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All About Guns Cops Fieldcraft Gun Info for Rookies Related Topics War

Don't rely on the police for protection!

Bayou Renaissance Man

If you’re one of those who says that you’ll rely on the police to protect you, rather than take steps to be able to defend yourself and your family if necessary, consider this.

Michael Lewis is the Sheriff in Wicomico County, and was also a Sergeant with the Maryland State Police. He joined Ed Norris and Steve Davis on Thursday to talk about the alleged controversial orders the police were given during the riots.
. . .
“They said we could have handled this, we were very capable of handling this, but we were told to stand down, repeatedly told to stand down,” he said. “I had never heard that order come from anyone — we went right out to our posts as soon as we got there, so I never heard the mayor say that.

But repeatedly these guys, and there were many high-ranking officials from the Baltimore City Police Department … and these guys told me they were essentially neutered from the start. They were spayed from the start.

They were told to stand down, you will not take any action, let them destroy property. I couldn’t believe it, I’m a 31-year veteran of law enforcement. … I had never heard anything like this before in my life and these guys obviously aren’t gonna speak out and the more I thought about this, … I had to say a few things. I apologize if I’ve upset people, but I believe in saying it like it is.”
Lewis said though he didn’t hear the order to stand down come from the mayor, he did hear it from police officials.
“I heard it myself over the Baltimore City police radio that I had tethered to my body-armor vest, I heard it repeatedly. ‘Stand down, stand down, stand down! Back up, back up, retreat, retreat!’ I couldn’t believe those words.

Those are words I’ve never heard in my law enforcement vocabulary,” he said. “Baltimore City police, all law enforcement agencies are very capable of handling that city. They’re trained to handle that city. These guys were hearing words that had never been echoed in their lives, in their careers.”

There’s more at the link.
What happens if you rely on the cops to protect you, but the politicians in charge of those cops think it’s more important for their image, or their re-electability, or for whatever politically correct reasons, to stop the cops from doing their job?
It matters not whether it’s a riot situation such as Sheriff Lewis is describing, or a problem with community relations that stops police from carrying out their normal duties.  Where does that leave you?
I’ll tell you where it leaves you.  Up the creek without a paddle.
I only hope that all my readers have the sense to read Sheriff Lewis’ words and draw the appropriate conclusions from them.  Your safety is first and foremost in yourhands – no-one else’s.  Train and prepare accordingly.
Peter
 

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All About Guns Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends" Hard Nosed Folks Both Good & Bad Related Topics This great Nation & Its People

Kids (Some Stout Hearted little ones) & Guns

Woman being choked by boyfriend is saved when son gets gun, daughter shoots, kills man

A 15-year-old girl who shot and killed her mother’s boyfriend will not be charged, according to the district attorney’s office. (Source: WYFF)A 15-year-old girl who shot and killed her mother’s boyfriend will not be charged, according to the district attorney’s office. (Source: WYFF)

FOREST CITY, NC (WYFF) – A 15-year-old girl who shot and killed her mother’s boyfriend will not be charged, according to the district attorney’s office.
Rutherford County deputies were called Wednesday night to a home on Lakeview Drive in Forest City about a shooting.
They found Steven Kelley dead in the home with two gunshot wounds.
Deputies learned that Kelley and his girlfriend, Chandra Nierman, 44, and her three children, a son, 12, and daughters, 15 and 16, had recently moved to the area from Indiana.
Investigators determined that Kelley had attacked Nierman and was choking her, yelling that he was going to cut her throat and kill everyone in the house.
Nierman’s son went and got a gun and her 15-year-old daughter took the gun from her brother and fired it twice, hitting Kelley in the chest.
Deputies said one of the rounds fragmented, and grazed Nierman’s sixteen-year-old daughter in the leg. She was taken to Spartanburg Regional Hospital and was released Thursday.
Deputies said Nierman had significant bruises from the attack.
Deputies said they learned that Kelley had threatened Nierman repeatedly and that on Aug. 4, he assaulted her and fired a gun several times inside the home to threaten and terrorize her.
Deputies said Kelley, who was a convicted felon, had multiple guns in the house and frequently carried one.
Kelley had two active domestic violence protection orders against him from two different women in Indiana and Ohio, although no domestic violence or assaults had been reported to law enforcement agencies locally prior to the fatal shooting, deputies said.
Deputies presented the case to the district attorney’s office on Friday. The DA’s office concluded, based on the facts and the evidence, that the shooting was justified and no charges will be filed.
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Dear Grumpy Advice on Teaching in Today's Classroom Hard Nosed Folks Both Good & Bad Related Topics War

