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Today: 64 articles and 88 comments as of 2:01.
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Area: WoT Operations    WoT Background    Non-WoT        Politix   
Suspected Jihadists Attack Cash Truck in Burkina Faso
Today's Headlines
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Page 4: Opinion
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Page 6: Politix
8 21:36 Jack Salami [1]
-Land of the Free
Concealed Carry and Home Defense: 6 Home Defense Carbines, 5 are NOT AR's
[The Daily Caller] First things first: Shotguns are devastatingly powerful. Nothing can compare to the 12 gauge at close range. Even birdshot, which is still one mass of moving lead at close range, will tear a human to shreds.

In my battery I have a Remington 870 and a bandoleer of slugs and buck ready to go for when the SHTF. You don’t lose much with a 20 gauge at close range either, and you gain some agility with a smaller gun, and more family members are likely to respond better to the 20.

The second point I’d like to make is on handguns for home defense: Shoot the biggest cartridge you can handle. That means a .40 S&W, a .45 ACP or a .357 magnum. Ask a doctor in an urban area where shootings are common and you will find these result in the most one-shot kills.

A 9mm? Well, if that’s what you have, use it, but they just can’t compare to the bigger rounds. I’m not a caliber snob myself, but face it: Bigger is better if you can handle the gun. And again, I’m not talking about concealed carry which can dictate a smaller round because you just can’t carry a larger gun at times, but I’m talking about guarding the homestead and your bedside piece.

But what is the best home defense gun? A rifle carbine.
Posted by: Besoeker || 11/30/2015 01:32 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:


Africa Subsaharan
Matome Letsoalo article on tribalism
[news24] BLUF: As much as we can admit the involvement and influence of external sources in African ethnic conflicts, at the end of it all, it is the locals themselves who choose to take up arms against their fellow brothers for whatever end. I believe any culture which doesn't teach its devotees to respect and live in harmony with others should be detested, no matter what race or how powerful it may be.
Matuma Letsoalo is a senior politics reporter at the Mail & Guardian. He joined the newspaper in 2003, focussing on politics and labour, and collaborated with the M&G's centre for investigations, amaBhungane, from time to time. In 2011, Matuma won the South African Journalist of the Year Award and was also the winner in the investigative journalism category in the same year. In 2004, he won the CNN African Journalist of the Year prize – the MKO Abiola Print Journalism Award. Matuma was also a joint category winner of the Mondi Shanduka SA Story of the year Award in 2008. In 2013, he was a finalist for Wits University's Taco Kuiper Award.

Link
Posted by: Besoeker || 11/30/2015 01:57 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I believe any culture which doesn't teach its devotees to respect and live in harmony with others should be detested, no matter what race or how powerful it may be.

Aside from the obligatory reference to 'external sources,' perhaps the term of reference the author is alluding to is the 'Rule of Law.' In any case, Letsoalo's astute observations reach far beyond his homeland.
Posted by: Besoeker || 11/30/2015 2:13 Comments || Top||

#2  IMO, tribalism is genetic, not cultural.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 11/30/2015 3:13 Comments || Top||

#3  Tribalism is the default setting for human organizations. It is right in there with "Grinding Poverty" as part of the default setting for the human condition.

See Heinlein for definition of "Bad Luck" as to why we still see so much of it.
Posted by: Nguard || 11/30/2015 4:02 Comments || Top||

#4  I used to think Grinding Poverty was the county-seat of Homes County Mississippi, since so many people in the area lived in it.
Posted by: Shipman || 11/30/2015 16:25 Comments || Top||


Economy
Lifting Champ's Oil Export ban will Create 300k Jobs And $38 Billion
[Daily Caller] Lifting the oil export ban will create hundreds of thousands of new jobs and billions of dollars according a Friday article by Heritage Foundation economist Nicolas Loris.

"Lifting the ban would generate more jobs for Americans, supply the United States and the world with more affordable energy and provide important geopolitical benefits for Washington and its allies. Unfortunately, some politicians want to hold this common-sense measure hostage until they get funding for their pet projects." Loris says, and concludes that "[t]he decision to export crude oil should be decided by those who produce and sell the oil, not by Washington bureaucrats."

Presently, selling American crude oil to other countries is illegal, despite the best efforts of House Republicans who voted to lift the ban in October. The Senate is preparing to act to lift the ban, but President Barack Obama has threatened to veto any attempt to do so.

