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All About Guns COOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

So ah, where could a Red Blooded American go and get one of these ?

Asking for a friend that is! Grumpy

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Another potential ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE Blessed with some of the worst luck California Grumpy's hall of Shame You have to be kidding, right!?!

Where’s the “NO KINGS” protests now????????.

Now normally I avoid talking about Politics in this blog of mine. As I figure that we all need a break from that BS.

Plus I really DON”T want to alienate any of my wonderful readers out there.  But w.t.f.  did California do to get this “man” as its Leader?

So in closing, all I can say is that I am just so happy to be out of that Nut House! That and may God protect my readers out there in my birthplace! Grumpy

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War

From Slings to Drones: The Art of Battling Giants from the American Shooting Journal

Throughout history, conflicts have shaped nations, economies, and societies. Wars are rarely clean or honorable. They are brutal contests where survival often belongs not to the strongest side, but to the side that understands its own strengths and the weaknesses of its opponent. Military historians study battles not simply to admire victory, but to understand why certain forces prevailed while others collapsed.

Those same lessons extend beyond the battlefield into business, politics, sports, and even modern technology wars. Success often depends less on raw power and more on strategy, adaptation, and refusing to fight on an opponent’s terms.

Few stories capture this lesson better than the biblical account of David and Goliath. The story is often simplified into a children’s tale about courage and faith. However, the deeper lesson is strategic. David did not defeat Goliath because he was stronger.

He won because he rejected conventional rules and forced the battle to be fought differently. Malcolm Gladwell, in his discussion of David and Goliath, argues that the real lesson is not that underdogs occasionally win, but that underdogs win when they understand how to change the battlefield itself.

The Israelites and Philistines were at war. To avoid a large-scale bloodbath, the Philistines proposed a representative duel, a common practice in ancient warfare. One warrior from each side would fight to the death, and the result would determine the outcome between the armies.

The Philistines sent Goliath, a giant warrior from Gath. He was heavily armored, experienced, and terrifying in appearance. His bronze armor alone weighed over one hundred pounds. He carried a massive spear capable of piercing shields and armor. By every conventional standard of ancient combat, Goliath was unbeatable.

The Israelites were terrified because they assumed the fight would follow traditional rules: hand-to-hand combat between infantry warriors. In that type of battle, Goliath possessed overwhelming advantages in size, armor, strength, and weaponry. No Israelite soldier wanted to step into the valley against him.

Then David Enters

David was not a professional soldier. He was a shepherd boy. Instead of accepting armor and a sword, David carried only a sling, stones, and a shepherd’s staff. To observers, it appeared ridiculous. Goliath himself mocked David, insulted him, and assumed the encounter would end quickly.

What Goliath failed to understand was that David was not entering an infantry duel. He was fighting as a projectile warrior.

Ancient armies generally consisted of three types of combat forces: cavalry, infantry, and projectile warriors such as archers and slingers. These groups balanced one another much like rock-paper-scissors. Infantry could resist cavalry with shields and long pikes. Cavalry could overrun projectile fighters because of speed and mobility. Projectile warriors, however, could devastate infantry from a distance.

David belonged to this third category.

The sling in ancient warfare was not a toy. Skilled slingers could launch stones with deadly velocity and remarkable accuracy. Historians estimate that sling projectiles could travel over one hundred miles per hour. A stone hurled from David’s sling struck Goliath in the forehead before the giant could even close the distance. The battle was effectively over before Goliath ever used his sword.

David’s victory was not miraculous simply because a smaller man defeated a larger one. The true significance lies in the fact that David refused to fight conventionally.

Had he accepted sword and armor and engaged in close combat, he likely would have died within moments. Instead, he transformed the encounter into a ranged engagement where Goliath’s strengths became weaknesses. The giant’s heavy armor reduced mobility. His close-range weapons became useless against a fast-moving projectile fighter.

