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The California Synagogue: On the Nature of Violence and Response

From USA Today

Over the weekend, while many in the gun community were focused on the products and events at NRAAM an attack took place at the Poway Synagogue in California. The attempted mass casualty attack was stopped very early, however. Anti-semitism and attacks against synagogues are unfortunately far from an unknown, faith based attacks seem to be trending right now as rhetoric blames one or another overarching religion for the woes of the world.

San Diego County Sheriff William Gore said the shooter at Chabad of Poway used an “AR-type assault weapon” that killed Lori Gilbert-Kaye, 60. Three others were injured in the shooting. -USA Today

The shooter, 19 years old and in custody, was courting another terrorist attack response similar in scope to New Zealand and Sri Lanka. This one happened to be anti-semitic, Sri Lanka was anti-christian, New Zealand was anti-islam. All the result of an individual weaponizing their desires.

The result in California though, is telling. While the article from USA Today quoted above digs into the question of whether or not the rifle was in a CA compliant configuration and they dig up an anti-gun veteran to leverage “expertise” on the subject, the salient point is how the attack was stopped.

USA Today seems to try and credit it to California’s functional restrictions, while in the same breathe wondering if it was outside the restrictions and illegal, but I have a different theory.

The 19 year old who attacked the Poway Synagogue met with effective resistance, he met with someone shooting back. The 60 year old woman he killed protected the synagogue rabbi. The congregate who the rabbi had asked to help protect the place of prayer showed up to do just that, and that CBP agent had his gun.

The rifle is said to have jammed during the attack and that is a fortunate circumstance, but the CBP agent using his sidearm truly broke the attack and caused the assailant to flee with only the brave woman dead and three others wounded.

The same article laudes the California feature list for jamming the rifle even as it insinuates their unstoppable weapon of mass destruction killing potential. It’s a reaching piece seeking to blame everyone it can, the gun store that sells CA compliant parts, the out of state gun stores that aren’t required to have CA compliant parts where he ‘might‘ have acquired non-compliant merchandise, the fact semi-autos are legal at all, leaving only blame by proxy for the actual shooter. The one who picked up the rifle and shot it is the sideshow to the gun inself.

On Violence

I have said it before and I will say it every single time the focus of a violent attack becomes the method.

Method does not matter during the occurrence. Motivation matters tangentially, this appears to be a copycat directly off of New Zealand. According to the alleged linked manifesto that is it exactly, but even that is independent of the violent act occurring. What matters immediately, in the moment, right there where you are the only one who can influence the situation in your favor… is your response. In that regard method does matter as it forumalates the response options you thought to bring or need to come up with.

Violence requires only a motivating factor that weighs heavier than the principles of civil society. Gun controllers have their hearts set on a civil answer to an uncivil problem. If a civil answer were the answer (ban, license, regulate, etc.) the wonderful circumstance of that would be not needing the answer in the first place, civility would preclude the improper use of violence entirely as it does so mostly every single day.

On Response

What should our response to this be?

Immediately, during the attack, it is to respond and survive. Shoot back, pack wounds, and get responder help coming as quickly as they can.

Surviving is not guaranteed… The heroics and swift response of the good people at the synagogue saved lives. The armed CBP congregate attending was a decisive ace in the sleeve of the worshippers. Armed response to armed attack works, and nothing works better.

The “thoughts and prayers” of mourners world wide have been mocked roundly as a non-response by select elements, but in reality thoughts and prayers are all that gun control consists of… the thought that if everyone followed this law no one would be shot, and the prayer that having the law will catch the next individual motivated to attack by making a firearm less convenient to acquire.

What should we do?

We start refocusing again on civility across the entirety of our political and social spectrums. We won’t always succeed. Sometimes we will fail to be civil and sometimes someone else will, but with a greater culture of civility these become discussions and not attacks. When we are attacked, especially unjustly, we respond. When we feel there is a threat to ourselves, our livelihoods, our our families, or our community we seek to step up and deal with it. With the culture of outrage that has been fostered, veiled thinly as discourse, we have lost civility.

With that loss each perceived attack becomes more threatening, more dramatic, more in need of retaliation. It allows those already close to an uncivil response, a violent response to slight perceived, to justify to themselves crossing the line.

We will never eradicate violence from the human condition. Gun control will never work to remove the motivations, its snake oil in a shiny bottle claiming to cure the woes of murder and suicide.

A society where we are civil though? Where we don’t assume malice when ignorance is the logical answer? A society where our default is discussion, not veiled dictation, and we seek to learn before any thought of retaliation? That is something we can foster.

