# Monday, October 10, 2005
By: Joe Huffman Monday, October 10, 2005 7:39:00 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Boomershoot | Home Life )

Today is the first day of hunting season and the first time I go hunting.  I would have left much earlier but I had to take Xenia to school.

I'll be working on the Taj Mahal during the middle of the day.  And perhaps preparing some of the pictures from the rock blasting I did yesterday.  The rock was MUCH bigger than anyone thought and we weren't able to do much with it.  But we did make some big booms and broke some pieces off of it.  Details later.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, October 10, 2005 7:31:27 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Freedom | Politics )

I want to build on the The Quote of the Day for today a bit.  I suspect more than just an avoidance of truth.  It's has to do with data selection and basic assumptions.  To the best of my knowledge there isn't an Air America radio station within my reception range here in North Central Idaho.  While I was in the Seattle area last week I spent several hours listening to it.  I concluded they have a completely different set of assumptions about the world, and perhaps reality, that are currently inaccessible to me.  "Bush is evil and stupid" seemed to be a basic tenet.  "The war in Iraq is wrong, we must leave as soon as possible" was another.  Another basic assumption appears to be "control things not people".

No evidence presented or examples given.  Just building on those assumptions.  In another example I just read an editorial which had these two paragraphs:

I don't mind that Bush is not a man of great intellect. I do mind that he effectively has taken the American public down to his simplistic level. Too many people buy a faulty link between Sept. 11 and Iraq. Too many people think that winning in Iraq will have any impact on the security of Americans at home.

...

At present the danger is from al-Qaida. That can change. The Unibomber was not driven by religious fervor, nor was Timothy McVeigh. The war on terror should focus on access to the tools of terrorism. That would require stringent controls on the sale of materials that can end up in bombs. That would require monitoring who purchases those materials. Wouldn't it make more sense to monitor those individuals rather than people with Middle Eastern surnames who borrow books from libraries? Books are not incendiary devices.

In the first paragraph no data is given to lead one to believe Bush is "not a man of great intellect" or that he works on a simplistic level. if you wanted to ignore all the funding of terrorism that Saddam engaged in you still don't have to have a link between 9-11 and Iraq to think converting a repressive dictatorship into a representative democracy is the right thing to do.  And what about drawing all the Muslim extremists to a common location to do battle with our troops rather than in our shopping malls, subways, and sports stadiums?  What about providing a "shining beacon"?  What about destroying the extremist Muslim culture?  Don't these guys get it?  Or is it they don't want to get it?  It seems to me that he is the one working at a very simplistic level.

In the second paragraph he isn't even consistent with himself.  Information is a tool of terrorism.  Doing research on the layout of a city subway, the construction details of a skyscraper, or how to make explosives and poisons from household materials is just as important to the terrorist as the physical materials.  I'll grant him that we shouldn't be monitoring people's reading materials.  But nether should we require stringent controls on steel nails, fingernail polish remover, and hair bleach which can be made into a bomb.  This guy complains Bush is simplistic and and he is totally clueless about bomb building as practiced in the mid-east.  He mentioned McVeigh and doesn't realize that the raw ingredients to make ammonium nitrate, the main ingredient McVeigh used, are all in the air we breath and our electrical outlets.  Try putting "stringent controls" on that!

I can only conclude that these people live in a different reality.  A simplistic, ignorant reality where Muslim extremists don't want to kill you if you don't convert to Islam.  A reality where Mommy (as opposed to Big Brother) government can put childproof locks on the "kitchen cupboards" so the "children" don't hurt themselves or others.  The reality is that to retain the freedoms we desire we must seek out and imprison or kill the individuals that desire to harm us.  The only tools of terrorism that restrictions upon make any sense reside between the ears of the terrorists.  It is those tools that must be physically controlled or destroyed.  And although I initially had many doubts about going into Iraq, even in hindsight, I think it was the best course of action.

