Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Three long gun projects

I have three long guns that I have been eyeing for some upgrades. The first is a Marlin 60. It has been needing a scope for sometime (bifocals make using the iron sights difficult). I just ordered a BSA rimfire scope and rings. I should have pics of this up soon. I've always believed an accurate .22 rimfire rifle is a must in anyone's collection. From plinking and small, having an inexpensive means of maintaining your shooting skills is terrific. For those who plan on WTSHTF, an accurate .22 rimfire loaded with subsonic ammunition gives you a means of shooting without attracting undue attention.

The next two projects are going to be more expensive. First up, I have a Remington 870 that previously was in the Nebraska State Patrol in the 1980s. It still has the old school metal folding stock, hard plastic pistol grip and magazine extension. Curiously, they left the wooden forend grip on this gun. It is still a fine tactical weapon but I want to update it a bit.

First, the folding stock and old style pistol grip have to go. I'm thinking about a stock with a recoil reduction system. There are many tactical forends and I'm leaning towards one with a picatinny rail. I could then attach a tactical light (if I want to go mall ninja). It only has a bead sight so that has to be upgraded. Originally I wanted to go with ghost rings but there are some reflex sights now that are small enough to be an option. Of course that's after I decide if it gets a new, shorter barrel. I'd like an accurate barrel to deliver slugs in a nice tight group. While its primary role will still he home defense, it may need to fill other roles on short notice. Case in point, back in the early 90s an African lion got loose from its pen on a farm about 20 miles from here. There are all kinds of idiots owning exotic animals. The Remington, armed with slugs and 00 buckshot, would be my first choice to deal with wild animals on the lose.

Once all of the physical upgrades are made, I then want to get it coat in something more durable than its current blue. I'm hoping to think my way through this over the fall and maybe have this ready for prime time in the spring.

Once the 870 completes its transformation, my money and time will focus on the final long gun project. I have a Springfield M1A1 that has been sitting idol in the gun closet. It can shoot further than my eyes can see so some type of optical sight is a must. Originally I was going to put a scope on it and let it do with .308s do well; shot long and straight. But in exploring sighting options for the Remington, I've decided that a reflex sight may be an option. It would turn the M1A1 into more of an urban warfare type weapon but isn't that where I live?

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Fix our Schools


Congresswoman Shakowsky is trying to create more jobs by introducing a $227 billion jobs bill. On one of the cable talk shows, she commented that we (the US) needs to fix our schools.

It was a through a comment much like saying, we need to eat more fiber. It is just a sound byte comment that gets head nodding without thinking through the real problem. If schools were to only reason we have unemployed workers, then the money already injected into schools would have produced more qualified workers.

The problem with getting more people into the workplace is more complicated. Our secondary education system does not produce qualified workers except for service industry (unless the student attended a vocational or career center). Students with diplomas have to go one for further academic training in order to get a job.

The curriculum at high schools is more about appeasing the state education controlling authority than producing a workforce. If the curriculum fails to meet state requirements, the school district does not qualify for state subsidies. The curriculum is controlled by teachers without regard to the requirements of the workplace. If it were, we would see high school diplomas as the entry point into the workforce. At least in the Buckeye State, you will need a minimum of an associate's degree or certification (such as fire, EMT, police, welder, etc).

The other problem is fewer and fewer students get the support for academic studies at home. There a many reasons for this but it comes down to the student receiving little support or encouragement for their studies. Students aren't held back because this would cause the district to lose funding. Graduates then have to go for additional training and education to qualify for jobs.

I hope the Congresswoman's plan works but remain skeptical to injecting money into schools without regard to changing the curriculums will result in much a change.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

We seem to have forgotten the basics


The above picture is of the .45 Long Colt round. It represents the ammunition choice 19th Century soldiers, lawman and gunslingers had for their sidearms and rifles. Exactly one, the conical lead bullet. Whether it was .36, .40, .41, .44 or .45 all bullets were semi-rounded chunks of lead. No hollow points (or "dums dums" as they British would later invent), no copper jacketed liquid alloy core. No plastic sabot filled with #12 shot and liquid Teflon. No frangible rounds with tungsten coated projectiles. Just a hunk of lead.

There are countless gunslingers, cowboys, lawmen, native Americans, and others that met their fate as a result of a round piece of lead.

Movies and magazines have created all manner of data about the need for reliable expansion and one shot stopping power. You can pay more than double for a box of 20 high-tech rounds compared to a box of 50 non-high tech rounds.

These high tech rounds begin to take on the same ridiculous arguments as though to ask which is better, a 9mm or 45 ACP? What difference does it make if you don't hit your target or worse, leave your weapon at home. Hollow point or Hyrdo Shock? Doesn't matter if you miss. A full metal jacket will drop someone just as fast as a high-tech round if you hit the central nervous system. Hollow points don't expand that often due to clothing, barrel length and metal expansion so in effect you have just paid double for a round nose bullet. Save the cost and buy the ammunition that works best in your weapon and DOESN'T cost a fortune.

