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Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Gun Theft

 One concern we all share as responsible gun owners is keeping our guns out of the wrong hands. That can range from children who aren’t ready to handle the responsibility of gun safety to violent criminals looking to arm themselves.  Based on police experience, we want to share some ways you can protect against unauthorized access and loss of a firearm.

There is one particular experience a patrol officer had that demonstrates just how easily avoidable many of those gun thefts are.

This was in a primarily commercial district. There were several gyms near the county line, and just on the other side of the county line was a large apartment complex that housed more than its share of criminals. As a result, the LEO was taking multiple vehicle break-in reports every day at the gyms, sometimes in the double digits.

After talking to so many victims, seeing where the cars were in the parking lot, and gathering information on what was taken and from where, one fact jumped out. From victim interviews and surveillance tape, it became clear the suspects were scouting cars for visible valuables. So, the LEO created a little flier that looked like a parking ticket, and he would walk the parking lot looking in cars. When he noticed valuables visible in the car, he filled out the blanks on the “ticket”. It would then read something like “Patrol. Blue conducted an anti-theft patrol in this parking lot. He noticed the following unsecured valuables in your vehicle _____. Had a thief noticed it, he would have broken your window and, within seconds, stolen your items. Please secure your items in the locker room or hide them from view.”

It was amazing how often purses, laptop bags, and expensive electronics were visible from outside the car. But with the “ticket” reminders, he saw fewer and fewer exposed valuables. Break-ins at the gym plummeted dramatically, so he continued the practice at other locations and solved the problem for his beat until a covert unit could become available and catch the thieves in the act elsewhere.  

Criminals gain access to firearms in several ways, the two most common being vehicle break-ins and residential burglaries. While guns are sometimes stolen from gun stores (often by driving a car into the building) and by robbing someone known to be carrying a gun, today we’re focusing on how the average armed citizen can avoid the theft of an unattended firearm.

Vehicle break-ins come in two varieties: residential parking (i.e. in your own driveway or at the curb in front of your home) and parking lots. Both types of crimes tend to be clustered in certain areas of any given jurisdiction. If your local police or sheriff’s department has online crime reporting, you can often filter the crimes to see where they cluster in your area.

Residential vehicle break-ins occur more frequently in areas that are high in other types of crimes, particularly narcotics and vice offenses. Non-violent addicts who are looking to feed their habits will often target unoccupied vehicles due to the lower risk of both being confronted by property owners or detected by law enforcement. The neighborhoods that attract these types of criminals lack stores to shoplift from, often making cars the lowest hanging fruit for theft. Only the most desperate will smash a window just to rummage, hoping to find something of value. Most will scout cars for valuables or access them without needing to break a window. They will try door handles looking for an unlocked vehicle to go through and will look in the windows of locked cars to see if there’s anything of value. The “tool” they use to break windows is often a simple spark plug — the electrode acts like a window punch and will break a side window quite easily. They generally do not gain access to the trunk in a modern car that requires the keys to pop it open. The center console and glove box are the prime focus of the rummaging. Valuables under the seats are sometimes missed.

For low-crime residential areas, vehicle break-ins can still occur. The thieves are often younger and live in the area. Residents of the neighborhood generally have a suspicion as to who the likely culprits are. They tend to be the source of other issues in the neighborhood such as vandalism, noise complaints, and petty theft. If you can think of someone that fits this narrative within easy walking distance of your home, then you are at an elevated risk of a vehicle break-in.

In more affluent neighborhoods, it’s generally kids looking for a thrill and hoping for money to buy something parents don’t know about. They usually travel in groups and are sometimes easier to catch since they are known to the neighborhood.

Those who live in rural settings generally have less to worry about. The low density of both people and potential targets means there’s little opportunity for scouting. Unfortunately, a quickly growing number of rural communities have issues with meth, pills, and heroin, so you still need to know your neighbors and be aware of anyone who heightens your risk.

The biggest step you can take in reducing your risk of a vehicle break-in in a residential setting is to not live in an area where they occur. I understand this seems self-evident and that where you live is often not entirely in your control, however, it’s worth mentioning, particularly if you are moving and will be renting. Run the crime stats for the neighborhood before you commit to it. Even for the most temporary lodging, like when I am choosing a hotel in an unfamiliar area, I will look at these sorts of crime stats for the neighborhood as well as reviews on travel websites. For a place you plan to live long-term, drive through the area in both the daytime and at night, watching for any suspicious activity.

