Letter Re: Cold Weather Patrol Tactics and Techniques

Dear JWR:
Regarding the recent Cold Weather Patrol Tactics and Techniques article, just one note about condensation prevention from bringing a cold weapon indoors. Packing or leaving a heavy duty garbage or similar bag outside and placing your weapon inside the bag can greatly reduce condensation from the indoor climate. Just place your weapon completely inside the bag. I like to compress the opening in my hand like a balloon opening and instead of blowing into this opening, I suck as much air out as I can with my lungs. If two or more deep inhalations are required to remove excess air after manual compression of the bag, remember to close your hand around the bag opening to avoid the bag expanding. Once you are satisfied you have removed as much air as possible, tie the opening very tightly with a rubber band, tape or the bag itself. I have found this technique to nearly eliminate all condensation on the weapon as the metal warms to ambient indoor temperature, but the plastic bag will have some moisture on the outside.

I do not recommend the usage of heavy duty compression or vacuum bags if the weapon is your first line defense arm. Unless these bags have a rapid way to open and extract your weapon, I prefer the tear-away and cheap garbage bags to allow rapid rearming when needed. However, as an aide to the air removal, I have seen the usage of small hand pumps and even a small battery powered air mattress inflator used in a reverse role. – J.G.

JWR Replies: That is a good suggestion. Of course, once a gun fully equalizes to room temperature, it should soon be removed from the bag, so that any trace of moisture doesn’t settle on the gun an induce rust.



Three Letters Re: How Your World View and Preparedness Mindset are Influenced by Your Eschatology

James:
Regarding the recent piece on eschatology and prepper Christian world views: We must suffer.

I’m not sure which is correct; post-trib, pre-trib, mid-trib, post-mil, whatever. But I know this: Some hold to pre-trib rapture simply because of an assumption that God won’t let His children suffer. But that turns a blind eye to the unmentionable suffering of Christians in the world today.

The Bible tells us to expect suffering: “Through many tribulations we must enter the kingdom.” (Acts 14:22) Peter said, “Do not be surprised at the fiery ordeal among you, which comes upon you for your testing, as though some strange thing were happening to you” (1 Peter 4:12). In other words it is not strange; it is to be expected. And Paul said (in 2 Timothy 3:12), “Indeed, all who desire to live godly in Christ Jesus will be persecuted.”

Two reasons to prepare anyway Two reasons it’s not foolish to prepare even if you are pre-trib: 1.) You might be mistaken on your interpretation of the Bible. Do not arrogantly assume you are correct about a topic for which there is considerable debate amongst intelligent, godly scholars (applies to post-trib as well). Such hubris will only harm people. I’m hoping the rapture happens before the tribulation and living as though it won’t. Hope for the best, prepare for the worst. 2.) These might not be the last days. Don’t assume that simply because many nations are headed for great difficulty that Christ is definitely coming. You’d have thought Jesus was coming any second during the last days of the Great Depression when the Dust Bowl consumed your food and Hitler was rising to power.

There are many reasons to think these days are indeed the last days. I’m 75% sure we’re in them. It’s the other 25% which bothers me: History is littered with great upheavals and all along they were sure it was the time to see Jesus. Even in Paul’s day they were saying it was the last days (2 Thessalonians 2).

Yet I’m 100% sure America will suffer great poverty within my lifetime — unless we have a mighty miracle. When we see winter coming we should prepare: “Four things on earth are small, but they are exceedingly wise: the ants are a people not strong, yet they provide their food in the summer…” (Proverbs 30:24,25 ESV)

Physically and spiritually James Rawles at SurvivalBlog.com is doing a great job teaching us how to physically prepare. One way to spiritually prepare is to start with many of the incredibly rich, free resources by Dr. John Piper. Start with the short videos, then listen to or read the other messages. Short video: America’s Ugly Exported “Gospel” Short video: Why Did the Bridge Collapse? Where Is God? (My favorite!) The Suffering of Christ and the Sovereignty of God , Don’t Waste Your Cancer,   Doing Missions When Dying Is Gain

Book that’s now free thanks to generosity: Suffering and the Sovereignty of God. (Both it and its study guide are free.).

More goodies: Essential Resources

The Bible can be deeply soul-satisfying in times of suffering, and I’m thankful for Dr. Piper’s work in exposing these truths.

Meditate on your Bible Much of the Bible is written for hard times, and up until now we’ve been living in Disney World so it hasn’t made as much sense. Half of the Psalms will pop off the page once things really start rolling. The writings surrounding the Babylonian capture are particularly applicable.

I suggest you start right now by reading Matthew 6:19-34 and Habakkuk 3:17-19 out loud. It seems to have a stronger effect when you read it out loud.

Also see Luke 12, the Psalms and Lamentations.