Exporting oil will boost U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) by $38 billion, reduce the trade deficit by $22 billion and add 300,000 new jobs by 2020, according to studies cited by Loris.
Posted by: Besoeker || 11/30/2015 06:44 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Must be a tough call for Champ. Selling off our oil means we have less and helps keep the price down for poor undeveloped countries - like Kenya. On the other hand, it keeps the price low, which is bad for his oil-producing buddies. But it would reduce unemployment. But that reduces government dependence, which is a good thing.

Good thing he has ValJar to point him in the right direction - this is sooooo confusing!
Posted by: Bobby || 11/30/2015 7:57 Comments || Top||

#2  Champ's export ban? Here I thought that was something that popped up well before the man was even around. IIRC that the deal for the Alaskan oil pipeline banned export of that crude. Then the '73 oil crisis did it's thing to the process.

If there's anything at is subject to vagaries of the market, oil certainly is one. I'm sure the quick buck artists are desperate to dump on the international market at our long term expense.

Right now we're sitting on a self sufficiency as the world is going mad. Better to look long term for our security.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 11/30/2015 8:56 Comments || Top||

#3  P2k, 1973 was bathed in the Cold War and the Middle East's proxy standing.

Sorta something like what's going on now.


Oh, don't forget the Graft Potential.
Posted by: AlanC || 11/30/2015 11:54 Comments || Top||

#4  The last time I checked the numbers the US is importing somewhere between 44 and 48% of the oil used here.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain || 11/30/2015 12:40 Comments || Top||

#5  more exports would tend to support the argument for more of those anti-enviro friendly pipelines or more of those really icky exploding trains that just won 3 more years to install PTC....
how would this play to bammie's eco-legacy?
Posted by: USN, Ret. || 11/30/2015 15:09 Comments || Top||

#6  Snowy how much of the imported is for domestic use as opposed to ruining thru a refinery and exporting it? Still freaks me out that the U.S. Is the largest exporter of fuel in the world (don't know if that is net or gross).
Posted by: Shipman || 11/30/2015 16:34 Comments || Top||

#7  Ship: the EIA says that refined products exports mean the net imports are lower, and it's only about 27 %, but that's for 2014. I think it'll be lower this year.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain || 11/30/2015 20:59 Comments || Top||

#8  BRB gotta install El Capitan. Ugh.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain || 11/30/2015 20:59 Comments || Top||


Europe
Bracken: Tet, Take Two – Islam's 2016 European Offensive
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 11/30/2015 12:22 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This essay came up this morning on Western Rifle Shooters Association website. It is now up on Gates of Vienna and is being translated into other languages. Bracken sends a chilling but very realistic scenario as to what he sees Islam doing, especially in Europe in 2016.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 11/30/2015 12:26 Comments || Top||

#2  excellent post
Posted by: 746 || 11/30/2015 15:54 Comments || Top||

#3  Now, if Bracken turns out to be prophetic how can this be dispersed and revisited as 2016 continues

I'm afraid that this will be like Sports predictions that disappear and are never revisited showing their inanity or worth.
Posted by: AlanC || 11/30/2015 17:11 Comments || Top||

#4  I will observe and post on the burg, AlanC.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 11/30/2015 17:40 Comments || Top||


The Grand Turk
In the eye of the storm
[DAWN] Istanbul was calm, normal towards the end of last week as I spent 24 hours there while in transit. But reading local English-language newspapers another realisation hit home: how drastically The Sick Man of Europe Turkey
...the only place on the face of the earth that misses the Ottoman Empire....
may have changed from the country of Mustafa Kemal Pasha's vision.

Mustafa Kemal, Ataturk (father of the Turks), visualised a democratic, secular society embracing modern values, Western attire and even the Roman script. He rose to power after the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in the First World War and believed the religion of Islam will be "elevated if it ceased being a political instrument" like it was in the past.

Today, some 90 years on, Turkey seems split down the middle among Islamists such as President Erdogan whose party is in power, and the fragmented secularists who failed to win a majority in the recent parliamentary elections.

Erdogan's critics believe he cynically manipulated the election result by provoking a confrontation with traditional Kurdish adversaries in its run-up and was able to galvanise support for his own party by spreading fear of what would happen if the other side won.

Whether this criticism is valid or not is for another day. What is clear is that Turkish society is divided into those who believe Erdogan offers a solution for all that is wrong with the country, and those who feel appalled that he is altering Ataturk's Turkey beyond recognition.

What happened at a football match over the past week, following the Gay Paree carnage carried out by the Death Eater Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
group, was utterly shocking. During a minute's silence to honour the memory of the Gay Paree victims, a section of the crowd raised 'Allah-o-Akbar' slogans.