Next is securing your vehicle. A garaged vehicle is much safer than one parked in a driveway, which can be marginally safer than one parked on the street, particularly if the driveway is longer, well lit, and the yard is fenced. It’s easier for criminals to scout while walking on a sidewalk and peering into curb-parked cars than going up into people’s yards or down long driveways.

Next is not advertising valuables. Thieves in our jurisdiction have targeted both marked and unmarked police cars since they know it’s very likely there are guns inside. They are often visible in a rack. Anyone with access to YouTube and Google can easily learn how to access a gun rack with a set of wire cutters and a 9v battery. If thieves, whether computer literate or not, can see valuables in your car, they will take note and go after them if the opportunity arises. Don’t leave bags, purses, electronics, cash, or weapons visible in the car. Not on the seats, not on the console, not on the floor. Hide, cover, or place in the trunk if it has to stay in your car.

While some vehicles are more secure than others, I haven’t noticed that any particular models are broken into more often than others with one notable exception. Early model Ford Super Duty Pickups are very easy to break into due to a security flaw in the external door handle, and because of that, they are more often targeted by professional thieves, both for break-ins and for auto theft. If you own a Super Duty, take the time to research the issue online and consider purchasing one of the aftermarket security upgrades to mitigate the problem. Some vehicles have a trunk that’s much easier to punch than others, but the overwhelming majority of break-ins involve the passenger compartment only.

I’d highly recommend not leaving firearms anywhere in a vehicle overnight, especially if it’s not garaged. If you absolutely must leave guns in the vehicle, lock them in a safe that is secured to the vehicle either permanently or via a cable lock with a high-quality padlock. This will deter all but the most dedicated thieves. The thieves that have been apprehended are sometimes carrying tools such a spark plug or other makeshift window punch and maybe a knife. They might also have a screwdriver and something to strike it with in order to punch car locks, but not wire cutters, pry bars, or the kind of tools needed to quickly force open a decent pistol safe.

While there are may very few reasons to leave a gun in your car when it’s parked at home, we can think of several reasons to leave a gun in a vehicle in a parking lot. Some states have a law that employers can’t prohibit a gun in your vehicle, but can prohibit them in the buildings. As a result, many citizens drive to and from work armed but must leave the firearm unattended in their vehicle while they are working. Additionally, every state has areas that are off limits for legal carry. Some are more restrictive than others. Finally, there are some places and activities that are just not conducive to carrying a firearm. I carry pretty much any time I’m awake, but even I haven’t figured out a good way to carry while swimming.

We should all assume there will be a time we have to leave our gun in the car and plan ahead, taking adequate precautions to keep that gun in the car and not let it fall into the hands of criminals. Layered security is the key. That could include a car alarm, parking in areas with more lighting and traffic (also a good personal security measure), and once again, making sure there is nothing of value visible from outside of the vehicle. You can use a small safe and cable lock that goes under the seat. Again, very few thieves carry the tools necessary to cut a cable. Given enough time, it could be pried into or otherwise defeated, but the combination of a car alarm and hidden safe are generally adequate precautions.

There are some people online saying it’s unwise to display NRA or other gun related stickers on your car as it advertises that there may be a gun inside.  While I’m not saying it has never happened anywhere, it has not been a factor in my area.

The most obvious answer for keeping your gun secure at home is a gun safe. While a well-made large gun safe is expensive, a pain to move, and can take up a lot of room, it’s also the best protection for your guns from any sort of unwanted access. While I was overseas, my Fort Knox safe protected my guns through two burglaries. Fort Knox even replaced a damaged faceplate for free when I returned.

Random thieves that break in will seldom have the tools required to get into a quality safe. If you’ve layered your security with an alarm or other ways to limit the amount of time a criminal is willing to spend in your house, it’s unlikely they will have time to get into your safe even if they do have the proper tools and knowledge. When larger gun safes are defeated, it’s because the thief was given plenty of time with it. That’s generally accomplished by simply stealing the entire safe and then opening it somewhere else. Cheaper safes and security cabinets are often relatively easy to pry open once they are laid on their backs. Bolting the safe down or framing it in so it’s not easily removed, combined with limiting the thief’s time via an alarm system will increase the effectiveness of any safe.