Memorize your Bible — with some excellent help I’m really bad at memorizing Scripture, but I’ve got some crutches which work wonders. David said, “I have stored up your word in my heart, that I might not sin against you.” (Psalm 119:11) (Yes, I wrote that from memory.) One day I was worried about the bee colony collapse disorder when Habakkuk 3:17-19 immediately popped into my head. I didn’t have to think, “What’s that verse about food?” It just immediately came to mind. The Spirit kept me from sinning by reminding me of a memorized passage.

I’ve got the “Hide the Word” CD series because I’m really bad at memorization. (Free samples here.) They definitely work, and are worth their weight in gold. You can also get Seeds Family Worship, the Glory Revealed CDs, and this free scripture memorization series. Also see Amazon’s and Google Shopping’s offerings. Worth their weight in gold!

Trust God. Oh that more Christians would trust God in hard times! He suffered more than any of us so He understands suffering (Hebrews 4:15).

He knows what we need before we ask (Matthew 6:8). He promised that if we seek first the Kingdom that food and clothing will be provided (Luke 12). George Mueller proved this with over 50,000 specific answers to prayer for specific needs.

One day He will deliver us from all suffering: “He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.” (Revelation 21:4 ESV) Amen! Come quickly Lord Jesus.

In summary, it’s wise to prepare for both physical and spiritual suffering, whether you are pre-trib or post-trib. Even if nothing happens you’ll still have goods left over to give to the needy. – C.D.V.

Dear B.H. in  North Central Idaho,
Your letter was well thought out and delivered and I agree with some of the statements you made.  However, I struggled with your claims on the eschatology of some of the religions you mentioned such as Mormons and Seventh Day Adventists.  Having many close friends in both those churches and knowing what they believe, I’m sorry sir, but they don’t meet the criteria you assigned to them.  There are far more believers outside of those churches, and considered more mainstream, that believe in the Rapture.  The last time I spoke to my Mormon and Seventh Day Adventist friends they were preparing for a long hard ride through the Tribulation or any other catastrophe that might befall us.  Many of them are doctors, medics, teachers, and community volunteers who are out there helping their fellow man just as you suggest and they are doing it now–not waiting for a TEOTWAWKI.  I know because I am in the emergency medical field and a community volunteer and that is where I met many of them.  Might I suggest that rather than focusing on our differences we might instead focus on what we do have in common so that we might work together for the good.  “Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to desolation, and  a house divided against a house falls. ” – Luke 11:17. Respectfully,- J.H. in Washington State

 

Mr. Rawles,
Regarding the recent article on SurvivalBlog entitled “How Your World View and Preparedness Mindset are Influenced by Your Eschatology”:

Some readers may be interested to know that all three books recommended by B.H. are available (digitally) for free on Dr. Gary North’s Freebooks page.



Economics and Investing:

Avalanche Lily spotted this: Report Card on Obama’s First Two Years. Those commodity inflation numbers look very troubling. What we are now witnessing is not so much commodities going up as it is the U.S. Dollar going down in purchasing power. If you haven’t done so already, then start shifting out of Dollar-denominated investments and into tangibles! Don’t overlook buying long term storage foods as both a hedge on inflation, and as a survival reserve for your family for times of scarcity.

Analyst Warns of 2015 Bank Crisis Amid ‘Upbeat’ Davos. “The fundamentals haven’t been addressed at all,” Wilkinson, a London-based partner at consulting firm Oliver Wyman, said in an interview at the Hotel Morosani Schweizerhof. “The things that caused the previous crisis — loose monetary policy and trade imbalances — they’re actually bigger now than they were then.”

B.B. sent us the link to the latest from the NIA: Americans Will Flock Into $5,000 Gold and $500 Silver

Our friends in Appenzell, Switzerland at The Daily Bell posted this: Central Banks Now Creating Hyperinflation?

Items from The Economatrix:

Bernanke Warns of Catastrophe if Debt Limit Not Raised  

Egypt Diverts Media Attention From US Economy  

GOP Plan Would Let States Go Bankrupt; Prospect Rocks Bond Market  

Bernanke Speech Helps Push Stocks Higher



Inflation Watch:

Companies Stock Up as Commodities Prices Rise. (This sort of hedging can of course start a snowballing effect.)

Why Global Food Price Inflation Really Matters  

Reader B.B. highlighted this: As World Becomes Zimbabwefied, Cotton Futures Surge 17% In One Month

Treasury TIPS: A Looming Disaster for Small Investors

Inflation ‘Higher Than Official Statistics Reveal’. (An interview with Marc Faber.)

Supermarket surprise: smaller servings, same price.

