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SIG’s Competition Grade AR – the M400-DH3

NEWINGTON, N.H. – SIG SAUER, in partnership with world champion 3-Gun competitor and Team SIG Shooter Daniel Horner, is pleased to introduce the M400-DH3 SDI rifle.  This is the inaugural release under Daniel Horner’s DH3 brand in conjunction with SIG SAUER; the M400-DH3 has been designed by Horner in collaboration with the SIG SAUER research and development team and is the rifle used by Horner in 3-Gun and multi-gun competition.

“Since Daniel Horner joined Team SIG, he has methodically been researching, designing, and testing the products he will be introducing through the DH3 brand from SIG SAUER.  These are not just products that bear his name, but are the products that have been tried, tested and used by him personally.  Daniel puts the full force of his name and his distinguished career in the shooting sports behind this new rifle,” said Tom Taylor, Chief Marketing Officer and Executive Vice President Commercial Sales, SIG SAUER, Inc.  “The M400-DH3 is the first product in this DH3 product line-up and achieves both the performance and precision that he is known for as one of the world’s most dominant world championship shooters.”

Team SIG’s Daniel Horner is regarded as the top multi-gun and 3-gun shooter in the world.  Daniel began his professional shooting career as a member of the elite U.S. Army Marksmanship Until rising to become the Coach of the USAMU Action Shooting Team and during his career was twice selected as the Military Marksmanship Association Soldier of the Year. He has captured over 125 championship titles at the world, national, regional, and state level, including 16 Multi-Gun / 3-Gun Championships, 8 Sniper Championships, 2 IDPA National Championships, an IPSC Shotgun National Championship, an NRA World Shooting Championship, and hundreds of additional national and major title wins throughout his career.

“For the past two years I have been shooting in competition with the M400-DH3 rifle and what you get right out of the box is my set-up.  We took our time to release this gun because I wanted all the elements to be my competition set-up from my trigger to the stock,” added Horner.  “I’ve won multiple titles with this exact build and even if you’re not taking it into competition, you are sure to enjoy the custom features that we have put into the M400-DH3.”

The M400-DH3 Rifle is a SIG Direct Impingement (SDI) aluminum frame rifle with a Cerakote Elite Titanium finish with the DH3 fully adjustable competition stock and a 2-stage adjustable Timney™ Daniel Horner signature trigger.  This competition platform features a 16” fluted stainless 223 WYLDE barrel for optimal 223REM or 5.56 performance with a three-chamber compensator for recoil mitigation, low-profile 3-gun handguard with M-LOK™ mounts for easy accessory attachment, ambidextrous controls including bolt catch/release, and ships with one 30-round magazine.

SIG SAUER M400 DH3:

Caliber: 223REM or 5.56 (223 WYLDE barrel)

Overall length: 34.5 inches

Overall height: 7.5 inches

Overall width: 2.5 inches

Barrel length:  16 inches

Barrel twist: 1:8

Weight (w/magazine): 7lbs.

The SIG SAUER M400-DH3 rifle is now shipping and available at retailers.  To learn more about the SIG SAUER M400-DH3 rifle competition rifle from Daniel Horner or watch the product video visit sigsauer.com.

About SIG SAUER, Inc.
SIG SAUER, Inc. is a leading provider and manufacturer of firearms, electro-optics, ammunition, suppressors, airguns, and training.  For over 250 years SIG SAUER, Inc. has evolved by blending American ingenuity, German engineering, and Swiss precision.  Today, SIG SAUER is synonymous with industry-leading quality and innovation which has made it the brand of choice amongst the U.S. Military, the global defense community, law enforcement, competitive shooters, hunters and responsible citizens.  Additionally, SIG SAUER is the premier provider of tactical training and elite firearms instruction at the SIG SAUER Academy.  Headquartered in Newington, New Hampshire, SIG SAUER has over 2,900 employees across eleven locations.  For more information abo ut the company and product line visit: sigsauer.com.

California’s Data Breach of Concealed Carry Licensees Continues the Parade of Government Incompetence

This is not my shocked face. This is why we can’t have nice things in government hands alone. If you haven’t heard by now, the state of California, gun controllers’ wet dream of rules and regulation, the supposed model of efficiency that the nation should base its practices on, couldn’t even launch a website without exposing every single licensee’s personal information for the world to find.

Not as egregious as the New York FOIA request from The Journal News, where the journalists then published a whole interactive map of gun owners’ personal addresses, this is nonetheless a serious privacy violation on the part of of the California government. The only major difference is that California didn’t do this on purpose, small comfort there. The Journal News absolutely did publish with hostile intent or an idiotic disregard of unintended consequences.

It was done because of incompetence and a failure on the part of California’s DOJ to properly protect personal information that is within their custody. California DOJ insists they need this information in order to prevent crime, ensure community safety, and promote the general welfare of California and yet they couldn’t be bothered to launch their website without checking to make certain that access guards were properly in place to prevent very current concealed carry licensee’s address and information from being searchable as an a Amazon shopping list.

Yep, really inspiring confidence aren’t we Newsom.

California DOJ data breach exposes personal information of all concealed carry permit holders across state

The breach occurred as part of the state Department of Justice’s launch of its “2022 Firearms Dashboard Portal,” officials said.

Breach is a very dramatic word that seems to indicate a hack took place, when in reality this is more like California in a Zoom meeting and screen sharing their “incognito” window to the world.

“This public site allows access to certain information, however, personal information of Concealed Carry Weapon (CCW) permit holders is not supposed to be visible,” the agency said.

But, it was.

The personal information included, but was not limited to, a person’s name, age, address, Criminal Identification Index number and license type, according to the sheriff’s office. The state DOJ pulled down the dashboard site along with all related links after learning of the breach, the sheriff’s office said.

But, the internet is forever. With very little effort and just a pinch of knowhow those screens are probably findable in archive now. Or anyone who took notice of the data and saved it could simply keep publishing it again for whatever motivation they so choose.

There is a silver lining though, all the new CCW permits that are in process and going to be issued under the California DOJs mandated update to shall issue are unlikely to have been in the system so new applicants and future applicants are unlikely to have had their information leaked.

This assumes that CA DOJ gets the portal launch right next time, of course.

Bold of you to assume you have a point…

Letter: The nation’s assault rifle cult must come to an end

It’s going to be one of those posts readers… here we go. Fisking another LTTE.

In a recent CBS – YouGov poll, 44% of the Republicans agreed that mass shootings are “unfortunately something we have to accept” in a free country.

It is. Freedom is not safe. We don’t have ‘accept’ it in the sense of doing nothing and letting people destroy at will, but accepting in the realistic facet that there is a hard limit to what we can do that will have any positive effect without a severe negative effect.

In other words, our politicians on the right “think that gun carnage is acceptable “

In your words, you mean. Accepting that the free will of mankind also allows them to, on rare occasion thankfully, act in horrific manners is accepting reality. They do not endorse it, but they do not futilely and erroneously promise over and over to “solve” the gun violence epidemic or whichever favorite panic buzzword is in use at the moment.

– even when as of recently , more than 240 “mass shootings” involving four or more victims have occurred in just (roughly) 155 days of 2022. Are they delusional? I think so.

Are you?

Delusional that is. What obvious solution do we not have in place that would make 330 million people suddenly behave harmoniously to each other?

The Republican Party – pretending to be “the Party of law and order,” has become so radicalized that they cannot acknowledge any circumstance in which, perhaps, weapons only designed for human carnage should be restricted.

That is all weapons. Literally all of them. Weapons in all of human history were designed to inflict casualties either on game for food or other humans to impose a will and desire upon them. That desire might be leave me alone and get out of my house, it might be ‘Not today, Third Reich.’, and it might be Putin f*cking around in Ukraine and doing a whole lot of finding out. The weapon gets no say in its use, it simply works or it does not.

