Thursday, July 31, 2025
He warned us.. | The decadence of society - Leaflit & Asari - Yuri Bezmenov video lectures
Yuri Bezmenov - 1983 Lecture on Subversion (Complete)
FULL INTERVIEW with Yuri Bezmenov: The Four Stages of Ideological Subversion (1984)
Yuri Bezmenov: 1983 Lecture
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
Tuesday, July 29, 2025
Monday, July 28, 2025
Two documents prove P320 is unsafe - Shadetree Armorer
https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.ctd.150506/gov.uscourts.ctd.150506.202.1.pdf
First document, Sig's "MHS Pistol Failure Modes, Effects, and Criticality Analysis (FMECA)" https://storage.courtlistener.com/rec... (note: redactions are removable using Adobe software.)
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1L7RXrneHlzfjrewMFIeeyc-nel3bsDnM/view
Second document, FBI BRF's "Michigan State Police Sig Sauer M18 Evaluation
Sunday, July 27, 2025
Saturday, July 26, 2025
Help Solve a Real-Life Mystery: $50,000 Reward Offered to Find Col. Lutz’s Lost 1911 - Ammoland.com
Palmetto State Armory is calling on patriots, collectors, and history buffs alike to help solve a powerful mystery—and there’s a $50,000 reward on the table for the person who finds the missing piece.
This isn’t fiction. This is about Col. Lutz, a Vietnam War hero who survived a close-quarters attack during a base assault by drawing and firing his issued Colt 1911 sidearm, saving his own life and helping repel the enemy.
Years later, after retiring as a full colonel, Lutz brought that same 1911 pistol home with him to the U.S. But like many of us, he eventually traded it at a gun shop in Ocoee, Florida—likely not realizing its future importance as a key piece of American history.
Now, PSA’s Freedom Museum [Opening Soon] Wants to Bring His Gear Home
Palmetto State Armory is building a display in honor of Col. Lutz as part of their upcoming Freedom Museum. They already have nearly everything:
His flight helmet
Dog tags
Flight maps
Even the AK rifle used in the attack against him
But the heart of the story—the Colt 1911 that protected him—is still out there
Click the link to read the whole article: $50,000 Reward Offered to Find Col. Lutz’s Lost 1911
Senator Murphy Proposes Raising Tax Stamp Fees to $4709 - Ammoland.com
Senator Chris Murphy (D-CT) has entered an amendment to the Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (H.R.3944) to raise the National Firearms Act of 1934 (NFA) tax stamp fee on all regulated items to $4709.
The move comes after Republicans lowered the tax stamp fee to $0 for suppressors, short-barreled rifles (SBRs), short-barreled shotguns (SBSs), and any other weapons (AOWs) during the reconciliation process. During negotiations over the so-called “one big, beautiful bill,” Sen Murphy proposed a $1 tax stamp fee instead of a $0 charge. The likely reason for the pushing of the $1 fee was to try to head off lawsuits. A tax must have a revenue-raising purpose to be constitutional. Since a $0 tax stamp generates no revenue, the government will struggle to defend the tax in court.
Sen. Murphy argues that the original $200 fee, set in 1934, is too little in today’s dollars. He adjusted his proposal for inflation to reflect what $200 would be in today’s funds. He is using the tax fee in a manner similar to how Congress did in the first half of the 20th century.
Click the link to read teh whole article: Murphy Proposes Raising Tax Stamp to $4709
Judge Strikes Down St. Louis Gun Storage Law in Major Win for Missouri Gun Owners - Ammoland.com
St. Louis, MO – A Missouri judge has struck down a St. Louis ordinance that tried to force gun owners to lock up firearms left in vehicles, dealing a sharp blow to local gun control efforts and delivering a clear win for Second Amendment supporters across the state.
On July 15, Circuit Judge Joseph P. Whyte ruled that the city’s 2017 “unattended vehicle” gun storage law violated Missouri’s state firearm preemption law—a law that reserves all authority to regulate firearms to the state legislature, not local governments.
The now-overturned ordinance required any gun left in a parked car to be locked in a secure, hidden container. Failure to comply came with up to $500 in fines and even jail time. But the court made it clear: city officials can’t make up their own rules when it comes to firearms.
Origin of the Lawsuit
The legal challenge was brought by St. Louis resident Michael Roth, whose 9mm pistol was stolen from his vehicle while he attended Sunday Mass at the Cathedral Basilica. When he reported the theft—doing the right thing—police turned around and cited him under the ordinance for not locking his firearm in a container.
Click the link to read the whole article: Judge Strikes Down St. Louis Gun Storage Law