Preparedness
Trump Appointed Judge Challenges Federal Machine Gun Ban

A recent ruling by a federal judge has dismissed criminal charges related to machine guns, emphasizing that such firearms are considered “bearable arms” under the Second Amendment.
On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge John W. Broomes in Wichita, Kansas, dismissed two counts against defendant Tamori Morgan for possessing a machine gun in violation of federal law.
Last year, Morgan was indicted by the DOJ for possessing an Anderson Manufacturing model AM-15 .300 caliber machine gun and a “Glock switch” that enabled his Glock model 33 .357 SIG to function as an automatic weapon.
Federal prosecutors argued that the “Supreme Court has made clear that regulations of machineguns fall outside the Second Amendment,” as reported by the AP.
Broomes, however, disagreed, stating, “The government has not met its burden under Bruen and Rahimi … . Indeed, the government has barely tried to meet that burden.”
Morgan had filed a motion to dismiss the charges, claiming that the federal statute, 18 U.S. Code § 922, infringed upon his constitutional rights. Judge Broomes concurred with this argument.
“The court finds that the Second Amendment applies to the weapons charged because they are ‘bearable arms’ within the original meaning of the amendment. The court further finds that the government has failed to establish that this nation’s history of gun regulation justifies the application of 18 U.S.C. § 922(o) to Defendant,” Broomes wrote.
In his decision, Broomes, appointed by former President Trump, explained that the “plain text” of the Second Amendment protects Morgan’s actions of possessing a machine gun and Glock switch. He noted that § 922 directly contradicts this plain text regarding firearm possession.
“If an individual purchases such a weapon and locks it away in a gun safe in his basement for twenty years without touching it, he is just as guilty of a violation of § 922(o) as one who takes the same weapon out on the public streets and displays it in an aggressive manner,” the judge pointed out.
Broomes also highlighted that federal prosecutors had failed to provide a relevant “historical firearm regulation tradition” to justify Morgan’s charges, referencing two U.S. Supreme Court decisions: Bruen of 2022 and Rahimi of 2024.
“To summarize, in this case, the government has not met its burden under Bruen and Rahimi to demonstrate through historical analogs that regulation of the weapons at issue in this case are consistent with the nation’s history of firearms regulation. Indeed, the government has barely tried to meet that burden,” Broomes insisted.
The National Association of Gun Rights cheered Broomes’ decision, posting to X: “This is incredible.”
Meanwhile, many gun opponents seethed. Shira Feldman of Brady United Against Gun Violence called Broomes’ ruling “incredibly dangerous,” and Jacob Charles, an associate law professor at Pepperdine University, insisted it gave lower courts “the ability to pick and choose the historical record in a way that they think the Second Amendment should be read.”
Eric Ruben, a fellow at the Brennan Center and an associate law professor of Southern Methodist University, indicated that Broomes’ opinion may be “the first time in American history that a machine gun ban has been found unconstitutional in its application.”
Trump-appointed Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Brett Kavanaugh, and Neil Gorsuch helped bring about the Bruen and Rahimi decisions as well, concurring with the majority in both cases.
Let us know what you think, please share your thoughts in the comments below.
																	
																															Off The Grid
What To Do When There’s No Water (And Everyone’s Panicking)
														The Water Survival Guide: Finding, Filtering, and Storing the One Thing You Can’t Live Without
You can go weeks without food. Maybe months without sunlight. But go three days without water, and your body starts to shut down. In a real survival situation whether it’s a natural disaster, a grid failure, or getting lost outdoors clean water isn’t optional. It’s the first and most important thing you need to secure.
This guide breaks it down into something simple and doable: how to find, filter, and store safe drinking water anywhere.
1. Finding Water When There’s None in Sight
When the taps stop running, it’s time to think like nature. Start by looking downhill. Water always follows gravity. Watch for damp soil, thick green vegetation, or insect activity these are signs there’s water nearby.
If you’re outdoors, collect rainwater anytime you can. Lay out plastic sheets, ponchos, or even trash bags to funnel it into containers. In the morning, you can also gather condensation by wrapping a T-shirt or towel around grass or branches and wringing out the moisture.
In urban settings, drainpipes, water heaters, and toilet tanks (not the bowl) can provide clean, stored water in an emergency.