The Victoria Cross

Related imageLance Corporal Joshua Leakey being awarded a Victoria Cross by Queen Elizabeth II
The Victoria Cross (VC) is the highest military decoration awarded for valour “in the face of the enemy”. It takes precedence over all other orders, decorations and medals. VCs are cast from the bronze cascabels of two cannons that were captured from the Russians at the siege of Sevastopol in 1854-1855.
Lance Corporal Joshua Leakey receives the Victoria Cross from the Queen at Buckingham Palace. L/Cpl Leakey became the first living British recipient of the medal from the Afghan conflict for his courage in three times running through heavy fire to set up machine guns and beat back a Taliban attack in August 2013. The 1 Para man showed “complete disregard” for his own safety as the group came under attack from around 20 insurgents armed with machine guns and rocket propelled grenades in Helmand province.
This medal by the way is awarded by most of the British Commonwealth / Empire Armed Forces. The troops call it the Very Careless Medal by the way. As you really have to not have a care / death wish in the world to win it.
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Somebody here picked the wrong guy to piss off!
Image result for cpl bryan budd
Ditto for this idiots in Afghanistan latelyImage result for Lt A Renny VC, Bengal Horse Artillery at the Delhi Magazine 1857 by David Rowlands.
Image result for the victoria cross war art
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HOW TO KEEP YOUR KNIVES BLAZING SHARP

Dull knives are more than just an annoyance, they’re a safety hazard. Don’t believe me? Fine. I dare you to use a dull knife for an entire month. If you actually do this, what you’d find is that a dull knife requires more pressure to get the job done compared to a sharp knife.
And because you’re applying more pressure, you’re at a greater risk of cutting yourself. The safest knife is a knife that does the work for you, not the other way around.
So, what can you do to achieve a hair-splitting knife edge? Well there’s 3 things: honing, sharpening, and stropping. Do these 3 things and dull knives will be a thing of the past! Let’s discuss each of these 3 in greater detail, shall we?

Hone, Hone, Hone Away!

Just what the hell is honing anyways? Without getting too technical, honing is the process of aligning a misaligned knife edge. So, you’re probably wondering how a knife’s edge gets misaligned to begin with. Every time you use your knife to slice, chop, or cut something, you knock your edge off alignment ever so little.
A knife edge is extremely delicate, and even the action of chopping up vegetables can over time result in an edge that is folded over (AKA misaligned). The thing is, we can’t prevent misalignment; we can only correct it. Honing is the process of correction.

This Is What A Honing Rod Looks Like. Make Sure You Get One!

I’m not going to get into the details of how to hone a knife, because that’s a discussion in and of itself. Instead I suggest you check out my honing 101 instructable. It explains how to hone a knife in 3 simple steps.

Get Yourself A Sharpener!

I said it before and I’ll say it again, dull knives are a safety hazard. If you have any reason to never use a dull knife ever again, let that be motivated by the safety of you and your loved ones. Without ranting on too much, my point is this: dull knives suck, so we need to sharpen them. Knife sharpening is an interesting topic. It can be as simple or complicated as you make it to be. I prefer simple. It is the process of slowly abrading material (steel), with the purpose of achieving as sharp an edge as possible. When it comes down to it, you have 3 choices as far as knife sharpeners are concerned:
Electric Knife Sharpeners
Electric knife sharpeners take away most of the skill and technique required to sharpen an edge. They’re typically the most expensive of the three types of sharpeners.

Work Sharp Ken Onion Edition Is One Of The Best Electric Sharpeners On The Market

What I Like:

  1. It’s All About Quick Results—Good electric knife sharpeners can get your blade from dull to finger cutting sharp in about a minute!
  2. Anyone Can Use Them—So easy, even grandma and grandpa can work these. Once you know the basics of knife sharpening, it’s literally plug and play.

