The Prepper Broadcasting Network - Matter of Facts: How Hard Could It Be?
Episode Date: January 13, 2025http://www.mofpodcast.com/www.pbnfamily.comhttps://www.facebook.com/matteroffactspodcast/https://www.facebook.com/groups/mofpodcastgroup/https://rumble.com/user/Mofpodcastwww.youtube.com/user/philrabh...ttps://www.instagram.com/mofpodcasthttps://twitter.com/themofpodcasthttps://www.instagram.com/cypress_survivalist/https://www.facebook.com/CypressSurvivalistSupport the showMerch at: https://southerngalscrafts.myshopify.com/Shop at Amazon: http://amzn.to/2ora9riPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/mofpodcastPurchase American Insurgent by Phil Rabalais: https://amzn.to/2FvSLMLShop at MantisX: http://www.mantisx.com/ref?id=173*The views and opinions of guests do not reflect the opinions of Phil Rabalais, Andrew Bobo, Nic Emricson, or the Matter of Facts Podcast*This week's episode includes a brief run through some current events followed by a wide-ranging discussion about various gun topics. If you ever thought shooting and handling firearms was a simple thing, follow along while the boys try to complicate the Hell out of it.Matter of Facts is now live-streaming our podcast on our YouTube channel, Facebook page, and Rumble. See the links above, join in the live chat, and see the faces behind the voices. Intro and Outro Music by Phil Rabalais All rights reserved, no commercial or non-commercial use without permission of creator prepper, prep, preparedness, prepared, emergency, survival, survive, self defense, 2nd amendment, 2a, gun rights, constitution, individual rights, train like you fight, firearms training, medical training, matter of facts podcast, mof podcast, reloading, handloading, ammo, ammunition, bullets, magazines, ar-15, ak-47, cz 75, cz, cz scorpion, bugout, bugout bag, get home bag, military, tacticalÂ
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Welcome back to the Matterfacts Podcast on the Prepper Broadcasting Network.
We talk prepping, guns, and politics every week on iTunes, Stitcher, and Spotify.
Go check out our content at mofpodcast.com on Facebook or Instagram.
You can support us via Patreon or by checking out our affiliate partners.
I'm your host, Phil Ravele.
Andrew and Nick are on the other side of the mic, and here's your show.
Welcome back to the MatterFacts Podcast.
I am setting a challenge for you, me, and Andrew
this freaking summer on that patron trip to get some pictures and some
video of the three of us so we can redo this intro and all
three of the hosts be represented
in it for a chance for a change we can do that yeah well i'll also appoint my wife the photographer
videographer because i universally suck at taking pictures and all that when i'm like trying to live
in the moment and yeah i don't know women's brains multitask better than men's and any man that wants
to fight me on that that assertion you're welcome to,
but my sample size of two being me and my wife has proven in my mind,
my wife multitask better than I do.
Absolutely.
Anyway,
let's do the admin work super,
super quick patrons.
Thank you for supporting the show.
You keep the show running.
You keep it from being a financial burden upon me,
which allows me to do without getting killed by my wife.
And I appreciate that greatly.
And also, if you're a patron and you're not in the signal chat and you don't check
Patreon very often, you might have likely missed the announcement that the matter of
fact summer camp is going to be going on this summer, June 20.
This is what happens.
The week of the 23rd. I think it's the week of the 23rd.
I think it's the week of the 23rd.
23rd through the 26th.
We already have our reservation made from June 23rd leaving June 27th to start heading out of there.
So it's going to be up in Michigan.
Lake Carp, which is like right a bridge ride across from the UP on the south side of
Michigan. If you are, if you're in the Michigan area or you don't mind making a trip, we'd love
to invite you out there. It's patrons only. So if you're not a patron, you should be. I'm not mad
at you. I'm just a little disappointed. But anyway, so you can, if you're in the signal chat,
you should already be aware of this. If you're not, you can send me a message through Patreon or you can just check the post because I'm 99% sure I posted information there.
And if you're not on Patreon, those links show in the show description for you to get to it.
I think it got emailed out to the patrons as well through the Patreon.
Yeah.
that's why I try to make those announcements through Patreon just because,
you know,
it,
it,
it's so much nicer than me trying to manage like an email mailing list,
which list,
which I am guaranteed to screw up completely.
Oh yeah,
absolutely.
So merch,
there are t-shirts,
there are koozies,
there are, I believe coffee cups.
Yes,
not.
And that's on me.
The link's in the show description.
Southern Gals Crafts is managing all of our merch.
If you'd like to support the show and support a small business,
you can check that.
And Cypress Survivalist, my wife and I's nonprofit,
has officially announced that our first event will be March 8th
in Mandeville, Louisiana, which is southeast Louisiana.
The Instagram and the Facebook,
those links are in the show description.
That's probably the best way to stay apprised of news.
If you're interested in coming out
and getting to meet me and my wife
and sitting around for like six to eight hours
with some like-minded people
and learn some stuff you might find interesting,
you should check that out.
And if you're brand new to the idea of preparedness or readiness,
I highly encourage you to come out because I'm going to do my best to get you to
drink from a fire hose for about eight hours. Just to try to
get you some information and get you to start thinking about this wide
wonderful world of not letting the world screw you over at the drop of a hat.
Okay, four minutes, 30 seconds. wonderful world does not let the world screw you over at the drop of a hat. Okay.
Four minutes, 30 seconds.
At a bare minimum,
I'll probably trip over my words
and make a complete jerk of myself at least once.
It'll be at least comedic, if nothing else.
Sounds like a good time.
Okay.
Less than five minutes.
Admin work is done.
We've got a couple little topics and then we're going to get into,
I would say the big topic being the big topic isn't a big topic,
but you know,
California is on fire right now,
which seems to happen.
Yeah.
This seems to happen with somewhat regularity every year or two.
Yeah. happen yeah this seems to happen with somewhat regularity every year or two yeah um there's so much being said right now in social media land about like the causes for this fire or what
precipitated it i don't even want to dig into all that what i really want to focus on is like
i have opinions oh i have plenty of too. Would you like to get into the
opinions? No, no, we can save that. We can save that. That will get us on a tangent of all tangents.
Yes. But I did want to just talk about like, you know, kind of like our end of this, which is like,
how do you deal with this kind of situation? Because like we down here in Southeast Louisiana
had some issues
with a marsh fire a couple of years ago, which was ripping through a bayou, not far from where I live.
And you know, there's, this is a podcast that largely centered around the idea of preparedness.
So like, how do you deal with, to me, how you deal with a fire is a lot the same,
how you deal with like a flood. There is no preparedness you are going to conduct
to survive a wildfire or a flood.
There's nothing you're going to do.
Well, no, no.
Let me get this thought out.
Go ahead.
What I'm saying is that in the sense that most people think about this,
they think about like to get ready for this. I need to buy this.
I need to learn this.
I need to do this ahead of time.
None of that matters for a wildfire or a flood because your shelter is now not feasible.
If it's a wildfire and it burns your house down, there's nothing you're going to do to make your house not burn down.
Well, there are ways you can mitigate the risk for sure.
I mean, there's, you know, we talked about it when we talked about home improvement
preparedness, changing the landscape around your house to minimize the burnable material
near your dwelling or near your garage.
I mean, there are things you can do.
There are emergency fire suppression systems that they're putting on houses out in california but they are in a large part cost prohibitive um yeah
landscaping is relatively cheap in that all you need is a chainsaw and a can-do attitude to get
rid of all the burnable things near your house but your wife might not like you just chainsawing
all of the bushes.
Or if you live in a neighborhood,
especially with an HOA,
that may not be feasible.
That was your first mistake.
Yeah,
I don't disagree with that.
