"WHAT GOOD CAN A HANDGUN DO
AGAINST AN ARMY.....?" A friend of mine recently
forwarded me a question a friend of his had posed:
"If/when our Federal Government comes to pilfer,
pillage, plunder our property and destroy our lives, what
good can a handgun do against an army with advanced
weaponry, tanks, missiles, planes, or whatever else they
might have at their disposal to achieve their nefarious
goals? (I'm not being facetious: I accept the possibility
that what happened in Germany, or similar, could happen
here; I'm just not sure that the potential good from an
armed citizenry in such a situation outweighs the
day-to-day problems caused by masses of idiots who own
guns.)"
If I may, I'd like to try to answer that question. I
certainly do not think the writer facetious for asking it.
The subject is a serious one that I have given much
research and considerable thought to. I believe that upon
the answer to this question depends the future of our
Constitutional republic, our liberty and perhaps our
lives. My friend Aaron Zelman, one of the founders of Jews
for the Preservation of Firearms Ownership told me once:
"If every Jewish and anti-nazi family in Germany
had owned a Mauser rifle and twenty rounds of ammunition
AND THE WILL TO USE IT (emphasis supplied, MV), Adolf
Hitler would be a little-known footnote to the history of
the Weimar Republic."
Note well that phrase: "and the will to use
it," for the simply-stated question, "What good
can a handgun do against an army?", is in fact a
complex one and must be answered at length and carefully.
It is a military question. It is also a political
question. But above all it is a moral question which
strikes to the heart of what makes men free, and what
makes them slaves. First, let's answer the military
question.
Most military questions have both a strategic and a
tactical component. Let's consider the tactical.
A friend of mine owns an instructive piece of history.
It is a small, crude pistol, made out of sheet-metal
stampings by the U.S. during World War II. While it fits
in the palm of your hand and is a slowly-operated,
single-shot arm, it's powerful .45 caliber projectile will
kill a man with brutal efficiency. With a short,
smooth-bore barrel it can reliably kill only at point
blank ranges, so its use requires the will (brave or
foolhardy) to get in close before firing. It is less a
soldier's weapon than an assassin's tool. The U.S.
manufactured them by the million during the war, not for
our own forces but rather to be air-dropped behind German
lines to resistance units in occupied Europe. Crude and
slow (the fired case had to be knocked out of the breech
by means of a little wooden dowel, a fresh round procured
from the storage area in the grip and then manually
reloaded and cocked) and so wildly inaccurate it couldn't
hit the broad side of a French barn at 50 meters, to the
Resistance man or woman who had no firearm it still looked
pretty darn good.
The theory and practice of it was this: First, you
approach a German sentry with your little pistol hidden in
your coat pocket and, with Academy-award sincerity, ask
him for a light for your cigarette (or the time the train
leaves for Paris, or if he wants to buy some
non-army-issue food or a half- hour with your
"sister"). When he smiles and casts a nervous
glance down the street to see where his Sergeant is at,
you blow his brains out with your first and only shot,
then take his rifle and ammunition. Your next few minutes
are occupied with "getting out of Dodge," for
such critters generally go around in packs. After that
(assuming you evade your late benefactor's friends) you
keep the rifle and hand your little pistol to a fellow
Resistance fighter so they can go get their own rifle.
Or maybe you then use your rifle to get a submachine
gun from the Sergeant when he comes running. Perhaps you
get very lucky and pickup a light machine gun, two boxes
of ammunition and a haversack of hand grenades. With two
of the grenades and the expenditure of a half-a-box of
ammunition at a hasty roadblock the next night, you and
your friends get a truck full of arms and ammunition.
(Some of the cargo is sticky with "Boche" blood,
but you don't mind terribly.)
Pretty soon you've got the best armed little maquis
unit in your part of France, all from that cheap little
pistol and the guts to use it. (One wonders if the current
political elite's opposition to so-called "Saturday
Night Specials" doesn't come from some adopted racial
memory of previous failed tyrants. Even cheap little
pistols are a threat to oppressive regimes.)
