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GOA: Compromise Is Hurting Gun Rights in Florida By TTAG Contributor

GOA Attacked for Holding a Compromising Politician Accountable

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On Thursday of last week, a Florida gun group launched an attack on our state director Luis Valdes and, by extension, on Gun Owners of America.

One pro-gun writer described it as an “attack piece” against GOA.

GOA's Erich Pratt and Luis Valdes with FL. Rep. Sabatini

From left to right: GOA’s Erich Pratt, pro-gun Rep. Anthony Sabatini (R-FL) and GOA FL Director Luis Valdes

This broadside was then reprinted by a national group, as well as another state gun group in Florida.

GOA has made it a practice not to speak ill of other pro-gun groups, and so I don’t intend to do so here. At the same time, given the coordinated attacks by several groups, it’s necessary that I respond to the false allegations because there are surely many GOA members who have read the articles, and they want to hear our side of the story.

You can read my full response to these accusations at The Truth About Guns.

NOTE: If you haven’t yet read my response at The Truth About Guns, I encourage you to stop reading here, click on the link directly above, and take a moment to read the article before continuing on. It will give you the best overview of the situation.

And make sure to read the comments at the bottom. They are universally supportive of GOA!

As you know, GOA is a no-compromise group, which means that we will never give politicians a pass for compromising — no matter what their party affiliation. GOA has been critical of many Florida legislators for refusing to pass substantive pro-gun bills. And ultimately, we are being attacked for holding accountable one legislator in particular: Rep. Cord Byrd (R-FL).

After The Truth About Guns printed my response, the other author has doubled down and launched a second attack against GOA. If you have questions regarding what this is all about, I encourage you to read my original response to this organization from Saturday, and the second ad hominem “attack piece” against GOA on Sunday. And as you do, here are a few things you should notice between these two articles:

  • The author of the attack piece claims that it was GOA who attacked him, the “messenger because [we] couldn’t handle the message.” But if you read my Saturday article, you will see that I studiously avoided mentioning the author or either of the two groups he represents. In fact, if you read people’s comments at the bottom, the only somewhat “negative” comment is that I was too nice because I didn’t “name names.” The reason was that we wanted to stay focused on the real problem – which is the compromising politicians and avoid an “infighting” situation.
  • Our antagonist claims we erred in saying that the pro-gun champion of the Florida legislature, Rep. Anthony Sabatini (R-FL), has introduced Constitutional Carry. For starters, the author ignores this statement that GOA made in our Florida alert last Friday: “Rep. Anthony Sabatini (R-FL) stand[s] before gun owners at the State Capitol pledging to introduce Constitutional Carry for the third time in a row.” That clearly indicates the bill has not yet been finalized. Moreover, Sabatini is the past sponsor of the bill, and he has already submitted the draft to the House Bill Drafting Service for printing. You can read what Rep. Sabatini told our state director Luis Valdes about the bill’s status here.
  • The writer claims that the GOA leadership was “in a quandary” over what our Florida Director Luis Valdes did (in being critical of compromising politicians). Well, as the Chairman of Gun Owners of America, I can assure you that neither I, nor the top officers of this organization, ever expressed any regret or doubt – and we were never in a “quandary.” It’s a shame that being a reporter, the author never picked up the phone and called me or my two vice presidents for a comment, because we could have quickly disabused him of that notion.
  • The Sunday article claims that we err in not blaming the entire leadership in the Florida legislature for the failure to pass Constitutional Carry. He accuses us of only blaming one Republican lawmaker, and he claims that Luis is unable to find legislative offices to meet with. Sadly, a quick purview of our website would have revealed the error on both counts. In fact, we have repeatedly blamed the entire Republican leadership in the legislature for their compromises, including the House Speaker Chris Sprowls and Senate President Wilton Simpson. See herehereherehereherehere and here – and notice how many times these reports reveal Luis meeting with state legislators (and the Governor’s office). Luis was able to meet with all these offices, even though the Capitol was officially closed due to COVID.
  • The author also attacks Luis as a political neophyte who has no prior 2A experience. Again, a modicum of research would have shown this to be false. Luis was involved in helping organize the Tallahassee gun rights rally in 2018 which drew hundreds of people. He has written dozens of articles (as a reporter) for The Truth About Guns over the past several years. And, in his former life as a cop, he publicly called out other officers for their actions during an arrest of Florida Carry members in Miami Beach.
  • Finally, in reading both GOA’s article and the author’s rebuttal, you should notice a stark difference. GOA’s article is packed with citations throughout. His article is a collection of ad hominem attacks and allegations without substantiation. His article is full of personal invectives against our Florida Director. GOA’s article has none of that, because again, our aim is to focus on the real problem – which is the compromising politicians.