I’ve also seen small “quick-access” or nightstand type safes defeated in the home. Some of them do not require any tools to open. Simply slamming it repeatedly on the floor causes it to spring open or the locking mechanism to fail. This is an important measure of how easy it is to quickly defeat a small safe by even the most unprepared thief.  Any small safe must be secured in some way so it can’t be removed from the home and opened at a later time. Nightstands are often easy to break, again, by simply picking it up and smashing it on the floor. An eye-bolt sunk into a stud or into the floor for a cable or chain lock is significantly harder to defeat for a thief with limited tools.

A subset of gun safes are in-wall units. They can’t be stolen as an entire unit, so the thief would have to pry into it. Their safety can also be enhanced by hiding the unit behind a mirror or painting. Burglars do not routinely remove wall decorations, but they can be targeted if the thief knows what to look for. The more people who know about it, the higher the chances of the information reaching the wrong ears.

This moves us to the notion of hiding guns. This is the least secure method, of course, but if you must rely on it, there are areas that burglars do tend to search for hidden valuables more often and more thoroughly. These include:

  • Under beds
  • Dresser and desk drawers, sometimes pulling the drawers completely out to look behind them
  • Refrigerators
  • Kitchen cabinets
  • Bookcases
  • Closets, including clothes hanging in closets

Bedrooms and their attached closets almost always get the most attention when the thief has the time and inclination to search for additional valuables. I’ve seen dresser drawers pulled out and smashed apart as well as entire nightstands broken, presumably checking for false bottoms or hidden compartments.

I have no experience with safes that are built into shelves or otherwise disguised. My opinion is that the wall shelf option would be the best since things on the walls are rarely disturbed. I would be a bit more concerned about an item mimicking furniture that’s small enough to pick up, like a nightstand. Bookshelves or wall shelves are less likely to be smashed than a nightstand.

Finally, I’d like to end this article with a plea to keep guns secure from children not mature enough to understand the responsibilities of gun safety. Hidden is not secured. Kids are more resourceful and more observant than you think. Children who aren’t strong enough to pull the trigger in the traditional way still shoot themselves, often by pointing the gun at themselves, putting both thumbs through the trigger guard and their fingers on the backstrap, and squeezing. I’ve regretfully seen more than one child not yet old enough to attend school shoot themselves in the chest this way.

Guns left on nightstands, in shoe boxes in the closet, hidden on a magnet under an end table, and many more “stash guns” have all led to LEO’s responding to a child shot with a found handgun. Sometimes the victim is a child that lives in the home and sometimes they’re a visitor.

Please, don’t be the next household to have to go through that. Put your gun in a safe or keep it on your person in a holster. Don’t think it can’t happen to you or your child.

In summary, the best way to lower your risk of losing firearms to a thief is to keep them behind layered security. Vehicles are inherently less secure than homes, but the risk can be mitigated by keeping valuables out of sight, parking in higher traffic well-lit areas, and using a security device that requires tools and time to defeat. When not carried on your person, firearms in the home should ideally be stored in a safe that’s either too heavy to haul away or secured to the floor or wall. An alarm system will help ensure that burglars do not have time to search for and defeat those containers. Taking just a few extra measures can reduce the risk of your firearms falling into the wrong hands.

Semper Paratus

Check 6

Burn

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

2025 Gunsite Index

Welcome to 2026!  This is what has happened on Gunsite for the past year: 


2025 Gunsite Index

Merry Christmas and Trying to Not Offend                                                                     Dec 23

Hoplophobia: That Dreaded Decease                                                                             Dec 18

Hot Gunz is a Stolen Firearm Searchable Database                                                 Dec 12

Fallacy of Rule of 3's Training (Take Heed)                                                                  Dec 3

Round in the Chamber? How Can You Do That?                                                         Dec 1

Tactical Driving                                                                                                        Nov 27

Should I Carry A Gun? (repost) What Kind of Question is That?                                Nov 27

Beating A Dead Horse (Just a little) and Solutions/Situational Awareness                  Nov 27

Guns, Gear, and Opinions                                                                                       Nov 21

