President Bush
has embarked on the final phase of Pax Americana and is ushering
in an advanced imperial stage that will endanger every living American.
The coming election will assure us that every American will have
his Second Amendment rights infringed or predated upon in some fashion
no matter which party succeeds (is there a difference except the
spelling?). Perennial readers of this site are better versed than
most in the predatory nature of the state and its ability to target
and vilify those it wishes to eliminate eventually whether through
political neutralization such as Trent Lott or lethal means such
as Waco or Ruby Ridge. I'd like to focus this essay on the practical
application of what Boston
T. Party refers to as "liberty's teeth" or small arms. There
are plenty of organizations like Jews
For the Preservation of Firearms Ownership and Gun
Owners of America which will provide you with all the intellectual
ammunition you need to know why you should be armed; I want to tell
you how. I want to offer a bare-bones primer on how to get started
in amassing your personal armory (contrary to what the government
says, an arsenal is where weapons are manufactured) and using the
weapons you obtain. I have a military background that spans two
decades, shoot competitively and currently instruct tactical firearms
so I have left the armchair a few times.
There are plenty
of sites from which you can obtain this information but I wanted
to provide a fairly painless gateway to get started if you are beginning
from ground zero. The black helicopter crowds are chockfull of hunker-down
survivalist information which for the most part suffers from their
barely hidden desire for the apocalypse to occur coupled with their
propensity to be armchair enthusiasts unfettered by real world application
of firepower. On the other end of the spectrum, you have the nation's
largest gun prohibition organization, the National Rifle Association,
selling plenty of safety-oriented gun practices (while winking lustfully
at the Beltway media and other hoplophobes) and ignoring any martial
aspects of weapons or gun handling the Founders wrote the Second
Amendment for in the first place.
1. Establish
a mindset much like the Flinters in F.
Paul Wilson's novels. Fully embrace the initiated non-aggression
principle. This is not a call for armed revolt or insurrection.
This is summed up as leave me alone or else. Whether you own weapons
now or not, you should be fully decided that when, not if, the government
comes around to seize them you will relinquish them one round at
a time. Or you have had the foresight to properly cache spares and
you can hand over that Lee Harvey Oswald Carcano to the nice young
men in black ninja suits who are from the government and just want
to help you. If you have any doubt about that, stop reading this
and take any weapons you now own and donate them to a paleoconservative
or libertarian who cares. You may continue reading if liberty means
more than lip service. The right to self-defense should be beyond
question to this audience.
2. If you bought
one book on the subject, buy Boston T. Party's book, Boston's
Gun Bible (revised April 2002). Hey, we're on LRC, you always
want a book on the subject. As a matter of fact, this logical and
sound compendium of gun stuff is worth a whole shelf of gun tomes.
Read it two or three times and always have a highlighter in hand.
He's done all the work for you. You just have to read and heed.
It has had a perennial place on my nightstand since I bought it.
While those new to the gun community will be amazed at the pedantic
disagreements that enliven every corner of the gun culture from
ballistics to weapons choice, enquiring minds will really be energized
by the level of intellectual ferment once you get the gun habit.
If one only read the New York Times or the LA Times,
you'd think all gun owners were backward hillbillies who only Jim
Goad could love. Like so many American subcultures, there is
a niche for every need or desire. For instance, I disagree with
his number-one choice for a battle rifle (M1A v. FN-FAL) but that
is the nature of the enterprise.
3. Write this
on your whiteboard one hundred times: I will never, ever buy
a weapon from a Federal Firearms Dealer (FFL). I will only make
private party purchases through gun shows, the classifieds or through
friends and neighbors. The Feral (no misspelling) government
has developed a devilishly clever system using the BATF as their
stalking horse to enable a de facto and de jure gun registration
system established at the central government level every time a
weapon is purchased at a brick and mortar gun shop. Check your risk
tolerance and local and state laws to determine the regulations
regarding private sales but the litmus test is easy. If you see
guns for sale in your local newspaper classifieds, it is under the
government radar (for now). Recent events such as the spate of college
campus shootings and the attempts by local and state governments
to regulate and suppress every manner of arms employment and provisioning
should convince you that time is short. The
same applies to ammunition; buy it at a gun show for cash as there
is no requirement for a permit (yet) in most states. I hope you
are fortunate enough to live in a state unlike Illinois or some
of the Borg states in the northeastern part of these united States.
When buying these weapons through private sales, always be prepared
to walk away if it smells funny. Never buy any weapon that even
appears to be fully automatic or is hinted to be. The Class III
licensing system in the US regulates these firearms in a very draconian
fashion under the auspices of the 1934 National Firearms Act. The
government has a history of entrapment and provocation. Ask Randy
Weaver if a half-inch on a ruler is hazardous to your health or
that of your family.
4. I could
write a book on what to buy but that is beyond the scope of this
essay. Armed conflict is a discipline of distance. Different firearms
have envelopes of lethality as distance is increased which is also
a factor in accuracy. To paraphrase Boston, a pistol is what you
fight your way to your rifle with. Spare no expense since your life
depends on these tools. At minimum you need a rifle and pistol for
every member of your family. The Glock pistol is the hands-down
winner for accuracy and reliability. As to rifles, if you are poorer
than dirt, scrape up $100 and buy a Lee-Enfield .303 rifle. These
bolt actions are highly serviceable for social work. If you have
more money, invest the hundreds and thousands it will take to get
a proper battle rifle such as an FN-FAL, M1A or HK91 and all the
equipment and ammunition to accompany each rifle for its care and
feeding. Be sure to have a minimum of 25 magazines per rifle and
ten per pistol. From this point, once you have started to empty
your wallet, more equipment will start to appeal to you such as
load-bearing gear, body armor and all manner of shooting accoutrement.
The sky is the limit (and your income).
5. Pay for
the very best firearms training you can afford; a single digit percentage
of the gun culture pays for professional training and this is the
greatest shortcoming you can have. No matter how American the concept
of having the most elaborate toys, if you can't employ them, then
their value is moot. Go to Google or Metacrawler, type in firearms
training in your state and see who offers it locally or go to the
nationally renowned training centers like Gunsite,
Thunder Ranch or Firearms
Academy of Seattle (my personal favorite for value and quality).
Take your spouse, too. She is your primary team-member.
6. Teach your
children well. The gun culture has roots as far back as the first
settlers in North America. This continuity is a result of parents
passing on their knowledge and weapons to their progeny to continue
down the line. Exposure to guns early enough can make liberty contagious.
Remember, guns
don’t kill people, governments and the criminals they create do.
February
18, 2008
William
Buppert [send him mail]
and his homeschooled family live in the high desert in the American
Southwest.