Those famous words were spoken by Wesley (Cary Elwes) in The Princess Bride in response to Vizzini’s convoluted arguments. I feel the same about anyone who can understand all of the intricacies of firearms. I have already written about some of my adventures into the realm of handguns, but this did nothing to prepare me for the dizzying variety in the world of shotguns. Shotguns have infinitely more variety than handguns
This little article will describe some of the choices and options to consider when purchasing a shotgun. (Please keep in mind that I have not yet had the opportunity to take a shotgun class, so much the information here will most likely need to be updated afterward.)
As always, the first question to be asked of any gun purchase is the gun’s intended purpose. With shotguns, the basic purposes boil down to recreational shooting such as traps and clay birds, hunting birds and small game, hunting larger game (such as deer), and self defense, especially home defense. If you are on a tight budget you will probably want one shotgun that can serve multiple roles. This can be accomplished because most shotguns allow multiple barrels that, in combination with different types of ammunition, can be configured for different roles.
The shotgun I am buying is first for self/home defense, and second for hunting/sporting (two things I do not do that often). The key things to consider when purchasing the shotgun are the action, the gauge, and the barrel.
The Action
The action refers to the type of shotgun. The basic (most common) three actions are break-action, pump, and autoloading. The break-action has a pivot between the chamber and the barrel. The action “breaks” or pivots open and the shells are loaded into the barrel. This is the traditional shotgun and comes in two basic varieties. Single barrel, and double barrel. Double barrels may be side by side or over-under, which describes the placement of the two barrels. These shotguns are very simple, very durable, and the barrel can be changed out for different purposes. They have been around for hundreds of years and vary from extremly inexpensive to very expensive.
The second type of shotgun is the pump-action shotgun. This is the iconic police shotgun from just about every movie featuring a policeman. Pump shotguns offer the advantage of quicker follow up shots when compared to break-action shotguns but are more complicated and can be more expensive. The shotgun shells are typically loaded into a magazine tube mounted below the barrel. The user loads a new round by sliding (pumping) the action.
The third type of shotgun is the autoloading (or semiautomatic) shotgun. These shotguns use the recoil of the shotgun to load the next round. These offer the quickest followup shots but are the most complicated and most prone to mechanical failure.
Generally speaking, the pump action is preferred for self defense purposes, due to it combination of quick follow up shots and rugged, reliable action. Of course reading any internet forum will bring a myriad arguments in favor of all three. So which did I go with? The pump action.
The Gauge
The gauge refers to the size of the round the shogun will accommodate. Gauge is typically measured as a fraction, so 12 gauge is actually larger than 20 gauge (1/12 > 1/20). The most common gauge by far is the 12 followed by the 20, with the oddly named .410 recently gaining in popularity. (The .410 is measured in inches and would be equivalent to 67 gauge.) Other relatively common gauges include the 10 and 28 (probably best known for being the gauge former vice president Dick Cheney used to shoot a hunting partner by accident).
Shogtun shells are verstaile creatures, able to accommodate, birdshot, buckshot, slugs, and specialty rounds such as flechettes (tiny darts) or tear gas cannisters. For civilians, the first three are the most common ammunition. The size of the gauge determines how much shot or what size slug can be used. The trade off is the amount of shot vs the kick or recoil of the gun. Shotguns are notorious for their kick, and new users are often steered to the smaller gauges because of their lighter recoil.
Randy Cain (my gun guru of choice from reputation, accessibility, and experience) maintains that this is a mistake. There is more 12 gauge ammunition available than any other choice, and if recoil is an issue, low-recoil 12 gauge shells have less recoil than traditional 20 gauge rounds. Anne Langlois also offers that loading a 20 gauge magazine is more difficult than a 12.
So what did I go with? 12 gauge. I haven’t paid for Randy’s advice on shotguns yet, but I might as well try to do it his way first.
The Barrel
The barrel on most shotguns can be replaced, so a single shotgun can be configured for multiple purposes.
Length
Generally speaking, a short barrel is desirable for self defense applications because it is more maneuverable. The shortest barrel that can be owned by civilians without hassle is 18 inches. Shorter barrels are also used for hunting in more densely wooded areas. Generally speaking, a longer barrel is used to for hunting game that moves because the heavier barrel swings more smoothly.