So what of the liberals and Air America's basic assumptions?  Are they simply projecting their simplistic limitations onto their "enemies"?  Perhaps that's part of it.  But I think it goes beyond that.  There appears to be more and more evidence that since Muslim terrorists want to destroy capitalism they must be on the side of righteousness.  The "liberals" are in so many ways nothing but haters of capitalism.  I believe they are thinking in terms of "the enemy of my enemy is my friend."  Never mind that the enemy of your enemy would have you giving up music, praying to Mecca multiple times per day, and killing homosexuals.  It appears to me it is more important to them that Republican control of government be destroyed than our freedom be retained.  Not that Republicans are any great friend of freedom.  I too utilize the "enemy of my enemy is my friend" rationalization. Bush is the enemy of Muslim extremists who would kill me if they could because I will not adhere to their belief system.  I will not convert.  The only available alternatives I see are a genocide of hundreds of millions or something very similar to what Bush is implementing.  I'm going with the Bush solution.  Air America and their ilk fall into the category of "the enemy of my friend is my enemy."  I rejoice at the news of their failures and scandals.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, October 10, 2005 6:13:53 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Politics | Quote of the Day )

Watching the unfolding political debate, it occurs to me that liberals feel the same way about truth that Dracula feels about sunlight.

Paul Kirchner
From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
Vol. 3, No. 5
31 March 1995

# Sunday, October 09, 2005
By: Joe Huffman Sunday, October 09, 2005 1:00:02 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Boomershoot | Gun Rights )

As I said a few days ago, probably mid-afternoon today, I will be making little rocks out a big rock again.  You are welcome to show up at the range and help out or just spectate.

By: Joe Huffman Sunday, October 09, 2005 12:42:45 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( )

The UK Times Online uses the headline Leap in life expectancy brings a scare for pension forecasters.  But it's the socialists that really need to be scared:

ACTUARIES admitted yesterday that they were scared to predict firmly how long humans would live in the future, after releasing new figures showing that survival rates improved by more than 30 per cent in just eight years.

Figures from the Continuous Mortality Investigation (CMI), part of the actuarial profession, showed that the mortality rate for men aged 65 in 2002 was 29 per cent better than in 1994, while life expectancy for women improved 33 per cent in the same period.

...

There is also concern over the growing cost of public sector pensions, which has doubled to £500 billion in just over ten years. Sir Digby Jones, the Director-General of the CBI, this week warned the Labour Party conference that “little has been done to address public sector provision in the face of people living longer and healthier lives”.

A socialist society of the future is going to be faced with some hard choices.  As health care technology improves people live longer and it seems the costs invariable increase as well.  This is a double whammy for the socialist.  They will be increasing unable to provide for both pensions and the health care of the elderly at the expense of the working class.  As I have pointed out in previous posts a common solution to the inevitable fixed budget is to ration health care.  In effect what this does is decrease the quality and the length of life for the people that are more deserving of a longer and better life--the people that contributed the most to society by being productive.  Faced with that penalty productive people have less incentive to be productive.  This decreased incentive results is less productivity and society as a whole suffers.  The more socialistic a society the less productive it becomes and the less able it is to compete in a global market.  As our human life expectancy improves socialism faces it's death.

By: Joe Huffman Sunday, October 09, 2005 12:15:08 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Freedom | Politics )

Force always attracts men of low morality, and I believe it to be an invariable rule that tyrants of genius are succeeded by scoundrels.

Albert Einstein
[This is one of the major claims of F. A. Hayek's book The Road to Serfdom.  I have no reason to doubt it and this "invariable rule" is a major factor in my opposition to socialism. -- Joe]

# Saturday, October 08, 2005
By: Joe Huffman Saturday, October 08, 2005 11:54:01 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Gun Rights | Home Life )

I went to the SVRC action pistol match today.  I had a few misses toward the end but nothing that was a disaster.  The weather and the people were great.  I'll get the results in a week or so.

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, October 08, 2005 6:51:17 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Gun Rights | Home Life )

I finally got to Wade's yesterday and spent some quality time with my pistol and paper.  After emptying about three or four magazines full (16 to 18 rounds per magazine) things started to flow more like they are supposed to.  The gun would "just go off" when the sights were aligned properly.  The bullseye, even at 30 feet away, would erode away with shots spaced less than a second apart.  I probably sent 300 or 400 rounds downrange and I felt much, much better about my shooting when I was done.

Today it's off to SVRC for a match and visiting with friends.

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, October 08, 2005 6:25:44 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Politics )

Jeff at Alphecca reports about an article in the Detroit Free Press:

LANSING, Mich. (AP) -- A plaque honoring the right to bear arms would be placed near the state Capitol under legislation approved Wednesday by the state House.