GOA’s “no-compromise” approach wins key battles

Ultimately, this comes down to a disagreement over how GOA lobbies. Rep. Ron Paul said that, “GOA is the only no-compromise gun lobby.” If you ever wondered what that means, this is one such example.

GOA doesn’t compromise, and we never have during our 40-plus years in operation. And while that drives some politicians crazy, it also upsets some gun owners who are willing to compromise if it means that they can have a “seat at the table.”

So case in point: While the author is a board member of the state group that is attacking GOA, he also writes for a national gun group that, in 2013, was pushing the Manchin-Toomey gun control bill in the wake of the Sandy Hook shooting.

Yes, that’s right. A national gun rights group was pushing the Manchin-Toomey compromise – which was a Universal Background Check-lite bill.

Well, GOA took a different approach in 2013. We opposed ALL gun control that year (as we always do), and we blasted the compromises that some gun rights advocates were pushing.

Rather than taking what legislators give us — and simply tweaking it to make it “not so bad” – we rallied the grassroots with the message: “Oppose all gun control.”

We generated so much grassroots pressure, that Republican Senators who were thinking about supporting gun control-lite, quickly backed away.

Consider this report from Slate: “When Sen. Tom Coburn, an Oklahoma Republican, backed away from bipartisan talks to expand background checks earlier this year, he did so after Gun Owners of America and its members flooded the senator’s office with e-mails and phone calls.”

In the end, GOA’s approach won. And the New York Times even credited GOA with killing Universal Background Checks (UBCs) in 2013.

But notice: Our approach differed from other lobby groups that were trying to broker a compromise on UBCs. Again, their approach can be summed up as getting a “seat at the table” where they can negotiate gun control language that’s “not as bad” as the original.

That’s not how GOA operates. We mobilize YOU — the grassroots — because the millions of gun owners like yourself are the ones best suited to blast the compromisers and rein them back in. Sadly, other groups don’t mobilize the grassroots this way.

The state group which is attacking GOA only sent one legislative alert to its grassroots members this year. Only one! By contrast, GOA put out over 20 alerts into the state within the period of a few months. But what’s ironic is that in the past week, this group has sent double the number of alerts (2) as they have legislative alerts (1) in 2021 – but both alerts in the past week focused on attacking a fellow gun organization.

This has not gone unnoticed by Florida gun owners. On Sunday, in the wake of the second hit piece on GOA, one Floridian posted this on Facebook:

They [the state group] doubled down attacking Luis Valdes and Gun Owners of America-Florida today with a condescending yet entirely emotional ad hominem tirade. Literally the only two emails I’ve received from them in almost two years were to attack other gun groups. Yet they’re nowhere to be found otherwise.

In a nutshell: GOA is under attack for refusing to compromise. But you have my promise that GOA will never do that. We are NOT going to compromise. And we will continue to hold politicians accountable when they do, and we will be sure to “name names” and tell you who the oath-breaking politicians are.

So thank you so much for standing with us. We can’t do what we do without your activism.

In Liberty,

Tim Macy
Chairman
Gun Owners of America

P.S. Go here to read this alert online.

P.P.S. See the announcement below for all the ladies of GOA!

 

Best outdoor ranges in or near Tampa?: FLGuns

By Tim Macy

This week, a Florida gun group launched an attack on our state director Luis Valdes and, by extension, on Gun Owners of America.

This broadside was then reprinted by a national group, as well as another state gun group in Florida.

GOA has made it a practice not to speak ill of other pro-gun groups, and so I don’t intend to do so here. At the same time, given the coordinated attacks by several groups, it’s necessary that I respond to the false allegations because there are surely many gun owners who have read the articles, and they want to hear our side of the story.

As you know, GOA is a no-compromise group, which means that we will never give politicians a pass for compromising — no matter what their party affiliation. GOA has been critical of many Florida legislators for refusing to pass substantive pro-gun bills, and ultimately, this is why we are being attacked.

One would think that suggesting there is a problem with Florida’s elected Republicans would be a no-brainer. After all, Florida has a Republican supermajority which means that Democrats have no power to stop significant pro-gun bills — if only Republicans had the will to push them.

But as I will explain below, Republican politicians have been stealthily working to undermine pro-gun bills. One such politician is Florida state Representative Cord Byrd, who has refused to bring up important pro-gun bills — such as Constitutional Carry and 2A Sanctuaries — after he had promised to do so.

This is something that Luis Valdes has pointed out. It’s information that gun owners need to know.

Sadly, the group attacking GOA gets personal and questions Luis’ motives, writing: “I understand Valdes wants to generate buzz and possibly a headline, and he’s not the first to go after a well-known member of the gun community in the hopes it will create even more of a splash.”