Bore
The bore refers to the inside of the barrell. There are two types of shotgun bore: smooth and rifled. Rifled barrels are a more recent development and are generally used for hunting with slugs. Smooth bores can be used for shot or slugs.
Choke
Some shotgun barrels are choked, which means the muzzle end is constricted. Choking the barrel prevents shot from spreading as much, allowing the shotgun to be used for longer distances. Some shotgun barrels have interchangeable chokes so that the same barrel can be used for several different purposes. For self defense shotguns, cylinder or improved cylinder barrel is preferred.
Sights
The traditional shotgun sight is a single bead at the muzzle end of the barrel. The shotgun is pointed not aimed. However for slugs and longer distance hunting, traditonal rifle sights or vent-ribs may be used. A vent rib is a tube or ridge that sits above the barrel and aids in sighting. For a defensive shotgun, rifle sights are preferred. Note: Jeff Cooper decided that ghost ring sites were best for tactical shotguns, so that is what is most popular, but in more recent times, instructors such as Randy Cain have discovered they shoot faster and better with traditional rifle sights.
The Conclusion
We have only begun to scracth the surface of shotguns, but hopefully, you have enough basic vocabulary to choose a shotgun for home defense. The preferred home defense shotgun is a 12 gauge, pump-action, shotgun with an 18 inch, improved cylinder barrel with rifle sights.
The Contenders
The two most common types of shotgun that meet these criteria are the Mossberg 500 series and the Remington 870. (Please note that I have no experience with the Mossberg, so this information is either factual or 2nd hand anecdotal). The Remington 870 has been around a long time and is a standard among armed forces, police, and hunters. It seems to be the standard by which all other pump shotguns are measured. There are a ton of replacement parts and accessories available for it.
The Mossberg 500 series is both stronger and weaker, more and less reliable, more and less rugged than the Remington 870 depending on who you listen to. Generally speaking, the major factors in its favor are that it is often less expensive, and the safety is located on top of the receiver and is completely ambidextrous, making it attractive to left handers.
The choice
Randy Cain’s preferred shotgun is the Remington 870, and since I have no preferences whatsoever (my shotgun experience is only with break-actions) I went ahead and bought a Remington 870. Of course, that brings another set of dizzying choices with it. The next article will highlight the different models of Remington 870 and guide you through some of their major features.
In the last article I highlighted some of the major choices that must be made in choosing a shotgun. Having narrowed my choice to a Remington 870, I thought that I simply needed to find the best price on one and buy it. If only it were that simple. This article will detail some of the choices and options available for the Remington 870.
The first thing to understand is that the Remington 870 comes in four different models or levels:
Remington 870 Express
Remington 870 Wingmaster
Remington 870 Police
Remington 870 other
This link has some nice information regarding the differences between the models although the information is a few years old and may be subject to change.
The most basic is the 870 Express. The internal workings are not as nice, the action does not slide as smoothly, and the finish is quite terrible (reports of it flaking off abound on the internet). Its major advantage is that it is 50%-60% of the price of a Wingmaster.
The Wingmaster has much more attention to detail than the Express, a much smoother slide, and high quality blued finish. The Wingmaster is considered vastly superior to the Express.
The Police model (870P) has even more attention to detail, is assembled in a special part of the factory to ensure quality, and features a parkerized finish. The 870P is also the only model to come with a 18 inch factory barrel (14 inch is also available if you want to go through the NFA hassle).
The other models include the Marine model which is identical to the Express but has a nickel plated corrosion resistant finish and is intended for salt water use. The HD and Tactical models are sold with home defense and tactical accessories. Some are based off the Express model while others are based off of the Police model, so care should be taken when choosing one of these.
Generally speaking, in order of desirability for home defense, the Police is preferred, followed by the Wingmaster, while the Express is deprecated. So now you have decided to get a Remington 870 12 gauge pump-action shotgun with rifle sights. Congratulations. But if you want an 18 inch barrel, it’s only available in the Police model. You could of course, get 20 inch barrel and have a gunsmith cut down the barrel and resolder the sight. But care must be taken because a quarter inch too short will land you in trouble with the ATF not to mention that resoldering the sight means refinishing the barrel. (Also keep in mind that although you can use other 870 barrels with the 870P, the finish will not match.)