What I Dislike:

  1. Can Cost Quite A Bit Of Money—The good ones can be quite expensive. I’m talking in and around the range of $140-250.
  2. Electronics Malfunction—Compared to the other three sharpeners, the electric variations are the least durable.

Pull Through Sharpeners
If you’re looking for the most bang for your buck, pull through sharpeners are your best bet. You can find some awesome ones that cost less than a McDonald’s combo meal!

Brod & Taylor Is The Crème De La Crème Of Pull Throughs!

What I Like:

  1. Not Hard On The Wallet—Unlike the electrics, pull through sharpeners are very reasonably priced. That’s not to say you can’t find a $150 pull through. Price range is about $5-150.
  2. Perfect For Outdoorsmen—The fact that they’re portable, lightweight, manual (no batteries or electricity required), and easy to use, make them the ideal sharpener for camping, hunting, fishing, and hiking trips. You can even toss one in the car!

What I Dislike:

  1. Results Are Average—The only caveat with this are the results are average. It sharpens an edge to the point where you should be able to get the job done, but nothing more.
  2. Wouldn’t Trust Them On My Expensive Knives—Pull throughs are perfect for whipping up a beater knife into shape (I say this from experience). I wouldn’t use them for my expensive collection, and I don’t recommend you do either.

Stone
Old is gold. No seriously, old is gold! It’s no surprise that this ancient sharpening technique is still relevant even today.

You Can Sharpen Just About Anything On This. Talk About Versatility!

What I Like:

  1. You Can Expect Professional Results—If used correctly, sharpening stones can produce results similar to a professional service. Of course, this depends on several different variables: stone quality, sharpening technique etc.
  2. Most “Natural” Way To Sharpen—One thing I dislike about electric and pull through sharpeners is that they can be a little too aggressive on a knife edge, and they strip off too much steel. With sharpening stones, you have full control over how much steel is abraded.

What I Dislike:

  1. Takes Time To Learn—Sharpening using stone requires a little bit of a technique and understanding. In that sense, it’s not everyone’s cup of tea.
  2. Confusing For The Newbie—Sharpening stones are a completely different ball game. Diamond (continuous and non-continuous), water, ceramic, and oil stones are what you can expect to find these days. This is just high level though. The deeper you dive, the more detailed it gets!

Last But Not Least, Stropping!

Stropping is something I usually do after I sharpen. To strop is to polish, coat, and align your edge. Think of it as the final step in achieving maximum sharpness. Wondering how to strop? Here’s an instructable I wrote on the topic. Check it out!

You should be honing every two weeks. When honing is no longer effective, then and only then should you sharpen (and strop).

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Another Great Reason on why I do not live in the Gulf States

I didn’t need to know big gators like that can climb.

Stolen from The daily Time Waster (A great Blog by the way, I suggest that my great Readers to check it out)

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Hunting, Butchering and Cooking Wild Boar – Gordon Ramsay (Yeah he killed it with his vile mouth in real life!)

https://youtu.be/6p5x0nxtqVsImage result for Gordon Ramsay memes

or Gordon as a baby!Related image

say I have some issues with this guy? Grumpy

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Well I thought they were some neat images!




 

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Faulty, Fabulous, or Fad? An M.D. Argues the 40 S&W by WILL DABBS

From left to right is a Gorilla Ammo .45ACP, a Browning .40S&W, and a Winchester 9mm Parabellum round.

Our patient was a heavily muscled young gladiator of the sort who frequents an urban emergency department. Stabbings and gunshot wounds are lamentable side effects of his day job. When he hobbled into the ER he had a bandana pressed against the lower right side of his abdomen yet seemed pleasant enough.
I forget the sordid details. Turf, drugs, or women accounted for the lion’s share of the chaos, so the impetus this evening was likely some toxic combination. Once we got him into the CT scanner we could see the 9mm round flattened against the back of his pelvis. The bullet had undoubtedly played holy havoc with the intervening entrails so the surgical residents got a laparotomy out of it, but I will never forget how calm he seemed. The round could have ricocheted or passed through some intervening barrier material to bleed a little horsepower, but its terminal effectiveness in this particular instance was decidedly underwhelming.
I have seen men killed with the 9mm round, but that experience with that thug in the ER made an impression. I like to shoot the 9mm because it is lightweight and fun. The round is cheap, produces modest recoil, and remains easy to carry. None of these attributes speaks to the crux of the issue, however, which is speedy incapacitation and expedient behavior modification.