This left many Turkish media commentators distressed. However,
a poor excuse is better than no excuse at all...
one of them pointed out in a column that it reflected what many have known in Turkey: that about a 10th of the country is sympathetic towards IS and supports it.

It seemed like yesterday Turkey was steaming towards membership of the European Union
...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing...
, working hard at goals such as economic criteria and at bettering its human rights
...which are usually open to widely divergent definitions...
record. It was seen as an economic powerhouse knocking at EU's door. It seemed to be swallowing the bitter pill of making concessions to the Kurds.

But despite all its incredible hard work and the aspirations of not just its secular population, but also Islamist leaders such as Erdogan, as it approached the point where its request could be considered Ankara was blackballed by La Belle France's then right-wing president Nicolas Sarkozy
...23rd President of the French Republic. Sarkozy is married to singer-songwriter Carla Bruni, who has a really nice birthday suit...
. His reasons seemed less about economic and political concerns and more about the faith of a majority of Turks.
Posted by: Fred || 11/30/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: WoT
This Week in Books
The Holy War for Constantinople and The Clash of Islam and The West
Roger Crowley
Hachette Books, reprint, 2006
Hyperion, 2005
First, apologies for the inconsistent posting - busy time of year.
I'm sure the importance of the Bosphorus is well known to Rantburgers as the access from The Black Sea and The White Sea (Mediterranean) as well as The Middle East and Europe.

Before getting too far into this moment of history, it must be remarked, as Roger Crowley does, considering the sacking of Constantinople during The Fourth Crusade and the eventual transformation of Constantinople into the capital of the Ottoman Caliphate, that much of the information quoted is from second hand and/or spurious accounts. The players in this moment of history just really do not like each other, so one side's account of another can be skewed at the least.

And just who is involved can be best summarized in the prologue (page 6-7):

Modern nationalists have interpreted the siege of Constantinople as a struggle between Greek and Turkish peoples, but such simplifications are misleading. Neither side would have readily accepted or even understood these labels, though each used them of the other. The Ottomans, literally the tribe of Osmen, called themselves just that, or simply Muslims. "Turk" was a largely pejorative term applied by the nation states of the West, the name "Turkey" unknown to them until borrowed from Europe to create the new Republic in 1923. The Ottoman Empire in 1453 was already a multicultural creation that sucked in the peoples it conquered with little concern for ethnic identity. Its crack troops were Slavs, its leading general Greek, its admiral Bulgarian, its sultan probably half Serbian or Macedonian. Furthermore under the complex code of medieval vassalage, thousands of Christian troops accompanied him down the road from Edirne. The had come to conquer the Greek-speaking inhabitants of Constantinople, whom we now call the Byzantines, a word first used in English in 1853, exactly four hundred years after the great siege. They were considered to be heirs to the Roman Empire and referred to themselves accordingly as Romans. In turn they were commanded by an emperor who was half Serbian and a quarter Italian, and much of the defense undertaken by people from Western Europe whom the Byzantines call "Franks": Venetians, Genoese, and Catalans, aided by some ethnic Turks, Cretans - and one Scotsman. If it is difficult to fix simple identities or loyalties to the participants at the siege, there was one dimension of the struggle that all the contemporary chroniclers never forget - that of faith. The Muslims referred to their adversary as "the despicable infidels," "the wretched unbelievers," "the enemies of the Faith"; in response they were called "pagans," "heathen infidels," "the faithless Turks." Constantinople was the front line in a long distance struggle between Islam and Christianity for the true faith. It was a place where different versions of the truth had confronted each other in war and truce for 800 years, and it was here in the spring of 1453 that new and lasting attitudes between the two great monotheisms were to be cemented in one intense moment of history.

One of the differences between this siege and previous attempts was the use of cannons. Mr. Crowley gets into many of the conditions leading to the siege, including the casting of cannon (page 92):

When the furnace was judged to have reached the correct temperature, the foundry works started to throw copper into the crucible along with scrap bronze probably salvaged, by a bitter irony for the Christians, from church bells. The work was incredibly dangerous - the difficulty of hurling the metal piece by pie e into the bubbling cauldron and of skimming dross off the surface with metal ladles, the noxious fumes given off by the tin alloys, the risk that if the scrap metal were wet, the water would vaporize, rupturing the furnace and wiping out all close by - these hazards hedged the operation about with superstitious dread.

And details of the defenses (page 82):

The first line of the walls built in 413 deterred Attila the Hun, "the scourge of God," from making an attack on the city in 447. When it collapsed under a severe earthquake the same year with Attila ravaging Thrace not far away, the whole population responded to the crises. Sixteen thousand citizens totally rebuilt the wall in an astounding two months, not just restoring Anthemius's original structure, but adding an outer wall with a further string of inter spaced towers, a protecting breastwork, and a brick-lined moat - the fosse - to create a formidable barrier of extraordinary complexity (excellent sketch page 81).

