Monthly Archives: September 2009

“Socialism Bums Me Out!”

Does socialism bum you out? It does me, to say the least. I mean, that’s putting it awful lightly.

Well, it bums out a member of the USCCA team as well. get a load of this, written by my buddy and assistant, Patrick:

Hey Tim,

I have never been one to hide my opinions, or keep my voice down. Can you tell?

This is what the back of my SUV has looked like for the past four days:

You wouldn’t BELIEVE some of the reactions I am getting from this.

Sadly, I have gotten zero smiles… zero nods… and zero cheers.

What I have gotten is an angry woman who followed me closely for five minutes on the freeway, snapping pictures. I was honked at while in town, and while driving in Lansing on Sunday, a little red Ford Focus honked and gave me the thumbs down.

This really bums me out, because I see Anti-Freedom stuff WAAAY more harshly worded than this all the time. Never once have I reacted angrily.

I guess that’s because I respect other people’s rights and freedoms. And these socialists clearly do not.

Anyway, it’s had me doing a LOT of thinking. With the ‘Emergency Preparedness’ kick that we’ve been working on, I have felt like there’s been a force at work, making sure NOBODY is prepared.

I realized today that there is. It’s the same force that HATES it when you carry concealed.

It’s the same force that compels some red-faced punk to glare at me and give me the thumbs-down, for driving an SUV with “Socialism Bums Me Out!” written on the back.

It’s the same force that compels someone whose family is stranded in a FEMA refugee camp to call “UNFAIR” when a family in a well-stocked Ford Pickup drives by.

And…. it will be the same force that will make looters feel justified to kick down your door and take what YOU have earned… for themselves.

I’m talking about the same force that depends on people being unprepared.

Why would Chicago or New York City ban YOU from carrying concealed there? Simple. Because THEY want control over the guns. They want you to depend on them for safety.

It’s the same reason Universities are not teaching, but TELLING young people what to think.

The same reason the liberals don’t want to stop illegal immigration: because the people coming here illegally will DEPEND on the government for care. They are not the hard working immigrants who came to America seeking Freedom- these ones are coming to seek hand-outs.

…and it’s probably the best case I’ve heard YET for getting prepared.

If we DEPEND on a force that hates our Freedom, we are enabling that force.

Over&Out,

Pat

=> Get Prepared & Live FREE.

Look- getting prepared is always a good idea. But if for no other reason, do it because you CAN.

Do it because there is no law against keeping 500 rounds of ammo in your closet. Because there’s no law against keeping a week’s worth of supplies in your pantry, or twenty gallons of gas in your garage.

Do it because you are a FREE American, and because you can take care of YOURSELF, and because you REFUSE to live by anyone else’s terms.

=> Get Prepared & Live FREE.

Stay safe,


Tim Schmidt
USCCA Founder

Armed American Report – Issue 164

Click here for important Membership Information!

September 25th, 2009

Dear Friend,

Make sure that you read this week’s ‘coming up on Armed American Radio’ segment. You will be blown away at how fast our radio station is spreading around the country.

There’s a lot of good stuff in here this week, so grab a cup of coffee, and let a week of political correctness melt away as you read your ARMED AMERICAN Report!

You won’t find anyone asking you to apologize for carrying a concealed weapon here- heck no! In fact, THANK YOU for carrying concealed. YOU are the best kind of citizen… the one I want as my neighbor.

;)

Food doesn’t come from the store.

“…There is no reason to just sit down and give up during the extremes of a temporary disaster situation….”

by Cody AldersonWherever we live, we already have what we need to survive in that particular geographical location. Whether we live in mansions or recreational vehicles, we keep a supply of what we need to survive at the home. We also have pipes and wires coming into the home to supply a need, and pipes going out of the home to get rid of our waste. Most of us have curbside pickup of our trash. Life is good!

Surviving a couple of days snowed in is usually just a minor inconvenience, even if the power and heat are off due to problems with the supply grid. A minor inconvenience, because we have plenty of blankets, food to eat, probably some candles and a couple of flashlights, and maybe even a kerosene heater or a fireplace. That minor inconvenience may turn into a dangerous situation if we were prepared enough to survive a couple of snow days in Pennsylvania, but are actually having to survive it in Coldfoot, Alaska.

In moderate climates such as where I live in Southwestern Pennsylvania, it is easy to become negligent about the simplest preparations that have us equipped to survive an extreme of climate since we do not often experience extremes of climate. Statistics demonstrate that more people die of hypothermia in moderate climates than in climates where extremely low temperatures are expected as the normal routine of winter weather.

We don’t experience arctic conditions very often where I live so routine preparations to survive those conditions aren’t carried out by much of the population either. People who live in areas routinely struck by tornadoes prepare for tornadoes. We don’t have very many tornadoes in Pennsylvania either so finding underground shelters dug for protection from tornadoes is unlikely. People adapt to their environments in ways that could be dangerous if the environment should suddenly change.

On any typical day here in Pennsylvania I can leave the house with no more preparation than an average winter coat (even on the coldest days), get in my vehicle, go shopping at the twenty-four hour Walmart, get gas at the always-open gas station which is also a convenience store, and stop by Wendy’s for a burger at least until one in the morning. I know that Walmart is closed on Christmas Day so I’ll make sure that I don’t need a prescription filled on that day, or be out of tea, coffee, milk, and other sundries. But even if I am out of some medicine, I will be okay waiting until Walmart opens up again the day after Christmas so they can refill my prescriptions. That being said, I have become adapted to the current conditions of my environment without regard to the possibility of the environment suddenly becoming extreme.

Fortunately I do not put all of my faith into nature keeping my environment within limits that are acceptable to me, nor am I ignorant of the possibility of man-made severe changes to my environment occurring at any moment. Though I have given thought to the wildest possible scenarios that could be thrown at me by man or nature, I only prepare for the ones that are probable based on my current geographical location, taking into account the social and political climate along with knowledge of the weather.

It is far more prudent to have a primary, secondary, and tertiary plan in place for probable scenarios than to prepare for the wildest conjuring of a vivid imagination. A man or woman who has a million rounds of ammunition buried in secret and strategic locations would be better served to have a redundant source of heat here in Pennsylvania. Conversely, a redundant source of heat would be of no use to a man or woman living in a climate that never drops below 80 degrees Fahrenheit, but who is constantly under threat of armed attack.

I teach people to prepare for what is most likely to happen to them based on their current location and operational scenario, and to leave the End-Of-The-World preparations to those who are much more extreme than I am. After all, even having a nuclear bomb shelter won’t do a fellow any good if it goes off while he is sitting on the toilet in the upstairs bathroom of his house. In other words, it is certain that even the best of us won’t get out of this life alive. As it is often said, “Ya gotta go sometime,” and the best we can do is to just do our personal best to survive a temporary harshness, then get on with rebuilding what may have been lost during the harshness.

There is no reason to just sit down and give up during the extremes of a temporary disaster situation. If a nuclear power plant is melting down, get away from it. If a hurricane is coming to your town, don’t be there. If tornadoes like to sneak up on you, have an early warning system and get in the pre made shelter when the tornado is coming. If there is a possibility of a train derailing and spilling 50,000 gallons of acid in your neighborhood, maybe have appropriate respirators for every member of your family. Have pets that you would die to protect in the same train scenario? Install a positive pressure filtration system in a room or vehicle for them, or buy the positive pressure filtration containers which are sized for your pets.

Oh, that last one is key to all of this. It really screams of preplanning in education, materials, and installation. It’s tough to fit pets with a respirator. There are some bag-like structures for individual pets. They use a battery powered blower that blows air through an appropriate filter into the bag so the pet can breathe. Usually the bags are big enough to fit over a pet crate that confines the pet. If a disaster that will affect air quality is on the list of probable disasters for a family who has pets that they are not willing to just let die, then a method to keep the pets from suffocating during evacuation should be considered a priority.

Positive pressure systems can be used in rooms and vehicles as well. The blower is big enough, and the filter has enough capacity to handle the volume of contaminated air blowing through it to keep the air pressure in the room or vehicle higher than the air pressure outside. This way treated air is always trying to get out any cracks, leaks, or crevices, which makes it so no contaminated air can creep in.

Saying that type of system is the key to all of this Bug Out stuff is not saying that it is the most needed or even needed at all. It is just pointing out that both PLANNING and PREPARATION is what makes disaster survival possible and training makes it more probable. Some things are not survivable. The human body can only endure so much trauma. Being blown to bits by a gas explosion caused by a ruptured main supply line usually comes quick, and without warning. If my body is in a hundred pieces, I’m not going to need my Bug Out Bag, but the rest of my family who may survive should have survival items ready to go for rapid evacuation.

I will need it for things like a dirty bomb going off in nearby Pittsburgh, or an accident at one of the chemical plants at each end of this valley I live in. Possibly the dam upriver may give way, or maybe one of the trains that go through town every couple of hours might one day be carrying something toxic and may spill. I watched a downdraft start to force a black swirling cloud toward the ground last summer while I was coming home from the post office during a storm. It started to rotate then lost momentum and faded away. Tornadoes aren’t common here, but one that hit Kennywood Park in Pittsburgh a few years ago was a killer.

I pack bags based on possibilities. I have more than one survival bag. There is one that I take to work every day that has in it an MRE, something to raise my blood glucose level (I’m an Insulin Dependant Diabetic), a lighting tool, extra test strips, insulin, infusion set supplies (for my insulin pump) batteries, cell phone charger, first-aid supplies, a handheld radio programmed with FRS/GMRS and NOAA Weather Alert frequencies and functions. One can also usually find in that bag the current issue of Concealed Carry Magazine and a book I am reading.

At home things are different. I have in my home all that I need to survive. I have clothing, shelter, climate control, water, food, methods for making light, fire making supplies or fire replacements (electric stove, microwave), medical supplies, means of personal hygiene, a place to relieve myself of biological waste, companionship, means of defense, tools for building, repairing, and maintaining, necessary fuels, as well as an abundant supply of entertainment and educational materials. Just about everywhere I go, I have access to most of these same things. Going out just about anywhere that human beings commonly go in public, I have access to light, a place to relieve the biological waste, a water fountain, and a controlled climate.

