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366 lines
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Jeff Cooper's Commentaries
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Previously Gunsite Gossip
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Vol. 3, No. 13 November, 1995
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Indian Summer, 1995
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The annual Gunsite Reunion and Theodore Roosevelt Memorial held at
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Whittington Center in honor of the great man's birthday was even more of a
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success than in the past. The shooting, conducted by Rich Wyatt, John
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Gannaway and David Kahn, was great fun. The declamations were inspiring, as
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always, but perhaps the greatest exhilaration of the meeting was the sense
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of unity and comradeship experienced by Orange Gunsite comrades, who in
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many instances are forced by circumstance to dwell amongst the
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unenlightened.
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While most of our people were from various parts of the United States, we
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had members from England, Switzerland, and even way up in Darkest New
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England. It is a long, long way to Whittington, but it is worth it when you
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get there. The weather was absolutely gorgeous, at the very peak of the
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western autumn colors, and we were troubled by neither heat nor cold nor
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wind until Sunday afternoon when we were breaking up.
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With all the family hard at work shooting, it was impossible for me to
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single out every distinguished performance, but a couple that stick in my
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mind were Finn Aagaard's erasing of two helium balloons with one shot as
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they lined up, and Marc Heim's impressive performance on clay birds with
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his "Kansas City Special." (That's a 16-inch iron-sighted lever gun in
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caliber 44 Magnum.) Dr. Manning Picket also showed off with his
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open-sighted 350 Magnum, and daughter Lindy managed to break four in a row
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on sporting clays.
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We had occasion to break out the "Gunsite zeroing target" for the first
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time on public display, and, not to my surprise, it worked very well. I
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commend this target to all the faithful as the most efficient thing of its
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kind I know.
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Dan Dennehy treated us to his usual knife throwing demonstration, as well
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as to his rendition of "The Lure of the Tropics."
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Both Don Davis and Marc Heim showed us how to use a lever-gun from a
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Condition 3 Ready, which is a technique not fully appreciated in the Age of
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High Tech.
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Lindy's poetry is developing to astonishing levels, and we are approaching
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the point where a bound volume of her collected works may be in order.
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Prior to that, however, her prose work, "Wisdom on Cooper," must be put to
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bed, published and out on the market.
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As always, the wildlife display at Whittington was delightful, with lots of
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deer and elk, including one big bull, plus pronghorns and turkeys. Nobody
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saw a cougar, but as these cats are becoming less and less secretive
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year-by-year we may expect to sight one or more at the next event of
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October '96.
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The Whittington Center cannot accommodate as many of you as we might wish,
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so fix the date for '96 and plan to join us then.
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On a T-shirt we saw at the reunion was displayed the pungent phrase,
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"Visualize no Liberals!"
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I have had the opportunity now for a couple of years to evaluate the Glock
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pistol with sufficient care to give me justification in an opinion. I have
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not used one much myself, but just enough to know that it is not for me.
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However, I have some good friends in law enforcement who have pretty much
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set matters straight. My conclusion is that the Glock pistol is a very good
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choice for hired hands, but not for serious pistoleros. Its proper place
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lies in the public sector, and the dedicated shottist is rarely found
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therein. (Note: That is shottist rather than shootist. Look it up.)
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It is with profound sorrow that we must report the death of our old friend
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and comrade Milt Sparks, on 8 September 1995. Milt was a man of great
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talent and he contributed measurably to American pistolcraft.
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He was a good artisan, a good shot, and a good man. He is sadly missed.
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We learn that the Chicoms placed an order for 10 million copies of the AUG
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with Steyr-Mannlicher. How interesting that the commies could dream up a
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demand for 10 million 22-caliber squirt guns! Apparently we will not
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discover what they wanted with those pieces since the Austrian government
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queered the deal, but if we are now hunting around for the next war, we may
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have some hints here. Incidentally, while the American law enforcement
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establishment refers to the piece in question as the AUG (pronounced OG),
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not too many of our people know what the letters stand for. AUG signifies
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Armee Universal Gewehr, which may be an exaggeration, but no more so than
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"high power" tacked onto the 9-millimeter Belgian Browning.