And the mood of the people. Constantine XI was pro-union with the Papacy on account of increased security against the looming Ottoman expansion. The people were anti-papist for both dogmatic reasons as well as practical; is was under the banner of the Papacy when the westerners sacked Constantinople (Page 68):

The people were profoundly antipapist, "the wolf, the destroyer"; "Rum Papa," the Roman Pope, was a popular choice of name for city dogs. The citizens formed a volatile proletariat: impoverished, superstitious, easily swayed to riot and disorder.

Having the motivations and what is at stake of the four major sides - Byzantium, Ottoman, Venetian, and Papacy - is satisfying as the siege grinds, and grinds, and grinds.

Link is to Amazon's page for 1453.
The book is also published by Faber and Faber, 2005, as Constantinople: the Last Great Siege, 1453. Recommended.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 11/30/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I meant to address a question from last week:

Were the oarsmen slaves? I know they weren't in the classical age, and I'd be surprised if they were any other time. OK -- not all that surprised if the Muslims used galley slaves.
-Rob Crawford


The short answer is - some were. Some would be convicts or debtors. Obviously an all volunteer crew is preferred, especially on a ship of war. The men must be fit, and I would think preferably with some experience on the sea. Run out of people who think the oarsman's life is the life for me! then those gaps must be filled.

Take some 350 ships at Lapanto, average 150 oarsmen/ship (I'm making these numbers up, my book is out) that is 52,500 physically able men - quite a number of people back in the day. And that does not include all the other shipping going on.

I will approach this next Books thread with Empires of the Sea. Everyone was involved, some entities more than others; Barbary Pirates for example were so successful they accumulated fleets but could not man the oars without slave raids on the European coast.

Even in the Age of Sail, impressment was well known practice and a key issue for the War of 1812. The Barbary Pirates, who were quite open about seizing ships and enslaving the crew for work or ransom, took the US To The Shores of Tripoli in 1805.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 11/30/2015 18:14 Comments || Top||


Terror Networks
Lords of darkness
[DAWN] IN 2004 Abu Musab Zarqawi, leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq, wrote a letter to the late Osama bin Laden
... who doesn't live anywhere anymore...
in which he set out his organization's strategy. Outlining Iraq's ethnic and sectarian fault lines, Zarqawi declared his intention to target Iraq's majority Shia population in order to create a reaction against Iraq's Sunnis. He wrote, "If we succeed in dragging [the Shias] into the arena of sectarian war, it will become possible to awaken the inattentive Sunnis as they feel imminent danger and annihilating death at the hands of the [Shias]."

The logic was that those Sunnis, or some of them at least, would then flock to Al Qaeda's banners. At the very least, the idea of coexistence and political compromise, abhorrent as it was to Zarqawi, would be badly damaged if not destroyed.
Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Fred || 11/30/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under: Islamic State

#1  How ironic! A Pakistani journalist lecturing the West on fascism.
Posted by: Spomong Bourbon8696 || 11/30/2015 8:02 Comments || Top||

#2  First thought: an expose on Lucas, Prince of Darkness.
Sorry.
Posted by: USN, Ret. || 11/30/2015 15:11 Comments || Top||

#3  ^LOL

Oldie
Why do the British drink warm beer?
Lucas Refridgerators.
Posted by: Shipman || 11/30/2015 16:38 Comments || Top||


The etymological evolution of 'IS'
[DAWN] FOR governments, media outlets and academics the world over, a question continues to confound: what exactly do you call the bad boy outfit that currently controls considerable chunks of Iraq and Syria? What should it be out of IS/ISIS/ISIL/Daesh [Islamic State]?
In case you were wondering about the multiplicity of names...
We may ask what's in a name? But there are issues of political correctness, legitimacy and accuracy at stake: many in the international community -- especially in the Muslim world -- do not want to grant what is clearly a lethal terrorist outfit legitimacy by referring to what it calls itself in Arabic: ad-Dawlat al-Islamia, literally translated as 'the Islamic state'.

It may be helpful to recall what these multiple acronyms actually stand for. While the meaning of IS has been explained above, ISIS is the English translation of what the outfit called itself in Arabic before it transformed into a self-declared 'caliphate' in June of last year: ad-Dawlat al-Islamia fil Iraq was Shaam, or the Islamic State
Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Fred || 11/30/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under: Islamic State

#1  You don't have to call them---they come on their own.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 11/30/2015 1:06 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
The Witches of the Ivy League
The rumpus over perceived racism at American universities, with its demands for "trigger warnings" against possibly hurtful statements, "safe spaces" to protect minority students against felt hostility, and "speech codes" which forbid statements that might offend self-styled victims, has turned into something of a circus.

