvania Gazette, Feb. 20, 1788










 

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