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The columnist Tony Snow offers us a good campaign slogan for the Billary
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Gang in '96:
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"We can't fool all the people all the time, but twice would be
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nice."
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I have almost passed the point at which I can be shocked anymore, but I was
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perhaps amazed at a report from England about a lawsuit brought by a woman
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against an importer of toys because when her little boy flung a boomerang
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it came back and hit him on the head. Apparently she holds that the package
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in which the toy was packed should have contained a statement to the effect
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that the instrument actually worked as designed. I suppose the next step is
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for someone to sue a gunmaker because when the gun fired it made a loud
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noise which startled him.
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Perhaps all is not lost. In Washington, D.C., of all places, family member
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Bill O'Connor recently overheard the following comment from the driver of a
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child-filled station wagon:
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"There are more armed men in the woods on opening day of deer
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season in Pennsylvania than there are federal agents, and that
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gives me a feeling of great comfort."
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Note that the new issue Burris Scoutscope is distinguished by a slightly
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enlarged bell at the front end. There are other structural differences as
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well, and up til now, the new glass has demonstrated increased honesty over
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previous products. An "honest" telescope is one that does what you tell it,
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in both planes, every time. When you dial in "left 4, up 6" that is what
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you should get, but all too often you do not. The new Burris, however, in
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samples inspected, has been quite satisfactory so far. We wish it a bright
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future.
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Sometimes I am convinced that the world is actually getting worse, and it
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is not just my advanced age which makes it seem so. Consider the case
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reported in the shooting industry magazine of a customer who bought a rifle
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only to return it in a matter of days. He claimed that when he fired it and
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opened the bolt a piece fell out, and he displayed an empty case to prove
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it.
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From a recent issue of Tailhook magazine, we discover that Naval pilots
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going into the Gulf War received no training nor familiarisation whatever
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with sidearms. Furthermore, they were forbidden to bring their own. As one
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post-modern bureaucrat sounded off, "This is war! You can't bring your own
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guns!"
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Of course it maybe adduced that if a flier loses a 30-million-dollar
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airplane, the taxpayer really should not be concerned about whether or not
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he can shoot his way to safety on the ground. It may, of course, be of some
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concern to him.
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Many years ago I was invited to a conference at the academy in Colorado
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Springs on just this point. The colonels sat there and shot the breeze all
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day without coming up with an answer to the question of what a combat pilot
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needs a pistol for. One school holds that he should be able to sneak around
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on the ground and put chickens in the pot. Another says he should stay on
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top of his hill and threaten the bad guys at the bottom until the chopper
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can come and pick him up. As many of you know, G ring's answer in World War
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II was to supply his combat pilots with beautifully made "drillings,"
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featuring two shotgun barrels and one rifle. I have no authoritative
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accounts about how good an idea this was, but it is a lot different from
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those manifest by the Navy in Desert Storm.
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As to the Vince Foster murder, Hillary does not want to hear any more about
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it. So there!
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In re-reading McBride for perhaps the tenth time, we discover again that a
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heart shot is by no means necessarily a quick stop. A beast shot through
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the heart will always die, and a man nearly always, unless he is wheeled
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into thoracic surgery within a couple of minutes, but he will not
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necessarily drop when hit. An armed antagonist can frequently shoot back,
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and a charging lion may easily bite you dead between the time the shot is
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delivered and the victim is no longer able to fight.
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From the collected writings I conclude that the larger the caliber the more
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quickly a heart shot will stop the action, and this is a matter of some
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interest in this day when the governments of the world seem determined to
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reduce calibers as much as possible.
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At Whittington we had a long and thoughtful session about the matter of Spc
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New, the soldier who maintains that he is not required to fight for the
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United Nations. The issue here is the most important one that I can recall
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during my lifetime. Can the Commander-in-Chief of American armed forces
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order an American fighting man to obey orders issued by a foreign
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sovereignty? In all the long history of mercenary soldiering it has been
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accepted that a soldier may indeed fight for a foreign power, but only if
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he volunteers for that duty. If we follow the example of the Swiss
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mercenaries of the Renaissance we discover that the contract specifically
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exempted the soldier from the obligation to fight against his own country.
