Links of the Day

Susie offers an ultimatum for Alliance members. Either follow what she says or you’re kicked out. We need an Alliance of elite blogs, not a bunch of lollygaggers.
baldilocks has some particularly poignant words about the harmfulness of the idiocy of Shelia Jackson Lee. (thanks to Inoperable Terran for the link)
Heh heh. People without guns are stupid. If I’d own a store, put up a “Gun Free” sign, and then shot someone trying to rob me, could I be sued for false advertising?
Plan to do some catch up blogging tomorrow, posting about MEChA, some hate mail, and finally getting back to some Frank Answers™.

Frank on Guns: Gun Care

In my final part of my series, I’m going to talk about gun care. You need to care about your gun so it can care about you. Your gun’s ability to shoot bad people could save you one day, and thus you need to treat it with respect. Nothing is worse than when you want to kill someone you miss or your gun malfunctions.

First off, you need to keep training with your guns. That means going to a gun range. There are lots of rules to follow at a gun range, and, though you’re probably thinking, “Hey – I have a gun – I don’t need to follow any rules!” remember that there are lots of other people at the gun ranges with firearms too. There are outdoor ranges where everyone needs to stop, lay down their weapon, and then go out on the range and set up targets. That’s annoying and takes time. I like indoor ranges where you just use some mechanical thing to bring your target towards you and away from you and then fill it with holes.

You need to practice until you have a good grouping of your shots. This makes it more likely that, if someone attacks you, you will make him dead. Also, a paper target where are all the shots are placed neatly in the center makes a great decoration to hang on your office door, especially if you write on the target the word “You.” You’ll find much less people will bother you if you do that.

While shooting and training with your gun is essential, also as important is to clean your gun after every time you fire, whether you spent a while at the range or just shot some punk on the way to the store to pick up some milk. Gunpowder residue will build up in your gun, and you want to remove it to keep proper functioning. This means cleaning out the barrel, all the working parts, and oiling everything to keep your gun protected from the elements.

To clean a gun properly, you need to “strip” the gun, removing the barrel so you can clean it from the inside out. Many guns have different ways to disassemble them, so it’s a good idea no to toss out those instruction booklets even though you probably thought, “Bah! I don’t need no stink’n instructions to tell me how to pull a trigger.” The problem with disassembling a gun is that, if someone is lurking in the shadows waiting to attack you, when your gun is apart is the perfect time for him to strike. In my favorite movie, The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, Clint Eastwood is cleaning is gun when he realizes enemies are approaching, so he has to quickly assemble and load it before they attack. You’re not the man with no name, so you don’t want to be in that situation. Instead, when cleaning one gun, keep another gun loaded and in ready access. When done cleaning the first gun, put it back together, load it, and then clean the second. It’s just common sense.

If you ever experience problems with your guns, you may need to use different ammo or have the gun checked out by an experienced gunsmith. To keep you guns in kill’n form takes your vigilance, and, with proper care, you’ll have many years of firearm fun and dead bad people.

Well, that concludes my primer on guns. If there are other topics people want me to cover, put them in the comments. Also, always follow the rules of gun safety, and always fight to make sure laws allow you to have access to lethal force to defend yourself, your family, and your stereo.

Remember, no problem is so complex that it can’t be solved by proper firearm usage.