We are programmed to have the necessary amenities for ourselves as well as provide them for our guests or customers. Conditions are variable depending on personal circumstance, but most of us in the lower forty-eight states enjoy more of a lifestyle of ease than one of having to continually be in a mode of trying to just survive. And although we Americans are resilient, we can get a little too reliant on the ‘grid’ that supports our daily comforts. My wife and I were present in a little sampling of chaos the day before these words were written.

The power went off in the main business district, and no transactions could be made at the stores and gas stations since everything that supported making sales easier ran on electricity. People were upset that the normal flow of daily life was interrupted. They wanted what they came to get, and they wanted it now. They were on a schedule and the interruption of the normal flow of their lives was disconcerting to say the least. As the lines got longer at the checkouts the emotions began to get a little charged. People didn’t want to wait. The body language and facial expressions had me wondering how some of them would react during a real emergency.

Most peoples only source for the things that they need are the stores and the gas stations. We are slaves to our thriving economy. I work for money to buy what I need, and do not have the resources to grow or hunt for my family’s own food supply here where I live. I need to buy stuff, and hopefully keep enough on hand to survive a protracted emergency. It also doesn’t take a highly imaginative person to think if it got so bad that the ‘getting of things’ may involve some folks trying to take it from us, but for most of us experiencing a disaster situations, that will not occur. Most people try to help, but it does depend on where one lives.

The same thing happened with a temporary power outage last summer when I went into a convenience store for coffee. I had exact change for my coffee, and the clerk was still hesitant to sell it to me. She had a difficult time reverting to an earlier method of doing something because she had no frame of reference for it. The electronic cash register told her everything she needed to know about the coffee. It told her the price, the tax, and how much change to give depending on what amount of money the customer tendered.

Ah, another point made. The old-timers reading this will think how easy it is to get through things if a person would only do this or that. The problem is that the old-timers already have a point of reference of how to complete a task a different way with a different tool. Many younger folks do not have that experience. In the stores of today everything has a barcode on it that is read by an electrically powered scanner. When I was a child, there was a price sticker on everything, and some of the stores still had cash registers that worked with a hand crank instead of being plugged into an electrical outlet. Clerks could also give change without having to see what to give on a screen.

We have modernized to support the massive amount of people who need to get their needs supplied every day using less staff to do it. The scanners make it faster to get through a checkout line. Shut off the electricity, and the clerk won’t even be able to tell you how much that can of soup is unless they send someone back to check the tag on the shelf. And with computer controlled inventory where every item being sold will be replaced on an automatic reordering system, the whole store would go into chaos if the staff would sell stuff while the electricity was off using paper and pencil. But that actually would only happen if the customers were carrying cash. Many of us no longer carry cash; we use debit or credit cards instead. They are worthless without electricity.

The simple act of never letting the fuel tank on one’s main evacuation vehicle get below a half tank is an important step in disaster preparedness. Most disasters knock out power. Even if a person has a wad of cash in his or her pocket, and even if the clerk was willing to make a cash sale without the register working, there still won’t be any gas purchased with no electricity to the gas pump. I live in an area that has a tame climate, and have been unable to make transactions for goods several times a year due to power outages.

Some folks who have a generator and kerosene heaters for emergencies won’t bother to use a fuel stabilizer so they can store fuel longer, due to the inconvenience. They rely on being able to drive to an area where the grid is still functioning in order to get fuel for their backup power generator and redundant heat source. Good luck with that if you are can’t leave home because of the disaster. A simple five gallon can of gas that routinely gets dumped into the gas tank of a vehicle and refilled with fresh fuel doesn’t really have an extra cost to it beyond owning the container. Gas goes in the tank of the vehicle anyway, so filling the gas can, emptying it into the fuel tank of the vehicle, and refilling the can with fresh fuel on a regular basis is just a matter of time and effort to have fresh fuel on hand for a gas powered backup generator.

So what conclusions can be drawn from this segment so far?

• Savvy planning and preparations rely more on the person wanting to
be prepared than money.

• It’s tough to revert to an old way of doing something without a point
of reference of how it used to be done.

• Even though we are resilient, we rely on the grid too much.

• Prepare for what is most likely to happen in your geographical
area, and leave doomsday to Hollywood and that weird guy who
lives in the woods.

• Plastic money needs electricity. Cash doesn’t.

• Plans need at least a small element of routine work to maintain
effectiveness.

• Our home is the Ultimate Bug-Out-Bag but tough to carry on our back.

EPILOGUE,

Dear friend- Tim here.,

Has this article peaked your interest?

I hope so! We’re nearing the end of September, and we’re really hoping that before 2010 is here, every single Armed American will be as prepared to deal with a disaster as they are to deal with someone intent on stealing their life away, or harming their loved ones.

Listen- if you’re interested in making sure that you’re armed with the right tools and knowledge that you’ll need to keep your family safe and comfortable during a local, regional, or national emergency, but do not know where to start, I hope you’ll consider giving our new preparedness Crash Course a shot.

The article you just read was the Introduction to one of the special reports in the Crash Course- “How to Build a Bug Out Bag for $99.74 or Even Less.”

Basically, we combined decades and research and knowledge, took what you need to know, threw out the other 98% of BS, and packed it into two special reports, an audio interview, and a DVD.

I’ve talked to so many people who have wasted WAY more than what I’ve got into this Crash Course on gear that they didn’t need, or gear that they thought they needed.

Everyone that’s worked through this Crash Course (which can be done in an evening) has realized one thing: You don’t need fancy gear. You can be fully prepared to get through a 72 hour emergency for less than $100.

It’s the knowledge that must come first, before any gear. Our Crash Course does both- it gives you the knowledge AND tells you what gear to buy (hint: you don’t need much! You’ve probably already got most of it!)

Look- if you want to get prepared, our Crash Course is the place to start. I wouldn’t have spent the time and money to develop it if I it wasn’t badly needed.

Remember- if you get it, and you don’t learn all you need from it, I have a 100% no questions asked return policy. There’ no silly ‘restocking fee’ (yes, even if you tear the plastic, hehehe). I’m sure you are going to use it and get your house and family prepared, and that is why I want you to give it a shot.

=> Learn more & maybe give it a shot.

USCCA Laugh of the Week

by Chaim’s Cartoons

== Survival Update ==
Learn The Secrets Of Urban Survival
Including Flu, Terrorists, & Economic Collapse
Get Prepared FAST and Inexpensively
Get Started Today

>>Click Here To Learn More<<

“I only wish I had this stuff 10 years ago…”

Last month I sent you a link to a complimentary program I felt every USCCA members should own. It was created by a hand-to-hand close combat expert named Tim Larkin. The feedback on it has been phenomenal. In a phone call, one guy called it “a life changing experience.” Here’s what he wrote directly to Tim Larkin (he asked to remain anonymous and we’ve respected that wish by deleting his name).

——

“I can honestly not thank you enough for giving USCCA members the huge discount on your Human Weapons ‘package’ deal.

“I have trained most of my life to survive. I’ve taken multiple survival classes (you know, being dumped out in the desert with absolutely nothing and having to live for a week). I took firearms training classes as soon as I was old enough to own one and I’ve taken practical self defense courses, mostly emphasizing on getting it over with as quickly as possible. I’ve worked with Marines all my life so I’ve had advantages other civilians have not had. I’ve also taken medical classes, EMT certified, you name it. Being prepared is something I take seriously. The safety of my family and myself I take very seriously.

“But this mega pack of materials is amazing. The practicality, straight forwardness and focus of the material is fantastic. I have always wondered why so many instructors insist on teaching things that have absolutely no practical value in saving my life or the life of another. Why fill student’s heads with crap. We are only going to retain so much in a true life or death scenario – so give people the best possible odds of winning. The rest is fluff and gets people killed.

“Your information is just so valuable - I have already had many of my friends and co-workers purchase the set.

“As I emailed Tim Schmidt of USCCA - I can only hope that all the money, time and effort that I continue to put into this program is completely ‘wasted’ (ie, I’ll never need to use it).

“Your concept of ’break things inside people so they don’t work anymore’ honestly is so, I don’t even have words for it, unbelievably simple. For the life of me I cannot understand why that isn’t at the core of every training class I’ve ever taken. I’ve heard it said other ways with a lot of fluff around it but it is a straight up truism. All of my firearms training - that was the point of it. Just that simple. From that axiom everything can be built.

“I feel like a lot of my training has been complete crap and I also feel like it is so damn obvious I am annoyed at myself for not realizing it before. After reading your book I know why I didn’t realize it but still, it isn’t a pill that’s easy to swallow.

“A while ago I was put on the disabled list that severely limits the amount I can train. I have to take every opportunity I can to keep pushing myself but I have to do it in a way where I am not making things worse for myself. The material that is in this program is a major help to me. Some things I simply cannot do, others I can adapt to my situation. What is important is that I now have better tools to use and a better understanding of how to use them and when. I hope that I can one day attend one of your classes.

“So - thank you. I only wish I had this stuff 10 years ago and was ahead of the curve instead of catching up.”

(name withheld for confidentiality reasons)
-USCCA member

If you missed it last month, here’s the link again:

=> http://www.targetfocustraining.com/uscca <=

Coming Up On Armed American Radio

The Official Voice of the USCCA

by Mark WaltersI know I keep saying this every week and I have no choice but to say it again…WOW! This radio broadcast is exploding across America at a pace that has even the syndicators astounded. Let me clue you in to what we are hearing, and humbling it is! You see, Armed American Radio was conceived by Tim and I back at the SHOT show in Orlando last January. The idea kind of fluttered around out there until we got serious and realized that we could be on to something. Little did we know.

The dream became a reality on April 26th when we aired our first broadcast from the 920 WGKA studios in Atlanta. The response to the program was overwhelming and we knew American gun owners and the concealed carry movement were ready for this format. We began inquiring about taking the local broadcast national and the radio professionals told us we need at least a year under our belt before the show would be ready for nationwide syndication. I mean, we had only been on the air for FOUR weeks! We knew better! We knew that gun owners were hungry, starving and salivating for this type of outlet and we wouldn’t be deterred by a bunch of radio people who had spent their entire adult lives in the industry…no way, not us! (what the heck did they know, anyway) We were getting your emails…daily…and we KNEW we could explode, the naysayers be damned!