Bond Market Flashes Inflation Warning: Jump in U.S. Treasury yields signals market fear that Fed is behind the curve on prices



Odds ‘n Sods:

F.G. sent a link to some amazing photographs of the largest snow and ice storm to hit the U.S. in decades.

   o o o

Kayaker, 64, completes marathon paddle across Atlantic. (Thanks to Patrick T. for the link.)

   o o o

You may have heard of the documentary film “Far Out” that profiles Heimo and Edna Korth’s trapping family who live year-round in the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). The documentary is again available at VBS.tv.

   o o o

Reader “InyoKern” wrote to recommend the IMCO Windproof Lighter from Austria. These were originally known as the “Trench Lighter” and date back to WWI. InyoKern’s description: “It has the benefits of a Zippo but is lighter weight, quieter to operate, doesn’t leak, and the flame can be separated from the housing to light a stove or fire like a match. They sell for less than $12.”



Jim’s Quote of the Day:

“There is a difference between an ‘optimist’ and a fool. An optimist is somebody who looks at bleak facts and decides to make the best of the situation that they can. A fool is somebody who looks at bleak facts and decides to ignore them because they are too upsetting.” – Matt Savinar, Editor of Life After The Oil Crash



Letter Re: Planning for Training

Sir:
I noticed the great recent piece by B.D. on the importance of training. Here is a follow-up to that:

All too often as Americans we tend to focus first on the material side of things. That is, “I have to have the right gear to train with.” No, not necessarily.

Proverbs 1: The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge: but fools despise wisdom and instruction. Even for the non believers this is the best place to start when it comes to training and learning. A haughty spirit hinders proper learning. Unfortunately you see this all too often in training. Ego and pride issues in both men and women preclude many from getting the most they could get out of the instruction available to them.

Proverbs 15:33 says “The fear of the Lord is the instruction of wisdom; and before honor is humility.” Humility. Interesting word you rarely see in our day and age. We want to be so “proud” of all of our achievements and accomplishments. Yet Scripture teaches us that God “resists the proud” and brings Grace to the humble.

I can’t tell you how many times in the last 2 and 1/2 decades of training that I’ve seen people hampered by their pride and ego issues. Certainly I have not been immune to it at times also. Yet we don’t learn with a closed mind. Yes, those new ideas might seem odd to you. Yes, they might be different from what you learned 40 years ago in the military. Yes, they may be different than what the police academy taught you. That doesn’t mean they don’t work!

Don’t be afraid to “lose” in training. This one is going to be a real blow to the pride and ego’ites. You can afford to lose in training. Getting shot with a simmunition or plastic BB isn’t the end of the world. Getting knocked out or having to “tap out” to a choke isn’t the end of the world. Should you set out to lose? Obviously not! But my point is that it’s training and -with the proper attitude- training is about learning – not competing. That’s a different realm.

When you lose in training you should learn from that loss. Certainly their is going to be a “learning curve” with any new skill. Would you rather experience that learning curve in the gym or in the force-on-force shoot house or would you rather experience that “learning curve” out on the street in a real encounter?

However when your main concern is only winning, then often times you miss the important lessons being taught. Yes, some techniques you can “muscle through” with a smaller adversary. Often times when you fight someone your size or larger, that won’t work. Meanwhile you’ve missed learning how to properly work the technique because you did it your way. Here again- pride and ego issues.

In training, allow yourself to get into a bad position or situation just to practice getting out of it. How often do you start a force on force drill on your knees with the opponents Airsoft or Simmunition weapon pointed at your head? How often do you start hand-to-hand practice with your opponent in back mount with a choke already sunk in? Impossible situations? No, just really tough situations. This is where the person that doesn’t really want to face reality says “I’d never let myself get into that position in the first place.” Yep, you and the tens of thousands that have already experienced it. Yet limiting your training to only the “best possible scenario” is like saying “well it will never rain so I don’t need an umbrella.”  You need to know how to react in unpleasant situations like this. Like Sonny Puzikas, a renowned trainer says “you can either think that you know, or you can know.”

Training shouldn’t be easy or set up in such a way to make us “feel good about ourselves.” If your leaving your training sessions like that, I would submit to you that you need to bump it up a level. You should leave training saying “I need to work on (fill in the blank).” Now is the time to push yourself. Now is the time to get in shape. Now is the time to learn.

Back in high school I remember their was a lot of talk about “on the job training.” For us as survivalists, “on the job training” won’t always be an option. Learning how to most efficiently manipulate your weapon under fire is not very conducive to learning- or survival for that matter! For serious survivalists, we want to learn and experience as much as possible before hand to avoid “on the job training” during bad situations.

Good luck and good training! – Robert (from the Survival And Preparedness Forum)



Note from JWR:

Today we present another two entries for Round 33 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round include:

First Prize: A.) A course certificate from onPoint Tactical. This certificate will be for the prize winner’s choice of three-day civilian courses. (Excluding those restricted for military or government teams.) Three day onPoint courses normally cost $795, and B.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees, in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $392 value.) C.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $275 value), D.) A 250 round case of 12 Gauge Hornady TAP FPD 2-3/4″ OO buckshot ammo, courtesy of Sunflower Ammo (a $240 value), and E.) An M17 medical kit from JRH Enterprises (a $179.95 value).