So you might decide to get a Police model with a factory barrel. But the police model is only available from authorized LE (law enforcement) distributors, which means your chances of finding a super discount are close to zero. On the other hand, you could keep an eye on the pawn shops looking for police trade-ins. In the four months that I looked, I was unable to find a used 870P for a decent price, and finally ended up buying a new one with the exact features I was looking for. Four days after I called in my order, I found a good deal on a police trade in on a local gun forum. (Customizing a used gun can end up being more expensive than simply buying it the way you want in the first place.)
This website has a decent guide to the various 870P models. I decided on the 4421 (includes extended magazine tube), although I was told by one distributor that the 4421 was discontinued (of course that same distributor told me they didn’t know what the 4418 model was). Another store said they had no 4421s in stock but sold me a 4417 with a magazine extension tube for less than other stores’ price on the 4421*.
The next article will detail some of the possible accessories you may want to add to your Remington 870.
Update: Both of the models I mention above are synthetic stock shotguns. I originally went that way because I wanted the OEM extension tube, and it was only available on synthetic stock shotgun from factory. Because they were either discontinued or out of stock, I ended up getting the shotgun tube separately (although it’s still OEM). Knowing what I know now, I would have gotten the 2505 version which is 18″, rifle sights, but with wooden stock and then installed the magazine extension. Wood is prettier and also easier to cut to the correct length. (Cutting your shotgun down to size is the topic of a future article.)
One of the most confusing aspects of choosing a handgun is choosing a trigger action. The discussion of trigger action can get very confusing very quickly, especially since some of the same words can mean different things when talking about revolvers or semi-automatics.
If you don’t care about the definitions and just want to know what to get, here are the Randy Cain recommendations:
Revolvers take longer to shoot well. Most beginners should start with semi-automatics, because they can become proficient quicker.
The most important thing in a trigger is that it works the same every time. (This rules out DA/SA triggers unless they can be carried like SA, cocked and locked).
1911s can have the best triggers if they’re worked on by a competent gunsmith. Glocks and Glock-like guns (e.g., M&P and XDs) are next.
I will just cover the basic definitions and then some thoughts about the advantages and disadvantages. We’ll start with revolvers because they are more intuitive to understand.
Revolver Single Action (SA)
A revolver single action trigger is one where the only thing the trigger does is make the hammer fall. The gun must be manually cocked by pulling back on the trigger. This is the traditional cowboy action seen in Westerns.
Revolver Double Action (DA)
In a double action revolver, pulling the trigger cocks the hammer and makes the hammer fall. The two actions in one trigger pull make it “double action.” (For you purists out there, you could argue that pulling the trigger also turns the cylinder, but that’s really a side effect of the hammer cocking, so they don’t count it as three actions.) Double action revolvers can also be manually cocked and used as single action. Because the trigger pull does more than one thing, the trigger pull is typically longer and heavier than single action, but the guns are simpler to fire.
Revolver Double Action (DAO)
Some revolvers are “hammerless” so they cannot be manually cocked. These are often called double action only, because you can’t shoot it single action. Rand Cain advises against hammerless models. Instead, he prefers shrouded hammers (where a hammer is relatively hidden by a “shroud” of metal to prevent the hammer from snagging on clothing. Shrouded hammers offer a compromise (or is it the best of both) between DAO and DA revolvers.
If you can understand the revolver actions, the rest of this article should be fairly simple.
Single Action Semi-autos (SA)
A single action semi-automatic is one where the trigger only makes the hammer fall. The recoil of the gun re-cocks the hammer for the next shot. The hammer is cocked the first time by “racking the slide” and chambering the first round. Most SA pistols have a manual safety and can be carried “cocked and locked”. The major advantage is a consistent trigger pull. The major disadvantage is that it takes practice to release the safety before firing (and to re-engage the safety before holstering). The most famous American gun of all time, the Colt 1911, and its clones are SA. Some SA pistols are not safe to have a closed hammer on a live round which can lead to dangerous situations with people not properly trained in their use.
