ITS Tactical + Huckberry = Awesomeness

We’ve just recently added Huckberry to our Members Only Discount Buyers Club and we may even have a few other fun things in store for the future, so stay tuned.

For those unfamiliar, Huckberry is “like your favorite store, your grandpa’s favorite store and your favorite magazine all rolled into one.” Many of us at ITS HQ have taken advantage of their discounted offerings from time to time and we think you will too. With the wide variety of items they carry on a weekly basis, you’ll be hard pressed to not find something you want in the Huckberry Shop.

That said, they have generously offered members of ITS Tactical a $10 credit to get you started in the Huckberry Store simply for signing up. Signing up is free and easy and they also have been known to put out one heck of a newsletter.

Huckberry Discount

We value the support of our members and we’re constantly looking for opportunities to give back. This is just one of the many ways we try and show our thanks to all of you.

Want in on deals like this?

To become a Member or to check out the full list of participating vendors in our Discount Buyers Club, click here.

Here are some of the other awesome benefits you’ll receive when you enlist as a Crew Leader:

  • Access to the Tactical Discount Buyers Club!
  • Members only Forum with Crew Leader distinction (Forum requires separate registration)
  • Free ITS Crew Leader Rocker Patch and ITS Logo Patch to proudly display your Crew Leader affiliation (color of patches based on availability)
  • Free copies of all eBooks we release on ITS Tactical
  • 15% off all ITS Tactical Merchandise (Code available on Dashboard once membership is processed)
  • Downloadable mobile ready versions of our YouTube videos
  • Subscription to the ITS Tactical Newsletter
  • Exclusive Members only giveaways and contests
  • Exclusive Members only videos

ITS Members: For details on this deal, make sure you are logged in and then head over to the Vendor Discount Code page.

Posted in ITS Information | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

Can Someone Steal Your Online Identity and Become You?

Stolen Identity

When the average person thinks of getting their identity stolen online, thoughts of credit card fraud typically come to mind. What if a criminal’s intention wasn’t just to buy themselves a nice round-trip ticket, or rack up a house full of chachkies like the movie Identity Thief?

What if their motive was to truly become you? Even to the point where friends and neighbors thought they were dealing directly with you. It’s scary to think about, but as the video ad below from Febelfin (the Belgian Financial Sector Federation) shows, most of us are storing all the details of our personal lives right out in the open on Social Media. Enough information for someone with malicious intent to know intimate details of your daily life.

Watch The World Burn

Remember that great quote from Alfred during The Dark Knight Rises?

Some men aren’t looking for anything logical, like money. They can’t be bought, bullied, reasoned or negotiated with. Some men just want to watch the world burn.

It seems like where we’re headed with crime today leaves more and more to be unanswered. Victims searching for the why, such as “Why would someone want to become me? Why would someone want to ruin my life by creating false information or even actions that weren’t mine?”

The answer may not be a logical one and may not have anything to do with money. How can you protect yourself against this type of crime? As we’ve mentioned time and time again here on ITS, no measure of security is 100% foolproof. Hardening security anywhere, whether it be physical security, digital security or personal security, is always just buying time. That or creating a hardened atmosphere that makes a criminal want to give up and move on to an easier victim.

Personal Information Exposed

In the case of this video we’re discussing, it specifically mentions phishing and finding your personal information through your Social Media profiles. Facebook being the biggest open door. Here’s an interesting fact brought out by the video as well. No matter how locked down your security preferences are on Facebook, unless everything you do is only seen by you, things can still be seen by your “friends.” Once someone becomes your friend, how do you know it’s really them? Because you recognize their profile photo?

Computer Lab

Phishing is something that can certainly be prevented by sticking to the advice given in the video. “Never share your financial data, not even by telephone. Be vigilant with personal information.” Sound advice, but let’s take that a step further. Always verify. If you get a call, or even an email from your bank, always verify before answering any questions. Call your bank back on the number you have for them. Ask them to verify that the call placed was truly information they were looking for. If not, alert your bank to the fishing scheme and report it to the US-CERT (United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team) via phone or their online form.

Do what you can to further secure your online identity and be careful what you share. Below are a few ITS Tactical resources that can help you out further as well.

Resources

Non ITS Resources

Thanks to Jon G. for bringing this video to our attention.

Photo © Chris Amelung

Posted in Privacy | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Living Better: Make Your Body Work For You

The phrase “survival of the fittest” has often been associated with various facets of society, but most often when depicting the nature of humans – to not only survive but thrive – when placed in seemingly insurmountable or physically challenging situations.

We see these tendencies of natural selection at a primitive level every day; some individuals grow accustomed to a certain level of comfort or luxury in their lives and live a lifestyle that supports that level of comfort. Other individuals do what they can to constantly displace any notion of comfort and strive to obtain higher levels of physical proficiency and a mastery of their physical and mental performance.

GORUCK Challenge

But this isn’t meant to be a watered-down monologue on natural selection or Darwinism – what this is meant to be is a basic framework you can apply in order to reach a greater mastery of your body’s overall performance. This article will focus primarily on physical performance. Life is a constant cycle of events and stimulants that your body is required to process; your physical, mental and emotional stasis is dependent on your ability to properly prepare your body for these events and stimulants. When your body is at a level that allows you to not only survive but thrive, in this cycle of events and stimulants, you can be assured to live better.

Identify Your Motivation

The most important step in choosing to master your body’s performance is identifying your motivation. Why do you choose to get up early every morning to run two miles followed by some light calisthenics? Why are you so keen on getting to the Crossfit box after work to knock out the prescribed WOD?

Maybe you already have a baseline level of fitness that you want to maintain (something we’ll cover shortly). You want to be confident that if X or Y occurs, you will be physically capable of performing Z. This is not uncommon in the military or other professions that require defined measurements of performance on a regular basis. While there are baseline levels of fitness that service members are required to maintain or meet per regulations, many choose to exceed or supplement these standards with additional fitness regimens that provide them with additional physical capabilities. For example, while being able to score high results for both the Air Force and Army PT tests, I choose to train in a manner that ensures I’m also capable of carrying heavy weight long distances for ruck marches that simulate the physical requirements of long dismounted patrols.

Maybe there’s a specific event that you’re participating in which requires an elevated level of fitness that you wouldn’t normally maintain. This is often the case for endurance-based athletes or other professional competitors. These athletes often build up their physical capability on a strict training regimen that cannot be deviated from, lest they are unprepared for the event come race day. An example of this would be your triathletes, Ironman competitors, or potential trainees for special operations pipelines.

Critical to your training motivation is your mental attitude and mindset. It is said, “the final weapon is the brain – all else is supplemental”. This could not be more true in the context of your willingness to train consistently to a measured standard or when faced with a seemingly insurmountable challenge. It must not be overlooked that frequently, it is our willingness to train and prepare that is more foundational in achieving heightened performance levels than the training itself. Nothing great was ever achieved overnight; hence the significance of a strong will to train and the proper mindset that accompanies it. If you fail to prepare, you prepare to fail. With the proper mindset and mental attitude coupled with consistent preparation, you cannot fail.

Establish a Baseline

After identifying your motivation for pursuing enhanced or improved physical performance, you need to establish a baseline of performance that your body is capable of. Personally, I like using a variety of military physical fitness tests to establish a fitness foundation. My primary go-to fitness tests are: the Army fitness test (as it’s usually administered prior to any Army training school), the Air Force fitness test (I’m in the Air Force and the standards must be exceeded) and the Air Force special operations PAST (Physical Aptitude and Stamina Test, used by the rescue and special tactics communities. This is one of the more balanced yet highly demanding fitness tests in the US military arsenal). However, using fitness tests to establish a baseline is only one option. If you’re training for a marathon – run the marathon distance. If you’re training for a triathlon – do a dry run. The purpose is to identify what your body is currently capable of, so that you can replace that capability with improved performance through focused training.

There are countless options in the fitness community available to use when establishing a baseline and you only need to choose one that not only fits your motivation (i.e. is in keeping with your end-goal) but also is easy to perform and evaluate. Look to other resources available as well to gauge your baseline performance, to include any peers with previous experience in similar goals, your local gym or by checking online for the countless workouts or fitness plans.

Fuel Your System

The need to fuel your system and provide it with the necessary energy and rest to achieve certain physical performance levels sounds rhetorical, but is still something that is worth mentioning.