First, true logic.

If that doesn’t work.

Speed, Surprise, and Violence of Action.

The M16A4 by Aero Precision

Man, everything is cyclical. There was a time, over a decade ago when I was issued an M16A4 and all I wanted was an M4. M4s were the cool guy rifle, it was also shorter and lighter than the M16A4, a gun we lovingly refer to as the musket. Recently I found myself desiring a return to an M16 sized rifle after SHOT Show. I went to a range day hosted by GAT and got my hands on the M16A4 clone from Aero Precision. This model was full auto, but it still reminded me of just how lovely a full-length rifle is to shoot. I knew I had to have one, and here is mine.

I was hit with a massive wave of nostalgia as I picked up this American classic. It brought me back to the School of Infantry and beyond. The days of being a young Marine came flying back at me. The M16A4 isn’t a heavy rifle, but you’ll often hear that complaint. It’s not unwieldy, and while the M4 is easier in and out of vehicles and buildings it’s not difficult with the M16A4.

Fallujah was taken by Marines with M16s so I don’t buy the idea that this gun is way too big for that role. It’s well balanced, and rock solid all the way around. Maybe it’s nostalgia, maybe it’s my 6 foot 5 inch frame, but I think the Corps was right in keeping the A4 is service for so long.

Inside the M16A4 Clone

The M16A4 clone from Aero Precision does the best it can to mimic the actual military rifle. It features a flat top upper and plastic handguards. The flattop is covered with a set of A4 iron sights which are versatile and dynamic. These sights make it easy to be precise and accurate with the rifle at varying distances and when facing different windages. A true clone has a quad rail, but the polymer handguards are much lighter. The markings indicate a nonfunctional burst third position and M16A4 markings. They don’t directly mimic the FN contract rifles but are close enough.

Of course, the barrel is 20 inches long, the stock is fixed and it sports the A-frame front sight base. There is a bayonet lug for those close encounters and the stock can even stash a small cleaning kit, or Skittles, whatever you want in there. That full stock is quite lovely for cheek weld.

Shooting the M16A4

Speaking of cheek weld lets talk about shooting this bad boy. I wonder how many people in the firearms community has ever fired a full rifle length AR? They may not know exactly what they are missing. Shooting a rifle length AR 15 is just so comfortable. Everything about it is pleasant and smooth.

I own plenty of ARs in carbine and pistol variants and you forget how smooth a rifle is compared to these guns. The recoil is incredibly soft, due to the rifle length gas tube and longer buffer spring. The weapon hardly moves when fired. Muzzle rise is also reduced with a 20-inch barrel. As is muzzle flash and concussion. It’s so much nicer to shoot and much easier to shoot accurately and rapidly.

The ballistic advantages are interesting too. The 20-inch barrel adds about a 100 feet per second of velocity per shot. The 20-inch barrel makes full use of the pressure from the gas that propels the bullet. In a 16 inch barrel, the gas is still building pressure when it reaches the end of the barrel. A 20-inch barrel takes advantage of that still expanding gas and this gives the M16A4 clone a little more oomph.

The Aero Precision M16A4 Performance

Focusing on just the Aero Precision model shows us just how excellent this rifle is. The gun is incredibly soft shooting and very precise. I used a standard 25-meter zeroing target from HD Targets and zeroed for 300 yards using the iron sight manual of arms.

It was love at First Group

The prone was my position of choice. I just held the M16A4, focused on the front sight and pulled the trigger slowly and carefully. My first group of three shots hit low, but the grow was insanely small. Every round touching and nearly overlapping. I made adjustments and fired three more shots.

All My Fault

The first shot was off, and that was my fault. I knew it as soon as I pulled the trigger. I threw it wide and to the right. My next two shots were slower, more meticulous, and I placed them on top of each other. Once the gun was zeroed it was time to load up and shoot like a Marine.

I dumped the rest of my ‘zeroing mag’ in an aimed rapid fire manner. Taking just enough time to reacquire my sight picture and let off another round.

Then I tried a five shot group from the standing. Again at 25 yards with a new target.

I ran through some of the basic drills, including the Failure to stop and box drill, reload drills, and snap drills. I did snap drills on a free RE Tactical headshot target at 25 yards. The rifle and I scored all six headshots on target and each was under 1 second from the low ready.

Every shot was enjoyable. I typically like shooting, and feel I’m pretty blessed to be where I am in this industry. However, the M16A4 was a dream to shoot. It made me smile and enjoy the experience for what it was.