It has become a refuge for absolutists who would rather tolerate mass murder,

There’s the implication again. Tolerate, as if murder is legal and unpunished. That we tolerate it because it exists as an action, and always has, and people (including governments) keep doing it, so therefore we somehow encourage it.

including the massacre of children, than even consider “reasonable” measures

I’m glad you put reasonable in quotes, it helps acknowledge that reasonable requires agreement, and we do not agree.

like waiting periods,

A right delayed is a right denied. Imagine a waiting period after registering to vote, or a waiting period on attending a religious service you wish to attend or a petition to the government required a waiting period before being processed. Justice Thomas was right, we do actively treat the 2nd Amendment like a 2nd Class right… oof.

background checks,

We have those.

permits,

Like voter IDs?

gun training,

Actively encouraged by the 2A community with a whole vibrant niche in our culture.

a ban on assault-style weapons.

Why? How many deaths do rifles account for?

FBI UCR 2010-2020

Ah, gotcha. Handguns are used to kill people at better than 20:1 over rifles according to the FBI but let’s ban some rifles.

Cool.

Continue.

Are we nuts by allowing this to continue;

There it is again. Are mass murder and terrorism being capital crimes not disallowal enough? I don’t think we can disallow more than, ‘If you do this we will kill you.’ We don’t ‘allow’ anything. Inability to prevent is not allowing. Allow implies we have the realistic power to stop. We can’t stop speeding. We do not allow earthquakes, tornadoes, or hurricanes, they are forces beyond our ability to control.

The thoughts and actions of an individual who is outside our total physical control is also something we do not allow, it is something we cannot control. We may influence, but we cannot control. It is impossible. When we are talking about gun control, we are talking about influencing the actions of the most non-influenceable and radicalized members of society by attempting to compel the actions of the reasonable members of society to a variable degree of success.

Again, I repeat, we cannot stop speeding.

or are they nuts when supposedly persons in positions of responsibility (our legislators at all levels) continue to act so shamelessly, so irresponsibly, and so hypocritically? These people are unfit for high office, low office , or any office at all – considering we have succumbed to becoming a “gun loving country,” in which there are way more guns than people.

Are we also a car loving country?

There are also more registered cars than there are drivers in the United States, by almost 50 million.

There were 35,766 fatal motor vehicle crashes in the United States in 2020 in which 38,824 deaths occurred.

Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, “a true Conservative’s conservative,” wrote that “the Second Amendment right is not unlimited.

Which doesn’t mean you get to pick what it means. It isn’t unlimited, but it isn’t limited to your preferred and nonsensical limits just because you think they’re “reasonable” and I do not. I have data and evidence on why they aren’t reasonable in a free society, you have thoughts and prayers wishing bad things wouldn’t happen.

It is not a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose.” During his tenure as Chief Justice, Warren Burger (a Conservative appointment to the Court) stated in an interview that as currently interpreted, the Second Amendment “is a fraud.”

And in perhaps the defining 2nd Amendment case of our time, Justice Samuel Alito wrote in his concurrence,

Heller correctly recognized that the Second Amendment codifies the right of ordinary law-abiding Americans to protect themselves from lethal violence by possessing and, if necessary, using a gun. In 1791, when the Second Amendment was adopted, there were no police departments, and many families lived alone on isolated farms or on the frontiers. If these people were attacked, they were on their own. It is hard to imagine the furor that would have erupted if the Federal Government and the States had tried to take away the guns that these people needed for protection.

Today, unfortunately, many Americans have good reason to fear that they will be victimized if they are unable to protect themselves. And today, no less than in 1791, the Second Amendment guarantees their right to do so.

So what’s your point? Burger got quoted in an interview but I just quoted a concurring Justice in the actual opinion of the court. Which carries the weight? Which is in concurrence with such terms as “keep and bear” and “shall not be infringed.”

You act as if the government is being solicited to subsidize privately held nuclear weapons instead of common single person portable and usable firearms eminently useful in defense of themselves or, if called to, their communities. Ukraine might be able to give us some relevant viewpoints upon both of those subjects from a modern perspective.

Keeping these thoughts in mind, how has “American Exceptionalism” become the realization that we are the most heavily armed nation on earth – with by far the most deaths by guns – in our allegedly civilized status as “the leader of the free world?”

Ranked by total firearm deaths
Ranked by homicide firearm deaths
Ranked by total homicides and with their homicide per 100,000 rate cited with most recent year for data.

The United States ranks 59th in the world for homicide rate. We are the 3rd largest country in the world but only the 5th in total homicides with only India ranking higher in both total murders and population above us. Don’t give me any crap about the “civilized” world either, that’s a garbage lazy excuse that we somehow can only expect civilized behavior from ‘westernized’ societies of wealth. Pathetic viewpoint. Like they don’t know murder is bad so it’s just “allowed” there, huh?

Michael Gerson stated it unequivocally in a column last week – “It is past time for Republican politicians to embrace some risk in the cause of life – and end their dance with death.”

Very poetic. Utterly meaningless but very poetic.

So yeah, ban assault weapons for all of these easily debunked and poorly substantiated opinions posing as reasons.

Larry said so, and if we don’t Larry will be sad.

Review: Colt’s Short Barrel Python 

A few years ago Colt re-introduced the Colt Python. There was some resistance to the revolver as there are many fans of the original. The new gun is affordable, but certainly not cheap, and an improvement over the original in my opinion. I have owned and fired four and six inch barrel examples with excellent results and I am pleased to use them beside my original 1969 Python. The new Colt .357 Magnum Pythons are well made, nicely finished stainless steel. The grips are excellent and the revolver has been beefed up from the original. These are not collector guns but shooters made for shooters. 

The original run of Colt Python revolvers included a two and one half inch barrel revolver. It is well balanced and a good shooter. The newest Python is a short barrel revolver on the same theme. This revolver features a three inch barrel. The ejector rod is longer than the two and one half inch revolver in the original line up, making for more positive ejection of spent cartridge cases. While .38 Special ammunition was usually ejected smartly with the original short barrel Python the longer Magnum cartridge cases were not as easily kicked out of the chambers.

As I said the new guns are shooters for shooters. The three inch Colt Python .357 Magnum balances well at 38 ounces. The double action trigger breaks at a smooth ten pounds. The single action press is a crisp four pounds single action break. Learn to run the trigger properly. The Colt revolver V spring powers both the hammer and trigger. If you are not used to the Colt action you may tie the gun up. This occurs when the trigger is pressed through the action cycle but the trigger is not allowed to completely reset. Simply release the action to unlock the gun. If the Colt trigger is not allowed to fully reset and the trigger is pressed hard in the locked position you may even warp the hand, the part which rotates the cylinder. So, do your dry fire with a triple checked unloaded Colt against a backstop. You will be rewarded with fine accuracy in the double action mode once you master the Colt action. 

The mid size frame makes for an optimum size for handling, speed, shooting, concealed carry and handling Magnum recoil. The Colt Python features a trademark ventilated barrel rib and superb fully adjustable rear sights. The Python is fast from concealed carry and gets on target quickly. Aim and press the trigger smoothly to the rear. The Python was fired at typical combat targets from 7 to 20 yards with good results. The weight, balance, sights and trigger add up to good results.

Firing the Python is enjoyable. The .357 Magnum revolver also functions well with the shorter .38 Special cartridge. Firing the .38 Special in this revolver is pleasant. Among the loads tested was the Federal 148 grain wadcutter. This .38 breaks about 700 fps in the three inch Python.

In single action fire from a solid rest this was the single most accurate load tested with a five shot 1.5 inch 25 yard group. I also used several other loads including the Federal 125 grain JHP .357 Magnum at a sizzling 1407 fps. All Magnum loads do not live up to the promise. As an example the PMC 158 grain JSP is an ok practice load but only breaks 1050 fps in the three inch barrel .357 Magnum. Another good load, the Winchester 145 grain Silvertip, breaks over 1150 fps. The short barrel Python is a good shooter with a bit of class of and style. It isn’t for everyone and I am not certain other revolvers such as the Ruger GP100 wont do most of what the Python does. With the Python you have easily the most accurate production revolver in America. 