Second Prize: A.) A Glock form factor SIRT laser training pistol. It is a $439 value courtesy of Next Level Training. B.) A “grab bag” of preparedness gear and books from Jim’s Amazing Secret Bunker of Redundant Redundancy (JASBORR) with a retail value of at least $300, C.) A $250 gift card from Emergency Essentials, and D.) two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value).

Third Prize: A.) A Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21. (This filter system is a $275 value.) , and B.) Expanded sets of both washable feminine pads and liners, donated by Naturally Cozy. This is a $185 retail value.

Round 33 ends on March 31st, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that articles that relate practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.



Shooting on a Shoestring, by John M.

Finding great self-defense weapons on a tight budget can be a challenge. There are tons of tactical weapons out there, but if you’re like a lot of us, the trick is finding something that you can afford.  If you’re one of those folks – this guide is for you.

Finding Your Gear

The used market is the place to look – prices are usually lower than retail.  Some states restrict advertising of certain kinds of used guns.  That makes it tougher, but not impossible to find stuff. 

Word of mouth and asking around (“know anybody that’s looking to sell something?”) can turn up leads.  Make friends in gun stores and get to know people. They’re often buying/selling/trading.

If advertising guns is unrestricted in your state, then pick up a local “shopper” advertising paper and/or check out the classifieds in the local newspapers.  Be persistent, be patient and when you find something you’re interested in, you can get on the ‘Net and check out the reviews.  An easy way to do that is to Google search the firearm you’ve got your eye on. [JWR Adds: I have found GunBroker.com, AuctionArms.com, and GunsAmerica.com to be excellent sources. The new GunListings.org page might also prove useful. To keep your gun buying both legal and private, at some of these web sites you can use an “Advanced Search” feature to limit your searches by State, and to only private seller listings. I strongly recommend that you buy only from private parties if that is legal in your locality. Of course consult your state and local laws first!]

If you’re not concerned about the paperwork involved with buying a firearm in a retail gun store, you’ll find that pawn shops and sporting goods outlets often stock used or consigned weapons at reasonable prices.  Some shops will let you try before you buy, or you can go to a commercial shooting range and rent guns that you’re interested in, before you lay down your cash.

A couple of thoughts about “paperwork” – the forms you fill out and the info you give whenever you buy a gun at a gun store. First, the government tells us that the info you give to get their permission to buy the gun (the instant criminal background check) is required by law to be destroyed.  Maybe they do, maybe they don’t – either way, you give them the info, fill out the Form 4473 and register yourself. The 4473 has to be surrendered to BATFE on demand, or when the store goes out of business.

Second, every gun that is sold retail for the first time, along with the buyer’s name, address, etc., is entered into BATFE’s E-trace system; and that is made available to any LEO or police department that subscribes to it.  In other words, you’re registered with your new gun. If that’s okay with you,then happy shopping!

Cheap Shotguns:

Shotguns are the definitive fight stopper. Devastating out to about 25 yards or so, there’s something inspiring about the sound of a 12 gauge racking a round into the chamber. The good news is, for $200 to $300 can find you a very serviceable gun. Tactical models, special finishes, stocks, and slings all raise the price quickly.

What you don’t want

Double barrels, single shots, and anything other than 12 or 20 gauge.  Double barrels look cool but they are slow to reload and only have (surprise!) two shots.  Singles go bang half as much and suffer from the same slow reload drawback.  Experts like Clint Smith of Thunder Ranch can make a single run almost like a semi-auto. But you ain’t Clint Smith.

What you do want

Late model guns from Remington, Mossberg, and Winchester are probably your best bet – The Remington 870, Mossberg 500 and Winchester 1300 all have their fans. The 870s I own have been completely reliable. Ditto my 1300.
Pump shotguns are plentiful on the used market.  They are relatively cheap, easy to use, reliable and have a stout kick.  When you shoot one – keep that in mind – it kicks.
Pumps are generally less expensive and finicky than semi-automatics. What to feed them? Another good debate topic (and oh, how gunnies love to argue!). To keep it simple, buy plenty of double ought buck for social work and bird shot (# 7 or 8) for practice. Bird shot is currently going for about 20 cents a round.
Shotgun shells in 12 or 20 gauge are common now and will likely be easier to find than any other gauge when the stuff hits the fan. I know .410s are popular, especially among the Taurus Judge 5 shooter crowd and the derringer community.  To me, it’s still a boutique round. But, you pays your money and takes your choice.  I’ll take a 12 or a 20, thanks.