To the contrary, Luis was not trying to generate “buzz” or “headlines” or create a “splash.” What he is doing is holding legislators accountable who are in a position to move pro-gun legislation but refuse to do so.

Pro-gun champion in the Florida House calls out RINO Republicans

While Rep. Byrd has voiced support for Second Amendment rights, it’s also clear that he has put his promises to gun owners on hold in order to appease the Republican leadership, who simply want gun owners to go away and leave them alone. (I’ll explain this below.)

But first, it’s worth noting that Rep. Anthony Sabatini, who is the sponsor of Constitutional Carry, has been quick to point out how Republicans are killing pro-gun legislation behind closed doors. He has seen this firsthand and has not hesitated to call them out.

At a recent press conference, the media reported: “Sabatini called out his fellow Republicans, some by name … for not doing enough for gun rights.”

And in this video, Rep. Sabatini calls out the “spineless RINO Republicans” in Florida for “lying to the American people about being strong on the Second Amendment.”

 

Likewise, pro-gun media have noted how the Republican leadership in Tallahassee is refusing to bring up substantive, pro-gun bills like Constitutional Carry:

The state of Florida has been semi-jokingly referred to as the Gunshine State. However, they’re not nearly as pro-gun as a lot of people think. They have a long way to go to really be one of the most pro-gun states in the nation. Yet they could make a big step toward that if they were to pass constitutional carry. Unfortunately, there doesn’t seem to be much political will.

After our press conference in Tallahassee to push Constitutional Carry, pro-gun media reported: “Let’s hope the powers that be in Florida step up and listen. If not, maybe it’s time for some lawmakers to start looking for a new line of work.”

Of course, the “powers that be” are Republicans who have held a supermajority for years.  This means that Democrats have NO WAY to stop Constitutional Carry…if only Republicans had the political will to pass it.

Sadly, they don’t have the will to do so. And they don’t like it when we start naming names.

The big lie: ‘We don’t have the votes’

When Republicans who don’t want to move pro-gun legislation come under fire, they complain that “their hands are tied” or that “they don’t have the votes.” This is a lie that is repeated time and time again. We hear it in Congress and in state legislatures across the country.

And incidentally, this is exactly what Texas Lt. Gov. Daniel Patrick tried to do to gun owners this year, claiming “we don’t have the votes” to pass Constitutional Carry:

“If we have the votes to pass a permitless carry bill off the Senate floor, I will move it,” Patrick said in a statement. “At this point we don’t have the votes on the floor to pass it.”

Of course, that means: “We don’t have the political will to pass Constitutional Carry.”

As you know, GOA’s team was the key force in pushing Constitutional Carry onto the Governor’s desk in Texas. And we did so over their “we can’t get your bill passed” objections. We demanded the legislature vote on the legislation — despite the Republicans’ claims that “they didn’t have the votes.”

And guess what? When push came to shove … and they forced a vote on the bill … they actually had the needed votes!

Lies and Broken Promises

In Florida, Rep. Cord Byrd was assigned to be the Committee Chair for the House’s Criminal Justice & Public Safety Subcommittee, which is a very important one since the majority of the pro-gun bills were assigned to this committee.

Rep. Byrd’s prior legislative action showed hopeful advancement for the cause of liberty in Florida. In 2018, he voted against SB 7026, the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Act.

Otherwise known as the Parkland Gun Control bill of 2018, it was the legislation that gave Florida an under-21 purchase ban, Red Flag Gun Confiscation Orders, and other horrible pieces of gun control.

As such, in the start of the previous session, our state director, Luis Valdes, approached Rep. Byrd and asked him when he was bringing up Constitutional Carry (HB 123), the Repeal of the Parkland Gun Control (HB 6083), and other pro-gun bills. He informed Luis that it would be the middle of session.

As time went on, GOA supported Rep. Byrd’s own bill — State Preemption (HB 1409) — plus the Church Carry bill (HB 259) that Rep. Byrd co-sponsored.

One thing that the hit-piece on GOA did NOT mention is that we have been very complimentary of Rep. Byrd where appropriate. In March of this year, GOA’s Valdes stated: “I believe that Rep. Bryd is a good man. As a lawyer, he even promotes himself as a ‘Gun Lawyer’ through his law firm.”

So we praise legislators when it’s appropriate, but we also have to hold them accountable when they don’t follow through on their promises.

This is a key point. To ignore a politician’s broken promises would be akin to believing the husband who tells his wife that, despite having committed adultery, he has always been solidly committed to the marriage.

When the middle of session came, Valdes asked Rep. Byrd again where he was on bringing up the other pro-gun bills. After all, why would Rep. Byrd not want to push a bill to repeal the Parkland gun control that he voted against?

He told GOA that, “They don’t have Senate Companion Bills,” so bringing them up is a waste of time. (Sounds a lot like what we were hearing out of Texas, doesn’t it?)