Avoiding extensive lessons in nutrition, dieting and physiological performance, you need to ensure that you are giving your body the energy it needs to perform the physical tasks you execute. Simple, right? Evidently not; to this day, this is something I constantly fail to do.

Source Hydration BladdersFor example, when it comes to extended endurance events like long-distance running or ruck marches, I consistently underestimate the amount of water my body requires to remain properly hydrated.

Without fail.

I may be sipping on water constantly or even increasing my electrolyte count with some Gatorade mix, but I can be guaranteed to not drink enough of it.

During a military heavy division (marathon distance ruck with 35lbs, fatigues and boots) event with a good friend in Colorado, he and I both – at separate times during the race – failed to properly consume enough water and energy, resulting in an unpleasant stint in what we refer to as the “pain cave” (a miserable location of self-pity, frustration and diminished physical performance). Such visits to the pain cave depend on more than one variable and a short mindset relapse, poor training or preparation, or lowered morale all play a role in these events; however, proper hydration and energy intake is one of your baseline necessities. The event is going to drain your body both physically and mentally regardless – but remaining well hydrated and nourished dictates the degree of drainage you experience. Know what your system needs and fuel it appropriately.

Measure Your Progress

After identifying your fitness objective(s), establishing your performance baseline and training with the proper amount of rest, energy intake and fuel, you need to measure your progress. In order to ensure you reach your performance objectives, you need some mechanism by which to measure your progress.

There are a number of methods available by which you can measure your fitness progression en route to your objective, including but not limited to: fitness trackers, re-administering fitness tests for a new baseline or signing up for endurance events themselves. Let’s say you’re preparing to run a marathon or compete in a triathlon; rather than falling back on your fundamental exercise regimens and routines, why not measure your progress with a fun yet still effective alternative? Instead of taking another dull twelve-mile out-and-back through the back roads of your town, why not sign up for a Tough Mudder or teamwork-based event instead? You cover the same twelve miles and you have much more fun doing it. Need a good full-body event that tests your endurance, strength and mental ability to think under stress? Why not do a GORUCK Challenge (of which I’m a major fan; class 198) and force your body to wear a ruck, perform countless exercise repetitions while wearing it, and be forced to work as a team with complete strangers all the while?

GORUCK Challenge 198

The purpose of measuring your progress is to establish your new baseline of performance. In doing so, you will have a better idea of how your training must be adjusted in order to meet your initial performance objectives.

Wash, Rinse, Repeat.

If you’ve made it this far in your training, you’re on the path to success. Nothing was ever gained by sitting idly by and watching the world pass. Most often in life, the good things are those that require hard work, dedication and commitment. It’s a good thing that humans are habitual in nature and enjoy routines – this is something that will undoubtedly come in handy when trying to find the inner motivation to get up for yet another early morning of training in the dead of winter, because as we all know, “If it ain’t raining, it ain’t training”.

The ultimate key to success is how strong your motivation to perform at higher levels really is. Coupled with the proper mindset and will to train, your motivation will be the difference between success and failure. For those in the military, this tends to be a very real and necessary motivation – especially when your life and your buddy’s life depend on it. For others, your fitness could be a hobby, a profession or a lifestyle that you require yourself to maintain. The purpose in pursuing these fitness objectives is to ultimately thrive in this world, by enabling your body to perform various feats that allow you to live as a better person. Thanks for listening.

The content of this article is the result of personal observations associated with military fitness requirements, various previous training objectives and personal fitness endeavors. It is by no means all-inclusive and one size does not fit all. There is no cookie-cutter approach to fitness!

GORUCK Challenge Photos © GORUCK

Posted in FITCOM | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

TiBolt: An American Made Bolt Action Titanium Pen by Brian Fellhoelter

I’ve been the proud owner of a TiBolt for the past six months and I’d like to describe how my experience has been with it thus far and tell you about a new offering to pick one up for yourself if you’d like.

I originally purchased my TiBolt by backing acclaimed Knife Maker Brian Fellhoelter‘s Kickstarter project in December of last year and have recently learned that he started a new offering for TiBolts on Jump Start City, another crowd-funding Website. (If you already know about the TiBolt click here to check out the offering, there’s only 5 days left!)

What originally drew me to the TiBolt was the simplicity, being American made, having an optional stylus nib for using the flip side on touch screens and the unique bolt-action mechanism that I knew I’d get addicted to. I was constantly clicking my Parker Jotter, much to the annoyance of those around me. That’s now changed to running the bolt action mechanism on my TiBolt.

I’ll also be honest and say that while it was awesome to learn the TiBolt was 100% Titanium, that wasn’t what drew me to it. I’ve never been a fan of all the so called “tactical pens” out on the market and really don’t lump the TiBolt in with these at all. I view the TiBolt as exactly what it is, an overbuilt bolt-action 100% titanium pen that’s not marketed as anything more.

Features

Every single part of the TiBolt with the exception of the ink cartridge, spring, O-ring and stylus nib is 100% Titanium. The TiBolt body is made from Grade 9, 3AL-2.5V Titanium and the other parts are Grade 5, 6AL-4V. It’s right arond 5 1/2″ in length (1/8″ longer if the stylus nib is used) and 7/16″ in diameter. The weight is 1.5 ounces with a stonewash finish.

The included and optional captive-silicone stylus nib can be affixed to the end of the TiBolt by removing the two torx screws (these are also Titanium) that hold the pocket clip on and removing the flat end cap. The end cap and the stylus nib carrier interface with the torx screws to secure them to the pen body.

TiBolt 06

TiBolt 09

While the pocket clip is very sturdy and has never bent on me, I do wish it was secured a bit higher up on the pen. It just seems to stick up fairly high clipped to a shirt pocket, though it’s only about 3/4 of an inch. With the added stylus nib it’s nearly a full inch above. That’s honestly just an aside and doesn’t take away from the functionality at all.

I usually carry the TiBolt in my front pocket or clipped in the front of a cargo pocket if possible.

Refills

I’m always writing and a good pen is hard to find, I have a drawer full of them to prove it. I initially liked that the TiBolt could accept Fisher Space Pen refills, as well as my favorite Parker “fine tip” refills. As shipping approached, Brian contacted his backers and informed them that the pens would now be shipping with the Schmidt EasyFlow 9000 refills. I hadn’t had the opportunity to use these refills yet and was looking forward to seeing how they performed.

Thanks to Brian, I’ve now become addicted to Schmidt refills. They’re much harder to find, seeing as they’re made in Germany, but well worth the digging to find spares. They write phenomenally well, better than anything I’ve ever written with before. Couple that with the heft of the TiBolt and you’ve got a winning combination.

Changing refills is simple with a simple turn of the tip and screwing it back in to secure it. Again these will accept the Fisher Space Pen refills, Parker refills and the Schmidt EasyFlow refills. I’m sure there are others too, but these are the only refills I’ve tested it with. So with a simple refill change to the Fisher, you’ll also get the versatility of being able to write in temperatures from -30˚F to +250˚F, write underwater, write in zero gravity and at any angle. Even upside down.

Notes

The TiBolt coupled with the Schmidt EasyFlow refill is the best pen I’ve ever owned, hands down. It beats out the Montblanc I received as a graduation gift from College and even the Parker Jotter I’ve carried for years. As I noted earlier, a good pen is hard to find and despite the $99 price tag that I paid for it, it’s easily worth that to me. Especially for something I use multiple times a day, every day.

A few other notes are that the laser engraved TiBolt logo has started to rub off and the “Fellhoelter” engraved on the pocket clip is starting to do the same. I don’t necessarily mind that these are coming off, just that it’s worth mentioning.

TiBolt

The bolt action on the TiBolt has run smooth and consistently for six months now and I don’t foresee it ever having problems. The packaging it came is was great and I appreciated the inclusion of a spare O-Ring and stylus nib and Torx tool to facilitate the change from the flat top to the stylus.

As the TiBolt isn’t officially for sale in any other way than through Jump Start City, I’d recommend you act quickly if you’d like to get ahold of one of these. The campaign ends in 5 days and time waits for no one. If you’re an avid writer and appreciate carrying a quality writing instrument, you won’t be disappointed with the TiBolt. Did I mention that it’s also made in America?

Posted in EDC | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 14 Comments

The 3 Phases of Kidnapping and How to Prepare Mentally

Jaycee Dugard described walking to the school bus stop on the day of a fifth-grade field trip and being zapped with a stun gun on a South Lake Tahoe street at age 11.