Double Action Semi-autos (DA) or (DA/SA)
Double action semi-automatics are similar in concept to revolver double action except for one major difference. On the first round, the trigger cocks the hammer and then makes it fall. The recoil then re-cocks the hammer so that the next shot is a single action shot. (Hence why they’re sometimes called DA/SA.)
The major advantage is that the hammer can safely be carried down on a live round. The first shot will then have a heavier, longer pull. The follow up shots then have the lighter trigger pull of the SA. The major disadvantage is that some people cannot get used to the transition between the DA and the SA trigger pulls. This can be ameliorated by manually cocking the pistol before the first shot.
The Crunchentickers as they are derisively known are notoriously difficult to shoot well from a holster. As Randy Cain says when the class starts to learn to shoot from a holster, “Now you’re going to learn to hate your gun.” And I did, and I no longer have it. DA/SA guns should be avoided (despite the penchant for law enforcement to use them) unless they can be carried cocked and locked like a SA gun.
The trixie part: DA/SA guns may or may not have manual safeties. The thinking here is that the hammer down, long trigger pull is a safety mechanism, so some guns omit the manual safety in favor of a decocker that is designed to safely lower the hammer onto a chambered round without an accidental discharge. In guns with a manual safety, some guns will not allow the safety to be engaged unless the hammer is cocked, while others will allow the safety to be engaged only with the hammer down, and others will allow both. Know what your gun will do before your purchase it.
Double Action Only Semi-auto (DAO)
Every trigger pull cocks the hammer and makes it fall. The recoil does not re-cock the gun. DAO triggers typically have long relatively heavy trigger pulls. This is very popular with politicians who know that their police officers are not adequately trained in the use of their weapons. The New York politicians (like Guiliani and Bloomberg) think their policemen are so inept that the trigger specified for New York policemen has its own name–you guessed it, the New York trigger (essentially a very heavy trigger).
The advantage of the DAO is that every trigger pull is the same. The disadvantage is that every trigger pull is relatively long and hard.
Striker fired Semi-autos
Striker fired semi autos have gained increasing popularity throughout the world thanks to Glock. A striker is an internal firing mechanism instead of a hammer. Think of it kind of like a slingshot hidden inside the gun. Here is a nifty animation that helps to explain it.
The major advantage of a striker fired gun is a consistent trigger pull (much like a single action). Glock calls theirs “Safe action” Other companies call theirs single action, and others double action only depending on whether the striker is fully cocked, half cocked, or uncocked between shots. Whatever; the important thing is that the trigger pull is always consistent. Some striker fired weapons have no manual safety, while others do. The trigger pull is usually a little heavier than a single action gun and often has some kind of safety lever on the trigger itself to help prevent the gun from firing unless the trigger is deliberately pulled.
The striker is generally fully cocked or half cocked, so when disassembling the weapon, the tension on the striker must be released. Some striker fired guns, like Glocks require that the trigger be pulled, which has caused at least a few negligent discharges (I thought it wasn’t loaded). Other companies have a decocker whose only purpose is to prevent the trigger from being pulled while disassembling the gun.
Other Trigger Actions
There are other trigger actions out there, but these are the major ones. Another that is growing in popularity among law enforcement is the Double Action Kellerman (DAK), named after it’s creator. This is a variant on the DAO, where the first trigger pull is long and heavy, and the follow up shots are short and heavy. This kind of trigger breaks Randy’s rule that a trigger should be consistent.
A Note on Trigger Weights and Pulls
Trigger weights are a highly subjective matter. The quality of the trigger, and its design have an influence on the overall feel. Generally speaking, smooth triggers feel lighter than gritty triggers. Triggers that travel a short distance and triggers that go straight back rather than travel in an arc feel lighter. So weight isn’t everything. Also guns can be modified after market, so this list should be taken with a grain of salt, but generally speaking, for semi-autos:
Single action: 3.5 – 5 pounds
Double action: 7 – 18 pounds
Striker fired: 5 – 8 pounds
Trigger reset
In addition to the trigger action, another important consideration is trigger reset–the distance the trigger has to move forward before it can fire a second shot. All things equal, a shorter reset will allow for more accurate, quicker shots.