The House voted 108-0 to send the Senate a bill that would require the Michigan Capitol Park Commission to place the plaque near the Capitol or in the adjacent mall area. The plaque would be installed once enough private money is collected for a foundation to which it could be attached.

What really tickles me about this is that they are backing the anti-freedom people into a corner.  What are they going to do when confronted with a vote on this?  Vote against it?  Flat out admit to the public they don't support the constitution they took an oath to support?  Then later support legislation that is anti-freedom even though they voted for a monument supporting that freedom?  Their only viable option appears to be to not vote and/or use some sort of weasel words to say the celebrated freedom doesn't mean what everyone else thinks it means.

By: Joe Huffman Saturday, October 08, 2005 5:47:39 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Politics | Quote of the Day )

We read a notice from Canada to the effect that "The purpose of anti-gun legislation is to establish criminal supremacy over the citizen by awarding the goblins the status of being the sole armed caste of the population." The publisher has gone on to state that the time has come to ask ourselves what is behind all this.

Well, we know what motivates the hoplophobe. He simply envies the man who can cope where he, the hoplophobe, cannot. A skilled, armed man lives on a plane of security and contentment different from that of others. This is not egalitarian! The man who cannot cut it, envies, fears and sometimes hates the man who can. This is all very clear, it is just a pity that so many people choose to hide their perfidious motivation behind what they claim to be "crime control."

Jeff Cooper
From Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
Vol. 5, No. 1
January 1997

# Friday, October 07, 2005
By: Joe Huffman Friday, October 07, 2005 12:07:25 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Boomershoot )

I had some time to think about reactive targets recently and I know of another material to use rather than the increasing difficult to obtain ammonium nitrate.  The good news is that I know it will detonate with handgun fire and shotguns.  I've done it with handguns before.  I did some pricing yesterday and it appears it would cost about the same as the current solution.  It also would not have the problem of spontaneous combustion at some later date.  The bad news is that it is much more bulky to obtain the same boom (the energy density of the material is much lower).  It also does not generate much of a visual effect.  It's just a loud noise accompanied by the sudden going away of things from the places where they were before.

I may do some experiments to see if it could be modified to provide more visual effects and how we might be able to store and distribute it to the target area.  Ry says, "It's an inspired solution."  I'm not so sure.  I did my first experiments with this in my childhood and then again a few years ago.  I rejected it because of the MUCH larger target size.  The only thing I came up with that made me reconsider it was that I could change the aspect ratio and give the target a greater depth to compensate for the lower density while still making it a challenging for the long range rifle shooters.  Not exactly "inspired" thinking.

Also Ry and I came up with some shotgun target scenarios.  There has always been a great deal of interest in this sort of target.  I'm certain we have a solution for that now.  It's just a matter of creating the launcher for the unconventional targets.  There has also been some interest in a handgun Boomershoot.  This new material should work very well for that application.  I'd want the targets to be at least 25 yards away and supported above the ground to avoid turning gravel and other small objects into projectiles.

By: Joe Huffman Friday, October 07, 2005 11:18:32 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Freedom )

It's being reported that the bomber wanted to buy ammonium nitrate:

Joel tried to purchase ammonium nitrate at a feed store late last week.

...

FEED STORE MANAGER TALKS TO REPORTERS ABOUT HINRICHS VIDEO HERE

Domestic manufacture of ammonium nitrate was halted earlier this year. It is going to be much less of an issue in future events of this sort. The price for it is is going to much higher than other forms of fertilizer that perform the same function in the field. Anyone that asks for it is going to be immediately identifying themselves as a non-typical user. The ATF and the fertilizer industry have been working together to reduce the chances that someone is going to misuse it. And as others of have noted the use of the alternative TATP will result in more Darwin awards and fewer innocents being injuried.

This is not to say I'm happy about the availablity of AN decreasing. I'm of the opinion that the misuse of the AN could and should have been prevented through less drastic means other than discontinuing the manufacture of the product. That our stadium bomber was asked what he was going to use it for and was unable to give a straight answer, which put the store manager on alert, proves the less drastic solution worked in this case.