Against the recommendations of the radio staff, we put the program “up on the birds” (satellites) and made a run for it. Folks, I gotta tell you, guess what we’re hearing NOW? We’ve been told by those same radio professionals that what Armed American Radio has accomplished in 5 short months is UNHEARD of in broadcasting. We’ve been told by people with decades in the business that they have NEVER seen this happen before in radio. Never before has a local show, begun as an experiment, grown at the rate Armed American Radio has! “This doesn’t happen”, we’re being told…Guess what? It is happening and it’s happening at an electrifying pace!

Get this: In less than 4 months we have grown to a TWO hour show and just this week, Armed American radio has added 5, let me say that again…just THIS week, Armed American radio is now being listened to in 5 new cities across the country. Just two weeks ago we were in Atlanta, GA, Mountain Home AR, Anchorage, AK, and Reno, NV. Beginning THIS week we have added Liberal, KS, Carrollton, GA, Griffin, GA and Lansing, MI to the lineup…and listen to this…Starting on Sunday October 4th, we will be LIVE on TWO more stations in Olympia, WA and Silverdale/Puget Sound, WA! 10 stations ladies and gentleman, in less than 3 weeks of official syndication. The radio management is blown away at the incredible pace of our growth. Buckle your seat belts folks, I will be naming more cities VERY soon. We WILL be in your area…The march of Armed American Radio across the country has JUST BEGUN and is now unstoppable! The winds have blown. We couldn’t have done it without you and we thank you very much for your support. Keep the letters and emails coming and more importantly…KEEP CALLING YOUR LOCAL TALK STATIONS AND DEMAND THEY CARRY THE PROGRAM!

OH, I almost forgot to tell you! I got a call from the Program Director at Mountain Talk 97.1 in Mtn Home, Arkansas YESTERDAY telling me they could no longer carry AAR on Saturday’s anymore. It seems the station was getting too many complaints on Monday mornings about the broadcast…I was sick to my stomach to hear that and when I asked Scott what kind of complaints he was getting this is what he said…”Every Monday since you went to two hours, my phones are jammed with listeners demanding the second hour soooooooo we had no choice but to re-schedule our program lineup and start carrying you LIVE for the full two hour broadcast”! So if you pick us up on Mountain Talk 97.1 in Arkansas, beginning THIS week you are now on the Armed American Radio Network for BOTH hours and LIVE! (and they said it couldn’t be done!)

Enough rambling, join me this week with my guests Alvin Petitt of Strike Back Technologies who will be discussing various forms of non-lethal defense products to compliment your choice of gun. Also, on is Mr. Jon H. Gutmacher, noted Florida self-defense attorney and author of the popular Florida Firearms book, widely recognized as the bible of Florida firearm laws. (you do NOT need to be a Florida resident to heed this man’s advice) In addition, we have Mr. Tom Powell, criminologist who will be discussing with me the FBI uniform crime stats and how the anti-gunners use these numbers to lie to you about the truth about violent crime in America in an ongoing effort to strip you of your second amendment rights.

Finally, Ms. Kathy Jackson, my co-author of our JUST RELEASED book “Lessons from Armed America” will be on the air to discuss the book release! With the foreword written by the great Massad Ayoob, this is one book you need to have in your library of self-defense!

Join me THIS sunday at 8pm eastern for Armed American Radio. Visit www.armedamericanradio.org for more details on where to hear the broadcast LIVE on the air or on the LIVE feed from anywhere on the planet!

To pick up your own copy of “Lessons from Armed America” or to simply read more about it, please stop by http://www.whitefeatherpress.com/id16.html

See ya on the radio!

Mark Walters

Review of Armed Response’s Newest DVDs

USCCA Gear Review

by Cody Alderson

David Kenik and Ralph Mroz make up the Armed Response team. I really liked the content and great presentation of the first DVDs in their video training series, and I was glad to have the opportunity to review the two newest titles in the series: Responsible Use of Lethal Force and Shoot/No-Shoot Scenarios.

I was a bit surprised that anyone would have taken it upon themselves to put together a DVD set that explains when to challenge, when to shoot, and when not to shoot. It’s like there is a pack of lawyers waiting to pounce when anyone in the civilian defensive operator training industry even attempts to answer those questions.

It comes down to the fact that there are variations in laws across the land, and as is pointed out by Ralph Mroz as he instructs, it is the responsibility of each of us to know the laws of our area and follow them. However, where we citizens have permits to carry a concealed weapon the laws of using deadly force contain some basic components such as the topics of Ability, Opportunity, and Jeopardy (AOJ) that need to be fully understood. Don’t know what the AOJ means? Get the DVDs! Seriously, if you cannot define those terms and apply them to self-defense, then you need to get training.

I hear over and over again the great things the student has learned after attending a class or a full course at a shooting school. One might hear the excited student say how she had a wonderful time, shot two-thousand rounds, learned to get off the X, can put a round center mass from concealment in less than one point five seconds, can shoot in low light and no light, knows the difference between cover and concealment, can clear any jam faster than lightning, and . . .

But then ask the student, ‘So when are ya ’sposed to shoot, and when ain’t ya ’sposed to shoot?’ It’s so cool how the deer-in-the-headlights stare can be made to come from such a highly trained defensive operator, just with that question. One of the issues is that the school may be in one state and the student may reside in another state.

The burden of knowing absolutely when the legally carried weapon can be used to defend life rests solely upon the carrier of that weapon. I reside in Pennsylvania, and there is no requirement to be trained to be able to get the permit to carry a firearm. When I renewed my permit this last time, there was a sign on the wall where the application is filled out at the sheriff’s office suggesting a location to take a training course. However, there is no requirement for the permit holder to actually take the course.

In one way I like it that Pennsylvania isn’t infringing as much on bearing arms as some other states do. On the other hand, I know that even responsible citizens can be lazy when it comes to fully taking responsibility for understanding the burden of responsibility of becoming a civilian defensive operator. I am very glad that for the cost of a couple of DVDs, my fellow Commonwealth citizens can get some good instruction on when to shoot and when not to shoot. And these DVDs are good for instruction where you have your permit too.

The DVDs start out with the premise that it is instruction for those permitted to carry a concealed weapon. The instruction also makes reference to the use of pepper spray assuming that it is legal in the viewing student’s area. This is where the disclaimer comes in. The viewer needs to know the laws where they reside. There may be some places where one can get a permit to carry a gun, but cannot legally carry pepper spray. Make the minor adjustment while learning from the DVDs if that is the case.

Responsible Use of Lethal Force

This is the first one that the student needs to watch in this series. However, I highly recommend that the student watch the three DVD set that precedes this release before getting into the nitty-gritty on when use of lethal force is justifiable on this DVD. I reviewed and recommended the first three titles, Fundamentals of Defensive Shooting, Tactics & Techniques for Defensive Shooting, and Dynamic Drills for Defensive Shooting.

Responsible Use of Lethal Force will teach the student such topics as: Levels of Force, Responding to Force, Force Response Based on Injury Potential, and Disparity of Force. That’s just a sampling of topics. There is a whole lot more on the DVD. In fact, there are thirty-two chapters with a runtime of one-hour and forty-five minutes.

There is a really great section on The Mantle of Innocence. If you are a concealed carry permit holder and don’t know what that means, then you really need to get these DVDs before the time comes that you may have to use your gun to defend your life.

There’s also a great section on the Myth of the Hierarchy of Deadliness, which is a term coined by Massad Ayoob. A student really needs instruction on what is deadly. We know that knives and guns are deadly when wielded against us, but what about empty hands, kicks, or a stick? The concept is explained on the DVD. I liked the point Mr. Mroz made when he pointed out that a knife can sometimes be more deadly than a gun at close range. A gun can poke a few holes in you quickly, but a knife can completely vivisect you in a second. Ever consider that in your training?

The information flows from segment to segment in a well thought out method of instruction. Mr. Mroz is either a trained teacher or is a natural at it. He’s a police officer in Massachusetts and is the Director of Training at the Police Officers Safety Association Inc. He’s got a lot more credentials than the few I mentioned. Just suffice it to say, he knows what he is doing and is great at imparting knowledge to the student.

Shoot/No-Shoot Scenarios

Now I like this DVD. If one follows the instructions from the first of the fifty chapters on how to use the videos, then it is an incredible learning experience. There are video vignettes that demonstrate in real-time situations that can be considered to either justify or not justify the use of lethal force, or any other force in the force continuum.

Mr. Mroz demonstrates that to use the videos correctly, one must be set up with a REDUNDANTLY CHECKED empty firearm along with the students standard concealed carry holster and clothing. You then use a box or piece of furniture as a prop to use as cover and then start the segments which begin with a title and a paragraph explaining the parameters of the scenario. Then, get ready to yell commands, move for cover, decide if it is appropriate to draw, and decide when to pull the trigger by actually dry-firing at the appropriate on-screen actor, or actors, at the appropriate moment. Did I say to make sure the gun is REDUNDANTLY CHECKED TO BE EMPTY?

Now the scene plays out to the end, and the assailant or assailants won’t fall down when you mock shoot, but there is an exact moment when the decision to shoot or not shoot is to be made. Those exact moments are discussed in the analysis after each scenario. Mr. Mroz teaches for each scenario exactly what is justifiable, and when it is justified.

With an hour and fifty minutes of multiple scenarios for many different categories, there is a vast range of situations that are dealt with on the DVD. The following list of scenarios is what is on the DVD, followed by the number of unique situations which are played out in different ways for the same scenario:

Domestic 4
Seated 3
Meeting 3
Approached 3
Flat Tire 3
Car 3
Street 1
Time (person asking for the time) 4
Dent (in vehicle) 3
Parking Lot 3
Door Knock 3
Furniture Store 3
ATM 3
Classroom 3
Grab 3
Shopping 3

The scenes are very intense and contain graphic language, and it was a shocking reminder even to me on how quickly things can go really bad in real-time. Follow me on this for it is very important. Probably every single one of us civilian defensive operators spends some time thinking of what we would do in a given situation. Maybe we hear of a shooting on the news, and imagine in our mind’s eye what we may have done if it happened to us.