Getting Down with the Pew Pew

The trigger is mil-spec and perfectly suited for accurate shooting. I had no major complaints. It’s no Geiselle, but better than my issued M16A4 by far. The trigger is a refined Mil-spec if you will. It’s more consistent, and predictable.

The full stock is perfect for my frame and gives me an amazing cheek weld. It is superbly comfortable and very stable. The stock allows for quick snaps as well. It doesn’t budge or wiggle at all.

The plastic handguards work well and allow me to stretch out my arms and get a good grip on the gun. The gun is put together with clear attention to detail. Nothing wiggles or moves and the gun controls work as intended. Down to the nub A2 grip, it’s all M16A4.

After 300 hundred rounds over two days I have zero malfunctions, or complaints.

Cloned Up

The clone market is growing for US Service rifles and the amazing quality and excellent price of the Aero Precision M16A4 make it an appealing place to begin. The markings alone make this a natural choice. Many cloners have to use blank 80% lowers and pay custom engravers for these markings.

Aero Precision has made an outstanding rifle. Regardless of the reason you choose this rifle, rest assured you are getting an amazing product. If you’ve never tried a rifle length AR I’d encourage you to give it a spin. Drop the newest Mk18 build and give the M16A4 a try.

Springfield Launches The Armory Life

The NRA show has been big for guns and gear. We are also seeing a big move in the online space. Springfield Armory has launched a new website called the Armory Life. The Armory Life isn’t just a giant Springfield Commercial. It’s not another method to push their products, but a blog to focus on the gun lifestyle in general. From self and home defense aspects to camping, match shooting, survival topics, building medkits, teaching, and more.

The Armory Life will be its own entity and their overall goal is to entertain and to educate. Start discussions and to pass on knowledge regarding a preparedness lifestyle. Lifestyle is the core of the Armory Life.

The website is dedicated for the everyday, modern shooter. Like the best guns, this website is built for shooters and by shooters. The Armory Life will be staffed by subject matter experts like Rob Leatham, Clay Martin, Karen Hunter, and even yours truly.

The diversity of the The Armory Life’s author base is one of their main strengths. They come from all walks of life. You’ll never read the same thing twice. Best of all the website has just launched and it’s already slammed packed full of content. The variety offered includes building a med kit, carrying while female, and dressing around your gun.

The Goal of The Armory Life is to cover everything involving the lifestyle that includes our firearms. It’ll approach the aforementioned self-defense subjects, like concealed carry and training. At the same time, you’ll see articles on hunting, finding the best AR 15 parts, competition shooting, musings, and even historical content to learn a little more about your favorite gun. The website is well designed, sleek and professional. It’s easy to navigate and is packed with both written word and video content.

So, check the Armory Life here and let ’em know that GAT Daily sent you.

The APC9K – The Army’s Pick At NRA

B&T makes some outstanding weapons, easily some of the highest end SMGs and Pistol Caliber carbines on the market. Their price reflects that, but there is no doubting their quality. The APC9K was originally designed for an Austrian counter terrorism unit. In the Army’s role, it would be used for protecting VIPs in war-torn countries.

The APC9K spits out 9mm rounds from a blowback system and fires from a closed bolt. It has a firing rate of 1,080 rounds per minute and that’s pretty fast but controllable. It would easily allow for a bodyguard to lay down suppressive fire and get their VIP out of danger. It’s collapsing stock makes it quite compact and with a 20 round magazine, it’d be pretty easy to hide in a large coat, bag, or be easy to move in and out of vehicles.

APC9K Impressions

The trigger is fantastic. We usually accept a little mediocrity when it comes to SMG or PCC triggers. The Scorpion has a heavy trigger, the non-Geiselle MPX is okay at best, and the MP5 has a terrible reset. The APC9K has none of that, the trigger is fantastic, like a good AR trigger from a quality manufacturer.

It feels very sturdy and well put together. Everything clicks, pops, and moves just right. The stock is rock solid with little wiggle or play. The Tailhook pistol model is the same. It’s light and intuitive. Keith described it as a bespoke SMG, and I agree with him.

B&T did an amazing job and has built an SMG to be proud of. Rarely do I agree with what big Army or big military would choose in general. However, the B&T is an amazing choice and even though it will be issued in extremely limited numbers I’m excited to see potential after actions.

The Trijicon SRO – Big In Indy

Trijicon makes the duty grade miniature red dot sight. The RMR has long been the standard for mini red dots, especially on handguns. The Trijicon RMR is one of the big reasons mini red dots have been so successful on handguns. Trijicon is rare to introduce a new optic, they seem to take their time and strain for perfection. Their latest is an upgrade for the RMR, it’s known as the SRO.