They called the pistol the "Liberator." Not a
bad name, all in all.
Now let's consider the strategic aspect of the
question, "What good can a handgun do against an
army....?" We have seen that even a poor pistol can
make a great deal of difference to the military career and
postwar plans of one enemy soldier. That's tactical. But
consider what a million pistols, or a hundred million
pistols (which may approach the actual number of handguns
in the U.S. today), can mean to the military planner who
seeks to carry out operations against a populace so armed.
Mention "Afghanistan" or "Chechnya" to
a member of the current Russian military hierarchy and
watch them shudder at the bloody memories. Then you begin
to get the idea that modern munitions, air superiority and
overwhelming, precision-guided violence still are not
enough to make victory certain when the targets are not
sitting Christmas- present fashion out in the middle of
the desert.
"A billion here, a billion there, sooner or later
it adds up to real money."
--Everett Dirksen
Consider that there are at least as many firearms--
handguns, rifles and shotguns-- as there are citizens of
the United States. Consider that last year there were more
than 14 million Americans who bought licenses to hunt deer
in the country. 14 million-- that's a number greater than
the largest five professional armies in the world
combined. Consider also that those deer hunters are not
only armed, but they own items of military utility--
everything from camouflage clothing to infrared "game
finders", Global Positioning System devices and night
vision scopes.
Consider also that quite a few of these hunters are
military veterans. Just as moving around in the woods and
stalking game are second nature, military operations are
no mystery to them, especially those who were on the
receiving end of guerrilla war in Southeast Asia. Indeed,
such men, aging though they may be, may be more
psychologically prepared for the exigencies of civil war
(for this is what we are talking about) than their younger
active-duty brother-soldiers whose only military
experience involved neatly defined enemies and fronts in
the Grand Campaign against Saddam. Not since 1861-1865 has
the American military attempted to wage a war athwart its
own logistical tail (nor indeed has it ever had to use
modern conventional munitions on the Main Streets of its
own hometowns and through its' relatives backyards, nor
has it tested the obedience of soldiers who took a very
different oath with orders to kill their
"rebellious" neighbors, but that touches on the
political aspect of the question).
But forget the psychological and political for a
moment, and consider just the numbers. To paraphrase the
Senator, "A million pistols here, a million rifles
there, pretty soon you're talking serious firepower."
No one, repeat, no one, will conquer America, from within
or without, until its citizenry are disarmed. We remain,
as a British officer had reason to complain at the start
of our Revolution, "a people numerous and
armed."
The Second Amendment is a political issue today only
because of the military reality that underlies it.
Politicians who fear the people seek to disarm them.
People who fear their government's intentions refuse to be
disarmed. The Founders understood this. So, too, does
every tyrant who ever lived. Liberty-loving Americans
forget it at their peril. Until they do, American
gunowners in the aggregate represent a strategic military
fact and an impediment to foreign tyranny. They also
represent the greatest political challenge to home-grown
would-be tyrants. If the people cannot be forcibly
disarmed against their will, then they must be persuaded
to give up their arms voluntarily. This is the siren song
of "gun control," which is to say
"government control of all guns," although few
self-respecting gun-grabbers would be quite so bold as to
phrase it so honestly.
Joseph Stalin, when informed after World War II that
the Pope disapproved of Russian troops occupying Trieste,
turned to his advisors and asked, "The Pope? The
Pope? How many divisions does he have?" Dictators are
unmoved by moral suasion. Fortunately, our Founders saw
the wisdom of backing the First Amendment up with the
Second. The "divisions" of the army of American
constitutional liberty get into their cars and drive to
work in this country every day to jobs that are hardly
military in nature. Most of them are unmindful of the
service they provide. Their arms depots may be found in
innumerable closets, gunracks and gunsafes. They have no
appointed officers, nor will they need any until they are
mobilized by events. Such guardians of our liberty perform
this service merely by existing. And although they may be
an ever-diminishing minority within their own country, as
gun ownership is demonized and discouraged by the ruling
elites, still they are as yet more than enough to perform
their vital task. And if they are unaware of the
impediment they present to their would-be rulers, their
would-be rulers are painfully aware of these
"divisions of liberty", as evidenced by their
incessant calls for individual disarmament. They
understand moral versus military force just as clearly as
Stalin, but they would not be so indelicate as to quote
him.