Updated: The information below is outdated and only left for posterity. Click here to see current recommendations
So, what do I have? I have a DA/SA with a decocker only (no manual safety). Why? Well, a combination of things, but the confluence of price and availability collided with my being left handed. The guns I was interested in didn’t fit my hand in the full size, and the compact models didn’t have ambi-dextrous safeties (I’m left handed). So I went with the decocker version, although I’d prefer a gun that lets me carry cocked and locked in single action mode. You really do have to practice that first double action shot in order to be good at it or it will tend to twitch the barrel to the side.
Obama says that for far too long, America has consumed more than its share of resources. He’s right. But unwittingly so, and not in the way he thinks. Put simply, America consumes more than its fair share of resources because it borrows money to pay for its consumption. When we borrow to subsidize our sumptuous lifestyle, someone else has to lend, i.e., not consume.
Individual Americans have contributed to the problem through personal debt, but we are gross amateurs before the American government. In order to fund its profligate spending, the American government uses a secret weapon–inflation. The government owns a printing press through the Federal Reserve. As it borrows, it also prints more money to pay its debts; you could say that the government has a monopoly on counterfeiting. Printing more money causes existing money to be worth less, which would ordinarily cause massive inflation.
Happily for the American government, the dollar is the world’s reserve currency, which means that international trade is priced in dollars. In order to keep inflation down in America, we exported the inflated dollars by selling government bonds to other governments, primarily China. Only China isn’t buying anymore.
And that brings us back to the opening statement. We ARE using more than our fair share of resources, because we have conned the world into loaning us the money to buy them. Loans that we intend to pay back in inflated (counterfeited) dollars (and lately it seems, with no intention of every paying back). Obama has NO intention whatsoever of actually remedying the situation. If he meant his “good citizen of the world” rhetoric, he would order the Fed to stop printing money, or better yet dissolve it altogether. He would stop issuing government bonds. He would end deficit spending. He would encourage Americans to stop borrowing to fund their lifestyles. Unfortunately, Obama is doing the exact opposite. He sent Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, to China to beg them to continue buying our debt. The Fed has ramped up money printing even more with no end in sight. Obama’s first year budget deficit will be more than twice as large as Bush’s last (even including the bailouts). And he is still encouraging Americans to borrow and consume.
The sad fact is that it did not matter who was elected in November; the underlying cancer in the American economy, the inflationary policy favored by the government and the Fed, was not going to change. You will notice that McCain campaigned for the bailouts. Bush said he had to abandon the free market to save it. And Obama? Obama is simply following the trail laid out by Bush and all the presidents before him back to 1913 when the Fed was established.
If this has piqued your curiosity, I highly encourage you to read Murray Rothbard’s short book What Has Government Done to Our Money. It can be downloaded for free from www.mises.org. For those of you with an aversion to books without pictures, search youtube for Irwin Schiff How an Economy Grows. (It’s a narrated graphic novel.)
Mike Huckabee dropped by Palm Beach Atlantic University (a small, private, Christian university with a fabulous nursing program) last night and today. I was at a session today where he made a few remarks and then took questions from the audience (students and faculty)–some hostile, some fawning. At the end of the hour, my head was hurting from sorting through all the doublespeak, half truths, and straw man arguments.
Huckabee has a few (very few) good points and pretends as though he is a different breed of candidate, when in fact there is nothing new about him. Following are a few of his points and my refutations of them. (Note: these are not in chronological order. Note also that I have confined myself only to the remarks he made during this session.)
Huckabee Point 1
He complained that many Republicans are not really Republican, but libertarian–they just don’t know it. He went on to explain that Libertarians are in favor of simply cutting government and the consequences be damned. Such a position, he maintains, is irresponsible. “How would you like it if we cut the police department, and then your house was broken into, and it took the police 45 minutes to get there instead of…” He, however, thinks that the best government is self-government embodied in the Golden rule (Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.)