Of course, Byrd’s statement was only a partial truth. Yes, they did not have companion bills. But under Florida’s legislative rules, bills do not need a companion in the other chamber to advance. The House can introduce legislation and pass it. It then advances to the Senate where they can choose to advance it or not.

And Rep. Byrd absolutely knows this. After all, Rep. Byrd has brought up other bills that did not have companion bills in the Senate (HB 411 and HB 1397). Byrd held votes on both of these non-gun related bills, and both passed favorably out of his committee, but then died in other committees.

So when he says that he can’t bring up bills for a vote that have no Senate companion bill — because that would be a waste of time — well, that’s just simply untrue.

The question that gun owners should be asking Rep. Byrd is: “Why will you bring up non-gun related bills for a vote — even when they don’t have Senate companions — but you won’t do that for substantive pro-gun bills, such as Constitutional Carry?”

Democrats push anti-gun bills, even when they don’t have sufficient votes

Consider how anti-gun Democrats at the national level push their agenda. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi doesn’t wait for companion bills to be introduced in the Senate. She pushes anti-gun bills to a vote, even if she knows they’re dead in the Senate. The reason is: She wants to create momentum.

This is exactly how national Democrats got the Brady Bill passed in 1993. For several years, they pushed for votes in one chamber — even though they couldn’t get a vote in the other chamber. Nevertheless, they forced votes year after year — and it worked. Even though Senator Bob Dole could have stopped the Brady bill from passing the Senate (by objecting to a Unanimous Consent agreement), he wilted, stating that: “Let’s get the best deal we can and move on.”

The pressure campaign to generate momentum had worked. The other side wore down “our side” in the same way that General Washington wore down the British.

So to say that “bringing them up is a waste of time” is simply not true. Victory feeds upon itself — and the momentum generated by holding hearings and conducting votes is extremely valuable. Our side needs to push substantive pro-gun legislation like Constitutional Carry. We need hearings, committee votes, chamber votes, etc.

Florida: A long record of killing pro-gun legislation

In the end, state Rep. Byrd allowed Constitutional Carry to die in committee without a vote or even a hearing.

This a pattern the Republican Party of Florida has used for years — they pick a designated “blocker” to hold up gun legislation that is popular with gun owners, but which is not favored by the party establishment.

That blocker is considered electorally “safe,” is leaving the legislature anyway, or is assured of a lucrative position should harm befall them.

In prior years, there was Sen. Anitere FloresSen. Rene GarciaSen. Miguel Diaz de la PortillaSenator Ellyn BogdanoffSenator John Thrasher, and Rep. Richard Corcoranjust to name a few. They all held important positions or chaired important committees and killed bills like Open Carry and Campus Carry over the past decade.  

What do they all have in common? They were Republicans who originally campaigned as being pro Second Amendment, and they received endorsements and high ratings from other gun rights organizations.

The compromising by other gun groups is not a well-kept secret in Florida. Chandler Langevin, who is President of Protect the 2nd in Florida, is running for Florida House District 52.

Langevin, who also works in a legislative office in the Tallahassee House, has an inside look at what’s happening in the state capitol. And this is what he had to say about Rep. Byrd and the attack on GOA and Luis Valdes: 

Thank you, Luis Valdes and Gun Owners of America/ Gun Owners of America — Florida for fighting a NO COMPROMISE fight for our 2nd Amendment rights here in Florida.

Florida Carry on the other hand would rather shill for the NRA and keep our fight for Florida’s gun rights stagnant. This is an unacceptable and cowardly approach. It will also render the organization illegitimate in any future battles for gun rights.

Let’s be perfectly clear. Cord Byrd had the opportunity to push Anthony Sabatini’s bills for Constitutional Carry, a 2nd Amendment Sanctuary State, and another bill to repeal Red Flag Laws to a committee hearing. Cord didn’t allow even a hearing, he didn’t go to the media to raise awareness. No, he killed them.

Langevin truly understands the legislative process. There is no reason that, in a state which has a Republican SUPER majority, we should not see the legislature pass important pro-gun measures like Constitutional Carry and 2A Sanctuary bills. Or at least to hold legislative hearings!

‘Old Guard’ to the grassroots: Get back in line, we know better than you!

GOA was attacked for supposedly not understanding the legislative process. More specifically, the email broadside against GOA quotes Marion Hammer (who is the head of the Unified Sportsmen of Florida) as saying:

When groups and group spokespersons, who don’t understand the legislative process, attack legislative leadership and committee chairmen who support the Second Amendment, they shoot themselves in the foot and do an enormous disservice to law-abiding gun owners.

This is quite ironic, given our success in getting Constitutional Carry passed in Texas this year. But many have reacted against these comments and blasted that statement for coming across as arrogant.