SRO stands for Specialized Reflex Optic. The RMR was designed just to be a mini red dot, not necessarily a pistol red dot. It became a pistol red dot, but the SRO was designed from the ground up to be a pistol optic.

Inside the Trijicon SRO

The SRO offers shooters wider lens that’s round instead of square or odd rectangle, or whatever you describe the RMR as. Trijicon claims the SRO’s round design helps you find the dot fast by design.

The Trijicon SRO shares the same footprint as the RMR which makes it compatible with guns with RMR cuts. This includes the Glock MOS, the S&W CORE Canik cut models, Walther Q5 match, the new CZ P10 series and more.

A change most of us will love is the fact the SRO has a top loading battery! Something the RMR did not have. The Trijicon SRO has a 3-year battery life, uses a CR 2032 battery, and is waterproof up to 10 feet.

The new optic has reticle options that include 1 MOA, 2.5 MOA, and 5 MOA. The reticle intensity can be locked in for the user chosen brightness and can be locked out for automatic brightness adjustments. Brightness settings in

The Trijicon SRO is a bit bigger than the RMR and seems more useful for duty, hunting, and competition. Bigger isn’t always better for concealed carry. The SRO is compatible with all RMR mounts too so it can be used on long guns. The SRO is an interesting optic and I’m excited to see how it performs.

NRAAM 2019

It was a rolling start to the morning here at NRAAM in Indy. It’s honestly light on new products but we managed to find a few.

TS 2.5-20

U.S. Optics is adding a distance precision option to the TS line and since they are done with their move the TS-6X and TS-8X will be out of their warehouse shortly.

The new TS 2.5-20 sports a 50mm objective lense, illuminated Front Focal Plane reticle in Mil or MOA, turrets in 1/10 MIL or 1/4 MOA, and parallax adjustment down to 10 yards. That parallax focus will be most useful for anyone trying to get an initial zero on the shorter indoor ranges.

With a tag of ~$1500 it’s one I’m looking forward to topping a rifle with for a little distance. It’s a more forgiving option on the bank account than the B-Series but incorporates a fine selection of those features it appears.

The SRO is floating around outside Trijicon’s booth

The SRO has made the most waves I’ve seen so far overall, Travis will have a little more on this guy later.

The historical displays are up and dotted around the low booth #’s. NSSA had a display featuring several pieces on Vietnam tech with a few folks to answer questions, one at at least with time relevant hands on experience.

Z9 Modular “Glock” at ZRO Delta

The ZRO Delta Z9’s are just about ready to go. The alloy “build a Glocks” are an intriguing push toward boutique pick your feature race, duty, carry guns. I’m a stock Glock guy but I do want to play with these because I’m also a fan of alloy guns. We’ll see what the year brings.

Zenith has made their little Z5’s a touch smaller on both the front and back ends. The new adjustable braces and stocks have cut down on the mass and bulk of the compact 9mm’s from the larger, heavier, legacy designs.

The threaded only barrel foregoes the tri-lug but keeps threading for a flush fit suppressor. More Z5’s are coming soon according to the Zenith crew. So if you’re waiting on that roller-delay, your delay shouldn’t be much longer.

Now lunch is over so off I go again.

Book Review – The Dark Secrets of SHTF Survival

Here’s a book review of a paperback I never expected to read, but am exceedingly glad that I did. Amazon suggested this book based on my past purchases of a trio of novels by Kurt Schlicter. 

Selco Begovic’s book, The Dark Secrets of SHTF Survival, published just this year, is a compilation of stories and advice based on this man’s experience as a civilian trapped in his home city during the Balkan War of the 1990’s. He was eighteen years old at the time.

Selco has had a blog presence for years and has been active in the “prepper” communities of the world – offering his advice and even offering classes based upon his harrowing experience of living through the collapse of his society.

But this is not a “how-to” book. It’s a book about how it was and what he went through, and about the misperceptions many preppers have about how things will be and how they might handle themselves. It is about what this man’s reality was for a year in a besieged city with no public water, sewage, electricity, or food supplies.

I’ll be the first to admit that I am not a “prepper” per se. The small amount of planning I have done is mostly for short-term scenarios like extended power outages, extreme weather situations, etc. I have planned for short-term inconvenience, not life or death survival.

But I’m also interested in history lessons – what my ancestors may have lived through, what they had to do to make ends meet or survive a tough winter during bad historical periods. I’m learning the home canning arts and about forage foods – mostly because it interests me – but also with an eye toward, “What would I do if there were a next Great Depression?”