The nice thing about our imaginations is that we are in complete control of how a scenario plays out because it is on our heads. We control who is there, what they are doing, and when they do it. There is no real surprise. Now take a similar situation that we could conjure up in the good old imagination and put it on a video playing out in real-time where we are not in control of anything, and it is a wake up call to reality even though the scenarios are just videos on a TV screen.

You need to experience this for yourself. It will either confirm to you that you are the master of self-defense that you think you are, or it will demonstrate to you in no uncertain terms that you just pulled the trigger at the wrong time. I was watching one scene and an actor came out of nowhere with a gun. I thought to myself how this is exactly what happens in real life. I’m telling you, even though it was just a video on TV, I almost said out loud, “Whoa! Where’d that gun come from!”

Now you might think that after watching this DVD once, it would be useless since you know what is going to happen. That’s where you get the spouse or friend involved. Use it to teach them, and then use it on one another by bringing up random segments of each scenario. This way, the viewer won’t know if this one is going to play out as a shoot or no-shoot until they see it unfold in real-time.

You can get your own copies of any and all of the Armed Response Video Training Series at www.armedresponsetraining.com.

Comments? I’d love to hear from you!
E-mail me at: cody@uscca.us
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Quote of the Week

“Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!”

-Patrick Henry, March 23, 1775

USCCA Forum Highlights

Every paying website member has complete access to the USCCA forum, which is constantly being accessed by members sharing information, knowledge, insight, and fun. With well over sixty-thousand posts and growing by the hour, this is one heck of a valuable resource!

If you have never logged in but are a member, visit THIS location to watch help videos, including how to find out your username and/or password!

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1911 best personal defense ammunition?

Hi, i just recently bought a Springfield lightweight operator 1911. this is my first 1911 and i was wondering what are some of the best hollow point ammunition for 1911? i know they are finicky with hollow points. i was thinking of mag safe, golden saber and power ball.. just wondering what everyone has tried and what works best for them and still being effective? any insight would be great!

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What to do?

I found out today that my church (fairly large) has hired a security company and will have thirteen (non-members) security people for Sunday mornings. There will be less personnel during other times, but if the doors are open, security people will be there.

My question is this: Nobody knows (one person suspects, but has never asked) that I carry in church. There are no signs anywhere saying I cannot carry (thank you, Texas!), but I’m a little concerned that I (and others) will be considered a BG if a shooting situation occurs.

Helpful opinions are welcomed.

*******************

Have you ever been bitten by a dog?

Yesterday was 3 years since a large dog bit me in the back of the leg (while working). He took about the size of a golf ball chunk with him. The scar is still not 100% healed and itches like you would not believe.

Anyone else ever been bitten? How long before it was 100% healed?
BTW I know it will never be technically 100% as I have a dent in my leg.

P.S. I did not carry then, but I do now!

Video of the Week

There are great people who do an incredible job during times of disaster, but there are also failures in emergency operations that can and will occur on every level. Watch this video, especially if you are putting all of your hopes of survival into government sanctioned emergency services. Years after 9-11 and they are still working out the bugs in inter-agency communication, responsibilities, and training. YOU NEED TO BE AS SELF-SUFFICIENT AS YOU POSSIBLY CAN.

Is the U.S. Ready for Another Major Disaster?

How long are YOU prepared to survive
when disaster strikes?

Here’s the bottom line: No one knows if a true disaster will ever threaten your safety or the safety of your community.

But that is no reason not to be prepared. Once disaster hits, it most likely will be too late to do anything about it.

And you’ll be grouped in with all of the other folks who did not take the time to plan and prepare before the disaster was reality. With the folks who froze in the face of danger and decided (making no decision IS making a decision) to wait for someone else to tell them what to do.

At the USCCA we call those people sheep.

YOU are not a sheep.

Introducing the USCCA’s Ultimate Buggin’ Out & Stayin’ Alive Crash Course.

USCCA Photo of the Week

All Photos of the Week are taken from Mr. Oleg Volk’s website:
http://www.a-human-right.com/.
It is a fantastic site. Please check it out!

USCCA Self Defense Story

Every day, thousands of Armed Americans use their firearms to preserve human life. Let this section of my newsletter serve as a record of this fact!

September 20, 2009

Lemmon Valley, Nevada

From: KOLO TV

Attempted Burglary Ends with Shot Fired at Homeowner

Police are investigating after a Lemmon Valley homeowner was shot at by a Sheriff’s Deputy while trying to defend his property from a suspected burglar Saturday night.

Rocky Triplett with the Sparks Police Department says just before midnight Saturday, a drunk man, 35-year-old Christopher Pool, entered his neighbor’s yard at 430 Paramount Ct. in Lemmon Valley. Pool was allegedly trying to either steal a car or burglarize the home. Pool didn’t know that the homeowners were home at the time.

Police say they received a call to respond to the home after it was reported that a suspicious man had climbed a fence, and was trying to steal a car.

The intruder was drunk and uncooperative when police entered the yard and began questioning him.

According to Police, the homeowners, Vince and Veronica Henderson, were aware of an intruder on their property after seeing him in their yard. Mrs. Henderson quickly turned on lights around the garage. Mr. Henderson grabbed his gun and went after Pool.

Deputies say they saw Mr. Henderson coming around the corner of the garage with a gun and a flashlight in his hands. One of the Deputies shouted at Henderson to drop his gun, but then fearing for his safety, fired a shot towards Henderson. Henderson was not hit.

After realizing that police had arrived, Mr. Henderson put his gun down. He and his wife were briefly detained and questioned. Police then arrested Pool.

No one was injured in the incident.

The Reno Police Department, Washoe County Sheriff’s Office and Sparks Police Department are all investigating the incident. The names of the deputies are not being released at this time.

Closing Thoughts

Tim I am a proud U.S. Marine Veteran that volunteered six years of my live back in 1965 to bare arms to Serve and Protect the Freedom and Rights of everyone in this great Country of ours but yet I am denied the same rights for myself and my family. I live in Northern Illinois very close to WI. Both states do not allow concealed carry so what can I and many like myself do. I know a lot of people that carry anyway but the fear and paranoia of getting caught and losing your weapon and going to jail or receiving a heavy fine makes it a very hard choice to carry or not to carry. I enjoy reading all your information but unfortunately it does not help us with our problem. Is there anything we can do to allow us to carry a concealed weapon legally in these States that the Free forgot. I find it so hard to believe that with the N.R.A. and other groups out there and people like yourself that we can not get these States to see the light and give us our God given right and our second amendment to bare arms and protect ourselves and our families from harm. I must confess that I have not joined as a full member at this time but hope to in the near future but due to being retired on disability and my wife’s hours being cut our life for now has become very difficult like so many others out there. But I have learned as they say in the Marine Corps Adapt, Improvise, Overcome the Situation. And add to that IN GOD WE TRUST and with a little help from our friends I am sure everything will turn out just fine. I look forward to your response. Thank you.
My friend, thank you for your service to the US of A during the Vietnam War. I am proud to say that the ranks of the USCCA are jam-packed with veterans like yourself, and it is an honor to be able to serve you, and send you an Armed American Report every Friday.

It is a shame that you are denied such a fundamental right, that of self defense, even after you’ve sacrificed so much.

If it were as simple of a choice as changing dish-soaps, I’d suggest that you move to a freer state, but family and friends keep us in place- I know how that goes.

Be reassured that the concealed carry movement is alive and strong. The NRA has been a huge factor in the increase in numbers of states that allow concealed carry, and so have hundreds of other grassroots national and state organizations across the country.

The good news, is that I do not believe it will be too long before you can legally carry in your state, my friend. The USCCA is exploring ways to make sure that this is the case.

Keep writing your legislators, and keep your NRA membership active. They need the money! Don’t forget to check out other state-based organizations, such as http://www.illinoiscarry.com/.

Do you have a pressing concern? Use the ‘Ask Tim’ contact form found at this page to let me hear your advice. Just use the graphic below!

Be safe,

Tim Schmidt

Founder - U.S. Concealed Carry
http://www.usconcealedcarry.com

Copyright © 2003-2008 Delta Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
Reproduction without permission is strictly prohibited.

“Why you can’t afford ANY duds / misfires, & what to do about it…”

We all know about Murphy’s Law. Personally, I think Murphy was a bit of a pessimist… but there’s still a lot to be said for thinking about ALL possible outcomes, and making a decision based on the best and worst possible outcomes.

Well, one of the worst things that can happen with our guns during a fight, is that we experience a jam or a dud round. We can prepare for this by using ’snap-caps’: dummy rounds that we can put into our guns and magazines during practice, to simulate a dud.

The idea is that if you train your mind to rack your slide in the event of a ‘fail to fire’, you will do it out of habit if it happens while your mind is turned off during a gun fight.

It’s ALWAYS good to have a back-up plan, no matter what you’re doing.

If you are thinking ahead, you have planned for a few days of self reliance in the event that something happens to disrupt the normal flow of society. I need to stress that preparing this way is just like carrying concealed- this is not paranoid, it’s common sense.

One area that we often over-look is fueling our vehicles.

Time and time again, we have seen that you CANNOT rely on gas stations to give you fuel during a crisis. At best, you’ll be waiting in line for hours for a few gallons of rationed gasoline.

Those of us who drive trucks or SUVs can expect some anger from those in line around you with small cars, who will look at you as if you are “wasting gas”.

At worst, the gas stations will be empty. It happens all the time- stations are supplied regularly, and they depend on being able to predict fuel usage.

If your entire area has to be evacuated because a chemical train derails (for example), this will be something that nobody has planned for, and since fuel trucks don’t drive into disaster zones, you and your family will have only the gas that’s in your tank.

So, what can you do? Remember- the goal here isn’t to completely rearrange your life, and spend a ton of money preparing for something that will probably never happen.

The goal is to take reasonable, common sense measures that will make it easier on everybody involved- especially you.

So, here is what you do:

1) Obviously, try to never let your car’s tank drop below 3/8s of a tank. In most vehicles, you’ll have at least 100 miles of fuel in your tank at 3/8s. If you don’t drive much, try to keep it above half tank.

