We are not fucked
There are still ways to fight back
AI Age Verification House BIll
“All right, so, apparently there’s some sort of House Bill 2361. It’s some sort of ‘I can’t raise my kids’ bill. Mutahar—I actually don’t know what his nationality is; he’s South Asian, but I don’t know if he’s Indian, Pakistani, Nepalese, or whatever—the point is, I’m watching this video and the way he describes all these problems is really captivating. He really is a great crusader for privacy and, mainly, common sense. Common sense over privacy, really, but he’s pointing out that all these ‘Karen’ parents who can’t raise their own kids are mandating age verification on everything.”
Don’t just download AI models to be stored locally. Share it on Internet Archive and over the decentralized LBRY protocol and add setup guides on PeerTube.
Exercising my First Amendment
“And I’m also exercising my First Amendment rights; that’s why I made the previous video, ‘Decentralized Command.’
I showed you that there was a guy named Steve Preisler, also known as Uncle Fester. He was arrested by the DEA for possession of methamphetamine in the 1980s. In prison, he was angry, so he wrote his first series of books—which are still updated to this day—called Secrets of Methamphetamine Manufacture. Other notable books include Home Workshop Explosives and Silent Death, which involve making high explosives and nerve gas.”
Fighting back on the internet
“I mean, look, man, I gave you all the tools that you need on my codeberg because GitHub is trash, basically. I have given you all of the tools that you need in my latest malware compendium. I’ve shown you how to spread misinformation through SMS, using the Twilio API. I’ve shown you how to use mass mailer attacks on a scammer’s machine to spread misinformation and spear-phishing payloads.
3D printing resources for fighting back in person
“I have also shown you very efficient ways to 3D-print gun parts, which is also being attacked by the 1st, 2nd, and 4th Amendments; people from the GunCad Index are suing California for this. But the thing is, you can’t regulate a shape. You could just print some crab legs on a lower receiver or a Glock frame, and then you just snap them off with some pliers. Basically, that’s what I would do. I would just 3D-print a lower receiver with lobster claws—tiny little lobster claws—which bypasses scanning easily.
But yes, I have shown you my favorite builds: my AR pistol 300 Blackout builds, and I taught you how to actually make it easier for an OrcaSlicer by just copying .zip configuration files. I mean, these things will outclass a police officer’s gun and a special agent’s gun easily, outside of SWAT Teams. And they’re surprisingly good; they’re very comparable to real guns. They may need new dope cards for the Mk 12 build, though, because of the way that the lower works and the way it handles recoil. And I strongly suggest that you use—I forgot what they call it—it’s like a specially machined muzzle brake that the Navy SEALs use. It only has a 40% reduction in recoil, but you can also put a suppressor on it, versus the M4-72.”“I have also shown you very efficient ways to 3D-print gun parts, which is also being attacked by the 1st, 2nd, and 4th Amendments; people from the GunCad Index are suing California for this. But the thing is, you can’t regulate a shape. You could just print some crab legs on a lower receiver or a Glock frame, and then you just snap them off with some pliers. Basically, that’s what I would do. I would just 3D-print a lower receiver with lobster claws—tiny little lobster claws—which bypasses scanning easily.
Ordnance Droppers, Bomblets, and self-made 3D printers and drones are available
“If you actually looked on the GunCad Index, as well as the catalog—and what do they call it? Print Your 2A—but specifically the GunCad Index, you can find the ‘Deimos’ or ‘Phobos’ series photo-receptors and bomblet droppers. These can be combined with Steve Preisler’s recipes, although attempting to acquire the precursors for a PETN striker-fired bomblet is going to get you a lot of attention from the ATF, especially with regulations now evolved from a 1990s-era book. There are also custom 3D-printing projects for drones, allowing you to make more resilient drones as well as build drone 3D printers. There are also custom Klipper projects—spelled K-L-I-P-P-E-R—which let you build your own 3D printers that are absolutely ‘cracked.’”
Use drones engaging beyond 500 to 600 yards
“And honestly, the maximum effective range for fragmentation of a Mk 262—which includes those cheap-ass clones that I have made by Frontier—is limited. A lot of these bullets only have a maximum effective range of 600 to 700 yards, which is about a third of a mile. If you want to achieve a single-shot kill—which is very difficult to do at 600 or 700 yards, by the way—it’s nearly superhuman to even reach 1,000 yards with a Mk 12 clone. That would be like Space Marine Astartes level, Warhammer 40,000 level accuracy and effectiveness. Beyond, I would say, 700 yards, I would just grab that drone and just go for him.”
“I am reading my evaluation right now, and honestly, I don’t like the idea of even using .300 Winchester Mag, .308, or 6.5 Creedmoor to compensate. I mean, you still have to be one hell of a shooter to hit someone north of 1,000 yards. And that gun is incredibly loud; at that distance, you’re trying to cover 60% to 70% of an entire mile. That’s record-breaking levels of accuracy for one-shot kills. Just go get the drone—the bomblet dropper—which uses several firing systems, including fly-by-wire and photoreceptors, if you wanted to, just to get that guy beyond 500 yards to be sure.”
“Yeah, I’ve seen that one dude saying, ‘Oh, that is nuts,’ ringing steel with this insane Mk 12 build.
https://youtube.com/shorts/0FHjVifFAls
I believe it’s a Daniel Defense, with at least some sort of Vortex Diamondback scope to NightForce, at a minimum—Front Focal Plane, measured in MRADs, or a shit ton of Mil-Dot reticle scopes. I’m assuming MRADs at that distance with some sort of thermal optic sight. And even then, when he can ring steel at 1,000 yards with a Mk 262 Sierra MatchKing bullet, I bet he cannot kill anyone if ‘shit hits the fan’ at that distance, whether he shot him or not. Most likely not. I bet under actual pressure, he cannot execute that shot.
And most guns that can reliably go past that distance, like a .338 Lapua Magnum, cost like $4 to $6 a shot. You need at least 20 rounds to zero a Lapua Magnum, okay? That’s like, how much? Like $120? And even then, the recoil is so incredible that you have to be a police SWAT sniper capable of doing crazy stunts and not falling out of helicopters—they use those secured things, like climbing harnesses, basically. You have to be a Space Marine to be able to handle this gun. So, I really would just grab that fucking drone.”