HOAs were invented by Satan and I will die on that.
They were invented by racists to keep minorities out of nice neighborhoods.
That's what they were invented by and for.
They're a terrible thing.
Yeah,
exactly.
There's no redeeming qualities to an hoa in my opinion but look hey regardless of what started this fire you're right phil the the only way to handle a fire of this size and this
intensity is to leave is to not be there when the fire gets to you and to leave early enough that you don't get trapped on the road or trapped by
the fire jumping a highway you know yeah so digging into this like the two questions the
two things i wanted to pose to everybody and this is not just wildfires this is wildfires this is
floods to a degree this is also like hurricanes these are things you you know we're coming
towards you not things not like a tornado that just pops up and says,
yeah,
AO.
And then shows up all of a sudden tornadoes.
You have minutes of warning floods.
You tend to have hours,
fires and hurricanes.
You tend to have hours,
sometimes days.
Yeah.
But my first question,
everybody's always,
is your position defensible,
which I mean,
and what I mean by that is I was watching,
um, I think it might've been last year, actually, a Wranglestar who's here on YouTube.
And he's fairly well known in the preparedness survivalist community.
He had a wildfire chewing through his area.
Now he lives way out in the middle of nowhere.
He has a huge swath around his property that is clear.
huge swath around his property that is clear unless and i think even he went into this because he was he was putting out lots of content during those wildfires but he pretty much was saying
that unless a piece of hot ash blew up out of the wood line and landed on his roof the likelihood
of his house burning was minimal and he had put things into place to include, like you said, removing combustible
materials and, you know, like preparing his home for exactly this kind of scenario that
made that position, his home, a much more defensible position than if you have a tree
hanging over your garage.
Because if the fire gets that far, it's getting to your house.
There's no way to stop it at that point.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
So the first question I always tell people is, is your position defensible?
This is the same reason why I encourage people to look at elevation maps down here in South
Louisiana. When they look, when they start home buying, I want to know how, what elevation your
house is at and what's the elevation of everything around you. Because my house is 21 feet above sea
level, which sounds hilarious to everybody until you realize that's three feet from the highest point on this side of town.
So I'm on high ground.
I have a much lower likelihood of flooding where I'm at.
Not impossible, less likely.
So I'm willing to roll the dice in a lot of situations where if you live in a low lying area that's flooded a lot, you probably should not risk it and say,
no, we're not sticking around for this.
High chance of flooding, let's go ahead, pack up,
and move to an elevated position.
That makes sense.
And the other question is, what's your red line?
Because in a situation where your options are bug in, bug out,
you always have to have preconceived what your red line is.
At what point
is this no longer worth trying to ride this out where we're at? And I don't feel like that's
something you decide in the moment. That's not something you think about in the middle of the
emergency. You should kind of like pre-plan this and be like, for hurricanes, my wife and I have
said in the past, if it's a Cat 3, we're probably not staying here.
It's not that we couldn't ride it out, just why?
Why be here to deal with it? When we could leave,
we could come back and pick up the pieces
afterwards. If it's a Cat 1...
The damage to your house is going to be the damage to your house, whether you're
there or not. Yeah.
But a Cat 1,
is it really worth
it for what is going to amount to
a really seriously histrionic thunderstorm?
And we,
we deal with those.
Honestly,
we get straight line winds that aren't much less than a tropical storm down
here.
It just happens.
Yeah.
Right.
Very regularly.
Yeah.
But you have to decide what's your red line.
Like if the fire gets within how many miles of my home,
at what point do I say we're pulling the plug?
We need to have our bags packed.
We need to load up the car and we need to leave because what i was seeing today on social media was lines and
lines and lines of people lined up at gas stations lined up at electric charging stations everyone
trying to fuel up and charge up their vehicles to get out of the area when like you can see the smoke in the distance.
And that is terrifying to me to think that like you're,
you're going to be stuck on the road in a vehicle with no shelter.
And that,
that is coming at you.
Yeah.
You know,
you bring up the elevation where you're at and I just had to look mine up
because I've never actually really looked at this house.
It's 932 feet above sea level.
Now, well, but that said, there is a creek running through my yard and the hill that my neighborhood is on is a water bearing hill.
So when we get rain, I get flooding.
So when we get rain, I get flooding.
Now, granted, where the creek is in my yard is about 30, yeah, between 25 and 30 feet below the entry level of my house and therefore about 20 feet below the basement of my house.
But being that it's a water bearing hill and that water level can come up or down quite dramatically in those in i basically live on a big glacial deposit so all the gravel and sand water can move through that pretty easy
pretty quickly well you can have it come up you know sometimes five six feet and a good rainstorm
in like the groundwater table so knowing that and keeping an eye on those those uh flood stages in places around me
i know when i need to be more diligent about checking my basement just to prevent damage to
the house but also when i need to be more uh proactive about debris clearing in the creek line
so we don't get a backup and a natural dam forming and flooding out most of my
most of my property yeah which reminds me like that's something that my neighborhood specifically
deals with because we very obviously have a culvert that is plugged because the very front
of the neighborhood like probably about 150 yards that direction that street floods if you spit on the sidewalk right and those ditches retain
water on just on one side of the road retain water for sometimes four or five days after a good rain
interesting now my side of the neighborhood we like a block away we drain into the main ditch
and if the water moves through here just fine it's only at that end of the neighborhood where
it's lower where it's older.
One of the culverts is very obviously collapsed.
Sure.
I told my wife on more than one occasion, if it was me living down there and my house was at risk of getting flooded out every time it rained, I don't think I'd be waiting around for the parish to deal with it.
I'd have got some friends together.
We'd have figured something out by now.
But neither here nor there.
Yeah.
I mean, if you've got collapsed culverts,
there's not really much you can do, especially if they're under the road.
I mean, this one runs parallel to the road,
so it just runs underneath somebody's driveway.
Oh, well, that's their responsibility to fix, and that's why they haven't.
Yeah, well, regardless, you know, court exists for a reason.
It does, and when that inevitably causes property damage to your neighbors, Well, regardless, you know, court exists for a reason.
It does.
And when that inevitably causes property damage to your neighbors, the neighbors are going to come after the city and the city is going to say, oh, that's this guy.
And then the insurance companies are going to chase that guy.
But those are the two things I look at.
I think about when I start talking, we start talking about wildfire season.
Like it's, it's not to me. It is.
There are things you can do to
your property you're right but i think that to minimize the damage but yeah you'll never prevent
it entirely because some of these fires are so hot that they're burning the alluvial soil on
off so i mean you can't do anything about that if the dirt is so hot it's catching on fire and
burning through the ground okay great you have dirt next to your house. You're not going to remove that.
Yeah. But that's also why I think the conversation has to shift to what's a situation where it's safe
to stay and what's a situation where we're being freaking morons. We need to pack up and leave.
I mean, a good place to start, I suppose, is talking to your local
emergency management office. They have all that stuff pre-figured out. They know how long it is
going to take people in any given area to exit. And then take their data, because you paid for
that data. You might as well ask for it. It's not state secrets. It's publicly available. A lot of times it's even on their websites. Take that data, come to your own conclusions,
and then add a buffer time because the traffic is always going to make it harder.
And on top of that, I would also say like, get really accustomed to finding in different
intelligence sources because in a situation like
this like where i was getting a lot of my news from when we had marshfires in this area was
social media which sounds stupid but you would be shocked the amount of human intelligence you can
get off social media when you've got like a hundred people talking about the hot topic in your area. Just, just listening within your friend group or in my case,
my,
my wife's friend group,
because I don't have a lot of friends,
but anyway,
especially in this local area,
but seriously,
like just list,
just keeping your eyes and ears open,
listening on the radio,
listening on local AM,
FM,
watching social media. Like you will get intelligence from the radio, listening on local AM, FM, watching social media,
like you will get intelligence from the weirdest places and you can start, you can start to piece
together where the fire is, how aggressively is it moving, what direction. And like you said,
like a lot of emergency management organizations, that information's out there and why wouldn't it
be? It's taxpayer funded. It's ours anyway. Yeah, it is. And it may take you a little bit of digging to find out who to actually talk to.
