Feral Jundi

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Industry Talk: Privatizing Airport Security

“Again, it’s because you can fire a bad contractor, but you can’t fire the government. I think TSA stands for Thousands Standing Around.” -John Stossel

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   This is a no brainer coming from our side of the house, and I salute John Stossel for calling it the way he sees it. I brought up three interesting informational pieces on airport security, and the reasoning behind going the private route.  For one, it works, and number two, it is what the Israelis do.

   I know, I know, we have a much larger airport system in America than the Israelis do.  But we must look hard at what we are doing, versus what others are doing, and ‘build a snowmobile’ out of the thing.  Privatizing airport security is just one component of the strategy, and using what we can from the Israeli and European models is essential. By the way, I love the quote that Stossel put together up top. lol-Matt

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O’Reilly Tonight: Privatize the TSA

By John Stossel

January 5, 2010

I’ll go on O’Reilly tonight to talk about the ridiculous new flight rules from the TSA .

Before my last flight, right after Christmas, security officials patted me down. I was wearing shorts. But they patted down my bare legs. There is a lot of “security” that seems pointless. Jet Blue told us that TSA had ordered them to keep all TV’s off for the whole flight. Everyone had to stay seated for an hour before takeoff — without blankets, pillows or personal belongings on their laps. And so on—you’ve heard about the new rules.

Those rules might help stop a terrorist if he did the exact same thing that Abdulmutallab attempted on Christmas. In reality, I suspect the rules will do nothing but inconvenience millions.

TSA should not exist. Before 9/11, screening was private — private companies, working for government, did the screening. They weren’t very sophisticated, but they did the job. The small knives the hijackers used were not violations of government rules. Neither were unlocked cockpit doors.

(more…)

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Cool Stuff: Slinging.org

Filed under: Cool Stuff,Weapons — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 9:14 PM

   This is a fun one, and thanks to Doug for sending me this.  I guess the one thing that is cool about slings, is that you could potentially use a sling as a less than lethal option for crowd control.  Thats all depending on the type of projectile you use. (please note the Israeli using the sling below).  Or if you are bored at some outpost and want something to do on your downtime, build a sling out of paracord and see if you can hit a tin can with it.  It’s cheap fun, but it is also cool to get a feel for how this weapon could have been used back when it was a weapon of war.  With the right projectile and some skill, a sling can certainly be deadly. –Matt

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An Israeli soldier uses a sling shot to stone demonstrators and workers dismantling the area in front of the Fatima Gate on the Israeli-Lebanese border, at Kfarkila, southern Lebanon, Tuesday Oct. 10, 2000. The area was liberated after the Israeli’s troops withdrew from southern Lebanon in May.

Welcome to Slinging.org!

When I first became interested in this fascinating weapon, I could find little information on the web or in published material. I hope this website can be the definitive source for slinging related information and news. Of course, it needs a community of slingers to experiment and pass on their knowledge. With your help, I hope we can rekindle the interest in this truly simple, effective, and historically significant weapon.

Sling Ranges

The range of the sling has always been a point of contention among enthusiasts and scholars. Present literature generally underestimates the sling’s range. Consider this snippet of text from Thom Richardson’s “The Ballistics of The Sling”, which provides an overview of some of these statistics:

“The more conservative estimates are around the 200 m mark (Ferrill 1985: 25), Connolly suggests 350 m (1981: 49), Korfmann estimates 400 m (1973: 37) while Demmin and Hogg go to 500 m (1893: 876; 1968: 30). The few accurately recorded observations are rather different. Reid records 55 m with a 227 g stone, and 91 m with 85 and 113 g balls (1976: 21). Burgess threw stones with his reconstructed Lahun sling between 50 and 100 yds, but admits to being unskilled at the art (1958: 230). Korfmann observed Turkish shepherds sling ordinary pebbles, ‘in 5 out of 11 trials the pebbles reached 200 m, and the three best casts were between 230 and 240 m (1973), while Dohrenwend has himself thrown beach pebbles over 200 yds (1994: 86).”

Since many of these statistics are formulated from authors’ experiences, the ranges that are creeping into literature, and becoming the standard, might not be representative of the true potential of the sling. The sling is a demanding weapon; range varies considerably from amateur to expert. Below is a table documenting the varied ranges of some members on slinging.org’s forum. It’s also important to consider the projectiles used in the test. A stone or softball will not perform as well as a biconical lead projectile, like those often used in antiquity.