Habits and Muscle Memory                                                                                     Nov 20

Magazine Maintenance: More Fun Than a Barrel of Monkeys                                    Nov 17

When You Die What Happens to Your Guns?                                                             Nov 14

A Voice of Warning, Again...sorry                                                                             Nov 13

Tactical Reloads: Never Will You Need During A Fight                                                Nov 6

Carry Ammo Maintenance                                                                                           Nov 5

Being An "Expert" Instructor: Tips For Teaching Shooting                                                 Oct 28

Modern Technology Dead Drops                                                                                        Oct 28

How To "Make" Someone (Tell If Someone Is Carrying a Gun)                                         Oct 17

Air Marshal Course of Fire Review:  The Toughest Out There!                                          Oct 16

FLAG Post:  Eating Healthy                                                                                               Oct 15

Normalcy Bias: How To Fight It                                                                                            Oct 9

Persecution is Heating Up!                                                                                                   Oct 8

Patriots: Special Forces Underground                                                                                Oct 2

Navy Course of Fire Review                                                                                                 Oct 1

A Prophets Passing and An Attack on the Church                                                               Oct 1

FBI Course of Fire Review                                                                                                Sep 23

National Preparedness Month: Home Emergency Kit                                                      Sep 10

September is National Preparedness Month                                                                     Sep 4

The Possibility of A Connection Between Mind and Body in Practice                                Sep 4

Gun Ranges: Source of Skill Improvement                                                               Sep 3

Zero at 200 Makes Me Smile!                                                                                  Aug 26

Frequently Asked Questions About Mormons and Defense                                       Aug 26

Reality of Stopping a Threat                                                                                    Aug 20

Am I Violent? Only my hairdresser knows for sure...                                                Aug 15

Holstering and Safety                                                                                              Aug 13

Celebrating Annie Oakley                                                                                        Aug 13

The Church and Security Abroad and Domestic                                                         Aug 13

Helping Someone Choose A Gun                                                                                Jul 24

An Appeal to Bishops and Stake Presidents on Security                                             Jul 23

Canning Jalapenos from FLAG                                                                                  Jul 23

So Smooth They'll Call You Slick: Starting To Carry                                                   Jul 10

Interesting Facts About LDS Gunsite                                                                          Jul 10

Shooting With A Barricade                                                                                        Jul 2

Being Vigilant To Terrorism                                                                                       Jun 23

Cover, Concealment, and Firefights                                                                          Jun 17

Free Printable or Downloadable Paper Targets                                                           Jun 16

Firefights: 10 Critical Habits To Win By: Charles Remsberg                                        Jun 13

What I Tell My Kids About Riots                                                                               Jun 10

The Porter Rockwell Tour                                                                                          Jun 4

Keeping Your Family Safe: follow-home Robbery                                                        Jun 2

Just 5 Drills                                                                                                    May 30

Justifiable Violence: Use of Force                                                                            May 30

Reloading Ammo Safely: From "DIY Prepper"                                                           May 27

Gun Registration? Almost Non-existent                                                                   May 20

1000th Post                                                                                                            May 20

What I Learned From A Green Beret                                                                        May 17

Remembering Jeff Cooper                                                                                              May 13

Rant: Putting Your Trust and Testimony Where It Belongs                                         May 12

Concealed Carry: 7 Ways                                                                                         May 8

Becoming A Small Arms Instructor                                                                             May 8

Complacency Kills!                                                                                                   Apr 30

A Realistic and Effective Training Program For You!                                                  Apr 18

Moving Toward the Gunfire                                                                                      Apr 17

Mystery Solved!                                                                                                       Mar 20

Alternate Fuel For Preparation                                                                                 Mar 17

Keeping Track of Everything: Inventories                                                                   Mar 15

Another Stroll Down Church Policy Lane                                                                   Mar 11

Practice, Brother, Practice!                                                                                       Mar 7

Breathing: It's Not Just For Living Anymore (repost from 9/19/18)                              Mar 7

Stripper Clips For Reloading Magazines                                                                   Feb 20

Reality Training For A Gunfight                                                                                Feb 10

Witness and Testimony: How I Remember                                                               Feb 4

Developing a Tactical Mindset                                                                                  Jan 29