Rifles:

A rifle, effectively used, is usually the best thing to take to a gun fight. For our purposes, we are only looking for a semi-automatic military type rifle. Why?
Good ones can still be had for cheap and they offer a level of durability and reliability far beyond their low price. Military weapons are built tough for a tough job – warfare. That translates into a tough dependable weapon in any situation – always an advantage.
Bolt actions are less desirable because of a lower rate of fire compared to a semi-automatic. Should you get into a firefight, you want to have all the firepower you can muster.
On the other hand, bolt actions like the Russian Mosin Nagant can be found for less than $200, and they fire a potent 7.62×54 round.  They also may have an accuracy advantage.
There are few affordable semi-auto military rifles on the open market for less than $400.  Except the venerable SKS.  The SKS come with a WWII-style wood stock (no “fancy-smancy” black plastic stuff on these), a crude (but effective) safety that blocks the trigger, usually some kind of canvas olive drab sling and a 10-shot magazine. If you were only going to own one rifle, this one is worth serious consideration. Developed in Russia in 1944, it enjoyed a short life as a front line battle rifle and was replaced three years late

r with the AK-47.  SKSes were then used by nearly all the old Soviet bloc countries, other communist countries like China, and client states like Vietnam and Cuba.  It is still used in insurgencies around the world. Capable of firing 10 rounds of 7.62×39 ammunition (roughly the same ballistics as a 30-30 round), they are loaded by inexpensive stripper clips or one at a time.  It is reliable as a quartz watch, virtually unbreakable, cheap to feed, easy to maintain (it can be, like most army guns, disassembled without tools), reasonably accurate and common on the market.

The AK-47 beats the SKS in firepower (30+ rounds versus 10).  It is lighter, faster to reload (mags versus stripper clips), and in military guise, has full auto capability. It is renowned as one of the most reliable (read, unbreakable) rifles in the world. The good news is that both are commercially available in the US (the AK being a semi-automatic only here). But the AK is a good deal more expensive – $600 and up. In contrast, I was recently able to find a couple Chinese SKS’s for $175 each.
The 7.62×39 round has been used to harvest deer and other medium game. SKSes are sufficiently accurate with standard sights to take game out to about 150 – 200 yards. At this writing it is runs about 27 cents a round. Cheap enough to practice with.
The stripper clip can be a very fast way to reload the rifle, assuming you practice and have a strong thumb. 
In short, if you’re looking for a powerful, multi-use, affordable, tough rifle, the SKS is the one to beat.

Beyond the SKS, prices go north. Next in line, price wise, might be an AK copy – variants sell under different designations. For example, a desirable used Mak 90 (a 1990s Chinese AK, stamped receiver, sporter AK with an awful looking thumbhole stock) can be had for $500 – $600. If you can afford one, go for it.
AR-15 clones, M1s, M-14s, FALs, FNs, etc., will cost you more. There are better rifles, but there are none at a better price point than an SKS.  At the end of the day – all of them go bang when you pull the trigger.  Nobody I know wants to stand in front of one!

Mini-14s

Loved and hated, the Ruger Mini-14 has been around since the 1970s and it is a durable semi-auto that has controls like Garand type rifles of yore (the M1 and the M14), [but uses a short-stroke gas piston like an M1 Carbine]. It shoots the ubiquitous .223 round and it is worthy of consideration to anyone wanting a .223 fighting gun. They can be found around $500 on the used market.

Older Mini-14s (serial number 180,XXX and up) are known for their reliability and their fair to poor accuracy – 7 inch groups at 100 yards aren’t uncommon. On the other hand, that level of accuracy in a combat gun is acceptable and not much worse than the SKS or the vaunted AK-47s. Later models have had mixed reviews and are reported to be more finicky about magazines. A common fix is to use factory Ruger magazines exclusively.
Newer models (with serial numbers above 581,XXX) are claimed to be more accurate and reliable.
Mine run consistently and hit with acceptable accuracy – even though they’re 30 years old. An advantage I’ve found with mine is that they shoot steel case Russian .223 happily.  A lot AR-15s don’t.  In a survival situation, it would be an advantage to have a rifle that will digest whatever ammo you have or acquire. Finally, Mini-14s are low maintenance and easy to field strip – without tools. That’s a plus in unpredictable circumstances.

A final thought on rifles: When the curtain goes down on the good times, 7.69×39 and .223 ammo will then, as now, probably be around in quantity.

Handguns:

Handguns are easily concealed and easily used in a self-defense situation. Most gunfights take place at close range and this is where handguns do their best work.
I am a Glock shooter.  I love ‘em.  I also love 1911s (usually Colts – older models), and good Smith & Wesson revolvers (.44 Magnums are still “the most powerful [widely produced] handgun in the world” for this Dirty Harry fan!).  Why do I love Glocks?  I bought my first one in the late 1980s and it’s never let me down. Recently I completed an intense three-day shooting school – over a thousand rounds down range and not a single failure, not one, nada – that from my old Glock 17, the one I got in the 1980s.  They are ugly, they run, and they are accurate. They are also light, easy to conceal, clean, maintain, and nearly rust-proof. What’s not to love?
Used ones turn up in the paper at around $500. 

