Author Archives: Kevin

A Sellout, A Panic, or A War?

We began our annual hiatus with the distribution of our Friday, December 14 edition. Only a few hours later, a disturbed kid and his stolen guns rampaging at Sandy Hook Elementary School in suburban Connecticut may have single-handedly reversed the political landscape for gun owners.

Trying to put the happenings, hysteria and hype of the past few days in perspective isn’t going to happen in in a single column. Only time will put this in perspective.

Since the shooting the market for guns in an already hot marketplace has superheated. Literally anything that attaches to, feeds, or otherwise supports the function of the modern sporting rifle has been snapped up by gun owners concerned that big changes are ahead. Ditto ammunition and many handguns like those carried by the military and police officers.

Barring our changing the way we deal with a crisis like this one, those changes are more than a possibility.

Today, Senator Dianne Feinstein will introduce proposed legislation that would impact every gun owner. If you’ve not already read her bill, I’d direct you to Feinstein’s Senate website for her identification of the bill’s key elements:

http://www.feinstein.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/files/serve/?File_id=10993387-5d4d-4680-a872-ac8ca4359119.

Passed – in any form – Senator Feinstein’s bill would permanently change our world. Having seen a ten year ban on “assault rifles” expire, Feinstein’s learned her lesson. She’s taken considerable pains to address subtle points unaddressed in the previous ban. If you own a modern sporting rifle or any other firearm capable of accepting more than a ten-round fuel supply, her bill assures that you’ll be one step closer to being required to either a) register or, b) surrender that firearm or be declared a criminal.

Not for something you did illegally, but for owning something you believe is your inalienable right to own.

The fact you’ve done nothing wrong does not matter.

Neither do the years of inaccuracies in firearms reporting you’ve pointed out to your friends and co-workers.

Ultimately, the Sandy Hook shooting won’t matter.

It may have been a catalyst, but this fight has always been about power, not people. It’s also about payback.

Today, hardcore anti-gunners are taking bold steps because they believe they can win.

They feel they “owe us” for the United States Supreme Court’s reversals of gun restrictions in DC and Chicago, and for having made anti-gun legislation a losing proposition over the past few election cycles.

This isn’t an election year, so moderates – on both sides of the aisle – are susceptible to political pressure, especially this hot-button topic. It sounds cynical, but they believe voters will forget how they voted and accept any new restrictions before they face the ballot box again.

But they will answer to the mainstream media – the minute their vote goes on the record.

Despite some even-handed reporting, it’s no secret where the majority of the media falls on this issue: they believe gun control is the answer.

To them, “assault rifles” not lunatics are why people are gunned down wholesale in “gun free zones”.

No, their opinion isn’t fact-based. That’s a fact we’d better accept, too.

And don’t bother pointing out that gun owners haven’t gotten a fair shake in the media in a very long time.

We’re far beyond that at this point.

Clip or magazine, semi- versus full-automatic; none of that stuff matters anymore.

Anti-gunners are moving – now – because they believe they can win – now.

They have the administration and most mainstream media execs on their side.

They believe that’s all it takes.

Barring everyone who believes in the individual right to own a firearm – whether they choose to own one themselves or not – speaking out, they’ll be right. And the right of firearms ownership will disappear faster than any of us can imagine.

Our doing business as usual and expecting trade organizations or membership groups to handle the heavy lifting in Washington just will not work this time.

It’s going to take regular people speaking out to stop – or at least slowdown- what’s coming otherwise.

We have something on the order of 51,000 retail gun stores. More licensed gun dealers than supermarkets, Starbucks or McDonalds.

In December 2012, 2,783,765 NICS checks were made. That’s nearly a million more than December 2011. 2011 eclipsed all previous years. Fifty-three percent of American households are thought to own a firearm. There’s really no definitive way of knowing the exact number – yet.

And for nearly five years, the firearms industry has been enjoying unprecedented sales. Already- record numbers have been pushed off the charts by the justifiable concerns of gun owners fearing action by the Obama administration.

This sector of the economy is doing quite well, thank you.

But that doesn’t mean anything.