We Have To Be Better Than Them (Repost from 10/10/18)                                        Jan 29

Tactical Knives EDC Essentials                                                                                Jan 24

LDS Gunsite Index 2024                                                                                          Jan 23

Time For A Rant. I'm Fed Up!                                                                                   Jan 19

Less Violent                                                                                                                      Jan 16

Traits of an Operator                                                                                                Jan 15

Stop Runnin' Around With No Spare!                                                                              Jan 14

Range Gun Conditions and Safety Rules                                                                        Jan 14

10 Worst Things You Can Do If You Decide To Carry                                                 Jan 8

 

 

 

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Merry Christmas and Trying to Not Offend

In the name of Christmas and peace on earth, I repost this little ditty that I believe promotes kindness and having thicker skin.  I hope you and yours has a Merry Christmas, a Happy New Year, or a Happy Holiday... Not that there's anything wrong with that..

 Everyone does it. Most people don't really want to offend anyone. Sometimes we try to clarify what we mean and sometimes that comes across as being politically correct. In some ways it is.

Do you remember the Seinfeld episode called “The Outing”? In this episode George and Jerry are mistakenly viewed as being gay. As they discuss this, they deny it by saying, “We’re not Gay! …not that there’s anything wrong with that…”
Well, this is a typical person trying not to be offensive. They are being politically correct.
I think that it’s not a horrible thing to not want to be offensive. We all should be more kind. But sometimes that can be to the extreme …not that there’s anything wrong with that…
Here’s the deal. There’s a fine line between political correctness and not being offensive. I think I may have been seen as being racist or sexist at times. I don’t think that I am. I don’t want anyone to be discriminated against because of race or gender. We should give people the benefit of the doubt. But I also think that we should not be stupid with this and call everyone who may not get along with other cultures a racist. There are times when all of us have a personality clash with another person. Sometimes the foundation of that difference may have to do with a cultural difference. Often cultural differences mean a different race. If I don’t agree with “Black Lives Matters” does that make me racist if I am a different race? I don’t think it does, but many people like to throw out their race card.
Today, we’re left to deal with the dangers of our politically correct society; one where society paints good guys as bad. If you choose to carry a firearm, defend yourself, or even consider taking another human’s life to protect a loved one, you’re demonized. It’s a sad state indeed, but we’re finally reaping what we’ve sowed.
Why is this such a hard concept to grasp and why is there so much push back? My gut tells me it’s simply about control. There are many groups within our country who don’t want life, liberty or the pursuit of happiness to be extolled. Instead, they want you to fall in line and live according to their ideas. If that notion doesn’t scare the crap out of you, then you’re probably on the wrong side of this discussion.
I loved growing up as a kid, sleeping with my windows open and sometimes even the doors open. It was a great time to be a kid for sure, but today we live in a drastically different world.
It shouldn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out many crimes are targeted against defenseless or weak targets. I wonder why that is; I wonder if we could look at the animal kingdom and see a similar pattern? Could it be that the lioness is chasing after the weaker of the prey in order to guarantee a meal? If she fails to catch and kill her prey, she doesn’t eat. It really is that simple; in order to increase the chances of success, evil will choose the weaker or soft target.
A new study released by Stanford University entitled “Mass Shootings of America” or MSA has determined that most mass shootings were largely conducted in “gun free” zones. No kidding? I think I’ll fall over and die from that surprise (dripping with sarcasm). If anyone is still convinced gun free zones are safe, they’re ignorant.
“The definition of mass shooting used for the Stanford database is 3 or more shooting victims (not necessarily fatalities), not including the shooter. The shooting must not be identifiably gang or drug related. The motive typically appears to be indiscriminate killing.”
If we know they’ll more than likely target gun free zones, what can we do to help deter them from doing so? Many are quick to comment that the presence of armed, uniformed officers or security guards is enough and while I believe it’s a step in the right direction, it’s not the only solution.
Being politically correct gets people killed. I’m not advocating being racist, sexist, or just plain mean. But we should be able to speak plainly. We have been attacked by Islamic extremists. Is it too much to ask that we are careful with Muslims coming into this country? Is it too much to ask that an American Muslim do their best to show their patriotism and allegiance to the U.S.? I know this is not particularly fair, but it is reality. Black people have dealt with this unfairly for years. If you want change in this country, you must be patient. Sometimes a generation must pass away. I hope that is not the case with real change. My Grandfather fired hands on his farm in the 40’s because they were treating paid black farm hands horribly. He was from a generation where discrimination against blacks was very common, but he understood how wrong it was.
We can be this way too. We can recognize how wrong it is to profile people and to stereotype them into any type of pigeonhole. We can see people for who they are regardless of their culture or skin color. There are jerks and idiots of every color.
The First Amendment of the Constitution guarantees that I can say whatever I want in this country. There is a reason that this is the first amendment of the Bill of rights. Many of the other bills are connected to this free expression. But also, you will notice that the very first thing that the forefathers of this country wanted to establish was freedom of religion. Religion was before free speech in this amendment. I think that is significant.
Everyone has an opinion. Everyone should be able to express that opinion. I feel that illegal aliens in this country should not be able to enjoy the fruits of this country. My opinion is that what part of “illegal” do we not understand? If I do something illegal, I must pay the price of that broken law. Does this make me anti-Mexican? I don’t think it does. Talk to a Border Patrol agent and he will tell you he gets just as many OTM’s (other than Mexican) trying to enter this country illegally. Immigration is not just about Mexicans. Liberal thinking sometimes makes me want to be that “ugly conservative”. Liberal views often paint anyone against typical liberal causes, like immigration, as racists. I think President Obama has perpetuated this ridicules attitude. I’m not a Donald Trump fan, but he often says things that he feels and is labeled for it. Politically correct people often paint the first amendment as something that is limited to agreeing with them. Sometimes freedom of speech is not nice. This is where I think people should be kind, not politically correct.
There is a comic strip where a black boy says to his white friend “I like being black.” The white boy says “I like being white”. The last panel is the black boy saying, “Racist!” This is how it has become. There are times when I agree with the T-shirt slogan I saw the other day:
“Politically Correct
A term used to describe whiney, overly sensitive pansies who need the big, bad, real world all sugar-coated.” There is another that I will end this article with.
“You find it offensive? I find it funny. That’s why I’m happier than you.”
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Thursday, December 18, 2025

