Month: December 2014

Thursday, 11 December 2014

09:23 – US news organizations have the attention spans of gnats, so it’s not surprising that they’re paying little attention to what may well portend the break-up of the eurozone. Greece is about to hold elections. The almost certain winner is the radical-left party Syriza, whose charismatic young leader Alexis Tsipras has already made it clear that the first thing he’ll do on his first day in office is tell the troika to get stuffed. He threatens to default on the $300 billion that Greece owes if the troika doesn’t meet his demands, and he’s not bluffing. Merkel believes that the eurozone has adequate firewalls in place to prevent contagion from spreading, so she’s very likely to call his non-bluff. If that happens, Greece exits the eurozone very messily, and Merkel finds out that her “firewalls” are worthless as the dominoes topple.

Speaking of gnats, it appears the MSM has completely forgotten about ebola. That’s natural enough. Most citizens of first-world countries don’t really care about ebola as long as it remains in Africa. It’s very sad for those affected, of course, but we really don’t have time to worry about something like that going on far away. We do get very upset about ebola patients being allowed into our countries because we don’t want ebola where we live. Which is a reasonable fear. The last thing we want is for ebola to make the jump to an animal host, such as bats, and become endemic in our own countries. So as long as the virus is kept restricted to Africa, most of us don’t much care. We have more important things to worry about.


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Wednesday, 10 December 2014

08:55 – With demagogues from Obama on down pandering to and stirring up the underclass, I wonder how long it will be before the lid blows off. One solution that comes to mind is to give the underclass what they’re demanding: withdraw police, fire, and other government services from the central cities and just let them go to hell in their own way. Use those freed-up police and fire resources to protect the middle-class areas surrounding the central cities, drawing a dead-line around the central cities. Tell the underclass to loot, riot, and burn all they want in their own areas, but make it clear that if they attempt to do so outside their own areas they will be met with deadly force, from both police and private citizens. Quarantine them.


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Tuesday, 9 December 2014

09:48 – We shipped nine science kits yesterday, and three so far today. At this rate, and with two weeks worth of Christmas orders yet to come, we’re going to be down to nothing pretty quickly.

With rioting continuing, I’m afraid this is going to become the norm. These idiots don’t realize what they’re doing. The cops are going to continue shooting young black men, because young black men commit lots of violent crimes, including rioting, looting, and arson. As more young black men are killed by police, the rioting will intensify, and more cops are likely to face legal sanctions, exacerbating the us-versus-them mindset already held by most cops. Eventually, cops, fire, EMS, and other emergency personnel will simply refuse to enter areas populated by the underclass. It’s happened before, and it will happen again. Why risk being killed or shooting in self-defense and facing criminal charges and ruinous lawsuits? If politicians don’t support the police, why should the police support the politicians?

And when it does happen, those areas will become chaotic. We’ll have gang rule, and the decent people who live in those areas–and most of them are decent people–will have no protection from the warlords. Businesses will completely abandon the lawless areas–many of them already have–and government services and utilities will become spotty to non-existent. Power company linemen don’t get combat pay, nor meter readers. Buildings will be left to burn to the ground, and calls to EMS will go unanswered. Is this really what these idiots want? Welcome to the third world.


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Monday, 8 December 2014

09:05 – As is usual this time of year, my time is fully occupied building and shipping science kits. I have eight or nine outstanding orders to ship so far today. At the moment, we’re down to only three of the CK01A chemistry kits in stock, so I’ll be working on building more of those today, after I get the outstanding orders shipped.


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Sunday, 7 December 2014

11:24 – A date which will live in infamy.

One of the fun things about writing a prepping book is the research. I come across things I never knew existed, many of them girl stuff. This morning, I mentioned one of them to Barbara. It’s called the pStyle, and it’s basically a plastic chute that allows girls and women to urinate while standing up. Barbara was surprised that I’d never heard of it. But then, she’s a girl.

I wish they’d had these things back when I was in college and doing a lot of camping with my girlfriends. One of them, to her regret, squatted to pee in what turned out to be a bed of poison ivy. Another lost her balance and toppled backward into a bed of stinging nettles. As one of them commented, it’s just not fair being a girl.

Today, Barbara and I are finishing up the last few chemicals I need to build kits. I’ll get those built today or tomorrow so they’ll be ready to ship by the time the mailman shows up tomorrow afternoon.


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Saturday, 6 December 2014

10:31 – We’re doing science kit stuff all weekend. The top priority is getting a batch of FK01C forensic science kits built, not least to fill the half dozen backorders for it that we need to ship Monday. After that, we need to build batches of the CK01A and CK01B chemistry kits and the BK01A biology kits.


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Friday, 5 December 2014

07:51 – Barbara left at 7:00 for an early appointment with her doctor. She has to have her dentist and GP check her over before the hospital will allow her knee-replacement surgery to take place.

As expected, December is starting out heavy for science kit sales. When I checked my email first thing this morning, I found a dozen orders had come in overnight. Unfortunately, half of those are for kits that we just ran out of stock on, so I know what I’ll be doing today and over the weekend.


11:52 – I got six of the kits I had in stock shipped, which leaves me with six for which I’m still making up chemicals and bottling them. They’ll ship Monday if there’s no rise in the creek level.