I know when I first, you know, was was looking into all this and trying to contact the local emergency management people,
a lot of times they don't want to take your call because they're not sure what you're trying to do.
Stop by the office in person you're like hey i live
over in xyz neighborhood you know i know there's a fire risk or a flood risk or yada yada yada
i'm looking for recommendations i'm looking for for assistance do it at a time like when there
isn't currently an active emergency and hell most of them are bored sitting at their desk anyway like yeah i don't know about
down by you but in the off season when you don't have hurricanes i can't imagine the
emergency management people have a whole lot to do other than training
uh
that's kind of hard to say because when you're outside a hurricane season you're still in
flood season winter weather season which everybody thinks winter weather is like
hilarious in southeast louisiana but like it's kind of funny well but like you and i talked
about before you know if the roads down here ice there's nothing to deal with it well not just that
but you can't it's not the roads icing that's our bigger worry.
It's the elevated roadways.
And there's so many lakes and rivers and streams in this area.
I don't think I can get to a town west, east, or north of me without going over a bridge.
That's fair.
And those bridges are going to ice before everything else does.
And you guys don't have salt trucks,
so there's no way for the state to manage it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So it's just one of those things where it's like,
there's,
there's some kind of a season going on all the time,
even if it's not hurricane season.
I agree.
So I do,
I do think your red line needs to be established well ahead of time.
Yeah.
So I put all this together because there's been a lot of weird stuff going on in the political arena with DJT about to take office.
I've heard apparently Lauren Boebert actually like filed a bill to abolish the ATF.
There's been a lot of calls for it recently, especially with what was the guy?
It's about that time.
I'm ready for the disappointment
yeah i know me too but let me have my moment uh atf apparently is in hot water again for
flash banging a family and some kids for random reasons with a sealed warrant that was
justified with a confidential informant which is police speak for we pulled this warrant out of
our butts and a judge signed off on it
because he's a freaking tool is that the is that the school teacher who was a 2a advocate that got
flash banged at three or at five o'clock in the morning yeah looking for illegal firearms of which
they found none zero the atf couldn't even constructive intent his ass. Well, but the impressive part is, is like, I, I heard it and I dismissed it.
But when I heard like how many firearms this family had, I thought to myself, I'm like, if you have that many guns and the ATF can't buy one single illegal thing, they're either not trying very hard or that guy was religiously squeaky clean because the
average bubba that lives in the woods probably got an illegal firearm he doesn't realize is illegal
so this guy was going above me on the call to keep everything above board and didn't blast an
atf agent in the front doorstep which would have got him killed immediately i think the lucky thing
here was is they were up having
coffee extra early and they saw the
agents out on the front lawn.
Thank Christ. Because
look, 3 o'clock in the
morning, no knock, my door
gets kicked in.
I'm probably going to respond
in a bit of an aggressive fashion.
I'm going
to charge into the living. I'm going to charge into the living I'm going to
charge out of my bedroom wearing colorful underwear and a very unhappy look on my face
right I mean it's let's just leave it there it's not going to be a friendly interaction because you
know who comes into your house at three o'clock in the morning people people without a regard for
their own lives exactly it. It's never good.
It's never, oh, it's my neighbor down the street
popping by to return a casserole dish.
It's a crackhead looking for your wallet.
Yeah.
Bootheel hits the door at 3 a.m.
I've heard every argument for why police officers
still insist on no-knock raids for high-value targets,
and I continue to say over and over and over, for why police officers still insist on no-knock raids for high-value targets.
And I continue to say over and over and over, I'm like,
there's nothing that says we absolutely do not know how to spell de-escalation like kicking a person's door off the hinges at 3 in the morning.
I can understand it in a military context in a hostile nation.
Are we a hostile nation to our government i mean
do you want me to answer that honestly i really think the answer is yes from our government's
perspective i think the answer is yes they consider us a hostile force i mean yeah i hate to say that
but i i look at things in terms of when i can. Okay. I have tried many, many times over
the years to abide and live by this idea that like never ascribed to malice, what incompetence
will explain. However, the evidence based on their actions is mounding up to the point where it's
getting harder and harder and harder to
give these agencies the benefit of doubt because the way they're behaving is exactly like me and
guys i knew behaved in iraq and we were fighting a hostile force we were surrounded by people that
wanted to kill us walks like a duck looks like a duck acts like a duck yeah definitely
a horse yeah yeah definitely a horse full of horses you know i i realize that these guys are
attempting to do jobs a lot of them are probably got into these agencies wanting to do good
my my future sister-in-law is a law enforcement professional he wants to do good
i think she's actually a good person from from how much i've interacted with her i mean
i don't i see her a few times a year sometimes a few times a month depending on how often
we get together for game nights but i don't think that she's getting into law enforcement to stand on the necks of the people.
But I think that departmental policy and policy coming down from above departmental policy kind of forces them to behave that way.
And peer pressure.
Call it what it is.
Mm hmm. And peer pressure. Mm hmm. Call it what it is. You don't. It's an uncomfortable position to be the one in the department who says, hey, guys, maybe we're being a little bit heavy handed here. Right. All all I ever tell people is like. while okay it's not my wife or daughter anyway when i get when i get well but when i get text
while podcasting i immediately wonder like is that my wife or daughter but anyway but it's just one
of the situations man where like i have friends and family that are in law enforcement and i i
am always very quick to preface my comments by saying that like, I try not to generalize whole groups of
people. I try my best. I fail sometimes, but I try my best. But my frustration is always that I expect
law enforcement officers to be held to a higher standard of behavior, not because a polyester
uniform and a badge makes them supermen and superwomen, but because we as a society have given them the literal power of life and death.
We've given them authorization to use lethal force against us, the broad body of the population.
And protections from being charged for most normal crimes in the process.
And broad legal shielding from prosecution.
And because of all that, I expect them to behave.
I expect them to tread as lightly as humanly possible
and to err on the side of protecting the people.
And when they don't do that, I want to see their badge fed to them
and them thrown out ahead of their jobs.
Period. End discussion.
And until we get there, we're going to continue to have more of this behavior from the atf
i don't think we can actually get to that point with the atf i don't think federal agencies can
get to the point of soft touch because they are so disconnected from the population because you don't have like in my
hometown all the cops lived in our hometown we knew all of them heck i still know almost all of
them they kind of had a baked in instead of not to be um too heavy-handed because you know they live
and so in the name of full disclosure like my brother- brother-in-law is a sheriff's deputy around here.
And, you know, he was very pointed to tell me one time, like, I have to I even have to like keep my eyes open when I go to the grocery store in case I bump into somebody I arrested.
Absolutely.
Because he said 99 percent of them understand I'm just doing my job.
You did something dumb.
Like, that's why we were in that situation.
But it's that 1% older grudge.
And I have I have to watch.
I have to watch myself.
You do.
Which made total sense to me.
But like you said, when you live hundreds of miles away outside of that community that you are kicking doors in, or if you're allowed to conceal your identity and wear like,
you know,
a mask or something,
you have no incentive left to exercise good behavior,
except if your department mandates it,
which this one does not.
No,
they don't.
Clearly.
I mean,
Waco,
Ruby Ridge.
Oh yeah,
that's right.
The ATF director that was standing on the ashes of children smiling for a photo op.
