We’re Hiring! Want to Be a Part of the ITS Crew here in Texas?

Our online company is looking for an enthusiastic, honest and efficient person to join the existing small business team in the role of Community Support for our retail services.  We need someone on a full-time (40 hours per week), long-term basis who is willing to learn about the inner workings of our company and will enjoy contributing to the team.

Think you have what it takes? Here’s what we’re looking for…

Community Support

Job responsibilities for the Community Support position:

  • Personable and outstanding customer service at all times
  • Timely and efficient response to all customer and support emails and phone calls
  • Daily review of ITS Community comments on our website and social media channels
  • Membership processing including accurate updates in database and ITS Forum
  • Process RMA requests and returns efficiently and accurately
  • Daily/Weekly cleaning tasks

Required skills and values for the Community Support position:

  • Excellent communication and organizational skills with strong attention to detail
  • Comfortable working on an Apple computer with a knowledge base of common software programs and social media sites
  • Must have integrity, be honest and open professionally, work with maximum efficiency and a sense of urgency, always strive for self-improvement and exceed customer expectations
  • Must be able to work independently as well as positively contribute to the ITS Team through sharing knowledge and collaboration
  • Must be able to manage work time effectively with proper planning to make the most of each work day

Additional requirements for this position:

  • Must have successfully completed high school or a higher level of education
  • Must have the legal right to work permanently in the United States
  • Must have reliable transportation
  • Must have a strong work ethic including timely daily attendance
  • Must submit resume to be considered for the position
  • Must undergo a background check, pre-employment drug screen and be insurable if job offer is made

Work schedule: Monday – Friday, 9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. (with 1 hour lunch break)

Compensation: $14.00 per hour with eligibility for Medical, Life and Dental Insurance and SIMPLE IRA enrollment after successful completion of 60-day Initial Training Period.

Job location: Arlington, Texas

Please email your resume to [email protected] for consideration.

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Witness Marks, AR Cleaning and Thoughts on “Budget Gear” – Gear Tasting 83

Can we get a witness!? Witness marks help to identifying screw-loosening shenanigans and provide visual reference points. Today on Gear Tasting, Bryan offers his thoughts on using witness marks and the best marker he’s found for making them.

Bryan also answers some great Questions Over Coffee, including his thoughts on which spare parts to keep with your AR, how to clean your AR and purchasing “budget gear.”

In each episode of Gear Tasting, Imminent Threat Solutions Editor-in-Chief Bryan Black answers your gear-related questions and shares his insight into what we’re currently evaluating at ITS HQ.

For more on the gear we review, check out our GEARCOM category here on ITS.

To have your gear related question answered on an upcoming episode, tweet us using the poundtag #GearTasting on Twitter.

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Three Layer Idiocy Cake: The Sickly State of the 2nd Amendment in California

Chances are good that if you believe in the legitimacy of the Second Amendment, you’re already familiar with California’s blatant disregard for that pesky section of the Bill of Rights. You may not know, however, the degree to which the multiple layers of government routinely try to kick that amendment and the people who choose to exercise that right, in the metaphoric teeth. It borders on absurdity and for those of us who, for whatever reason, have to live here, it’s a consistent pain in the proverbial backside.

I’m a shooter and have lived in the belly of the beast, San Francisco, for almost two decades and I’m not alone in this regard. I know a sizable number of people who live here in the Bay Area and other areas of California, who believe firmly in the 2nd Amendment. Particularly that it describes a right that isn’t granted by the Constitution, but acknowledged by it and cannot be taken away from the law-abiding people of this country, regardless of the particular state in which they reside.

We’re gun owners and shooters; we train in the use of firearms whenever and wherever we can. We take firearms safety seriously, we don’t commit murders, we don’t escalate bar fights into gun battles and not one of us has ever gone on a shooting rampage, nor will we ever.

Yet at every turn, the State of California implies that it’s only a matter of time that we will do one, if not all of those things. They continue their effort to pass layer upon layer of restrictive legislation that makes our lives harder and more difficult to maintain an ability to defend ourselves from those who would deprive us of our lives. Regardless of the fact that if caught, they could be convicted both of murder and additional petty firearms charges, which apparently don’t serve as enough of a deterrent to prevent them from committing these crimes.