As one person responded: “Luis must’ve struck a nerve. Good. This is nothing more than a command from the ‘ruling class’ to ‘the serfs’ to get back in line and shut up — WE know what’s best for you.”

The truth of the matter is that, in Tallahassee, GOA has outperformed the group that is now attacking us by every certifiable measure. That may sound like braggadocio. But this can be verifiably proven.

For one, GOA put out as many as twenty times more email alerts than did this other group. But that’s not all.

A simple search of lobbyist records shows that GOA’s Florida director Luis Valdes was present for every gun-related hearing. And this includes his testifying on the church carry bill (HB 259) which eventually passed. However, the group behind the attack on GOA did not testify at a single gun-related hearing in the House. (See the accompanying images below.)

So in review: When it came to mobilizing the grassroots and testifying before legislators, GOA outperformed the gun organization that is now attacking us.

As suggested above, it makes me very uncomfortable to point these things out. It is not GOA’s policy to comment on what other pro-gun organizations do or don’t do. That’s their business, and they have to answer to their own members for their actions. Very often, these are well-meaning Second Amendment advocates who simply hold to a different lobbying philosophy than GOA’s.

But as I said before, when another organization takes a swipe at GOA, which has a long-record of legislative accomplishments, we owe it to our membership to answer the false allegations. Because naturally, many will have questions.

GOP Senator reveals RINOs don’t get negative criticism from 2A community

For over twenty years, the Republican Party has held a supermajority in Florida. Yet the state is falling behind in the advancement of liberty — and worse, it was Republican lawmakers who advanced gun control!

Failing to bring up pro-gun bills for a committee hearing or vote can be summed up easily: “The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.”

This describes the problem in Florida and is exactly the point made by Sen. Dennis Baxley (R) in 2019:

Republican Lawmakers don’t support pro-gun legislation because they don’t hear any negative criticism from their constituency. They take the silence of gun owners as approval.

If Florida gun groups refuse to hold compromising politicians accountable, then Sen. Baxley’s analysis becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. The failure to hear criticism will result in more of the same — which means that we only get “table scraps” when it comes to gun rights.

If we are going to get Constitutional Carry enacted in Florida — or anywhere else in the country — we must demand that Republicans act to support our rights.

We want hearings … we want votes … we want the bill sent to the Governor. And if legislators refuse to do this, we must hold them accountable.

Anything short of that, as Sen. Baxley suggested, will only encourage Republicans in any state to continue ignoring the voice of pro-gun voters.

Again, Gun Owners of America does not compromise, and we will not carry water for any political party (or politician) when they compromise. The Second Amendment is apolitical, it belongs to everyone and the best way to secure that is to advance liberty.

This is GOA’s message both in Florida and across the country, and we urge all gun owners to be always vigilant in holding their elected official accountable.

 

Tim Macy is the Chairman of Gun Owners of America, a grassroots lobby representing more than two million gun owners nationwide. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Shooting Italian Vetterli 1870/87/15 Rifle

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A Colt DIAMONDBACK in .22 LONG RIFLE with a 4-INCH VENT RIB BARREL

Colt DIAMONDBACK .22 LONG RIFLE...4-INCH VENT RIB BARREL... NICE SHAPE W/ EXTRA GRIPS... MFD 1980 .22 LR - Picture 2With an aftermarket gripColt DIAMONDBACK .22 LONG RIFLE...4-INCH VENT RIB BARREL... NICE SHAPE W/ EXTRA GRIPS... MFD 1980 .22 LR - Picture 3

Colt DIAMONDBACK .22 LONG RIFLE...4-INCH VENT RIB BARREL... NICE SHAPE W/ EXTRA GRIPS... MFD 1980 .22 LR - Picture 4

Colt DIAMONDBACK .22 LONG RIFLE...4-INCH VENT RIB BARREL... NICE SHAPE W/ EXTRA GRIPS... MFD 1980 .22 LR - Picture 5

Colt DIAMONDBACK .22 LONG RIFLE...4-INCH VENT RIB BARREL... NICE SHAPE W/ EXTRA GRIPS... MFD 1980 .22 LR - Picture 8

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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American Handguns of World War 1

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A Victory!

Mississippi Hunters Hook Massive 787-Pound Alligator by MAX SLOWIK

Eli Frierson, Adam Steen and Bubba Steen, Kent Britton and Ty Powell, from left to right, with their 787-pound alligator caught last week. (Photo: Clarion Ledger)

A group of Mississippi hunters took a monstrous 13-foot, 2-inch alligator weighing nearly 800 pounds. The five men spent hours trying to reel in the big predator from the Yazoo River on August 29th.