In her first public interview since being kidnapped and held for two decades, Jaycee Dugard told NBC’s Dianne Sawyer that she heard her kidnapper, Phillip Garrido, laughing and telling his wife Nancy, “I can’t believe we got away with it” and calling the moment “the most horrible moment in your life, times 10.”

She also said that she was trying to hold back tears because of her cuffed hands. “I tried not to cry because I couldn’t wipe them away,” she said, “and then they get itchy.”

There are approximately 15,000-20,000 kidnappings world-wide and it’s thought that only 1/3 of kidnappings for ransom, extortion and sex-trafficking are reported. Jaycee Dugard’s case is typical of this type of abduction, in which three women were plucked off the streets and held for 10 years in unlawful custody. There are 3 phases that kidnappings typically follow, abduction, subjugation and captivity.

Phase One: Abduction

The abductor is looking for the right circumstances, such as a single young female walking alone late at night in a deserted area. Most kidnappers have protocols that they strictly follow and they usually have very good opsec (operational security) to protect them. They tend to be cautious and meticulous in planning and execution, but once they move, they’re quick, brutal and efficient.

Serial Killer Ted Bundy used charm and created a sense of his own helplessness to lower his victim’s defenses. He would put his arm in a sling and ask for help changing a tire. He was good looking and charming and many women fell victim to his charms. Those who did, soon saw the other side of Ted. He was cruel and sadistic once the women were subjugated.

Phase Two: Subjugation

Once a victim has been kidnapped and the pretenses dropped, the victim will undergo a period of indoctrination. The victim is made to realize the hopelessness of their situation, that resistance is futile and that they’re in an utterly powerless situation. This phase includes physical brutalization, rape, beatings and other humiliation designed to break the victim’s spirit.

Subjugation includes excessive restraints that make escape seemingly impossible. The excessive restraints are designed to make the hope of escape fade and to condition them to their captivity.

Do What You Have To Do

In the interview, Dugard told Diane Sawyer that “there was a switch she had to shut off to emotionally survive her rape and imprisonment.” When asked by Sawyer how she stayed sane, Dugard said, “I don’t know, I can’t imagine being beaten to death and you can’t imagine being kidnapped and raped. You just do what you have to do to survive.'”

When a young elephant is first born in captivity, the trainers will place a manacle on the rear leg of the elephant and restrain the animal with a great chain. As the elephant grows and becomes stronger, it learns it cannot fight against that strong chain. Buy the time it’s an adult, the chain is reduced in size to one it could easily break, but it never tries. It’s conditioned otherwise.

Phase Three: Captivity

Once the individual has been pacified, attempts at escape are usually feeble and not well thought out. In the Cleveland case, the women in captivity would tap on the windows and call for help. But they didn’t throw a chair through the window, or try more radical signaling attempts. Their fear of attempting to signal, or escape and failing coupled with the resulting punishment that would occur, made that seem an unworthy risk.

According to the LA Times, Dugard told Sawyer that her only companion was a spider she named Bianca. “I would live in my own world,” she said. “Physical abuse was all I knew.”

The human mind has an amazing ability to adapt to inhumane conditions. During the captivity phase, the victim will adapt in order to maintain sanity. They may reason that their situation is not that bad, or that they’ll be rescued soon. Sometimes they lose hope and fall into deep depression. We have learned from POW experiences the many ways people learn to adapt to captivity. This includes a wide range of adaptations from feigning insanity to the Stockholm Syndrome of learning to protect the captor.

Heiress Patty Hearst’s captivity is reflective of a range of adaptations. She was kept in a closet, raped repeatedly and beaten as her indoctrination. In the end, she joined with her captors in robbing a Bank of America. Elizabeth Smart experienced daily beatings and sexual assaults. In the end she accompanied her captors in public places without attempting to escape.

The NBC article mentions Dugard told Sawyer that in later years, despite going out into public with her captors, she was just too scared to try to leave, especially for her daughters. The fear was also fueled by what the Garridos told her about the world.

“What I knew was safe,” she said. “The unknown out there was terrifying, especially when thinking about the girls.”

Some captives never adapt. They sit like a tigers in a cage, waiting for the captors to make a mistake and then they pounce. That is what we would like to think of ourselves doing. However, the forces at work on the human psyche are very powerful. Few never go through an adaptation and at some point lose hope of ever being rescued.

Vice Admiral James Stockdale, the ranking POW in Vietnam, was held at the prison known as the Hanoi Hilton for 7.5 years. In an interview for James Collin’s book, Good to Great, he said that the optimists died first.

“Oh, they were the ones who said, ‘We’re going to be out by Christmas.’ And Christmas would come and Christmas would go. Then they’d say, ‘We’re going to be out by Easter.’ And Easter would come and Easter would go. Then Thanksgiving and then it would be Christmas again. They died of a broken heart.”

Besides being brutally tortured* and kept in solitary with other resistors he said, “I never lost faith in the end of the story, I never doubted not only that I would get out, but also that I would prevail in the end and turn the experience into the defining event of my life, which, in retrospect, I would not trade.”

Collins called this attitude, The Stockdale Paradox

“This is a very important lesson. You must never confuse faith that you will prevail in the end,which you can never afford to lose, with the discipline to confront the most brutal facts of your current reality, whatever they might be.”

He drew strength from stoic philosophy, specifically Epictetus’ The Enchiridion. Epictetus was a Greek philosopher who began his life as a slave in Rome and developed a philosophy to deal with uncontrolled harsh conditions.

Key Strategies for escape in circumstances like we’ve addressed in this article, would include understanding house construction, lock picking and defeating restraints. These all require training to be effective and which are offered at onPoint Tactical’s in Urban Escape & Evasion class.

Footnotes

  • *Admiral Stockdale’s response to treatment in captivity was heroic:As the senior Naval officer, he was one of the primary organizers of prisoner resistance. Tortured routinely and denied medical attention for the severely damaged leg he suffered during capture, Stockdale created and enforced a code of conduct for all prisoners which governed torture, secret communications and behavior. In the summer of 1969, he was locked in leg irons in a bath stall and routinely tortured and beaten. When told by his captors that he was to be paraded in public, Stockdale slit his scalp with a razor to purposely disfigure himself so that his captors could not use him as propaganda. When they covered his head with a hat, he beat himself with a stool until his face was swollen beyond recognition. When Stockdale was discovered with information that could implicate his friends’ ‘black activities’, he slit his wrists so they could not torture him into confession.” From the website www.admiralstockdale.com

Editor-in-Chief’s Note: Please join us in welcoming Kevin Reeve as a contributor on ITS Tactical. Kevin is the founder of onPoint Tactical, training professionals and select civilians in urban escape & evasion, urban survival, wilderness survival, tracking and scout skills. I’ve personally taken onPoint Tactical’s Urban Escape & Evasion class and highly recommend it as a resource!

Posted in Mindset | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Road to American Independence: The Rebellion that Created a Nation

In honor of the Declaration of Independence adoption on July 4th, 1776, we thought it fitting to not only talk about the historical significance of this date, but of the long road to our country’s independence.

“The Revolution was effected before the war commenced. The Revolution was in the hearts and minds of the people.”
— Former President John Adams, 1818

The following article is a long but great read. It’s taken from the U.S. Department of State publication, Outline of American History.

Throughout the 18th century, the maturing British North American colonies inevitably forged a distinct identity. They grew vastly in economic strength and cultural attainment; virtually all had long years of self-government behind them. In the 1760s their combined population exceeded 1,500,000 — a six-fold increase since 1700. Nonetheless, England and America did not begin an overt parting of the ways until 1763, more than a century and a half after the founding of the first permanent settlement at Jamestown, Virginia.

A New Colonial System

Jamestown, Virginia

In the aftermath of the French and Indian War, London saw a need for a new imperial design that would involve more centralized control, spread the costs of empire more equitably, and speak to the interests of both French Canadians and North American Indians. The colonies, on the other hand, long accustomed to a large measure of independence, expected more, not less, freedom. And, with the French menace eliminated, they felt far less need for a strong British presence. A scarcely comprehending Crown and Parliament on the other side of the Atlantic found itself contending with colonists trained in self-government and impatient with interference.