The All Skill No Luck Flannel – Keep It Flannel and Fancy

I’m a flannel guy, believe it or not. Sure, I live in hot as hell Florida, but I still respect a good flannel. In fact, if my wife tells me to dress nice, I pop one of my flannels on. My favorite brand has long been Dixxon, but I was more than willing to try out the All Skill No Luck flannel. Their claim to fame is taking flannels, making them fit like modern BDUs.

They call it the Ntchwaidumela, and no, I can’t help you pronounce that. Oddly enough, I recognized the word for some reason. I read on, and All Skill No Luck translates it to He who greets with fire, and it clicked. 

It’s the shared name of a lion from a Nat Geo documentary I watched as a teenager. It’s called Eternal Enemies, and the lion, Ntchwaidumela, kills tons of hyenas. I can talk about that all day, but let’s be more practical and talk more about the shirt. When I say modern BDU, what do I mean? Well, it’s all about the pockets. 

The pocket locations, in particular, are an interesting choice. The front pockets are slanted inward, much like the Marine Corp’s uniform. Also, across the sleeves are two smaller pockets perfect for pens, at least that’s what I always used them for. While the designs novel, does the All Skill No Luck hold up? 

Deconstructing the All Skills No Luck Flannel 

All Skill No Luck uses Cordura brand combat wool to make a darn tough shirt. Combat wool is made to be 10X more abrasion resistant than standard wool. Cordura’s combat wool also implements merino wool into its design to help get that wicking style comfort and antimicrobial properties. 

The XL fit is perfect for me. It’s contoured for an even fit and works kind of like a push-up bra for bros. The All Skill No Luck Flannel is tight around the chest, emphasizing the pecs, but loose around the stomach letting your little beer gut hide naturally. I also appreciate that XL also takes arm length into account. Most XL long-sleeve shirts are still too short, but All Skill No Luck nails it. 

It’s also a soft material, but don’t get me wrong, it is wool. It’s a little itchy and poking at first, but with subsequent washings, it gets a little more comfortable bit by bit until it’s well worn and perfectly soft. Also, the color hasn’t faded in the months I’ve rocked it. It still looks brand new but feels worn in. 

The buttons are hidden under a flap for a sleek appearance and to prevent the big buttons from catching on and eventually breaking. Those buttons are fairly large and easy to manipulate, even with gloved hands. 

A Carry Perspective 

I tend to like clothes that make it easier to conceal and carry. That fit style of the All Skill No Luck flannel is perfect for carrying. It’s a little baggier around the belly. Therefore baggier around your gun makes it easier to hide. I can drop my favorite CZ P09 with a Streamlight TLR-1 equipped into a Phlster Floodlight and make it disappear under my flannel. 

Flannel patterns also tend to hide lumps, and big guns tend to be lumpy, so flannels are a natural cure to those lumps. Maybe that’s why I’ve always liked flannels. They hide my lumps. Concealing weapons, specifically, handguns is fairly easy with the All Skill No Luck flannel. Hell, it’s fairly easy to conceal a small or compact pistol in an OWB holster with this shirt. 

Beyond just carrying the flared bottom makes it easy to grip, rip and draw. When I grab my shirt to draw my gun, I grab it near the sternum and rip it upward. This isn’t challenging with the shirt and revealing the gun for a clean and easy draw is simple and effective. 

Day To Day 

The overall appearance of the All Skills No Luck flannel is fantastic. It’s dyed well, and the reds are deep and eye-catching. The pattern is perfect and attractive. The orientation of the pockets makes the shirt stand out in a subtle way. At SHOT, someone straight-up name-checked it, which was pretty neat. If you know, you know. If not, the shirt still looks fantastic and feels fantastic as well. 

Sure give it a few washes to get the most out of it, but once it’s worn in and washed, the shirt becomes an awesome option for daily wear. Weight-wise it’s a little heavier than your average shirt but lighter than most dedicated flannels. It’s not a summer afternoon shirt by any means. If you want a high-quality, well-made, American flannel from a small, veteran-owned company, click here. 

Your Hot Take Probably Sucks – Hyperbole, Metaphor, and Exaggeration…

GAT Daily, putting rifles in snow for pictures because winter isn't done with us yet.

The following was a letter to the editor to The Columbian, referencing, I assume, another letter.

James Ault’s letter in the June 15 Columbian is typical of right-wing gun nuts’ “nothing up my sleeve” verbal sleight of hand (“AR-15 is natural evolution,” Our Readers’ Views). In outlining why the AR-15 is not really a military-style assault rifle and insinuating it gets a bad rap because of its misunderstood appearance, he leaves out the most relevant fact: It’s designed to kill a whole bunch of people in a short period of time, and has no other purpose.

It’s what is colloquially known as a ‘Hot Take’, a quick sentence or paragraph that summarizes the feeling on an event or topic. Twitter, in essence. The limitation with that is there is no room, none, for nuance, but all the room in the world for hyperbole.

With SCOTUS delivering a ruling on each of, arguably, the most hot button issues of our time this weekend, we have been treated to an absolute master class in hyperbole, metaphor, and exaggeration in pursuit of various points of view and goals. To no one’s surprise the point of view and the goal are not always the same from the same person.

I didn’t know how I wanted to approach writing down my thoughts, I am still figuring it out because the two are connected on several levels and those levels I feel are being missed by the masses.

Then this short piece above hit my inbox and I decided that I may not know where my thought will finalize, but I can begin here.

We must, as a nation, start more responsibly using our literary tools when we are discussing matters of civil rights and law. We must, even if our ire is up, remain as dispassionately calculating as we can when things go our way and when things do not. I know I vent my spleen here often, but even in my disquiet I attempt to discourage my disappointments in a rational and concise way that will arm a reader to move this conversation and policy forward.

In short, we must use nuance where nuance is needed, and it is universally need in the application of law. Each application of the law is a unique circumstance with an individual or multiple individuals involved.

We make progress through discussion.

Not all conversations or arguments are discussions. A discussion, even a heated one, necessitates respectful acknowledgement of the viewpoints and the assignment of validity based on correlative data both supporting and opposing a concept. We are living in an age where an opinion shouted loud enough is supposed to be a fact, and it gets bonus points based on the how politically ‘in’ or politically contrarian it is. What we additionally mistake for facts are supported opinions, opinions backed by facts but they are opinions based on the data the facts give. The facts themselves, such as an individual’s action or inaction, an observed trend of events, or a law of physics may support your opinion and thus be a supported opinion, but do not mistake an opinion for the facts.

Remember too, that the concepts of ‘Freedom’ and ‘Personal Autonomy’, are opinions. They are beliefs, concepts of how someone should be allowed to make determinations on their own, while the facts are the real world results of each instance. The facts, as an example, show that not everybody is capable of independent action and decision making that is not harmful to themselves or others. Sometimes this is their deliberate acts contrary to the good and order of the remainder, sometimes this is beyond their conscious rational control because their particular example of the human experience is outside the ordered parameters of those around them. They could be disabled, criminal, or insane, and the result facts of their actions or choices make for an less than desirable result.

Give people the choice to do as they wish and some of them are going to OD and take crap on a sidewalk, others will insist the earth is flat and that gravity is a result of constant acceleration and not mass. The human experience has a lot of facts and even more opinions.

So now let us return to this “Fact” *opinion* that the AR-15 has a limited purpose, as written above.

Letter: AR-15 has limited purpose

James Ault’s letter in the June 15 Columbian is typical of right-wing gun nuts’ “nothing up my sleeve” verbal sleight of hand (“AR-15 is natural evolution,” Our Readers’ Views).

