Previously Gunsite Gossip
Vol. 3, No. 8 21 June 1995
Independence, 1995
We really did not intend to get out
another commentary in the month of June, during which the sequence
of activities has been such as to preclude much of anything other
than eating and sleeping - and drinking.
However, the material has just kept piling up, so we will try and
put this one together in what time is available, which is, as
usual, less than needful.
Our class in Guatemala went quite well, thanks to the ingenuity and
activity of family members Bob Young and Tom Graziano.
It has been a short lifetime since our first visit to Guatemala,
and while the geography remains the same the sociology is entirely
different. The street hazard from bad guys is still there, but it
comes from different directions, and while it is easier to combat,
it is more difficult to predict. Most of our friends down there
remain faithful to the 1911 pistol, as in our class the
crunchentickers were pretty much the field of the military
citizens and there was only one Glock (no revolvers.)
It remains so difficult to keep the thumb of an inexperienced
shooter on top of the safety where it belongs that we are now
thinking seriously of making the safety spring-loaded in the new
pistol. Family member Rich Wyatt points out that if the
safety goes on automatically when the thumb is not actuating it, it
will be difficult for the weapon to be operated with the wrong hand
unless the safety mechanism is "ambidextrous," a concept which is
structurally unsound. Vamos a ver.
The other point which impressed itself again is that the student
who chooses to use a crunchenticker must be shown how to
operate the pistol in both trigger-cocking and thumb-cocking
fashion, and given a choice by which he can prove to himself what
system suits him better. This is not a matter to be left up to
bureaucratic regulation.
The very good things about Guatemala are the climate, the tortillas
(Mexican style,) the beef, the rum, and the people. On the negative
side are the city traffic and the highly confused political
situation. (Also the turistas, unless you keep your blood alcohol
level at a proper count.)
We were delighted to meet again old friends: the Grimlers, the
Harshbargers, and the Widmanns. Carlos Widmann probably should be
president of the republic, but the very idea fills him with dismay.
He flew us around in his helicopter, which, in that beautiful
landscape, is a true luxury.
I visited with family member Rich
Wyatt up in Denver, but I still do not have a definite date for the
forthcoming instruction sessions at Whittington Center. I will
release those dates as soon as I have them.
The Keneyathlon this year did not
turn out well, from my standpoint. I tried to introduce the concept
of a proper rifle to the contestants by means of the special award
called "The Guru's Gold," but seems that target rifles have
taken over this match. The lightest rifle in the first five, which
was to receive the special award, weighed well over 10lbs.
Something will have to be done about this, and David Kahn and I
will come up with a solution prior to next year's event.
Plans for the Third Annual Gunsite
Reunion and Theodore Roosevelt Memorial are already afoot at
Whittington Center, and this time we plan to hold a party down at
the St. Charles Hotel in Cimarron, which is a historic landmark and
well worth a visit in itself. Naturally, we will feature rifle,
pistol and shotgun shooting, as well as two full nights of
declamation. All you frustrated thespians are well advised to start
now on your preparation.
We learned in Phoenix that overall NRA
membership is stable, but that we got a considerable lift from the
"Bush Flap." At the membership booth we were pleased to hear a new
applicant for life membership state that she did not own a gun and
did not intend to be a shooter, but that she wanted to pick up
George Bush's membership number.
At the NRA general meeting at Phoenix we
were shown by Tanya Metaksa that now I have been personally
excoriated in the pages of the New York Times. This is
certainly a mark of "having arrived," and I thank the perpetrator
sincerely.
Many years ago I instituted the doctrine
of always placing two shots solidly in the center of the
adversary's torso. This has become the rule throughout much of the
world, and while it is not necessarily wrong, it ought not to be
followed slavishly. In a gunfight the precise placement of a big
bullet is what wins. That second shot is just for insurance.
However, in certain competitive circles the need for an almost
instantaneous second shot has lead to the introduction of small
calibers, long slides and light loads. This is not a good answer
and course designers should take note.
Family member and riflemaster John
Gannaway recently cruised out to a silhouette match, which he
entered more out of curiosity than anything else. Not to my
surprise, he won, being the marksman that he is. I find in my
wanderings across the world that the people who enter marksmanship
competition are in large measure not qualified for the task. I have
seen people shooting in police pistol matches recently who have
obviously not been properly schooled. The problem is serious and is
one result of the loss of doctrinal purity on the part of IPSC
competitors.