If you are one an even tighter budget, the how about a used P85 or P90 series Ruger 9mm?  $375.  Mine has been running since around 1985.  Sure it’s big.  Sure it’s ugly.  But it’s accurate and reliable.

Used Beretta 92s (civilian version of the Army’s official M9 sidearm) are around for $400.  Does it run? Yes.  Accurate?  Yes. Easy to maintain?  Absolutely. Remember that that 9mm ammo is relatively inexpensive and ubiquitous.

Before you turn your nose up at 9 millimeter pistols, remember we’re doing this on a budget.  Are there better calibers?  Probably.  But none cheaper to practice with.  There are excellent self-defense 9mm bullets available as well, which make the 9mm a serious combat gun. For the money, they are hard to beat.

Final Thoughts

The most important thing you can do after you get your gun is learn how to run it well – that includes safe handling and good marksmanship.  Good training will help you hone both. If you can’t afford training, consider one of the excellent training books by masters like John Farnam, Jeff Cooper, or Massad Ayoob.  There are some great training DVDs available for rent at Smartflix.  The advantage to DVDs is you get to see the tactics and techniques in action. [JWR Adds: Also take advantage of low cost training at the Appleseed Shoots.]

Weapons don’t make you a master.  You have to master your weapon.  While you might not have the latest tacticool gun, experts say that marksmanship is largely a matter of practice and good trigger control – regardless of your equipment.  As Clint Smith says, “Use what you got!” – J.M.



How Your World View and Preparedness Mindset are Influenced by Your Eschatology, by B.H. in North Central Idaho

A few weeks back a young reader asked a question about preparedness and the coming tribulation.  I was surprised that you left out a third option in your response.  I tried to write a quick note but soon realized a comprehensive response or article was warranted.  So here it is.

Since the Second Great Awakening (a time of spiritual revival and activity) in the 1830s the Christian Church has embraced the theology of Pessimism.  This time of revival saw a clear shift in end times belief or eschatology.  The traditional and historical view of the Church was of Dominion Theology which is quickly making a strong return today through the Reformed Christian Movement.  Let’s explore both thoroughly so we can understand how one’s position of eschatology will ultimately define their world view and preparedness mindset.

In the 1830s, the spiritual culture in America was in upheaval and change.  Concurrently we saw the rejection of Dominion Theology and the movement to Theology of Pessimism.  Likewise, we saw the emergence of the Church of Jesus Christ and the Latter Day Saints (LDS), Jehovah’s Witnesses (JW) and Seventh Day Adventist Church (SDA).  Coincidentally, all four now rely heavily upon Biblical speculation, new or post-Biblical prophecy and focus heavily on end times topics for weekly liturgy or rely heavily on apocalyptic content for their church identity.  We also saw the introduction of humanism at  the pulpit and in worship explaining today’s flowery and repetitiously-hypnotic songs of worship which lead people to see Jesus as a “Therapist in the Sky” (self-focused worship like Two Footprints in the Sand” rather than the Conquering King of everything.)  Dominion Theology uses Psalms for it’s majority of worship music.  The idea being that the Psalms are songs written by a warrior about God’s strong nature and Dominion of creation.  Plus, singing God’s own words back to Him in worship seems to make a lot of sense.

The commonality between the modern mainstream church, LDS, JW and SDA is the prophetic interpretation.  Its highly speculative without using standard rules of hermeneutics, historical imperative or Biblical interpretation (using the Bible to interpret the Bible).  They all include some form of Theology of Pessimism.  Why do I call it the Theology of Pessimism?  Because that is exactly what happens when you embrace that eschatology.  Let me explain.  If I were a youth football coach and I walked into the locker room and yelled at the kids every day telling them…”your nothing, you stink, you will never be a winner, your going to go out and get your butt kicked every day, we may win the game at the very end but your going to lose the 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th quarters.”  What kind of team do you think I would field?  Exactly.  A team with the understanding that no matter what it does it will lose, be irrelevant, be persecuted and tried and eventually need a “life raft” called the rapture to whisk them away to safety before the real bad stuff happens.  Wow!  What a message.  Come on people-come join the losing team.  Christ died for us but let’s be a bunch of loser’s and be Satan’s doormat together! 