The organization of Canada and of the Ohio Valley necessitated policies that would not alienate the French and Indian inhabitants. Here London was in fundamental conflict with the interests of the colonies. Fast increasing in population, and needing more land for settlement, they claimed the right to extend their boundaries as far west as the Mississippi River.

The British government, fearing a series of Indian wars, believed that the lands should be opened on a more gradual basis. Restricting movement was also a way of ensuring royal control over existing settlements before allowing the formation of new ones. The Royal Proclamation of 1763 reserved all the western territory between the Allegheny Mountains, Florida, the Mississippi River, and Quebec for use by Native Americans. Thus the Crown attempted to sweep away every western land claim of the 13 colonies and to stop westward expansion. Although never effectively enforced, this measure, in the eyes of the colonists, constituted a high-handed disregard of their fundamental right to occupy and settle western lands.

More serious in its repercussions was the new British revenue policy. London needed more money to support its growing empire and faced growing taxpayer discontent at home. It seemed reasonable enough that the colonies should pay for their own defense. That would involve new taxes, levied by Parliament — at the expense of colonial self-government.

The first step was the replacement of the Molasses Act of 1733, which placed a prohibitive duty, or tax, on the import of rum and molasses from non-English areas, with the Sugar Act of 1764. This act outlawed the importation of foreign rum; it also put a modest duty on molasses from all sources and levied taxes on wines, silks, coffee, and a number of other luxury items. The hope was that lowering the duty on molasses would reduce the temptation to smuggle the commodity from the Dutch and French West Indies for the rum distilleries of New England. The British government enforced the Sugar Act energetically. Customs officials were ordered to show more effectiveness. British warships in American waters were instructed to seize smugglers, and “writs of assistance,” or warrants, authorized the king’s officers to search suspected premises.

Both the duty imposed by the Sugar Act and the measures to enforce it caused consternation among New England merchants. They contended that payment of even the small duty imposed would be ruinous to their businesses. Merchants, legislatures, and town meetings protested the law. Colonial lawyers protested “taxation without representation,” a slogan that was to persuade many Americans they were being oppressed by the mother country.

Later in 1764, Parliament enacted a Currency Act “to prevent paper bills of credit hereafter issued in any of His Majesty’s colonies from being made legal tender.” Since the colonies were a deficit trade area and were constantly short of hard currency, this measure added a serious burden to the colonial economy. Equally objectionable from the colonial viewpoint was the Quartering Act, passed in 1765, which required colonies to provide royal troops with provisions and barracks.

The Stamp Act

A general tax measure sparked the greatest organized resistance. Known as the “Stamp Act,” it required all newspapers, broadsides, pamphlets, licenses, leases, and other legal documents to bear revenue stamps. The proceeds, collected by American customs agents, would be used for “defending, protecting, and securing” the colonies.

Bearing equally on people who did any kind of business, the Stamp Act aroused the hostility of the most powerful and articulate groups in the American population: journalists, lawyers, clergymen, merchants and businessmen, North and South, East and West. Leading merchants organized for resistance and formed nonimportation associations.

Trade with the mother country fell off sharply in the summer of 1765, as prominent men organized themselves into the “Sons of Liberty” — secret organizations formed to protest the Stamp Act, often through violent means. From Massachusetts to South Carolina, mobs, forcing luckless customs agents to resign their offices, destroyed the hated stamps. Militant resistance effectively nullified the Act.

Stamp Act

Spurred by delegate Patrick Henry, the Virginia House of Burgesses passed a set of resolutions in May denouncing taxation without representation as a threat to colonial liberties. It asserted that Virginians, enjoying the rights of Englishmen, could be taxed only by their own representatives. The Massachusetts Assembly invited all the colonies to appoint delegates to a “Stamp Act Congress” in New York, held in October 1765, to consider appeals for relief to the Crown and Parliament. Twenty-seven representatives from nine colonies seized the opportunity to mobilize colonial opinion. After much debate, the congress adopted a set of resolutions asserting that “no taxes ever have been or can be constitutionally imposed on them, but by their respective legislatures,” and that the Stamp Act had a “manifest tendency to subvert the rights and liberties of the colonists.”

Taxation Without Representation

The issue thus drawn centered on the question of representation. The colonists believed they could not be represented in Parliament unless they actually elected members to the House of Commons. But this idea conflicted with the English principle of “virtual representation,” according to which each member of Parliament represented the interests of the whole country and the empire — even if his electoral base consisted of only a tiny minority of property owners from a given district. This theory assumed that all British subjects shared the same interests as the property owners who elected members of Parliament.

The American leaders argued that their only legal relations were with the Crown. It was the king who had agreed to establish colonies beyond the sea and the king who provided them with governments. They asserted that he was equally a king of England and a king of the colonies, but they insisted that the English Parliament had no more right to pass laws for the colonies than any colonial legislature had the right to pass laws for England. In fact, however, their struggle was equally with King George III and Parliament. Factions aligned with the Crown generally controlled Parliament and reflected the king’s determination to be a strong monarch.

The British Parliament rejected the colonial contentions. British merchants, however, feeling the effects of the American boycott, threw their weight behind a repeal movement. In 1766 Parliament yielded, repealing the Stamp Act and modifying the Sugar Act. However, to mollify the supporters of central control over the colonies, Parliament followed these actions with passage of the Declaratory Act, which asserted the authority of Parliament to make laws binding the colonies “in all cases whatsoever.” The colonists had won only a temporary respite from an impending crisis.

The Townshend Acts

The year 1767 brought another series of measures that stirred anew all the elements of discord. Charles Townshend, British chancellor of the exchequer, attempted a new fiscal program in the face of continued discontent over high taxes at home. Intent upon reducing British taxes by making more efficient the collection of duties levied on American trade, he tightened customs administration and enacted duties on colonial imports of paper, glass, lead, and tea from Britain. The “Townshend Acts” were based on the premise that taxes imposed on goods imported by the colonies were legal while internal taxes (like the Stamp Act) were not.

The Townshend Acts were designed to raise revenue that would be used in part to support colonial officials and maintain the British army in America. In response, Philadelphia lawyer John Dickinson, in Letters of a Pennsylvania Farmer, argued that Parliament had the right to control imperial commerce but did not have the right to tax the colonies, whether the duties were external or internal.

The agitation following enactment of the Townshend duties was less violent than that stirred by the Stamp Act, but it was nevertheless strong, particularly in the cities of the Eastern seaboard. Merchants once again resorted to non-importation agreements, and people made do with local products. Colonists, for example, dressed in homespun clothing and found substitutes for tea. They used homemade paper and their houses went unpainted. In Boston, enforcement of the new regulations provoked violence. When customs officials sought to collect duties, they were set upon by the populace and roughly handled. For this infraction, two British regiments were dispatched to protect the customs commissioners.

The Boston Massacre

The presence of British troops in Boston was a standing invitation to disorder. On March 5, 1770, antagonism between citizens and British soldiers again flared into violence. What began as a harmless snowballing of British soldiers degenerated into a mob attack. Someone gave the order to fire. When the smoke had cleared, three Bostonians lay dead in the snow. Dubbed the “Boston Massacre,” the incident was dramatically pictured as proof of British heartlessness and tyranny.

Faced with such opposition, Parliament in 1770 opted for a strategic retreat and repealed all the Townshend duties except that on tea, which was a luxury item in the colonies, imbibed only by a very small minority. To most, the action of Parliament signified that the colonists had won a major concession, and the campaign against England was largely dropped. A colonial embargo on “English tea” continued but was not too scrupulously observed. Prosperity was increasing and most colonial leaders were willing to let the future take care of itself.

Samuel Adams

Samuel AdamsDuring a three-year interval of calm, a relatively small number of radicals strove energetically to keep the controversy alive. They contended that payment of the tax constituted an acceptance of the principle that Parliament had the right to rule over the colonies. They feared that at any time in the future, the principle of parliamentary rule might be applied with devastating effect on all colonial liberties.

The radicals’ most effective leader was Samuel Adams of Massachusetts, who toiled tirelessly for a single end: independence. From the time he graduated from Harvard College in 1743, Adams was a public servant in some capacity — inspector of chimneys, tax-collector, and moderator of town meetings. A consistent failure in business, he was shrewd and able in politics, with the New England town meeting his theater of action.

Adams wanted to free people from their awe of social and political superiors, make them aware of their own power and importance, and thus arouse them to action. Toward these objectives, he published articles in newspapers and made speeches in town meetings, instigating resolutions that appealed to the colonists’ democratic impulses.

