
From the film Tremors Grumpy

From the film Tremors Grumpy
The space shuttle was 4.48 million pounds of unfiltered awesome. This 122-foot hybrid space plane could boost more than 60,000 pounds into low Earth orbit. Sporting an aggregate thrust of 7.1 million pounds at liftoff, this mechanical marvel was, at the time of its introduction, the most complex contrivance ever built by man. I would assert that it was perhaps 3% as complicated as the human female, but it was nonetheless quite the rarefied piece of work.
My buddy Bob and I shared a fairly arboreal upbringing. Like me, Bob was a product of the Mississippi Delta. I endured mechanical engineering school with him back in the 1980’s. That guy was brilliant and had remarkably refined wit.
I headed off for the Army after graduation. Bob stuck around to get a master’s degree in materials science. After successfully defending his thesis, Bob took a job with Lockheed Martin and moved to Cape Canaveral to work on the space shuttle. Lots of folks talk about being a rocket scientist. Bob actually did something about it.
A point of personal privilege concerning Mississippi — after living all over the world, I invested quite a lot of effort in getting back here.
To the tolerant, enlightened population of both esteemed coasts, Mississippi is the nation’s dimwitted inbred third cousin. Geopolitically, we are the family member who is forever getting locked away in the basement when company comes over. Much of the nation views us as a bit of an embarrassment. To the elites we are politically, culturally, and intellectually irrelevant. Nothing good could come out of such an unenlightened backwater dump.
Well, the world does have us to thank for Blue Suede Shoes, The Sound and the Fury, FedEx, Darth Vader’s dulcet baritone, and Kermit the Frog. Elvis Presley, William Faulkner, and Jim Henson were well-known favorite sons. Britney Spears, Oprah Winfrey, and Faith Hill ably represent the fairer sex. Walter Payton, Jerry Rice, Brett Favre, and at least a couple of Mannings were pretty decent football players. Ever heard of anybody having a heart or lung transplant? Dr. James Hardy performed the first ones in the early 1960’s at the medical school I attended in Jackson.
To my friends in such rarefied locales as New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago, I would like to offer a humble entreaty. Don’t presume that folks are dumber than are you simply because they didn’t grow up in some big ghastly city.
My alma mater of Ole Miss has produced 32 Rhodes Scholars. By comparison, Cornell has had 31, Georgetown 25, Johns Hopkins 21, and Rice 12. Georgia Tech and NYU made six apiece. Get over yourselves. Now, back to the space shuttle.
One fine day Bob and two compatriots were called upon to troubleshoot something onboard the space shuttle Atlantis. I have myself never darkened the door of a space shuttle. However, I’m told there are crawlspaces aplenty. Bob was in the lead traversing some tight space with his buddies close behind when disaster struck. With little preamble he proceeded to pass gas with exceptional vigor.
We act like farting is this horrible unforgivable thing. Everybody farts, even cheerleaders, movie stars, pastors, politicians, and supermodels. Trust me, I’m a doctor. We’re all honestly pretty nasty on the inside.
The other two engineers responded predictably. Taking a face full of flatulence under any circumstance is decidedly unpleasant. The same exercise while crammed into a tiny crawlspace all the more so. They coughed and moaned in a manner that bordered upon unseemly. They vehemently castigated Bob for his synergistic deficits in couth, self-control, and breeding. For his part, Bob later related that he found the whole sordid affair surprisingly affirming.
In his own words, “There I was, an unwashed redneck from Mississippi, and I just farted in the space shuttle. I’ve known a lot of smart people, and I’ve yet to meet anybody else who could reliably claim that they had ever farted in the space shuttle.”
Bob’s logic was indeed unassailable. If ever there was need for a metric to determine one’s degree of academic and intellectual success, I should think that designing and servicing spacecraft would be right up there at the top. Stupid people simply need not apply. As an only marginally-reconstructed unwashed redneck myself, I proudly claim kinship with my buddy Bob. The fact that his accomplishment also involved copious intestinal gas just seems to somehow lend an odor of irony to the assessment.
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SPRINGFIELD, Ill. —The Illinois House passed a bill early Friday that would ban assault weapons statewide.
It came six months after the deadly mass shooting at Highland Park’s Fourth of July Parade. The House voted around 12:50 a.m. Gov. JB Pritzker was present for the entire debate and expressed confidence that the bill would reach his desk.
The Protect Illinois Communities Act outlaws the manufacture, sale, delivery and purchase of assault weapons — as well as magazines that hold 12 or more rounds.
Current owners of legally purchased weapons would have to register them with the state within 300 days.
For now, the minimum age to get a Firearms Owner ID card will remain at 18 and require parental approval.
Pritzker released the following statement after the bill was passed:
For months lawmakers and advocates have been hard at work negotiating two very critical pieces of legislation to keep Illinoisans safe. Tonight, with the leadership and support of Speaker Welch, the Illinois House passed critical reproductive health protections and an assault weapons ban. The people of Illinois send us to Springfield to tackle tough issues and these bills are historic steps in the right direction. I look forward to working with our colleagues in the Illinois Senate to get bills addressing these issues to my desk so I can sign them as soon as possible.
I’d like to thank Rep. Cassidy for her tireless work to protect reproductive healthcare and Rep. Morgan for his work to get weapons of war off our streets.
GOVERNOR JB PRITZKER
The bill now heads to the Illinois Senate.
Also passed was a bill that would strengthen reproductive rights and gender affirming care in Illinois.
(The Center Square) – On July 1, 2022, California Penal Code section 31910 was revised. The change required semiautomatic pistols sold in California to have microstamping technology. A microstamp acts like a fingerprint in identifying ammunition cartridges and the gun from which it
Anew era of gun sales is taking effect in California.