Opening with an ad-hominem attack is rarely a good start, but doesn’t necessarily invalidate the commentary that comes after it. These are opinions and believing that I and my ilk are “gun nuts” is what they believe. Whatever, I’m having wrong fun and believe in my sacrosanct ability to fight for my life with an effective tool and ‘you’ believe that is nuts… for reasons… Okay, we understand each other. At least, I understand ‘you’ on this point.

The “nothing up my sleeve” seems to mean that the ‘natural evolution’ letter either didn’t resonate, or it is plausible the writer here is deliberately misunderstanding to push their opinion as fact.

Speaking of,

In outlining why the AR-15 is not really a military-style assault rifle and insinuating it gets a bad rap because of its misunderstood appearance, he leaves out the most relevant fact:

We’ll get to the ‘relevant fact’ in a moment. First lets address why the AR-15 isn’t a traditional military assault rifle.

It isn’t select-fire.

That covers it. The definition of assault rifle includes select-fire, the ability to fire in a burst and/or fully automatic. The AR-15 may be the same shape, color, size, weight, and fire the same caliber ammunition as the military rifle, but unless it is a machine gun (by the legal definition) it is not an assault rifle. It is merely an intermediate caliber semi-automatic rifle.

The well worn FN “M16A5-I” of the author. One of those AR-15’s in circulation.

If you want to call that a technicality, fine. I agree. The M16A4 ‘Clone’ that is a semi-auto only, but otherwise built with the same parts as an M16A4 that would’ve been shipped to me in the Marines, firing M855 ammunition would have the same shot to shot lethality as an actual military assault rifle. I’ve gotten into fights a plenty online with veterans on the pro-gun side of things who insist the AR-15 is completely and totally different than an AR-15… and that’s fundamentally not true. They are nearly identical. They are functionally identical if used in semi-automatic.

But the “weapons of war” analogy falls into utter ruin the minute you analyze it, because combined arms doctrine is how you win a war and not an AR-15. The rifle and the pistol of any given military force are arguably among the least important weapon selections, provided that they function. How the manage the high explosives, armor, indirect fire, air support, and ground force day and night movements are the true weapons of war. The service rifle is mostly a logistic note.

The rifle gets its ‘bad reputation’ from both ignorant and deliberate misunderstandings. People deliberately misunderstand the rifle all the time because they are not looking to understand it, they are looking to be mad. They have made up their mind. That reputation is centered among a certain group of people, ones who do not like firearms and are unlikely to hold any firearm in good repute. So it’s reputation is can be determined based upon nothing of the rifle itself, but purely on the prevailing attitude of the crowd you are interacting with. That isn’t a reputation, that is a bias.

It’s like people who hate pitbulls, it doesn’t matter how many times you point out the millions of good dogs, the prevalence of pit mixes compared to the other large dog breeds (Rotts and German Shepherds for example), or anything else. Their minds are set, they hate the dogs, and they want them destroyed in many instances.

Now, the “fact” …

It’s designed to kill a whole bunch of people in a short period of time, and has no other purpose.

*Sigh* This isn’t a fact, it is an opinion, and it isn’t a very well backed up one as, again, the rifle of any sort is ahead of only the pistol in its ability to cause casualties as a weapon of war. Explosives are king of the battlefield.

Yes, the AR-15 was designed as a fighting rifle. In fact it was designed as one that was lighter and easier to handle, doing so by using a much less powerful round than the previous fighting rifles. Yes, it is lethal. Yes, it can be fired quickly and accurately. That descriptor covers just about every single rifle produced since 1928.

There is no rifle that is good for fighting, and thus defending yourself and your community, but not good fighting if you are bad. It doesn’t exist. It cannot exist. A rifle is not designed to “kill” it is designed to function. Ammunition may be designed to kill, and physics and biology says that it can. But a rifle is designed to work.

Firearms do one of two things, they work or they don’t.

Can be used to and designed to are not the same. Because in reality, the AR-15 was designed to protect. It was designed to be an efficient individual fighting rifle so that a soldier, an officer, or citizen can bring an effective force against something threatening their life. That ability necessitates and cannot be divorced from the ability of a rifle to be used harmfully. It is force made of metal and polymer.

A rifle, especially an assault rifle, is designed to be ‘force’ for whoever holds it. That is the fact. How someone employs that force is entirely in their own care. Your opinion based upon that fact may vary. But it does not make your opinion fact.

Who We Are – Smith & Wesson

This is, without a doubt, one of the best 70 second spots I’ve seen in a long time from a company bringing the focus back from start to finish on their pride in providing for you.

Smith & Wesson makes some of the most competitive handgun lines in the nation and their premium lines of rifles are well regarded also. Their foray into shotguns is certainly a foray, but I will give them credit for a solid attempt. Nothing is ceasing the absolutely solid foundation of their M&P and revolver lines, the Shield Plus, and the service pistols.

This is one of those instances where I just want to point out, as was pointed out to me, a quality thing done.

Might have to up my acquisition of that 10mm. Which is among the point of creations like this in the first place. Good job S&W, it worked.

The 5.11 Tactical Maverick Battle Belt

I love battle belts. It’s really my favorite way to carry gear. I think it’s because I naturally run hot and live in Florida. This combination results in me seeking out the lightest load-bearing gear that’s less likely to wear like a sweater and make me sweat. Minimalist battle belts have become the new hotness, and today I am diving in with the 5.11 Tactical Maverick Battle Belt. 

This is a fairly new design from 5.11. They throw you a ton of sizes and colors, giving tactical beanpoles a small option and man tanks up to 2Xl. Beyond that, you get all the colors you could want, including Ranger Green, Black, Coyote, and Multicam. Sadly no M81 for our consumption…yet. The belt retails for 145 dollars with the inner and outer belt. 

The Maverick – The Most Minimalist Belt 

Does it get more minimalist than a 1.75-inch wide belt? Prior to this, the Sentry Gunnar belt leads the minimalist charge, but the Maverick might take that crown. It’s small and also light at about 12 ounces total, and that’s with the Cobra buckle. 

For such a small belt, it’s not a big surprise that you don’t get fields of webbing. You get a single row, so this won’t be great for someone rocking a belt-fed. However, for the modern loadout from a rifle or subgun, then you’d be served well by the Maverick. Stacking on pistol mags, a few rifle mags, an IFAK, and some admin gear is just the right amount of stuff to be successful. 

The belt uses an inner and out belt combination. If you’ve never used one, what you have is an inner belt that goes through your belt loops. The outer belt is then wrapped around the inner belt and secured via hook and loop. This provides support and ensures the belt remains in place when moving and grooving. 

A stationary belt provides a more comfortable experience as well as ensures all your gear remains in the same spot. This allows that proper muscle memory to take over when things get violent and quick moving. You don’t want your magazine shifted 2 inches when you reach for it. 

Getting the Maverick Ready 

Sizing the belt is fairly easy, and you typically want a nice tight fit. I squeezed the Maverick on with ease and adjusted it just a little. With the inner belt in place, the outer belt clips on without issue. It’s very stable and honestly a pain to remove. I guess that’s a good thing. 

The belt is purposefully stiff, but 5.11 wisely contoured it to wrap around the body. This improves comfort and reduces the bulky, awkward nature of these belts. Most have a break-in period to get that good fit around the waist, but the Maverick does not. 

When it comes to attaching pouches, you have to be diligent and make sure you don’t get lazy out on the molle. The 5.11 flex pouches work best with their uber-thin straps. However, MALICE clips, as well as traditional MOLLE, will work but prepared to work those thumbs.

Putting together tactical gear is probably my favorite thing to do while watching TV, so I enjoy this kind of setup and tweaking. Once tweaked just right, I had my minimalist battel belt set up and ready for my AR 15. 