As I started bottling chemicals this morning, I remembered that I needed to re-order bottles and caps. So I just did a PO for a dozen cases of assorted bottles and caps, 10,000+ of them. As always, I used the free ground shipping option, which generally takes two days after shipping to arrive. The other option was next-day, but that would have cost $900+ extra. I wonder if anyone is ever in such a hurry for bottles that they’ll pay for next-day shipping. That phrase that starts out “piss-poor planning” comes to mind.

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Thursday, 4 December 2014

10:04 – The morning paper reports that another car full of teenagers wrecked, this time in Greensboro, which is about half an hour east of us. Four kids in the car. The driver was 15 years old and had no license. The car was going 95 MPH in a 35 zone. Three kids dead, one in critical condition. I’m not sure why this is happening so frequently lately. I understand that teenage boys drive like maniacs. It’s not cultural; it’s biology. High testosterone levels, little driving experience, and a sense of immortality. I grew up in an area with lots of Amish, and I remember the Amish teenage boys holding drag races in their buggies. I’m sure Roman boys 2,000 years ago took similar risks, and Cro Magnon boys 20,000 years ago. But we sure have had a run of these tragedies lately.

There’s probably nothing to be done. When I was that age, our schools regularly showed gory movies like Signal 30, showing mangled cars and mangled people. I’ll never forget the images of Jayne Mansfield with her face ripped off and her head impaled by a piece of pipe. But I’d be willing to bet that not a single kid who ever sat through those movies actually believed it could ever happen to him. It was always someone else.

Barbara will be happy to know that I’m now reasonably happy with our level of preparation for emergencies. As is only proper for anyone who’s writing a prepping book, we’re now better-prepared than probably 99.99% of the population, in terms of both supplies and knowledge. I still want to relocate away from the city, or at least buy a weekend/vacation home up in the mountains that we could relocate to permanently if necessary, but otherwise we’re in pretty good shape. I’ll keep buying small items and more food but nearly all of the major purchases are complete.

Our Amazon Prime membership expires Saturday, and I’m not going to bother to renew it. We haven’t watched any Prime video in months, and none of the other benefits are of any interest to us other than free 2-day shipping. And that’s not worth $99/year, despite the fact that I’ve placed 52 orders with Amazon in the last six months. I won’t have a problem reaching the $35 minimum for free SuperSaver shipping, and in my experience with it before I (re)joined Prime, it usually doesn’t take much longer than Prime shipping to arrive.


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Wednesday, 3 December 2014

08:29 – Happy Birthday to Barbara, who turned 20:40 yesterday. I didn’t mention it yesterday, because I thought she was concerned about hitting the big Six-Oh. As it turns out, she’s not.

Sad news in the paper this morning. A 17-year-old senior from a local high school is in critical condition after her car collided near the high school with an SUV driven by a 68-year-old guy. No word on who was at fault. One such accident is bad enough, but this one is just the latest in a recent slew of car accidents locally that have killed and critically injured numerous kids.

I’m writing now about water purification in the “First Year” section. There are numerous gravity-fed micro-filtration systems available, but the two I’m going to recommend are the LifeStraw Family and the Sawyer Point ZeroTwo. Both filter down to 0.02 microns, which is sufficient to provide a Log 4 reduction even for viruses. Both have very long filter life, assuming periodic back-flushing. (The Sawyer unit is rated at one million gallons.) Both are widely used in third-world countries. Both are reasonably inexpensive, with the LifeStraw Family about $85 and the Sawyer Point ZeroTwo at about $120.

We won’t be recommending the Berkey, despite its popularity among preppers, mainly because I’m concerned about its design/engineering. The LifeStraw and Sawyer units use tubing from the source container to the destination container with in-line microfilter cartridges, which inherently fail safe. Water cannot get from the source container to the destination without passing through the filter. The Berkey, on the other hand, immerses the filter in a container of questionable water and then allows water that passes through the filter to exit from the center of the filter to the output. That’s inherently a riskier design, and I’ve seen numerous reports of that filter coming loose and allowing questionable water to pass directly into the destination container without passing through the filter.


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Tuesday, 2 December 2014

09:15 – Every once in a great while I’m really surprised. That happened yesterday when I read an article about Charles Barkley’s comments on the Ferguson situation. Until then, I thought of him as just another professional athlete. I was wrong. He’s smart, sensible, and wants to run for governor of Alabama. He has a very low opinion of both the Democrat Party and Republican Party. He supports same-sex marriage, saying it’s no one’s business but the people involved. I emailed him and said that if he ever decides to move to North Carolina, he has my vote if he runs for governor.

My kitchen cabinet–those who comment regularly here–have convinced me to change my mind. I still have a very high opinion of those $3.44 UltraFire flashlights, and I will continue to recommend them as general-purpose lights. (I have two of them on my person at the moment.) But I will recommend using name-brand lights as tactical lights–for mounting on shotgun barrels and so on–on the assumption (and it is merely an assumption) that the more expensive lights will be at least marginally more reliable under recoil.


14:31 – It’s that time of year again. I got two begging emails this morning from WikiPedia. Although I don’t depend on WikiPedia to be authoritative, I do use it nearly every day, as I suspect do most or all of my readers. So I’ll encourage all of you to contribute as I just did. Even $20 will help them a lot.

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