That is the background to why I ordered this book. Selco’s voice was new to me. His voice of experience about life during the Balkan war (during my adult lifetime) lends immediacy to those who worry about their own survival if something bad should happen “here” – wherever “here” is.

It is not hyperbole to talk about “survival” in a civil war situation when all municipal services have ceased. Death stalked the streets of Selco’s city – not only from mortars and snipers, but from gangs, and starvation, and simple infection. In a situation like that a case of diarrhea can kill you.

You may not think of a simple bar of soap as a survival tool to be packed and planned for, but it became one in Selco’s world.

He covers a wide range of topics – from false media reassurance, to those who hoard gold coins to the prevalence of unburied bodies, to ways to help maintain your sanity and humanity in the midst of insanity and chaos.

This book is written in his own accented voice – dropped articles and all. (English is not his first language) The editing is done lightly so as to preserve the impression that you are hearing the stories from the man himself. The book has large print and narrow columns, so the read is quick. But if you want a chilling reality check into just how fast the civilization and convenience we take for granted can crumble into chaos, you need to read this book.

The Dark Secrets of STHF Survival

Letter to a Friend on Gun Control

(from petspopular.com)

[DRGO author Michael Brown, OD has been very occupied for some while, but found time to reply to a friend of his on Facebook April 14. His description of anti-gun emotion versus pro-rights reason is instructive — as well as being able to remain friends.]

Charles: “Approximately 1.4 million people have died from firearms in the U.S. between 1968 and 2011. This number includes deaths resulting from a firearm, including suicides, homicides, and accidents. Why is there so much push back about saving these lives? These 1.4 million people just don’t fucking count?”

Thanks for asking Charles, unfortunately a truly honest answer must question the assumptions behind your question.

To start with, why lump all the types of deaths together if not to create a more emotionally charged number to score points in political debates? Each type of death has its own etiology and its own solutions. Just blaming them all on the availability of guns makes an honest person wonder about the motive behind that. Why would some politicians and their media allies want us to lump those together? Doesn’t that confuse the issues and impede progress on each one?

Next, there is an extremely important unfounded assumption behind your question and that is that gun control laws will actually make a difference. I’ve spent a lot of words and links here on Facebook explaining why they don’t. With so many different gun laws in the 50 states, it’s pretty easy to compare the results and restrictive gun laws simply don’t provide any benefit to society.

Charles, I’ve tried to explain this to you many times and I think you understand what I’m saying, but you keep coming back to your emotion-based position that there must be something we can do about those deaths and it has to involve limiting access to guns. I’m really sorry that you feel so badly about that, but it’s not your fault and it’s not your job to save all those people. Humans are a violent species. They will find ways to kill and injure themselves and each other in spite of your best efforts. A man can protect his loved ones from some threats, but you can’t protect everyone from everything. Attempting to do so just leads us farther down the nanny state path which is and will be exploited by both left and right wing politicians. I suspect you can also drive yourself a little crazy obsessing over it.

If you are truly concerned about preventable deaths, you would better spend your time raising awareness of the many diseases and social problems that cause exponentially more deaths.

Perhaps you should examine your deeper motives? My theory is that liberals don’t like widespread civilian gun ownership because that makes it harder for them to impose their will on the people who don’t agree with their agenda. But obviously, that is very simplistic and I’m sure you can do better if you put some time and honest effort into it.

And finally, I want to address an important difference in our thought processes, which is illustrated by your use of profanity.

Non-liberals like me tend to make our arguments with facts, studies and anecdotes about our personal observations on the ground, so to speak. Liberals prefer to persuade by convincing others how strongly they feel about the issue. I guess they think that if they can only impress others with how really, really important something is to them, that others will be converted to their point of view.

This disconnect between our thought processes, I feel, is one of the reasons why liberals are so frustrated and we as a nation are so polarized. I’m not trying to excuse bad behavior by right-wingers, that’s just outside the scope of this post.

So Charles, you’re a really nice guy, but I don’t know what else I can say to help you understand the gun control issue. Perhaps it’s time for us to just let this issue drop?

.

.

Dr. Tim Wheeler

—Dr. Michael S. Brown is a pragmatic Libertarian environmentalist who has been studying the gun debate for three decades and considers it a fascinating way to learn about human nature and politics.

