|
Will
You Fire The Next Shot Heard ’Round’Round the World?
by
Greg Perry
by Greg Perry
DIGG THIS
"By
the rude bridge that arched the flood,
Their
flag to April's breeze unfurled,
Here once the embattled farmers stood
And fired the shot heard round the world."
~
Concord Hymn, 1837, Ralph Waldo Emerson
April 19th
is coming up fast.
Throughout
American history a lot happened on April 19th. Americans can associate
much pride to that fateful date; sadly, Americans can also associate
their share of shame.
Consider for
a moment these tide-turning events:
- The Battle
of Lexington and Concord at the Old North Bridge in Concord, Massachusetts,
began April 19th in 1775. This is the fight about which Emerson
wrote so eloquently; it was the beginning of the Revolutionary
War that resulted in America gaining her independence.
- Easter Sunday
falls on April 19th more than any other date.
- In 1933,
Franklin D. Roosevelt abandoned the gold standard (and the Constitution).
- Exactly
43 years later, the same liberal open-minded Democratic President’s
Executive Order 9066 that sent ethnic groups to prison camps was
finally rescinded.
- The Bay
of Pigs invasion took place in 1961.
- April 19,
1993 Janet Reno and her ATF soul-mates firebombed a child-filled
church in Waco, Texas, slaughtering 81 women, children, and men,
in the congregation so Americans could be safe from harm. While
the church burned, Janet Nero played her fiddle.
- Exactly
two years later, Timothy McVeigh bombed the Oklahoma City Murrah
Federal Building murdering slightly more than twice the number
of people Janet Reno murdered in Waco.
(I’ll leave
it as an exercise to the reader to determine which of these April
19th events should be honored with pride and which should be shunned
in shame.)
How Will
You Celebrate April 19, 2008?
How do you
honor important dates in history?
I prefer to
honor pivotal dates by making a difference. I honor important historical
dates and the memories of those who suffered on them by doing my
part to make America better.
As an example,
I honored last September 11th by purchasing a brand new M1A .308
caliber rifle. Lew published my 2007 tribute to 9/11 here.
If you’re like
most Americans, not only do you do nothing to honor important
historical dates, you are a recovering public school graduate who
barely even knows important historical dates. I fall into
that same category! Fortunately, I am a recovering public
school graduate so take comfort in knowing there is hope for the
hopeless.
On April 19th
this year you can begin honoring those dates.
On April 19th
this year you can begin a lifelong journey to make a difference
so those who went before you didn’t labor in vain.
On April 19th
this year you can feel more like a red-blooded, once-again proud,
apple-pie-eating, flag-waving American and become the best citizen
you could dream of being.
On April 19th
this year you can invest in your country’s future spending virtually
no money whatsoever.
Are you ready
to get off the couch? Are you ready to put down that tattered copy
of Atlas
Shrugged? Are you ready to enter the Hall of Famers right
alongside Patrick Henry?
Spend a
Short Weekend at the Appleseed Project!
Riflemen are
the means that brought about America’s independence. A pistol is
a defensive weapon but it doesn’t win wars (unless you have an army
of Sergeant Yorks and even when Sergeant York was in the
Army there was only one of him; we haven’t had well-trained marksmen,
in general, since). Hopefully you know how to use your pistol but
as Boston
T and others explain so well, when taking fire your pistol is
what you use to get to your rifle which you should have had in your
hands before the fight broke out.
If you own
a rifle, you are a rifle owner. Most rifle owners (men and women)
are not riflemen. Most rifle owners cannot hit a cantaloupe from
100 yards. If you can shoot your rifle, you are a rifleman. If you
cannot, you are a victim. It’s worse to be a victim when you own
a rifle than when you don’t own a rifle. At least the latter category
has a poor excuse.
Most rifle
owners are little more than victims waiting to happen when international
forces begin patrolling American streets as they thought they would
do back on April 19, 1775.
I’m not trying
to belittle you. I am stating facts. To prove my sincerity, I am
not going to hide behind my lofty words I, too, am a victim. I
doubt I can hit a cantaloupe at 100 yards. But that is going to
change.
You can
take an expensive rifle class. There’s a much better option,
but taking an expensive rifle class would most likely not be a waste
of money – it would be an investment in your future and the future
of generations who come after you whom you then train. But you don’t
need an expensive rifle class to be a rifleman.
Oh have I got
a deal for you!
You only need
a rifle – just about any will do. Remember that $100 SKS you bought
back in the early 1990s and put under your bed thinking you’ll practice
Real Soon Now? That’ll work fine. You will only need a few hundred
rounds of ammo – and most of that can be out of one cheap box of
.22 ammo you get at Wal-Mart (in free states) for $20 or so. You’ll
need about $70 for expenses. (Most rifle classes cost $70 per
hour). Finally, you’ll need to get yourself (and a carload of
friends) to an Appleseed Project located all across America in
less than 3 weeks from now on April 19th.