Today the Israeli pistol salesmen are roaming the world and
providing pistol training for those departments who will purchase
their firearms. I have seen the results, and it is quite clear that
Israeli pistol doctrine has little to recommend it apart from the
fact that the Israelis teach it.
Who then can define proper pistolcraft at this time? At the
beginning of The Movement it could be said that the best
shots were those who were winning in practical competition. Since
the loss of practicality in practical competition, who can say what
technique is best? The original lifesaving technique was invented
by Jack Weaver, perfected by Elden Carl and Ray Chapman, codified
by John Plahn, and promulgated by me. Now, thirty years later, I do
not see anything better being demonstrated worldwide. On the
contrary what I see, in the main, is retrogression. It is, of
course, presumptuous of me to claim that I know the answer, but
looking around I certainly can say that I have seen a great many
people who presume to know the answer and do not.
The important thing is to keep the seekers after excellence free of
the public sector. Neither the police nor the military, are proper
places in which to seek individual excellence. Many cops and many
soldiers are very fine marksmen, but they are that regardless of
their civil status. The sad fact is that individual excellence is a
matter for development by the individual and it is not something
that can be imparted in the mass. Ask any fighter pilot the next
chance you get.
Gordon Cormack, a professional hunter now
operating up in Mugabestan, assures us that the Four Horsemen of
the Apocalypse - War, Pestilence, Famine and Death - are
riding in full cry across Africa north of the Zambezi. Well, what
did you expect?
I am sure all of you have been battered
by viewers-with-alarm who have taken exception to Wayne LaPierre's
characterization of the BATmen as "jackbooted thugs." This
was probably an unfortunate use of words, though neither Wayne nor
anyone else who is aware of the circumstances will recant the
thought behind the phrase. Personally I do not know exactly what a
jackboot is, but I suppose that term could be applied to the
footgear worn by the BATchick who stomped the pet kitten to
death in the Lamplugh raid. Perhaps if we call these people "kitten
stompers," rather than thugs, we would get the message across to
more people.
Please note that another group in Waco
has already secured the money and put up the Waco monument, thus we
have no mission for the money that many of you have already
subscribed to us here. We are returning your checks with thanks.
You may not have built the monument, but you certainly showed the
right spirit.
I had always thought that the injunction
not to shoot "until you can see the whites of their eyes" was
properly attributed to Dr. Joseph Warren at Bunker Hill. Now I find
that Frederick the Great has supposed to have used the same caution
several generations earlier. Be that as it may, it does raise an
interesting point. Just how far away can one see the whites of the
eyes? Check that out yourself sometime. Just what is the range at
which you can see the whites of someone's eyes?
We are somewhat amused by the hysteria
manifest in the press at the suggestion by Gordon Liddy that if one
is menaced by bad guys (particularly the ninja) one is wise to
shoot for the head. That statement has got a whole bunch of
journalists and commentators bleeding from the nose. One wonders
why it should. Where else should you shoot a man if he is probably
wearing an armored vest? If you decide to shoot you have made the
big decision. Where you place your shot is merely a technical
matter.
A new and highly recommended bumper sticker:
ESCHEW ETHNICITY!
Have you noticed all these pictures of
people shooting from a putative kneeling position and not using the
knee? One would assume that error would be obvious even to a person
who had never thought about it, but we are living in an age where
people will not do anything because it makes sense and will cross
the street against the red light simply because they were never
told not to.
Phil Gramm certainly gave us a rousing
speech at Phoenix, pointing out that he had always been a devoted
bird shooter. He wound up his presentation by saying that we have
not had an honest-to-God hunter in the White House since Theodore
Roosevelt - and that's too long!
I mentioned recently the demise of the
hero Lord Lovatt and the elegance of his funeral. Now we learn to
our dismay that the estate of the Clan Frazer is in total disarray
and that the traditional seat in Scotland is to be broken up and
sold in chunks. This is not unheard of in Britain, but it is
nonetheless tragic. The heroic tradition has been dimmed throughout
the world and journalists now use the word without any thought for
its meaning.
"Heroism" is not the same as coping. A man who does his job
properly and succeeds through his own efforts is definitely to be
commended, but he is not a hero in the classic sense until he
deliberately lays his life on the line for a cause he deems to be
greater than himself.