2) Budget for, and buy a few metal 5 gallon safety gas cans. These are not cheap ($25-$35 each), but try to buy one per month for the next few months.

Then, get a product called “Sta-Bil”. It’s just a few dollars at any auto store or Wal-Mart. It’s usually in a clear container, and the fluid is reddish-pink.

As you get your metal cans, fill them up with 5 gallons of Premium Gasoline.

(The metal will keep the gas fresh longer than plastic, and Premium will remain usable for much longer than regular!)

When you get home, add 4 ounces of ‘Sta-Bil’ to the 5 gallons of gas, put the cap on, and slosh the gas around to mix the Sta-Bil.

(Sta-Bil is a gasoline stabilizer, and makes gas last for a LONG time.)

Then, take the full can and put it the coolest, driest, darkest, and most temperature-consistent place you can think of. (The more the temperature fluctuates, the faster the gas will degrade.)

If you can keep the gas in a good environment, the gas in this can will help carry you, your vehicle, and your loved ones to safety for YEARS.

The Sta-Bil bottle says two years, but I know for a fact it lasts longer than that. I’ve heard some people talking about 10+ years, but for safe keeping, I would recommend that every couple years, you just put the gas in your car, and refill the cans and repeat storage.

Do this, and there’ll be one less sheep in line for gas- for hours, when minutes count. And, you’ll be ahead of traffic and to safety by the time the pumps dry up.

Now- getting to safety is important, but without the right supplies, tools, and knowledge, it won’t really matter.

I strongly suggest that you take a look at the Ultimate Stayin’ Alive & Buggin’ Out Crash Course, available for next to nothing compared to the life-saving value you’re going to get out of this:

=> http://UltimateBugOutBag.com/

Hear what a USCCA member said about it this morning:

I don’t participate in an attitude of fear that the typical news media tends to foster. I do however, have handgun permit and take prudent precautions to deal with unforeseen situations. I believe this package is a good source of information to prepare oneself and family against those situations.

-NavyCalibrator

Get it, and stay one step ahead of the game forever.

“Uh Oh Moments & GLOCK Security…”

I went to sleep on August 28th, 2005 like any other Sunday night. I had no idea how much my life would change over the next week.

I had been following Hurricane Katrina, and the 11pm news was saying that it would make landfall early Monday morning.

I saw video of a dark, rainy and windy New Orleans, and a few cars driving along streets. They were predicting some serious damage, but with all the time to prepare, and the evacuation, I was sure that little would come of it all. Oh well… time for bed.

I was a computer repairman and technology consultant for a small company in Mid Michigan back then, and when I got to work, everything was normal. It was a beautiful sunny day in Michigan- low 70s, slight breeze, just a few clouds. All late August days in Michigan are wonderful, but that day was perfect- I was about as far from the storm as anyone could have been.

I booted up my laptop, and started running through my voicemails. As a certified news addict, one of the first windows that I opened was FoxNews.

Uh Oh. Fit had hit the shan in New Orleans. I stopped listening to the voicemails, and started rolling the live coverage that Fox had on their webpage.

I saw footage of people waving their arms on roof tops. I saw a Superdome jam-packed with people who had no homes to return to. Brown flood water was everywhere.

All day I was glued to my laptop, and it was hard to get any work done. I don’t even know if I opened our office that day. During the day, more levees broke, and more and more flooding took place. The storm was over, but it kept getting worse.

At noon, my dad called and asked if I’d heard about the gas prices.

“No, I haven’t left the office all day- what’s up?”

“They’re saying it’s going to be $5 a gallon by the end of the week, and some stations might even run out! I’m sitting here with all my cans, in line at…”

Uh Oh. My wife and I were young, just married, and just starting out in life.

I thought of my car in the parking lot, with about 1/4 of a tank of gas. I thought of my wife at her college, whom I’d married less than a month before. And I thought of our tiny house with no basement, which we’d just bought. We had maybe a couple hundred dollars in our accounts, and virtually no supplies at home.

Over the next few days, I watched New Orleans slip further and further into chaos and disorder. I never thought this was possible in modern America. Emergency helicopters were being shot at. Gangs were riding around in stolen vehicles, looting businesses and homes, raping women, and killing. On my laptop, I saw videos dead elders in crowded refuge points- these people had not planned on needing medicine for several days, and died from dehydration, heart attacks, and diabetes.

trash

I remember sitting on the top floor of a local old school building, where I was supposed to be preparing their computer lab for the kids returning from summer break. Instead, I watched on my laptop, as a team of SWAT officers tackle an old lady who refused to give up her only means of protection- a small pistol. I saw video of police officers living out of their cars, trying to offer aid where they could.

I watched a video of a cop trying to help someone change a tire, and when someone pointed at a group coming out of a store, the officer drew his S&W and fired a shot into the air. “Drop that stuff!” he yelled. They didn’t drop it, they just ran faster. The officer went back to helping change the tire.

I also saw video of police officers looting a Wal-Mart, right along side criminals. “Do you NEED those Nikes to survive?” a reporter was asking them, as they turned to avoid showing their face.

New Orleans was a hell hole, and it wasn’t getting better. I didn’t understand how this could happen in modern America. Maybe if half the country had been hit with something, but sheesh- a measly coast line gets smashed, and it’s taking a WEEK to get to people… and some people were acting like animals. I would never have expected public order to topple so quickly.

This was my Uh Oh Moment. There on the top floor of an impoverished 150 year old school building, it hit me, and I still remember trying to find cell phone signal against the computer lab’s north wall, so that I could call my wife to tell her that we needed to start budgeting for some survival supplies and a more effective gun- that night.

All I had at the time were some hunting shotguns and .22s. Ammo was easy to get, but I couldn’t believe that 1,000 miles away from New Orleans, even our local Wal-Mart’s shelves were completely empty of gallons of water, and water bottles. Nobody had them, for weeks. Apparently they had all been redirected to help the refugees, and all the current stock had been bought a few hours after the storm. Wow.

This is when I learned that when SHTF (crap hits the fan), the government is not going to be there to make sure I am taken care of. Now that I’m a little older, I actually prefer it that way, but it was quite a large pill to swallow as a 19 year old.

Within a month, we had a good sized store of canned goods, bottled water, and I had even bought my first handgun: a GLOCK 26. I still don’t remember where all the money came from to get this done (like I said, we were pretty hard pressed), but once we decided to do just DO IT, it wasn’t hard to trim some fat on our budget to get this stuff done.

Since then, there have been a few times where I put preparedness on the back-burner. When you’re not watching video of corpses floating down flooded streets, it’s easy to forget how quickly it can happen, and how suddenly an entire department store’s supply of food, water, and ammunition can be swept away by eager buyers or angry looters.

Today, I vow to re-inventory all of my disaster preparedness supplies, and see what I need to buy, and to set aside some money over the next couple months and just MAKE IT HAPPEN.

I vow this in front of all my fellow members of the USCCA, and I hope that if you’re not already prepared for AT LEAST three days of SHTF, you’ll take this vow with me. Please use the speech box in the bottom, right-hand corner of this post to comment about YOUR plans, your Uh-Oh moments, or anything else that you’d like to say.

My biggest piece of Disaster Preparation advice is this: don’t think that you have to go out and spend $200+ (or thousands) getting everything you can think of. You don’t need EVERYTHING to be prepared. Even if you have just one gallon of drinking water stored somewhere… or even just one can of Spam tucked away, you’re already better off than you were.

Just get what you can as you can afford it, and you will be much better for it.

And of course, if you need help with how to go about preparing or exactly what to get, or if you have questions about ‘bugging out’, 72 hour kits, rotating stock, or preparing your home and family for a disaster, (physically and mentally), I URGE you to check out our latest information package:

www.UltimateBugOutBag.com

(members click here for special member info!)

If this wasn’t the biggest time and money saving “how to prepare” guide out there, then we wouldn’t have made it, and I wouldn’t recommend it. Honestly, friend: The USCCA’s Ultimate Buggin’ Out and Stayin’ Alive Crash Course is where you need to start if you are anything less than totally prepared for a disaster or emergency scenario.

A Day for Remembrance…

Eight years ago on this day our nation was touched by the hands of evil. We banded together in our time of need to rescue the survivors and to bury the dead that we could find in the rubble and wreckage of buildings and planes that came down that day.

Today I ask that we all take a moment to remember. If you haven’t already, please go out and raise the flag in honor of those who have died in the initial attack, and in honor of those who have died in service to preserve our way of life. Raise the flag to the top of the mast- not at half-mast for this occasion. Raise it as a salute and declaration of our resolve to continue to fight against terrorism in all its forms. Raise the flag also in living tribute to the victims who survived the initial attack, and to the families of those who didn’t.

Across the Fruited Plain: Concealed Carry Confidentiality

“…pro-gun activists across the fruited plain are finding that attitudes among the elites are much different when it comes to exercising one’s right to bear arms…”

by Chad D. Baus

As the fight to restore the right to bear arms for self-defense was waged in various states, one of the toughest opponents to attempts to reform the law was the establishment media. With rare exception, newspaper editorial boards repeatedly took the side of legislators and gun ban extremists who prefer to view citizens more as subjects.

Thanks in no small part to media meddling, many states’ laws were first passed with onerous provisions (anti-gun poison pills) that pro-gun rights activists are now methodically laboring to remove.

One of the more common items inserted as a poison pill in many states under pressure from the establishment media was a public records provision. “We have to make sure,” the editorial boards claimed, “that the ‘right’ people are getting licenses.” But in the months and years after concealed carry laws took effect, it quickly became clear the media had far less noble intentions.

Instead of reporting, each time an armed robbery, home invasion, or car-jacking occurred, that the violent attacker did NOT have a license to carry, the news media set about to publish lists containing the private, personal information of license-holders, not unlike the state publishes records about registered sex offenders.

In my home state of Ohio, the Cleveland Plain Dealer was one of many news entities to obtain and publish a list of licensees after prodding from the Ohio Newspaper Association. Just a few days after the first list was published, one of the license-holders on that list - a Cleveland store-owner - was dead, having been ambushed by violent armed robbers as he came to work one morning.[1] Many wondered why the criminals knew they needed to get the jump on the store-owner. Had they read his name in the newspaper?