Rather than worry about the latest high-tech round, stick to the basics. Learn to shoot your weapon really, really well. John Dillinger was killed by a police office chasing him at full speed firing his .38 Special revolver. The officer placed three rounds into the back of Dillinger. Wild Bill Hitchcock killed Davis Tutt with a single shot from 75 yards away (think about that the next time you are feeling like a bad ass because you fired a 4 inch group at 25 feet).

The bullets did not matter, the shot placement did.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Boys pretending to be men


I picked Wilson and Vaughn for the pic but it could just as easily have been any other group of comedians. Truth in writing, I really enjoyed Wedding Crashers but I could not help but notice that they were too old to be acting like a couple of high school students.

Vaughn and Owens personify the 21st Century fascination with boy-men. Movies and pop culture show irresponsible, sophomoric behavior as deriguer. House MD for examples shows a brilliant physician who is addicted to Vicodin and regular engages in frat boy behavior without consequence. Such behavior in reality would have landed the dear doctor unemployed and quite possibly in jail.

The gangsta persona is nothing more than a bunch of immature males running around with guns, bling, drugs and hookers somehow or other passing for adult behavior.

I was reading some friends Facebook postings today and there is an effort to reduce bullying. The examples were that the girl who got called fat has an eating disorder. The boy who got called stupid now has a learning disorder. Please stop bullying. What I did not read was the story about the boy who got called stupid and ended up graduating magna cum laude. Or the fat girl that went own to run her own fortune 500 company. There are stories like that out there but we emphasize consensus building instead of strength.

Hence we are experiencing a generation of boy-men who contribute nothing back to society except their stupid antics. Kids are routinely kicked out of school for drawing pictures of guns. Why? How does kicking the kid out of school teach the kid anything except how to become alienated from society?

We've got to start allowing boys to grow into men and then hold them responsible for being men. Stupid, immature behavior should be labeled as such and not excused as "edgy". Imagine these boy-men dealing with the crisis in Japan or handling the Libyan army?

Thursday, March 3, 2011



I've started to re-watch the movies that shaped my views of the military. I begin with the Enemy Below. Even if you haven't seen this movie, its basic plot (two war-weary captains evenly matched try to out maneuver each other) has been redone in several TV series and movies (for the Trekkies out there, watch Kirk battle the Romulan captain).

I first saw "The Enemy Below" when I was still in grade school (probably 3rd or 4th grade). I was fascinated by the strategy each captain had to develop to try to survive. I also was intrigued by the mutual admiration they developed for their unseen opponent. It wasn't personal, it was just a job. I loved the espirit de coprs amongst the ships crews.

When I watched it again later in my 20s and 30s, I respected the fear both crews had knowing that one mistake by their captain could mean instant death. Yet they still executed their jobs despite the harrowing conditions. I like the different leadership styles of the captains. The destroyer captain was worldly and cool. He had two other boats shot out from under him. He recognized the talents his crew had (sonar man, the exec who had raced yachts, the engineers) and knew where he had a weakness (a green crew on the depth charges). He took it all in and made it work. The U-boat captain was an enigma even to his closest friend the first officer. His moods could shift from moody introspection to fiery passion. He could cower his crew with a scowl or help quell the fears of a suicidal crew mate with a fatherly talk.

Watching it again the other night, I saw all of the same elements but some new ones as well. Neither captain was especially thrilled about the war and viewed their duties as just doing their jobs. The U-boat captain was openly dismissive of one of his officers who was clearly a product of the Hitler Youth Corps. Today, the U-boat captain would be diagnosed with PTSD. He was fatalist and say his role as a warrior inevitably ending in his death (just as had happened to his two sons). The destroyer captain seemed motivated by the loss of his new bride (whom he got passage on his merchant freighter which was sunk) as well as an attempt to prove himself after losing his previous destroyer to a U-boat only weeks earlier. Neither of these back stories is particularly noble and seems to convey a message that only these kinds of men can excel at war. I don't know if this was the director or the one set in the book.

Now as a retied colonel looking back on my career I saw parts of myself in both captains. I identify with the U-boat captains suspicions of his government that their motives are only going to get you killed. I empathize with his weariness of war and how modern technology takes the "human" out of war (drones will never experience regret or PTSD). I identify with the destroyer captains self-confidence and calmness in doing his job. He the U-boat has the advantage and that the situation could easily go from bad (mono y mono) to horrible (encountering a German raider). He formulates a plan and carries it out while encouraging his crew and earning their respect at the same tim.

