I want to address one aspect of the Rittenhouse trial that I think has been lost in the mix. I think this is important because FAR too many people in this country are completely ignorant of the rules and realities of self defense.
Wednesday, November 24, 2021
The "duty to retreat" and Kyle Rittenhouse
Tuesday, August 24, 2021
Harlem Globetrotters 2021 Review
I recently had the opportunity to see the Original Harlem Globetrotters play at Fairfax VA. Overall, it was a lot of fun and I want to write a review. I'm choosing to not post this on any social media platform so if you're reading this, it is because somebody sent you a link or you just stumbled upon it by dumb luck.
Friday, May 21, 2021
Scout Rifle vs Practical Rifle Training
Scout Rifle or
Practical Rifle Training
Tom Russell or Randy
Cain
I have now taken both the Randy Cain Practical Rifle and the
Tom Russell 5.5 Day Scout Rifle course twice each. I have had many people ask me which is better
or which I recommend for a person taking their first rifle class. The bottom line is, there is not a real
answer to that question. They are both
excellent, but each has a unique way of going about teaching the fundamentals
of riflery.
The following is a compare and contrast review of different
things that are taught and how they are approached by each instructor. I should note here that Tom has 3 coaches who
assist with various things like setting up targets, spotting targets and
generally helping make things run smoothly.
The Instructors:
Tom Russell was an instructor with Jeff Cooper back
in the late 90’s and was with him on two trips to Africa. He is one of six individuals who Cooper
conferred the title “Master Instructor” and I believe only one other is still
alive and presently teaching. His
demeanor is that of a preacher and that is his full time profession in addition
to firearms instruction. You will not
hear a curse word in the class. He
listens well to his students. He is
interested in new ways to look at things and will listen to well reasoned and
researched ideas. He will often digress
into tales of his adventures with Col. Cooper.
Randy Cain was also an instructor with Col. Cooper
but was really a protégé’ of Louis Awerbuck (one of the other 5 Master
instructors but has since passed away).
He is a bit rough around the edges and one cannot be offended by the "F" word if one wishes to enjoy the training.
It makes for very colorful banter and it makes things feel very
genuine. His background is law enforcement
and that comes through very clearly during the class. He will also digress into stories from the
past but they usually involved Louis or some connection to law
enforcement. At every point, there is no
doubt that one is learning how to fight with a bolt action rifle.
The facilities:
Tom Russell conducts his rifle class at the Jeff
Cooper range at the Whittington Center in Raton New Mexico. It is an amazing facility. From the shooting line, shooters can engage
targets from 50 to 500 yards without moving.
It allows for running the Rifle 10 and Rifle Bounce drills. There is a side valley that can be set up for
an individual rifle walk while the assistant instructors monitor drills with
the rest of the class. There is a
classroom with tables and chairs and a room heater. There is running water and multiple
outhouses. There is a proshop where one
can get some shooting supplies. It is
like Disneyland with guns. It allows Tom
to do things that Randy just can’t.
Randy conducts classes at various facilities but his
main one is in Central Florida. It is a
grass range out in the middle of nowhere.
Students move from position to position and can shoot a maximum of 200
yards. There is a covered area where
instruction takes place and ammo and gear can be stored but that is not a shooting
position. All shooting is exposed to the
elements. It is a bit primitive but he
makes the most of it.
Format
Tom’s class is 5 and a half days, starting on a
Monday and finishing at noon on Saturday.
Students start off at the bench to zero their rifles. While the original zero was about 2.5” high
at 100, we confirmed zero at 200 from prone and from sitting. Students move on to learn prone, sitting,
squat, kneeling and offhand. Heavy
emphasis is put on the snap shot at 10, 25 and 50 yards (start from high ready
position and engage the target on command within 1.5 seconds. Head shots at 10
and 25 yards and “A” zone body at 50).
We did the snap shot drill several times a day.
On Thursday and Friday, the instructors set up two different
“rifle walks” which involved setting both steel and cardboard targets in hidden
positions along a valley. Also on those
days, we had the opportunity to shoot out to 500 yards. This is a mindset drill more than anything
and it is very effective. We did the “Rifle
Bounce” several times (pepper popper targets at 100, 200 and 300 yards, each
being engaged from different positions and timed). We did the “Rifle 10” once each which at 6500
foot elevation was enough. That drill
has one starting from prone at 300 yards, running to 275, then 250, then 225
and finally 200 and make two shots at each range. The final shots must be from standing.