Other early problems with Ohio’s concealed carry law, which was written to specifically declare the records of license-holders private, and then to allow journalists access to the “private” records, included the sheriffs in at least two counties releasing private information beyond that enumerated in the media access loophole[2]. Additionally, at least one license-holder’s guns were stolen from his home after having his status as a gun owner published in the newspaper[3], and a prison guard was tracked down by a former inmate by using a list published in the local paper.[4]

Gun rights activists fought back. In the case of the Cleveland Plain Dealer and Sandusky Register, editors had their own information - truly public information - compiled and published on pro-gun websites such as BuckeyeFirearms.org. Telephone numbers, maps to their homes, deeds to houses, and even divorce records were displayed as examples of how such records could be used against individuals or family members who found themselves on lists such as the ones the newspapers were creating.[5]

In the end, two years after the media access loophole was inserted as a poison pill in Ohio’s concealed carry law, Buckeye state legislators reformed the law, making it illegal for journalists to copy the records.[6]

Battles over concealed carry confidentiality are currently ongoing in at least ten other states across the country.

Legislation seeking to close access to concealed carry records was introduced in North Carolina this spring, but has not yet received committee attention. Legislation has already moved in Tennessee and Oregon, but with disappointing results. Although it received overwhelming approval by each states’ House of Representatives (54-4 in Oregon and 83-12 in Tennessee, state senators had a different take. Tennessee senators narrowly rejected a colleague’s Senate Bill 1126 by 14-13 vote, and the Oregon Senate refused to vote on House Bill 2727.

On the other hand, in an impressive show in Alabama, both the House and Senate passed the legislation unanimously, and Gov. Bob Riley signed the bill into law on May 21. Additionally, Bills have already been passed into law in Arkansas and Virginia, but grassroots leaders there remain unsatisfied with the final outcome.

According to Phillip VanCleve, president of the Virginia Citizens Defense League (VCDL), Virginia law changed this year to block release of concealed handgun permit (CHP) info from the State Police, which holds a central database of all CHP holders. But there’s a catch.

“There is a loophole that allows local Circuit Courts to give out their own info for that court,” VanCleve notes. “We are planning on closing that loophole next year. I think we have a 70% chance of doing so, depending on the elections later this year. It’s just not good enough and we need to fix it.”

Motivation to change the law in that state came about after the Roanoke Times published a complete database of CHP holder information on the Internet.

“The uproar was so intense that they dropped that site within a day or two and have never gone anywhere near doing such a thing again,” VanCleve noted. “The Attorney General put a block on the State Police right after it happened and that is what was formally codified this year.”

In Arkansas, where (like so many other states) motivation to reform the law came about after the irresponsible actions of a newspaper, pro-gun activists were even more dissatisfied with passage of their confidentiality bill.

John Anderson, who serves as Communications Director of the Arkansas Concealed Carry Association (ACCA), said their concealed carry privacy bill came about because a local paper, the Arkansas Times, published a list in a copy-cat move after a list ran in neighboring Tennessee.

“They thought what the Commercial Appeal did in Tennessee was funny, so they posted the Arkansas list kind of as a, ’see we can do it too’ move,” Anderson observed.

Initially, the volunteers at ACCA had every reason to be encouraged by efforts to close the lists. “The bill had great public support and passed the Arkansas House on a 98-1 vote,” Anderson said. “However, when it got to the Senate it was ground to a halt, stalled and allowed to languish.” “It was being lobbied against heavily here by the local press association. The Governor, who seems to crave positive press, but also claims to be pro-gun, managed to force a compromise on the bill by coming out against making gun permit information private.

“The ‘compromise’ was anything but,” Anderson said. “It essentially made us compromise to the point where the list of names and zip codes are still considered public. We did manage to keep all information on the forms from being able to be published, but it was a very small victory.”

Like VanCleve’s VCDL, the good people at ACCA say they’ll be back next session next session, and that the issue “will be a very high priority for us.”

In some states, privacy is not just a concern for concealed carry license-holders. After revelations that the Delaware State Police were maintaining a list of gun buyers for years (despite a state law that required the records to be destroyed after 60 days), efforts by local gun rights activists and the NRA have resulted in legislation which would provide legal purchasers of firearms a source of redress in the Delaware court system if their firearms purchase records are improperly handled or stored by the Delaware State Police. The bill has been passed in the Delaware House and Senate, and awaits the signature of Governor Jack Markell.

In Michigan, gun rights activists are working legislation to prevent firearms retailers from taking photographs of people who purchase firearms. According to an NRA-ILA legislative summary, this bill is in direct response to actions taken by some major retailers (such was WalMart) who, under threats of litigation from New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, have created video surveillance registries under their “Responsible Firearms Retailer Partnership.” While the bill would allow stores to maintain their security surveillance, it would prevent recordings of gun and ammunition transactions for registration purposes.[8]

“There were several reports of this [video recording] happening last year,” said Brad Benzing, Legislative Liason for the (Michigan) Shooters’ Alliance for Firearms Rights (SAFR). “[The bill sponsor] was approached and introduced the same Bill in the previous Session.”

Unfortunately, SAFR’s Benzing says the bill did not move last session, and, he adds, “I suspect that the same will transpire here.”

While the “right to privacy” is spoken highly of by everyone from adulterous politicians to the ACLU, pro-gun activists across the fruited plain are finding that attitudes among the elites are much different when it comes to exercising one’s right to bear arms for self-defense without the judgmental glare of the ignorant and uninformed. It is clear that, while progress is being made, the fight for concealed carry confidentiality is far from over.

***

Chad D. Baus is the Buckeye Firearms Association Vice Chairman (www.BuckeyeFirearms.org), and an NRA-certified firearms instructor.

Footnotes:

[1] Days after Plain Dealer ‘outing’; CHL-holder Bill Singleton is dead, August 4, 2004, http://www.buckeyefirearms.org/node/1667

[2] Law not followed in release of Lucas Co. CHL-holders’ private information, September 15, 2004, http://www.buckeyefirearms.org/node/1761

[3] Did media list of gun owners put these 20 guns on the street? January 23, 2007, http://www.buckeyefirearms.org/node/3506

[4] Senate committee hears testimony on media access loophole, November 15, 2006, http://www.buckeyefirearms.org/node/3372

[5] What is the harm in publishing lists of concealed handgun license holders?, June 28, 2007, http://www.buckeyefirearms.org/node/3823

[6] SIGNED: General Assembly’s first attempt at Media Access Loophole fix, December 28, 2006, http://www.buckeyefirearms.org/node/3468

[7] Gun purchase glitch raises questions, The News Journal, October 28, 2008, http://www.delawareonline.com/article/20081028/NEWS01/810280392

[8] Michigan: Consumer Protection Bill Assigned to the House Judiciary Committee, April 10, 2009, http://www.nraila.org/Legislation/Read.aspx?ID=4738

USCCA Laugh of the Week

by Chaim’s Cartoons

“I only wish I had this stuff 10 years ago…”

Last month I sent you a link to a complimentary program I felt every USCCA members should own. It was created by a hand-to-hand close combat expert named Tim Larkin. The feedback on it has been phenomenal. In a phone call, one guy called it “a life changing experience.” Here’s what he wrote directly to Tim Larkin (he asked to remain anonymous and we’ve respected that wish by deleting his name).

——

“I can honestly not thank you enough for giving USCCA members the huge discount on your Human Weapons ‘package’ deal.

“I have trained most of my life to survive. I’ve taken multiple survival classes (you know, being dumped out in the desert with absolutely nothing and having to live for a week). I took firearms training classes as soon as I was old enough to own one and I’ve taken practical self defense courses, mostly emphasizing on getting it over with as quickly as possible. I’ve worked with Marines all my life so I’ve had advantages other civilians have not had. I’ve also taken medical classes, EMT certified, you name it. Being prepared is something I take seriously. The safety of my family and myself I take very seriously.

“But this mega pack of materials is amazing. The practicality, straight forwardness and focus of the material is fantastic. I have always wondered why so many instructors insist on teaching things that have absolutely no practical value in saving my life or the life of another. Why fill student’s heads with crap. We are only going to retain so much in a true life or death scenario – so give people the best possible odds of winning. The rest is fluff and gets people killed.

“Your information is just so valuable - I have already had many of my friends and co-workers purchase the set.

“As I emailed Tim Schmidt of USCCA - I can only hope that all the money, time and effort that I continue to put into this program is completely ‘wasted’ (ie, I’ll never need to use it).

“Your concept of ’break things inside people so they don’t work anymore’ honestly is so, I don’t even have words for it, unbelievably simple. For the life of me I cannot understand why that isn’t at the core of every training class I’ve ever taken. I’ve heard it said other ways with a lot of fluff around it but it is a straight up truism. All of my firearms training - that was the point of it. Just that simple. From that axiom everything can be built.

“I feel like a lot of my training has been complete crap and I also feel like it is so damn obvious I am annoyed at myself for not realizing it before. After reading your book I know why I didn’t realize it but still, it isn’t a pill that’s easy to swallow.

“A while ago I was put on the disabled list that severely limits the amount I can train. I have to take every opportunity I can to keep pushing myself but I have to do it in a way where I am not making things worse for myself. The material that is in this program is a major help to me. Some things I simply cannot do, others I can adapt to my situation. What is important is that I now have better tools to use and a better understanding of how to use them and when. I hope that I can one day attend one of your classes.

“So - thank you. I only wish I had this stuff 10 years ago and was ahead of the curve instead of catching up.”

(name withheld for confidentiality reasons)
-USCCA member

If you missed it last month, here’s the link again:

=> http://www.targetfocustraining.com/uscca <=

Coming Up On Armed American Radio

The Official Voice of the USCCA

by Mark Walters

Ok everyone. This radio program is now two relaxed hours and getting better by the week. Join me this Sunday for an unbelievable line-up! On Air this Sunday will be John Higgs, author of The Bug Out Book, Mark Craighead, founder of Crossbreed Holsters, The master of self-defense Massad Ayoob and the trio of hosts from the wildly popular Best Defense TV series on the Outdoor Channel, Michael Bane, Rob Pincus and Mike Janich. DON’T waste this unbelievable collection of knowledge! Be there with me this Sunday on Armed American Radio. Visit www.armedamericanradio.org for info on where to listen nationwide! See ya on the radio this Sunday at 8PM Eastern, 5 Pacific.

