So, you’ve decided on a rifle and pistol for personal
protection. What more could anyone ask of you?
Firearms have more utility than simply self-defense. They
can also get you food.
If, for example, your chosen semi-automatic battle rifle
clone is in .308 (7.62x51), or you picked one in a similarly well-suited
caliber like .30-06 or 7.62x54Russian, it's also well-suited
for hunting larger game, including most of what romps around on either American
continent, north or south. (The .223 is a good varmint round and anti-personnel
choice, but anything else is either big enough to be wounded and run far away before it dies, or small
enough that the round’s terminal effects
will destroy more of the carcass than you’ll get to eat. You may be the
ultra-rare exception, but I wouldn’t want to gamble my life on that margin.)
And then there are shotguns, because unless you’re Annie
Oakley good, you aren’t going to shoot food that flies with a centerfire rifle,
so you’re going to need lots of little pellets. As an added bonus, shotguns that can
interchange barrels offer the possibility of having a shotgun that’s suitable
for personal defense/protection, then swapping another barrel suitable for
slugs for deer or bear, and a longer barrel with a screw-in choke system for
anything from pigeons and doves all the way to Canadian geese, with the proper
selection of chokes and ammunition. Better still, you can probably get one of
these (Remington 870 or Mossberg 500 series, for example) for less than you’ll
spend for either your rifle or pistol.
Now you’re up to three weapons, and still not done.
The next should be either a rifle or pistol (or both, if
you’re a suspenders and belt kind of
person) in the ubiquitous .22LR. As former blogger Kim DuToit used to put it,
.22LR ammunition isn’t just ammunition, it’s a commodity.
Because long after paper money or even precious metals like gold or silver have
lost trading value, .22LR ammunition will probably suffice to barter goods and
services in longer-term situations. With decent optics, you can set up a .22
pistol (e.g. a Ruger Mark II or MkIII) to where you can hit anything out to 100
yards just about as quickly and easily as you would with a scoped .22 rifle
like the Ruger 10/22, except in a more compact package. And unlike the .223,
the .22LR round is eminently suited for potting small game, and has been used
to successfully poach up to small deer with decent shot placement. And one more
notch in its favor: should you reside in a state where it’s permissible, you
can secure a sound suppressor that will hush it down to a level far less
audible than a full-bore hunting rifle, which could spare you from dealing with
all sorts of unpleasantness as you go about your survival tasks.
If you’re serious about preparing, each weapon will need
cleaning supplies, extra magazines, and should also be provided with manuals
and media plus the necessary spare parts and tools to replace or repair things
that wear out, break, get lost, etc. Most of these will fit handily in a
weapon-specific plastic parts tote from any craft store. And besides a generous
supply of ammunition to tide you over any temporary buying frenzies like the
one we’re in now, or the one from 2008, one day it will also dawn on you that
it’s not a bad idea to double up on your basic 5 weapons, because as both Navy
Seals and serious preppers know, “two is one, and one is none” when something
catastrophically fails.
Always focus on the concept that it’s your safety and
security that’s the system, not the weapon(s).
If the contingencies you’re
planning on suggest a need for a weapon, for less than the price of your
current health insurance ER deductible you can (and should!) get ahold of body armor of at least a concealable soft
vest variety. Given the price and utility, as well as the value of your own
hide, one would be a fool not to do so, and in fact ought to get the vest before the weapons, while they’re still
legal to acquire, because unlike a handgun, you probably aren’t breaking any laws
by wearing soft body armor in 99% of the country. I can’t speak for every
jurisdiction, because some of them are universally stupid about such purely
defensive measures. Check your local laws. Some manufacturers/retailers are
jackassical too, but the expedient of taking a day’s training and getting a
security guard certification in your state is usually enough to paper your way
past well-intentioned but idiotic vendor sales restrictions on body armor. If my
choice is to spend another $100 or so to take a class and get a license to get
the vest I want, or do without, I’m taking the class. YMMV.
Finally, do everything you can not to need this system.
Don’t go to the ATM at 3AM in the dive part of town. Lock your car and house
doors. Secure your windows and premises. Get bright outdoor lights, light
timers, and a dog that barks at strangers. Keep your personal business off the internet,
and zip your lip about what you’ve got, and when you’ll be gone, so nobody has
any special idea to target you. All of that is part of your personal security
system, so learn it and live it. (Or, as multiple collections of military
maxims put it “Be courteous and friendly towards everyone, but have a plan to
kill anyone you meet.”)
Everyone ought to know how to defend themselves, but nobody
with a lick of sense wants to use a
weapon except for practice or sport. Your goal is to die of old age, after your
weapons have killed a lot of targets and the occasional freezer deer or bag of
game birds, not to get into gunfights daily, or to constantly battle the odds
to survive in some wasteland. Trading lead by choice is a low-percentage
investment over the long haul. Be prepared enough that no one wants to play
that game with you, then do everything reasonable not to have to either. And
come the day, make sure you’re the one standing afterwards, and get to go home
instead of the hospital or the morgue.Too many people think survival is all about having guns. Until, if they're lucky, they grow up, and a minor emergency shows them all the other things they're without, but not to the point they die from the lack. So now that we've bought you some time to survive immediate threats, let's move up the ladder a step.
No comments:
Post a Comment