In 1772 he induced the Boston town meeting to select a “Committee of Correspondence” to state the rights and grievances of the colonists. The committee opposed a British decision to pay the salaries of judges from customs revenues; it feared that the judges would no longer be dependent on the legislature for their incomes and thus no longer accountable to it, thereby leading to the emergence of “a despotic form of government.” The committee communicated with other towns on this matter and requested them to draft replies. Committees were set up in virtually all the colonies, and out of them grew a base of effective revolutionary organizations. Still, Adams did not have enough fuel to set a fire.

The Boston “Tea Party”

In 1773, however, Britain furnished Adams and his allies with an incendiary issue. The powerful East India Company, finding itself in critical financial straits, appealed to the British government, which granted it a monopoly on all tea exported to the colonies. The government also permitted the East India Company to supply retailers directly, bypassing colonial wholesalers. By then, most of the tea consumed in America was imported illegally, duty-free. By selling its tea through its own agents at a price well under the customary one, the East India Company made smuggling unprofitable and threatened to eliminate the independent colonial merchants. Aroused not only by the loss of the tea trade but also by the monopolistic practice involved, colonial traders joined the radicals agitating for independence.

Boston Tea Party

In ports up and down the Atlantic coast, agents of the East India Company were forced to resign. New shipments of tea were either returned to England or warehoused. In Boston, however, the agents defied the colonists; with the support of the royal governor, they made preparations to land incoming cargoes regardless of opposition. On the night of December 16, 1773, a band of men disguised as Mohawk Indians and led by Samuel Adams boarded three British ships lying at anchor and dumped their tea cargo into Boston harbor. Doubting their countrymen’s commitment to principle, they feared that if the tea were landed, colonists would actually purchase the tea and pay the tax.

A crisis now confronted Britain. The East India Company had carried out a parliamentary statute. If the destruction of the tea went unpunished, Parliament would admit to the world that it had no control over the colonies. Official opinion in Britain almost unanimously condemned the Boston Tea Party as an act of vandalism and advocated legal measures to bring the insurgent colonists into line.

The Coercive Acts

Parliament responded with new laws that the colonists called the “Coercive” or “Intolerable Acts.” The first, the Boston Port Bill, closed the port of Boston until the tea was paid for. The action threatened the very life of the city, for to prevent Boston from having access to the sea meant economic disaster. Other enactments restricted local authority and banned most town meetings held without the governor’s consent. A Quartering Act required local authorities to find suitable quarters for British troops, in private homes if necessary. Instead of subduing and isolating Massachusetts, as Parliament intended, these acts rallied its sister colonies to its aid. The Quebec Act, passed at nearly the same time, extended the boundaries of the province of Quebec south to the Ohio River. In conformity with previous French practice, it provided for trials without jury, did not establish a representative assembly, and gave the Catholic Church semi-established status. By disregarding old charter claims to western lands, it threatened to block colonial expansion to the North and Northwest; its recognition of the Roman Catholic Church outraged the Protestant sects that dominated every colony. Though the Quebec Act had not been passed as a punitive measure, Americans associated it with the Coercive Acts, and all became known as the “Five Intolerable Acts.”

At the suggestion of the Virginia House of Burgesses, colonial representatives met in Philadelphia on September 5, 1774, “to consult upon the present unhappy state of the Colonies.” Delegates to this meeting, known as the First Continental Congress, were chosen by provincial congresses or popular conventions. Only Georgia failed to send a delegate; the total number of 55 was large enough for diversity of opinion, but small enough for genuine debate and effective action. The division of opinion in the colonies posed a genuine dilemma for the delegates. They would have to give an appearance of firm unanimity to induce the British government to make concessions. But they also would have to avoid any show of radicalism or spirit of independence that would alarm more moderate Americans.

A cautious keynote speech, followed by a “resolve” that no obedience was due the Coercive Acts, ended with adoption of a set of resolutions affirming the right of the colonists to “life, liberty, and property,” and the right of provincial legislatures to set “all cases of taxation and internal polity.” The most important action taken by the Congress, however, was the formation of a “Continental Association” to reestablish the trade boycott. It set up a system of committees to inspect customs entries, publish the names of merchants who violated the agreements, confiscate their imports, and encourage frugality, economy, and industry.

The Continental Association immediately assumed the leadership in the colonies, spurring new local organizations to end what remained of royal authority. Led by the pro-independence leaders, they drew their support not only from the less well-to-do, but from many members of the professional class (especially lawyers), most of the planters of the Southern colonies, and a number of merchants. They intimidated the hesitant into joining the popular movement and punished the hostile; began the collection of military supplies and the mobilization of troops; and fanned public opinion into revolutionary ardor.

Many of those opposed to British encroachment on American rights nonetheless favored discussion and compromise as the proper solution. This group included Crown-appointed officers, Quakers and members of other religious sects opposed to the use of violence, numerous merchants (especially in the middle colonies), and some discontented farmers and frontiersmen in the Southern colonies.

The king might well have effected an alliance with these moderates and, by timely concessions, so strengthened their position that the revolutionaries would have found it difficult to proceed with hostilities. But George III had no intention of making concessions. In September 1774, scorning a petition by Philadelphia Quakers, he wrote, “The die is now cast, the Colonies must either submit or triumph.” This action isolated Loyalists who were appalled and frightened by the course of events following the Coercive Acts.

The Revolution Begins

General Thomas Gage, an amiable English gentleman with an American-born wife, commanded the garrison at Boston, where political activity had almost wholly replaced trade. Gage’s main duty in the colonies had been to enforce the Coercive Acts. When news reached him that the Massachusetts colonists were collecting powder and military stores at the town of Concord, 32 kilometers away, Gage sent a strong detail to confiscate these munitions.

Lexington Skirmish

After a night of marching, the British troops reached the village of Lexington on April 19, 1775, and saw a grim band of 77 Minutemen — so named because they were said to be ready to fight in a minute — through the early morning mist. The Minutemen intended only a silent protest, but Marine Major John Pitcairn, the leader of the British troops, yelled, “Disperse, you damned rebels! You dogs, run!” The leader of the Minutemen, Captain John Parker, told his troops not to fire unless fired at first. The Americans were withdrawing when someone fired a shot, which led the British troops to fire at the Minutemen. The British then charged with bayonets, leaving eight dead and 10 wounded. In the often-quoted phrase of 19th century poet Ralph Waldo Emerson, this was “the shot heard round the world.”

The British pushed on to Concord. The Americans had taken away most of the munitions, but they destroyed whatever was left. In the meantime, American forces in the countryside had mobilized to harass the British on their long return to Boston. All along the road, behind stone walls, hillocks, and houses, militiamen from “every Middlesex village and farm” made targets of the bright red coats of the British soldiers. By the time Gage’s weary detachment stumbled into Boston, it had suffered more than 250 killed and wounded. The Americans lost 93 men.

The Second Continental Congress met in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on May 10. The Congress voted to go to war, inducting the colonial militias into continental service. It appointed Colonel George Washington of Virginia as their commander-in-chief on June 15. Within two days, the Americans had incurred high casualties at Bunker Hill just outside Boston. Congress also ordered American expeditions to march northward into Canada by fall. Capturing Montreal, they failed in a winter assault on Quebec, and eventually retreated to New York.

Despite the outbreak of armed conflict, the idea of complete separation from England was still repugnant to many members of the Continental Congress. In July, it adopted the Olive Branch Petition, begging the king to prevent further hostile actions until some sort of agreement could be worked out. King George rejected it; instead, on August 23, 1775, he issued a proclamation declaring the colonies to be in a state of rebellion.

Britain had expected the Southern colonies to remain loyal, in part because of their reliance on slavery. Many in the Southern colonies feared that a rebellion against the mother country would also trigger a slave uprising. In November 1775, Lord Dunmore, the governor of Virginia, tried to capitalize on that fear by offering freedom to all slaves who would fight for the British. Instead, his proclamation drove to the rebel side many Virginians who would otherwise have remained Loyalist.

The governor of North Carolina, Josiah Martin, also urged North Carolinians to remain loyal to the Crown. When 1,500 men answered Martin’s call, they were defeated by revolutionary armies before British troops could arrive to help.

British warships continued down the coast to Charleston, South Carolina, and opened fire on the city in early June 1776. But South Carolinians had time to prepare, and repulsed the British by the end of the month. They would not return South for more than two years.