By: Joe Huffman Friday, October 07, 2005 10:54:05 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Freedom )

From the Times Online in Britain:

Yvonne Watts, 74, had been promised a reduced waiting time for treatment from a year to three to four months under the NHS. But she was in such pain from severe arthritis that she spent almost £4,000 on surgery in France.

What do you expect when your health care provider has a fixed budget rather than being market driven?  Why can't they learn the lessons from the Soviet Union and nearly every other socialist country where there were long lines and waits for toilet paper, shoes, bread, and almost everything?  Government monopolies create shortages.  Sure government can make things more equal, but only more equal in poverty and misery.

And besides that typical socialized medicine schemes fail my Jews in the Attic Test.

By: Joe Huffman Friday, October 07, 2005 7:20:39 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Politics | Quote of the Day )

Guns will make us powerful; butter will only make us fat.

Hermann Goering (1893-1946)
German Nazi leader, air marshal.
Alleged radio broadcast, Summer 1936, on the Four-Year Plan.
[As by the design of the U.S. Constitution power is safest when it is in the hands of the people, not the government. -- Joe]

# Thursday, October 06, 2005
By: Joe Huffman Thursday, October 06, 2005 12:25:32 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Boomershoot | Freedom | Gun Rights | Technology )

Much to my surprise the Gun Dictionary page on the Boomershoot web site is one of the most popular web pages on the site (thanks to Stephanie Sailor for suggesting this page).  Even the USPSA has linked to the page on their information for the press page (from the same page they also link to my Gun Myths and Truth page).  Because of that I frequently get requests for the definition of a firearm related term.  Just today I received a request for the definition of ACP, as in .45 ACP.  I updated the page with this definition and a few others.  In the past week or two I have added the following words:

If you have suggestions for other terms let me know.  Feel free to supply your own definition and save me a little bit of work.

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, October 06, 2005 6:10:38 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Politics )

I've written about this before.  Jeff at Alphecca posted another example:

Leaving a Nashville courtroom yesterday morning, two Metro police officers were greeted by their peers and supporters with handshakes and hugs. A judge had just ruled they were not guilty of illegally taking guns into a downtown nightclub last year.

Personally, I think that they have such a law is wrong.  Idaho doesn't have a law against taking guns into places where alcohol is being served and doesn't have the type of problems the anti-freedom bigots would whine about if they knew about it.  You can't legally be intoxicated while carrying a concealed weapon and I don't have a problem with that.  Driving and/or shooting while drunk is a bit on the reckless side of things.  It's not consistent with a big 'L' Libertarian philosophy but I'm not going to get all bent out of shape over that.  I think it is a fair compromise.

An employee of the nightclub noticed that one of the officers was carrying a gun and asked him to leave. Police were called when the officers refused.

...

"There was no authorization for them to be there, nor did supervisors have any knowledge of them being there," police spokesman Don Aaron said.

It's a dangerous path to go down.  If the police (and other government workers) don't obey the law on minor stuff it becomes more and more likely they won't obey the law on major stuff.  The mindset becomes one of the laws are for keeping "them" in line.  The government workers are the elite for whom the laws were not really intended.  I've spoken to many liberals and who have a similar elitist mindset.  They want restrictions on firearms for the "average" person.  The police are the side of the elite who need to be protected from the common person that might want to hurt them.  They just don't seem to get it that more people have been murdered by their own government than by the "common criminals."  Government workers should be held to a higher standard of behavior than the non-government employee, not lower.  And the Second Amendment is our last ditch means of enforcing that ethical behavior on an out of control "the law doesn't apply to us" elitist government.

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, October 06, 2005 5:24:09 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Home Life )

The IPSC match results are posted now.  I knew I didn't do great but it was worse than I thought.  I didn't realize what was going on until about half way through the last stage when I was having problems hitting some steel targets.  I wasn't doing proper trigger preparation.  I had lots of penalities from misses which hurt badly.  More actual time on the range is required. 

I'm attending another match this Saturday at SVRC. I'm hoping to spend some practice time at Wade's later today.

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, October 06, 2005 5:04:24 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Quote of the Day )

Just because you are tolerated doesn't mean we're glad you came.

Bill Hall
Lewiston Morning Tribune
February 4, 1998
In reference to the neo-Nazi's and other 'hate-groups' that have moved to Idaho.