...The targets are university administrators and faculty who without exception are commited liberals and professed enemies of racism, but who are insufficiently vigilant against "casual, everyday slights and insensitivities," as a US News commentary noted. It is one thing to revile the student protesters as "college crybullies," as my friend Roger Kimball did recently at the Wall Street Journal, and another to talk about rope in the house of the hanged.

Kimball sees this as the triumph of the 1960s radicalism that took root in universities and now has become the reigning ideology of the academic establishment. A widely-read Atlantic magazine commentary by Prof. Jonathan Haidt blames the hysteria on changes in child-rearing practice during the 1980s. But the hysteria at American universities is instantly recognizeable as a commplace if neglected practice of European civilization (among others), namely the witch-hunt. The 20 victims of the 1692 Salem witch trials have become the stuff of American legend, but the inquisitors of Massachusetts hardly make the league tables: up to 100,000 presumed witches were executed in Europe between 1450 and 1750, during the rise of the Age of Reason.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 11/30/2015 09:25 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:


The Upside Down Campus Protester
h/t Instapundit
One common denominator characterizes almost all unrest on college campuses: the demands to create more "-studies" courses (black, Latino, feminist, gay, etc.) and thus to hire more -studies professors.

An empiricist from Mars might observe that the chief beneficiaries of the protests are -studies academics. They alone will win more jobs and classes, which otherwise few students wish to attend and from which fewer gain any factual knowledge, written and oral speaking skills, or improvement in inductive thinking.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 11/30/2015 09:19 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  It's like early unionization in which the 'bosses' use thugs to establish membership and extort demands from the people who provided the means of production. Yeah, you need more union 'stewards' on the payroll.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 11/30/2015 9:47 Comments || Top||

#2  Problem is that the US Government is running out of money. This whole deck of cards will come crashing down. And China is not bailing out Venezuela, either.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 11/30/2015 12:28 Comments || Top||

#3  Agree with fist AP, not sure about 2nd. I figure the Chavistas will end up selling their actual reserves, just a matter of time.
Posted by: Shipman || 11/30/2015 16:36 Comments || Top||

#4  At some point an administrator will stand up and kick some protesters out of school. Perhaps cancel a few majors as unproductive and disruptive. Then we'll see what happens.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 11/30/2015 16:53 Comments || Top||



Who's in the News
38[untagged]
9Islamic State
5Govt of Pakistan
4Houthis
2TTP
1Hezbollah
1Govt of Iran
1al-Shabaab
1Pirates
1Taliban
1al-Qaeda in North Africa

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On Sale now!


A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.

Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.

Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has dominated Mexico for six years.
Click here for more information

Meet the Mods
In no particular order...
Steve White
Seafarious
tu3031
badanov
sherry
ryuge
GolfBravoUSMC
Bright Pebbles
trailing wife
Gloria
Fred
Besoeker
Glenmore
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Two weeks of WOT
Mon 2015-11-30
  Suspected Jihadists Attack Cash Truck in Burkina Faso
Sun 2015-11-29
  Pakistan Airstrikes Kill 17 Militants
Sat 2015-11-28
  ISIS top dawg dies in Tal Afar
Fri 2015-11-27
  Top Pakistani extremist killed in 'shoot-out' with police
Thu 2015-11-26
  Drone strike kills Taliban shadow district governor in Nangarhar
Wed 2015-11-25
  One Russian pilot killed, other returned to Russia airbase in Syria
Tue 2015-11-24
  Tensions rise after Turkey shoots down Russian jet, says it will take the issue to the UN, NATO
Mon 2015-11-23
  Chinese police use a flamethrower on 'Muslim terror suspects'
Sun 2015-11-22
  Abu Sayyaf leader killed in Tawi-Tawi clash
Sat 2015-11-21
  Mali hotel attack: 27 dead with no more hostages
Fri 2015-11-20
  Gunmen take 170 hostages in Radisson Blu hotel in Mali capital
Thu 2015-11-19
  Video - Russia destroyed 500 fuel trucks of Islamic State in Syria
Wed 2015-11-18
  Soddy cops seize 500+ pounds of hashish
Tue 2015-11-17
  Kurds repel attack near Mosul, 60 ISIS Bad Guys die
Mon 2015-11-16
  ISIS executes 73 of its own militants for evacuating headquarters


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