This principle appears repeatedly throughout history. Smaller forces often succeed against larger opponents when they abandon conventional methods and exploit asymmetrical advantages.

20th Century War – One modern example is the Vietnam War. The United States possessed overwhelming military superiority in aircraft, artillery, armored vehicles, and technological resources. On paper, the U.S. military should have crushed North Vietnam quickly. Yet the conflict dragged on for years and ended in American withdrawal.

The Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces understood that fighting the United States in traditional open-field warfare would lead to destruction. Instead, they relied on guerrilla tactics, jungle mobility, underground tunnel systems, ambushes, and psychological warfare. They avoided fighting according to American strengths. Like David, they changed the rules of engagement. The United States struggled because its conventional military advantages were difficult to apply against an elusive and decentralized enemy.

A similar dynamic unfolded in Afghanistan against both the Soviet Union during the 1980s and later against the United States after 2001. Both superpowers entered with advanced aircraft, armored vehicles, surveillance systems, and modern weaponry. Yet insurgent fighters relied on terrain, local knowledge, mobility, and patience. Rather than defeating their enemies directly, they aimed to exhaust them economically and politically over time. Again, the weaker force avoided fighting the stronger force head-on.

Business competition follows similar patterns.

Large corporations often resemble Goliath. They possess massive resources, established infrastructure, large workforces, and financial strength. However, their size can also create rigidity. Smaller startups often succeed not because they outspend larger competitors, but because they move faster and attack overlooked weaknesses.

Netflix provides an example. In the early 2000s, Blockbuster dominated the home movie rental market with thousands of physical stores across the country. Conventional wisdom suggested no smaller company could compete. Yet Netflix refused to compete on Blockbuster’s terms. Instead of building retail stores, Netflix focused on mail delivery and eventually streaming technology. Blockbuster’s greatest strength—its enormous retail footprint—became a liability as consumer behavior shifted online. The giant was defeated because the battlefield changed.

The same pattern can be seen in technology wars today. Cyber warfare often allows smaller actors to challenge powerful nations and corporations. A lone hacker group can disrupt major infrastructure systems or leak sensitive information from organizations worth billions of dollars. Traditional military strength means little in cyberspace if vulnerabilities exist. In this environment, agility and creativity can outweigh sheer scale.

Even sports demonstrate the David and Goliath principle. In mixed martial arts, smaller fighters frequently defeat physically stronger opponents by using speed, leverage, endurance, and technique. In basketball, smaller teams may defeat larger teams by relying on perimeter shooting, pace, and ball movement rather than trying to dominate physically inside the paint. Successful underdogs rarely win by copying stronger opponents. They win by creating situations where the stronger side’s advantages matter less.

The lesson also applies to social and political conflicts. Throughout history, civil rights movements often began with limited resources against entrenched institutions. Leaders such as Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr. understood that directly matching the violence of powerful governments would fail. Instead, they used nonviolent resistance, public pressure, media attention, and moral authority. They changed the nature of the conflict itself. Their victories were strategic as much as ideological.

However, the David and Goliath lesson is often misunderstood. Being the underdog is not automatically an advantage. Many weaker forces lose because they still choose to fight conventionally. History is filled with smaller armies annihilated because they copied the tactics of stronger opponents instead of innovating.

The real lesson is adaptation.

Goliath expected a traditional duel because tradition favored him. David recognized that accepting those terms guaranteed defeat. Instead of obeying expectations, he identified the true nature of the battlefield. He understood that mobility and range mattered more than physical size. In many conflicts, the strongest side becomes trapped by its own assumptions. Powerful organizations often believe their methods succeeded in the past and therefore must continue succeeding in the future. That mindset can create blindness.

This concept remains highly relevant today in economics, politics, warfare, and business disruption driven by artificial intelligence. Smaller AI startups are currently challenging enormous corporations by moving faster and experimenting aggressively. Independent creators on platforms such as YouTube, TikTok, and podcasts compete against traditional media companies with far fewer resources. Remote drone warfare allows relatively inexpensive technology to threaten multi-million-dollar military hardware. In recent global conflicts, low-cost drones have destroyed tanks and ships worth vastly more money. Once again, smaller and unconventional tools can neutralize traditional power structures.

