Month: March 2022

Bye Bye CSGV

The Coalition to Stop Gun Violence (sic) has announced it is winding down operations. It will be merging its sister organization Educational Fund to Stop Gun Violence (sic) with Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Prevention. The new organization will be called the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions.

CSGV Winding Down Operations – (onlygunsandmoney.com)

With John Hopkins involved in the “merge” I am going to say they were absorbed/assimilated by Bloomberg and Co. If anything, their fanatical hate towards gun owners and freedoms was more than enough examples of why we own guns.

CSGV may be leaving but I still have my commemorative patch!

Same here!

Site Issue

This is a heads up that the site might be a little bit wonky today.  A reader brought a security alert to our attention and we are doing some security work on the site.  During this time there might be situations where the site “doesn’t look right” or it is unresponsive.

We will be back live with updates from J.Kb and Miguel shortly.

This is how Mengeles happen

Wake Forest medical student suggests she stuck patient twice with needle after he called out her pronoun pin

A fourth-year medical student at Wake Forest University in North Carolina bragged on Twitter about purposely missing a vein while drawing blood because a patient asked about her pronoun pin.

“I had a patient I was doing a blood draw on see my pronoun pin and loudly laugh to the staff ‘She/Her? Well of course it is! What other pronouns even are there? It?'” K. Del, or Kychelle Del Rosario, a fourth-year medical student at Wake Forest School of Medicine, tweeted, according to The Post Millennial.

“I missed his vein so he had to get stuck twice,” she said. Del Rosario has since deleted her account.

 

An untermenschen disagreed with her politics and virtue signaling so she used her authority as a medical practitioner to physically abuse her patient.

Give these people the opportunity to cause pain and suffering in those they disagree with and they will.

 

The concept of Backups in every day life.

I think many readers are about the same as me when it comes to backups: It is not only guns, knives and first aid, but also things we use every day. From pens and notebooks to handkerchiefs to whatever small tool or artifact you need to carry your everyday duties at work.

As silly as it may seem, many people do not understand the idea of having a backup, even though they have experienced the problems of suddenly being without that object that is common but needed in the performance of their duties.

One of the hard lessons I learned is that you cannot be generous. More than once, I have helped a coworker with his loss by lending him my backup, only to never see it again or get remunerated for it. Add insult to injury when the same person comes to you later asking for another back up and you have to do your best to smile and say you are fresh out when in reality you want to comment on the possibility that his birth doctor dropped him half a dozen times on his head immediately after delivery.

So, my advice for the day is: Have backups & don’t tell anyone.