The jobs the gun industry provides weren’t considered in the proposed legislation. Neither were the voluntary taxes paid by hunters and shooters that support conservation nationwide.

Some in the gun industry have already recognized that. And as they continue to make record numbers, they’re quietly discussing acceptable concessions.

Those concessions include a possible national adoption of regulations already in place in some areas (think California’s mandated bullet-buttons or 10-round maximum magazine capacities in a variety of states).

Others reportedly on the table for consideration don’t outlaw manufacturing or sales of the modern sporting rifle, but severely restrict what’s “acceptable” to the government.

It is unrealistic to expect companies to fight this for us. While companies are operated by individuals, a company’s ultimate goal never changes: to make money for its owners.

That discourages do-or-die fights with regulators and politicians. Compromise, not confrontation, minimizes the impact of change.

It’s equally unreasonable to expect membership groups, lobbyists, political parties or trade organizations to do the heavy-lifting.

They thrive in times of controversy, so they’re putting themselves at risk if they go “all-in” against increasingly anti-gun sentiments. It might sound cynical, but neither side of the gun issue has been willing to eliminate the other – until now.

Only regular people speaking out – clearly -has a chance of winning this one. Passing the buck won’t cut it.

SHOT – the industry’s largest trade show – is less than two weeks away and many companies are all in complete dither over what to do there – or even if they should go.

Some have withdrawn major new product introductions. Others are waiting to print catalogs because they want to be sure “what’s legal” before they go to that expense. Others are taking a wait-and-see attitude.

All of them dread the protesters and heavy media scrutiny that will surround a high-profile event like SHOT Show.

Some retailers and distributors have already caved. I’m not going to list them, because it doesn’t matter if I do or not. You will decide who sold-out, not me.

They exercised their right to decide what they sell. You will decide where to spend your money. Ultimately, that’s the only “voice” they hear. It was a calculated political risk, but if the result has no economic impact, their decision won’t matter.

And taking another “unacceptable” gun off the shelves later will be even easier.

Across the country “No Guns” signs are popping up. In states like Oklahoma, Kentucky, Alabama, New Mexico and Montana, not Massachusetts, New York and California.

In states where gun owners were accepted -if not welcomed – until only a few days ago businesses are telling gun owners they’re no longer welcome.

It’s significant that teachers across the country are signing up for firearms training wherever it’s offered. It’s important because teachers realize – better than anyone else – that “Gun Free Zones” aren’t deterrents to criminals and crazies.

School systems nationwide are beginning to embrace, or at least entertain, the NRA’s National School Shield education and training emergency response program. They might not like to admit it, but they know “the best person to stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun”.

But if we expect the NRA to win this fight for us, we are badly mistaken.

An NRA label on any idea is enough to turn some people off, including many gun owners. And the mainstream media’s still steamed over being denied the chance to ask questions at the NRA’s announcement of the School Shield program. I was there – I know how angry they were -and still are- at the idea they were used as “props”.

Wayne LaPierre’s lengthy review of a litany of media faults, omissions and inaccuracies – prior to announcing the program – didn’t help, but it certainly didn’t warrant the outpouring of nationwide media bile that followed.

The rancor clarified the mainstream media’s position when it comes to the NRA in particular, and gun owners in general. To them, we’re whack jobs who can’t be trusted. And not just some of us – all of us.

That’s why I don’t believe you can presume everyone else will fight off this attack on gun rights for you.

No pro-gun organization can expect the open-minded consideration of the media, politicians, or even our neighbors who truly believe guns are what’s wrong with America.

We’ve been reduced to a faceless group of crazies, and being marginalized is a step toward being criminalized and eventually exterminated. That’s not hysteria, that’s history.

There’s no organization that can step up and make the case that gun owners aren’t all fanatical crazies. Organizations represent nameless, faceless groups, not “real” people.

Only by putting faces people recognize – our faces- on the faceless numbers of gun owners can we hope to reverse the growing acceptance of the “reasonableness” of more gun controls.

We have to make this fight personal – or we’re all going to lose.