Rebuttal:
Wow, where does one start with this mess of illogic? There is no doubt that many libertarians are registered as Republicans for a variety of reasons one of which might be ignorance, but his next statement is a classic straw man argument. Some Libertarians are certainly in favor of cutting the government regardless of the short term consequences, because they know that the long term effects will be beneficial, but others favor a more graduated approach. The next statement is both specious and disingenuous in its straw humanity: a) The federal government does not fund police departments (homeland security funding aside). b) He plies the classic liberal maneuver that if cuts must be made, sanitation, fire departments, and the police will be the first to be cut from the budget–as opposed to say the Jazzfest or the municipal water park. c) As the (I hesitate to use the term victim) subject of an attempted home invasion two years ago, I can tell you that a police response time of five minutes is not fast enough. d) In many areas of the country, the police response time is already 45 minutes, and in some cities, the police will not respond at all to certain neighborhoods. In fact, the Supreme Court has ruled that police have NO responsibility for the protection of individual citizens.
The most audacious aspect of this point is Huckabee’s shameless appropriation of a key Libertarian plank as his own–that self-government is best, that if government must exist at all, it should be as small and as local as possible. And of course, he declined to elaborate on just how any of his big government policies are supposed to move us closer to self-government.
Huckabee Point 2
His appearance seems to have been part of a speaking tour connected to his new book Do The Right Thing. He pointed out that in it he has coined a new term: vertical politics–as opposed to horizontal politics. Horizontal politics is voting for someone based on party affiliation or political philosophy. Vertical politics is based on whether voters think a candidate will lead the country up or down. Huckabee thinks that politics in America is moving from horizontal to vertical because the under 35 demographic has no party loyalty.
Rebuttal:
Only a politician could make such a banal point and call it new and insightful. People have been voting for the candidate they thought would be good for the country since the time of Pericles. Has Huckabee never heard that Mussolini was elected because he made the trains run on time? Why does he think that Reagan won in two landslide elections? Has he never heard of Reagan Democrats?
The major reason that party loyalty is waning is because there is so little difference between the parties these days. The reason that the Republicans have been losing elections lately is because they are being punished by their own voters for acting like democrats, for supporting George W. Bush’s liberal programs and spending.
Huckabee Point 3
He made a point about the cost of health care and how it was so expensive because we don’t have enough preventative care. He pointed out that three of the things that contribute most to the high cost of health care in the United States are overeating, underexercising, and smoking–all three voluntary behaviors. He also pointed out that (I forget the exact statistic) something like 85% of the healthcare expenditures occur in the last five years of an individual’s life.
Rebuttal:
We most certainly do cover the cost of preventative care in the United States. It is mandatory in practically every insurance plan. It is the entire basis of HMOs. Most insurance plans even cover screening colonoscopies. Preventative care is also available from a variety of community clinics, occupational health programs, health fairs, etc. Preventative care is so important now that doctors have been successfully sued because they did not encourage patients to quit smoking often enough.
Preventative medicine is not fun; it takes discipline. If you felt perfectly fine would you take medicine every single day that made you fatigued, made you dizzy, made you cough, made your ankles swell, gave you constipation, made you impotent? (All major adverse effects of common blood pressure medications.) Heck, if you really are sick, how many of you can even remember to take your antibiotics correctly? Quite simply, Americans do not use preventative care because the nanny state shields them from themselves. They are protected from the consequences of their actions while young, because their grandchildren subsidize their healthcare when they reach 65. Why should they deny themselves the good life now when they can just take a “magic pill” later?
While it is true that many of our chronic diseases have behavioral components, what exactly does Huckabee propose we do about it? Outlaw overeating? Mandate government morning runs? I was reminded of the classic scene from Demolition Man where Sandra Bullock’s character explains to Sylvester Stallone’s character that meat has been outlawed because, “anything not good for you is bad, hence illegal. Alcohol, caffeine, contact sports, meat…bad language, child play, gasoline, uneducational toys, and anything spicy. Abortion is also illegal, but then so is pregnancy…if you don’t have a license.”
It is sheer mockery of logic to complain about spending more health care dollars in the last few years of life. Hello. That is when you need them unless you are tired of living. It is as though he had just visited the Amazon basin with Montaigne’s servant who declared that among the natives there were no sick people, no one palsied, toothless, or bleary-eyed, or bent with age. As P.J. O’Rourke pointed out, that is because such people were most probably dead.