National-Level Idiocy

The top layer of Californian firearm-related idiocy is, of course, the national layer; which is to say the layer that has an effect on the world outside California. Between the constant stream of Californian Senators and Congresspeople pushing their gun control agenda, to the seemingly endless array of celebrities who happily shill for gun control causes (despite the irony that they often earn their livings portraying themselves as “people of the gun” – I’m looking at you, Matt Damon), California has made itself the butt of any number of jokes and has earned the ire of anyone who holds our Second Amendment as an important tenet worthy of defending.

Misery Loves Company

The list of anti-gun Californian legislators on the national stage is a lengthy and notorious one. Nancy Pelosi, Dianne Feinstein, Barbara Boxer and Henry Waxman have all received national media attention for their anti-Second Amendment voting and willingness to act against the oath they swore to defend; the U.S. Constitution.

Rather than spend much time detailing the antics of these legislators, we’ll assume you’re already familiar with some of their actions. Californian federal-level politicians are often times behind national efforts to destroy or diminish the 2nd Amendment and if they aren’t the instigators, they’re quick to line up to support those that are. If you feel that I’m being hyperbolic here, allow me to use the words of these politicians to illustrate exactly what I’m talking about:

“If I could have gotten 51 votes in the Senate of the United States for an outright ban, picking up every one of them; “Mr. and Mrs. America, turn ‘em all in,” I would have done it.” – Dianne Feinstein

“Banning guns addresses a fundamental right of all Americans to feel safe.” – Feinstein

“The National Guard fulfills the militia mentioned in the Second amendment. Citizens no longer need to protect the states or themselves.” – Feinstein

“If I had my way, sporting guns would be strictly regulated, the rest would be confiscated.” – Nancy Pelosi

“The fact is, sensible gun laws work, we’ve proven it in California and we’re not going to give up.” – Barbara Boxer, in comments made the day after the San Bernardino shooting

We could go on, but you likely get the point by now and there’s plenty more to discuss in regard to the outright disdain California displays towards the Second Amendment.

Irresponsible Propaganda of Mass Media

We live, unfortunately, in an era of celebrity worship. While our 1776 revolution may have initially torn off the tyranny of monarchic rule, we’ve done everything in our power since that time to build our own version of royalty. Our culture jumps at every opportunity to ask what our “celebrities” think about the state of our nation and the issues that effect it and our “celebrities” rarely squander an opportunity to run their mouths on these subjects, often times despite the complete lack of understanding and experience they may have on these issues.

No subset of celebrities has been as vocal and visible as those who, for all intents and purposes, spend their professional careers pretending to be other people. Those people in mass media, television and movies are all too happy to offer their naive misunderstandings of the role guns play both in the history of this nation, as well as the role they shouldn’t play in modern society.

Hollywood is the center of much of this mass media production and it’s the absolute epicenter of celebrity gun control advocacy. Ironically, at the same time the individual practitioners of “culture creation” may offer their proclamations that we need to “get rid of all privately-owned guns,” they’ve made a sizable portion of their living using fake guns. Additionally, in the process they’ve propagated myths about how guns work and how people should use them.

Without those firearms, a large number of movies wouldn’t be compelling enough for people to watch them. Liam Neeson and Matt Damon tell us we shouldn’t own guns and at the same time make their living portraying gun-savvy secret agents on screen. Rosie O’Donnell and Whoopi Goldberg screech their views that no one needs firearms, all from the comfort of being protected by armed security, completely unaware of the hypocrisy of their positions.

State-Level Idiocy

Not content with spewing anti-gun vitriol in Federal legislation and inundating the public at large to non-stop agitprop through the synthesis of cultural bilge, California’s state-level politicians routinely make sure they’re getting their cut of the anti-gun crusade as well. Thus, we cut further into the second layer of idiocy that is Californian governance. Some of it makes the national news and some of it doesn’t, though all of it has an effect on firearms owners in the state.

Kevin Leon and the Battle Against Ghost Guns

Kevin Leon (generally known as “Kevin de León,” though that’s neither his birth name, nor has he legally changed it from “Kevin Alexander Leon”) is a state-level California politician who, in the course of pursuing the outlawing of “80% lowers,” made the following statement:

“This is a ghost gun. This right here has the ability with a 30-caliber clip to disperse with 30 bullets within half a second. 30 magazine clip within half a second.”

The multiple layers of wrongness are so dense, it’s difficult to dissect what he was even trying to say, much less what he actually said. Perhaps it’s part of a complex psychological obfuscation tactic, or perhaps it can safely be assumed that Mr. Leon has no idea what he’s talking about. Good thing he isn’t writing laws to outlaw things he doesn’t understand. Oh, wait…

“Assault Weapons”

In 1994, the United States Congress passed the “Assault Weapons Ban,” which later expired in 2004. California had already passed a similar piece of legislation called the “Roberti-Roos Assault Weapons Control Act of 1989,” which in effect, banned the sale, possession and transfer of the vast majority of semi-automatic rifles in California.