–Jim Shepherd

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Wolf Bill Up On House Floor!

Dear MUCC Members,

We’re almost there. Thanks to your efforts in contacting your legislators, SB 1350 has passed a Senate

Committee, the full Senate, and now the House Natural Resources Committee, too. We’re not done yet,

though: the bill to authorize a wolf hunting season is up on the House floor, and could be voted on as soon as tomorrow!

Please contact your State Representative today, and if you have already done so, encourage your friends and family to do the same. The more the merrier.

Contact your Rep today and tell them that you support science based management for wolves that the people asked for through Proposal G in 1996. Respectfully ask your representative to vote “YES” on SB 1350 when it comes up for a vote on the House floor.
Find Your Representative Here!

Thank you,

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Smith & Wesson® Introduces New M&P® Pro Series C.O.R.E. Pistols

November 8 : 2012
Smith & Wesson® Introduces New M&P® Pro Series C.O.R.E. Pistols
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — Smith & Wesson Corp. today announced that four new models have been added to the Company’s premier line of M&P® polymer pistols. Based on the popular Pro Series line of competition ready firearms, the new M&P C.O.R.E (Competition Optics Ready Equipment) models offer consumers a specialized platform for adding accessory optics to their personal handguns. Engineered to accept six popular styles of competition based optics, the M&P C.O.R.E models are easily adapted to meet any demand.

At the foundation of the new M&P C.O.R.E. resides a specialized mounting platform on the slide of the pistol that can be conveniently changed to match the desired optic. Through the use of removable brackets, consumers are able to simply install the corresponding mounting screws to achieve the precise fit and height required. Designed to work in conjunction with the Trijicon RMR®, C-More STS, Leupold® DeltaPoint™, Docter, Insight® MRDS™ and JPoint™, the M&P C.O.R.E. offers quick and custom sight installation for the industry’s top aftermarket red-dot sight manufacturers.

The new M&P C.O.R.E. models will be available in both 9mm and .40 S&W with either a 4.25 or 5-inch barrel configuration. Engineered as a true competition platform, each model will retain original design features including a polymer frame with a through-hardened stainless steel slide and barrel, ambidextrous operating controls, striker fire action and Melonite® finish. For improved handling the M&P C.O.R.E. models feature a new textured interchangeable back strap with prominent stippling. Three patented palmswell grips are supplied with each pistol, providing shooters the ability to tailor the grip size to their personal preference.

For improved accuracy and precise shot placement during competition, the M&P C.O.R.E. pistols are standard with a Performance Center sear. The specialized sear allows for a crisp 4.5 pound trigger pull along with a faster, defined reset in between shots. On top of the slide, Smith & Wesson has added higher sights that can be used in concordance with the mounted optic. Other standard features of the new pistols include a crowned muzzle for improved accuracy, picatinny-style equipment rail and reversible magazine release.

Internal features of the new M&P C.O.R.E. remain consistent with the original design and include a stainless steel internal chassis designed to reduce flex while also providing a stable shooting platform. The M&P pistol’s low-bore axis helps maintain ease-of-use and a comfortable feel and the passive trigger safety prevents the pistol from firing if dropped regardless of angle. A sear release lever eliminates the need to press the trigger in order to disassemble and the simple take down lever is located on the left side of the frame. A loaded chamber indicator is present on top of the slide and rear scalloped slide serrations enable easy firearm manipulation.

The 9mm M&P C.O.R.E. is standard with a 17+1 round magazine capacity and the .40 S&W variant features a 15+1 round capacity. Without a mounted optic the 5-inch barrel models have an empty weight of 26 ounces while the 4.25-inch pistols measure two ounces lighter.

For more information on the new M&P C.O.R.E models, please visit www.smith-wesson.com

About Smith & Wesson
Smith & Wesson Holding Corporation (NASDAQ Global Select: SWHC) is a U.S.-based leader in firearm manufacturing and design, delivering a broad portfolio of quality firearms, related products and training to the consumer, law enforcement, and military markets. The company’s brands include Smith & Wesson, M&P and Thompson/Center Arms. Smith & Wesson facilities are located in Massachusetts and Maine. For more information on Smith & Wesson, call (800) 331-0852 or log on to www.smith-wesson.com.