Common Sense and Independence

Common SenseIn January 1776, Thomas Paine, a radical political theorist and writer who had come to America from England in 1774, published a 50-page pamphlet, Common Sense. Within three months, it sold 100,000 copies. Paine attacked the idea of a hereditary monarchy, declaring that one honest man was worth more to society than “all the crowned ruffians that ever lived.” He presented the alternatives — continued submission to a tyrannical king and an outworn government, or liberty and happiness as a self-sufficient, independent republic. Circulated throughout the colonies, Common Sense helped to crystallize a decision for separation.

There still remained the task, however, of gaining each colony’s approval of a formal declaration. On June 7, Richard Henry Lee of Virginia introduced a resolution in the Second Continental Congress, declaring, “That these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent states. …” Immediately, a committee of five, headed by Thomas Jefferson of Virginia, was appointed to draft a document for a vote.

Largely Jefferson’s work, the Declaration of Independence, adopted July 4, 1776, not only announced the birth of a new nation, but also set forth a philosophy of human freedom that would become a dynamic force throughout the entire world. The Declaration drew upon French and English Enlightenment political philosophy, but one influence in particular stands out: John Locke’s Second Treatise on Government. Locke took conceptions of the traditional rights of Englishmen and universalized them into the natural rights of all humankind. The Declaration’s familiar opening passage echoes Locke’s social-contract theory of government:

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.

Declaration of Independence

Jefferson linked Locke’s principles directly to the situation in the colonies. To fight for American independence was to fight for a government based on popular consent in place of a government by a king who had “combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws. …” Only a government based on popular consent could secure natural rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Thus, to fight for American independence was to fight on behalf of one’s own natural rights.

Defeats and Victories

Although the Americans suffered severe setbacks for months after independence was declared, their tenacity and perseverance eventually paid off. During August 1776, in the Battle of Long Island in New York, Washington’s position became untenable, and he executed a masterly retreat in small boats from Brooklyn to the Manhattan shore. British General William Howe twice hesitated and allowed the Americans to escape. By November, however, Howe had captured Fort Washington on Manhattan Island. New York City would remain under British control until the end of the war.

That December, Washington’s forces were near collapse, as supplies and promised aid failed to materialize. Howe again missed his chance to crush the Americans by deciding to wait until spring to resume fighting. On Christmas Day, December 25, 1776, Washington crossed the Delaware River, north of Trenton, New Jersey. In the early-morning hours of December 26, his troops surprised the British garrison there, taking more than 900 prisoners. A week later, on January 3, 1777, Washington attacked the British at Princeton, regaining most of the territory formally occupied by the British. The victories at Trenton and Princeton revived flagging American spirits.

In September 1777, however, Howe defeated the American army at Brandywine in Pennsylvania and occupied Philadelphia, forcing the Continental Congress to flee. Washington had to endure the bitterly cold winter of 1777-1778 at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, lacking adequate food, clothing, and supplies. Farmers and merchants exchanged their goods for British gold and silver rather than for dubious paper money issued by the Continental Congress and the states.

Valley Forge Winter

Valley Forge was the lowest ebb for Washington’s Continental Army, but elsewhere 1777 proved to be the turning point in the war. British General John Burgoyne, moving south from Canada, attempted to invade New York and New England via Lake Champlain and the Hudson River. He had too much heavy equipment to negotiate the wooded and marshy terrain. On August 6, at Oriskany, New York, a band of Loyalists and Native Americans under Burgoyne’s command ran into a mobile and seasoned American force that managed to halt their advance. A few days later at Bennington, Vermont, more of Burgoyne’s forces, seeking much-needed supplies, were pushed back by American troops.

Moving to the west side of the Hudson River, Burgoyne’s army advanced on Albany. The Americans were waiting for him. Led by Benedict Arnold — who would later betray the Americans at West Point, New York — the colonials twice repulsed the British. Having by this time incurred heavy losses, Burgoyne fell back to Saratoga, New York, where a vastly superior American force under General Horatio Gates surrounded the British troops. On October 17, 1777, Burgoyne surrendered his entire army — six generals, 300 other officers, and 5,500 enlisted personnel.

Franco-American Alliance

In France, enthusiasm for the American cause was high: The French intellectual world was itself stirring against feudalism and privilege. However, the Crown lent its support to the colonies for geopolitical rather than ideological reasons: The French government had been eager for reprisal against Britain ever since France’s defeat in 1763. To further the American cause, Benjamin Franklin was sent to Paris in 1776. His wit, guile, and intellect soon made their presence felt in the French capital, and played a major role in winning French assistance.

France began providing aid to the colonies in May 1776, when it sent 14 ships with war supplies to America. In fact, most of the gunpowder used by the American armies came from France. After Britain’s defeat at Saratoga, France saw an opportunity to seriously weaken its ancient enemy and restore the balance of power that had been upset by the Seven Years’ War (called the French and Indian War in the American colonies). On February 6, 1778, the colonies and France signed a Treaty of Amity and Commerce, in which France recognized the United States and offered trade concessions. They also signed a Treaty of Alliance, which stipulated that if France entered the war, neither country would lay down its arms until the colonies won their independence, that neither would conclude peace with Britain without the consent of the other, and that each guaranteed the other’s possessions in America. This was the only bilateral defense treaty signed by the United States or its predecessors until 1949.

The Franco-American alliance soon broadened the conflict. In June 1778 British ships fired on French vessels, and the two countries went to war. In 1779 Spain, hoping to reacquire territories taken by Britain in the Seven Years’ War, entered the conflict on the side of France, but not as an ally of the Americans. In 1780 Britain declared war on the Dutch, who had continued to trade with the Americans. The combination of these European powers, with France in the lead, was a far greater threat to Britain than the American colonies standing alone.

The British Move South

With the French now involved, the British, still believing that most Southerners were Loyalists, stepped up their efforts in the Southern colonies. A campaign began in late 1778, with the capture of Savannah, Georgia. Shortly thereafter, British troops and naval forces converged on Charleston, South Carolina, the principal Southern port. They managed to bottle up American forces on the Charleston peninsula. On May 12, 1780, General Benjamin Lincoln surrendered the city and its 5,000 troops, in the greatest American defeat of the war.

But the reversal in fortune only emboldened the American rebels. South Carolinians began roaming the countryside, attacking British supply lines. In July, American General Horatio Gates, who had assembled a replacement force of untrained militiamen, rushed to Camden, South Carolina, to confront British forces led by General Charles Cornwallis. But Gates’s makeshift army panicked and ran when confronted by the British regulars. Cornwallis’s troops met the Americans several more times, but the most significant battle took place at Cowpens, South Carolina, in early 1781, where the Americans soundly defeated the British. After an exhausting but unproductive chase through North Carolina, Cornwallis set his sights on Virginia.

Victory and Independence

In July 1780 France’s King Louis XVI had sent to America an expeditionary force of 6,000 men under the Comte Jean de Rochambeau. In addition, the French fleet harassed British shipping and blocked reinforcement and resupply of British forces in Virginia. French and American armies and navies, totaling 18,000 men, parried with Cornwallis all through the summer and into the fall. Finally, on October 19, 1781, after being trapped at Yorktown near the mouth of Chesapeake Bay, Cornwallis surrendered his army of 8,000 British soldiers.

Cornwallis Surrender

Although Cornwallis’s defeat did not immediately end the war — which would drag on inconclusively for almost two more years — a new British government decided to pursue peace negotiations in Paris in early 1782, with the American side represented by Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, and John Jay. On April 15, 1783, Congress approved the final treaty. Signed on September 3, the Treaty of Paris acknowledged the independence, freedom, and sovereignty of the 13 former colonies, now states. The new United States stretched west to the Mississippi River, north to Canada, and south to Florida, which was returned to Spain. The fledgling colonies that Richard Henry Lee had spoken of more than seven years before had finally become “free and independent states.”

The task of knitting together a nation remained.

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What Are You Training For?

I recently posed this question to one of the CD/CT teams that I’ve been training for the past four years. Like most units, the level of commitment given to training seems to wax and wane, unfortunately they are on a steep down-swing. As an instructor it’s pretty easy to tell, not just by how they do during evaluations, but also how they act or even talk before training begins.

