Mas Ayoob Blog - Identity politics seems to be the bane of our time in this country, and the "cancellation of culture" is a side effect. Even the center-left magazine The Atlantic seems to be aware of this
Do the snowflakes realize that they are empowering racists by allowing them to co-opt the positive hand gesture that has been a part of American culture since the early 1800s? In other places it means different things. For some of my ancestors, I was told, it meant the Evil Eye: "A curse on you, your children, and the camel on which you rode." Teaching in Latin America, I learned the hard way that this is a sign
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Took it as a sign of approval when I showed it to the macho guys I teach.
The Da/sa Pistol, Reconsidered
We're trying to do our part to make America great, but I always thought things were still great, so "Again" just didn't fit. A Langdon Custom Beretta LTT pistol currently made in Tennessee.
My gun/self defense training school is called MAG, for Massad Ayoob Group, since 2009. I issue red caps with this logo to range officers so that students can identify them as part of the training staff. In a recent class, one of the ROs said to me, "I'd better take that hat off before I go to lunch." I must have given him a quizzical look because he explained, "There are places around here where you can get attacked for wearing a red MAGA cap, and I want to stay out of trouble." Sigh... maybe he's right. Maybe people are stupid and dangerous enough to attack someone for wearing a logo cap
If someone is looking at me for wearing a red cap with my company logo on it, maybe I should just give them the OK sign to clear some troubled waters... In the mid-1990s, I got a call from a man named Dave Duffy . He published a magazine called
, and is looking for a firearms editor. I was a little embarrassed to tell him that I had not heard of the publication. He sent me some previous and current copies. I liked his approach and his family's approach to self-sufficiency, and I came back to him to basically say, "Let me in, Coach!"
New Holosun P.id Series Of Weaponlights The Firearm Blog
So, I'm still an employee and Dave wants a bio. The Grateful Dead have a phrase that my generation uses a lot: "It's been a long, strange journey."
I am from the second generation of my family to be born in this country. As far as I can tell, my paternal grandparents came to the US. from Damascus in the last decade of the nineteenth century and settled in Boston, where my father was born in 1900. My maternal grandfather immigrated here from Scotland after settling in Canada and his wife from County Cork, Ireland in the first decade of the 20th century. They also settled in the Boston area of Dorchester, where my mother was born in 1909. My parents met there in the late 1930s and married in 1940. After World War II ended in 1945, they moved to southern New Hampshire, where I unexpectedly arrived as a life-changing child in 1948.
Why do I mention ethnicity? In my mature career as a firearms writer and instructor, I've occasionally encountered someone who asked, "If you're cool enough to teach me this, why didn't you ever become a World Champion Combat Pistol?" My ancestors gave me the perfect answer: “It's genetic. When you're half Syrian, one quarter Irish, and one quarter Scottish, you're three-quarters genetically programmed to shoot hostages first. The fines add up, and when your Scottish quarter asks for your entry fee back, it starts to get embarrassing.
My mother and her family are not "gun people". In fact, my mother hated guns herself, but she allowed them because she understood their protective purpose. However, mine and his father were armed citizens. Both participated in successful self-defense shootouts in early 20th century Boston. My father was a jeweler and watchmaker who set up his first store in 1932 in Boston, so I grew up in a family and an armed family.
Massad Ayoob Answers Questions From Our Subscribers. Q&a
Damn, I've gotten old... here is March 2020 from a 60 round demo target I shot for students in a MAG-40 class in Mississippi with a Glock 19 Gen5 stock in 9mm.
I came to the shooting early. My father was a sporting figure, an exceptional swimmer and boxer in his youth. I have asthma since childhood, and the family doctor insists that there is no more athletics. Hell, I can't swim; maybe due to buoyancy issues due to asthma i am a "natural tonun". When my dad found out I liked guns, I said, “Thank God, there is
My only son can be a man,” so he gave me permission to do so. One of my earliest memories is of him holding my older sister's .22 Stevens rifle balanced in the palm of my hand as I climbed the stock and it took me too long to reach my shoulder to aim and squeeze the shots. . He told me later that I was four years old when he started doing it. When mom went shopping in town, she would drop me off at the store for dad to babysit, and to keep me busy, she would put me in the back room with a Colt revolver to dry fire. At first the pressure on the double action trigger was more than I could handle, but I learned to press the trigger of the trigger against something hard to push the gun and cock it so I could "fire" it in one motion. This is my introduction to the gun safety rule I've been sharing all along: We can never childproof our guns, so we must "proof" our kids.
My generation grew up calling it ".45 subs" instead of "semi-finished". Hell, the word is emblazoned on the gun and the ammo box... (That gun is the Trapper Scorpion, a cut and channeled Colt Combat Commander designed by Lin Alexiou decades ago.)
Massad Ayoob — Five Point Checklist For After A Self Defense Shooting
My first gun of my own was an Eastern Arms 12-gauge single-barreled shotgun when I was about seven years old. Yeah, it kicked my ass the first time I fired it. My father started me shooting handguns at age nine, and at age eleven I got my first gun, a used Ruger .22 Standard Model that he bought for $20. I love this gun, but in the 1950's it was expected to be shot one handed and was too heavy for a little boy on the cusp of puberty. We traded it in for a new High Standard Sentinel .22 light aluminum frame revolver at Western Auto across the street from my dad's jewelry store and that was the gun I really learned about.
Twelve was an important age for me, and, although I didn't realize it at the time, the most formative. At the time, I had my first centerfire rifle, a WWII souvenir 1934 Beretta in .380. I found gun shops and gun magazines. Sprague's Gun Shop in Hooksett, New Hampshire has boxes of old issues
That I found a job Jeff Cooper. I liked what he wrote: as if the Messiah had risen in the west. Cooper was the high priest of the Colt .45 (yes, back then it was called "automatic" not "semi-automatic" and the magazine boxes and the Colt pistol itself read ".45 Automatic") and I my father asked why he had with him only the .38 caliber Colt Cobra. Instantly taking down two deadly assailants with a single round of .38 lead bullets of his own, my father only smiled condescendingly and perhaps a little teasingly, but under the tree for my twelfth Christmas was a Colt 1911. 45 machine gun.
Through the mists of time spanning 28 of LE's 40+ years. The service revolver on the left is a personally owned Colt Python .357 Magnum; On the right is a Ruger P345.
Massad Ayoob On Guns, Early 1980s Edition
I was about 25 years old when I sat at the feet of the legendary Bill Jordan. Here he holds the S&W .41 Magnum he helped create.
This was important because at twelve I was no longer a kid sitting in the utility room with an empty revolver, but working part-time and summer in a shop. There were a variety of handguns and revolvers stashed in tactical locations in that armed robbery of a business type, including a Winchester Model 1897 12 gauge pump action shotgun in the utility room, all loaded accurately, but pointed as Dad said when the dirt got into the fan. I may not be close to any of them, so if I'm working there, I'll bring it. The gun I chose was a .45, cocked, locked, and tucked into my belt behind my right hip, always hidden by one of those white lab coats
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