Review of Blackhawk’s Warrior Wear ZW5 Inch Side Zip Boot

USCCA Gear Review

by Cody Alderson

Continuing my series on gear from Blackhawk, I definitely wanted to get in a review of a literal foundational product that is imperative for those of us who take the “self” in self-defense seriously. Everyone should know how important it is to stay on your feet in a fight. Sure, there are some great systems of ground fighting techniques and tactics, but keeping our legs under us can very well mean life or death in a fight.

There are situations that call for going prone or crouching but those happen during times where we are in control of our body position in a three-dimensional space. The scary times come when we lose that control of our body position in a three-dimensional space. My favorite, sarcastically speaking, is walking from an outside environment that is wet, onto an indoor laminate floor surface that is smooth and shiny. That first step or two inside the door with a pair of wet shoes creates more new dancers than Arthur Miller ever did!

I wanted footwear that was battle tested but also suited to civilian life. I wanted a boot since that is my favorite every-day footwear. I’m just not a dress shoe kind of guy. I stopped wearing shoes that didn’t go above the ankle after an event that occurred when I worked as a bouncer in a bar a lifetime ago. A drunk started smacking one of the managers around one night. I pulled him off of the manager and then slipped a hinged handcuff onto his right wrist. He tried to fight me until I gave a twist of that hinged cuff. Oh, they are so much more suited to control than chain cuffs!

The bad guy relented but his girlfriend didn’t. She jumped on my back and started hitting me on the head with her fists. She wasn’t much of a fighter, but whoever hit me with the beer bottle at the same time was right on target. Motivated drunks who witnessed the fight involving the manager saw it as an opportunity to get involved in a free-for-all. When I got whacked with the beer bottle, I was surprised that it didn’t break. It hit me hard enough that when I moved, I lost one of my shoes.

With my bad guy hollering about the pain in his wrist and his girlfriend taking a piggyback ride on my back, I was fortunate to have a few moments to slip my shoe back on as the attention of the other drunks were on each other instead of me and my dancing partners. I really wish I had some pictures or video of those few moments. Though potentially life threatening, it turned out more funny than dangerous, especially since I have such a hard head.

After that it was boots only. For that job, I had to dress in suit pants and a suit jacket with a clip-on tie. The only reason I was wearing shoes instead of boots was because of the boss’s meticulous rules. Though I see it all of the time now (boots being worn with dress clothes), I was one of the pioneers. In practically any profession that requires employees to play dress up, I see men wearing various styles of hiking, law enforcement, and military style boots with their dress clothes. There are even dress shoes available now with lug soles instead of the old slick leather of old, but they are still shoes and not boots.

I can’t speak for women’s footwear; for that is a foreign language that I have never learned to speak. Sorry girls, I guess this review is mainly for guys. But I do have good news. On the Blackhawk website, there is a conversion chart available on the Downloads tab of the product page for a woman to be able to order the boots in men’s sizes that will fit them. For the females reading this article, if you don’t have to wear heels with your work attire, I’d strongly suggest wearing a good pair of boots. Even if you have to wear a dress and heels, I strongly suggest wearing at a minimum a pair of running shoes that go above the ankle back and forth to the work place.

As an aside, keep a pair of sweatpants to slip on over the dress, and a jacket too for emergency situations where you might have to walk out of an area. A woman with sweatpants, boots, and a jacket attracts much less attention from predators than a woman out in a nice dress and heels. Sad that our culture is like that? Yes. True that it is? Yes.

I really like how these boots are made. And they are special in another way to me too. I’ve got peripheral neuropathy. Basically that’s just some nerve damage. It is worse in my feet. I’m at the stage where I have pain if the footwear doesn’t fit right. Actually, it used to be much worse. Some nerve damage is so severe that the person who has it doesn’t feel anything. They can get a pressure sore or puncture, and not even know it until it is seen. Footwear that has protruding bulges or seams inside the footbed could cause pain, damage, or both depending on the level of nerve damage.

The inside of these Blackhawk boots where my tootsies take up residence doesn’t have any seams poking out on the insides, nor are there any bulges or spots that protrude into the footbed or sides. There is an Ortholite insole liner that is thick, comfortable, and washable. Below the liner is a fully covered and sewn footbed. No glue residue, cardboard, nails, or fasteners as can be seen when the liner is removed from lower quality footwear. Very well made indeed.

Here are photos of the inside of the boot without the liner as well as with:

The heel is fully supported with sturdy leather. The fabric portions of the boots are Cordura, not some cheap thin stuff that will fall apart.

The soles are Vibram Lug in a design that is “toothy” to get going on uneven surfaces and various terrain types from sand to snow. The parts of the lugs that make contact with a smooth surface such as standard indoor surfaces is pliable and “grabby” enough to keep me from skating when I’m not wanting to be skating.

The sole wraps up over the front to give reinforced point for climbing steep angles or crawling, and the whole toe area is oversewn with a reinforcement. Foresight has gone into the design of these boots in order to make them tough enough to hold up through whatever the user can dish out.

I also wanted the boots to not to be too tall. These ZW5 boots are five inches high. The perfect mid-height for boots. They also have a zipper on the side that makes it easier to put them on and take them off. The zipper doesn’t mean that the owner won’t have to ever unlace the boots. The zipper is an assist that makes it much easier to get the boots on and off.

These Warrior Wear boots are also waterproof utilizing SympaTex Technology to keep water out, and Dri-Lex to get the perspiration away from your feet. The tongue gusset only goes as high as the fourth eyelet of the six on the boots. Step in water higher than the fourth eyelet, and water probably will get in. This makes them perfect for everyday wear. They’ll get you through snow and puddles that are encountered in cities and towns everywhere. They might not be all that great for slopping the hogs in a foot of mud during the rainy season, but they are sturdy enough to survive the mess.

I don’t like the laces, but that’s not really Blackhawk’s fault. I’ve never liked the stock laces on any pair of boots that I have ever owned. With jeans being worn over the boots the laces keep coming untied throughout the day when using a standard tying knot for shoes that we learn as kids. I like waxed laces much better on boots because of how well the tying knot is held in place. These laces are like paracord. The only other thing I would change about these boots is to make the tongue loop and heel loop bigger for pulling the tongue up straight and the boot on. I don’t like to have to fiddle around with an assist loop to get my finger in it.

These boots are really comfortable and that’s really saying something coming from me. My wife remembers me taking forever at the shoe store inspecting the insides of footwear for the tiniest deformity that would cause me pain due to the neuropathy. In the photo below you can see my old orthopedic style shoes for folks with nerve damage on the left with the new ZW5 boots on the right.

The orthopedic boots cost $200.00, have lousy tread and they are not waterproof, but they are very comfortable. The Blackhawk Warrior Wear ZW5 boots are $169.00, have excellent tread and they are waterproof, and they are also very comfortable. As you can see in the photo, I am a bit tough on boots since the ones on the left aren’t even a year-old yet.

As far as I’m concerned, these are the Cadillac of boots. Available in black or desert tan in medium and wide widths from size 6 to 14 including half-sizes. This is a really good boot for $169.99. Get yourself some quality footwear at www.blackhawk.com.

Comments? I’d love to hear from you!
E-mail me at: cody@uscca.us
Follow Me on Twitter

== Survival Update ==
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Including Flu, Terrorists, & Economic Collapse
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Interview with a Pro-CCW Sheriff’s Candidate for Orange County CA: Part II

by Uli Gebhard

Suarez International Staff Instructor

In last week’s newsletter, range County, CA Sheriff’s candidate Bill Hunt gave a clear testimony to his proposed pro-CCW/Pro armed citizen policy. He evaluated Appointed Sheriff Sandra Hutchens’ restrictive approach as “badly misguided policies”, “unconstitutional” and the oppressive actions of her command staff as “unconscionable”, following a “dangerous anti-American political philosophy”. Here is part two of our interview with Bill Hunt. He is answering Uli Gebhard’s questions regarding armed citizens, training and recommendations for people who consider taking up the responsibility for their own safety in form of carrying a firearm.

7. Personally, I had very positive as well as very negative experiences with LEO in regards to holding a CCW. What would be the procedures and policies under your leadership for the OCSD when it comes to working with CCW holders?

There should be no reason for a law abiding citizen to have negative experiences with a law enforcement officer whether they are CCW holders or not! Law enforcement is a service profession, we work for you. I will emphasize a culture of service when I am sheriff from the top down.

8. You are currently a regular citizen, not a member of law enforcement. What are your thoughts on armed citizens?

As a citizen, I support elected officials who understand our constitutional rights, ALL of our constitutional rights and are committed to protecting them. These rights are what distinguishes the United States from the other countries in the world. It is why people have been flocking here for centuries. James Madison, considered to be the “Father of the Constitution” because he was the principal author of the document once stated, “Americans have the right and advantage of being armed - unlike the citizens of other countries whose governments are afraid to trust the people with arms.” We also are supposed to have the right to free speech, the right to peaceful assembly, protection against warrantless search, and so on. If we continue to elect or accept representatives regardless of the position, Sheriff, District Attorney, Board of Supervisors, who are ambivalent to these rights we are voluntarily surrendering them and that is a travesty.

9. How do you estimate the average level of training that armed citizens in Orange County have?

Proper training and gun safety is a very important consideration to me. Possessing firearms is a responsibility and careless or reckless handling can have serious consequences. As a boy I received much instruction from my father on weapons handling and safety. I received substantial weapons training as a soldier in the US Army and countless hours in my career in the Sheriff’s department. I have been handling weapons since I was a child and carrying weapons all of my adult life without mishap. But I have witnessed several “accidental discharges” over the last 30 years, generally due to inattention and failure to follow safety protocols when handling weapons. I think a minimum of 8 hours of instruction is necessary to familiarize a person with basic handling and safety considerations and to ensure basic competence and proficiency with the weapon. I encourage anyone who routinely handles weapons to seek additional training and practice beyond that to increase their shooting skills and decrease the likelihood of a weapons related incident.