Yeah. But anyway, so
a bill to abolish the ATF has been filed.
There's a lot of discussions about Nashville concealed carry arrest prosody, which
I'm pretty sure we've talked about before, but
the title here is, is this like a new era or is this about to be a whole lot more empty promises?
Because I so I can remember when eight years ago now we swore up and down Hillary Clinton was about to become the the president and people were selling kidneys for boxes 9mm.
I made a killing on 30 round mags. But it was
nuts, right? And then Trump won and we went into
the Trump slump in the gun community. Nobody was buying guns, nobody was buying ammo. Some of us
kept buying guns and ammo because we were getting a discounted prices.
But there was this feeling at the time like, woohoo, the Second Amendment is safe, even
though bump stock ban and take the guns first and due process later, I'm not going to go
down that road again.
But even though all that happened, the perception was our guys in office, we don't have to worry.
And then when Biden won won everybody started running around
like chicken with their head cut off well i mean it was kovid there were riots there's a lot of
weird stuff going on so a lot of people run around buying guns and ammo and the price started shooting
up i blame covet for that much more than biden there would have been a there would have been a
boom just because a democrat was getting elected into the presidency but i i do i the boom in prices
started well before the election cycle it started as soon as covet started hitting the u.s shores
i mean there were lines down the block out of gun stores they were selling out of everything and i
do mean everything my the ffl that i deal with he doesn't have a storefront, but he sold every single piece of inventory that he had.
And so the wacky part of it was during COVID, it was the weird esoteric shit you can never get ammo for that all of a sudden you could get.
It was the only thing you could get ammo for.
Like if you had a 458 Win Mag or if you had a 450 Bushmaster or you had a 500 Smith & Wesson Magnum, you could go find ammo.
I was doing some pistol drills with 32 auto in a 1907 Savage because that's what I could get the most ammo for.
Dude, at one point I was looking for 22 and I managed to find some 22LR.
I managed to find some 22 LR,
but of all the weird nonsense, I found 22 short,
which I'm not sure.
Did they still make it?
Uh,
I mean,
I found some sources for it,
but the point remains 22 short and 22 long.
I was finding it.
Couldn't find 20 long,
22 long rifle was getting thin on the ground.
Unfortunately,
in front of my nose,
a gun store.
So he was,
he slipped me a box back.
Well, at that at that time, because ammo was getting in such short supply, he had a policy that he would only sell ammo with a firearm.
Yeah.
So, like, if you came in and you purchased a nine mil pistol, he'd sell you all the nine mil you want.
Right.
Wanted to make sure that if you bought a gun, you amp you had ammo to go with it right yes in my case he made an exception because you
know me and my daughter walked in and i was like uh i just went to the range and burned up some 22
long rifle so i'd need to buy some more like i've got some i just want to replenish what and you're
a regular customer so you know you weren't the guy coming in to buy everything and dip. Well, I mean, we did we did deploy Iraq together, so we have some history.
There you go.
So what do you think, man?
Is this like new era of gun rights?
Is the tide turned or is this about to be four years of disappointment and blue, you know, gun culture blue balls?
The culture is shifting.
Like I've said before, I don't think the culture will tolerate
as much shenanigans and chicanery as they used to chicanery i need to work that word in my life
it's a great word it's a fantastic it's such a fun word to say um i usually use jackassery more
often but chicanery is a good one canary good. You can use chicanery in sentences around five-year-olds,
and when they use it at school, you get props instead of getting yelled at.
But personally, I will never count on the Republicans to not screw up a supermajority
when they could do something their constituents actually want.
They have proven time and time again that they will throw away whatever power we give them
and just hand it back over in four years, or in this case, at the midterms, probably, just like last time.
So I think we're going to see some things done.
I would like to think we'll see national reciprocity.
I don't see any good arguments against it.
national reciprocity. I don't see any good arguments against it, but I do believe there is still a pretty big section of the Republican establishment that does not, number one, care
about Second Amendment rights, does not really care what its constituents think, feel, or want.
And that's been proven out time and time
again with various studies of what legislation passes you can predict guaranteed which legislation
will pass based on which lobbyists names have signed on to it but you can't even if 95 percent
of the u.s wants it done well but, but call it, call it what it is.
How many people do you think?
So the statistics say like,
what is it like?
There's a hundred million gun owners in this country,
about 400 million firearms.
Do you count?
Yeah.
That,
that we admit to having theoretically,
allegedly,
but anyway,
stick with me on this.
So that's approximately four farms for every one person.
I know that I am I and lots of people are skewing those statistics a little bit.
But like, let me have let me have fun with the numbers for a second.
It's more than four.
Yeah.
But so how what percentage of that hundred million people would you consider to be part of the gun community?
Because you and I both know that there's a hell of a lot of them that they own, like a single Smith and Wesson J frame stays in their sock drawer just in case crackhead kicks the door in.
They're not Second Amendment advocates. They're not regular shooters. They don't train. They don't purchase ammo.
They have like a gun and one box of ammo and that's it. There's a proportion
of those. So how much of that hundred million do you think are part of the gun
community or the gun culture? Are you including hunters in that?
Fair point. Hunters regularly use their firearms.
Obviously they train with them because they have to. I don't know about
regularly use their firearms regularly say once twice a year okay all right so at least once
twice a year they sight in the rifle and they use it for whatever purpose yeah if we're in
hunters if we're including hunters i would be shocked if it broke 40 okay so you're already being much more brutal than i was gonna
be let's say well let's go that way let's i'm just i'm just going through my head of everybody
i know that owns a gun and then ticking them off the list if they don't go to the range at least once a year and out of out of there's like 17 to 19 people that i
regularly associate with that i know own firearms i know for a fact about 50 to 60 percent of those
have not been to the range in the last three years you know they inherited a gun from dad
they've got dad's old hunting shotgun or grandma's got the shotgun from her dead husband
kind of deal so 40 you would count as being in the gun community maybe just just a guess
okay so we're down we went from 100 we went from 330 million citizens to 100 million that own
firearms to 40 million that are in the gun community.
We can't even get that 40 million people to agree on what the Second Amendment actually means.
Because there's people in there, FUDs, I'm looking at all of y'all, and I am disappointed in y'all.
Very disappointed.
Who say people who use words like assault rifles and assault weapons unironically.
And who say rapid fire shouldn't be allowed at ranges,
and black rifles are scary, and all this nonsense.
I kind of feel like the problem we have here is that this community
that I count myself as a part of is so freaking bipolar
about how do we even identify other members of it,
that if you can't get
consensus within the gun community about like what should or should not be permitted legally
that we have no leverage to to you know lean on our politicians to enact any kind of change
the difference is it's changing i think the big difference is unlike 20 years ago, where FUDs were the majority in the active gun community, it's now tactical Timmy who wants to train in a plate carrier and maybe shoot a three gun match.
I will.
I will agree with you on that.
And that has been.
It has been interesting to watch because, like, you know, I've talked about the fact that, like, before this, before I started this podcast, this podcast I mean 15 years ago I was basically an outcast among other gun people because I was
rabidly emphatic about the fact that like we should be allowed to have machine guns and rocket
launchers and grenades and like if I can afford a tank I should be able to have one in the front
yard I should be able to have a belt bed machine gun for home defense. Like people were freaked out by people like me,
but now that those statements are getting less and less and less eyebrow
raising and you get more and more and more nods.
The community has done this weird shift where,
like you said,
the guys with the,
the NRA hats and the orange vest,
and I don't know if it's that they're,
they're dying off.