# Wednesday, October 05, 2005
By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, October 05, 2005 5:00:21 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Boomershoot )

After four days in storage (more than required for a typical Boomershoot event) the mix looked like this (click on a picture to get a high resolution version):


All looks good.  There was only the slightest hint of clumping.


I used the dead tree to hold the 7"x7" target while doing sensitivity tests. This was after four days of storage. Multiple hits of a .22LR with a target velocity ~1170 fps failed to detonate it. .22LR with a velocity of ~1500 fps detonated it on the first shot. At the time of mixing 1170 fps would reliably detonate it.  The top of the tree was moved rearward and caught by the live tree.


I put four reactive targets on top of four IPSC targets to make it easier to find the targets at 700 yards away.  I also hoped to be able to do my own long distance spotting by moving forward to the targets and see bullet holes in the IPSC targets.  I was not able to do this. There were no bullet holes to be found after firing one shot at each target from 700 yards away.


It was typical Boomershoot weather--wet. I wrapped the targets in plastic to keep them from getting water logged.


I was unable to hit them at 700 yards with my .223 without a spotter. I moved them to 380 yards to test sensitivity to at least get some hits with the AR-15.


The 50 grain VMAX bullets, with an estimated target velocity of 1970 fps, were successful in detonating the targets. I had not anticipated all the plastic scraps. I will return to pick them up. I ran out of time and had to leave.

I have video of the target detonations which I hope to get digitized sometime this week.  In the scope I saw a bright red flash as the targets disassembled in a cloud of smoke but I don't know if it showed up in the video.

I did not have enough time to do the last test--Boomer Clays.  I did get various types of high velocity shotgun ammo that at least has a chance of working.  Those tests will have to be another day.  Perhaps this Sunday if the range work and rock blasting goes quickly.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, October 05, 2005 3:36:17 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Boomershoot )

Ry created a Wikipedia entry for Boomershoot and I touched it up a bit.  If have additional information you think should be included or have corrections go ahead and add it or send it to me.  If you do change it please send me an email so I can check it out.

I added the Lewiston Morning Tribune article on the 2005 precision rifle clinic and the KING 5 Evening Magazine video to the News Coverage page on Boomershoot.org.

Test results from yesterday will be posted soon.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, October 05, 2005 8:52:26 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Freedom | Politics | Quote of the Day )

We need to reduce government to just the functions authorized in the Constitution. Then, if you believe that makes the federal government too big or too little, you can work to amend the Constitution to make it more to your liking. But the first step is to establish limits, so that we no longer have unlimited government that the politicians can use for anything they want.

Harry Browne
March 1998
Libertarian Candidate for President in 1996

# Tuesday, October 04, 2005
By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, October 04, 2005 7:52:50 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Boomershoot | Gun Rights )

The weather isn't great (cold and cloudy) but it's better than yesterday.  And I'm out of town for the rest of the week and I really need to get this done so I'm headed to the Boomershoot site in a few minutes.

A few tests need to be done.

  1. Was the latest mix stable over time?  It's been four days in storage.  Did it get hyper sensitive?  Did it go dead?
  2. If it still detonates with a .22 LR at reasonable ranges I'm putting it out at 700 yards and trying to detonate it with a .223.  The weather report says winds from 0 to 1 MPH so I have a chance.  I put a different scope on my most accurate AR-15 so that shouldn't be an issue.
  3. Boomer Clays.  I bought a box of clays and several different boxes of high velocity shotgun shells.  I'm going to load up the underside of some clay targets with "Joe's Special Recipe" and see if they can be detonated at a reasonable range.  Reasonable being far enough away that we don't get our outer layers of clothes and/or body parts shredded by pieces of clay pigeons.

If the results are interesting enough I'll post pictures and perhaps video later this week.

Oh, I probably will be blasting a rock at the local gun range on Work Day this coming Sunday.  If you are in the area show up to help make it a better range and then watch me make small rocks out of a big rock and explosives.

See also:

Twenty pounds of HE versus a rock 
Rocks and explosives video
Little rocks from big rocks and explosives

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, October 04, 2005 7:37:36 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) ( Freedom | Politics | Quote of the Day )

I believe a self-righteous liberal Democrat with a cause is more dangerous than a Hell's Angel with an attitude.

Ted Nugent