Anti-gun legislators, being generally unfamiliar with weapons they were so intent on legislating out of existence, made a number of tactical errors when penning their law. They banned specific makes and models of rifles, based entirely on cosmetic features, combined with the basic qualifications of what they defined as an “assault weapon,” which was semi-automatic center-fire rifles able to accept a detachable magazine.

In time and after the 2004 expiration of the federal AWB, Californian shooters found ways around the remaining Assault Weapons Control Act by inventing things like the “bullet button”. This device allows the rifle’s user to eject a magazine with one additional step. A “tool” (which often times could be as simple as a free round of ammunition), had to be used in order to use the magazine eject button that other free Americans will be familiar with.

There was also a ban on the import, manufacture and sale of anything larger than 10-round magazines. This saw growth of a vertical industry of disassembled 30 round magazines referred to as “replacement parts kits,” as well as 20 and 30 round magazines with a spring disallowing the addition of any more than 10 rounds into the magazine. So technically, Californians could own semi-automatic centerfire rifles, provided they were suitably neutered to match the legal requirements.

To describe the situation as “complex” would be to understate the actual situation. Determining the legality of particular weapon configurations was a legal minefield, though plenty of people ventured into that minefield and built or bought semi-automatic centerfire rifles in California and these rifles, unsurprisingly, were almost never used in crimes.

“Assault Weapons” 2, Semi-Automatic Boogaloo

In December of 2015, Syed Farook and his wife broke some laws. They broke the law that says you can’t murder people. They broke the federal law that says you can’t modify a semi-automatic rifle to make it capable of fully automatic firing. Their friend broke the law by making straw purchases for them. Possibly worst of all, they broke the California statute that says you can’t modify a California-compliant “assault weapon” to circumvent the requirement of using a secondary tool (in addition to your finger) in order to eject an empty magazine and replace it with a full magazine.

I’m being facetious here, but people who believe in that mistaken prioritization do exist and they immediately seized on the opportunity to push additional legislation. At first, they tried to push a law through the state legislature in order to outlaw “bullet buttons,” thus re-qualifying formerly legal semi-automatic centerfire rifles as banned “assault weapons”. This effort failed and upon that failure, they drafted and passed SB-880, thus expanding the definition of “assault weapons” to include everything they missed the first time, including specifically describing the “bullet button.”

As a result of SB-880, Californians who own rifles that were legal prior to passage, are faced with a choice. They can “register” the weapons as “assault rifles” with the State and give up ever modifying, selling or passing them down to a family member. Alternatively, they can modify the rifles to be “featureless” (meaning, specifically, getting rid of collapsible stocks, pistol grips, forward grips and “flash hiders”). Lastly, they can move them out of the state. By not following one of these three options, they risk becoming felons.

The Fifty Caliber Ban

In 2004, the State Legislature passed the .50 Caliber BMG Regulation Act of 2004, declaring that .50 caliber rifles posed a threat to the health and safety of the citizens of California. They enacted this in much the same way they’re enacting the second “assault weapon” ban. Owners of the rifles were given a year to register them with the Department of Justice and failure to do so by that deadline would mean that any unregistered .50 cal rifles would be illegal. This law was passed despite the complete lack of crimes committed in the state with .50 caliber rifles, thus solving yet another problem that didn’t actually exist.

…may have been committing a felony.

Though they carved out a Law Enforcement exemption in this law, Ronnie Barrett, of Barrett Firearms, wrote an open letter to the Los Angeles Police Department, letting him know that Barrett Firearms would refuse to sell any .50 caliber rifles to the LAPD.

“I personally attended the council meeting in Los Angeles regarding attempts to bar ownership of the .50 caliber rifle in your city. I was allowed to briefly address the council. The tone of the discussion was mostly emotionally based, so the facts that I attempted to provide were ineffective to the extent they were heard at all. The council voted to have the city attorney draft an ordinance to ban the .50 and further, to instruct the city’s representatives in Sacramento and in Washington D.C. to push for bans at their respective levels.