In a unit dedicated to training I hear talk about increasing their tactical advantage or looking for more opportunities to hone their skills. In a unit plagued by the disease of mediocrity, talk seems to center around the testing itself or how long we’ll be training. Why is someone asking me how many negative marks they can get during their tactical evaluation? To a true warrior, someone dedicated to training, the answer is simple: Zero. That’s how many times you can turn your back to a guy with a gun in combat and live to tell the tale. Once you put your sights on the bottom of what’s acceptable, you’ve found your range and sometimes you’ll be just above (Yes, I barely passed!) and other times below (I thought I could die four times and still pass?).

Over the past few years I’ve talked a lot about the technical aspects of combat training, but never thought to ask why you’re training. If it’s to put holes in paper targets on a sunny day, then you’ll do fine. Read our lessons on marksmanship and any paper target that comes your way is going down! But if you ever need to defend your loved ones or your job is protecting our country, you need to look deeper. Because a miss on a paper target may give you a lower score or even a fail on an evolution, but a miss on a guy who breaks into your house with intent to do you harm could mean you’ve failed yourself and your family. So what are you training for?

If you don’t immediately know the answer or if it’s just to shoot fast, look cool, or pass your next training evaluation you’ll never have the drive needed to become a true warrior. Warriors arise from strong motivation; a motivation to survive no matter what evils come their way and that motivation is love.

Love for the people in our lives is the reason true warriors train. We train for battle to make sure we return to the ones we love. For anyone who has brushed deaths cold shoulder can tell you, it’s those faces we see when our lives ‘flash before our eyes’. You don’t see the fun times you had or any accomplishments you made, you see the pain and sorrow in their eyes knowing that you’re gone and you’re not coming back. In combat you’re not fighting for a top score or bragging rights, you fighting to spare your wife the pain of crying over your grave as she grows old without you. You’re fighting so your parents don’t need to bury the son they raised and expected to bury them. You’re fighting so you can raise your children right and protect them from harm. Because if you die in battle, the permanent pain in their hearts will be worse than any temporary pain you feel in death.

If you know this when you train, you will train that much harder; you’ll wake up early and stay up late making sure you are the best warrior you can be. You’ll never be satisfied with your performance and always look for ways to improve your chances of surviving a violent encounter. By knowing that you are training to be with the ones you love and spare them a lifetime of grief, you’ll never settle for good-enough. For defeating your enemy is the ultimate act of love.

There will come a time when you will look back at the training you’ve done and either say, this is why I failed, or this is why I prevailed. Right now you have the opportunity to choose your future and that of those you love.

There are 24 hours in a day: How many of them are you willing to spare to ensure you return home and spare your parents, your wife and your children the pain of your loss?

So I ask again, what are you training for?

Editor-in-Chief’s Note: Chris is a former Navy SEAL and the Director of Training for Center Mass Group, which was founded by two former Navy SEAL Instructors. Giving people the experience of being trained by the most elite combat unit in the world, Chris is currently a Maritime-Counter-Terrorism and advanced marksmanship Instructor who has trained DOD, DHS, FBI, CIA and multiple foreign allies in all aspects of combat weapons handling, marksmanship and Maritime Operations.

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Gearing Up for the 2013 Sniper Adventure Challenge

The Competition Dynamics Sniper Adventure Challenge is unique among adventure races. It combines traditional orienteering with long rifle, carbine and pistol shooting as well as various tactical challenges. No other race that I know of contains this combination of non-stop physical effort, problem solving and field craft. Last year’s SAC included extreme tests of physical resilience, cryptography and other logic puzzles, tactical marksmenship, escape & evasion and navigation over a grueling 30 mile course. 40% of teams would drop out during the race.

For 2013, Zak Smith and Competition Dynamics are back, but have split the Sniper Adventure Challenge into two classes; Sprint and Endurance. While competitors can expect challenges similar to 2012, the terrain is completely different and Zak will be sure to include plenty of surprises and unforeseen obstacles. The Endurance class is described as “24-40 hours of continuous challenge, 30-40 miles of foot navigation” and is our chosen competition class. Both my teammate and I are SWAT snipers for a California law enforcement agency. We’ve never attempted any competition on the scale of the SAC Endurance, but we’re hoping our combination of military, law enforcement and mountaineering experience will help carry us through.

Gear Selection

A basic tenet of lightweight backpacking is the lightest gear is the gear you don’t bring. Traveling 30-40 miles on foot means even the lightest ounce in your pack at the start will feel like pounds of rocks as you near the end. We wanted to be prepared, but do so with as little excess weight as possible.

Nearly every item on the required gear list is a safety item, so there is no doubt that competitor safety is of the highest priority for the race organizers.

Sniper Challenge Gear Loadout

The Ten Essentials are covered with extra emphasis on Signals; a flare launcher and military strobe lights are required. There is not much wiggle room in the rules here, but we still wanted our safety gear to be as small and light as possible.

For our first aid kits, we leaned heavily on ITS Tactical’s Lightweight DOPP Kit writeup, repacking our supplies in mini containers, pill pockets and aLOKSAK bags.

Our trauma kits follow the same philosophy, taking all the necessary blowout supplies and packing them tight in sealable waterproof bags. I eliminated as much of the non-sterile packaging as possible to reduce bulk and weight in our kits.

Another tenet of lightweight backpacking is that multi-use gear should be prioritized above others. Shooting sticks and trekking poles are both invaluable, but with the straps looped over the poles, my trekking poles serve as both. You don’t need a bipod when you train shooting off your pack.

We decided on variable zoom scopes with front focal plane mil dot reticles for both our weapons to eliminate the need for binoculars or spotting scopes. Good optics are also very heavy, but with mil dot reticles in both our scopes, we can spot for each other without the additional gear.

Sniper Challenge Gear Loadout

Weapon Selection

The SAC rules specify that each team be composed of a long rifle shooter and a carbine shooter. Each team member must also carry a handgun and they may not switch weapons or roles during the competition. All ammunition, shooting accessories and optics must be carried by the team throughout the race.

My teammate and I agonized over our weapon loadout and changed our minds several times during preparation. Fortunately, we had the luxury of having several weapon systems to choose from. With long rifle targets out to 1500 yards and carbine targets out to 500 yards, my initial thought was larger calibers would give us a definite advantage. Out past 800 yards, the reduced wind deflection with a .338 caliber projectile would be helpful, although shooting past 800 yards is difficult and highly technical with any caliber. For the long rifle, we initially decided on an AIAW in .338 caliber. A .308 caliber Rock River AR10 would serve as the carbine.

The size and weight of these weapons, particularly the AI .338, necessitated Eberlestock Gunslinger packs to carry comfortably over long distances. Over a few training hikes, however, the Gunslingers proved to be less comfortable than I had hoped. Eberlestock gear has served me well through multiple callouts and years of training, so I know their packs are bomber tough. Bomber tough is also heavy. With our full loadout and ammunition, our packs passed the 50 pound mark. We had to downsize. It was about time our weapon loadout philosophy matched our lightweight gear philosophy.

Sniper Challenge Rifles

In a compromise between effective range and encumberance, we decided on an AIAW .308 for the long rifle and a Colt AR15 in .223 for the carbine. Between the weight differences in the weapons and lighter, smaller caliber ammo, my teammate and I each reduced our packs by over 10 pounds.

Only after downsizing our weapons and scrutinizing every piece of gear were we able to succeed in getting our packs, including ammunition, water and food, into the 30 pound range. Even if it costs us in points on the long range targets, points earned in the other challenges and getting to additional bonus checkpoints could make up that difference.

Even with all the gear preparation, marksmenship practice and training hikes, the SAC Endurance is going to be the longest, toughest 40 hours around. In my opinion though, there’s not really any kind of recreation more patriotic than spending time in the wilderness testing your physical and mental limits. I am definitely looking forward to celebrating Fourth of July 2013 at the Competition Dynamics Sniper Adventure Challenge.

Editor-in-Chief’s Note: Please join us in welcoming Arthur Guo as a contributor on ITS Tactical. Arthur has been a peace officer in Southern California for the last nine years. He’s worked a variety of assignments in LE and has been a SWAT Sniper for the last four years. Arthur is also an avid rock climber and mountaineer.