It is absolutely that they're dying off. i mean we all know we all know the average age of an nra
member has done nothing but rise over the last 20 years and they've earned that oh 100 you you
couldn't you couldn't give me an nra membership at this point i had to have an nra membership to
be a member of a rifle range for a while they had an nra member an nra representative that would
show up to our yearly big meeting that we all had that everybody all the members had to show up to
and elect the board and the nr and then reinstitute the nra being there and the first couple years i
would belong to that range you know you welcome them in handshakes all that
a couple years later as it started to swing more towards the tactical shooters at that range
yeah the nra was still part of the thing but you know goa and fpc if you had one of those
memberships that was fine too but the year before i left i noticed something interesting
But the year before I left, I noticed something interesting.
People were shunning that NRA rep.
They didn't let him speak at the meeting.
Nobody would talk to them.
When he did try to talk to people, they laughed at him and told him, well, you haven't done anything for us.
Why should we give you money?
And I think that's the big attitude change we've got the ability to organize
now people like you and me over the internet and to and to collate our efforts around people like
the fpc and goa or even our local gun rights clubs and find each other outside of the range
i mean the forums even before the big explosion of gun tubers on YouTube, the just the ability to share training tips, to find IDPA IPSC matches, to find three gun matches.
When I first started getting into shooting, I didn't know where to look for that stuff.
But I had the ability to just quick Google search and go, all right, there's a pistol match here.
I'm going to go find out what that is and show up.
So can we agree that while the culture is changing, the political landscape is probably not.
Politics is downstream from culture, bud.
It only takes so long before the politics will change to follow culture you know
we bring up uh tim pool on here every once in a while he has some good one-liners and a pretty
funny show but um politics is downstream from culture but culture is everything because you
cannot enforce a law that the that the public at large disagrees with i agree with that i'm still not holding my breath
they do allow women to skydive in florida on sundays despite the fact that it is illegal
thank you for reminding me about how stupid our legislatures are nick
i'm sure they had a good reason for it maybe and since we're talking about
legality being downstream from culture,
Meta is
ditching their fact checkers.
Yeah, because everybody mocks and belittles them.
It's become a meme.
Well, that and like,
so lately I've been seeing this
thing that keeps popping up called
the dead internet theory that like
so much of the internet is just
overridden by like
bots and automated crap and people with like multiple ghost accounts and everything that
like the proportion of people that are on social media that are real life breathing people is
shrink is probably a 10th what we suspected is based on the traffic numbers i've seen that i
don't i yeah i'm not far enough into it to like develop an opinion
i remember when that became the big thing online and my my response was to just laugh because
bud you're going online to say that there's no people online you've disproved your own hypothesis
unless he was in fact a bot because it was one guy that kind of started the whole thing.
It was,
it was pretty big on the forums for a while.
And look,
I get it.
I get it.
I mean,
most people are passive observers of the internet,
but you and I,
we are active content creators on the internet.
We put out these videos,
we,
we make shitty memes and to make fun of
people we yell at people on on on instagram and tell them to go back to camifornia you know i did
just but most people are scroll scroll scroll like scroll scroll like scroll scroll heart
they they don't actively put anything out there. And that's probably fine.
I mean, that's not really a problem per se,
but the issue is the active user base of the internet
has decided that fact checkers are to be mocked and belittled
because of how incorrect they are most of the time.
Especially if you can post a Facebook fact check on Instagram
and then their same fact checkers then fact check their fact check and you can create a recursive loop of incorrect information, it's great.
Oh, it's hilarious.
I actually managed to do it once and it is – it's freaking hilarious.
But yeah, I mean, I don't know if the fact that this is happening right now, immediately ahead of Donald Trump getting a – they're sucking up to Trump so that they don't get an antitrust investigation.
And that's really what I think is going on here.
That's all it is. It's cucking to the administration that's in charge, just like they did to Biden,
just like they'll do to everybody else.
Yeah.
And I guess that's kind of where I was going.
Was that like,
I don't,
I don't think this has anything to do with,
with Mark Zuckerberg and meta suddenly turning over a new leaf.
I know.
I think it's,
I think they're going to do popular with their user base.
It makes them look stupid on the regular and the incoming administration doesn't like that.
Great.
They have all the excuse they need to turn it off.
So they will.
They'll turn it back on the second it's convenient.
I'm sure they will.
That being said, I'm going to, even if they ditch their fact checkers, I have zero hope that they're going to stop shadow banning
our accounts specifically because I actually did this with my wife.
I was going back through old posts and I showed her the day shadow banning got enacted
for our Instagram account.
Yep.
Because you can see it plain as day, like 1,500, 1500, 1500, 2000, 2000, 2500, seven.
Yep.
You can see the day it happened.
And the really annoying part was I had a reel that actually, like, didn't go viral or anything like that.
But, like, it got out of the starting blocks.
Even with the shadow banning, it picked up a few thousand views within a couple of hours.
And then all of a sudden. And then you can just a couple of hours. And then all of a sudden.
And then you can just watch the attraction fall off a cliff all of a sudden.
I was like, oh, the party's over.
That's all right.
We don't need them anyway.
I don't care that much, but it's just one of those things where it's like, you know,
me being the libertarian in heart, all I have ever wanted is an even playing field. If my memes are stupid, let me be stupid in front of people and let the landscape decide who wins and loses rather than people putting their finger on the scales.
Because it's not whether the finger benefits or harms me that aggravates me.
It's that the finger is there in the first place.
Yeah, it's corrupting the market.
It's corrupting the market. It's corrupting the market.
And that is why I think that the political ideologies have shifted,
have seen such a drastic shift that they did with this election
because they were inflating their numbers
and they couldn't double down hard enough on Trump being Hitler to scare people more than they already were scared of him.
You can only call a guy ultra mega turbo Hitler so many different ways before people are like.
Bored.
I will say that it has been very fun to be a lurker on Reddit recently.
Because see this real.
Oh, no, no, no. even better than the copen sieve it's the people who are watching like watching his confirmation and they're about to watch him
take office and every step of the way they are freaking out louder and louder every day like
why are the democrats fighting why are they being so nice to him why are they allowing this why
why why are they acting like this is business as usual?
Because it is.
And it's like, y'all are so close to the light bulb turning on.
You're so close to the light bulb turning on to realize that you've been lied to, but you just haven't quite got that far yet. And by the way, Republicans, we're going to have this exact same conversation in a couple of weeks or a couple of months.
Believe me, you me. You're so close. You're so close to figuring it out, but not quite there yet.
They're all friends in the background.
Yes. But this is also why I go into, I intentionally insert myself into spaces where I am not welcome.
And I just, I just, I sit back there with my hands folded over my chest and just watch.
Oh, I don't, I actively antagonize them.
Because as long as I quietly lurk, then I don't get banned
and I can continue to be a quiet lurker. I have quite the ban list going on
both Reddit and Facebook. Yeah, but for me, they're
intelligence-gathering apparatuses, so not getting banned suits my needs.
Dude, that's what ults are for. Come on now.
I don't have the patience to manage all that.
That's fair.
But anyway, okay, so 12 minutes left until we hit an hour.
Bah.
We can go an extra 15.
My hero shouldn't be here until 6.15 to 6.20.
Yeah, I smell dinner cooking, so hopefully that's my wife and not somebody that broke into my house that's fine randomly i mean as long as there's a meal prepared i won't get too upset with
whoever it was right you broke in and made a five course meal i'm upset and curious more curious
than upset right so we were talking about like different things within the within like shooting tactics the
firearms community where like some of these are like eternal debates and some of them are just
memes at a certain point yeah but i thought but i thought it'd make for an interesting conversation
like your thoughts on them my thoughts on them and at some point one of us is probably going to
flip a table and say to hell with all this. So we'll see.
Sounds good.
But let's start with Weaver's Dance versus Isosceles.
This is a stupid debate.