2. Filtering and Purifying
Finding water is only half the job making it safe is what keeps you alive. Clear-looking water can still contain bacteria, chemicals, or parasites. The rule of thumb: If you didn’t see it come out of a sealed bottle, purify it.
Here are the main ways:
- Boiling: The oldest and most effective method. Bring water to a rolling boil for at least one minute (three if you’re at high altitude).
 - Bleach: Add 8 drops of regular, unscented bleach per gallon of water. Wait 30 minutes before drinking.
 - Filters: Portable straw filters, gravity filters, or ceramic pumps remove most contaminants. Always follow up with chemical treatment if possible.
 - Improvised options: Pour water through layers of cloth, sand, or charcoal to remove sediment before purification.
 
3. Storing Water for the Long Haul
Once you’ve got clean water, store it like it’s liquid gold. Use food-grade plastic containers, glass jugs, or heavy-duty bottles with tight seals. Keep them in a cool, dark place away from chemicals and direct sunlight.
A good goal is one gallon per person per day half for drinking, half for cooking and hygiene. Rotate your supply every six months to keep it fresh.
The “Clean Water Anywhere” Method
If you forget everything else, remember this three-step formula:
Find it. Clean it. Protect it.
Locate a source, purify it before you drink, and store it safely for when things get worse.
Final Thought
Water is the ultimate equalizer. It doesn’t care how strong, rich, or prepared you are without it, nothing else matters. Learn how to find and protect it now, before you ever have to. Because when the world runs dry, those who know how to stay hydrated will be the ones who stay alive.
Off The Grid
What Would You Do If the Grid Went Down Tomorrow?
														How to Survive the First 24 Hours Without Electricity
Picture this: you wake up and nothing works. The lights don’t turn on. Your phone’s dead. The fridge hum is gone, and the tap only spits air. You check outside streetlights, silent houses, blank car alarms. It’s not just your house. The entire grid is down.
Sounds dramatic, right? But blackouts happen all the time, and most people are wildly unprepared for even a few hours without power. The key to surviving a real grid-down event isn’t stockpiling gadgets it’s knowing how to stay calm and use what you already have wisely.
Hour 1–3: Don’t Panic, Get Oriented
The first few hours are about awareness. Check your surroundings. Is it just your block or the entire city? Turn off and unplug major appliances to protect them from a surge when the power returns. Use your phone sparingly battery power becomes gold.
Start filling containers, bathtubs, and pots with water. When the grid fails, municipal pumps stop working fast. You’ll want every drop you can store.
Hour 4–8: Secure Light and Warmth
Once the sun starts dropping, light becomes your lifeline. Use flashlights, candles, or headlamps never burn open flames near flammable surfaces. If it’s cold, layer clothing and block drafts instead of wasting energy trying to heat a room. If it’s hot, stay hydrated and open shaded windows for airflow.
Now’s also the time to check on neighbors, especially anyone older or living alone. Community awareness is survival in disguise.
Hour 9–16: Protect Your Food and Water
Your fridge will stay cold for about four hours your freezer for about a day, if unopened. Group food together to preserve cold air and start eating perishables first. Keep bottled water handy, and if you have a gas or charcoal grill, that’s your new kitchen.
Stay inside if possible; confusion and panic can spread quickly outside when communication fails.
Hour 17–24: Rest and Reset
As night falls, light discipline matters. Too much brightness could attract attention if things get tense. Conserve power, stay quiet, and rest. Tomorrow, you’ll need clear thinking to find information, help, or supplies.
Grid-Down Checklist
✅ Store water before pressure drops
✅ Conserve phone battery
✅ Secure light and warmth
✅ Eat perishables first
✅ Check on neighbors
✅ Stay calm and rest
When the lights go out, the people who do best aren’t the ones with the most gear they’re the ones who keep their heads and think clearly. Preparation starts now, not when the power dies.
Nature and Wildlife
10 Survival Skills You Should Learn Before You Need Them
														These Everyday Skills Could Save Your Life Or Someone Else’s
When an emergency hits, it’s too late to start Googling. Whether it’s a power outage, car breakdown, unexpected hike gone wrong, or full-scale disaster, knowing what to do before chaos strikes is the difference between staying calm and spiraling. The good news? You don’t need military training or a bug-out bunker. You just need to learn these 10 core survival skills ahead of time and they’ll serve you in everyday life too.