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Your Guide to the Night Sky: How to See the Stars in All Their Glory

Night Sky by Jeff M

As a city boy who grew up in Los Angeles thinking the dry concrete trench in the Terminator 2 chase scene was actually a river, I likewise thought the night sky was composed of perhaps a dozen stars. I could sometimes make out Orion, but it was nothing like the astronomy books I looked at as a kid. As you can imagine, my first camping trip beyond the local mountains to Monument Valley (on the desolate Arizona/Utah border) I was able to see all the stars and experience a truly magical and life changing moment.

As of 2008, more people are living in urban than rural areas and as we flock to the cities in search of opportunity, less of us are in touch with the stars that served as inspiration and sources of wonder to our species since the beginning of recorded history. Nowadays, the night sky with the milky way, stars, comets and meteors, is an abstract concept that few have witnessed it in all its glory.

Night Sky

I’m sure you’ve even had times where you’ve set aside a weekend to go camping at an established campground only to have the lights of RVs, the restroom facilities, campfires, headlamps, camp lanterns, check in and registration bulletin boards, not to mention the vehicle lights of fellow campers arriving late in the night, drown out your ability to view the stars.

We’re not here to reminisce upon the days of yore when the Polynesians memorized the starfields and navigated the Pacific, but to help you find a time and place to spend a warm summer night basking in the glow of the Milky Way.

Planning When To Go

SunriseSunset.com is great for this. The generated calendar is dependent upon your geographic location so make sure to specify an area closest to your destination whether it’s a city or National Park. No, you won’t be camping in the city, but if I’m camping up the California coast, plugging in San Francisco is close enough.

Customize your calendar. The key options you want to enable for output here are moon phases, moonrise & moonset times and astronomical twilight times. Astronomical twilight is the beginning/end of the glow in the sky before the sun rises and after it sets. Optimally, moonless nights give you the most options, but if you can’t get your weekend of camping to coincide with a new moon, you may be able to get in a few moonless hours on gibbous moon phase nights.

Sunrise Calendar

In the example above, if you were planning a trip and trying to decide between camping the weekend of August 10th or August 17th, you can see that the darkness on Friday Aug 9 lasts from astronomical twilight time of 2139hrs to astronomical sunrise at 0429hrs on Sat Aug 10—luckily the moon is up during daylight hours. Alternatively, on Fri Aug 16 the moon rises at 1611hrs in the afternoon and is up until 0226hrs the next morning on Sat Aug 17. Astronomical twilight begins at 0438hrs, so you’d only have just over two hours of star-worthy darkness.

A few months ago, the Delta Aquarids meteor shower occurred in the same way. The moon didn’t set until 3:30 in the morning and the morning’s first light would be 5:30, so we drove up to the mountains Sunday night, bedded down and set our alarm clocks for 3am Monday morning. We watched the sky for a few hours, packed up, then drove back to town and headed into the office on time.

Use this calendar to plan based on your preferences. I like moonless nights, but as a frequent desert traveler, it is quite nice to go on a full-moon hike, which makes it bright enough that you won’t need a headlamp. There are also less crowds and the temperatures in the summer are tolerable.

Earthsky.org is a great blog to follow if you want to to stay current with celestial events such as meteor showers, comet sightings or eclipses. Many of these events are visible even in the big city, so if you’re averse to bugs and dirt but have a passing interest in astronomy, it’s still worth checking out if. If you’re aiming to check out a meteor shower, Earthsky has good intel on peak times and moon phases, but oftentimes depending on various conditions, they are a bust. Earthsky will at least let you know what your chances are for catching the good ones though.

Planning Where To Go

Using a website called Clear Sky Charts, click on your state here on this map, which should give you a good idea of where all the darkest areas in your region and beyond are. How dark the sky is at a given site is intrinsically dependent on a number of factors, including proximity to city, pollution levels, humidity and elevation. The Clear Sky Charts is a great resource on finding the darkest places to camp and stargaze in your area. From there, clicking on a particular dark sky in the provided database lets you go into more granular detail with hourly information such as forecasted cloud cover, air temperature, moon phase, humidity and so forth.

Clear Sky Map

You want to camp in the black or at least blue. I live within all those white spots on the bottom.

Many established camp grounds have artificial lighting and/or crowds that may detract from the experience. Use our guide on scouting for free campsites to check out Forest Service roads to lay in for the night. In my experience, your best bet is a ridge or clearing. Thanks to modern technology, you can get a pretty good sense for the terrain using Google Maps satellite view or Google Earth. Ridgelines are better for their unobstructed views, but can be windy, so remember to pack extra layers for comfort. Higher elevation is generally better as the air thins out, leading to less stuff for stray light from the cities to bounce off of.

There is a nifty [Android] app called Google Sky Map that you can use to identify or guide you to the constellations, planets, or general direction of a meteor shower. There is a time travel feature that you can use for planning future trips as well.

On a side note, if you want a good view of the Milky Way center it isn’t on the Sky Map app. Just plug in Sagittarius as the Milky Way’s center and from Earth’s perspective, it lines up with Sagittarius. While long exposure photography makes the Milky Way look very bright in those time lapses you see on Vimeo, in reality you need a very dark sky in order to see it with the naked eye.

Sky Map App Screenshot

On a side note, most of us at ITS are sort of camera nerds, but photography goes beyond the scope of the website. If you want a good guide on photographing the night sky, National Geographic photographer Jim Richardson has a great one here and another on the Milky Way specifically. Mr Richardson recommends the Sky Voyager app for the iPhone for trip planning, which I cannot vouch for personally (as it is not available on Android) and cannot seem to find a direct link to. If you are using iOS and have found some good astronomy apps, please let us know in the comments.

Final tip: Mark your calendars because the Perseids, the most reliable meteor shower every year, is on August 11-13. We hope you can spend it out there with your friends and family, or even in solitude.

“Dwell on the beauty of life. Watch the stars, and see yourself running with them.” ~ Marcus Aurelius

Happy stargazing!

Editor-in-Chief’s Note: Jeff works and resides in Los Angeles, where the four seasons are mudslides, earthquakes, riots and wildfires. He is an avid shooter (of both firearms and cameras) and celebrates his American heritage by playing the 5-string banjo. Check out his website at skunkabilly.com.

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Win a Door Devil Anti-Kick Door Security Kit! *Updated*

See below for winner announcement.

The kind folks over at Door Devil decided to let us give away two Door Devil Doorframe Reinforcement Kits to two lucky ITS readers! Just as we discussed in our article yesterday on home invasions, the Door Devil may mean the difference between life or death.

Designed to stop kick-ins, the Door Devil has been tested to withstand nearly 1,000 foot pounds of pressure. The installation screws have also been heat treated to prevent from snapping or bending under stress. These reinforcement kits have been proven to be a fairly fast and simple way to bolster your home security at a low cost.

Something else worth mentioning is that all Crew Leaders, Plank Owners and Life Members get a 20% discount on your order from Door Devil so if you don’t win, you can still get an awesome deal on this life saving product! Make sure you are signed in before checking the Vendor Discount Code page for more information.

What’s Included In The Prize Pack?

  • (1) Door Devil Steel Reinforcement Plate
  • (1) Door Devil Door Edge Guard
  • (1) Door Devil Hinge Bolt Set
  • (1) Installation Kit
  • (1) Yard sign

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Congratulations to Scav and John H. for winning this latest contest! They both have been contacted and will be receiving their Door Devil Doorframe Reinforcement Kits shortly. In case you didn’t win this time, stay tuned to more contests in the future!

Also, Crew Leaders, Plank Owners and Life Members get 20% off a purchase on doordevil.com

Good luck!

Contest Fine Print:

  • Two winners will be selected at random and each will receive one prize pack with the contents listed above.
  • Winner will get their choice of color; Classic White or Premium Brown
  • Winners will be notified by email. Once contacted, they have 24 hours to claim their prize. If we do not receive a response from them within 24 hours, we will select a new winner.
  • Contest ends at 11:59 PM CST on 6/30/13.

 

Disclaimer: “Security” is a common industry category/term to allow customers to easily find and describe a family of products and services that can help improve the home’s defenses. Please be aware that no “security” product, measure or device by itself or in aggregate is 100% guaranteed to stop a determined criminal. Purchasing or adding a Door Devil does not mean or imply that your home is 100% “secure”. It is not. Adding layers of defense such as Alarm Systems, Video Systems and Door Devils significantly increase the chances that your home will either not be targeted and/or able to successfully repel an attack if it were to occur. However and ultimately, these solutions – including Door Devils – are unable to guarantee the prevention or stop the commission of a crime.

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