All DRGO articles by Michael Brown, OD

Springfield Armory: SAINT VICTOR .308

At just 7.8 lbs the all new SAINT™ VICTOR .308 hits like a ton of bricks without the weight of a traditional AR-10. Purpose built to offer serious power in a quick handling configuration, the SAINT VICTOR in .308 features a 16″ light weight barrel, M-Lok® free float hand guard and included flip-up sights. Never a victim, always the VICTOR.

Springfield Armory is entering the AR-10 game with the latest extension of their Victor line.

15″ M-LOK FREE FLOAT HANDGUARD

All Victor models include an M-Lok Aluminum Free Float handguard with patent-pending SA Locking Tabs for unlimited customization.

Saint Victor

NICKEL BORON COATED FLAT TRIGGER

An enhanced, nickel boron coated single-stage flat trigger ensures a grit-free pull for consistent accuracy.

Saint Victor

SPRING LOADED FLIP-UP SIGHTS

The SAINT Victor rifle comes outfitted with SA spring-loaded flip-up iron sights that are adjustable for windage and elevation.

Saint Victor

BRAVO COMPANY FURNITURE

The SAINT Victor is fitted with premium furniture including a BCM 6-position stock and pistol grip.

Saint Victor

QD MOUNTS

QD mounts built into the end plate and stock offer multiple options to suit your sling configuration preference.

Saint Victor

SA MUZZLE BRAKE

The SA Muzzle Brake effectively distributes pressure upward and outward to counter muzzle rise for faster and more accurate follow up shots.

Saint Victor

SAINT™ VICTOR .308 – STV916308B

Caliber .308 WIN
Magazine (1) 20-Round Magpul Gen M3
Barrel 16″ Lightweight Profile, CMV Melonite® Finish Internal & External, 1:10
Front Sight Spring Loaded Flip-Up
Rear Sight Spring Loaded Flip-Up
Muzzle Device SA Muzzle Brake
Trigger Enhanced Nickel Boron Coated Single Stage Flat
Upper Receiver Forged Type III Hard Coat Anodized, 7075 T6 Aluminum
Lower Receiver Forged Type III Hard Coat Anodized, 7075 T6 Aluminum w/ Accu-Tite™ Tension System
Handguard 15″ M-Lok Aluminum Free Float w/ SA Locking Tabs
Gas System Direct Impingement Mid-Length, Pinned Gas Block
Receiver Extension Mil-Spec Dimension Carbine, 7075 T6 Type III Hard Anodized Aluminum
Bolt Carrier Group MPT, Melonite® Finish w/ 9310 Steel Bolt
Buffer Assembly Carbine “H” Heavy Tungsten Buffer
Charging Handle GI Style
Butt Stock Bravo Company 6-Position
Safety 90 Degree Single Sided
Trigger Guard Integral to Receiver
Pistol Grip Bravo Company Mod.3
Length 37.75″ Fully Extended, 34.5″ Collapsed
Weight 7 lbs 11 oz
MSRP $1,399

STNGR: A New All Purpose EyePro Option

If you drop the vowel devoid STNGR name into Google right now you will find… free float handguards.

STNGR, eye protection

Sharp looking ones too. But those aren’t the glasses you were looking for. Never fear, you are in the correct place, just click on the STNGR Edge tab and you’ll find yourself where you originally expected to be.

The company’s new branch, STNGR Edge, is entering the ballistic eyewear market and they are proud of their product.

I recall another company using a truck and tire to demonstrate durability about 12 years ago.

I have a set of the Alpine’s, and they are among the best glasses I’ve had the chance yet to use.

The Alpine’s frame comfortably wraps around the eyes, the bridge of the nose, and with enough support around the sides of the head and ears that they won’t slip off while looking at odd angles. They sit closer and shield the eye more completely than several competing frames, important for protecting against off angle debris, slag, or fragmentation coming from a high, low, or wide angle.

Z87+

The ANSI/IESA or American National Standards Institute/International Safety Equipment Association have a book of tests and standards for an encyclopedic sized collection of safety equipment. The passages were are concerned with though are those referencing the Z87+ marking.

Impact rated protectors must meet the established high mass and high velocity tests, and defined, continuous lateral coverage is now mandatory. Those protectors satisfying the requirements will carry the Z87+ mark on both the lens and the frame or housing. Compliant prescription products will be marked with Z87-2+. – ANSI Z87.1

The Z87+ indicates a non-prescription high velocity impact standard and a required amount of coverage for the wearer’s eye. The tests are similar to the MIL-PRF 32432 Ballistic Fragmentation standard but the military’s has a more stringent (higher energy) standard than Z87.1.