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I do not believe any of this has been taken up properly by the lawmen as of
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yet. A soldier absolutely must do what he is told, but what happens if his
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foreign commander orders him to fight against his own country?
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It appears that our masters in Washington are doing their best to sweep
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this matter under the rug, just as they have done with other recent federal
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transgressions, but this is a matter of enormous importance, and we the
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people must demand an answer.
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On the occasion of the recent demonstration in Washington, engineered by
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Louis Farrakhan and others, one of his lieutenants (sporting the
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unimaginative name of Khalid Mohammed) is quoted in Human Events as
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shouting, "This is the time of blackman's rise and the whiteman's demise."
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Being genetically placed on one side of that confrontation, I apparently
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have no choice but to join the fray. This being the case I am reminded of
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the statement attributed to John Parker at Lexington on 19 April 1775, to
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wit: "If they mean to have a war, let it begin here!"
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Daughter Lindy's pseudo-Scout, constructed by Robbie Barrkman on a
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Springfield base, worked very well for her at Whittington, except that the
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shortened stock permitted the cocking piece to bang her on the cheek bone.
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When I was a lad we were all intimately introduced to the 03 Springfield,
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which naturally featured a stock short enough for even very close-coupled
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soldiers. We got banged, though I did learn to keep my thumb over on the
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right side of the stock out of the way, and to open my firing hand a tad so
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that my fingernails would not gouge my chin. When the rifle is private
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property, however, and not government issue, another solution maybe
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somewhat better. Simply saw the cocking piece off.
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It has long been claimed that the flared cocking piece on the 03, and the
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Krag, and some other actions, is a safety feature in that it deflects hot
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gas which may result from a punctured primer. I know from personal
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experience on the 1917 action that if hot gas travels back along the
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striker it ejects from the bolt an inch or so below the line of sight -
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even an open sight. I sported a neat black tattoo on my right cheek for a
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couple of months to illustrate this. When asked about it I found it very
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macho to say casually, "Blown primer on my 30-06."
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I have never worn a really good facial scar, but those who have are one up
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on the rest of us, if their narrative is sufficiently dramatic. The actor,
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George McCready, was able to say when asked about a clean white scar on his
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jaw bone that he got it when he flipped his Bugatti at LeMans, which is
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exactly what happened. (At this point I think the feminists in the group
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will drop out of the conversation.)
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Arizona T-shirt sign:
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"I will rope for beer."
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On the subject of Africa, it is not too soon to start setting up schedules.
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We are committed to be on station in Pretoria by 19 March, and to be back
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here in the states by 18 April. Just what happens in the interim is yet to
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be worked out, but our African adventures have been so totally successful
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in the past that we do not foresee any problems.
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We are informed that the street scene in Johannesburg is bad and
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degenerating, but that is true of any big city you can name. We expect to
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get out into the country at once and thus be well clear of social strife,
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if any.
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As to that, one thing that we have always liked about Africa is that if you
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are attacked you may legally defend yourself, which is not true of London
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or Toronto or Tokyo.
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"The rifleman, being a hunter, naturally always has an eye, and
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an ear, for game. The great game movement along the front took
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place at night. That in the back areas, of course, could only be
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deduced, from daytime observation, and at night became the
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business of the artillery and machine guns. But no-man's-land, in
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quiet times, was the scene of an almost purely nocturnal life.
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The sniper was lucky if, during the day, he spotted a couple of
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Germans; but if he really cared for hunting he might have a dozen
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pass within as many feet of him at night. He can well afford to
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abandon his rifle for this - if he can still find time to get the
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necessary sleep. There is nothing just like it for making one
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feel at home in the trench areas. To spend the night in a funky
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dugout or musty cellar, whether in the front line, supports or
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reserves, is like closing the tent-fly at nightfall as soon as
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you have made camp on the mountainside overlooking a pleasant -
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and unknown - valley. Much better to get outside and see what's
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happening."