Media Contact:
Matt Rice
Blue Heron Communications
(800) 654-3766
matt@blueheroncomm.com
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Remington Acquires TAPCO

November 6 : 2012
Remington Acquires TAPCO
Madison, NC – Remington Arms Company, LLC (Remington), part of the Freedom Group Family of Companies, announced today it has acquired The American Parts Company Inc. (TAPCO).

TAPCO is a designer and marketer of American-made aftermarket accessories and replacement parts for handguns, rifles, shotguns, modern sporting rifles and other tactical firearms. All aspects of the product development cycle are managed from within the company. State of the art computer aided design, rapid prototyping and extensive testing have allowed TAPCO to bring innovative and dependable products to the shooting marketplace.

“TAPCO has been in business for more than 25 years and has established market strength through its high quality U.S.-made products,” said George Kollitides, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Freedom Group. “This acquisition will enhance our positioning in the accessories market and allow us to further our research and development capabilities.”

“With the acquisition of TAPCO, Remington continues to demonstrate its commitment to the firearm parts and accessories business,” said Scott Blackwell, President of Freedom Group. “TAPCO is well-known as a leader in delivering innovative and dependable products to the shooting marketplace. We are excited about the breadth of the products they bring to our portfolio, and we look forward to utilizing our resources to ensure our consumers and OEM partners benefit from this important acquisition. We welcome TAPCO and its employees into our family of companies.”

TAPCO will continue day-to-day operations at its Kennesaw, Georgia, facility.

###

About Remington Arms Company, LLC

Remington Arms Company, LLC, (“Remington”) headquartered in Madison, N.C., designs, produces and sells sporting goods products for the hunting and shooting sports markets, as well as solutions to the military, government and law enforcement markets. Founded in 1816 in upstate New York, the Company is one of the nation’s oldest continuously operating manufacturers. Remington is the only U.S. manufacturer of both firearms and ammunition products and one of the largest domestic producers of shotguns and rifles. The Company distributes its products throughout the U.S. and in over 55 foreign countries. More information about the Company can be found at www.remington.com.

Media Contact:
Jessica Kallam Jessica.kallam@remington.com (800) 243-9700 ext. 8578
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Safety Warning And Recall Notice

Product Safety Recall Notice

Warning – Do Not Use

Remington 338 Lapua Magnum

250 Grain Scenar Match Ammunition Lot Nos. L13SA29L, L13SA29R, L13SB29L, or L13SB29R

Remington has determined the above lots may have been improperly loaded. Improper loading may cause malfunctions which may result in damage to the firearm, serious personal injury or death.

DO NOT USE

Remington 338 Lapua Magnum 250 Grain Scenar Match Ammunition Lot Nos. L13SA29L, L13SA29R, L13SB29L, or L13SB29R

To identify Lot numbers:

  • For CASES, the Lot Number is stenciled on the outside of the case; and,
  • For BOXES, the Lot Number is stamped on the inside flap of the box.

If you have any of the ammunition identified above, immediately discontinue use and contact Remington at 1-800-243-9700, Prompt #3. We will arrange for return shipment and, upon receipt, will send replacement ammunition at no cost.

If you are unsure if you have one of these Lots or if you have mixed boxes of ammunition, please immediately discontinue use and contact Remington.

For any consumer questions or instructions on how to return product, contact the Consumer Service Department at 1-800-243-9700, Prompt #3.

We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.

Safety First

Always observe the Ten Commandments of Firearm Safety and wear approved eye and ear protection anytime you are shooting.

September 19, 2012.

http://www.remington.com/pages/news-and-resources/safety-center/safety-warning-recall-notice-Remington338-250Gr-Match.aspx

 

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Get $50 Back on all Redfield® Raider™ 550 Laser Rangefinders

September 27 : 2012
Get $50 Back on all Redfield® Raider™ 550 Laser Rangefinders
BEAVERTON, Ore. – Consumers who purchase a Redfield® Raider™ 550 laser rangefinder between October 1 and December 31, 2012, can receive a $50 rebate while supplies last. The compact Raider 550 delivers big-time performance in a package just four inches long and weighs less than five ounces. This easy to carry rangefinder can make a big difference on the hunt or at the range.