The purpose
of the Appleseed Project is to raise up American Riflemen once again.
The purpose is to gather a group of rifle owners – victims – on
Saturday morning and turn them into Riflemen by Sunday afternoon.
More than likely, this means you qualify. If you love your
country and your freedom enough to cough up the sub-$100 fee, a
box of .22 ammo, a couple of hundred rounds of a little longer-range
ammo, and a couple of rifles (borrow a .22 and/or a longer-range
rifle if you need to), you will be a Rifleman by April 21st.
This April
19th there will be fourteen Appleseed Project classes spread across
America. Only victims who want to change their future need apply.
You can find the closest
one here. Load up a group of your friends, people like you and
me who talk about our loss of freedoms but don’t really do much
about it, and get to an Appleseed Project.
I Won’t
Be There…
At the risk
of sounding hypocritical, I won’t be joining you at an Appleseed
Project event this April 19th. I have a good excuse but I envy those
of you who care enough to be there.
I’m not playing
hooky. Many months ago I signed up for a combat rifle class taking
place in Alabama to celebrate April 19th this year. I signed up
before I learned about this year’s April 19th Appleseed Project
events. Face it though I’m still participating to become a better
American and I’m honoring those who proudly worked to make this
country better throughout the history of April 19ths.
My rifle class
exclusively teaches how to use those commie-pinko AK-47 "assault
rifles." AKs are those rifles that always work and whose
7.62x39 caliber ammo doesn’t bounce off glass the way finicky .223
pea-shooters do. Well-rounded and truly capable Americans want to
keep his and her skills honed both at long-range rifle distances
as well as short-range carbine-like distances out to about 300 yards.
I’m working on the second area first just because I happened to
have signed up and sent my money before I learned about Appleseed.
You’ve got to admit, I could have a worse excuse to not practice
what the rest of this article preaches.
Now even though
I do like my AK more than fine wine, my first love of steel will
always be that all-American M1A that is nipping at my heels anxious
to be used at an Appleseed Project later this year. I’m hoping that
a July 4th Appleseed is scheduled somewhere. What a way to glorify
the honor of those who died for our freedoms. My second-preferred
date would be September 11th.
My excuse for
missing the April 19th Appleseed Project for absolute beginning
red-blooded patriotic Americans isn’t a bad one. What is your excuse?
Unless you’re at Gunsite, Thunder Ranch, US Shooting Academy, Front
Sight, or with me at Suarez International, maybe you don’t have
a good excuse to miss the April 19th Appleseed event closest to
you.
Maybe it’s
time to put your ammo where your mouth is.
Do You Promise
to Do Your Duty?
Lew Rockwell-types
are often portrayed in various ways as being un-American. I know
you laugh at that considering how pro-Constitution you are while
those who mock you would rather wipe their backsides with the Constitution
than read its simple and clear words.
Each Appleseed
Project taking place across the country on April 19th costs about
as much as the tickets you paid for your family to see I
Am Legend and A
Scanner Darkly plus those Ayn Rand books you have on your
shelves. The difference is that on April 21st, you will be able
to hit a man-sized target at 500 yards, a skill that our American
Revolutionary soldiers and almost every private citizen the first
200 years of our country’s history had by the time they were 12.
God
willing and if the creek don’t rise, April 21st will be here in
less than 3 weeks and so will you. Today you have two choices and
the one you choose decides your stature on Monday, April 21st:
- On April
21st you can still be part of a growing problem, you can still
be wallowing in excuses, and you can still be rubbing the fabric
down on that couch in front of your television.
- On April
21st you can have newfound skills that will change your entire
outlook, skills that will infiltrate your very being, skills that
will inculcate your whole manner, and skills that will strengthen
your character.
On
April 21st you can be a better American, one who doesn’t just give
lip service to our country’s fallen condition but one who actually
did something about it. You will be that American, and a proud American,
if on April 19th you take the simple and virtually no-cost step
to become a Rifleman.
"A
good shot must necessarily be a good man since the essence of good
marksmanship is self-control and self-control is the essential quality
of a good man." ~ Colonel Jeff Cooper
April
2, 2008
Greg
Perry [send him mail]
is the pistol-packing author of more than 75 books. He loves to
combine his favorite hobby – guns – with his second favorite – online
auctions – by teaching others how to buy and sell firearms, knives,
and ammo in online auctions legally and easily! eBay may not respect
your freedoms but the free market does. You can comfortably buy
and sell weapons-related items in a simpler-than-eBay environment
by getting his profit-boosting book, Guns
Galore! How to Buy and Sell Guns, Knives, and Ammo in Online Auctions
Easily Without eBay!
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
Greg
Perry Archives
|