The Pessimism plays out in our world view and culture.  This is the exact reason the Christian Church of today is vastly impotent and useless in affecting our culture for Christ and has no cause for impacting future generations.  Why would someone be interested in a two to three generational plan of action when they continually are looking to the sky for an exit.  The modern church has a lack of generational  purpose and is waiting for the “Mother ship” to come take her away so why bother with high standards or pursuits in great education, pursuit of cultural victory by making good wholesome movies and music, art, government, a clear lack of generational mindset of positive change in our communities and culture for the long-term—all missing because of pessimism.

Furthermore, this subsequently manifests itself in our prepping.  We now focus inwardly on individual and family prepping at the expense of the world around us.  We have recently experienced this mindset first hand where the local Christian community is so inwardly focused in can soon be described as incestuous or inbred in its nature with a refusal to anchor or be a pillar of Christian action in the daily culture of our community.

Do you want to just survive or thrive?  Do you want to see hard or troubled times as the end of times or the opportunity to move the gospel forward and advance our Christian culture back to where it was in the days of old?  Are you prepping to be a self-sufficient island, hoping to outlast the looter carnage or are you planning with other preppers to be ready for commerce and trade?  To profit from the coming hard times by creating wealth and providing an avenue for a large hungry labor pool to create stability and peace or the opposite?

I pointedly say to Mr. Rawles that he has been a great leader in waking people up to the need to prepare but there seems to be a general focus upon isolation rather than a direct plan within a small town infrastructure.  My belief is to be in the small town setting, just outside or close enough for walking.  This way one can be active with the town marshal, help organize the churches, organize and improve farmer’s market, create relationships and networks that will be ready to weather the storm.  Fact—we will need other people, that stinks.  Guess what?  We sin and they sin and all the other mess that goes with it is exactly where God wants us.  All the folks who are removed by distance and geography will soon regret it when fuel is too expensive or valuable to burn just so they can get to a market to get something they need.  Their well-planned retreat becomes an island of exile from community, commerce and fellowship.

Therefore, my position is that Dominion Theology is the organic world view of Christianity and the most appropriate world view for prepping.  Dominion Theology states that Christ is King, has dominion over all of creation, He is sitting on the throne and will not get up until His enemies are made His footstool (complete cultural and political dominion).  It also believes that the Book of Revelation means what it says when it was written for the early church (tribulation warning for churches of Asia minor in regards to Nero) and that prophecy was fulfilled and closed in A.D. 70 with the great harlot being destroyed and the Jewish temple de-constructed in Jerusalem (just as Jesus said).  We are now in the Church Age or millennium and that the “1,000 years” was not literal but symbolic of many generations.

Instead of trying to convince you with a lengthy dissertation, I will just recommend three books and throw out a clear challenge to do some study. The first book is to gain clear understanding of Biblical language and themes starting with Creation and ending with Revelation.  David Chilton’s “Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion” does just that.  Next is to gain a clear understanding of Revelation and how Biblical themes, Jewish symbolism, worship themes and New Testament references lead us into a clear understanding of Revelation and not a disjointed and far-fetched speculation or fiction of end times.  I believe that David Chilton scored a scholarly victory with “The Days of Vengeance: An Exposition of the Book of Revelation.”

The final and most difficult to find book is Dr. Kenneth L. Gentry’s  “He Shall Have Dominion: A Postmillennial Eschatology (Third Edition: Revised & Expanded) ”–which has yet to be scholarly answered by the theological scholars of today.  The likes of Dallas Theological Seminary and others have been convincingly silent and can’t or won’t respond to the clear and definitive work by Gentry.  The Christian church made a left turn in the 1830s and its time to get back on track.  So the challenge is to read these and not be convinced of the falsity of Dispensational Pre-millennialism. 

In closing, why is this important to prepping?  It determines your world view and your prepping focus.  I say it is a mistake to “hunker down” in your remote retreat for several reasons.  Being close (walking distance) to a small town allows one to be influential in town politics, community activity and supportive of local commerce.  Also, it allows Christian fellowship in mature and formal settings. Specifically, when things go to Schumer and fuel is over $10/gallon you’ve just removed yourself from influence and positive activity if you live a long way out.

Do you have a plan to help organize local churches to feed, clothe, commune and minister to locals who will be looking for leadership?  Have you segregated yourself from them hoping they feed upon each other, thus limiting your charity to the the scarecrows that crawl by so you only have to give “until it hurts”?  In the Book of Acts the commitment was clear and complete. Do we consider charity limited to materials goods or does it include your time and energy?  As Christians, do we deny the employment of fellowship as charity just because we risk bodily harm being away from the retreat?  “Feed the poor” Jesus says. but modern survivalism says each to their own with a little for charity if they can make it past the killing time.  I say that is the wrong approach.