On July 1, 2022, California Penal Code section 31910 was revised. The change required semiautomatic pistols sold in California to have microstamping technology.
A microstamp acts like a fingerprint in identifying ammunition cartridges and the gun from which it was fired. The firing pin imposes an identifying stamp on the round’s primer as it’s discharged.
The revision now only requires one microstamp in the interior of the handgun instead of two. Supporters hoped that this change in the penal code would encourage manufacturers to employ the technology in their firearm products.
Attorney General Rob Bonta, along with the California Department of Justice, is proposing an additional rule to bolster the use of microstamping. The new rule proposes that the unique microstamp of every handgun in California be kept as a record with the Department of Justice to identify firearms used in criminal activity.
A statement released by the California Department of Justice addressed to “Firearm manufacturers and Interested Parties,” invites comments on specific questions “in developing new regulations to achieve the law’s objectives in the most effective manner.”
The department does not ask whether the rule should be made but rather poses questions on procedure once it is implemented. They invite input on questions such as:
Who is best suited to provide the microstamp to the DOJ?When should the microstamp be provided to the DOJ?How should the microstamp be provided to the DOJ?If a microstamp part needs to be replaced, should the regulated replacement part have the same microstamp as the original?
The department will accept comments from interested parties until 5:00 p.m. on Feb. 1, 2023.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the number of firearms manufactured in the U.S. has tripled since 2000. Fueling this years-long gun-buying bonanza has been rising demand for handguns. In 2009, semi-automatic handguns began outselling hunting rifles, underscoring a consumer shift toward guns typically used for personal protection. (This is how many guns people bought in each state so far this year.)
A civilian-firearms market the size of the United States means buyers have a wide selection of revolvers and pistols to choose from. How much punch a handgun delivers is typically measured by the pressure on the bullet the moment the firing pin ignites the powder, measured in the U.S. by pounds per square inch (psi), and the velocity of the bullet as it leaves the muzzle, measured by feet per second.
But gauging the power of a handgun isn’t simply a matter of how much explosive pressure is put on the bullet, or even of the bullet type. Some popular handguns for personal protection have lower pressure than other guns but deliver faster muzzle velocity. For example, the Ruger Wrangler single action revolver using .22 LR ammunition has relatively low chamber pressure of 24,000 psi but its muzzle velocity is 41% faster than that of a Ruger LCP semi-automatic pistol firing a .380 bullet with a chamber pressure of 62,000 psi.
To compile a ranking of high-velocity handguns, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed a list of some of the most popular handguns in the U.S. as of July 2022 published by American Firearms, a firearms information site. We considered muzzle velocity – the starting speed of the bullet after the gunpowder has been ignited – as the primary criterion for our ranking. Recommended ammunition and price come from American Firearms and from other online sources. (Compare our list with our roster of the 50 most popular guns in the world.)
Click here to see the world’s 25 highest-velocity handguns.
Among the 25 handguns on this list, prices vary widely, from a Sig Sauer P266 for about $2,500 to a Heritage Rough Rider single-action revolver, which can be found for around $100. The most powerful one of all ranked here, the Ruger GP100 double-action revolver – which boasts a muzzle velocity of 1,525 feet per second – sells for about $950.
25. Smith and Wesson Shield
> Velocity: 600 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: .40 S&W
> Pressure: 35,000 psi
> Price: $499
24. Smith and Wesson 442
> Velocity: 830 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: .38 Special +P
> Pressure: 21,756 psi
> Price: $422
23. Ruger LCP
> Velocity: 891 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 0.38
> Pressure: 62,000 psi
> Price: $319
22. Glock 48
> Velocity: 1000 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $381
21. Ruger Mark IV 22/45
> Velocity: 1032 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: .22 LR
> Pressure: 24,000 psi
> Price: $346
20. Sig Sauer P365
> Velocity: 1050 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $500
19. Heckler and Koch VP9
> Velocity: 1051 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $584
18. Taurus G2c
> Velocity: 1052 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $210
17. Sccy Cpx-2
> Velocity: 1060 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $172
16. Kimber Micro 9
> Velocity: 1,079 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $486
15. Taurus Gx4
> Velocity: 1,100 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $245
14. Springfield Armory Hellcat
> Velocity: 1,123 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $587
13. Glock 43
> Velocity: 1,168 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $469
12. Springfield XD
> Velocity: 1,173 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: .45 ACP
> Pressure: 21,000 psi
> Price: $469
11. Sig Sauer P226
> Velocity: 1,180 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $2548
10. CZ 75B
> Velocity: 1,180 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $1615
9. Sig Sauer P320
> Velocity: 1,198 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $529
8. Kel-Tec PMR-30
> Velocity: 1,200 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: .22 WMR
> Pressure: 24,000 psi
> Price: $381
7. Heritage Rough Rider
> Velocity: 1,225 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 22 LR
> Pressure: 24,000 psi
> Price: $97
6. Glock 45
> Velocity: 1,225 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $569
5. Glock 17
> Velocity: 1,230 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $620
4. ATI GSG 1911
> Velocity: 1,250 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: .22 LR
> Pressure: 24,000 psi
> Price: $269
3. Ruger Wrangler
> Velocity: 1,255 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: .22 LR
> Pressure: 24,000 psi
> Price: $145
2. Glock 19
> Velocity: 1,500 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: 9mm
> Pressure: 34,084 psi
> Price: $560
1. Ruger GP100
> Velocity: 1,525 ft/s
> Recommended ammunition: .357 magnum
> Pressure: 43,551 psi
> Price: $949
(I sure would like to know where in the Hell does he get these prices! Grumpy)