I was pleased, of course, at being
awarded the Outstanding Handgunner trophy for this year. I have
never been one for "ribbons and stars," being more inclined to
judge my performance by my own standards, but praise is always
pleasant regardless of what one's own standards are.
We were both amused and annoyed down in
Guatemala at the efforts of uninstructed range personnel to
calibrate poppers so that they would go down with minor caliber
hits. After adjusting the targets with some care to illustrate to
the shooter that if he did not succeed with a body shot he should
shift to the head, we found the mozos rushing out between strings
to reset targets which had been hit by nines and had not fallen
down.
"Lo pegue pero no se caio'."
Years ago we opined in print that the
three great luxuries of life were fresh citrus fruit daily on the
breakfast table, a private shooting range on one's own property,
and a personal helicopter. Though we have been chided for not
putting political liberty on that list, we feel that this is simply
a matter of semantics. Liberty is essential - something one is
prepared to die for. One does not die for luxuries, he simply seeks
them and enjoys them insofar as possible. I have not met anyone who
has enjoyed all three of my own idealized delectations
simultaneously. Those who enjoy just two of the three are among the
most fortunate of men.
Dick Thomas, of Columbia, Missouri has
now proposed a twentieth anniversary party for IPSC to be held at
Pretoria, South Africa, in March of '96. This is just the final
impetus we needed to make our own decision to go back to Africa
next year. There are about a dozen things we really should do down
there (including a hippo on dry land,) and now we have enough to
make a final decision. We plan to be there with bells on.
When people tell you that personally
owned firearms are a source of deadly danger you may point out that
according to the National Safety Council about twice as many people
die from medical malpractice as die from firearms accidents.
Furthermore, there is no comparison to the risk from motor
vehicles, falls, poisoning, drowning and simply choking to death on
your food.
Curious that in light of this so-called
fertilizer bomb in Oklahoma City our Glorious Leader in
Washington made a point of offering the hospitality of the White
House to the leader of the Irish Republican Army, which is the
world's leading specialist in fertilizer bombs. This guy has a real
talent for ineptitude. Or should we put it more precisely,
gaucherie.
No doubt you have heard that Diane
Feinstein, among others, is seeking to abolish the Office of
Civilian Marksmanship, on the grounds that civilians ought not to
know how to shoot. The leftist elite obviously fears an armed
citizenry, which is, of course, the sole barrier to tyranny.
From the opposite point of view, what ought to be abolished is the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, a rogue organization that
was never needed in the first place and which has now developed
into an uncontrolled instrument of harassment recruited from the
dregs of the federal employment establishment.
Let us by all means economize, but let us get our priorities
straight.
Fund raisers of all sorts on our side of
the political spectrum report with dismay that too many people have
regarded last November's election as a reduction in the need for
the sinews of war. Not true! Last November's election was a
skirmish - hardly even a battle, still less a war. We need
that money for the 1996 election, in which Wayne LaPierre has
stated pointedly to Bill Clinton, "We will clean your clock!" Well
we should, but it will take both concentration and, unfortunately,
money.
I discover with sorrow that Sweetheart
grows old. This little rifle - Scout II - has had such a
distinguished record over the years that it has rightfully been
termed by critics "the best rifle in the world." The fact is,
however, that it has had so much hard use, and had so many rounds
through it, that it is showing signs of wear. Thus I will no longer
loan Sweetheart out. I could go to the trouble of having the piece
rebarreled and rebedded, but I seriously doubt if she will ever
obtain the almost supernatural edge she started with.
"Much is being made of the shock that we're supposed to
feel that the Oklahoma bombing was perpetrated by Americans, as
opposed to Islamic militants. I don't know why this is an issue. I
am quite used to American criminals and psychopaths committing
atrocities - after all, it was putative Americans who looted
and burned Los Angeles four years ago. What shocks me, and what our
media are strangely indifferent to, are the crimes which our own
government has committed against Americans."
Paul Kirchner
Summer is upon us here at Gunsite and
"June is busting out all over." Under proper supervision this whole
estate could be beautified beyond recognition. May it indeed come
to pass!
I am now off to Austria where I hope to
see the light of a new production Scout on the horizon. I have been
on this exercise for five years now and time is running out. I
devoutly hope that you all may be able to purchase an idealized
production rifle and an idealized production pistol over the
counter in 1996. If that comes to pass, I will consider my life
well spent.
Please Note. These "Commentaries" are for personal
use only. Not for publication.