For comparison, the current World Flight record for a “historically accurate” English longbow and horn/sinew composite bow is 306m and 566m respectively. It should be noted, however, that these ranges were achieved using light-weight flight arrows designed for range, and not for combat.

Website here.

5-Strand Woven Paracord Sling Tutorial

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

News: Palestinian Bulldozer Driver Goes on Deadly Jerusalem Rampage

Filed under: Israel,News — Tags: , , — Matt @ 12:21 PM

Palestinian Bulldozer Driver Goes on Deadly Jerusalem Rampage

By Jim Teeple, Jerusalem, 02 July 2008

At least four people were killed and about 40 others injured when a Palestinian bulldozer driver went on a deadly rampage in downtown Jerusalem. The man was killed by an off-duty soldier and police say the incident was a terrorist attack. VOA’s Jim Teeple reports from Jerusalem.

Witnesses reported a scene of chaos and panic as the bulldozer plowed over cars, knocked over a city bus and damaged buildings on busy Jaffa Road near the city’s main bus station.

The driver was shot by an off-duty soldier, one of several people who climbed onto the bulldozer in an effort to stop the rampage. Police spokesman Mickey Rosenfeld told VOA the incident was clearly a terrorist attack and the bulldozer driver was heading for Jerusalem’s main food market.

“Police officers arrived on the scene and attempted to stop the killings,” he said. “We clearly understood that it was a terrorist attack by the way that he continued to try and make his way to the market, and therefore it was critical to stop him from continuing in the direction of the market.”

Rosenfeld says the man driving the bulldozer was a Palestinian with an East Jerusalem identity card. The area where the incident took place is a construction site with a new light rail system and road widening projects under way. Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem have access to Jewish West Jerusalem and carry out nearly all construction work in the city.

This was the second terrorist attack this year. In March, an East Jerusalem man attacked a Jewish seminary killing eight students. Rosenfeld says just like that attack there was no prior warning.

“There were no specific warnings that an attack was going to take place, but immediately after this incident the security level was heightened, both in Jerusalem and in other cities,” he said.

Hamas and Islamic Jihad militants who have carried out many terrorist attacks inside Israel said they were not responsible for the bulldozer incident and police say they are trying to determine if the man acted by himself.”

The attack took place as a truce between Israel and Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip enters its second week.

On Wednesday Israel reopened cargo crossing points into Gaza.

Meanwhile, hundreds of Palestinians tried, but failed, to break through the Gaza crossing point between Egypt and Gaza. The crowd surged past Hamas guards at the border, but was beaten back by Egyptian troops who used water cannons to disperse the Palestinians.

Egypt says it will open the crossing once Hamas and other Palestinian militants agree to go along with an Egyptian mediated prisoner swap between Israel and Hamas that would free an Israeli soldier in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian militants.

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Here is a video of the attack.  

Video 1

And here is the video of the savage eating the bullet.  

Video 2

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He Cried Allah Akhbar and Hit the Gas’ 

The Jerusalem Post 

July 2, 2008 | Yaakov Katz

Posted on Wed Jul 2 08:41:26 2008 by Cecily

Moshe Plesser, the off-duty soldier who shot and killed the terrorist on Wednesday, was riding his bike down Jaffa Road when he spotted the overturned bus and a massive bulldozer tearing through the streets of Jerusalem.

Understanding that the Arab driver behind the wheel was in the midst of a terror rampage, Plesser, on a furlough from the Golani Brigade’s elite Egoz unit, threw his bike to the side of the road and began chasing after the bulldozer.

Speaking with reporters several hours after the attack, Plesser recalled the sequence of events that led to his courageous action on Wednesday. He is the brother-in-law of Capt. David Shapira, the IDF officer who stormed the Mercaz Harav Yeshiva in March and killed the Arab terrorist who had massacred eight students in the religious seminary.

As he began running towards the bulldozer, Plesser said that he shouted out to onlookers for a gun. Together with another civilian, Plesser climbed aboard the bulldozer and began wrestling with the driver.

 

“At one point he [the driver] yelled out “Allah Akhbar” [God is great] and stepped on the gas pedal,” Plesser recalled. “I drew the weapon of the civilian who was with me and shot the driver three times in the head. I think I did what is expected from every soldier and citizen.”

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