Press "Enter" to skip to content

Living Freedom Posts

Friday links and videos

A handful of links and two (longish) videos for your Friday and weekend pleasure: Nano-material stops bullets? This I’d like to see. (H/T PT) Among all the other laughs of the Petraeus scandal is the scandalously flawed method the lovers used to hide their email correspondence. (And this guy was the nation’s top intelligence officer?) The Electronic Frontier Foundation has analysis and advice. So does the ACLU. (Tip o’ hat to JG) It’s pretty amazing what the FBI went through to trace emails that probably weren’t even illegal — and the kind of data they had fingertip access to (e.g.…

8 Comments

Thank you :-)

I was pretty excited to look at my Amazon wish list tonight. Oh my. Some of the most needed items from the list are already coming my way, thanks to you. And some of the not-strictly-needed but most very cool are also in the “purchased” list. Someone — and I hope that person included a note with their identity — even bought something I never imagined anyone would. Nobody is contributing to the generator fund. But that’s okay. ‘Cause you know, this is more fun. 🙂 I wish I could leave you all milk and cookies on Christmas Eve because…

2 Comments

The scandal

Unlike Joel, I’ve been thoroughly enjoying the Petraeus scandal. Oh, not the sex part. What’s emerged about that so far is pretty dull: middle-aged married man boffs attractive, slightly younger married woman. This is news? (The British, who do sex scandals with more color and athleticism than anybody, must be laughing at us for getting excited over this.) But what a marvelous cast of characters — from the “victim” who’s a more sketchy character than her anonymous stalker to the infamously shirtless FBI agent. When somebody makes a movie out of this — and they must — it should be…

18 Comments

From Sandy’s heart of darkness

Reader “just waiting” — who was without power for nearly two weeks after Hurricane Sandy and got back online only yesterday — posted this in comments. But with its combo of good advice and scary warnings, it deserves more exposure. Everything that follows is his. —– We just got the internets back yesterday after Sandy. Street power came back on late last Saturday, we were out for almost 14 days. My ears are still ringing from the constant hum of the gen, silence truly is golden. We were as ready as we could be, so it wasn’t really a big…

5 Comments

A day in the life, a walk in the rain

My two biggest clients pay irregularly. Don’t get me wrong; they’re good people who have gone out of their way for me in many ways. But they may pay me quickly or … not. I never know. Weirdly, they seem to conspire; in months when one is slow, the other usually is, too. I try to keep a cushion for bill paying, but this month the cushion got threadbare. My income in the last 30 days was $200.42 — all thanks to you guys stepping up your regular use of my Amazon links. (You see why I ask you to…

33 Comments

When the abnormal becomes everyday reality

The following letter comes from Helen, who lives in Greece. “William” is a reader of this blog who has spent years urging preparedness on her. She writes about the demonstrations and riots in her country and how quickly the unnatural can become the natural, the abnormal the normal. Pundits debate endlessly about whether the U.S. economy is going to end up like or unlike Greece’s. Whichever way you bet, the future doesn’t exactly look rosy. Might as well listen to voices of experience, just as Helen listened to William’s warnings about preparedness. I’m reprinting this with thanks to Helen, who…

12 Comments

Preparedness backup reference library

The KTD Project is an effort to put over 600 preparedness and survival texts onto bootable thumb drives or SD cards. The idea is to be able to carry a vast store of resources anywhere and access it on even some pretty inadequate equipment. (Yes, paper would be even more accessible in primitive conditions — if we weren’t talking about such a huge volume.) Mark (aka GreyLocke), who’s been pulling this together, has pretty comprehensive instructions at the link above. I’ve queried him about access to the library for people who may not want to deal with the tech stuff.…

22 Comments

Monday links

Tribes. (Aka help Tam, Queen of Snark, and maybe win some cool gunstuff.) Hm. Happy life? Meaningful life? Choices … choices … How to devise more secure passwords. (Yeah, we’ve been here before; always a good reminder, though.) I know some cynics think Obama and Eric Holder will kill recreational cannabis in Washington and Colorado. They’ll try. But this is a battle they’re going to lose. The new legalization is already making waves in Mexico. And having a very, very real effect on prosecutions in Washington state. Hey, look! Europe has turned the corner and is headed for financial stability!…

13 Comments

Christmas wishes

STICKIED. Scroll down for newer posts — then come back and do your Christmas shopping. 🙂 It’s that time of year again. Yep, already. If you value the information you get from this blog, please contribute to its (and my) well-being. As I’ve mentioned before, Backwoods Home is kind enough to pay me for this blog, but the pay is based on one post a week. I think we’re doing better than that. As always, please do your online shopping via my Amazon links. I did have an Amazon wish list, but I’ve had to remove it for reasons I…

16 Comments

Preparedness priorities: First aid, part II

This is another guest blog from Will Kone, aka BusyPoorDad. His first installment is here. —– What are the minimal items to have in a first aid kit? We have all seen the ads, heard the sales pitches, wallowed in the fear-mongering marketing. “You MUST have this special kit! Your life depends on it!” Which is why companies who sell specialized first-aid kits feel they have to charge so much for stuff they sell. After all, it must be great, it costs a whole lot! I have nothing against making money selling stuff. And there is value in having someone…

18 Comments