Hoplophobia: That Dreaded Decease

 Hoplology isn’t exactly a household word, so before I get too far with this post I had better define my key term.  Hoplology– derived from “hoplos,” a type of Ancient Greek fighter– is essentially the study of human combative behavior.  Personally, I like to think of it as a quirky branch of anthropology.  Some anthropologists might visit a tribe in a remote corner of the world and study that tribe’s traditional forms of dance, trying to use the dance as a lens to better understand the tribe’s culture.  A hoplologist would want to learn more about the tribe by examining their fighting methods– what do the types of weapons that they use tell us about their culture?  Does the fact that their fighting techniques focus on wrestling tell us something about their society?  Can we learn something from the way that they conceptualize the act of combat?

I have a phobia for doctors.  That is not true, I have an aversion to doctors.  It’s not quite a phobia.  After my combat experience I saw a psychologist and he drove me crazy.  If you ask someone 2,342 times how violence makes them feel rest assured, they will commit violence on you.  I’m not completely knocking the mental health field, but sometimes they do more damage than the original trauma the patient experienced. 

“Hoplophobia is a mental disturbance characterized by irrational aversion to weapons, as opposed to justified apprehension about those who may wield them.”  Lt Col Jeff Cooper

This is the definition of the word that Jeff Cooper first coined.  I see it all the time.  I had a coworker tell me his wife would not let him get a gun even though both of them felt the need for a means to defend their young family.  I told him about hoplophobia and that it is an irrational worry.  Sadly, the bumper sticker is correct, “Guns don’t kill people, People do.”  I told him to find a afternoon when they could meet me at the range.

We found an afternoon and I was ready.  First, we talked about the logical reasons for her fear, which are not really logical but emotional.  I talked about her gun training.  She said she didn’t have any gun training.  I said, “Yes you do!”  Then we talked about the false training that comes for Hollywood and the media.  We were at the range so there was someone else there shooting but several bays away.  Every time there was a shot she jumped.  I gave her some headsets and that helped.  We talked about how guns are just inanimate objects and that they don’t just go off without human interaction.  I kept all the guns in cases on another table.  We talked about gun safety, and we used a “rubber” gun.  It was a natural conversation, and she was put at ease.