10. What are your thoughts on force-on-force training for law enforcement as well as for armed citizens?

Anyone who carries a weapon for protection has a responsibility to be proficient with that weapon and to have adequate training to ensure it is handled responsibly. They should also have training and a plan for how to use that weapon for defense if necessary. It is my intention to offer course like this at the Sheriff’s Department public range, taught by the same staff that train our police officers in the Sheriff’s Basic Academy.

11. Do you have any recommendations for current CCW holders and for people who consider applying for a CCW?

There has never been a better time to get involved in the political process and fight for representation that reflects your values. There is a very committed conservative movement in Orange County that is fed up with politicians who fail to uphold their oath of office and restrict our liberties. This grass roots movement was absent in 2006 when I was trying to warn a lethargic electorate about a corrupt sheriff and a grossly mismanaged sheriff’s department. Now is the time for you to get involved and elect a sheriff who will uphold their oath of office and fight for your constitutional rights. It will require that you take some action, make a contribution, educate and involve your friends and family, support your candidate for sheriff and make a difference!

12. What are your thoughts on CCW reciprocity between California and other states?

I think it’s a great idea. One sheriff can’t make that happen but I am committed to working with the other pro CCW sheriff’s in the state to lobby for it.

Closing thoughts by Uli Gebhard:

The key point that came across in this segment is that Bill Hunt stands for equal application of the United States Constitution. There is no part in the Bill of Rights that is more important than another; it is not a menu that one picks from as it fits one’s particular agenda. The US Constitution is the cornerstone of our countries political system and it is a cornerstone for Bill Hunt to protect these rights.

Compare that to Appointed Sheriff Sandra Hutchens who has come up with quite creative ways to restrict these rights. Some of you may recall how she made it sound so sinister when we voiced our opinion to the board of supervisors. She and her staff were concerned back then about “first amendment activities”.

I can only speak for myself, but the positive, citizen-oriented approach that Bill Hunt is taking deserves my full support.

Working together as a CCW community, we can help him win this election.

This win will not come by itself. There is much to be done and our opposition had somewhat of a head-start.

There are many ways to support Bill Hunt’s campaign. Please check his website or the website of SafeOC who is endorsing Bill Hunt as Sheriff for Orange County.

Let’s get to work!

Uli Gebhard is a Mechanical Engineer and Firearms Instructor in Orange County, CA. You can find out more about him on his website: www.gebhardsolutions.com.


Quote of the Week

“As civil rulers, not having their duty to the people duly before them, may attempt to tyrannize, and as the military forces which must be occasionally raised to defend our country, might pervert their power to the injury of their fellow-citizens, the people are confirmed by the next article in their right to keep and bear their private arms.”

-Tench Coxe Federal Gazette, June 18, 1789

USCCA Forum Highlights

Every paying website member has complete access to the USCCA forum, which is constantly being accessed by members sharing information, knowledge, insight, and fun. With well over sixty-thousand posts and growing by the hour, this is one heck of a valuable resource!

If you have never logged in but are a member, visit THIS location to watch help videos, including how to find out your username and/or password!

*******************

(Lots of replies to this thread originally posted on 3/19/09. Read the latest updates at the link)

OK I’m Scared

I’m a life long city boy with some self protection on person and in the house. My concern is emergency items needed for a possible civil unrest that may involve the country. What are the items that I need to have in advance to survive? My initial thoughts are: 1. food (freeze dryed dinners) 2. water 3. propane stove 4. electric generator 5. ammo 6. ammo 7. water purification equipment 8. gasoline What else is needed or is my list in error?

*******************

No more Wolf ammo for me

I had a bad experience with Wolf .45 cal 230 gr ammo on Sunday. I had recently purchased 200 rounds of it on-line from Cabelas. In my first 40 of 50 rounds fired I had 4 ejection failures! The last one locked up the slide (closed). I could not clear the weapon but was able to drop the magazine, and by counting the remaining rounds still inside the mag, I determined I did not have a hot round in the gun. So it was off to the “Smitty” on Monday.
The “Smith” was able to clear the gun and then checked for any internal damage and found none thank goodness. The problem was a failed case on the ammo. It had roughly a 1/8″ split in it. My curiosity got the best of me and when I got home today I went through the rest of the brass from my shooting day. I was able to find two other cases with splits in them! So, I am through with Wolf ammo.

For those who are sticklers for detail:
1) I was shooting a Kimber Ultra Carry II and these were the first failures I have had in the almost 8 years I have owned it.
2) This was the first time I have used Wolf ammunition (and the last).
3) The Wolf ammo has steel cases not brass. I used the word “brass” in my report as a summary because I had already fired a different brand of ammo that day as well.
4) Every time I shoot outdoors I try to collect all of my empties and bring them home.

I hope this information is useful.

*******************

Church Security Incident-Three Men Burst Into Church and Disrupt Service

Rather interesting. Two thoughts: Note that the membership kept their heads and responded appropriately to the level of the disruption. Second thought is, it could have been worse; has been in the past. Review your positions and sight-lines, guys.

From: churchsecuritymember.com

Church Security Incident-Three men burst into two separate churches this past Sunday yelling, “God is dead!” The incident caused a disruption and they were escorted out by church members.

It was a situation that caused fear for church members.

Shreveport Police say the man first ran into the Heritage Baptist Church at Kirby Street and Creswell Avenue, yelling ‘God is dead,’ and a few other things, before getting escorted out.

“I thought it was humorous in the sense that if there’s no God why spend so much of your time trying to disprove that which doesn’t exist,” said Heritage Baptist Church Pastor Earl Blackburn.

The suspects repeated the offense again just a mile away at First Baptist Church of Shreveport.

“It was right in the middle of service. He just came in and started screaming about God isn’t real and it’s all fake, it’s all a lie,” said church member Michael Morales.

“It was just very disturbing,” said Morales wife, Elizabeth.

Morales says he and several other men watched the man go outside and get into a pick-up truck with two others passengers.

“A couple of guys called the cops as soon as he walked out and we gave them a great description of the guys and of their truck and we got their license plate number,” said Morales.

This is a church security incident that could have escalated very quickly. Notice the church members were able to keep their wits, and reported a great description, which led to the suspects being apprehended.

Due to the descriptions, police quickly found the truck and charged the driver with DWI. They believe he had just dropped off the other two men at Highland Park, where the men were eventually arrested.

A police spokesman stated, “I just checked with detectives in major crimes and we’re going to try to book them in under a hate crime. This could have gotten out of hand quick.”

Video of the Week

This incredible footage of the attack on the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001 is about twenty-six minutes long, but worth watching to both remember and see the events again from another perspective. This footage is not encumbered by editorial from a newscaster, or fancy graphics and editing as what most of us saw as we watched the news channels that day.

The soundtrack is the sounds of home going on in the background while the video recorder is running. The chaos can be heard when the camera operator opens a window to the outside. In the beginning moments of the footage one can hear a children’s song playing in the background. Later on a baby can be heard.

Probably most of us USCCA members would have immediately taken our family to a safer place if we could, and maybe the makers of this video could not get away. Maybe they figured they were a safe enough distance away. I don’t know. The smoke and dust of the second tower’s collapse is an ominous site as it creeps toward their open window.

Watch it and remember . . . and God bless the victims, heroes, and survivors.

September 11 2001 Video.

USCCA Photo of the Week

All Photos of the Week are taken from Mr. Oleg Volk’s website:
http://www.a-human-right.com/.
It is a fantastic site. Please check it out!

USCCA Self Defense Story

Every day, thousands of Armed Americans use their firearms to preserve human life. Let this section of my newsletter serve as a record of this fact!

September 4, 2009

San Marcos, Texas

From: The Houston Chronicle

Two Teens Killed Trying To Break Into Home

A man shot and killed two teenagers and wounded another when they tried breaking into his home early Friday, police said.

A fourth teenager was arrested and is expected to be charged with aggravated robbery.

Three of the four male teenagers who tried breaking into the home were armed, one with a handgun and two with pellet guns that looked like more powerful weapons, San Marcos Police Chief Howard Williams said.

One of the three college-aged people who lived in the rental home opened fire on the teens with a .40-caliber Glock pistol, killing two 16-year-olds and wounding another suspect. A 17-year-old suspect fled the scene but was captured and arrested after returning to the scene to check on his friends, police said. He’s expected to be charged with aggravated robbery, Williams said.

The wounded suspect was taken to Brackenridge Hospital in Austin with non-life threatening injuries, Williams said. Officials say the wounded suspect is also expected to be charged.

Police did not identify the suspects or those who lived in the home. None of the residents were injured. One was a Texas State University student.

Williams said the shooter appeared to be acting in self-defense and “there doesn’t appear to be a crime” related to the shooting.

The suspects are from Luling, about 20 miles southeast of San Marcos, Williams said. It does not appear they know those living at the home, he said.

The shooting happened shortly before 2 a.m. Friday. Police responded to a 911 call about a home invasion and shots fired.

“If you feel threatened, you certainly have a right to defend yourself,” said Williams.

San Marcos is about 30 miles south of Austin.

Closing Thoughts

Tim- This is probably not the place for this, but I found it interesting. I was in Cabela’s yesterday buying a shotgun. There were 2 couples at the counter next to me. One of the guys was getting his wife a pistol. There was a pink Lady Smith in the case. When he pointed it out she said ” I don’t have a pink hammer or a pink screwdriver and I don’t need a pink gun”. At the time I was preoccupied with my purchase so I didn’t give it much thought. On the way home however, I realized what a great line that was. Mark
Mark, that’s a great point. I have no problem with pink guns- I think it’s not much different than the Olive Drab GLOCK the Gunny carries. I think it’s all personal preference, as long as you recognize that no matter what color a gun is, it’s just as effective and dangerous as any other- whether it’s silver, gold, black, brown… or pink.
Do you have a pressing concern? Use the ‘Ask Tim’ contact form found at this page to let me hear your advice. Just use the graphic below!

Be safe,

Tim Schmidt

Founder - U.S. Concealed Carry
http://www.usconcealedcarry.com