The final day has evaluations which was to see who could
make the most snap shots at 25 and 50 yards and then a bracket style double
elimination shootoff. Two steel targets
were placed at 60 and 200 yards. Two
students paired off and engaged the first from standing and the second from any
position.
Between drills, we had classroom instruction and covered a
variety of topics from shot placement to mindset and various other ideas about
sling use and carry positions.
Randy Cain has a more compressed format as his class
is only 3 days. He starts by zeroing the
rifle from the prone position. He has a
strong emphasis on “Natural Point of Aim.”
This takes a lot of time but it really emphasizes the importance of
NPA. Randy doesn’t introduce the sling
until day 2 which is when most students really understand what NPA means. He moves on with sitting, kneeling, squat and
offhand.
Near the end of each day, he has a mad minute style drill
that really emphasizes weapon manipulation.
If you take the class during the winter, he also has a night shoot which
is an incredible opportunity to see how your optics work in low light. There are several shootoff type competitions
using various drills including the scrambler (shot at steel from prone at 100,
advancing 10 yards, shot in sitting, 10 yards to kneeling, 10 yards to squat
and 10 yards to standing). Randy uses
reloading time to give instructions about upcoming drills.
Style, emphasis and esoterica:
Tom Russell never lets one forget that this is Jeff
Cooper’s baby. Because of the
facilities, he can do things that would be impossible elsewhere. Learning to shoot comfortably at 300 yards is
great, as is the chance to stretch to 500.
Most rifle owners never get the chance to see what their rifles can do
off the bench and very little shooting is done from that bench.
The value of the rifle walks can’t be underestimated. It teaches one to look both near and far. It can be frustrating the first time through because
it is so easy to look right past some targets which is why he sets it up
twice. The lessons on mindset from this
are amazing.
Tom also does some really neat team building. On Wednesday, weather permitting, after the
shooting day, the class hikes several miles up a canyon to a genuine ghost
town. Rifles are carried so the students
get an idea what it is like to move with a rifle. On Thursday, the class travels to Cimarron
and the St. James Hotel which is the oldest operating hotel and saloon on the
Santa Fe Trail. Real gunfighters stayed
there and there are bullet holes in the ceiling to prove it. On the other nights, the class will often
meet in Raton for dinner. Because many
students stay in competitor housing, the lobby often serves as a central place
to enjoy lunch. There is great chemistry
and comradery between the students and instructors.
The way Tom teaches builds students up so that by the last
day, most are shocked by what they can accomplish. In both classes I took from him, there were
students that had almost no rifle experience and by the end, each was able to perform
extremely well. Both times, a new rifle shooter
placed 2nd in the shootoff.
That’s pretty amazing. The experienced
shooters all advanced their skill sets as well.
Randy Cain runs a hot range which means that between
each drill, the rifles may be topped off before they are slung. His emphasis on NPA is tedious at first but
extremely valuable. The mad minute
drills expose poor gun handling and rewards smooth reloads. I really liked being pushed that hard in
these drills.
Randy spends a good amount of time in teaching how to come
out of a slung position and onto target.
African carry works best for most students. He has a demonstration where he picks a
student that has a pistol on their hip.
He has that student and one other stand 10 yards from the targets and
asks if this is pistol or rifle range.
Most think 10 yards is pistol territory.
He has the two students stand next to one other. The one with the rifle is in the African
carry position. On signal, both must
bring their weapons up and engage the target with one head shot. The rifle usually wins.
The night shoot is invaluable in terms of learning to use
one’s equipment to the best of their ability.
It starts at dusk and starts off with all students in prone and aiming
in at their targets. Randy occasionally
calls for a shot. Students must come off the line at the point
where they can’t positively identify their targets or see their reticle on the
vital zone. This exposes scout scopes
and lower quality glass very quickly.
Low power variable scopes with illuminated reticles usually do best
although my Leupold VX-R 1.5-5X scout actually tied a Leupold VX6 1-6X scope in
this drill. The rest of the evening,
Randy teaches how to use lights in conjunction with the rifle.