Time to Train 

With the belt properly set up, I took it out for a little training, both live and dry fire. With the proper outer belt equipped, the belt stays right where I need it to. The belt locks in the pouches and makes them easy to access. The belt doesn’t fight the out belt or shift when I try to draw mags, and the Cobra belt buckle locks it down tight. 

The Maverick belt is incredibly comfy. The compact design makes it easy to bend in all manner of directions, to grab gear, and move up and down different obstacles. The minimalist belt has become such an endearing piece of gear because it allows for such freedom of movement. 

While I’ve taken the Maverick belt, the more tactical wanna-be sling route, it could serve very well in a variety of tasks, and you could general adventure with it, use it for hikes, wildland firefighting, search and rescue, and any task where you need a belt full of gear to thrive. The Maverick belt from 5.11 offers a versatile battle belt that does a fantastic job of emphasizing small but useful. 

“Nah” – Brandon Herrera reviews the VZ-58, a Hipster Origin Rifle

I still believe the VZ-58 was of the most entertaining departures from traditional Soviet ‘Nyet, is fine’ness that exists. It had to be 7.62x39mm but they gave the rifle several rather nice features the AK didn’t get, like a last round bolt lock.

The VZ is very same-same-but-different, different mouse trap to solve the same series of problems and integrate with militaries running the AK and SKS. The action, striker fired. Neat!

Brandon hits on the fact that magazines and muzzle threads are the same, but different and incompatible. I suspect that this was done so that the wide variety of AK parts couldn’t be added and mess up anything with a wildly out of spec part. Nothing would almost fit and then grenade the gun in a classic ‘but if not supposed to go together, why fit?’ type methodology.

That is merely my off the cuff thought process and it may be that the VZ-58 engineers were a group of contrarians who wanted to bug the Soviet Union’s logistic system on everything except the ammunition.

Anyway, I like the VZ-58. I wouldn’t choose it first, or second, or probably even fifth for a rifle in a fight if given a choice. Key phrase there, if given a choice. But I wouldn’t feel under gunned with it and a couple of its available upgrades to put a dot and a light on it any more than if I were handed an MP5 in an “I need a gun” situation. It is a very functional .

Plus

Strike Back was a really awesome show where they were rocking.

Don’t overcomplicate it…

The meme… template… concept slide? Whatever it is, I suppose, floated around the internet awhile from a Nick who claims the status of Nickest on the IG. He’s at least using his noodle, credit there. But he’s also overthinking and that is among the greatest errors we in the industry commit on the daily.

An overly clever coworker of mine tried to ‘impress’ our boss one day by asking how we, or rather do we, have a plan for if someone Timothy McVeigh’d the casino we worked at by pretending to be the band. I laughed and said, “Yeah, hope you are on the far side when it happens.” My boss laughed and nodded, being realistic in our position in the world. The long, short, and medium of our reality was that our little polite safety force of door greeters wasn’t going to intercede on a VBIED with anything but sheer dumb luck, if someone was that mad at the casino and hadn’t telegraphed their attack to where we could see it and get law enforcement involved, it was going to be a rough day.

Don’t overcomplicate it.

K.I.S.S.

You know what it means. If you don’t, use a bit of Google-Fu.

Simple concepts apply to greater numbers of people and situations. When I say apply, I mean can be accomplished successfully by. This slide covers a complex concept for a nuanced offensive situation and I fail to see any reasonable purpose for it. At what level of operational planning do we believe that civilians will be fire and maneuvering offensively?

It is going to be enough of a herculean task enough to drill any group of civilians of disparate physical and skill levels to be proficient with a light rifle, to say nothing of building them into a jury-rigged, quasi-heavy weapons team.

It would quite literally be easier to steal a 240 from a local armory. Much less effort. Or, in the odd chance the Canucks invade, the GPMGs are coming out of the armory anyway.

Problem solved. Heavy weapons unlocked… literally.

The Civilian “Support Squad” Concept

Supporting what? Conceptualizing fighting in what capacity? What ‘maneuver element’, as the original post implies, exists to be supported?

This ‘concept’ somewhat successfully turns a five man team into what would amount to one, singular, lonely M240 or other GPMG… and I don’t understand why we would want to. My job in the Marines was to be that maneuver element being talked about and I cannot conceive of a manner in which a civilian “gun team” makes sense to plan.

“To fix the enemy in place and maneuver on them, Keith! Duh!”

What enemy?

And what civilian gun team?

And again, what maneuver element? What apocalyptic scenario are you envisioning where this requires any attention at all?

This could be a cool alt-history way to solve a problem in a novel. This is an imagined problem with an imagined solution to it that, of course, works nicely in fiction/theory.

Ukraine? They handed out AKs, gave a few days of instruction, and made people skirmishers, but ultimately the actual uniformed forces are doing the fire and maneuver thing with real machine guns. So in the most real world example we have ever been given of a space where this might be needed it doesn’t appear to be being done…

Pick your squad

Alright team. The… well, not the Russians… The not-the-Russians have invaded and you must sally forth all sallied and forth with your fire team. Who are you picking?

Nope. You don’t get them.

You get your neighbor, who’s an alright guy or gal, and a bunch of various well meaning tryhards of highly variable quality, who have maybe seen a Nutnfancy video, GarandThumb if you’re lucky and/or they’re younger. Odds are real long that any of them has a recent shooting course under their belt. No, a state compliant CCW course doesn’t count. It may be the best you get, but it doesn’t count.

Say ‘it goes down’ at work, now your coworkers are your team. How screwed are you, really? Even against not-the-Russians I have one coworker in office who might be not-a-liability in a gunfight, especially one that is more infantry than robbery.

Face it, your ad hoc “machine gun” team is incapable of basic weapons manipulations. Don’t scoff, just about everyone near you would get DQ’d and sent home at a single shooting match stage. The actual no shit military struggles with basics once you’re off the ‘line companies’, yet we think a civi-team is going to have enough presence of mind to implement a support role with specialization tasking? Most of these people are not going to be able to reliably hit targets at 100 yards, yet this concept expects they will be able, and equipped, to run two battle rifles like a machine gun for target suppression out to 800 or so.

Again, why? Why are we worried about building a “squad” for this specialty? You’ll be luckier than odds suggest you have a right to be if every one of the volunteers shows up with a functional rifle. Those rifles won’t be zeroed. They will probably not have slings on properly, or at all. Their optics are going to be a whole mix of whatever. Spare magazines are going to run spectrum from a single backup el cheapo pmag clone to a hopeful mix of MOE and M3 PMags, Surefeeds, Duramags, and Lancers… hopeful being the operative word.

What on Earth suggests that worrying about turning five of these guys into a static ‘support weapon’ has value?

If you get a fairly squared away bunch, veterans and competition shooters perhaps. If they have common weapons that are mutually supporting, like common ammunition and magazines. If you can foresee forming them into a squad, then you’d be best served in first drilling them as individuals. After individual spin up, drill them as a security force on ECPs, perimeter security, interlocking fires, communication, medical, etc., and then as a light patrol/skirmisher force. There are so many tasks prior to developing heavy weapons doctrine and improvised heavy weapons doctrine.

Don’t overcomplicate it

I had several discussions with support/logistic echelon soldiers about how CQB or close contact or any number of events would work and to these soldiers, just like this hypothetical civilian squad, I would advise.

“Don’t worry about it. We aren’t there yet.”

The most basic shoots we did in my time with MIANG were familiarization fires and the basic service rifle qualification, and both were done in a ‘best we can do’ manner which left no time to build individual skills. A soldier was either proficient or not, and those not were just kinda left in the dust like ‘you suck and you shouldn’t’. We routinely failed soldiers in this manner.

So if you feel the need to build a fireteam start taking people to classes, lots of classes, individual pistol, rifle, and medical classes. Camp with them, hike with them, workout with them. Once you’re warm and fuzzy on the individual skills you can start taking some of the team tactic classes offered here and there.