The Roman Republic failed because they could not
successfully answer the question, "Who Shall Guard
the Guards?" The Founders of this Republic answered
that question with both the First and Second Amendments.
Like Stalin, the Clintonistas could care less what common
folk say about them, but the concept of the armed
citizenry as guarantors of their own liberties sets their
teeth on edge and disturbs their statist sleep.
Governments, some great men once avowed, derive their
legitimacy from "the consent of the governed."
In the country that these men founded, it should not be
required to remind anyone that the people do not obtain
their natural, God-given liberties by "the consent of
the Government." Yet in this century, our once great
constitutional republic has been so profaned in the
pursuit of power and social engineering by corrupt leaders
as to be unrecognizable to the Founders. And in large
measure we have ourselves to blame because at each crucial
step along the way the usurpers of our liberties have
obtained the consent of a majority of the governed to do
what they have done, often in the name of
"democracy"-- a political system rejected by the
Founders. Another good friend of mine gave the best
description of pure democracy I have ever heard.
"Democracy," he concluded, "is three wolves
and a sheep sitting down to vote on what to have for
dinner." The rights of the sheep in this system are
by no means guaranteed.
Now it is true that our present wolf-like, would-be
rulers do not as yet seek to eat that sheep and its
peaceable wooly cousins (We, the people). They are,
however, most desirous that the sheep be shorn of taxes,
and if possible and when necessary, be reminded of their
rightful place in society as "good citizen
sheep" whose safety from the big bad wolves outside
their barn doors is only guaranteed by the omni-presence
in the barn of the "good wolves" of the
government. Indeed, they do not present themselves as
wolves at all, but rather these lupines parade around in
sheep's clothing, bleating insistently in falsetto about
the welfare of the flock and the necessity to surrender
liberty and property "for the children", er, ah,
I mean "the lambs." In order to ensure future
generations of compliant sheep, they are careful to
educate the lambs in the way of "political
correctness," tutoring them in the totalitarian
faiths that "it takes a barnyard to raise a
lamb" and "all animals are equal, but some
animals are more equal than others."
Every now and then, some tough old independent-minded
ram refuses to be shorn and tries to remind the flock that
they once decided affairs themselves according to the rule
of law of their ancestors, and without the help of their
"betters." When that happens, the fangs become
apparent and the conspicuously unwilling are shunned,
cowed, driven off or (occasionally) killed. But flashing
teeth or not, the majority of the flock has learned over
time not to resist the Lupine-Mandarin class which herds
it. Their Founders, who were fiercely independent rams,
would have long ago chased off such usurpers. Any present
members of the flock who think like that are denounced as
antediluvian or mentally deranged.
There are some of these dissidents the lupines would
like to punish, but they dare not-- for their teeth are
every bit as long as their "betters." Indeed,
this is the reason the wolves haven't eaten any sheep in
generations. To the wolves chagrin, this portion of the
flock is armed and they outnumber the wolves by a
considerable margin. For now the wolves are content are
content to watch the numbers of these "armed
sheep" diminish, as long teeth are no longer
fashionable in polite society. (Indeed, they are
considered by the literati to be an anachronism best
forgotten and such sheep are dismissed by the Mandarins as
"Tooth Nuts" or "Right Leg Fanatics".)