“We were on the Yazoo River north of Redwood,” said first-time hunter Ty Powell. “We probably saw 15 or 20 on the way up, but we had that spot marked and were headed there.”

Powell was one of just 920 hunters issued an alligator tag for this season. Thousands of prospective hunters apply for the tags every year. “They told me to go buy a lottery ticket because I was the luckiest man in Mississippi that day,” said Powell.

His luck was just picking up. Along with Kent Britton of Poplar Creek, Eli Frierson of Starkville, Adam and Bubba Steen of Ethel, Ty Powell, from Columbia, would catch a behemoth.

“We had known about this alligator a month before,” said Britton. “We had him pinned on our phones along with another alligator.”

Members of the crew spotted an alligator estimated to be at least 12 feet long and around 500 pounds, so the team started there. Seeing nothing but smaller alligators, they began to travel upriver in two boats in hopes of spotting their prize.

“When we got back down there, there was another set of eyes,” said Powell. One of the hunters managed to hook the alligator and handed his rod and reel to Powell.

The line snapped when the gator swam around a log. “It’s a little bit of helplessness,” Powell said. “You don’t know if you’re going to get another chance at him. When you feel that line loosen up real quick, it’s an ‘Oh, no’ feeling.”

Still, the hunters pressed on, and got their second chance.

“He popped up about 30 to 40 yards between us,” Britton said. “Me and Eli hooked him at the same time from two different vessels. As soon as I hooked him, we got the boats together and I passed my pole to Ty so they could fight him from the same boat. He popped up 20 minutes later and I got another line on him.”

The huge alligator put up some fight, with their gear slowly falling apart in the process. They had been wrestling with the gator for about three hours. Toward the end they only had one of their three fishing poles in fully working order, but they persisted.

“Just to get him from the side of the boat into the boat took all five of us about 30 minutes,” Powell said. “I think we floated a mile or two down the river trying to catch our breath after that.”

It became clear, fast, that this was not the same alligator they spotted earlier. “We were all in shock,” said Powell. “He was also missing part of his tail. I know 13-2 is huge, but at one time he was bigger than that.”

“We were off about 300 pounds and six inches,” said Britton. “The 13-2 was missing six inches of tail, if not more.”

“I’m still excited and shaking about it,” Powell said. “This is the first time I’ve put in for alligator tags or even thought about it and something happens like this. It was the hunt of a lifetime. These four guys that were with me, I can’t thank them enough for helping me get that gator. I really need to go buy that lottery ticket.”

Powell said they plan to use the entire animal, hide, claws, meat and all.

———————————————————————————–  Frigging thing looks like something out of Jurassic Park to me! Grumpy

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There’s Cool Then there is REALLY COOL!

Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson stands next to NASA’s Mars Buggy Prototype, which weighs over 5000lb and can reach speeds up to 70mph.

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Gear & Stuff

Special Forces Tough – Aimpoint Comp M5 Review by CLAY MARTIN

New Aimpoint CompM5, tested on Springfield Armory Edge rifle

Red dots have become pretty much the default option for short and mid-range rifle work these days, stemming in no small part from huge improvements over the course of the GWOT. Once decried as science fiction nonsense, they have even taken over the military to the point iron sights are no longer taught in boot camp. We can dislike that all we want, but the fact remains: Electronic sights are the way of the future.

Mounted up and ready to rock

It hasn’t always been this way and it was a long road. I will leave the complete history of red dot sights to someone else, but it is relevant to today’s discussion to tell you how it started for me: The first time I ever tried a red dot optic was in 2002, and it was a brief moment. We were doing a training exchange day with the door kickers we supported as a sniper platoon. I thought it was cool, but since I had an M40 with a mil-dot scope to worry about, I mostly didn’t care about its benefits over iron sights. That sight was, of course, the ubiquitous Aimpoint Comp2, the original US Military CCO, or Close Combat Optic.

Fast forwarding a few years to the Army, where I was the new guy on the door kicker team and an arms race was underway. The Comp2 was still in widespread use, and it had its fans. But a new upstart company was gaining ground, the original model EOTech, in all its black housing glory. The EOTech was being run on everything from 50 cals to MP5s, and it looked like the future belonged to them.

Being in a place that had both options, you had to weigh the pro’s and cons. The Aimpoint had a legendary name in reliability, though the original EOTech was catching up. The Aimpoint had a much better battery life, something like 6 months on high, even back then. With an EOTech double A battery model, a smart assaulter would change batteries literally every night, a pre-party ritual as sure as tying your boots. But the Comp2 had something about it I didn’t like. It was a reflex sight, with a similar parallax free, eye relief irrelevant operation like the EOTech. But it felt to me like looking down a toilet paper tube to use and I thought it took away from situational awareness. You could use either option with both eyes open, the preferred method by far in close quarters battle. But I liked the EOTech better and it became my sight of choice.