Background

The 9mm Parabellum is the most popular centerfire pistol cartridge in the world. Parabellum means, “If you seek peace, prepare for war.” Georg Luger contrived the round in 1902 to feed his eponymous toggle-locked handgun. 60% of the cops in America carry 9mm handguns, and the FBI relatively recently retired their .40-caliber weapons in favor of guns firing the smaller round. The 9mm is credited with the demise of the combat revolver in America in favor of high-capacity autoloading handguns.
In its military guise, the 9mm cartridge pushes a 124-grain metal-jacketed lead-cored projectile to about 1,150 feet per second. I have an acquaintance who shot a man in Iraq three times in the chest with his M9 Beretta handgun after an unfortunate surprise encounter in an alleyway. He then went on to develop a friendship with the hapless Iraqi after he recovered. When shooting ball ammo the 9mm never seemed to command respect in the ER.

The .45 ACP—Practical Tactical

This poor guy caught a .45ACP round to the head and was rapidly approaching room temperature when we met. The bullet separated from the jacket and went its own way, while the jacket lodged outbound between his skull and his scalp. The jagged scrap of copper measured 11mm on a piece of EKG paper. The job that thing did on that guy’s melon was the stuff of nightmares.
Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta employs some of the finest shooters on the planet. They called it the Combat Applications Group for a time. I think the Army’s pet name is Army Compartmented Element these days. JSOC calls it Task Force Green. The guys who actually serve there just call it “The Unit.” Delta is the best we can produce, and they are some rarefied warriors indeed. Their very existence is supposed to be a secret, but they have a Wikipedia page.
The Delta guys I bumped into back when I wore the uniform typically carried high-capacity 1911 handguns. Their pistols were built around Para-Ordnance frames and had all the bells and whistles. With 14+1 of .45ACP chaos onboard these were some of the most effective combat handguns in the world. They also must have been boat anchors to hump. I’m told there are more Glocks in those holsters nowadays, but these guys know guns and the .45ACP was their round.
The .45ACP was a John Moses Browning creation in 1905, and it pushed a bullet roughly twice as big as that of the original 9mm Parabellum. However, all that horsepower comes at a cost. The .45ACP is big and chunky to tote and a handful to run for those with modest mitts.

The .40S&W—The Grand Compromise

If there is a message to be found in the ignoble tale that follows it is that the sensible citizen should never try to run over a police officer with an automobile. The cop sidestepped the speeding car and fired a single .40-caliber round through the driver’s side window. The bullet struck the hapless felon in the chest and peeled open the left ventricle of his heart like a can opener. Had it happened in the operating room the guy still wouldn’t have survived. That high-performance police-issue expanding bullet performed exactly as it was intended. It passed through the glass, the dude’s shirt, his skin, and the intervening muscle without checking up before deploying like a miniature buzzsaw to thoroughly rearrange the guy’s chest cavity. It didn’t hurt long.
The .40S&W arose as the indirect result of the FBI’s 1986 Miami shootout. If you aren’t familiar with the details surf on over when you’re done here. Any student of small arms is well served to read up on it. Google is your buddy.
During the Miami shootout, two FBI special agents were killed and five wounded by a pair of bank robbers wielding a variety of weapons. One of the Bad Guys, in particular, took a 9mm round to the chest and went on to foment a great deal of mischief before he succumbed. With this as an impetus, S&W partnered with Winchester to produce the ideal Law Enforcement pistol round.
The resulting .40S&W was, in essence, a shortened 10mm auto cartridge. This rimless straight-walled round was short enough to fit into existing 9mm pistol frames yet pushed a 165-grain bullet to more than 1,100 feet per second. In many cases converting between 9mm and .40S&W was as simple as exchanging the barrel and magazine. The resulting magazine capacity was typically reduced from 2 to 4 rounds, but this interchangeability meant easier maintenance and a convenient transition for officers already familiar with the platform.
.40S&W does inevitably offer greater recoil than the 9mm but remains more pleasant than the .45ACP. There were some teething problems but in general, the .40S&W has lived up to its press releases. Why then might the FBI and 60% of American Law Enforcement agencies be switching back to the 116-year-old 9mm Parabellum when the .40S&W was specifically designed to replace it?