When the numbers of armed sheep fall below a level that
wolves can feel safe to do so, the eating will begin. The
wolves are patient, and proceed by infinitesimal degrees
like the slowly-boiling frog. It took them generations to
lull the sheep into accepting them as rulers instead of
elected representatives. If it takes another generation or
two of sheep to complete the process, the wolves can wait.
This is our "Animal Farm," without apology to
George Orwell.
Even so, the truth is that one man with a pistol CAN
defeat an army, given a righteous cause to fight for,
enough determination to risk death for that cause, and
enough brains, luck and friends to win the struggle. This
is true in war but also in politics, and it is not
necessary to be a Prussian militarist to see it. The dirty
little secret of today's ruling elite as represented by
the Clintonistas is that they want people of conscience
and principle to be divided in as many ways as possible
("wedge issues" the consultants call them) so
that they may be more easily manipulated. No issue of
race, religion, class or economics is left unexploited.
Lost in the din of jostling special interests are the few
voices who point out that if we refuse to be divided from
what truly unites us as a people, we cannot be defeated on
the large issues of principle, faith, the constitutional
republic and the rule of law. More importantly, woe and
ridicule will be heaped upon anyone who points out that
like the blustering Wizard of Oz, the federal tax and
regulation machine is not as omniscient, omnipotent or
fearsome as they would have us believe. Like the Wizard,
they fan the scary flames higher and shout, "Pay no
attention to the man behind the curtain!"
For the truth is, they are frightened that we will find
out how pitifully few they are compared to the mass of the
citizenry they seek to frighten into compliance with their
tax collections, property seizures and bureaucratic,
unconstitutional power-shifting. I strongly recommend
everyone see the new animated movie "A Bug's
Life". Simple truths may often be found sheltering
beneath unlikely overhangs, there protected by the pelting
storm of lies that soak us everyday. "A Bug's
Life", a childrens' movie of all things, is just such
a place.
The plot revolves around an ant hill on an unnamed
island, where the ants placate predatory grasshoppers by
offering them each year one-half of the food they gather
(sounds a lot like the IRS, right?). Driven to desperation
by the insatiable tax demands of the large, fearsome
grasshoppers, one enterprising ant goes abroad seeking bug
mercenaries who will return with him and defend the
anthill when the grasshoppers return. (If this sounds a
lot like an animated "Magnificent Seven", you're
right.)
The grasshoppers (who roar about like some biker gang
or perhaps the ATF in black helicopters, take your pick)
are, at one point in the movie, lounging around in a bug
cantina down in Mexico, living off the bounty of the land.
The harvest seeds they eat are dispensed one at a time
from an upturned bar bottle. Two grasshoppers suggest to
their leader, a menacing fellow named "Hopper"
(whose voice characterization by Kevin Spacey is suitably
evil personified), that they should forget about the poor
ants on the island. Here, they say, we can live off the
fat of the land, why worry about some upstart ants? Hopper
turns on them instantly. "Would you like a
seed?" he quietly asks one. "Sure," answers
the skeptical grasshopper thug. "Would you like
one?" Hopper asks the other. "Yeah," says
he. Hopper manipulates the spigot on the bar bottle twice,
and distributes the seeds to them.
"So, you want to know why we have to go back to
the island, do you?" Hopper asks menacingly as the
thugs munch on their seeds. "I'll show you why!"
he shouts, removing the cap from the bottle entirely with
one quick blow. The seeds, no longer restrained by the
cap, respond to gravity and rush out all at once,
inundating the two grasshoppers and crushing them. Hopper
turns to his remaining fellow grasshoppers and shrieks,
"That's why!"
I'm paraphrasing from memory here, for I've only seen
the movie once. But Hopper then explains, "Don't you
remember the upstart ant on that island? They outnumber us
a hundred to one. How long do you think we'll last if they
ever figure that out?"
"If the ants are not frightened of us,"
Hopper tells them,
"our game is finished. We're finished."
Of course it comes as no surprise that in the end the
ants figure that out. Would that liberty-loving Americans
were as smart as animated ants.
