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Your
First-Response Team – Can Your Spouse and Kids Shoot?
by
Greg Perry
by Greg Perry
DIGG THIS
On April 19th
I attended my first on-site rifle training course. I’ve had loads
of pistol training but if you’re in a gunfight a knife is better
than nothing, a pistol is better than a knife, but a rifle is best
to have. A rifle can reach out and touch someone and do so far more
accurately than the other weapons.
A few years
ago I hired a gun trainer to come to my home and give me personal
rifle training but it was the prone, long-distance kind of shot
training. The problem is we have no "long ranges" where
we live.
My class in
April was close-range, combat rifle training using what many call
a "carbine" rifle. A carbine shoots out to about 250-350
yards reliably. Some carbine-class rifles do better, some not as
good, but the general carbine category is considered fairly short
distances where you can easily see your targets without binocs.
Today, I want
to convince each and every one of you to:
- Master short-range
combat shooting skills.
- Do so with
your mate by your side.
I don’t address
this article to shooters. I address this to freedom-loving people
who know little about guns, know they should know more about guns,
but don’t know where to begin.
Shooting
Short Distances
We live in
a part of Oklahoma called "Green Country." That’s not
some faux environmental label; it was called that long before the
environmentalists invented Global Cooling as something we should
pay to fix (the 1970s), and long before they then had to scramble
to invent Global Warming as something we should pay to fix (the
1980s to present). Northeastern Oklahoma is called "Green Country"
because of rolling hills of dense trees and numerous lakes all around
us. When you think of Oklahoma you might think Grapes of Wrathlike
dust bowl plains but that’s not reality in the eastern 2/3rds of
the state.
Here, when
you look outside, you see trees. Lots of trees. When you walk anywhere
that’s not paved you’ve got to watch out for limbs poking you in
the eyes. When you want to plant a garden you must cut down trees.
So far, we’ve cut down about 75 trees around our home and I have
my sights on about 30 more I’d like to take out within a year or
so.
I love to cut
down trees. It makes the environmentalists seethe with anger, it
makes my property look cleaner, and I have it on good authority
that a tree is never as happy as when it’s used as a piano or baseball
bat or something else exceedingly useful.
In spite of
the clearing we’ve done, the typical distance one can see from our
home before dense trees close down the horizon is about 100 yards.
When we shoot, a shot of 500 yards simply isn’t possible because
there is no 500 yards within miles of here if you don’t count the
highways. As much as I want sniper skills, and as moved as I am
to attend an Appleseed Project
course, the reality is that if I must ever use my rifle skills to
defend myself, my wife, my home, or my neighbors, it’s close-range
shooting that I will be doing.
We live in
the middle of nowhere. You must drive a mile on dirt roads to get
to our house. Our little township has only one municipal building
and it stays empty except once a month when the residents meet to
discuss local concerns. (Talk about small government!) I suspect
the majority of you live in the cities, or at least live in towns
with more than one mostly-empty government building. I suspect very
few of you live 40 or more acres from your nearest neighbors with
scores of trees between you.
In spite of
our different living situations, mastering carbine-like rifle ranges
is as important for you as it is for me. See, you may not have trees
but can you look across your street and see more than 100 yards
without houses and buildings impeding your view? Perhaps some Kansas
and Wyoming residents can but for most people the reality is that
if you ever need your rifle to defend yourself you will be doing
so at short ranges. As a matter of fact, that’s the whole point
of rifle defense; if you ever want to start a rifle
fight, you prefer to be as far away from your target as you can
with as a high-powered rifle and scope as possible, firing one-shot/one-kill
and moving off point as quickly as you can before being spotted
or shot back at.
Most of us
never want to start a rifle fight. That means the odds are
exceedingly great that we’ll be defending ourselves from 25 to 150
yards if the need ever arises.
It turns out
that short distance rifle training is far different from long-range
rifle training. You’d better have both but it’s probably more critical
to put short-range training skills in your bag of tricks first.
Kalashnikov
Kombat
I celebrated
the historical April 19th by attending a 2-day combat rifle training
class taught by Gabe
Suarez. Maybe it didn’t exactly look like a celebration of the
first volley in the American War of Independence though, because
all 18 students came to train with Commie AK-47s.
I joke a lot
in these articles about calibers and preferred guns. We all have
our favorites and I’m always harping on the AR-15/M4/M16 owners
(basically that rifle is what most American soldiers carry in the
Middle East) because of its weak .22-like caliber that requires
multiple enemy hits before taking down the target and that too often
just ricochets off glass. When I write things like that, those of
you with AR technology write back to correct all the ills of my
words. (You never write much about what I say about the weak caliber
though…!)
I prefer the
AK-47 for several reasons. It takes under 4 minutes to learn to
clean and operate as opposed to 3 hours to master cleaning and basic
operation of ARs. The AK-47 works reliably when dirty and seems
to work even better the more beat up and dirty it gets. (It’s Russian
after all.) It uses a 7.62x39 caliber round which is basically a
30-caliber bullet. That bullet causes lots of hurt, more easily
drops its target with a single hit, punches through brick and glass
without a whimper, and is the round most often used by the enemies
shooting back at American soldiers in the Middle East.
