While I was at our place in Arizona this week I started looking for spots to build a couple of small cabins for friends to use. I hadn't given it much thought. I figured I might find three or four. There are at least a dozen cool possibilities.
In the first half, attorney Sean Maloney from Second Call Defense joins me to explain the lessons gun owners can learn from what happened to Kyle Rittenhouse.
In the second half, I discuss a home invasion case from Oceanside California in which the homeowner successfully defended himself.
I stopped in Pine Top Arizona for breakfast yesterday. There's a little coffee shop there I like. I was sitting at the counter when an older gal sat down two seats over. We struck up a conversation.
She was from the north east and had moved with her husband to Scottsdale. North eastern liberals are common there, apparently.
Anyhow, she asked me if I was visiting the area. I said, "No Ma'am. We have a small ranch in the neighboring county." She screwed up her face and asked me if we had cows. I said, "No Ma'am. I was raised around farms and ranches. In my experience, cows are a big bunch of trouble wrapped up in a leather bag and I'm getting too old to put up with them." I said, "But my neighbor is a castle rancher. He's got thousands of 'em. His cows graze on our land all the time."
It was at that point that she leaned over with a concerned look on her face and whispered, "They pass a lot of gas." I replied, "That's no problem, Ma'am. I pass a lot of gas too." And ...
OK. I'm back in San Diego County and ready to go. I spent this week off the grid in the White Mountains. I had StarLink, so I checked in occasionally.
While I was there, my neighbor's cattle cut the grass for me - 38 acres of grass. LOL. They were still grazing when I left yesterday morning.
I'm headed back there in a couple of weeks, but I'm not leaving California. Staying in the fight is the best course of action.