But you’re going to find a few things out really quickly. Most people won’t ante up and go, either in a group or on their own initiative. A few will, most won’t. Too much time and money diverted from other items they need more immediately, I get that. Of the few who do go, not all will emerge proficient and ready to start building a ‘team’ mentality.

I remember jumping into Day 2 of Dan Shaw’s Carbine course with VSO and running a some buddy team integration but, not to toot my own horn, he and I are fairly proficient users and we took it slow. Why? We’d never run anything together, so thankfully both knowing that we slowed down and communicated clearly when we were working barricades and malfunctions next to each other. And that was all we were doing, malfunctions around a single barricade, not a buddy team or fireteam assault, just Dan making our guns stop by messing up the ejection and we had to communicate it, swap to our handguns which Dan would also mess with, fix our guns, and keep shooting and hitting the targets. There was a lot going on, for how little was actually going on.

I’ve spent time nearly riding the back of surgeons, like Yoda on Luke, making certain I could catch a muzzle and redirect it or answer the same question again, and again, and again because the task stacking that the rest of the class was managing is too much for this individual.

This is a learning curve with no shortcuts, short cuts lead to confusion and dangerous handling.

Scams – Whats New In The Gun World

Death, taxes, and scams are the only constants we have in this day and age. Scams and guns have become quite prevalent, and I’m not just talking about the old Armslist cashier’s check scam. There has been a recent spate of websites popping up using the names of famed firearms companies and even replicating the look of these companies’ websites with the aim to try and fleece your hard-earned dollarydoos. 

I first took notice of this when searching for a firearm Mossberg made years ago. It was the Zombie versions of a few of their favorite guns. Specifically, the very goofy Mossberg 464 ZMB which predated the tactical lever action genre by a good ten years. I saw a website with Mossberg in the name clicked and found myself surprised to see the discontinued gun for sale for 420 dollars. 

I know Mossberg doesn’t make direct sales, and I glanced at the URL once more. It wasn’t Mossberg, but something very similar. The website looked similar, and the more I clicked through, the more it became apparent the website was a scam. 

Online Scams – What’s New? 

It’s easy. Scammers are targeting guns because they are a high-demand item. These scams aren’t isolated to firearms by any means. The high demand for PS5s and gaming consoles in general created a rash of these websites advertising in-stock status. The Better Business Bureau put out an alert last fall telling people to watch out for deals too good to be true on in-demand items.

In the firearms realm, they’ve gotten quite clever. 

I can buy 100 of them! A discontinued firearm and only have 70 dollars shipping.

It’s a fairly simple scam, build a decent-looking website and make it seem like you have firearms for sale. People’ buy’ the firearms and send that beautiful credit card information over, get charged, and never receive a firearm. The better websites even have you enter in FFL information. Your money will likely go overseas, and you’ll never see it again. 

What’s crazy is that some of these websites are hitting the SEO metrics perfectly and appearing at the top of searches. They are capable enough with SEO that they appear above the actual websites for the actual companies. It’s nutso how efficient they’ve been. 

These websites have pictures and even proper SKUs as well as product descriptions that are accurate. 

What To Watch Out For 

Mossberg isn’t the only company affected. SIG Sauer went as far as to post a pop-up warning on their website warning customers not to deal with certain websites. Most have been taken down, but one titled SSGunDeals is still loud and proud. (I’m not linking to it because that boosts their SEO even more.) 

When you start to look closely at these websites, you’ll realize that they do a ton of keyword stuffing. Unnatural blocks of text with the words ‘SIG SAUER P226 for sale’, ‘SIG SAUER P226 for sale cheap’, and more help shove it t the top of your searches. 

Additionally, they are fairly smart in their pricing. They price their ‘guns’ for sale to the point where it’s a good deal. It’s likely a little cheaper than most actual online outlets but not so cheap that it’s immediately identified as a scam. 

Additionally, these scams will mass list firearms, even if they’ve been out of production for decades. For example, on the Mossberg website, they’ve listed the old Mossberg 144SLB for sale, and I can purchase 1,000 of the ‘new’ rifles. Their description is stolen from Guns.com word for word. 

Typically they’ll use the name of the company plus something else. For example, the Mossberg website is called MossbergGunShop, but MossbergArms exists as well. SIG got hit with scam names like SIGSAUERARMS and SIGSAUERUSA. I found numerous examples for Springfield Armory, Marlin, Remington, and more. 

All fake websites riding high in the search algorithm. 

Watch Your Money 

Like the Who said, we won’t get fooled again. Watch where you are spending your money and only shop at places you truly trust. Authorized dealers exist for a reason, and it’s to avoid garbage like this. Unfortunately, this is something we’ll have to deal with for seemingly ever, and getting wise to it early will save you some headache. 

 

Hopefully, the search engines will take note of this issue and work to limit these websites from appearing in searches and hopefully not pin them to the top of search results. It’s likely a game of whack-a-mole, but firearm companies are at least aware of it and trying to stay ahead of the game. 

Keep safe, keep smart, and make sure you aren’t giving credit card information to a scam. That’s my life advice for you today. 

UPDATED: The BSCA has passed the Senate 65-33 and the House 234-193.

Update: The House has passed it, as anticipated.

Fifteen Republican senators joined the Democrats in passing the BSCA and it will likely sail through the House, representing the first major piece of gun control to be passed in a long time.

The previous piece was the rather disastrously bad Clinton crime bill, which included the assault weapon ban. This law mirrors that one in that it retains a sunset provision on the NICS check enhancement to young purchasers.

The bill has a $13 Billion price tag and authorizes red flag funding along with mental health and school resource funding. I hope that districts will actually take the funding for the good parts of this bill and make substantive improvements to their safety and wellness infrastructures.

The red flag provision is probably the most troublesome as it is reliant on the state programs, this will result in a messy soup of laws and legal procedures to flag and unflag individuals that I do not feel a great wellspring of confidence in the government doing well. To be honest, I don’t have a great deal of confidence in the NICS update either, but the age proviso has an expiration date along with an annual reporting requirement that should establish or disprove efficacy.

The closing of the ‘boyfriend’ loophole is so niche as to be a hollow victory for Democrats, a political win that moves a very small number of misdemeanor convictions, moving forward, into the prohibited pile. Not pyrrhic, but close. The cases are also likely to require additional adjudication on the ‘boyfriend’ status, as if it means losing firearm rights a prospective ‘boyfriend’ or ‘girlfriend’ is unlikely to claim that status voluntarily.

President Biden has urged the House of Representatives to get it to his desk, making it likely that the House will not amend and return a draft to the Senate for concurrence and pass the bill as it came with their Democrat majority and any Republican support.

For actual effects of the legislation, I see little becoming apparent. For mid-term propaganda fodder, this is going to be everywhere as either the greatest win or the greatest sin passed.

“And today, no less than in 1791, the Second Amendment guarantees their right to do so.” Justice Samuel Alito’s Concurrence – NYSRPA v BRUEN

This absolute boss level take down of the dissenting opinion in today’s SCOTUS ruling deserves it’s full recognition. The whole printed opinion can be found here. Alito’s eloquently brutal concurrence hammer’s home the absurdity of the obfuscatory arguments used to restrict firearm rights over, and over, and over again in the vague name of ‘safety’ and it is delightful.

Enjoy.

JUSTICE ALITO, concurring. I join the opinion of the Court in full but add the following comments in response to the dissent.

I

Much of the dissent seems designed to obscure the specific question that the Court has decided, and therefore it may be helpful to provide a succinct summary of what we have actually held. In District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U. S. 570 (2008), the Court concluded that the Second Amendment protects the right to keep a handgun in the home for self-defense. Heller found that the Amendment codified a preexisting right and that this right was regarded at the time of the Amendment’s adoption as rooted in “‘the natural right of resistance and self-preservation.’” Id., at 594. “[T]he inherent right of self-defense,” Heller explained, is “central to the Second Amendment right.” Id., at 628.