A Z87+ set of eye protection is designed to protect against a wide variety of flying high speed hazards. Fragmentation from a steel target impact, unburnt powder, dirt, sand, spall, etc.

The Lenses

The STNGR lens selection has both mirrored and matte options. Their clarity is exceptional. From the front the glasses present a typical high quality mirrored image but from the back you can see the amber coloring in use for popular eye visibility eyewear.

Glare and brightness are reduced while detail and color acuity remain very high. Even in the reduced lighting of an indoor range, dawn, or dusk, the STNGR’s are more usable than most darkened lenses by a substantial margin.

In short, I like them.

They’re my daily riders, my range wear until it’s dark, and in the month of dropping, scratch opportunities, getting sat on, and all the other hazards a pair of glasses faces there is no sign of detrimental deterioration. No loose screws, no degrading rubber or polymer due to sweat or sunlight, no damage to lens or frame (I haven’t run them over with a truck yet, but I might.)

Tim Schmidt Clarifies USCCA’s Red Flag Position

Short Version: USCCA will be crafting policies that cover defense in ERPO claims.

Longer version: USCCA employees in customer care were using a managerial approved response to the question about ‘Red Flag’ legal defense. These responses did not reach Tim’s level and he will be making training corrections and formulating a policy product to address coverage.

So, does USCCA support ‘Red Flag‘ laws? Their President & Founder certainly doesn’t and he is taking steps to be certain that is understood company wide.

Forgotten Weapons on the XL60: SA80 Prototype

The SA80 has had a storied history. Until the A2 iteration, with the help of H&K, the rifle had very serious reliability issues. But early in its development that actually wasn’t the case. See here, the XL60.

Before the U.S. swung NATO the way they did in small arms development the Brits were working on a bullpup that would eventually be broken enough to become the SA80/L85 first iteration. But prior to that the XL60 prototype rifles they were developing actually worked alright.

The problem with giving a bunch of good engineers an engineering problem that they have no practical experience with (IE: small arms development) is that they just do not possess the familiarity to think of the small items like ergonomics against web gear or how it will run when snow gets packed into the space behind the trigger guard.

NRAAM 2019

GAT will be on the ground in sunny (hopefully) Indianapolis covering the National Rifle Association’s Annual Meeting 2019.

The NRA’s fallout with Ackerman McQueen in the weeks leading up to the massive trade show has shifted attentions and interests in that direction. I believe that the NRA is likely to avoid most public commentary and will keep its slugging match with Ack-Mac as quiet as the massive organization can.

That won’t keep its members from asking though and it may well see a shift in the members voting for the NRA’s Board. As we find the info we will share it, however I don’t expect to run into it on the NRAAM floor.

NRA

The NRAAM show itself will be full of products and while no one has been dropping anything super shiny (or at least that I’ve seen hinted at) we should see updates on several of the developments from SHOT.

Stay with us for daily updates.

New Zealand: Knee-Jerk Democracy & Draconian Gun Laws

(from haciendapub.com)

[Dr. Faria originally posted this article on HaciendaPublishing.com on April 11.]

On April 10, 2019, New Zealand MPs voted almost unanimously to pass draconian gun control laws in the aftermath of the Christchurch mosque shooting. As a result, “military-style semiautomatic firearms” are now banned. New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardem stated she would be signing the legislation into law, claiming “these weapons were designed to kill.”

The fact is these firearms were designed for civilian recreational shooting, and the original military version of these weapons that are fully automatic (true assault rifles) were designed to wound enemy soldiers in war, which tactically is better than killing because it ties up more enemy troops.

The facts surrounding the shooting have also been plagued by misinformation and deliberate media disinformation. Here is another view based on facts that have been hard to extract from the mainstream press.

On March 15, 2019 an Australian man suffering from mass shooting derangement syndrome undertook a terrorist attack at two Islamic mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, during Friday Prayer. The attack resulted in 50 dead and at least 40 wounded. Although the man has been described as a right-wing, white supremacist by the internationalist and mainstream liberal media, the reality is that the mass shooter could best be categorized as inhabiting the far left of the political spectrum.

The Islamophobic mass shooter described himself as an eco-fascist, which according to Wikipedia, places him among those who favor “totalitarian government requiring individuals to sacrifice their own interest to the ‘organic whole of nature’ and which would rely on militarism, expansionism, and possibly racism to defend the land.” Obviously, this is far-left totalitarian stuff rather than traditional conservatism or right-wing libertarian philosophy. Two New Zealand nationalist, anti-immigration groups quickly condemned the attack. Nevertheless, MI5 in Great Britain is investigating possible links between the deranged killer and far-right British organizations.