Yes, beans, bullets and Band-Aids for your family.  But a plan to be ready in the small town you influence will keep the hordes away from your property, maximize efficiency of charity, allow for pooling of resources and labor and set the stage for commerce, profit and thriving.  Rothschild said,  “When there is blood in the streets—buy!”  The clear message is to be ready for opportunity and use it for generational victory and not a temporary patch until the mother ship arrives.  Christianity isn’t “Calgon take me away”- (an old soap commercial) but is “Freedom!”– (Mel Gibson from Braveheart)

Gloria Deo, – B.H. in North Central Idaho



Letter Re: Tips on Wild Food Foraging

Jim:
I just wanted to add a note to a well-written article. In addition to wild plant collection, I would seriously look to ornamental plants in the landscape as sources of both edible foods and medicinal plants. I currently work at a botanic garden and have been identifying and eating wild plants as well as ornamental ones for more than 20 years. I also teach plant identification.

As your article points out, season is everything. I am confident that I could walk into the woods from May through September and probably not starve to death. Late Fall and Winter are different. However, I could survive for a much longer period eating the plants that have been planted throughout the neighborhood. While most were planted for their ornamental qualities, they also have edible or medicinal qualities.

Plants such as crabapples, serviceberries, barberries, roses, certain dogwoods, and a few dozen different perennial flowers are all sources of food that should be considered.  

As for the “yuck” factor that your friends have, it has been my experience that some people will never eat anything unless it comes from a grocery stand, or is prepackaged food. They have been so conditioned to believe that anything that has not been washed is going to make them sick. Most will not even give some of these plants a little taste. Or worse, some believe that it is beneath them to even try. If the Schumer hits the fan like a lot of the predictions out there, I can assure you there will be a quick, steep learning curve as to which plants you can do what with. Many will get sick, and some will die from eating the wrong plant or berry. Experimenting with the wrong plant can be deadly. And if you need food now, just walking into the woods with a book to start to learn how to identify which plants are good to eat and which will kill you will only accomplish a slower rate of starvation for yourself at best. Start learning how to identify them now. Learn where certain plants like to grow. Scout out your neighborhood and see where the best trees, shrubs, and flowers are at.

Learn how to use these plants. And most importantly, understand that “Edible” does not mean “good to eat”. “Edible” means you will not flop over dead if you do consume it. – Dan D. Lion



Letter Re: Buy It Wholesale–Free Food Now and Free Food Later

Mr. Rawles

Thanks for posting the article “Buy It Wholesale–Free Food Now and Free Food Later”. It has given me much to think about. It also introduced me to Restaurant Depot. I discovered that they had a store an hour drive from me. Their on-line sale flyer showed that they had boneless skinless chicken thighs for just $0.85 per pound in a 40 pound carton. I can report that 40 pounds of chicken make 18 quarts of canned chicken. I canned it mostly in pint jars since there are just two of us. This is far less expensive than commercially canned chicken.

Everything the author said about the place is true. They have an amazing selection. I am sure we will make them one of our regular suppliers. Thanks, – R.A.



Letter Re: Multi-Lens Eyeglasses Sets

James,

I have a concern with the recently mentioned “Multi-Lens TEOTWAWKI Vision System“. I have not been able to find anything where they ask for a person’s pupillary distance (PD). This is necessary to ensure the optical centers of the lenses align with the wearer eyes properly. If you have ever looked through a binoculars that were dropped and had the the internal optics misaligned that will give you an idea of what misaligned optical centers can do. A way to measure your PD is discussed here.

People purchasing that kit should be aware that they may not work for them if the lenses are designed for their particular PD. This is more likely to be an issue with the higher powers than with the lower powers. I would advise them to try them as soon as they get them. If they can’t wear them for a day without eye strain of if they cause any double vision then they will not be of much help and should be returned.

I’d also like to mention that if you want to get your PD from your eye doctor ask them before the exam. Contrary to the link posted and this video it is usually recorded when fitting the glasses, not during the eye exam. – Eye Doc in Indiana



Economics and Investing:

Darin H. flagged a blog piece by Chris Martenson: How long can the party in stocks last?

Several readers mentioned this new video from Future Money Trends: Gold This Decade.

Jim Rickards on Reserve currency, hot money and global food price inflation. (Thanks to David W. for the link.)

Items from The Economatrix:

Stocks Shrug Off Mixed Unemployment Reports  

Unemployment Falls to 9%, Lowest Since 2009  

Regulators Shut Three Small Banks; 14 Failures in 2011  

Why You Should be Buying Gold as the Fed Prints Money  

Jim Rogers:  Obama is Ruining America  



Odds ‘n Sods:

Directive 21 now offers Emergency Seed Banks, which each have 37,000 heirloom seeds that are non-GMO and non-hybrid (open pollinated).

   o o o

Eric H. found an incognito and space saving storage idea

   o o o

Reader Michelle J. recommended a site with maps and other geological information called Anyplace America. Michelle says: “It’s free, printable, and there are over a million different geological features that you can sort by feature, city, county, et cetera.”.