AK-47 ammunition
is about half the price of AR-15 ammo. You can buy an old AK-47
online for $250$350 and expect it to work.
Best of all,
the liberals despise the rifle because it looks so mean.
Try to get a bayonet for your AK because it really makes them furious.
What Is
Your Excuse?
In that April
1920 class, some of us showed up having never really touched
an AK before. Gabe Suarez taught us to operate our AKs, shoot reliably
from 25 to 100 yards (the most typical rifle defense range), transition
to pistol when needed, move when shooting (because it’s far better
to not get shot than to shoot your opponent) (shooting your
opponent is a close second though), and shoot ambidextrously from
left-handed and right-handed positions. By the second day we were
shooting as much from the left-handed position as from the right
which emphasized how vital that skill is to master as well as how
simple it can be.
Simple is the
key.
Is all this
too much for you to want to do? Gabe’s 2-day AK class costs $400
so price is not an issue. Difficulty is not an issue because
I can do it. The name of the game in a Suarez course is "caveman
simple." Every single skill must be caveman simple or it’s
tossed out.
Some of you
know I have a few physical annoyances, namely a grand total of 3
deformed fingers and one leg. Caveman simple? Heck, combat AK rifle
training is so simple even I can do it.
So, I ask again,
what is your excuse for hesitating to get training that might
save your life?
Gather and
Prepare Your First-Response Team Now
Who do the
odds say will be by your side if a situation breaks out? If you’re
married your spouse is the person most likely to be at your side
when a situation breaks out. In spite of Annie Oakley, gun training
is overwhelmingly attended by men so let me address you. You are
responsible, not your wife, for her safety. You are responsible
for her falling into one of three categories:
- Getting
shot when the fight breaks out
- Running
when the fight breaks out
- Helping
you win the fight when the fight breaks out
See, she is
part of your problem or she’s part of your solution. She can be
your First-Response Team. So can your children if you have them.
Are you training
and then training some more but you do not include your family?
Sure you take them to the range maybe sometimes but do you
take them to gun training classes too? If not, then your First-Response
Team is incomplete and your family members are possibly casualties-waiting-to-happen.
Last weekend, just thirty days after my 2-day AK combat rifle training
class, I packed Jayne in the car and we drove to Houston to attend
another AK combat rifle training class with Gabe. It was review
for me (always good) and new for her. Our class had a whopping 28
students all armed with AK rifles, many of whom had never touched
one before.
She went with
major back troubles that broke out just the week before. We were
not certain she could even pick up a rifle. Yet, the smell of gunpowder
in the morning brings out the best in all of us. Jayne performed
each and every drill and skill with as much – and often more – precision
than anyone else. She was a trooper.
Her previous rifle skills were zero. After last weekend, my Primary
Response Team is skilled and ready: she and me.
Do you have
children? How well can they wield a rifle if the time ever comes?
Don’t want them to be in that position? Nobody does. Unfortunately
good guys rarely get to pick the time and place for a gunfight.
You can either set the odds up they will survive and help you survive
or you can keep the current odds that they will be a burden in such
a situation. The odds are stacked against you anytime you must respond
to an attack. Do you want to stack the odds against you even further
by making your children a liability?
In the 1990s,
Clinton's Surgeon General Jocelyn Elders said we should never give
children toy guns. I tend to agree with that. Make sure you give
your kids real guns and make sure everyone in your family
can shoot. (Even a broken wristwatch is correct twice a day... although
I doubt Elders was ever correct twice. You've got to give
her this one even though it would appall her to learn why she was
correct.)
I think it was Boston’s
Gun Bible that discusses what happens when we try
to teach our wives shooting skills. You have less patience than
you would with a stranger and she gets more sensitive than usual
and the dynamic doesn't usually go well. That’s why she needs to
be by your side at a class.
Right now,
the caveman-simple class is the hot one to take. That would be any
class from Suarez
International, and yes, I’m biased. But I have recent and firsthand
knowledge so I have reason to be biased. More important, I have
a wife whom I would trust by my side if tonight someone begins a
fight so I have even better reason to be biased.
Today
Isn’t Too Soon
My First-Response
Team is in place. It’s insurance we hope we never need.
Jayne isn’t
a gun gal who looks forward to shooting. She isn’t comfortable with
guns any more than I’m comfortable with our oven. I’ve already told
you about my physical annoyances. I’ve also told you about the major
back and muscular pains that come and go on a regular basis with
my wife.
Yet,
Jayne was at my side at this weekend’s AK combat rifle training
class. She loved it and she was dreading it before we went.
If you aren’t
making plans for your wife’s training right now, I ask again, what
is your excuse?
Get your first
response team ready. Sign up now
while you're thinking of it. Like the price of 7.62x39 ammunition,
class prices can't stay this low forever. Even if class prices double
tomorrow, though, how much is your most-likely First-Response Team’s
life worth to you?
May
24, 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
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