Is one better?
Tom’s class has much better facilities. The ranges are longer and the drills are more
varied. The rifle walks teach things
that Randy just can’t. The shootoff
format is really fun. Tom’s connections
to Col. Cooper keep students well engaged in the class time.
Randy drills the fundaments to the point that one
cannot forget. The night shoot teaches
lessons that Tom can’t. The hot range
and mad minute drills force gun handling lessons extremely well. His emphasis on NPA and positional shooting emphasizes the fundamentals extremely well.
Both teach mindset but from different
perspectives. Both will take a shooter
and make them better. Both can take a
beginner to places they didn’t anticipate.
Both made me feel like I was watching every lesson from “The Art of the
Rifle” come alive in front of me.
So the answer is, both.
Tom’s class is longer and harder to get to and costs $1300. Randy’s is shorter, easier to get to and
costs $650. Both will take 500-700
rounds of ammo. Tom’s is more of an
experience in terms of history and heritage and Randy’s is more blue
collar. Take your pick, you can’t make a
bad decision between them.
(note: I didn't get many pics at Randy's class. Don't take that as anything other than the fact that my wife was with me at Tom's most recent class so I got many more pics.)
Saturday, February 20, 2021
How to Prepare for a Scout Rifle Class
How
to prepare for a scout rifle class
So you signed up for a
general/practical/scout rifle class or you're considering it and want to know
how to prepare for it. That's smart. Going in well prepared will
make your training more effective and you'll spend more time learning the
fundamentals than dealing with extraneous issues. I've taken 4 of
these classes so far and I've learned a number of things that might help you in
preparing for this.
Knowledge:
Buy a copy of Jeff Cooper's Art of
the Rifle. Read it cover to cover and then read it again.
Everything you're going to be taught will be coming directly from Cooper's
book. This is not to say that the book is a substitute for the
training. If you're familiar with the fundamentals ahead of time, you'll
get more out of the class. It is really cool to have Cooper's words come
alive in front of you. This is something I found to be true when taking
classes from Randy Cain and Tom Russell. These guys were there with Col
Cooper and having them demonstrating positional rifle shooting and helping me
to do the same really added a lot of value to the experience for
me.
Watch instructional shooting videos
but be careful which ones. There are a lot of idiots on YouTube. If
you want an illustration of how bad it can be, look up "hasty sling"
and see how many well intentioned guys have videos claiming this will help
you stabilize the rifle by just wrapping your hand around a standard
carry strap (it doesn't and can't). Watch Il Ling New from
Gunsite. Richard Mann has some great content, as does Lucky
Gunner.
Tom Russell has been doing something
unique lately as well. About 3 months before his 5.5 Day Scout Rifle
class, he conducts Zoom meetings every Thursday night to help potential
students prepare for the class. He goes over a lot of the things
I'm covering in this blog and video but also will help people understand
how to get into the 5 basic shooting positions.
Conditioning:
You don't need to be a 26 year old
cross fit champion to do well in a rifle class. I'm 52 and I have a bit
of a gut. I don't have a gym membership. Before my last Tom Russell
class, I decided I needed to be a bit better shape since the class is at
Whittington Center which is at 6500 feet elevation. Try waking up 20
minutes early. What you do for those 20 minutes is up to you but it
doesn't need to be overly strenuous. I spend a few minutes doing deep
knee bends, lunges, push-ups and some time on a rowing machine. It is
basic calisthenics plus one other feature I'll describe in a moment. The
point is to stretch your muscles and get your heart rate up.
Now for the last part. As part
of my morning exercise routine, I take my rifle and shooting mat and spend time
getting into shooting positions. I start with 5 repetitions into
squatting. Then 5 times into kneeling. Then 5 times into sitting
and finally, 5 times into prone. This will get your heart rate up.
It will also help you find out what does and doesn't work getting into and out
of these positions. It will also make you MUCH smoother by the time you
get to the class. In the class, you won't need this skill in the first
day or two. By the end however, you will be glad you prepared.