Then I showed her a .22 Long round.  Then I brought out a Ruger 10/22, and we talked about the rifle.  We practice rounds I showed her how to load the magazine.  Then, reminding her of the safety rules we talked about, I handed her the rifle, and she loaded the magazine and charged a round.  She then cycled the gun until the 5 rounds from the magazine were all out.

We then talked again about the safety rules, and I gave her some live rounds.  She loaded the magazine.  I handed her the rifle again and she chambered a round.  We talked about aiming and sight picture.  She took the rifle and sighted in on the target and squeezed the trigger.  I had her shoot the 5 rounds I had her load.  We made the gun safe and went to look at her shots.  She had an impressive group with one flyer.  We talked about those 5 shots and went back to the bench.  She loaded and shot 10 more shots.  Then there were 10 more and repeated the process.  I then had her make the gun safe, put the rifle aside, and then we talked.  We talked about her shots, aim, grip, trigger discipline, breathing, all over again.  We touched again on safety then talked about the experience.  I asked her if it was a frightening experience.  She said once she understood the safety rules and why we have them, and understood how to operate the gun, she was actually having fun!  I said it was what I said when we started, “Education changes everything.”  We did similar things with a handgun, and she even shot a 9mm and a .38.  The fear was gone. Replaced by education and fun!  The mystery and false teaching melted away, and she learned to safely control and use a firearm.  She suffered from Hoplophobia, the irrational fear of weapons. 

There are many that suffer from this.  But the media is the worst purveyor of misinformation and downright lies concerning guns.  The anti-gun people are not always bad about this, especially if they are taught truth and given good education.  Most people react like my coworkers wife.  Often many can be brought over to our side with the same type of experience.  So, if you witness some idiot that think it’s funny to give a 12 guage to a petite woman and watch her get beat because of inadequate training, and no safety education, stop the travesty.  And those who are guilty of this are usually not anti-gun.  We want more rational people in our corner and these dangerous, bad experiences just hurt our cause.  Also, stop doing stupid things with guns.  Learn and keep the rules.  Teach with patience and a real interest in making that first range time for the inexperienced person a good experience.  Remember the safety rules:

1.       All guns are always loaded

2.      Never point a gun at anything you’re not willing to destroy

3.      Keep your finger off the trigger and out of the trigger guard until your sights are on the target

4.      Know your target and beyond the target

We as gun advocates need to be calm and rational in a crazy irrational world.  Some anti-gun people are nuts.  Completely unapproachable and unwilling to learn.  But most people will learn and understand better.  It may not make them gun people, but at least they have a better understanding that the hype created by the media is not true.

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Friday, December 12, 2025

Hot Gunz: A Stolen Firearm Searchable Database

 Hot Gunz is a database for guns that are stolen.  In the past, only law enforcement were the ones to have access to stolen gun information.  That is no longer the case.  HotGunz was created by gun owners who felt that regular citizens should have access to stolen gun information. Law enforcement databases are only available to law enforcement personnel; there is no way of knowing if a used firearm is a stolen gun. The HotGunz stolen gun database doesn’t necessarily have every stolen gun in it, but it is quickly making it much more difficult for gun thieves to sell stolen firearms. When the database was created in January 2009, they never charged any fees to list a stolen gun or search for a stolen gun. It is a great service for gun sellers and buyers. It is also the longest running and largest user-submitted database of stolen guns.  They have over 32,000 guns from north America and has been trusted by gun owners for 16 years.

Before buying a used gun check against this database.  You can add any guns that were stolen from you.  You can get help from the public and check if a firearm is stolen.

You must have an account to add a stolen gun, edit or remove stolen guns or view stolen guns in your area.  The account is free as of this writing.

Check it out!

https://www.hotgunz.com/

 

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Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Fallacy of Rule of 3's Training (Take Heed)

This is not my article.  It was sent to me, but I don't know where it came from.  If anyone knows please let me know so I can give credit where credit is due.  I've recently heard this "Rule of Threes" training, and I agree with the author of this article.