Now I am not going to come down hard on the Comp2. The camps were split about 50/50 amongst SOF guys, with each side just as fanatical. I could text 5 guys today with a resume as deep or deeper than my own that loved the Comp2 and will tell you all about why it was better. But I don’t have to, because then something unexpected happened.

Arms races don’t stay static, that is for sure. And sometimes they don’t go the way we expect. Around 2005, EOTech was purchased by L3, a massive conglomerate. I hope the original designer of the EOTech sight is on a beach somewhere, enjoying all the coconut drinks they can mix. But after the L3 purchase, things went downhill fast.

The “new” EOTech was issued to all of SOCOM in 2008, part of the SOPMOD II kit. All of a sudden, the sight that would survive 3 tours on an M-2 over thousands of miles of Afghan roads, wouldn’t survive a 6 week CQB class. We would routinely break 10% every class, with damage ranging from simple refusal to turn on to lenses actually falling out. It was a clown show. Everyone who still had them on the books scrambled to find the “old” Comp2s. And that was even before the US Government sued EOTech for civil fraud related to a company cover-up of a defect known as thermal drift.

Fortunately for all of us, in 2007 Aimpoint wasn’t holding still either. That was the year they introduced the all-new Micro T-1. It took a little while to get traction but it changed the way we look at red dot sights. I got my first one in 2010, and to be fair, I was a little skeptical. I initially thought the micro size would multiply the problems of the full-size Aimpoint Comp2. The size of the T-1 lived up to it’s Micro name being about 1/3rd the size of the Comp2. This fear, however, proved completely unfounded. The T-1 actually fixed all the problems of the Comp2, and then some.

CompM5, with T-1 either side for reference

The smaller size actually made the Aimpoint easier to use, by a margin. Somehow, its tiny stature didn’t draw you in the same way as the original. The aiming dot was front and center, but the housing was no longer in the way. It was just big enough to use the outside of the housing as a rough snapshot reticle, with the eye naturally picking up the illuminated dot. It increased situational awareness even past the original EOTech, what was then the gold standard. And Lord, was the new T-1 tough.

The optional mount is true co-witness height.

Skeptical that something so small could possibly be durable, I beat the absolute hell out of my original T-1. And true to the Aimpoint reputation, it is still running fine today, which actually brings up a point in favor of Aimpoint as a brand. Even with all my time in the military, I have never seen one broken. Not once. I bet that if we went to the Aimpoint factory, the warranty department is one of the founder’s kids playing X-box in an out of the way office.

 

AAA battery compartment

Aimpoint has introduced subsequent models in the years since, such as the T-2 and H-1. I can’t tell you anything about them. My T-1’s never quit, so I never bothered to think about buying a new model until they got my attention at SHOT Show 2018, with the introduction of the all-new CompM5, which brings us to today.

The see-through rear lens cover

The CompM5 was built from the ground up, expressly at the request of a military customer. The T-series was great, but they wanted something just a little bit different. And awesome for us normal consumers, Aimpoint went ahead and made it an option for us after the contract was filled.

I am told the M5 is even tougher than the T-1 or 2, but I don’t know how to even test that. My T-1 has 8 years of service doing duty as a CQB, competition, and instructor rifle optic. I can’t count the rifles it has been on, much less the rounds fired. I think we will have to take their word on that one, which has been good enough since 1975.

New throw lever mount is an optional inclusion

The other changes are more visible. The biggest change is the battery system. Gone are the CR2032 days of the other Micro Models. In place is a single AAA battery compartment, reminiscent of the full-size Comp4. The reasoning is simple for this one. The military customer wanted to be able to feed them off a local economy anywhere in the world, for those times they are outside the logistics footprint of Uncle Sugar. A CR2032 is a difficult thing to find in Zaire or Azerbaijan, but the triple A’s will be right next to the Puna or Adidas tracksuits. Count on it.

The battery cap is very secure now. In fact, you have to remove the front lens protector to get it off. But due to Aimpoint’s ever-advancing electronics wizardry, it isn’t really a problem. The M5 will last 5 years turned on at position 7, or over a year at position 8. If you swap your battery on the grueling schedule of daylight savings time, you are still well ahead of the curve.

Throw lever lock

The adjustment turrets for windage and elevation are slightly larger on the M5 than other micro models, which tends to also mean more robust. They are also now protected by an aluminum shelf around the outside. Not only should this protect them better, but it also keeps your caps from inadvertently screwing off. I have never seen that happen to a T-1, but they thought of it anyway.

In place of the rubber thong lens covers from the T-1, the M5 has a feature first seen on the T-2. Both front and rear lens covers are pop up style, with the rear one being clear. This is a great feature. The rear lens is the one more likely to get rain or mud on it while you are on patrol, so it is nice to have a sacrificial lens in place. But if you need to use it with no time to flip it up, you can still see.