Despite its blocky utilitarian appearance, the Glock 22 is an exceptionally efficient combat implement.

Technology Marches On

The three anecdotes related above represent a comically small sample size. I have seen a guy survive being shot with a .45ACP to the torso and another paralyzed for life with a .25ACP to the neck. Shot placement is everything, and bullet design is indeed a combat multiplier. However, there’s way more to it than that. No handgun round will reliably guarantee one-shot stops.
Most of the thugs I have encountered feed their cheap crappy guns the cheapest ball ammo they can steal. As a result, the downrange effects can indeed be underwhelming. By contrast, trained Law Enforcement Officers running the finest antipersonnel rounds money can buy generally find their tools to be markedly more effective.
In 2014 the FBI produced a report that detailed how improvements in powder efficiency and bullet design had generated 9mm performance that was in some cases superior to comparable .40S&W and .45ACP Law Enforcement loads. Given that 9mm ammo is cheaper and produces less recoil, this equates out to less expensive training and better accuracy, particularly with small-statured officers. As a direct result, Law Enforcement agencies across our great republic seem to be tripping over themselves to trade out their .40S&W handguns for the 9mm sort.
Statistically, trained Law Enforcement Officers shooting under the stress of a life or death situation connect with their targets with one round in five. As a result, a softer-shooting handgun that yields better follow up accuracy can itself render a combat advantage so long as penetration is adequate. However, that takes us full circle to Miami, wherein a determined assailant hit in the chest with a bullet that rendered adequate penetration went on to kill two federal agents before he expired. What conclusions should we mere civilians draw from all this?

The Real Skinny

Whenever I am not asleep or in the shower I am invariably armed, but I’m not a cop. I carry my handguns concealed or in a vehicle and don’t expect to engage an armed assailant as part of my day job. However, I have a difficult time getting past the image of that guy standing in the exam room with the bandana on his groin.
The 2014 FBI report is itself fascinating reading, and it makes some great points. However, I’m personally not quite ready to cash in my .40’s for something smaller. I have carried most everything at one point or another, and I do prefer toting a compact 9mm as I wander through my daily sojourn. However, when I travel or am someplace static the game changes. If I have two otherwise identical handguns sitting on the table, one in 9mm and the other in .40S&W, it’s most typically the .40 that ends up in the center console of the truck.

A Few Options

Most popular modern combat handguns sport polymer frames and striker-fired triggers. The Glock 22 is the industry standard. The Glock 22 packs 15 rounds in its magazine and sports the raked grip-to-frame angle and low bore axis for which Glock has become justifiably famous. The sole external safety is a blade in the trigger, and the gun is arguably the most reliable autoloading handgun ever made.

The Glock 22 is the most popular .40-caliber pistol in Law Enforcement. Sporting legendary reliability and simple operation, the Glock and its Safe Action trigger precipitated the polymer pistol revolution.

 
The Smith and Wesson M&P offers an oblique grip-to-frame angle more akin to that of the 1911 and a pivoting safety as part of the trigger body. The M&P has interchangeable palm swells and a 15-round magazine. The M&P comes standard with steel sights and is a dream on the range.

The Smith and Wesson M&P .40 is a rugged and effective design. Sporting interchangeable palm swells and a bilateral slide release, the M&P .40 is an Amer-ican-made warhorse.

The Steyr L40A1 is the “Other Austrian Combat Pistol.” Featuring the same raked grip-to-frame angle and low bore axis as the Glock, the L40A1 has an extended slide and barrel for enhanced accuracy. Magazine capacity is limited to 12 rounds, but the gun looks like it fell off the set of a science fiction movie.