At that council meeting, I was very surprised to see an LAPD officer seated front and center with a Barrett 82A1 .50 cal rifle. It was the centerpiece of the discussion. As you know, there have been no crimes committed with these rifles and most importantly, current California law does not allow the sale of the M82AI in the state because of its detachable magazine and features that make it an “assault weapon.” This rifle was being deceptively used by your department. The officer portrayed it as a sample of a currently available .50 cal rifle, available for sale to the civilians of Los Angeles. One councilman even questioned how this rifle was available under current laws, but as I stated, facts were ineffective that day.

Your officer, speaking for the LAPD, endorsed the banning of this rifle and its ammunition. Then he used the rifle for photo ops with the Councilmen each of whom, in handling the firearm, may have been committing a felony. I was amazed.”

His letter went on to say that upon his return to office, he was surprised to find a different M82AI owned by LAPD was in the shop for repairs. He let them know, in no uncertain terms, that he would be dragging his feet getting that rifle repaired and would not be selling them any more rifles, as he never intended his rifles to be used as propaganda pieces towards civilian disarmament.

The Handgun Roster

California’s Department of Justice maintains what’s known as the “Handgun Roster,” which in essence, is a list of handguns the State has approved for sale and ownership inside California.

“Effective January 1, 2001, no handgun may be manufactured within California, imported into California for sale, lent, given, kept for sale, or offered/exposed for sale unless that handgun model has passed firing, safety and drop tests and is certified for sale in California by the Department of Justice. Private party transfers, curio/relic handguns, certain single-action revolvers and pawn/consignment returns are exempt from this requirement.”

The reality of this roster is that California gets to arbitrarily decide which handguns are approved and which ones aren’t. If manufacturers wish to sell their guns to residents of California, they must submit their firearms for “testing” in order to gain approval. Naturally, this costs the manufacturers money and even small revisions of firearms already on the existing roster requires submitting the requisite fees and samples for “testing” before approval is granted.

Say, for instance, Glock changes nothing on the G19 but the color of the polymer lower assembly between 2016 and 2017. Without submitting the additional fee and waiting for DOJ’s “testing” to result in approval (which, given the DOJ’s obvious goal of reducing the number of guns for sale in California, may or may not ever come), the new G19 will remain off-limits for Californians, while the old G19 will be available until such time as supply runs out.

One need only browse the “recent additions” to see the chilling effect this has had on available firearms within the state. The Hudson H9, HK VP9 and Glock 43 are prime examples of very popular new guns that will likely never be available for sale in California; short of a buyer finding someone who moved to the state with one of the off-roster firearms, who would be amenable to selling his or her gun to the purchaser.

Even then, the sale would require the “transformation” of the weapon into “single-shot” mode for the purchase, after which it could be reconfigured to its intended state. How many gang-related firearm crimes, committed by felons already disallowed from owning, or even touching, firearms do you suppose this has stopped? That number can roughly be ascertained to be “zero”.

Background Checks for Ammunition

In 2016, Proposition 63 was just one of many additional anti-gun pieces of legislation passed, with some far-reaching ramifications for those of us that shoot. One part of Proposition 63 was the requirement of background checks for ammunition purchases. As of January 1, 2018, anyone selling 500 rounds of ammunition in any given month will be required to obtain a license from the State of California in order to do so. Proposition 63 passed with 62.7% of the voters in California voting in favor of it and 37.3% against.

Sales of ammunition by someone without said license will have to take place through someone with a license, much the same as the requirement that individuals selling firearms must go through a vendor with an FFL. This includes the purchase of ammunition through online vendors. If you order ammunition from one of the plentiful places online, they’ll have to deliver the ammunition to a licensed vendor of ammunition in the state of California.

This also includes purchases made out of state by Californians, which would then have to be shipped to a licensed vendor in the state in order to remain legal. Additionally, every purchase of ammunition will require that a background check be performed through the CA Department of Justice.

Leland Freakin’ Yee

What discussion of California gun laws would be complete without mentioning Hypocrite Extraordinaire, Leland Yee? A child psychologist by trade, Yee started his political career on the San Francisco Unified School Board, during which time he was first arrested for stealing a bottle of tanning oil. He quickly moved onto San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors and while Supervisor for District 4, he was stopped by SFPD two times under suspicion of soliciting prostitutes. Obviously too big for San Francisco and its repressive restrictions, he moved on to the California House of Representatives and was elected to represent District 12.

When Yee wasn’t busy stealing tanning oil or soliciting prostitutes, he was focusing his legislative power on the dangers of video games. He then managed to get elected to the State Senate of California, where he turned his attention to passing gun control legislation.

