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The Right to Bear ArmsAs most of you know, the importance of firearm ownership cannot be understated. Owning a gun (or several, as the case should be) is a required part of being a White Racialist unless one is deep undercover. Like people, all guns are not created equal and care should be taken when deciding which firearm make and model you will trust your life to. Some firearms are much better than others and some will do much better using certain types of ammunition. Know as well as possible the main firearm you plan on using for home defense. Know its magazine capacity, its safeties, its location, and how to fix it quickly if it has a failure to feed (FTF) or failure to eject (FTE). Know the same information about the weapon you would choose to carry with you when you leave your home, and keep additional ammunition close at hand if it is possible and not too conspicuous. While a shotgun is the preferred close range antipersonnel weapon, for this article I will mostly be discussing handguns. Today there are a great variety of handgun types to choose from and it can be a difficult selection process when deciding which handgun would be best for you. I will first break it down into revolver vs. semi-auto pistol: * Revolvers use a very old design and it's a design that works very well. They have limited bullet capacity and take longer to reload than an auto-pistol, but generally they will fire a round capable of ending a human life every time the trigger is pulled (providing a live round is in the chamber), and in a situation where half-seconds mean the difference between life and death, reliability is everything. My choice for a concealed carry weapon is a revolver chambered for the potent .357 magnum round. My favorites are the Smith & Wesson Model 640 and 649 ( http://www.smith-wesson.com ) and the Ruger KSP-321XL ( http://www.ruger-firearms.com ). Both Ruger and S&W make high quality revolvers. All three of these models have concealed hammers which means you wont snag your gun on any clothing when pulling it out of its holster in an emergency They are very compact weapons that each have a 5-shot capacity using .357 magnum rounds. A revolver chambered in .357 mag can also use .38 spl ammunition which is good to use while at the range because it won't cause as much wear and tear on your gun as the .357 mag ammo will. You should practice with both types of ammunition to get a feel for the recoil you will experience in a real life or death situation. Always carry your revolver loaded with .357 mag ammo. * Pistols are far more common these days
than revolvers are due to their higher bullet capacity and ease of quick
reloading. Some pistols are very reliable and some will jam frighteningly
often. My choices for pistols are Glocks ( http://www.glock.com
), the Springfield XD series ( http://www.springfield-armory.com
[personal favorite] ), Heckler and Koch (H&K) USP series ( http://www.hecklerkoch-usa.com
), and the Sig Sauer Pro series ( http://www.sigarms.com
). All of these companies produce handguns that are very well made and
the price will reflect that (you get what you pay for). Choose a handgun
chambered for 9mm, .40 s&w, or .45 acp. Clean these guns well after
every session at the shooting range and they will last a long time and
continue to be accurate. * There is a variety of ammunition to choose
from nowadays and that choice can strongly affect the reliability, lifespan
and accuracy of your gun. Generally, 'Wolf' ammunition is bad. Some
gun ranges won't even allow it to be used at their range. 'Wolf' ammo
is cheap, but also dirty and unreliable. Winchester White Box (WWB)
and Remington UMC are common practice ammunition but are both fairly
dirty and not the best for your gun. They will suffice if you for some
reason have a desperate, immediate need for practice ammo. Pay for the
expensive ammunition in any gun that you care about. My favorite target
ammunition (and what I consider is the best for the gun) is CCI Blazer
ammunition or Speer Lawman ammunition. - Federal Hydra-Shok Based on studies and test of these various types of ammo, my top picks would be the Federal HST, Speer Gold Dot, Hornady TAP, and Corbon DPX. Try all these loads in your handgun and see which one you get the best reliability and accuracy with and stick to that one.
* Regarding personal/home defense shotguns, you should look no further than the Remington 870 or Mossberg 500/590 12 gauge with an 18.5'' or shorter barrel. Both pump-action shotguns are very well made and ultra-reliable. For ammo, you should use quality ammunition but the ammo brand selection isn't as quite as important with a pump shotgun than it is with a handgun. If you are sensitive to recoil (consider your sensitivity while thinking about being waken up at 2:00 am by an intruder breaking into your home) you should use the 2-3/4'' shotshells. If recoil isn't a problem for you then the 3'' shotshells do provide a slight increase in stopping power. Use #4 buckshot; it has a better lethal spread than either #1 or 00 buckshot and getting hit with only one pellet from #4 (.24 inches in diameter) in the right spot will kill most people - or at least discourage further aggression on their part. Contrary to popular belief, you can't just point a shotgun in someone's general direction and expect them to get blown to pieces; you do actual have to aim. You will not need to consider any "hot" or magnum shotgun ammunition, standard over the counter buckshot will do just fine for almost any situation.
Remember, when you say you would defend your family with your life, don't forget that your Aryan Race is your family as well.
- Axl Hess
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