This unhealthy fixation on fat and cardiovascular disease dates back to the 50s with Dr. Ancel Keys who was obsessed with lowering deaths from heart disease. We have indeed lowered deaths from heart disease, but a careful examination of the evidence shows that it was lowered by symptom awareness and early and better treatment of heart attacks–not by prevention. Such advances would likely never have occurred had we followed Huckabee’s misguided advice. Thankfully, while the government was pursuing dead end prevention measures, the actual health care business was in the business of saving lives.
Americans are healthier than they ever have been aside from their excesses of weight and associated diseases. But even that is traceable to well-meaning government agents. After mucking with the schools for decades and worsening education, they decided to eliminate recess and P.E. They decided parents could not be trusted to feed their children, so the government would do it for them. They subsidized agriculture leading to the bizarre situation where soda is cheaper than milk, where petroleum byproducts (margarine) are preferred to natural products (butter).
I am not quite sure where Huckabee was going with this one, because he never actually gave any policies. But his premises are so wrong they would incite mass fear and panic if not for the reality of Obama health care. Maybe I should call Grandma.
Huckabee Point 4
He took a cheap shot at commentators such as those on Talk Radio, who have never had to make a tough government decision in their lives, who will tell us how we ought to do it and how we’re doing it wrong.
Rebuttal:
I felt like saying, “Aww, didems make oo wanna cry?” Does this mean that unless one has worked in government in an executive position, no one can criticize the president or a presidential candidate? What about voters? Are they allowed to criticize? Is there still a first amendment in the United States or did that get destroyed somewhere between the Digital Millenium Copyright Act, Patriot Act, and Campaign Finance Reform?
Many talk radio hosts and guests have worked in government such as Judge Napolitano, Mark Levin and Laura Ingraham. Even those who have not worked in government nor even earned a college degree like Rush Limbaugh make important business decisions every day. In fact, if the Republican party had listened to Rush during the last election campaign (or for the last ten years), we might be in a very different position than we are now. I know there are a lot of Rush-haters here, but every day, Rush speaks about personal liberty, about relying on yourself instead of government, about the erosion of freedom in the United States. He speaks about real free market principals, real capitalism, and promotes the work of economists like F.A. Hayek and Milton Friedman. (Even Lew Rockwell has admitted that, monetarism aside, Friedman was a great economist). During the Bush presidency he opposed No Child Left Behind and Medicare Part D. He has consistently warned that compassionate conservatism is no conservatism at all, that governing like liberals but “smarter” is a difference of degree, not kind. During the campaign, Rush opposed the bailout bill and pointed out that there was no essential policy difference between Obama (the real liberal) and McCain (the liberal-lite). Huckabee could do much worse than listen to the likes of talk radio.
Huckabee Point 5
He claimed that in the last election, the entire field of candidates on both sides essentially held the same views on major points such as the war in Iraq. He quipped, “At the debates, we could have all just shut up and given Ron Paul two minutes to tell us how we’re wrong.”
Rebuttal:
True and false at the same time. Granted, there were very few good choices among the candidates, and true that no one was calling for the closing of the Federal Reserve other than Ron Paul, but there was a huge difference among the candidates’ views on substantive issues such as taxes, global warming, illegal aliens and immigration, gun ownership, and campaign finance reform. Huckabee was also trying to position himself as above the fray, when in fact, he was just a conventional candidate.
Closing thoughts:
Huckabee comes across as a reasonable, down to earth person. He has a good sense of humor. He speaks well. He plays a mean bass guitar (but that brings flashbacks of our last musician president). After the session I attended, he preached a “mom and apple pie” message—the kind that no one can dispute. The problem is that these types of qualities do not a president make. In these kinds of controlled circumstances even ultra liberal democrats like Florida Senator Bill Nelson (who spoke at our graduation a few years back) can seem reasonable and conservative.
Huckabee does have some good points. He mentioned that under capitalism, freedom to succeed also means freedom to fail. The problem is that he seems to omit extending that same freedom to people who make bad choices in their diets and personal habits. (See healthcare sections above.) On his television show, he has talked about the unholy alliance of business and government* but today he only referenced the culture of greed and mentioned the time he called the Club for Growth the Club for Greed. I must admit that I am not completely familiar with Club for Growth’s politics, but looking at their website, does this mean that Huckabee is against making the Bush tax cuts permanent, for the death tax, against school choice, against limiting government spending, against tort reform?
