Archive for the Shooting Category

Obama revives talk of U.N. gun control

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Written By: A Global Leading News Source

Obama revives talk of U.N. gun control

NRA guests warn international treaty would strip 2nd Amendment rights

Gun rights supporters are up in arms over a pair of moves the White House made last month to reverse long-standing U.S. policy and begin negotiating a gun control treaty with the United Nations.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton first announced on Oct. 14 that the U.S. had changed its stance and would support negotiations of an Arms Trade Treaty to regulate international gun trafficking, a measure the Bush administration and, notably, former Permanent U.S. Representative to the United Nations John Bolton opposed for years.

Two weeks ago, in another reversal of policy, the U.S. joined a nearly unanimous 153-1 U.N. vote to adopt a resolution setting out a timetable on the proposed Arms Trade Treaty, including a U.N. conference to produce a final accord in 2012.

“Conventional arms transfers are a crucial national security concern for the United States, and we have always supported effective action to control the international transfer of arms,” Clinton said in a statement. “The United States is prepared to work hard for a strong international standard in this area.”

Gun rights advocates, however, are calling the reversal both a dangerous submission of America’s Constitution to international governance and an attempt by the Obama administration to sneak into effect private gun control laws it couldn’t pass through Congress.

‘Shooting Back’ tells of lives saved from attackers. Learn the Bible’s defense of bearing arms from a man who defended his church from terrorists

Bolton, for example, told Ginny Simone, managing editor of the National Rifle Associations’ NRA News and host of the NRA’s Daily News program, “The administration is trying to act as though this is really just a treaty about international arms trade between nation states, but there’s no doubt – as was the case back over a decade ago – that the real agenda here is domestic firearms control.”

He continued, “There’s never been any doubt when these groups talk about saying they only want to prohibit illicit international trafficking in small arms and light weapons, it begs the whole question of what’s legal at what’s not legal. And many of the implications of these treaty negotiations are very much in their domestic application. So, whatever the appearance on the surface, there’s no doubt that domestic firearm control is right at the top of their agenda.”

Brian Wood, disarmament expert for Amnesty International, explained in a Bloomberg report why his organization and others are pushing for the U.S. to join Arms Trade Treaty talks. Wood said the U.S. is the largest conventional arms trader in the world and the unregulated trade of conventional arms “can fuel instability, transnational organized crime and terrorism.”

“All countries participate in the conventional arms trade and share responsibility for the ‘collateral damage’ it produces – widespread death, injuries and human rights abuses,” said Rebecca Peters, director of the International Action Network on Small Arms in an Agence France-Presse interview. “Now finally governments have agreed to negotiate legally binding global controls on this deadly trade.”

But Bob Barr, a former U.S. representative and presidential candidate of the Libertarian Party explained in a separate interview with the NRA’s Simone how a treaty that looks like it’s all about fighting international crime will necessarily lead to erosion of Second Amendment gun rights:

“Even though [treaty advocates] all say, ‘We are not going to involve domestic laws and the right to keep and bear arms, that won’t be affected by all this,’ that’s nonsense,” Barr said. “There’s no way that if you buy into something like this and a treaty is passed regulating to ensure that firearms transfers internationally don’t fall into the hands of people that the U.N. doesn’t like, there’s no way that that mechanism will work unless you have some form of national regulation and national tracking.”

Bolton not only agrees with Barr’s assessment but also sees the treaty as an Obama administration end-around of the Constitution:

“After the treaty is approved and it comes into force, you will find out that it has this implication or that implication and it requires the Congress to adopt some measure that restricts ownership of firearms,” he said. “The administration knows it cannot obtain this kind of legislation purely in a domestic context … They will use an international agreement as an excuse to get domestically what they couldn’t otherwise.”

Clinton’s October statement of support for the treaty negotiations was filed with a caveat that the Conference on the Arms Trade Treaty operate under the consensus rule of decision-making, essentially that its provisions be adopted unanimously.

“Consensus is needed to ensure the widest possible support for the treaty,” she stated, “and to avoid loopholes in the treaty that can be exploited by those wishing to export arms irresponsibly.”

But Bolton warned gun owners not to think the consensus rule will stop the treaty from passing.

“Consensus at the U.N. is a way of saying unanimity, everybody agrees, but in fact, the U.N. in the last eight years could have been very close to consensus on exactly this kind of treaty but for the Bush administration,” Bolton said. “So I don’t think her comment about consensus offers Second Amendment supporters any consolation, because absent the Unites States, nobody is really going to put up an objection to this.”

Citizens wishing to speak out on the issue can contact the State Department or the National Rifle Association.

The Art of Dry Firing: Honing your marksmanship skills

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If you asked the top shooters in Bullseye today what’s helped them the most, they’d answer, unequivocally, dry firing. Yes, it can be boring, but it doesn’t have to be if you use your imagination.

You’re in Total Control

Even if you’re at the club 2-3 times a week, it’s still necessary to dry fire. With dry firing you choose when, where and how long to practice. And, dry firing doesn’t cost anything: no range fees, or target expense and no ammunition burnt up. Plus you can do it just about anywhere—in the comfort of your home or while you’re away getting ready for a match. Plus, there’s no wear and tear on your pistol and, best of all, you never have to clean your gun! Now that is big! You can dry fire every gun in your safe and never have to clean a one of them.