The story of David and Goliath endures because it reflects a timeless truth about conflict. Strength alone does not determine victory. The side that understands the environment, adapts faster, and refuses to fight on unfavorable terms often gains the advantage. Giants fall when they become too dependent on old assumptions.

In every generation there are new Goliaths: dominant corporations, military superpowers, political establishments, or entrenched systems. There are also new Davids: smaller competitors, insurgent forces, startups, innovators, and unconventional thinkers. The outcome often depends not on who appears stronger at first glance, but on who better understands how the battle is truly being fought.

David did not win because he was fearless alone. He won because he recognized that the giant was vulnerable in ways nobody else understood.

Ukraine/Russia Conflict – One of the clearest modern examples of the David and Goliath principle can be seen in the ongoing conflict between Ukraine and Russia. At the beginning of the war, Russia appeared to hold overwhelming advantages in manpower, artillery, armored vehicles, aircraft, missiles, and military spending. By conventional standards, many analysts expected Ukraine to collapse quickly under the pressure of a much larger military power. On paper, Russia was Goliath.

However, Ukraine adapted in ways that dramatically changed the battlefield. Rather than attempting to match Russia tank-for-tank or artillery-for-artillery, Ukraine increasingly relied on agility, intelligence sharing, decentralized operations, and especially drone warfare. Much like David refusing traditional hand-to-hand combat against Goliath, Ukraine recognized that fighting Russia conventionally on Russia’s terms would likely end in defeat.

Cheap, highly mobile drones became one of Ukraine’s most important equalizers. Small commercial drones, many costing only hundreds or thousands of dollars, were modified to conduct reconnaissance, artillery targeting, surveillance, and direct attacks. Instead of relying solely on expensive traditional aircraft, Ukrainian forces weaponized drones to strike Russian tanks, supply convoys, trenches, command centers, and even naval assets.

This created a dramatic imbalance in cost versus damage. A drone worth a few thousand dollars could destroy armored vehicles worth millions. In some cases, inexpensive first-person-view (FPV) drones carrying explosives were capable of hunting tanks and troop positions with precision. The psychological impact was equally significant. Russian soldiers often faced constant aerial surveillance, never knowing when a small drone might suddenly appear overhead.

Ukraine also demonstrated innovation and speed that larger military systems sometimes struggle to match. Civilian engineers, volunteers, and technology groups rapidly modified commercially available drone systems for battlefield use.

Software updates, targeting improvements, and tactical adaptations happened in weeks rather than years. This flexibility mirrors the central lesson of David and Goliath: smaller forces can survive and even succeed when they exploit mobility, creativity, and unconventional tactics against a stronger opponent locked into traditional methods.

The conflict also revealed how warfare itself is changing. Historically, military dominance depended heavily on large industrial capabilities such as tanks, aircraft carriers, and massive troop formations.

While those assets still matter, drone warfare has introduced a new kind of asymmetrical combat where relatively inexpensive technology can neutralize vastly more expensive systems. A billion-dollar warship or advanced tank can suddenly become vulnerable to swarms of low-cost unmanned systems operated by smaller teams.

In many ways, Ukraine’s drone strategy resembles David’s sling. The sling was not impressive in appearance compared to Goliath’s armor and weapons, yet it allowed David to attack from distance, remain mobile, and exploit weaknesses that conventional fighters could not.

Likewise, drones allow Ukraine to strike Russian forces from positions and angles that traditional combat methods cannot always achieve. The battlefield changes when the weaker side refuses to fight according to old expectations.

The broader lesson is that modern conflicts increasingly reward adaptability over sheer size. Military power still matters, but innovation, speed, decentralized decision-making, and technological creativity can allow smaller forces to challenge much larger opponents.