Okay, so even his good point turns out to be a bad point. It was quite obvious that Huckabee is already campaigning for 2012. If he ends up as the Republican candidate, I may take take Thomas DiLorenzo’s advice and simply not vote. See also the Myth of Representation.
*The Obama administration’s favorite term seems to be “public-private partnership,” meaning taking our tax money and giving it to the government and its private cronies like ACORN, Fannie Mae, and AIG.
Patrick Heyman, PhD, (patrick_heyman@pba.edu) is an Assistant Professor of Nursing at Palm Beach Atlantic University. His views are his own and most likely do not represent the position of the University.
I recently attended a Tactical Handgun 101 course with Randy Cain. (I’ll put more down about that later.) One of the nice things about taking Randy’s course is that not only is he a font of knowledge and experience about guns, but everyone brings a ton of toys. As you can see from the site, I have been chronicling some some of my experiences in choosing a handgun. After literally hundred of hours of reading, I thought that I had chosen something that would truly work for me (CZ-40P). In reality, I had just paid–in Randy’s words–the stupid tax.
The Stupid Tax is the cost of learning what does and doesn’t work for you by experience. It’s also the cost of listening to the wrong people. So here are the basics of buying a gun according to Randy Cain.
Randy’s Bottom Line
If you’re serious, get a custom 1911. Buy a Colt Government model (full 5″ barrel) and send it to custom combat gunsmith. It’ll take about three to four years to get it back because the best smiths have waiting periods that long. And it will end up costing $3000-$4000.
Everyone else should get a Glock or at least make a good case as to why a Glock doesn’t work for them. “They’re ugly; they have weird triggers; they have crappy sights and feel blocky in the hand. But they’re relatively cheap, reliable, every trigger pull is the same, and you can put better sights on them.”
Things to look for in a Gun in order of importance:
Reliability: It has to go bang every time you pull the trigger or it will get you killed one day.
Trigger: It needs to have a consistent trigger. In order of “goodness” of trigger: 1911’s can have the best triggers, followed by Glocks and glock like guns (like Springfield XD and S&W M&P). The worse triggers are DA/SA guns because they have two different trigger pulls.
Sights: In order to hit the target, the gun needs to have sights that you can use easily. Randy’s favorite sights are Heinie sights.
Other Thoughts:
Get a gun in the caliber it was designed for as it was designed. The more a gun is modified from its original design, the more problems may manifest.
Don’t go messing with the gun: full length guide rods and other doodads (except for sights).
The only calibers you really need to choose between (for civilians) is 9mm and .45 ACP. 9mm is easier to shoot and cheaper to practice with, but doesn’t work as well in a defensive situation. Cops may want to use 40 S&W, but it’s really a compromise: more powerful than 9mm; less powerful than .45; and harder to shoot then both.
So what was my stupid tax?
Buying a gun DA/SA gun, even though I clearly remembered hating the M-9’s (Beretta 92FS) double action trigger when I went through Basic Training at the Academy. I bought the CZ-40P because in my reading, a gun with a decocker was recommended for left handers as you can “decock at leisure after shooting.” It’s also a 40 S&W, which is more expensive to shoot and a little harder to shoot well. Thankfully, the CZ-40P was a very inexpensive gun whose value has actually gone up slightly because of its relative rarity.
Did I learn my lesson?
Only partially. I am selling my CZ-40P and have now bought a CZ-75 Stainless Steel edition that Gander Mountain had priced $100 less than it should have been. It has an ambidextrous safety, so that I can work it left handed. Even though it is a DA/SA gun, it can be carried “cocked and locked” in single action mode, similar to a 1911 type gun. And finally, it’s a 9mm, so it should be a bit less expensive to shoot and easier to shoot well.
I tried to like the Glock; I honestly did. I tested a Glock and a Springfield XD in 40 S&W side by side with my CZ-40P, and I just shot the CZ better. Then when I went to Gander Mountain, and they happened to have that nice Stainless Steel model sitting there at a bargain price, it was like God was speaking to me.
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