It is a stupid debate, but listen to me.
I know I've met people who will defend the Weaver's Dance like it was invented by their grandmother.
They will not come off of it no matter what.
And I've met people that, likewise the isosceles stance for anybody that
does know isosceles is like,
you know,
left foot in front of right foot about shorter,
shorter width apart.
Weaver stances,
the old fudge,
like feet,
feet side by side about double the shoulder width.
And you're leaning over your gun.
I don't know.
Like there are appropriate use cases for both and neither both yes
yeah and there are biomechanical reasons why for some people they cannot use one stance or the other
true yeah me and me and phil are actually having this discussion in a in a just some dms here uh
about reloading shotguns
i have messed up my hands and wrists to the point where i don't have full rotation in this wrist
anymore i cannot underside load a shotgun can't do it i've tried every time i do bell falls on
the floor no matter how slow i go i cannot keep my fingers in the correct position to roll under or to roll a shell up and under and then trip the action yeah so injuries however you grew whatever whatever's comfortable and consistent for you
is probably more important than which form factor you choose so long as your biomechanics on your grip are correct yeah and the thing i used to go to
whenever i hear these these whenever i hear all or nothing debates this way is always right this
way is never right those kinds of things i always like to be dealt with afghan and throw the monkey
wrench into the argument because i can probably find when you say things like always and never
it doesn't take much to peel that argument try to shoot from a weaver stance moving wrench into the argument because i can probably when you say things like always and never it
doesn't take much to peel that argument try to shoot from a weaver stance moving
try to shoot from weaver stance if you're shooting anything but a freaking handgun like try to shoot
from weavers now here's the other thing isosceles stance a lot of not all but a lot of people tend
to blade their bodies right that is frowned upon in the military when you're using body armor because you want a plate facing the person and not the hole where your armpit and squishy stuff is.
Put the big square plate in the way.
Yeah, there's a thousand reasons to choose one stance over the other and to have no stance at all.
Because if you're standing still shooting shooting you're probably doing it wrong like
in the in the world we live in now where dynamic shooting and three gun and these kinds of
competitions and just the realities of urban combat with our military are the way they are
if you're not shooting you should be reloading and if you're not and if you're if you're and
you should probably be moving while doing both of those. And given the number of people that train shooting at static targets,
I'm going to be moving a hell of a lot
because most people can't hit a moving target for shit.
It is tricky, to be perfectly fair.
It is. It is.
It's something you have to train on.
And you can get some benefits of that training
by moving while you're shooting at a static target
because you're changing your point of
aim and such. But yeah, but one thing I'm very quick to point out to people a lot is like,
I had this debate with somebody one time and their, their assertion was like,
you should practice reloading your gun until you can get it down to this time. Because like,
you know, speed reloading is a tactical skill. And I was like, I'll be honest with you. The number of times that we ever practiced speed reloading in the army was zero.
Zero.
The army does not give, the DOD as a whole does not care if it takes you three seconds to reload your weapon.
Do you know why?
You should be doing it from behind cover.
And Puritans tend to be working in teams of people and ideally not all out of ammo at the
same time but this is also why they teach us in a team environment to holler i'm out reload and
commands that let your buddies know hey i need to cover down on this guy and a purse hiding behind
a guy who's laying down a wall of gunfire is almost as good as hiding behind cover but the
point remains the idea that
well, if I can't speed reload in half a second
it's too slow is just stupid.
You should be doing it from behind cover. Concealment
if cover is not present
but you should not be doing it standing in
you should not be doing it like you're at an
IPSC match.
We're not standing still doing this nonsense.
That's not the way this game is played.
Well, that's one of the reasons why I advocate.
And actually, Joe brought up a really good fact.
A lot of ranges won't let you move and shoot.
This is why I advocate for a lot of people to get private instruction,
because the rules of the range are very different when you're in a private class
than when you're standing in the booth shooting at your target.
That's great for working on form,
but the other thing I advocate everybody do is a lot of dry fire training that
AR that's behind me that,
that you might notice has a red bolt in it.
That's a man is X black beard.
So I can auto,
I can literally run drills around the house with that thing.
If I want,
I can,
I mean,
I can literally run drills around the house with that thing if I want.
I can, I mean, between that and the Manis X10 and just like, you know, snap caps for my frigging shotgun, snap caps for every firearm in this entire house.
I can run dry fire drills and I can run them in what is likely to be my primary defensive position, my home.
And there's no one around to tell me you can't do that except for my wife, who I do have to listen to. You do. But that's also why I usually run drills when I'm here by myself, so that my daughter and wife aren't in the
living room looking at me like I'm a complete maniac. Why would they be just hanging out
in the living room? Do you not run team drills?
Getting my wife and daughter to run team drills with me is not going to happen.
Bribes
i hear tacos are effective you might have a point i'm telling you can we can we agree that center axis relock is a gimmick it is and just move past it it's it's it is a gimmick it is for anybody
that doesn't know what center axis relock or the CAR method is,
Google that.
It's interesting.
It's a lot of interesting theory.
I don't think it actually works in real life.
I could see in some competitions it being valuable, perhaps.
I don't know that i want that training scar
i i think to me
there are some parts of firearms training that are kind of timeless
most of the things jeff cooper taught in his day yes most of the things you'll learn from like
track or his guys at mdfi most of the things you'd learn from like Clint Smith,
the Thunder Ranch,
like these,
these farms trainers who are prolific,
they don't teach a lot of weird esoteric special systems or gimmicks.
They teach good old fashioned violence,
quick action,
and excellent marksmanship and efficiency of movement.
Yes.
Efficiency can be,
once you have your basic form down and you,
and you are,
you're reliable with your muscle memory for how you get on your firearm,
get behind the sites and acquire a target.
Then you need to start working on efficiency because if,
if you shoot second,
it might not matter because if the other guy misses but you don't,
that's what wins.
So you need to be accurate first and fast second.
But we both agree that when you find a firearms instructor
that's trying to teach you the special sauce that he just figured out that is the new hotness and it's so revolutionary, just be suspicious.
Speed is good.
Accuracy is final.
Quieter.
Joe's right.
I mean, I'm going to tell you honestly that like my perspective on the whole speed
versus accuracy thing is that the two are trade-offs.
They are.
I can be more accurate,
slower.
Absolutely.
Yes.
And,
and here's the thing of it.
Anyone would be like,
that's the dirty little secret because a lot of people,
a lot of people want to assert that like,
well,
that person is such a good shooter they
can move at like jerry mitchellick speed but have you know grandmaster silhouette shooter accuracy
and i say that's bs there's no one on earth that can cheat the laws of physics and the faster you
move the less accurately you're going to move that That's biomechanics 101. It does. So the question,
so to me, and this is like, this is a debate my father and I've had, by the way, talking about
defensive shooting. My point of view has always been whatever amount of accuracy is required to
make the hit. Yep. I'm going to move as fast as that amount of accuracy allows me. Yes, absolutely.
So, so if I'm shooting at, if I'm shooting it inside the house
distances, 7 to 10 yards,
I'm not even going to look at the sights.
Yeah, that's going to be a point shoot.
I'm going to line up over the top of the barrel,
double tap the trigger, and I'm probably going to make
a hit on a man-sized target. I am so
not even concerned. I'm not even going to
take the time to look through the red dot.
I don't care. It's not necessary.
With the amount of reps you have, you can be confident confident at that speed at that range with that target size but
that's why the reps are important now on the other hand if i'm shooting at 50 to 100 yards
yes i'm going to take my time to line up a shot unless it's a rifle then it's probably you can
snap shoot that pretty easy if you've got a lot of reps. If you have a lot of reps.