Courage to stand against tyranny, fortunately, is not
only found on videotape.
Courage flowers from the heart, from the twin roots of
deeply-held principle and faith in God. There are American
heroes living today who have not yet performed the deeds
of principled courage that future history books will
record. They have not yet had to stand in the gap, to plug
it with their own fragile bodies and lives against the
evil that portends. Not yet have they been required to
pledge "their lives, their fortunes and their sacred
honor." Yet they will have to. I believe with all my
heart the lesson that history teaches: That each and every
generation of Americans is given, along with the liberty
and opportunity that is their heritage, the duty to defend
America against the tyrannies of their day. Our father's
father's fathers fought this same fight. Our mother's
mother's mothers fought it as well. From the Revolution
through the world wars, from the Cold War through to the
Gulf, they fought to secure their liberty in conflicts
great and small, within and without.
They stood faithful to the oath that our Founders gave
us: To bear true faith and allegiance-- not to a man; not
to the land; not to a political party, but to an idea. The
idea is liberty, as codified in the Constitution of the
United States. We swear, as did they, an oath to defend
the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and
domestic. And throughout the years they paid in blood and
treasure the terrible price of that oath. That was their
day. This is ours. The clouds we can see on the horizon
may be a simple rain or a vast hurricane, but there is a
storm coming. Make no mistake.
Lincoln said that this nation cannot long exist half
slave and half free. I say, if I may humbly paraphrase,
that this nation cannot long exist one-third slave,
one-third uncommitted, and one-third free. The slavery
today is of the mind and soul not the body, but is slavery
without a doubt that the Clintons and their toadies are
pushing. It is slavery to worship our nominally-elected
representatives as our rulers instead of requiring their
trustworthiness as our servants. It is slavery of the mind
and soul that demands that God-given rights that our
Forefathers secured with their blood and sacrifice be
traded for false security of a nanny-state which will tend
to our "legitimate needs" as they are perceived
by that government.
It is slavery to worship humanism as religion and
slavery to deny life and liberty to unborn Americans. As
people of faith in God, whatever our denomination, we are
in bondage to a plantation system that steals our money;
seizes our property; denies our ancient liberties; denies
even our very history, supplanting it with sanitized and
politicized "correctness"; denies our children a
real public education; denies them even the mention of God
in school; denies, in fact, the very existence of God.
So finally we are faced with, we must return to, the
moral component of the question: "What good can a
handgun do against an army?" The answer is
"Nothing," or "Everything." The
outcome depends upon the mind and heart and soul of the
man or woman who holds it. One may also ask, "What
good can a sling in the hands of a boy do against a
marauding giant?" If your cause is just and righteous
much can be done, nut only if you are willing to risk the
consequences of failure and to bear the burdens of eternal
vigilance. A new friend of mine gave me a plaque the other
day. Upon it is written these words by Winston Churchill,
a man who knew much about fighting tyranny:
"Still, if you will not fight for the right when
you can easily win without bloodshed; if you will not
fight when your victory will be sure and not too costly;
you may come to the moment when you will have to fight
with all the odds against you and only a precarious chance
of survival. There may be a worse case. You may have to
fight when there is no hope of victory, because it is
better to perish than to live as slaves."
The Spartans at Thermopolae knew this. The fighting
Jews of Masada knew this, when every man, woman and child
died rather than submit to Roman tyranny. The Texans who
died at the Alamo knew this. The frozen patriots of Valley
Forge knew this. The "expendable men" of Bataan
and Corregidor knew this. If there is one lesson of
Hitlerism and the Holocaust, it is that free men, if they
wish to remain free, must resist would-be tyrants at the
first opportunity and at every opportunity. Remember that
whether they the come as conquerors or elected officials,
the men who secretly wish to be your murderers must first
convince you that you must accept them as your masters.