1. Fire-Starting Without a Lighter
Being able to start a fire in wet or windy conditions is a skill that spans thousands of years and it still matters. Learn to use a ferro rod, flint and steel, or even a magnifying glass. Practice with damp tinder, and always carry some dryer lint or cotton balls soaked in petroleum jelly.
2. Basic First Aid
Knowing how to stop bleeding, treat burns, or manage a broken bone is essential. Sign up for a CPR/first aid course you’ll gain life-saving knowledge and confidence. Bonus: it’s just as useful at a family BBQ as in a forest.
3. Navigation Without GPS
Batteries die. Satellites fail. Learn to read a paper map, use a compass, and find direction using the sun or stars. Even basic orienteering skills can get you out of a jam.
4. Knot-Tying for Real-World Use
The right knot can save your gear or your life. Know how to tie a bowline, square knot, and trucker’s hitch. These knots can help build shelter, secure loads, and make emergency repairs.
5. Water Purification and Collection
You can survive weeks without food but only 3 days without water. Learn how to boil, filter, or chemically treat water. Know where to find it in urban and wild environments, like rain catchment or condensation traps.
6. Shelter Building With Natural Materials
Even in a warm climate, exposure can be deadly. Practice building lean-tos, debris huts, or tarp shelters using branches, leaves, and cordage. A good shelter keeps you warm, dry, and protected from the elements.
7. Situational Awareness
Learn to scan your environment, trust your instincts, and notice small changes around you. Awareness prevents problems, whether it’s spotting a fire hazard, noticing someone following you, or avoiding dangerous terrain.
8. Cooking Without Electricity
Know how to cook over open flames, on a wood stove, or using solar ovens. It’s more than survival, it’s resilience. Start by learning to boil, grill, or bake without relying on modern conveniences.
9. Signaling for Help
If you’re stuck, you’ll need to be found. Learn how to use mirrors, flares, whistles, or even create large ground signals like “SOS” using rocks or logs. Understanding rescue priorities can make you easier to spot and faster to save.
10. Mental Resilience and Problem Solving
This is the quiet skill that holds it all together. Practice staying calm under pressure through breath control, visualization, or even journaling. In any crisis, your mindset determines whether you freeze… or adapt.
🧭 Final Thought
The best time to learn these survival skills is when you don’t need them. They aren’t just about extreme situations they teach self-reliance, confidence, and control. The more you know, the less you fear and the better prepared you’ll be when life throws the unexpected your way.
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Peter Miks
September 5, 2024 at 12:40 pm
The commie dummycraps can keep their hands off law abiding citizens 2nd Amendment rights. This is about total dummycrapcommunism control over Americans rights. From my Cold Dead Hands as Charlton Heston would say. Go after the criminals and illegal criminals you devilcraps have created with you lawlessness laws for criminals, no cash bail, safety acts, and your other bullshit laws that career criminals reap over everyday citizens. 2 words for the democratic party, FUCK YOU.TRUMP 2024 will end this shit and the chaos created by the party of commies.
Joan
September 5, 2024 at 1:09 pm
George Washington contemporaneously recorded his position on the 2nd Amendment: “A free people ought not only be armed and disciplined, but they should have sufficient arms and ammunition to maintain a status of independence from any who might attempt to abuse them, which would include their own government.”
Washington placed NO limit on weapons even though a machine gun was invented 70 years earlier in France. Privateers (privately owned ships) had cannon aboard and they were not banned in the Constitution. Guns are inanimate objects and will not operate without a person to load it and pull the trigger. It is the person and their state of mind that needs to be considered, especially BEFORE an act of violence takes place.
The people should place more attention on raising children to respect and love their neighbors, to not covet neighbors’ property, and to find ways to reach out in peace to each and everyone, including those who have different opinions, to create a community that nurtures good neighborliness and friendships. Put away the cell phones and talk in person with your family, friends, and visitors to give them a sense they are valued and not alone.
Dr. Caligari
September 5, 2024 at 2:31 pm
An interesting analysis by the Judge, if you buy a machine gun and lock it away for 20 years you are just as guilty of a violation as the person that displays it in public in anger.