And the thing of it is that
trade-off, that
swinging needle in this gauge, which
is like accuracy and speed,
your gauge and my gauge are different.
Oh, every single person takes a little bit
more time to get better accuracy.
You might be the son of Jerry
Michalik and be lightning fast and
crazy accurate. Kudos to you, but there is no cheating the laws of biomechanik and be lightning fast and crazy accurate. Cool.
Kudos to you,
but there is no cheating the laws of biomechanics.
You're going to have to give up a little bit of one,
get more of the other.
But I always say that like there is that argument that no matter how fast you
shoot,
if you miss,
it's a miss.
Yep.
But there's also the argument of no matter how accurate you are,
if the other guy gets his shot off first,
your shot doesn't matter anymore.
Assuming he hits.
Assuming he hits.
Right.
Which is,
you know,
but that's why I bring up economy of movement before.
You can use whatever stance you want.
If your biomechanics on your grip are good,
if your trigger pull is good,
if your sight acquisition is good,
fantastic.
But there is a lot of wasted time in people's movements. on your grip are good. If your trigger pull is good, if your site acquisition is good, fantastic.
But there is a lot of wasted time in people's movements until they train a way to have the simplest path of movements in the least number of steps to get the job done. All of my mags,
I'm sure this will start a different argument, but all of my mags are loaded in my pouches in the
same direction so when i grab a mag my index finger is on the tip of that round and i can
seat that mag without ever looking at it without any fumbling or flipping around i do it the same
way every single time and that was just that alone took my draw stroke time or my reload time down almost in half
just memorizing that movement well if somebody wants to argue with that they'll be arguing with
me too because that's literally how i and i mean not only not only just like chest rig body armor
but even if you talk about like a belt mounted holster the orientation of that magazine is
dependent upon i grab the mag i put my finger on the orientation of that magazine is dependent upon, I grabbed the mag,
I put my finger on the tip of the first bullet and then I reach for the
pouch and whichever direction that mag is pointing is the direction that
goes.
And no other,
because to me,
it's all about,
I'm not trying to make things where I have to fight them to make them
work.
That's why I brought up the whole shotgun thing,
which is we might as well just talk about this now. We can talk about it now. That's why I brought up the whole shotgun thing which is we might as well just talk about this now we can talk about
it now
that's why I brought up this whole thing of
shotgun reloads do you reload at high
port or at violin where you have
like the buttstock up on your shoulder and the barrel
pointed slightly down or do you reload at the
ready position which is buttstock
and you're in the firing position
but you're reloading with your non-dominant
hand and there's all these different methods you can go buttstock and you're in the firing position, but you're reloading with your non-dominant hand.
And there's all these different methods. You can go over the top of the receiver underneath the bottom,
but like you and I've already talked about for you,
your issue is if you try to load from under the bottom,
whether it's at high port or the ready position,
your wrist doesn't let you do that.
Just don't turn that way.
It just doesn't turn that way.
Now what I,
what I discovered
when I put this red dot on my shotgun was that now I have this inch and a half tall tumor on top of
the receiver directly above the ejection port. So I can't load over the top anymore. I don't have a
problem loading from under the bottom, but it does mean that does it's going to make a big difference for me probably yeah well and it may it may not see for me i used to run into trouble loading from the top
unless i could unless what i i used to fumble around a lot and then i realized that if i index
my palm on the very top of the receiver my fingers would just naturally drop into the ejection port
but with the red dot up there i lose that that index point you could index off the red dot
maybe i don't know it's it's definitely going to be a thing that i'm going to have to experiment
with when i put a red dot on my shotgun big palm short fingers i understand so i don't have that
problem i've got normal size hands yeah hands but it but it's one of those things where it's like
you know i to me there's there's not usually a wrong method here.
It's what works best for you.
Like, there may be a more efficient method if you haven't been, if you have not had someone, a third party that's not doing the drill watching you do the drill.
Because they'll be able to see wasted motion in you before you can see it.
you before you can see it but even above and beyond red above even above and beyond wasted motion i think a lot of this comes down to like you individually like me personally i would never
attempt to reload from the ready position i've seen it done where people they'll hold the shotgun
on target at all and they'll use their non-dominant hand i don't know why i really don't i have the
worst trouble with my non-dominant hand loading the shotgun unless like going into the loading port.
I can get into the chamber just fine.
But as far as like pulling shells out of the side saddle and going for the loading port, my left hand screws it up fairly regularly, which is why a violin load.
Sure.
I've got eyeballs on the port. I've got the side saddle right here. screws it up fairly regularly, which is why a violin load. Sure. Wait,
I've got,
I've got eyeballs on the,
on the port.
I've got the side saddle right here.
My dominant hand is in play and I can just charge that firearm up very quickly doing that.
I wonder if it's a reps issue.
I don't know.
Cause I don't have near the same trouble like loading a pistol or a rifle.
So who freaking.
Well,
but you got to remember you're dealing with square box,
square hole. And with shotgun, you're dealing with square box square hole and with shotgun you're dealing with cylinder into square hole you you're trying to shove
shotgun shells into a rube goldberg device between the little the little hole and then the trapdoor
swing it up and down it's just there's things going on i would like to see how you feel i would
like to touch back on this when we get towards the fall, after you've
had time to do a lot of reps, try every time you go out, even if it's just between strings of fire,
relaxed on the range, nice and easy. Get yourself used to that motion. Try it. I'm going to keep
trying to learn to load underneath because there are situations where you may need to do that.
And if I can find a way to finagle around, maybe change the angle of approach on my arm or something that I can get it to work.
Great.
It's another tool in the toolbox.
I'll train through that.
Here's a thought.
Do you have trouble if your hand is like in this orientation, like thumb to the sky?
Is it only if you torque it all the way over so that your palm to the sky
that you have trouble?
Uh,
let's see.
Yeah.
My fingers start opening up.
Okay.
So here's a thought or maybe roll the shotgun to the side,
you think,
and then go up in slap it.
Well,
I was thinking point,
point the shotgun more skyward because you remember you and I were talking
about this last time.
I said that like my personal method for a slug changeover
is to actually come to a high port
and then hold the bolt back with my thumb
and then wrap my fingers around the trigger guard.
But now I've got the shotgun pointed up on almost a 60-degree angle.
And I don't have to work very hard at all to get there
because my hand doesn't have to turn it
would it would naturally be more easy to wrap that way that might be what i have to do to load
underside i'm gonna have to get more snaps caps and the fun part about doing it that way for me
at least is that like my issue with ready position is that i'm i'm holding the majority of the weight
of the shotgun in one hand and I'm having a pullback
against my shoulder. So I have that second point of contact, but at high port, I've got my right
hand on the weapon and I've got the buttstock under my armpit. I've got my arm wrapped around
it. I have, even with just one hand, I have a lot of control over the weapon. And because I'm at
high port, I brought it in closer to my body to have like a slimmer profile. For me, it's just much more, I don't know, it's much more comfortable to me.
But that could also be a lot of a carryover from the way I was taught to handle like M4s and M16s.
It could be.
We don't put the buttstock in the shoulder and hold the rifle up on target and try to monkey around.
We would pull it down, we'd pull it into kind of a high port.
Yeah.
Maybe what you need to try as well,
when you're trying the ready position loading,
don't fully dismount the shotgun and put it up fully at high port,
go to a high ready and tuck it under your armpit and use your,
your pressure between your,
your upper arm and your chest to retain the weight of the shotgun.
And then just control with your hand.
Try that.
Not going to a full high port.
Maybe like a high ready.
Yeah.
Ish.
But in any case, that might be a way for you to still be able to under the receiver load.
Especially if the red dot ends up in the way.
If I find that it's just too inconvenient to top load.