You'll melt into the positions because your body is so used to it. Even if you're unsure how these positions should feel, if you've read the Cooper book, you'll have a good idea. Just don't get too used to it. The instructors will correct any errors in positional shooting, but at least you'll be able to get into and out of them easier.
Equipment :
Zero your rifle before going to class. Don't show up with a gun and scope that you've never shot on paper before. If you don't know how to do this, look it up. You should be hitting 2" high at 100 yards. If you can't get to a 100 yard range before the class, find a 25 yard range and set it so you're dead-on at that range. If you don't, you'll spend the first hour or more of your valuable training time doing basic bench work that could have been done at home. Use the training time for training, not sighting in.
As for guns and scopes, run
what you are most likely to use in the field. If you're a hunter, bring
your hunting gun. If you're a prepper, bring your prepper gun.
You'll get more from the class with a bolt gun, but I don't think you'd be
unwelcome with a semi-auto (talk to the instructor of course). Optics are
the same thing. If you normally run a LPVO (low power variable optic like a 1.5-5 or 2-7 maximum), bring it. If you
normally use a scout scope, that's the one to bring. Randy Cain prefers
an LPVO to a scout scope and Tom Russell likes the scouts. The only thing
is, make sure the low end magnification is no more than 3X and preferably
lower. In all of these classes, you'll be doing some work from close up
(like 10 yards) and your longest shot will be 2-300 yards.
General/Practical/Scout classes are not long range classes and bulky optics are
not helpful.
Bring a real sling.
Every time I go to a class, I bring an extra sling because there is always a
guy who didn't understand what that meant until it was too late. A carry
strap isn't a sling. You need something that allows you to loop up around
your bicep that will hold the rifle in place from supported positions. If
you have 3 swivels, the Ching sling is the obvious choice. If you have
only two, then the Rhodesian style or the Galco Riflemann sling are the best choices.
The Galco Safari sling will work, but are not as well liked by the instructors
I've had.
How many magazines should you
bring? All of them. If all you can bring are the two that came with
your Steyr, you will survive, but you'll be at a disadvantage and might slow
down the class. You're going to be stuffing rounds in mags while standing
at the line with a rifle in your hand. You really need 4 five round
mags. If you can bring more, bring more. I prefer to have 50 rounds
loaded in magazines with me at the line, but that isn't realistic for some
people. Steyr mags are almost impossible to find right now and cost $50
each at this point. AICS mags are easier and I'd still try to bring 50
loaded rounds but would use 3 ten round mags and 4 five rounders.
How do you manage all that ammo?
First of all, you don't need to carry everything on your body at all
times. You need 20 to 25 rounds on your person but you can have an ammo
can or bag sitting at your feet with the rest of it. As you start shooting
through the loaded mags on your body, there will be pauses where you can switch
out the empties for fresh mags from the can without running back to the staging
area. Because the Steyr has a stock that carries one extra mag, I only
need to carry two more. I use the pouches from Wilderness Tactical that are sold by Steyr and I have one on either side of my belt buckle at the 2 and
10 position. I might put one more loaded mag in a cargo pocket and the
rest in a bag or ammo can behind me on the line. I did a class with a Sig
Cross which uses AICS mags and those were a little more difficult. I had
to move those to the 3 and 9 position so they wouldn't interfere with the
sitting or squatting position.
Next, you need a dump pouch.
I've tried a few different ideas here but a simple belt mounted one at about
the 8 position works best. If you put it at the 6, you'll find it in your
way for some positions. Work with it and you'll figure it out. You
need it though. These mags are too expensive to drop on the ground.
Speaking of which, mark your mags. If somebody has a similar rifle next
to you, you really don't want to have that awkward conversation about who's
magazine that is. Just a dot of paint or use a Sharpie to put your
initials. While you're at it, put your initials on your hearing
protection. It turns out everybody has Walker's Razor headphones.
What about the guys running hinged
floorplate guns? You actually have it easy. Grab a handful of
ammo and stuff it in the cargo pocket of your pants. You can get 20-25 in
there and then have another 20-30 in your ammo can at your feet and you're good
to go. I've seen guys with various pouches to hold loose ammo, but most
of them dumped ammo on the ground when shooting prone. If you find a
pouch that is secure enough for shooting prone but easy enough to grab 5 quick
rounds, go for it, but most will not.