Yee co-authored the bill that required all “new semiautomatic handguns” to be equipped with “micro-stamping” technology. Along with the aforementioned intellectual powerhouse Kevin “de” Leon, he proposed a bill to “close the loophole” that allowed for Californians to own AR-15 rifles, in spite of the “assault weapon” ban, by means of installing a “bullet button” which disallowed the normal dropping of a magazine by pressing a magazine release button, requiring them to use an additional tool to perform this perfectly normal task. On this subject, he said,

“It is extremely important that individuals in the state of California do not own assault weapons. I mean that is just so crystal clear, there is no debate, no discussion.”

In March of 2014, Yee was charged with, among a slew of other things, dealing firearms without a license, illegally importing firearms and accepting bribes in exchange for specific legislative favors. As expected (at least for those who might be called “cynical” with regard to California politicians and the expectation of equitable application of the law), these charges were reduced to racketeering, to which Yee pleaded guilty and was sentenced to five years.

Despite this forcing his withdrawal from the race for California’s Secretary of State, he still managed to receive almost 10% of the vote in the primary. Also despite his crying about his sentencing being “too tough,” he actually got off very lightly, given that he stood accused of trying to buy $2.5 million dollars of weapons, including rocket launchers, from the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, in order to import them to the United States. The ITAR charges alone could have won him 2000 years in jail, given that each of the 100 Tavor rifles he was trying to import would carry a 20 year penalty.

Local-Level Idiocy

As if the federal California legislators and either-inane-or-outright-evil state legislators weren’t enough, if you’re unlucky enough to live in sizable coastal city in California (namely LA and SF), you’ll also have to deal with a third layer of anti-firearm bovine feces, as it is so lovingly distributed from the regional power-hungry local politicians.

Having lived in San Francisco for the better part of the last 17 years, I’m most familiar with their brand of tyranny, though it most definitely exists in other cities in California as well.

Black Talon Cop-Killer Magazine-Clip-Bullets!

In April of 2013, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed a city ordinance (yes, that was intentional) specifically outlawing three types of ammunition:

• Federal Premium “Law Enforcement Ammunition Tactical”

• Hornady “TAP (Tactical Application Police) Law Enforcement Ammunition”

• Winchester Black Talon

Hilariously, Winchester Black Talon ammunition, first introduced in 1991, had already been discontinued in 2000. So one would think this legislation would be yet another example of San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors wasting time passing laws that have no effect on anyone, were it not for the manner in which MPC 618 is actually worded.

Definition. For purposes of this Section, “Prohibited Ammunition” shall mean:

1. Ammunition sold under the brand name “Winchester Black Talon,” or that has physical properties resulting in ballistics performance identical to ammunition presently or formerly sold under the brand name Winchester Black Talon; or,

2. Ammunition designated by its manufacturer for purchase by law enforcement or military agencies only, unless other ammunition is available to the general public that has physical properties resulting in ballistics performance identical to such ammunition.

There’s a fine line between brilliant deviousness and excruciating ineptitude.

It’s important to pay close attention to the clause, “or that has physical properties resulting in ballistics performance identical to ammunition presently or formerly sold under the brand name Winchester Black Talon;” which is followed by the entire section two, wherein they make a completely arbitrary ban on ammunition that was “designated by its manufacturer for purchase by law enforcement or military agencies only”, or ammunition that has “physical properties resulting in ballistics performance identical to such ammunition.”

In effect, what they’ve done is allow the prosecuting attorneys the ability to perpetually re-define exactly what they’ve banned. Surprisingly enough, the Board of Supes did manage to carve out an active law enforcement/active duty military exemption for this particular masterpiece of legislative action, but they then topped it off with this gem:

d.) Police Database. The San Francisco Police Department shall prepare or cause to be prepared a public database of brands and product lines of ammunition meeting the definition of “Prohibited Ammunition” in subsection (a). Failure of the Police Department to create or maintain such a database, or the omission from the database of a particular brand or product line of ammunition otherwise qualifying as “Prohibited Ammunition,” under subsection (a), shall not be a defense to or otherwise excuse a violation of this Section.

In layman’s terms, this says that SFPD will build, or hire someone to build, a database of specific ammunitions that this ban shall apply to. However if they don’t, you can’t use the fact that they haven’t specifically banned a particular ammunition from charges against you for possessing an un-specifically banned ammunition. There’s a fine line between brilliant deviousness and excruciating ineptitude. San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors straddles that line magnificently.