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from A Rifleman Went to War by Captain Herbert W. McBride
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Danie van Graan, our good friend from the Low Veldt, has just shown us an
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interesting photograph of a Burris Scoutscope mounted on an Enfield Combat
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Rifle. The assembly looks good. It is not a Scout, being overweight and
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overlong, but it is handy, powerful and easy to feed. Since it has a
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full-weight barrel the base may be fastened thereto with screws with no
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need for a custom forward extrusion. We hope to play with this piece next
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year in Africa, and we expect that it will prove out well.
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Family member Tom Berger sends us an extract from a piece of fiction called
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"Flying Finish," by Dick Francis, which points up a peculiar aspect of
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post-modern sociology that I had not thought about before. The idea is that
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in an emasculated society there is no accepted outlet for the natural
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combativeness of the young male, except in crime. Apparently it is
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considered uncouth for a young man to say that he wants to fight, no matter
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how much he does. This poses no problem for the counterculture, whose
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members grow to adolescence with no ethical or moral base, but it becomes
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an increasing affliction for young men brought up by decent parents. If
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Louis Farrakhan gets his way, this difficulty may straighten itself out in
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fairly short order.
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"This situation has turned congressional hearings into somewhat
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of a joke and has made it obvious that federal law enforcement
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cannot be expected to investigate itself."
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Robert K. Brown
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in Soldier of Fortune, December 1995
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"The government against which our ancestors took up arms was a
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mild and distant irritant compared to the federal scourge that
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rules us today. Constitutional restraints on tyranny are to our
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masters only a hazy memory as they exercise powers beyond the
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dreams of history's most famous dictators. Louis the XIV never
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required an annual accounting of every centime every Frenchman
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earned. He would never have dared then to demand a third of it in
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yearly tribute. Ivan the Terrible never told Russian merchants
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whom they could or could not hire, nor, heaven help us, where
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they could have a smoke."
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Jared Taylor, Louisville, Kentucky
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"If the wound is large, the weapon with which the patient has
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been wounded should be anointed daily: otherwise every two or
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three days. The weapon should be kept in pure linen and a warm
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place, but not too hot to scald lest the patient suffer harm."
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That was written in 1662, and after three hundred years some of our
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legislators still insist on treating the weapon rather than the wound. (We
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get this from David Kopel at a presentation at the University of Oklahoma.)
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Cross-eyed shooting - that is shooting right-handed and left-eyed, or vice
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versa, is not difficult with a pistol, and it is not much of a problem in
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slow-fire rifle shooting. It does become difficult with the rifle snapshot.
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The shooter can dim his weaker eye by taping over his shooting glasses, or
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by wearing a bandanna or eye patch, but while these expedients suffice for
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the target range they are unlikely to be useful in the field. We can take
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some comfort from observing that the snapshot with a rifle is a rare
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occurrence, but the problem is still there and I do not have an answer for
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it.
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All of this "whingeing" (British word) about our termination of the war in
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the Pacific is interesting in view of McBride's observation about his
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sniping in World War I. "We killed them when we could and we damned them
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all to Hell. They started it and by God we finished it!" This calls to mind
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the advice of Gunsite's Grand Patron Theodore Roosevelt to the effect that
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you should never start a fight, but once you are in it you should finish
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it. This is a principle which a series of recent American presidents seem
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to have missed.
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Family member and military historian Barrett Tillman tells us that Jim
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Coxen, who did a tour with the 5th Marines, has now been shooting with new
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devices and new techniques for sport. He maintains that he wished he had a
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Scout rifle up in I CORPS. He feels that he would definitely have bagged
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more bad guys. Well sure! Wouldn't you prefer a properly set up Scout to an
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M16?
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Despite the best efforts of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, we now
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have access to a photograph of Lon Horiuchi, who shot Vickie Weaver in the
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face but who still has not been brought to justice. Col. Bob Brown ran it
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down in a West Point yearbook and it appears on page 38 of the December
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issue of Soldier of Fortune magazine. It is not very clear, and it is
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twenty years old, but it is better than nothing.
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An Indian Summer here in the Arizona highlands maybe assessed as evidence
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of God's goodwill to men. We count our blessings.
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Please Note. These "Commentaries" are for personal use only. Not for
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publication.
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