Picatinny-compatible base

Last but certainly not least, the M5 now has a factory option for a co-witness mount. Out of the box, my M5 was ready to slap on a rail and go zero. For many years, you needed to find an outside vendor to have such a mount at a cost of around $200. Aimpoint set out to create their own and succeeded wildly. The new mount is solid, has an excellent locking system, and matches perfectly to your back up irons.

The new CompM5 certainly sets a high bar in features and is in my opinion, the new class leader in red dots. It isn’t for everyone, and it certainly isn’t cheap. With the mount, the MSRP is $971. But then, there are two kinds of red dots in this world. There’s the kind you buy to plink cans with and the kind you bet your life on. If you are in the latter category, this one is for you.

Visit Aimpoint to learn more about the Aimpoint Comp M5 by clicking HERE.

About the author: Clay Martin is a former Marine and Green Beret, retiring out of 3rd Special Forces Group. He is a multi-decade and -service sniper, as well as 3-Gun competitor and Master ranked shooter in USPSA Production. In addition to writing about guns, he is the author of “Last Son of The War God,” a novel about shooting people that deserve it. You can also follow him on twitter, @offthe_res or his website, Off-The-Reservation.com

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All About Guns California

Noted in Passing: At the Range by VANDERLEUN on AUGUST 31, 2021

The Project

Today I decided to acquire my first pistol in California, the Capitol of “NO” in America. I’d taken the courses at the excellent Downrange in Chico and a fine set of courses they are. I’d reviewed the current state of the proctological process of buying a pistol in California.  Because of this I budgeted about 3 hours at Downrange to select the pistol and go through the process.

The Process

1. Get the California “RealID.” This is your standard California Driver’s License but, I guess, “Mo’ Realer.” To obtain this permission slip you have to show up at the DMV with a current valid driver’s license ID plus a passport… plus –if you got it — a birth certificate… plus something else official with an address on it identical to the address on your driver’s license. It doesn’t matter if you have just renewed your driver’s license because, I guess, it just isn’t real enough. Then you are thumb printed and photographed. Wait a week or two and here it comes in the mail. It looks just like your previous UnRealID except it has a little golden bear in the upper right corner.

2. Haul thy ass with RealID off to Downrange and make your selection. But you also need a second bit of ID to make the RealID more real than a RealID.  At this point, your RealID has become a SurRealID. Then you must take a firearms proficiency and knowledge of gun law test and pass.

3. Next it is a deluge of different paperwork: dating, signing, initialing, and swearing that you are not a crazed felonious whack job itching to spread mayhem. (For that sort of thing you just wander around parts of Sacramento and buy one — cash on the barrelhead, take the grease-stained paper bag,  and adios muchacho. And Si it has a 14 round magazine instead of the 10 rounds the Rulers of California have decided is the holy bullet number.)

4. Following the assemblage of enough paperwork to make a modest pinata comes the autofornication festival of various signatures and thence electronic submissions to some sort of background check apparatus somewhere inside the vast digital realm of MatrixCalifornia where the Gods of Permissions may deign to review your craven and humbled plea to please, please, please let me have the means to defend myself.

The Glitch

Then it is time to pay. Up to this point, the Jerry-Get-Your-Gun process has been proctological but smooth… an advantage in things proctological. Then — just as my card was about to be submitted for permission to buy from the Gods of American Express —  Comcast takes the internet down for all of North Chico and, poof!… hangfire. I am in limbo until such time as the Gods of Comcast decide to put the internet back up. Until then everything I am doing at Downrange along with everything else at Downrange and at the Dutch Brother’s coffee junkies’ shop next door comes to a screeching halt.

When this happens I notice that most of the staff at Downrange along with the customers in the place check their phones for connectivity. I do and see there are still bars. Behind me a man looks at his phone and says to the woman beside him, “If I ever see the Internet and the phones down at the same time I’m going home to load more magazines.”  What can I say? People seem edgy these days. Can’t imagine why.

Waiting for     Godot      the Internet I glance down at my copy of the document sent to the Permissions Gods in Sacramento and DC. The man selling me the pistol puts his finger on a number in a box in the top upper left corner. That number is 2,657. It is 12:30 PM on a Tuesday.

“That’s the number of pistols sold and sent for background checks so far today in California.”

“Two thousand six hundred and fifty-seven guns sold today in California? Really?”

“It’ll be at least 5,000 by midnight tonight.”

“Really?”

“Really. We’ve been seeing between 5,000 and 6,000 a day since January. In California. Seven days a week.”

“Whoa. People in California are getting strapped.”

“We prefer to think of them as new hobbyists.”