The media have also made a lot out of the killer’s alleged support for Donald Trump as a “symbol of white identity,” but it neglected to follow through with the fact that the terrorist also admitted that he did not support Trump as a leader or his policies. Be that as it may, Trump was cited as somehow being responsible for the shooting. Moreover, in the terrorist’s 73-page manifesto, the deranged killer stated that with the shooting he hoped to encourage drastic gun control laws and thereby cause a race war in America!

Returning to New Zealand, the new drastic gun control laws passed by its parliament represent a massive knee-jerk response to the shooting. New Zealand already has strict gun control laws. The single dissenter in parliament called the knee-jerk action “an exercise in political theater,” but it is much worse than that: Thousands of citizens will have to surrender their semi-automatic firearms, a characterization that could be interpreted to include just about all firearms, except for single shot rifles and shotguns. Citizens have until September to comply with the new law or face penalties that include a two to ten-year incarceration.

The deranged madman wanted to promote incendiary gun control laws in America that would result in mayhem; instead he caused drastic gun laws to pass in his own country, and they passed without any opposition
[Ed: he was Australian].

We can thank our Founding Fathers for their foresight in drafting our constitution for our American Republic and warning us about the shortcomings of a mass democracy in which the passions of the majority can be aroused in the heat of the moment to pass draconian laws that trample individual rights and promote tyrannical government in the name of safety.

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—  Miguel A. Faria, Jr., M.D. is a retired Clinical Professor of Neurosurgery and Adjunct Professor of Medical History at Mercer University School of Medicine. He is Associate Editor in Chief and World Affairs Editor of Surgical Neurology International. He served on the CDC’s Injury Research Grant Review Committee.

All DRGO articles by Miguel A. Faria, Jr., MD

How High Should the Cost of Entry be For a Civil Right?

Why Having a Gun in New Jersey Could Soon Cost 20 Times as Much

New Jersey is no bastion of gun rights. But, the state fees involved could have been termed as ‘modest’.

$27 would net you the firearm ID card, the permit to own, and the concealed carry license, about the cost of seeing the new Avengers Endgame movie. With my own state’s fee for the concealed pistol license being far higher I can, at the least, appreciate a state who is not taxing people out of ownership.

Governor Philip Murphy is seeking to change that in an “effort” to tackle gun violence and reduce the flow of illegal firearms…

How, precisely, changing the combined total fee on a legal purchase and carry from an inconvenient yet modest $27.00 to $550.00 is going to reduce the number of illegal firearms is beyond me.

By taxing the constitutional right beyond the reach of anyone with tight finances you are effectively encouraging people to seek options that don’t comply with New Jersey law, but that are cost effective within their means. Furthermore the Governor doesn’t appear to have the authority to earmark any money from the licenses for gun violence prevention efforts, the tax increase will be general funds.

The price to carry a conventional Glock handgun in New Jersey would double. Even at a screaming deal most handguns would become a 4 figure expenditure on anyone’s budget, with somewhere between 30-50% of those dollars going the state… not increasing the quality of the firearm, getting better training, or buying quality ammunition for protection (an already expensive prospect in NJ due to their braindead ban on hollow points), no… the state of New Jersey will take the dollars with the promise (an empty promise since the funds cannot be marked for a program) that they will be used to combat gun violence.

There is an obvious goal here, less New Jersey citizens carrying. That won’t be the result in this case, it will be less residents carrying legally. Taxing the right further and further away from the financially strapped, who also are often the more vulnerable demographic living in lower income higher crime regions, will just put more pressure on them to ignore the law as the choice becomes personal safety or cough up an extra few hundred dollars for licensing.

Perhaps the goal is elitism? Only those who can afford access to the right should exercise it, maybe? Jersey only wants the well off well armed?

“Of course it isn’t!”, I can fathom the retort. But what is the net effect?

If I place the cost of entering legally into owning and carrying a firearm so much higher than cost of the hardware and training, far above the administrative fees to process licenses, the only things I effectively encourage are a combination of elitism and legal circumvention.

What possible influence is believed to be exercised on the armed street level enforcer who didn’t care to get the licenses at $27 now that it will be $550? None. A group who does not care to be taxed or follow a rule set won’t start just because you made it more expensive.

There is an influence that will be recognized, that of far less likely legally armed targets in the law abiding New Jersey populous. Perhaps that’s Governor Murphy’s goal? If so, it’s far more likely to achieve that one then the stated.