Yeah. And I mean mean think about this if you can't change the angle of your loading hand change
the angle of the firearm exactly exactly you've got two things in motion here yes but i will say
that as far as plussing up the uh the magazine tube violin load the damn damn thing every day
of the week twice on sunday oh yeah it's so slow though because i can once you
get once you get okay the the reason why i say that is because we did a ton of drills at truck
shotgun class and i really would love to see you how you feel about this after taking like a real
good shotgun class the speed difference that you have and being able to go from say the buttstock in your armpit
and not quite a high ready or not quite a and not a violent position where you're just plussing up
through the bottom of the tube where you're still somewhat on the gun and then just up in click
is so much faster than having to flip everything over
i i just i just think that there's so much less motion there it saves a ton of time
and now i'm sure there are times when a violin load perfect perfect like if you've got somebody
covering you you can take your time to load it you're less likely to drop shells fine but i don't
have a team here it's me and my wife once i get some more reps in i'm probably gonna wind up doing
exactly what i did for right for revolver reloads and i'm just gonna put put myself on a shot clock
yep just turn the sensitivity all the way through the ceiling so it can hear so the shot timer can
hear just dry a dry hole and just click reload click yep i mean it's ultimately it's the only way i'm ever gonna know and in training can improve those
times too yeah but the stopwatch never lies yeah i'm i've tried the violin reloading position
and they did cover it in in that shotgun class i took and they said applicable sometimes
not always the best depends on your situation like
anything with these techniques but so here's a cool little thing that I was crawling YouTube
and I came across this you've heard of quad loading right I have I have seen it in practice
in three gun matches which requires pretty much a dedicated rig because you have to be able to grab like four shotgun shells at a time.
A very specific rig.
Yeah.
I saw a person who kind of came up with this
and it was to double load off of a side saddle.
Okay.
So the way they were doing this was
between their thumb and their forefinger,
they'd pinch off the first round.
They would hook their pinky around a second round and then pull that.
And now you've got two shotgun shells in your fist, in line.
Your thumb is on the one in back.
And then you just double them down into the magazine tube.
With enough training, you could probably get okay with it.
Just like you can get okay with quad loads.
It's like you can get okay with doubles.
But my concern is that requires an awful lot of being able to consciously
control one finger.
Yeah.
So I've tried it quite a few times.
Um,
about 50% for dropping.
Have you ever found a pistol shooting instructor that will tell you to run the
slide release?
They always tell you to, to grab the slide with your flipper,
rack it to the back and send it forward,
rack it back and let go.
And the reason for that is because one is a fine motor skill,
finding that little tiny button and pressing it.
And the other one is flipper.
The other one is big meat hook,
top of gun,
hard to miss, hard to miss under duress because you
damn well know where that gun is because you know where your other hand is but you can't always find
that little button and especially under a time constraint or an adrenaline dump and that's that's
one of those things i get into where it's like i don't like saying any kind of reloading style
is wrong because competitions
fine fine do that but you're creating training scars for yourself in my opinion i think the
simpler you can get your techniques and still being effective are the ones that you are going
to remember under pressure well not to mention i mean just looking at the technique, it's finicky.
If you could get it super reliable, super reliable, I think it would save you a modicum amount of time.
Sure. where it's before I'm going to spend hours and hours and hours of reps to shave milliseconds off my reload time,
I'm going to spend three seconds to look at my environment and find cover.
And at that point, if it takes you a little longer because you're putting your shells into the shotgun one at a time,
who cares? You're behind cover where you should be to reload.
You're behind cover where you should be to reload.
If you get comfortable with emergency reloads, you can fire very, very quickly from an empty gun.
We did an entire, they call it a rolling thunder drill where we were shooting from an empty gun.
Sometimes four shot strings.
It takes about twice as long in between shots.
Because look, it's going to take a while to get back on target with a shotgun anyway but once you're proficient with emergency reloads like look look
most home defense situations most concealed carry self-defense situations are three rounds three
yards three seconds or 30 seconds or something like that three rounds three yards 30 seconds and and it's
done great my shotgun holds five plus one in the chamber plus one on the ghost load prob solved
i mean is there a situation where i may need to start topping up my shotgun sure maybe in a
home defense situation if you got a half a dozen
intruders or something like that, fine. But if you're pop, pop, got a second, throw a top off
in the tube, pop, pop, top off in the tube, pop, pop, you still got those three rounds. You were
able to get back in the tube out of your six that you fired six and you
loaded three in between your two shots now i don't know a whole lot of home invader burglars
that are likely to continue to aggress after you've fired six rounds of 12 gauge indoors
and they don't have hearing protection on i mean at that point you're better off just handing the keys and
leaving well it's his house now let's be realistic here let's be entirely realistic what happens in
every one of these videos of a home break-in when the homeowner starts firing what is the
first thing that happens run like hell everybody dips why would they not they don't they probably don't have great health insurance
number one and and number two nobody wants to get shot anyway getting shot sucks everybody i know
that's tried it does not recommend it true true we got two things left can we get through these
in a minute or less oh yeah probably okay do you carry appendix or on your hip i'm not even
putting small back in here because if you do i'm going to shame you if you do you're asking for
back pain uh strong side hip yep same and i'll throw in i'll throw in my ankle carry but that's
only in rare occasions where like that's absolutely yeah and that's the only reason i have that smith and wesson j frame
is when i absolutely positively cannot conceal a double stack nine millimeter no matter what i do
short of prison pursing it that's when i go for the j frame on the ankle understandable
and that goes straight to revolver reloads speed strips or speed loaders and the answer is both i own zero revolvers
nick nope and you i have had several and i just i i don't like them i just flat don't like them
if i had a need for a large bore pistol i would go to a 10 millimeter with monolithic copper extreme penetrators
because that would be something like bears hogs whatever or i'd be up in alaska where there are
grizzly bears and i'm rolling a 12 gauge i think we need to discuss your definition of need well
look revolvers are just fun i i get it and i've've tried them and it just, I can't, I just,
I just cannot enjoy them for whatever reason.
Maybe I was never taught to shoot them, right?
Maybe I had the wrong ones,
but I have none of revolvers currently in my collection.
I have owned two and I got rid of both of them.
One of them was a Smith and Wesson 66 4-inch all-stainless.357,
and the other one was a, oh, God,.38 Special,
also Smith & Wesson, one of the old-school police thin-barrel jobbers
with a 3.5-inch barrel.
You know,
we're probably going to talk about next week,
right?
Yeah.
Me buying a revolver.
You've shamed me.
Now you get it back.
I know if I've always said,
if I do buy another revolver,
it will probably be a Python just because,
just because,
or it'll be a 44 Magnum.
Probably.
If I do buy a revolver, it will definitely be a 44 Magnum. Probably if I do buy a revolver,
it will definitely be a 44 Magnum because at that point,
yes,
I will have one just to have one.
That's the right answer.
Yeah.
Well,
let's go ahead and wrap this up.
It's an hour and 18 minutes into the show.
Exactly zero of y'all are still watching a stream.
That's probably healthy.
That's probably healthy.
But Nick has to go check in with his wife before she reports him missing.
And I have to go eat dinner with Mrs.
Matter of Facts before she gets cross.
The euros have not arrived yet.
So we are still good.
All right.
Matter of Facts podcast going out the door.
Thanks for hanging out with us, guys.
Thanks for all the comments.
We didn't really get to a lot of them because because frankly, we're trying to cram in more talks
than we should have in one show. We can always
overspill next time.
Yeah. So yeah, if you want me
if you want to be on board for me shaming the hell
out of Nick about buying a revolver, you should tune in
next week and we'll see you
then. Bye everybody. Bye. We'll be right back. Thank you. We'll see you next time.