Not sure of the author but this post came from

reddotrange.com   Red dot training range in New Castle, PA

  You’ve probably heard the phrase: “The average defensive shooting is three rounds, at three yards, in three seconds.” It’s repeated so often that it’s treated like gospel in certain circles, usually to justify lazy training, underdeveloped skills, and resistance to progression.

 

While I’m not sure of the origin of the quote, specifically who to attribute it to, I can tell you that person is probably an idiot. Anyone giving definitive advice on self-defense by quoting a statistical average like it’s predictive is either missing the point or deliberately lowering the standard.

 

Let’s be clear: training around the average outcome is a fundamentally flawed approach when it comes to a task as dynamic and unpredictable as armed self-defense. “Average” does not equal “normal,” and it certainly doesn’t mean “sufficient.” If you build your entire skill set around a midline statistic, you are gambling that your future life-or-death scenario will be mild and convenient. That’s not risk management. That’s willful negligence.

 

Here’s why the “Rule of Threes” fails both logically and technically:

 

First, it’s not grounded in serious data. The origin of the “3-3-3” rule is often attributed to outdated summaries or cherry-picked data from limited law enforcement incident reports decades ago, many of which didn’t account for civilian defensive shootings, multiple attacker incidents, or cases that didn’t result in a full investigation. Worse, it compresses a massive range of possible encounters into one neat little phrase. It’s a misleading average, not a representative breakdown.

 

Second, it’s statistically illiterate. Averaging highly variable events and then using that number to dictate training priorities is idiotic. Imagine if you built a fire department’s training program around the “average” house fire. Would you ignore multi-story buildings? Basements? Wildfires? Of course not. You’d train for edge cases, worst-case scenarios, and high-complexity problems, because that’s what preparation looks like.

 

Third, it ignores distance variability. Defensive shootings don’t all happen at three yards. While some do occur at contact distances, many involve threats beyond ten yards, and a non-trivial number occur past twenty-five. Carjackings, active killers, church or school shootings, parking lot ambushes, and third-party defense situations don’t conform to three-yard templates. If your training plan doesn’t include being accountable at 10, 15, or 25 yards, then you’re not training to be a defender. You’re training to feel good in an echo chamber.

 

Fourth, it denies the reality of misses under stress. The “three rounds” idea assumes either a 100% hit rate or an opponent that falls down instantly. Neither is guaranteed. Under duress, shooting performance drops dramatically: cognitive degradation, narrowed focus, elevated heart rate, degraded fine motor control. Real-world footage shows multiple misses, multiple hits, and still-moving threats. Training to fire only “three rounds” sets an artificial mental threshold that could stall you when real resistance shows up.

 

Fifth, it fails to account for attacker resilience. Motivated attackers may be on drugs, wearing armor, or simply unwilling to stop. A single assailant can soak up multiple hits. Or there might be more than one. Limiting your mindset to three rounds assumes you’ll only ever face one compliant threat with no cover, no armor, and no forward drive. That’s fantasy. In a high-stakes scenario, your job isn’t to meet the minimum, it’s to overwhelm the problem decisively.

 

Sixth, the “three seconds” figure is both arbitrary and misleading. Violence doesn’t operate on timers. If you need to draw from concealment, break contact, seek cover, or protect a third party, your timeline could expand or contract rapidly. Assuming you’ll have “three seconds” of clean, uninterrupted control is nothing more than projection. Worse, when people believe this myth, they fail to train decision-making under time pressure. They don’t practice movement. They don’t rehearse complex threat assessment under stress. That’s how people freeze or fumble.

 

Finally, the “Rule of Threes” encourages training to a minimalist standard. It’s the weaponized version of “good enough,” and it pushes people toward mediocrity. It creates shooters who never leave the three-yard line, never push cadence or accuracy, and never stress-test themselves at distance or under duress. That kind of training may feel comfortable, but it isn’t preparing you for reality.

 

The mission of defensive firearms training should be preparedness, not statistical mimicry. You’re not trying to pass a math test; you’re trying to win a potentially lethal encounter where failure has permanent consequences. And if that’s the standard, then any mindset that leads you to prepare for the average, rather than training to handle the worst, is doing you a disservice.



I hadn't heard of this "rule of three's" but from what I know of it, I don't like it for reasons cited in this article.  Be very careful of the training that is out there.  Be sure it makes sense.


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