Redfield’s high-speed digital processor technology and powerful laser combine to provide quick, accurate ranging. Highly efficient, the Raider provides longer battery life out of its CR-2 battery.

The 6X magnification allows hunters to precisely target game and get exact distances. At close ranges, the Raider 550 can double as an instant spotter. The Raider 550 is available in matte black or Mossy Oak ® Break- Up® Infinity™ camouflage.

For more information, visit www.redfield.com or call 877-798-9686. Rebate details can be found at rewards.redfield.com.

Visit us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/RedfieldHunting.

Acquired by Leupold & Stevens, Inc. in 2008, Redfield is now a brand of the Oregon-based company. The Redfield line includes Revolution™ and Revenge™ riflescopes, Rebel™ roof prism and Renegade™ Porro prism binoculars, Rampage™ spotting scope kits, and Raider™ rangefinders. The Redfield Gun Sight Company was founded in 1909 by John Hill Redfield. Over the years, Redfield became one of the leading American manufacturers of sports optics, known for the performance, ruggedness and reliability of its products. The new Redfield line upholds that tradition and is sold worldwide to hunters, shooters, wildlife observers and other outdoor enthusiasts.

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2013 New Products from Del-Ton Incorporated

September 27 : 2012
2013 New Products from Del-Ton Incorporated
(Elizabethtown, NC) Del-Ton is pleased to announce the introduction of an exciting new rifle designed for the sport shooter and enhancements to two flagship models of its rifle line.

The DTI Evolution is an excellent choice for any sporting application including 3-gun competition. “We have included many quality features but were able to keep the weight down,” said Tony Autry, CEO of Del-Ton Incorporated. The DTI Evolution will begin shipping in first quarter, 2013. Key features include:

16″ CMV chrome-lined, mid-length lightweight barrel and gas system; 1X9 twist
HPT/MPI tested Carpenter 158 bolt
Samson Evolution 12.37″ free float rail
M4 feed ramps
Samson Quick Flip Dual Aperture rear sight; Samson folding front sight
Two-stage, Mil-Spec trigger; Magpul MOE+ grip
Magpul CTR Mil-Spec buttstock; Mil-Spec buffer tube; H-buffer
Weight: 6.5 lbs
MSRP: $1300

The DT Sport OR is now on the shelves. This sporty, lightweight rifle is a great value and offers many features available on more expensive rifles. Key features:

16″ barrel; 4140 steel; 1X9 twist
Phosphated under low pro gas block; lightweight profile
Tested Carpenter 158 bolt
A3 Flat top with white “T” marks
Lower receiver is Mil-Spec forged 7075 T6 aluminum; hard coat anodized
M4, 6-position buttstock
Weight: 5.6 lbs
MSRP: $699

The Echo 316H OR is a solid, mid-priced A3 heavy barreled carbine that will offer years of service and reliability. Key features:

16″ chrome moly vanadium barrel; 1X9 twist
Phosphated under single rail gas block; heavy profile; M4 feed ramps
HPT/MPI tested Carpenter 158 bolt
M4 feed ramps
A3 flat top with white “T” marks
Lower receiver is hard coat anodized, Mil-Spec, forged 7075 T6 aluminum
M4 6-position buttstock; Mil-Spec buffer tube; H-Buffer
Weight: 6.4 lbs
MSRP: $864

For complete technical specifications and information on these and other Del-Ton products, please visit www.del-ton.com.

Del-Ton Incorporated is a manufacturer of quality AR-15 style modern sporting rifles and an online supplier for parts, upgrades, accessories, optics and custom rifle kits. Based in Elizabethtown, N.C., all rifles and components for Del-Ton products are made in the U.S.A. and Del-Ton rifles carry a lifetime warranty for the original purchaser. Visit www.del-ton.com for detailed product information.

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