High Bridge Arms

High Bridge Arms was the last remaining gun store in San Francisco until two years ago. They were an anomaly in the city and one that didn’t go unnoticed by local legislators, who repeatedly wrote law after law to force them out of the city. The final straw was a piece of legislation that would have required them to videotape every transaction in the store and generate monthly copies of that video to give to SFPD. Whether SFPD wanted that footage or not was largely irrelevant; the real goal of the legislation was to just make it more difficult for High Bridge Arms to stay in business in the city limits of San Francisco.

Chris Cheng, techie-turned-Top Shot competitive shooter, had this to say about that closing:

“San Francisco’s last gun shop, Highbridge Arms, has closed after years of anti-gun pressure from local and state politicians. The final straw that broke the camel’s back was proposed legislation by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors which would have required firearms and ammunition transactions and personal data be handed over to the San Francisco Police Department. The invasion of privacy and additional overhead costs became too much for the store to handle.”

No Delivery

Section 3601A of the San Francisco Police Code specifically prohibits the sale, distribution, transfer and manufacture of firearms and ammunition, as well as the possession of handguns, within the city and county of San Francisco. The handgun prohibition was stricken down (and the city had to pay the NRA’s legal fees), yet the rest of the code remains in force. For firearms owners in San Francisco, this means they have to leave the city in order to procure firearms and ammunition. This was further complicated by the closure of High Bridge Arms, which was the only San Francisco gun store and the only vendor of ammunition within the city and county limits.

Online sales, prior to the Prop 63 ban, weren’t allowed to make delivery to San Francisco either, so unless you knew someone who lived outside the city who was willing to take delivery for you (at which point you could pick the ammunition up from said person and take it back into San Francisco, all of which was legal), you were out of luck.

Strangely, no Law Enforcement exemption was carved out with this legislation. When I first became aware of this prohibition a number of years ago, I made a number of phone calls to SFPD, who eventually suggested I talk to the range master of SFPD’s range. The range master let me know that the San Francisco Police Department had to make a once-a-month trip to Oakland in order to pick up the ammunition issued to their officers and used in academy training and qualification evaluations.

London Breed, Gun Trafficker?

London Breed is the current president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, having first been elected to office in 2013. In an interview with “Hoodline,” in January 2013, she described having “quietly [operated] a gun buyback program,” in the following words.

“The things I would do as Supervisor are the things I’ve done as Director of the Center. When we had issues with guns, we basically quietly did a gun buyback program, where me and a couple of guys got some cash, went into public housing to the people we knew who had the guns and we basically gave them money to give us their guns and I took them to Northern Station and gave them to the Captain.”

While this information was obviously intended to show she’s a “Get Things Done” type of individual, willing to take the initiative in order to get results, it actually describes criminal behavior. In order to run a “gun buyback” program, one of the absolute legal musts is that an authoritative law enforcement agency has to not only approve, but actively be a part of the program. Without this authorization and participation, running a “gun buyback” program is basically serial firearm purchase transactions for which no California-mandated background checks are being performed.

In Breed’s case, naturally enough, SFPD upper management has no interest in pursuing prosecution for this crime, or series of crimes, depending on how many weapons she “and a couple guys” managed to buy with cash in public housing. She’s a sitting supervisor, capable of making their lives unnecessarily more difficult in a city that, despite a scarce examples of police brutality, is populated with a reflexive anti-police population.

As an aside on the subject of “gun buybacks” and inappropriate behavior of those associated with them in California, here’s a photograph of convicted felon, Rudy Corpuz, leader of a non-profit called “United Playaz,” which portends to try to be involved in reducing gang involvement and the gun violence that gangs bring, holding a gun at a “gun buyback.”

While his motivations for being involved in “gun buyback” programs may be something to be applauded, the laws about felons handling weapons are very clear; such behavior is completely illegal. You can also tell by the way he’s got his finger on the trigger that he’s a firearm expert.

The Unarmed Sheriff of San Francisco

Before London Breed took over District 5 and began her illegal arms trafficking efforts, Ross Mirkarimi held the position of Supervisor of that district. Mirkarimi somehow managed to be elected as Sheriff of the County of San Francisco and a little less than a month before he would be sworn in, SFPD visited his home to address a domestic disturbance claim.

As a result, Mirkarimi would be charged with domestic violence battery, child endangerment and dissuading a witness. He plead not guilty to the domestic violence, despite having left a visible mark on his wife’s arm after twisting her up, but plead guilty to false imprisonment charges.