The Steyr L40A1 is the longest of their three .40-caliber combat handguns. The rakish design offers an exceptionally low bore axis and a fresh slick geometry.

The HK VP40 offers the most customizable grip of any combat pistol in the world with three interchangeable backstraps and six side panels of various thicknesses. The slide also includes polymer ears the company calls “charging supports” to enhance your grip when sweaty or rushed. There is the obligatory trigger safety, and the gun is available in black or FDE. The VP40 carries 13 rounds in its magazine. The VP40 is the most expensive gun of the four profiled, but it also sports a legendarily smooth crisp trigger.

The HK VP40 features the most customizable grip in the industry. Grip panels are interchangeable between 9mm and .40-caliber versions, so I just mixed and matched.

Ruminations

All things being equal I shoot a bit better with a .40S&W than I do a .45ACP. I also shoot a little bit better with a 9mm than a .40S&W. However, taken to an illogical extreme, I shoot even better than that with a decent .22LR. Life is all about compromises, and the .40S&W was designed from the outset to balance power and portability. As a result, I think until I can lay my hands on a phased plasma rifle in the 40-watt range I’ll hang onto my full-sized .40-caliber handguns. They all punch deep, but the .40 seems intuitively destined to make bigger holes.

The polymer-framed .40-caliber pistol still offers more power than the 9mm and less recoil than a .45ACP all in an envelope comparable to the weaker gun.

Technical Specifications

                             Glock 22     S&W M&P          Steyr L40A1         HK VP40
Caliber                  .40S&W     .40S&W               .40S&W               .40S&W
Barrel Length        4.49in       4.25in                   4.5in                     4.09in
Overall Length      8.03in       7.6in                     7.4in                     7.34in
Weight                  25.59oz       27.9oz                  28.8oz                 28.93oz
Mag Capacity        15               15                         12                         13
MSRP                  NP              $569                     $575                     $719

All of these guns are fast. Magazines drop away freely, and these tapered magazines find the magwell easily.

 
About the Author – Will was born and raised in the Mississippi Delta, having been immersed in hunting and the outdoors since his earliest recollections. He holds a degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Mississippi and is the product of a traditional American nuclear family. Where most normal American kids get drunk to celebrate their 21st birthday, Will bought his first two machineguns.
Will served eight years as an Army Aviator and accumulated more than 1,100 flight hours piloting CH47D, UH1H, OH58A/C, and AH1S helicopters. He is scuba qualified, has parachuted out of perfectly good airplanes at 3 o’clock in the morning, and has summited Mt. McKinley, Alaska–the highest point in North America–six times (at the controls of a helicopter, which is the only way sensible folk climb mountains). For reasons that seemed sagacious at the time he ultimately left the Army as a Major to pursue medical school.
Dr. Dabbs has for the last dozen years owned the Urgent Care Clinic of Ox-ford, Mississippi. He also serves as the plant physician for the sprawling Winchester ammunition plant in that same delightful little Southern town. Will is a founding partner of Advanced Tactical Ordnance LLC, a licensed 07/02 firearms manufacturer and has written for the gun press for a quarter century. He writes solely to support a shooting habit that is as insensate as it is insatiable. Will has been married to his high school sweetheart for more than thirty years. He and his wife currently have three adult children and a most thoroughly worthless farm dog named Dog.

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Personal hygiene in the field

Or as we use to say in the Army. How to keep your shit together!Image result for got their shit together
Now I know this is a yucky subject. But if one ignores taking care of business in the field. You and others can & will get quickly very sick or die. No kidding!Image result for cholera
Because before WWI. Most soldiers died from disease not from Bullets, Bayonets etc etc. That is why today the Military is very fanatical about cleanliness & for good reason.
Enjoy
Grumpy
 

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So you want to go off the grid? Then you might want to read this.

Image result for got their shit together memes
Now some may consider this yucky but if you ignore this shit then you are in for a world of hurt down the road.Image result for going off the grid memes
As this stuff is just as important as your rifle, Ammo and other field skills.
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http://www.armystudyguide.com/content/army_board_study_guide_topics/field_sanitation/field-sanitation-study-gu.shtml
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