Let's talk pants. I
have a strong preference for 5.11 pants, but not for the reason you might
think. The 5.11 pants have a pocket in the knee that accepts their
neoprene knee pads. These things are slick. They are unobtrusive
and people can't tell you have them on, but they will protect your knees when
going down into prone and kneeling. They also give your elbows a
better resting place when shooting from the sitting position. They also
don't look like SWAT gear.
The rest of it is just common
sense. Yes, bring a shooting mat. Yes, have rain gear handy.
Yes, well worn boots are preferred. Read the equipment page of your
instructor's website and if in doubt, call the instructor before the
class. Don't be afraid to ask questions. They've heard them
before.
Resources:
Lucky Gunner on becoming a practical
rifleman: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RtfmHKQmIoM
Il Ling New with a scout rifle: https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=il+ling+new+ruger+gunsite+scout
Richard Mann's blog and
videos https://empty-cases.com/blog/
Tom Russell's web site and contact
info: https://americanfirearmsacademy.com/author/tom/
Randy Cain's web
site: https://www.guntactics.com/
Steyr
Academy https://www.steyr-arms.com/us/ssrc
Gunsite: https://www.gunsite.com/classes/270-rifle-class/
Art of the rifle
book: https://www.gunsitestore.com/product/library/books/the-art-of-the-rifle-by-jeff-cooper/
Rhodesian and Ching
Slings: https://www.andysleather.com/
My video on scout slings https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uf93qY1z7dE&t=167s
Saturday, January 16, 2021
Why we were there
Why Protest?
Today marks one week since the
protest at the US Capitol which is now being characterized as a seditious act
of an angry mob. Those who attended are
being excoriated and “cancelled.” I
posted a blog with a fairly detached tone that was a simple description of the
event and I was rewarded with a person who I don’t even know posting a review
on my employer’s Facebook page calling me out by name as a cultist and a
seditionist. The person feels that I don’t
deserve a job. Fortunately, my post was
reviewed and determined to be acceptable but I pulled it down anyway.
The one thing I did not address was
why I chose to go to the protest in the first place. I thought that would be clear to all, but I
have since learned that it isn’t. Either
through innocent or willful ignorance, they really cannot figure out why so
many thousands of Americans would travel to participate in such an event.
There are a few points that unfortunately
need to be brought up. I thought these were
self-evident, but apparently are not.
1. 1. Nobody I
spoke to had any intention of breaking any laws. That includes rioting, breaking and entering,
assault or any of the things that are shown on TV.
2. 2. Those
that clearly did come to break the law were very small in number as compared to
the numbers at the protest. I don’t have
actual figures because strangely, they are not available anywhere I can
find. The crowd at the Ellipse was huge
and likely in the hundreds of thousands.
It was not the 2 million that rumor pegged it at but it wasn’t in the
tens of thousands either. The number actually
in the Capitol was somewhere in the low hundreds.
3. 3. Not
everybody who was there was a Trump supporter.
Yes, I know you’re reading plenty of media accounts of those arrested
who were indeed Trump fans, but in watching and listening to the crowd, it was
obvious that there was a small contingent of those with other views and likely,
other motives.
Let
me also get in the obligatory note that neither I nor anybody I am friends with
supports the idea of sedition, treason, murder for political ends, violence for
political ends, theft, vandalism, assault, or any of the things that happened
inside the Capitol. I have met a few
people who are so angry that they believe it is time for violence, but those
are the outliers. They are not the Tea
Party types. They are the Q-Anon types
and there are not a lot of those. I don’t
deny their existence, but they don’t represent any significant fraction of Trump
supporters.
So what was the point and why did Americans drive and fly
from all over the nation to protest this event?
Was it stupidity? Ignorance? Malice?
Some people really don’t understand what brought so many Americans to
this point and think that is must be some cultish devotion to what they view as
a the incarnation of evil.
In order to understand it, we need to go back a bit. In 2016, the seeds of all of this were sown. The Steele Dossier was a fraud from the very
beginning and the FBI knew it at the time.
They ignored that fact and lied to a FISA court and to others in order
to pursue a fraudulent investigation.