Although Heller concerned the possession of a handgun in the home, the key point that we decided was that “the people,” not just members of the “militia,” have the right to use a firearm to defend themselves. And because many people face a serious risk of lethal violence when they venture outside their homes, the Second Amendment was understood at the time of adoption to apply under those circumstances. The Court’s exhaustive historical survey establishes that point very clearly, and today’s decision therefore holds that a State may not enforce a law, like New York’s Sullivan Law, that effectively prevents its law-abiding residents from carrying a gun for this purpose.

That is all we decide. Our holding decides nothing about who may lawfully possess a firearm or the requirements that must be met to buy a gun. Nor does it decide anything about the kinds of weapons that people may possess. Nor have we disturbed anything that we said in Heller or McDonald v. Chicago, 561 U. S. 742 (2010), about restrictions that may be imposed on the possession or carrying of guns.

In light of what we have actually held, it is hard to see what legitimate purpose can possibly be served by most of the dissent’s lengthy introductory section. See post, at 1–8 (opinion of BREYER, J.). Why, for example, does the dissent think it is relevant to recount the mass shootings that have occurred in recent years? Post, at 4–5. Does the dissent think that laws like New York’s prevent or deter such atrocities? Will a person bent on carrying out a mass shooting be stopped if he knows that it is illegal to carry a handgun outside the home? And how does the dissent account for the fact that one of the mass shootings near the top of its list took place in Buffalo? The New York law at issue in this case obviously did not stop that perpetrator. [Emphasis added]

Let us take a moment to acknowledge the absolute brutal analysis here, the analysis that needs to happen in order to stop wasting time on laws that only grant authoritarians authority and do nothing to promote welfare and safety. It continues in the following paragraphs.

What is the relevance of statistics about the use of guns to commit suicide? See post, at 5–6. Does the dissent think that a lot of people who possess guns in their homes will be stopped or deterred from shooting themselves if they cannot lawfully take them outside?

The dissent cites statistics about the use of guns in domestic disputes, see post, at 5, but it does not explain why these statistics are relevant to the question presented in this case. How many of the cases involving the use of a gun in a domestic dispute occur outside the home, and how many are prevented by laws like New York’s?

The dissent cites statistics on children and adolescents killed by guns, see post, at 1, 4, but what does this have to do with the question whether an adult who is licensed to possess a handgun may be prohibited from carrying it outside the home? Our decision, as noted, does not expand the categories of people who may lawfully possess a gun, and federal law generally forbids the possession of a handgun by a person who is under the age of 18, 18 U. S. C. §§922(x)(2)–(5), and bars the sale of a handgun to anyone under the age of 21, §§922(b)(1), (c)(1). 1

1. The dissent makes no effort to explain the relevance of most of the incidents and statistics cited in its introductory section (post, at 1–8) (opinion of BREYER, J.). Instead, it points to studies (summarized later in its opinion) regarding the effects of “shall issue” licensing regimes on rates of homicide and other violent crimes. I note only that the dissent’s presentation of such studies is one-sided. See RAND Corporation, Effects of Concealed-Carry Laws on Violent Crime (Apr. 22, 2022), https://www.rand.org/research/gun-policy/analysis/concealedcarry/violent-crime-html; see also Brief for William English et al. as Amici Curiae 3 (“The overwhelming weight of statistical analysis on the effects of [right-to-carry] laws on violent crime concludes that RTC laws do not result in any statistically significant increase in violent crime rates”); Brief for Arizona et al. as Amici Curiae 12 (“[P]opulation-level data on licensed carry is extensive, and the weight of the evidence confirms that objective, non-discriminatory licensed-carry laws have two results: (1) statistically significant reductions in some types of violent crime, or (2) no statistically significant effect on overall violent crime”); Brief for Law Enforcement Groups et al. as Amici Curiae 12 (“[O]ver the period 1991–2019 the inventory of firearms more than doubled; the number of concealed carry permits increased by at least sevenfold,” but “murder rates fell by almost half, from 9.8 per 100,000 people in 1991 to 5.0 per 100,000 in 2019” and “[v]iolent crimes plummeted by over half ”).

The dissent cites the large number of guns in private hands—nearly 400 million—but it does not explain what this statistic has to do with the question whether a person who already has the right to keep a gun in the home for self-defense is likely to be deterred from acquiring a gun by the knowledge that the gun cannot be carried outside the home. See post, at 3. And while the dissent seemingly thinks that the ubiquity of guns and our country’s high level of gun violence provide reasons for sustaining the New York law, the dissent appears not to understand that it is these very facts that cause law-abiding citizens to feel the need to carry a gun for self-defense.

No one apparently knows how many of the 400 million privately held guns are in the hands of criminals, but there can be little doubt that many muggers and rapists are armed and are undeterred by the Sullivan Law. Each year, the New York City Police Department (NYPD) confiscates thousands of guns, 2 and it is fair to assume that the number of guns seized is a fraction of the total number held unlawfully. The police cannot disarm every person who acquires a gun for use in criminal activity; nor can they provide bodyguard protection for the State’s nearly 20 million residents or the 8.8 million people who live in New York City. Some of these people live in high-crime neighborhoods. Some must traverse dark and dangerous streets in order to reach their homes after work or other evening activities. Some are members of groups whose members feel especially vulnerable. And some of these people reasonably believe that unless they can brandish or, if necessary, use a handgun in the case of attack, they may be murdered, raped, or suffer some other serious injury.

2. NYPD statistics show approximately 6,000 illegal guns were seized in 2021. A. Southall, This Police Captain’s Plan To Stop Gun Violence Uses More Than Handcuffs, N. Y. Times, Feb. 4, 2022. According to recent remarks by New York City Mayor Eric Adams, the NYPD has confiscated 3,000 firearms in 2022 so far. City of New York, Transcript: Mayor Eric Adams Makes Announcement About NYPD Gun Violence Suppression Division (June 6, 2022), https://www1.nyc.gov/office-of-themayor/news/369-22/trascript-mayor-eric-adams-makes-announcementnypd-gun-violence-suppression-division.

Ordinary citizens frequently use firearms to protect themselves from criminal attack. According to survey data, defensive firearm use occurs up to 2.5 million times per year. Brief for Law Enforcement Groups et al. as Amici Curiae 5. A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report commissioned by former President Barack Obama reviewed the literature surrounding firearms use and noted that “[s]tudies that directly assessed the effect of actual defensive uses of guns . . . have found consistently lower injury rates among gun-using crime victims compared with victims who used other self-protective strategies.” Institute of Medicine and National Research Council, Priorities for Research To Reduce the Threat of Firearm-Related Violence 15–16 (2013) (referenced in Brief for Independent Women’s Law Center as Amicus Curiae 19–20).

Many of the amicus briefs filed in this case tell the story of such people. Some recount incidents in which a potential victim escaped death or serious injury only because carrying a gun for self-defense was allowed in the jurisdiction where the incident occurred. Here are two examples. One night in 1987, Austin Fulk, a gay man from Arkansas, “was chatting with another man in a parking lot when four gay bashers charged them with baseball bats and tire irons. Fulk’s companion drew his pistol from under the seat of his car, brandished it at the attackers, and fired a single shot over their heads, causing them to flee and saving the wouldbe victims from serious harm.” Brief for DC Project Foundation et al. as Amici Curiae 31 (footnote omitted).

On July 7, 2020, a woman was brutally assaulted in the parking lot of a fast food restaurant in Jefferson City, Tennessee. Her assailant slammed her to the ground and began to drag her around while strangling her. She was saved when a bystander who was lawfully carrying a pistol pointed his gun at the assailant, who then stopped the assault and the assailant was arrested. Ibid. (citing C. Wethington, Jefferson City Police: Legally Armed Good Samaritan Stops Assault, ABC News 6, WATE.com (July 9, 2020), https://www.wate.com/news/local-news/jefferson-city-policelegally-armed-good-samaritan-stops-assault/).