Because of this, Mirkarimi, as acting sheriff, was stripped of his rights to own or carry firearms. His personally owned firearms (a Sig Sauer P229, a Beretta 92G and a Smith & Wesson Model 19 .357-caliber magnum revolver) were taken from him and for the duration of his trial, the elected Sheriff of San Francisco County was not allowed to carry (or own) a firearm. Mirkarimi took a plea agreement and regained this right, yet he lost it again by failing to qualify at the range.

Concealed Carry Buck-Passing Round-Robin

The vast majority of coastal Californian cities flat-out refuse to issue concealed carry permits. Certain rural counties are a little more accommodating, but if you live in San Francisco or Los Angeles and aren’t a retired judge, law enforcement official or anti-gun celebrity, you’re out of luck.

What could possibly go wrong?

San Francisco, in particular, engages in a frustrating buck-passing tennis match, wherein requests made to SFPD, if they get any response at all, get the response that one should apply with San Francisco’s Sheriff Department.

Applications to Sheriff’s Department get the opposite response; that one should apply with the Police Department. So, literally, the only people concealed carrying in San Francisco are criminals. What could possibly go wrong?

Fight or Flight

For those that don’t live in California, but enjoy shooting, carrying and training in the use of firearms for self-defense, it may seem that all of California has lost its collective mind. It can be easy to assume that, given the stream of anti-gun developments that form the news that leaves the state.

Yet, California has the second highest number of firearms owners in the country by percentage and the highest number of people who own guns, in total, largely due to its size. So how is it that these firearms owners get trampled on with such regularity? The answer to that is complicated, but one major aspect of it is that many of those who own firearms here don’t live in major metropolitan areas and the cities on the coast carry more legislative weight than the rural areas, so they trample at will.

Another factor is the supermajority in Californian politics and the plentitude of anti-gun politicians willing to forego the oath they all take when sworn into office. Really, that whole subject is deep enough to generate another 10,000 words and isn’t really the point of this article.

…for my family and for me, I’m moving to America.

I know a number of people who shoot here. They are, as they are almost everywhere in the United States I’ve lived or visited, well-trained, responsible and upstanding human beings.

In California, we’re routinely kicked in the teeth by three layers of stupidity, all so politicians can say they’re “doing something,” when they lack the guts to address the actual source of the gun crime in this state.

These same politicians engage in rhetoric and propagandizing in order to rile the support of a coastal anti-gun population and though we’re willing to fight in court for our rights, it’s both costly and often times painful. Those of us that live in these coastal cities in California often have to hide the fact that we shoot, or that we own guns at all, as we are routinely judged as neanderthals or sociopaths waiting to snap by those we live amongst.

For me, it’s just not worth staying here any more. I love the Pacific Ocean and the Sierra Nevada mountains and the plains in between them. I love driving down “The One” to Big Sur, or north through the Redwoods and I love the fog that rolls in during the summer months where I live in San Francisco.

However, given the cost of living, the inanity of my federal, state and local politicians and the fact that I am treated as a second-class citizen for believing in the importance of the Amendment that allows for all the other Amendments to our Constitution, I’ve had it. For those of you that remain, I hope you fight for your rights and I hope you win. But for my family and for me, I’m moving to America.

Editor-in-Chief’s Note: Matthew Sharp is a Plank Owner and Life Member at ITS and goes by the username “viator.” He lives in The People’s Republic of Northern California (for now) and enjoys long range shooting, carrying heavy objects great distances and fuzzy little puppies.

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Sensei James Williams on Mindset – Gear Tasting Radio Episode 09

Sensei James Williams is a well-known instructor on both bladed and unarmed combat and on this episode of Gear Tasting Radio, we were lucky enough to have him as a guest. While this is a longer episode than we usually produce, it’s worth the extra time for all of the information James provides in this fantastic interview.

Covering everything from techniques in bladed combat to the training mindset, James offers some information on his background and the training he offers in his online dojo.

Episode 09 – Sensei James Williams on Mindset


Highlighted Products

In each episode of Gear Tasting Radio, we offer an in-depth look into the usage and philosophy behind the equipment in our lives.

For more on the gear we review, check out our GEARCOM category here on ITS.

To have your gear related question answered on an upcoming episode, tweet us using the poundtag #GearTasting on Twitter.

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The Skills that Thrill: Looking Back on the Past Eight Years of ITS and Our Skill-Set Development

This year marks our eighth year in business at ITS and to say it’s been a journey is an understatement. When the idea for ITS first came to me all those years ago, I saw a void in the tactical industry and it didn’t have anything to do with where to find information on the latest and greatest products being released. The disparity came from where to find the skills necessary to use all the products being released; that’s where ITS came in.