The Mueller report confirms that that the very least, there was zero
evidence of collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russians. This led to 3 years of wasted energy and time
and destroyed the credibility of the FBI in the process.
There was however, clear collusion between the Clinton
campaign and those same Russians. John
Durham is looking into it and conservatives have been waiting… and waiting… and
waiting for satisfaction for that report which will hopefully bring to justice
those who really did engage in sedition. The longer this takes, the less credibility it will have to conservatives.
Then there was the bureaucratic attempted coup. Sally Yates was one, but not the only
one. Remember all the leaks in
2017? They were outrageous and unprecedented. Recordings of conversations with foreign
leaders have never been leaked in such a manner. None of this has ever happened. It was obvious that the “swamp” or “deep
state” was actively coordinating to weaken the president or even run him from
office. They were called the
resistance. They damaged the credibility
of the permanent bureaucracy in the process.
Next was the Ukrainian phone call that turned out to be
nothing. This time, it was the national
security apparatus that damaged their own credibility once the facts came
out. We watched the Democrats in
congress impeach Trump for things that looked idiotic to us.
As a side note, with this level of corruption so obvious to
conservatives, is it any wonder we were distrustful when more bureaucrats said
we had to shut down the economy over a virus?
All of this just sets the stage for the election. Some may look at the above situations and
dismiss it as the wrong way to view the facts.
They really can’t dispute the facts themselves though. In this election, 75 million Americans saw
things essentially this way which is more than any candidate has in any
election in history.
Seventy-five million Americans saw it and voted and yet
somehow President Trump lost to a candidate who didn’t campaign, had rallies
where literally a few dozen people attended and had a demonstrated history of a
condition resembling dementia. It made
zero sense. Surely that can’t be
true.
Now about that election… to deny that problems didn’t exist
is to deny reality. I don’t care if
court cases have been thrown out, not heard or if Republican officials in some
states say things were normal. If this
is normal, then normal needs to change.
We’ve seen the video from Detroit with pizza boxes being used to block
Republican observers from doing their job.
We’ve seen the video from Atlanta of cases of ballots being pulled from under a table
after observers are made to leave after a “water main break” that never happened. We’ve seen that election laws were re-written
in several states by judges who had no statutory authority to do it. That just scratches the surface but are the most obvious and don't require mysterious conspiracy theories to demonstrate. Ballots were sent to every registered voter when the law didn't provide for that and that is in states that had resisted or been prevented from examining the voter roles for decades. The opportunity for corruption is undeniable.
Is any of that enough to change the outcome? Maybe and maybe not. But it should be in all American’s best
interest to find out. Election integrity
is critical to any functioning democratic government. Without trust in the outcome of elections,
any remaining credibility in government is gone.
That is why we were there.
That is why people traveled thousands of miles to be present at the
Capitol that day. It was to remind the
legislative branch that Americans demand election integrity. We knew this was a Hail Mary and that there
was likely no way to stop it at this late date, but all other avenues to attain
that had been blocked. We hoped that
Senator Cruz could be successful in getting congress to actually look at the
problems and delaying things just a few days more while an honest hearing could
be made. The Pence gambit was doomed but
some put faith in that effort as well.
It was grasping at straws because we felt it was our duty to ensure
honesty in the election.
One more thing to consider is what we were prepared for. We were not thinking that this would turn into a riot of Trump supporters. The thing that concerned me and everybody I met was the fear that the same protesters that had attacked a previous rally would try to attack this one. It is why I got a train ticket to get me out of town well before sunset. The fear of Antifa or other violent mobs was a genuine concern of several people with whom I had conversations. The Tea Party crowd is very respectful and will not even litter on the grounds of the Capitol. It didn't occur to most of us that elements of the group would resort to rioting.
Edit 1/16/2021:
Now we are seeing that the riot wasn't as pure as was first portrayed. It is still too early to know if the real story will come out but already there is video of a BLM activist who embedded himself in the crowd and was clearly inciting as if he were a Trump supporter. In a heated crowd, this kind of behavior would have predictable effects. Individuals may be smart, but a mob is not and a mob is easily manipulated by those who are determined to do it.
Thursday, January 7, 2021
My Experience at the US Capitol Jan 6, 2021