Honing Your Skills

The most important reasons to dry fire are clear: you can improve your scores by building up your fine muscle motor skills and refine trigger control. Your gun doesn’t need to go “bang” in order to get measurable results. Dry firing will help overcome bad habits too—like jerking or healing the gun. It also sends signals to the brain that “everything’s okay,” which eases tension during a match. Have you ever watched a professional basketball player shoot free throws? They go through the exact same process over and over and over again. From beginning to end, every little move has been diagnosed and rehearsed until it is embedded in their mind and muscle as their own personal process for shooting free throws. The same theory applies to bullseye. You too should have a process or technique, that is your very own and when you run your program you should not have to think it through, you just do it. Our ability lies in perfect repetition.

Basic Rules of Dry Firing

1. Make sure the gun is unloaded—seems sophomoric, but many mistakes have been made by shooters who thought the gun was unloaded.
2. Be sure to make your mind concentrate, FOCUS, FOCUS, FOCUS.
3. Train at the same time of day as your matches—this helps if you’re not an early riser. Most matches are in the morning.
4. Train for at least twenty minutes, three or four times a week.
5. Simulate the conditions of a real match as much as possible.

Remember the Basics

In bullseye we have many details to learn: stance, grip, sight picture, sight alignment, breathing, delivering the shot, follow thru, et cetera. We are only able to concentrate on one item at a time. But, if we practice something enough, it will become a habit embedded in our subconscious mind. The important part is to practice correctly. This is where dry firing comes in. We should practice all of our basic fundamentals until we can do them without conscious thought. Once we have moved our basics into our subconscious mind we then can begin to learn to shoot with good technique and continually improve our scores.

All of the basic fundamentals of bullseye pistol shooting make up the integrated act of firing a single shot. That being said, keep it short and simple (KISS). KISS is moving the trigger straight to the rear and firing the gun without disturbing sight alignment. Or as USMC Team Coach Andy Moody once said, “pick up gun, shoot gun, put gun down.” It’s that simple. Now, start dry firing!

Nouveau State of Mind; why drinking and shooting don’t mix

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For those of us who have been shooting awhile—and I mean really competing and working on technique and honing skills—there comes a time when you feel like you’re in a bloody rut you can’t quite seem to get out of. I believe that’s the perfect time for review.

Although I haven’t been shooting as long as most competitors, I’ve sure done a ton of shooting in the time I’ve been involved in the sport. So I do know how the “rut” feels. I’ve felt frustrated, pissed-off, discontent, discouraged, and out-of-gas. But, never, ever, have I felt like giving up.

Oh sure, there’s been days I’d rather throw my guns down range instead of shoot them. But it wasn’t because my equipment didn’t bring its “game.” It was because I failed. Failed to get my head into it, or failed to follow the system I mapped out for myself, or I failed physically. The point is, I didn’t quit! And to me, that says volumes.

So here I am, searching for answers, trying to find that “thing” that’s going to get me over the hump. I decided to pull out my notes from a shooting clinic I went to in Richmond, VA, sponsored by the NRA and instructed by no less than GySgt Brian Zins (9-time National Champion), Larry Quandahl (National Instructor Trainer), and Andy Moody (former USMC Shooting Team Chief Instructor). Each guy brought something different to the table.

In the two days I sat at their feet, soaking up all they were spilling out, I felt encouraged, motivated and built-up. I had a “can-do” attitude. Heck, I even had Andy Moody tell me that based on what he saw I was going to be a 2650 shooter—sounded good to me. Funny, but it didn’t register at the time what that really meant. I was just a Sharpshooter when I attended that clinic and couldn’t see that far down the road.

Things are different now, I got a taste for 2600 in my mouth I can’t get rid of. And, like a newly released Beaujolais Nouveau, I’m ready to gulp, not sip! Forget the notion of “aged over time”, I want an expeditious harvest for all my time and effort!

So as I poured over my notes, I thought some were just too good not to share…with perhaps someone else that’s feeling a bit like me.

Getting Started
We all know the saying “practice makes perfect.” This is not necessarily true, if you practice something incorrectly it will never be perfect nor will you ever improve. It’s “perfect practice makes perfect.” So as you move into your practice time remember that you’re looking for that perfect execution of repetitive and consistent behavior. Analyze what you’re doing right to get those perfect shots and forget the bad, do not reinforce the negative. Questions to ask yourself are: What did I learn? What did I do right? What problem am I looking for a solution to? And start journaling!

Goal Setting and Performance
Experience has shown that the most rapid development will be achieved when a shooter both practices and shoots a match with a specific goal in mind. Since two-thirds of our shooting is done at the 25 yard line, it can be said that a pistol match is won at the long-line and lost at the short: mastering sustained fire would be a critical “performance goal” to set. Performance not scores are the goals we should train toward. Set a performance goal for each practice session and every match.

Are you Mental?
“Visualize perfect performance” it sounds so elementary, but how many of us do it? Mental concentration is the key. If you can control your mind you’ll have it all. The Corps trains their shooters like they train their Marines: they’re given directives. They’re instructed to establish a mental program and they don’t deviate:

1. Visualize perfect performance of upcoming stage.
2. “LOAD”…………………..load and verify N.P.A.
3. “is the line ready”………restate stage…rapid fire
4. “the line is ready” ……..start breathing cycle
5. “READY ON THE RIGHT”…raise gun, image of perfect sights, continue breathing cycle
6. “READY ON THE LEFT”…let gun/body settle, image of centered shot group
7. “READY ON THE FIRING LINE”…start trigger pressure, focus on dot, “patience”
8. TARGET TURNS………….let first shot break, recover and continue your string

There’s so much more to share, but not enough time. However, I will leave you with this: Andy Moody couldn’t have put it more perfect when he said, “It’s as easy as this; pick up gun, shoot gun, put gun down. We’re the ones that make it more complicated.”