Ukraine’s use of drones demonstrates that in modern warfare, as in the story of David and Goliath, the side willing to rethink the rules of battle can often level the playing field against a seemingly superior enemy.

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You have to be kidding, right!?!

Something to cheer you up a bit. Grumpy

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A Victory!

And the world changed

When Boris Yeltsin went grocery shopping in Clear Lake

In September 1989, Russian president Boris Yeltsin and a handful of Soviet companions made an unscheduled 20-minute visit to a Randall's Supermarket after touring the Johnson Space Center.See more photos of the foreign leader in an American grocery store...
© Houston Chronicle

In 1989 Russian president Boris Yeltsin’s wide-eyed trip to a Clear Lake grocery store led to the downfall of communism.

It was Sept. 16, 1989, and Yeltsin, then newly-elected to the new Soviet parliament and the Supreme Soviet, had just visited Johnson Space Center.

At JSC, Yeltsin visited mission control and a mock-up of a space station. According to Houston Chronicle reporter Stefanie Asin, it wasn’t all the screens, dials, and wonder at NASA that blew up his skirt, it was the unscheduled trip inside a nearby Randall’s location.

Yeltsin, then 58, “roamed the aisles of Randall’s nodding his head in amazement,” wrote Asin. He told his fellow Russians in his entourage that if their people, who often must wait in line for most goods, saw the conditions of U.S. supermarkets, “there would be a revolution.”

Shoppers and employees stopped him to shake his hand and say hello. In 1989, not everyone was carrying a smart phone in their pocket so Yeltsin “selfies” weren’t a thing yet.

Yeltsin asked customers about what they were buying and how much it cost, later asking the store manager if one needed a special education to manage a store. In the Chronicle photos, you can see him marveling at the produce section, the fresh fish market, and the checkout counter. He looked especially excited about frozen pudding pops.

“Even the Politburo doesn’t have this choice. Not even Mr. Gorbachev,” he said. When he was told through his interpreter that there were thousands of items in the store for sale he didn’t believe it. He had even thought that the store was staged, a show for him. Little did he know there countless stores just like it all over the country, some with even more things than the Randall’s he visited.

The fact that stores like these were on nearly every street corner in America amazed him. They even offered him free cheese samples.

By contrast, this is what a Russian grocery store looked like at the same time.

According to Asin, Yeltsin didn’t leave empty-handed, as he was given a small bag of goodies to enjoy on the rest of his trip.

About a year after the Russian leader left office, a Yeltsin biographer later wrote that on the plane ride to Yeltsin’s next destination, Miami, he was despondent. He couldn’t stop thinking about the plentiful food at the grocery store and what his countrymen had to subsist on in Russia.

In Yeltsin’s own autobiography, he wrote about the experience at Randall’s, which shattered his view of communism, according to pundits. Two years later, he left the Communist Party and began making reforms to turn the economic tide in Russia.

Maybe you can blame those frozen Jell-O Pudding pops he’s seen marveling in those Chronicle photos.

“When I saw those shelves crammed with hundreds, thousands of cans, cartons and goods of every possible sort, for the first time I felt quite frankly sick with despair for the Soviet people,” Yeltsin wrote. “That such a potentially super-rich country as ours has been brought to a state of such poverty! It is terrible to think of it.”

The leader himself stepped down on the last day of 1999 after years of trying to bring a new system to Russia. The cronyism in place only managed to stifle Yeltsin’s dream for his country. Corruption and perceived incompetence plague his final years in office. Leaving the Kremlin voluntarily is said to have kept him from criminal prosecution.

His successor was Prime Minister Vladimir Putin took over as acting president. Putin had been an aide to Yeltsin in the years previous.

Yeltsin died in 2007 at the age of 76.

The Randall’s he visited, just off El Dorado Boulevard and Highway 3, is now a Food Town location.

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