The final scene would never be shot today. We are too cynical and after being inundated with "reality" shows, cannot believe that two opposing captains would find any kind of respect. But that was the whole point of "The Enemy Below" is just that, at the end of the day it is about doing your job. Being a professional in your job, you recognize and can even admire your enemy.

Watch "The Enemy Below" to see how movies used to make you think and feel. And not one CGI or commercial placement to be seen.

Monday, February 28, 2011

The Great Swordfight of Sabratha


The old axiom, "Never bring a knife to a gunfight" is far from always correct.

On Friday afternoon 40 rebels brandishing 2ft swords and scimitars spearheaded a group of 1,000 men who clashed with army troops in Sabratha, a coastal town 40 miles west of Tripoli.

It made for a bizarre spectacle. While Colonel Gaddafi has the most modern of arms at his disposal, his civilians were relying on weaponry that hadn’t been used in anger since the days of Lawrence of Arabia.

Some said the swords belonged to their grandfathers in the First World War,’ said Egyptian waiter Mahmoud El Masri, who witnessed the fighting.

‘It was a crazy sight, all these swords being wildly swung in the main street. I was hiding in a cafe but I saw them connect with the soldiers and I heard blood was spilt.

‘The men with swords were at the front of the protesters, leading them. It scared me but they are brave to take on men with guns.’


Knives or swords are extremely lethal. They don't jam or require reloading. For those unfamiliar with knives or swords, you need to realize all parts can be used in an attack. The back of the blade can shatter bones or cracked skulls. A jab with the pommel can break ribs or knock the wind out of an opponent. Blades like the scimitar or bowie with a clip point allow the user to cut on both the down stroke as well as the back stroke. A single swing of a sword or long knife (such as a bowie or my favorite, the kukri) can injure multiple opponents.

Gunshot wounds are wicked and deadly but there is something even more psychologically devastating about seeing a human being filleted in front of your eyes. Watching body parts getting lob off can send even the most combat hardened troops packing in the opposite direction.

Does that mean I will be abandoning my H&K USP Compact in favor of my kukri? Well it depends. If I think I might need to engage a target at a distance, the H&K gets the nod. However, many times carrying a firearm can present other challenges. Hiking with an open carry firearm can cause fellow hikers some concern. However, no one seems concerned about a good field knife on your belt. If circumstances allow, I would carry both and then be able to employ the best solution.

Don't let the crap on the TV and Internet fool you. Edged-weapons are still lethal in the 21st Century and may be the option for defending yourself (or leading a revolution!)

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Kukris


If you have never owned a held a kukri, you don't realize what you are missing. Originally these were daily carry knives to hack through thickets, cut rope or firewood, and defend yourself against wild animals. The curve of the kukri actually pulls whatever you are cutting into the blade. Contrary to what a lot of people think, the kukri is not a head-chopper. It is primarily a cleaving weapon with an extremely thick spine. The blade can disembowel your enemy in a quick cut. The back of the blade can break bones or shatter skulls. While it may not look like it, you can stab with the kukri creating a huge, gushing wound that all the kings horses and all the kinds men won't be able to mend. Don't let its size fool you. In the hands of a skilled user, the kukri is wicked fast and damn near impossible to defend against. The blade on mine is 12 inches long. Even if the edge doesn't hit the sheer weight of the blade is like getting clocked by a small steel bat.

I own and train with other fixed blades and folders but the kukri is my favorite.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Eagle Sanctum

Okay, I'm up to 413 posts on my original blog at Losantiville. I started that blog back in Oct 2007 as a way of developing my thoughts for my classes at the college. Like all blogs, it took several different turns but it seems to have found its niche in world affairs and national defense (with occasional detours for homeland security and local politics).

Writing Losantiville has sharpened my observations on world affairs but also on the mundane. I note things around the college or just walking around my town. Those travels allow me to observe things that are interesting enough to write about but just don't seem to fit on Losantiville. I've dabbled with Facebook and Twitter but those platformslimiting. I like the free flowing thoughts I can create on a blog without limitation. Hence Eagle Sanctum was created to give me a place to share my other thoughts.

I was trying to come up with a name that spoke to what I will try to do here. I was a colonel which in the US military is symbolized by the eagle. As a senior officer, you sometimes needed to be alone with your thoughts (a sanctum if you will). Eagle Sanctum thus is a place for a retired colonel to reflect on my thoughts. No this will not turn into some moody, introspective monologue. I hope to write about some of my other interests here in Eagle Sanctum.

I have interests in shooting, cooking, self-defense, martial arts, and have discovered a passion for bourbon. Each of those topics have a number of subsets and tangents within them. I may ramble one day about the virtues of the Sig Sauer P220 and the next day wax about Van Morrison.