In other incidents, a law-abiding person was driven to violate the Sullivan Law because of fear of victimization and as a result was arrested, prosecuted, and incarcerated. See Brief for Black Attorneys of Legal Aid et al. as Amici Curiae 22–25.

Some briefs were filed by members of groups whose members feel that they have special reasons to fear attacks. See Brief for Asian Pacific American Gun Owners Association as Amicus Curiae; Brief for DC Project Foundation et al. as Amici Curiae; Brief for Black Guns Matter et al. as Amici Curiae; Brief for Independent Women’s Law Center as Amicus Curiae; Brief for National African American Gun Association, Inc., as Amicus Curiae

I reiterate: All that we decide in this case is that the Second Amendment protects the right of law-abiding people to carry a gun outside the home for self-defense and that the Sullivan Law, which makes that virtually impossible for most New Yorkers, is unconstitutional.

II

This brings me to Part II–B of the dissent, post, at 11–21, which chastises the Court for deciding this case without a trial and factual findings about just how hard it is for a law abiding New Yorker to get a carry permit. The record before us, however, tells us everything we need on this score. At argument, New York’s solicitor general was asked about an ordinary person who works at night and must walk through dark and crime-infested streets to get home. Tr. of Oral Arg. 66–67. The solicitor general was asked whether such a person would be issued a carry permit if she pleaded: “[T]here have been a lot of muggings in this area, and I am scared to death.” Id., at 67. The solicitor general’s candid answer was “in general,” no. Ibid. To get a permit, the applicant would have to show more—for example, that she had been singled out for attack. Id., at 65; see also id., at 58. A law that dictates that answer violates the Second Amendment.

III

My final point concerns the dissent’s complaint that the Court relies too heavily on history and should instead approve the sort of “means-end” analysis employed in this case by the Second Circuit. Under that approach, a court, in most cases, assesses a law’s burden on the Second Amendment right and the strength of the State’s interest in imposing the challenged restriction. See post, at 20. This mode of analysis places no firm limits on the ability of judges to sustain any law restricting the possession or use of a gun. Two examples illustrate the point.

The first is the Second Circuit’s decision in a case the Court decided two Terms ago, New York State Rifle & Pistol Assn., Inc. v. City of New York, 590 U. S. _ (2020). The law in that case affected New York City residents who had been issued permits to keep a gun in the home for self defense. The city recommended that these permit holders practice at a range to ensure that they are able to handle their guns safely, but the law prohibited them from taking their guns to any range other than the seven that were spread around the city’s five boroughs. Even if such a person unloaded the gun, locked it in the trunk of a car, and drove to the nearest range, that person would violate the law if the nearest range happened to be outside city limits. The Second Circuit held that the law was constitutional, concluding, among other things, that the restriction was substantially related to the city’s interests in public safety and crime prevention. See New York State Rifle & Pistol Assn., Inc. v. New York, 883 F. 3d 45, 62–64 (2018). But after we agreed to review that decision, the city repealed the law and admitted that it did not actually have any beneficial effect on public safety. See N. Y. Penal Law Ann. §400.00(6) (West Cum. Supp. 2022); Suggestion of Mootness in New York State Rifle & Pistol Assn., Inc. v. City of New York, O. T. 2019, No. 18–280, pp. 5–7.

Exhibit two is the dissent filed in Heller by JUSTICE BREYER, the author of today’s dissent. At issue in Heller was an ordinance that made it impossible for any District of Columbia resident to keep a handgun in the home for self-defense. See 554 U. S., at 574–575. Even the respondent, who carried a gun on the job while protecting federal facilities, did not qualify. Id., at 575–576. The District of Columbia law was an extreme outlier; only a few other jurisdictions in the entire country had similar laws. Nevertheless, JUSTICE BREYER’s dissent, while accepting for the sake of argument that the Second Amendment protects the right to keep a handgun in the home, concluded, based on essentially the same test that today’s dissent defends, that the District’s complete ban was constitutional. See id., at 689, 722 (under “an interest-balancing inquiry. . .” the dissent would “conclude that the District’s measure is a proportionate, not a disproportionate, response to the compelling concerns that led the District to adopt it”).

Like that dissent in Heller, the real thrust of today’s dissent is that guns are bad and that States and local jurisdictions should be free to restrict them essentially as they see fit. 3 That argument was rejected in Heller, and while the dissent protests that it is not rearguing Heller, it proceeds to do just that. See post, at 25–28.

3. If we put together the dissent in this case and JUSTICE BREYER’s Heller dissent, States and local governments would essentially be free to ban the possession of all handguns, and it is unclear whether its approach would impose any significant restrictions on laws regulating long guns. The dissent would extend a very large measure of deference to legislation implicating Second Amendment rights, but it does not claim that such deference is appropriate when any other constitutional right is at issue.

Heller correctly recognized that the Second Amendment codifies the right of ordinary law-abiding Americans to protect themselves from lethal violence by possessing and, if necessary, using a gun. In 1791, when the Second Amendment was adopted, there were no police departments, and many families lived alone on isolated farms or on the frontiers. If these people were attacked, they were on their own. It is hard to imagine the furor that would have erupted if the Federal Government and the States had tried to take away the guns that these people needed for protection.

Today, unfortunately, many Americans have good reason to fear that they will be victimized if they are unable to protect themselves. And today, no less than in 1791, the Second Amendment guarantees their right to do so.

Gunday Brunch 57: Supreme Court Strikes Down New York’s May Issue Permits

Alternate episode title: All my homies hate may-issue carry, because it’s true. Today, in a 6-3 decision largely down ideological lines, the US Supreme Court ruled that New York state’s system for obtaining a concealed carry permit was unconstitutional. What does this mean? Tune into the episode to find out!

Supreme Court Strikes NY Carry Law – Shall Issue Carry Reigns Supreme

Credit where credit is due, I saw it first from FromTheGunCounter on IG. If you aren’t following that account you are missing out. Do that.

From the NBC Report,

The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that the Constitution provides a right to carry a gun outside the home, issuing a major decision on the meaning of the Second Amendment.

The 6-3 ruling was the court’s second important decision on the right to “keep and bear arms.” In a landmark 2008 decision, the court said for the first time that the amendment safeguards a person’s right to possess firearms, although the decision was limited to keeping guns at home for self-defense.

The court has now taken that ruling to the next step after years of ducking the issue and applied the Second Amendment beyond the limits of homeowners’ property.

The case involved a New York law that required showing a special need to get a permit to carry a concealed handgun in public. The state bans carrying handguns openly, but it allows residents to apply for licenses to carry them concealed. 

The law at issue said, however, that permits could be granted only to applicants who demonstrated some special need — a requirement that went beyond a general desire for self-protection. 

In an time and on a day where we are battling again in the halls of Congress against Red Flag legislation that could get very dicey since it just cuts checks to the states and to make their rules, this is a welcome sign of victory.

The 2nd Amendment applies to a person, not a property. A person is sacrosanct and their right to bear arms goes with them. They need no special permission above and beyond being a citizen or resident in good standing. If there is to be a license to carry a firearm criteria must be clear and evenly applicable with no special discretion granted to the government to deny on a whim.

In short, the entire nation is now a shall issue standard for concealed carry and states with discretion to deny will lose it and need to create an objective standard.

“The constitutional right to bear arms in public for self defense is not ‘a second-class right, subject to an entirely different body of rules than the other Bill of Rights guarantees,’” Justice Clarence Thomas wrote in the majority opinion. “We know of no other constitutional right that an individual may exercise only after demonstrating to government officers some special need.”

New York’s proper-cause requirement violates the Fourteenth Amendment in that it prevents law-abiding citizens with ordinary self-defense needs from exercising their right to keep and bear arms. We therefore reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

It is so ordered – Opinion of the Court

Winning.