Free men and women must not wait until they are
"selected", divided and herded into Warsaw
Ghettos, there to finally fight desperately, almost
without weapons, and die outnumbered. The tyrant must be
met at the door when he appears. At your door, or mine,
wherever he shows his bloody appetite. He must be met by
the pistol which can defeat an army. He must be met at
every door, for in truth we outnumber him and his
henchmen. It matters not whether they call themselves
Communists or Nazis or something else. It matters not what
flag they fly, nor what uniform they wear. It matters not
what excuses they give for stealing your liberty, your
property or your life. "By their works ye shall know
them."
The time is late. Those who once has trouble reading
the hour on their watches have no trouble seeing by the
glare of the fire at Waco. Few of us realized at the time
that the Constitution was burning right along with the
Davidians. Now we know better.
We have had the advantage of that horrible illumination
for more than five years now-- five years in which the
rule of law and the battered old parchment of our beloved
Constitution have been smashed, shredded and besmirched by
the Clintonistas. In this process they have been aided and
abetted by the cowardly incompetence of the
"opposition" Republican leadership, a fact made
crystal clear by the Waco hearings. They have forgotten
Daniel Webster's warning: "Miracles do not cluster.
Hold on to the Constitution of the United States of
America and the Republic for which it stands-- what has
happened once in six thousand years may never happen
again. Hold on to your Constitution, for if the American
Constitution shall fail there will be anarchy throughout
the world."
Yet being able to see what has happened has not helped
us reverse, or even slow, the process. The sad fact is
that we may have to resign ourselves to the prospect of
having to maintain our principles and our liberty in the
face of becoming a disenfranchised minority within our own
country.
The middle third of the populace, it seems, will
continue to waffle in favor of the enemies of the
Constitution until their comfort level with the economy is
endangered. They've got theirs, Jack. The Republicans, who
we thought could represent our interests and protect the
Constitution and the rule of law, have been demonstrated
to be political eunuchs. Alan Keyes was dead right when he
characterized the last election as one between "the
lawless Democrats and the gutless Republicans." The
spectacular political failures of our current leaders are
unrivaled in our history unless you recall the
unprincipled jockeying for position and tragi-comedy of
misunderstanding and miscommunication which lead to our
first Civil War.
And make no mistake, it is civil war which may be the
most horrible corollary of the Law of Unintended
Consequences as it applies to the Clintonistas and their
destruction of the rule of law. Because such people have
no cause for which they are willing to die (all morality
being relativistic to them, and all principles
compromisable), they cannot fathom the motives or behavior
of people who believe that there are some principles worth
fighting and dying for. Out of such failures of
understanding come wars. Particularly because although
such elitists would not risk their own necks in a fight,
they have no compunction about ordering others in their
pay to fight for them. It is not the deaths of others, but
their own deaths, that they fear. As a Christian, I cannot
fear my own death, but rather I am commanded by my God to
live in such a way as to make my death a homecoming. That
this makes me incomprehensible and threatening to those
who wish to be my masters is something I can do little
about. I would suggest to them that they not poke their
godless, tyrannical noses down my alley. As the coiled
rattlesnake flag of the Revolution bluntly stated:
"Don't Tread on Me!" Or, as our state motto here
in Alabama says: "We Dare Defend Our Rights."
But can a handgun defeat an army? Yes. It remains to be
seen whether the struggle of our generation against the
tyrants of our day in the first decade of the 21st Century
will bring a restoration of liberty and the rule of law or
a dark and bloody descent into chaos and slavery.
If it is to be the former, I will meet you at the new
Yorktown. If it is to be the latter, I will meet you at
Masada. But I will not be a slave. And I know that whether
we succeed or fail, if we should fall along the way our
graves will one day be visited by other free Americans,
thanking us that we did not forget that, with the help of
Almighty God, in the hands of a free man a handgun CAN
defeat a tyrant's army.
-- Mike Vanderboegh
P.O. Box 926
Pinson, AL 35126
Mo10Cav@aol.com
Copyright 1998.