Categories
A Victory!

The Quigley Shoot

Categories
Uncategorized

Just way too Cool!

Categories
All About Guns

A Winchester model 52, US Property Target in caliber .22 LR

Winchester model 52, US Property Target .22 LR - Picture 2
Winchester model 52, US Property Target .22 LR - Picture 3
Winchester model 52, US Property Target .22 LR - Picture 4
Winchester model 52, US Property Target .22 LR - Picture 5
Winchester model 52, US Property Target .22 LR - Picture 6
Winchester model 52, US Property Target .22 LR - Picture 7
Winchester model 52, US Property Target .22 LR - Picture 8
Winchester model 52, US Property Target .22 LR - Picture 9
Winchester model 52, US Property Target .22 LR - Picture 10

 

Categories
All About Guns Fieldcraft Gun Info for Rookies

RETRIEVING THE RIFLE: AN OVERLOOKED SKILL

If you haven’t taken my Perimeter Defense Rifle class (or read Protecting Your Homestead), you may not know that one of the things I teach is the idea that the rifle is the gun we are most unlikely to have on our person when we need it. It’s the firearm that needs to be retrieved in order to use, and that affects how we train and practice.

The popularity contest

It’s quite popular in rifle classes these days to shoot from a slung-in-front configuration — with the rifle hanging in the perfect position, hands pre-placed and, very often, with the buttstock already on the shoulder. This makes it fast and easy to simply swing the gun up and into a shooting position, decreasing the time it takes to fire a shot (and giving the guy holding the shot timer some reason for existing.)

Despite the ubiquity of the practice, I consider it so unrealistic as to be laughable, because it assumes you already have the gun with you, and slung just so, when the problem starts!

In reality, when an incident occurs for which you need the rifle it’s very unlikely that you’ll be “on patrol”, with the gun conveniently slung where you can simply raise it and shoot. You’re not going to be on a SWAT entry team with the butt of your rifle already planted on your shoulder.

The more likely scenario is that you’ll suddenly become aware that you need a rifle. You’ll run to the rifle’s storage place, grab it (and a magazine, if necessary), get the gun into a condition to be used, make your way to the point where you can/will employ it, then (if necessary) shoulder it and make the shot.

That’s a very different set of skills.

Sling, slung, slang?

Because of the need to respond to a developing situation, and the urgency it causes in one’s reactions, I don’t believe most people will actually take the time to get “slung up” or don one of those chest harness/magazine carrier contraptions.

I’ve used a rifle as a defensive tool, and in none of my incidents did I even think about using the sling. (I’ll admit to not owning any of those chest harnesses, but I’m quite sure I would also have left it behind in my rush to get the rifle into play.)

This is quite consistent with what people I’ve interviewed have told me about their defensive experience with the rifle. As one said: “When someone is shooting at you, everything that’s non-essential goes right out the window.”

The sling, in my opinion, is usually non-essential to the job of putting rounds downrange. Someone once said that the sling is to the rifle what the holster is to the pistol, but I think even that analogy implies more importance than it should. Practicing from a slung position, I believe, is a waste of valuable resources because plausible incidents don’t often happen that way.

I think it’s far more valuable to practice a realistic skill set, those things that you’ll actually need to do when it’s time for the rifle.

What might that look like?

Grab and go

Since the rifle is the arm that you need to go and get, it seems to me that learning how to retrieve and move with it is important. Like drawing the handgun, retrieving the rifle is a skill that must be practiced. Oddly, though, it’s one that gets little to no attention in most rifle curriculums. See the disconnect?

Being able to get to the storage area quickly, access the rifle, easily get it out of the storage device, and move rapidly and safely to the point where it will be employed are all tasks that need to be practiced if they’re to be done efficiently. This is the time for “grab the gun and go”, not “get geared up to be all tactical and stuff”.

Think about your rifle and how you train with it. When was the last time you factored any realistic  skills into your practice routine? I submit that you’ll gain far more from paying attention to those  than adjusting a sling to reduce your shot time by a tenth of a second.

-=[ Grant ]=-

P.S.: My Threat-Centered Revolver course in Phoenix, AZ this November is filling up! This will be my last open-enrollment course of 2019, so if you’ve been putting off registration don’t wait any longer. You can learn more (and sign up) at this link.

Listen to this blog – and subscribe to it on iTunes by clicking this link! 

  • Posted by Grant Cunningham
Categories
All About Guns

Ruger SR22

Categories
Cops

Now that is what I call some serious crowd control!

Categories
Well I thought it was funny!

On the other hand!

Categories
All About Guns

Hammer Time ~ Hammerli

Categories
All About Guns

It was one of the Best Rifles in it’s Day and it can still dish it out – The Legendary Sharps Rifle

Categories
Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends" California Cops

San Francisco initiative will pay residents each month not to shoot others

The people behind the initiative swear it’s not a “transaction.” Rather, it’s intended to show would-be offenders what it’s like to help out their community.San Francisco initiative will pay residents each month not to shoot others

Nick Monroe The Post Millennia
The city of San Francisco will pay 10 lucky individuals who are “at high risk of shooting someone” $300 not to pull the trigger or be involved in shootings.
The terminology used by Newsweek describes the project in that fashion. The Dream Keeper Fellowship is launching the initiative in October and will pay 10 people a monthly $300 salary to not get caught up in shooting incidents.

“It’s not necessarily as cut and dry as folks may think. It’s not as transactional as, ‘Here’s a few dollars so that you don’t do something bad,’ but it really is about how you help us improve public safety in the neighborhood,” Sheryl Davis, executive director of the Human Rights Commission, told the outlet Tuesday.

Those involved in the program can earn a bonus of $200 if they engage in “working, going to school and even being a mediator in situations that could lead to violence.” Davis hopes this cash incentive will encourage the recipients about the intrinsic rewards of being productive members of society.

As purported proof of practice, the American Journal for Public Health said the “Operation Peacemaker Fellowship” program reduced gun violence in Richmond, California; it was implemented in June 2010.

The study published in 2019 was described to have a similar program as to what will be trialed in San Francisco next month: “The core components of Operation Peacemaker are individually tailored mentorship, 24-hour case management, cognitive behavioral therapy, internship opportunities, social service navigation, substance abuse treatment, excursions, and stipends up to $1000 per month for successful completion of specific goals set by the fellowship and ONS staff, including nonparticipation in firearm violence (a conditional cash transfer).”

San Francisco has the ability to directly pay people not to get involved in gun violence because of the mayor’s decision to defund millions from the police and funnel it into the black community. The overall goal of this effort is $120 million, as announced by Mayor London Breed back at the end of February of this year.

This is what city officials elected to do as a solution to heightened crime rates and increased gun violence. The mid-year crime stats for San Francisco show 119 gun violence victims so far, versus 58 at the same time last year. The crime statistics also show 26 homicides as of July 2021, compared to 22 for mid-year 2020.