I started writing about these topics, which I’d been taking it upon myself to learn for years and sharing them with other like-minded people online. I was overwhelmed with just how many people appreciated the skill-set information I was writing about and how lacking information like it was out there on the Internet.

Things like knot tying, lock picking, escaping from illegal restraint, rappelling and more, where the starting point in our content. While these skills weren’t purely tactical in nature, they most fit the confines of the tactical industry and those drawn to it. In reflecting on these eight years of content, we wanted to put together a compendium of articles by year. Both to give those that have been with us from the beginning a refresher and those that haven’t, a look back at all we’ve accomplished.

No matter when you started following us here at ITS, I can’t thank you enough for the support you’ve given us along the way. To those who have decided to support us financially through joining our membership, or by purchasing products in our store, thank you for helping us grow and continue to provide skill-set information online. Here’s to the future and all that will come.

~ Bryan Black
Founder, Editor-in-Chief

2009

In our first year, we hit the ground running in attempt to get some great information out to the public on everything from escaping illegal restraint to knot tying basics. Not only was our popular Knot of the Week series introduced in this year, we also featured some basics on lock picking, navigation and field tips. Check out some of the most popular articles from 2009 below!

2010

 

In the second year of ITS, we continued our push to re-introduce people to skill-sets to help them be better prepared. Articles on navigation, creating bypass tools with everyday items and even using PSD techniques to analyze your security allowed ITS readers to increase their knowledge and make their lives safer. This year also saw the results of our second Camouflage Comparison, which had some surprising results!

2011

In 2011, we tried to reiterate to our readers how much of your preparedness relies on you. Whether it was completing the GORUCK Challenge and Ascent, or getting out and getting medical training, in this year we shared our experiences in improving ourselves. Continuing in the DIY theme, this was also the year we introduced our ITS DIY AR-15 Build and highlighted how to build your own dead drop devices!

2012

For 2012, much of our year was dedicated to our first inaugural ITS Muster and it turned out to be a tremendous success! In addition, we highlighted several great products and training courses to improve shooting fundamentals. However, we still stuck to our skill-set roots and provided tons of great information on DIY knot tying projects, important knots to know and back packing skills like building a dopp kit and folding a topo map!

2013

Vehicle content ruled much of 2013 for ITS, including our visit to the Overland Expo and Bryan’s journey to modifying his FJ Cruiser. For firearms fans, 2013 was a great year with both our AR-15 Spare Parts Organization and our visit to Rifle Dynamics and their AK Builders Class. Keeping your outdoor skills sharp as well, we also highlighted some great content on taking care of your feet and the lost art of reading a road atlas.

2014

Our first podcast was introduced in 2014 and the world has never been the same without Ridiculous Dialogue. Always eager to share even more skills and knowledge, in this year we shared our experiences from a climbing trip to Chamonix, France and later offered a look at some basics for Urban Rappelling. 2014 also saw the debut of our DIY Flat Fold Method for the SOFT-TW Tourniquets; a method we still use to help create our ITS EDC Trauma Kits!

2015

From the Outdoor Meal Shootout to Bryan’s first 1,000 yard rifle shot, 2015 was a jam packed year! Not only did we cover things like escaping from an elevator and creating a key from just a photo, we also debuted our first episode of the popular show, Gear Tasting. We always try to provide the most up-to-date information, especially concerning trauma care and 2015 led us to further investigate some grey areas surrounding the RATS Tourniquet.

2016

Continuing our push for skill-set development, in 2016 we offered some longer reading on things like home security, medical training and some important things to consider when outdoors or in public. We also tested some great equipment, including the MAXTRAX for off-road recovery. 2016 was also the year we published our buyer’s guide to the Protective Combat Uniform system (PCU) and boy was it a popular article!

2017

While we’re not quite halfway through 2017, it’s already shaping up to be an awesome year. Already this year, we’ve featured content on diving, precision rifles and overcoming your inner demons. Keeping current with all things trauma-related, we also published some guidelines for First Responders with a Duty to Act. Also at the beginning of this year, we published a story from an ITS reader detailing his journey, from finding ITS to the changes it convinced him to make and how positive those changes were in his life.

Here’s to another awesome year of ITS!

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Spring Into Security: New ITS Security Seals and ITS No Step on Snek Morale Patch in the ITS Store!

Spring is here and we’re excited to be adding brand new products in the ITS Store! To help increase your garage door security, we’re introducing the new ITS Security Seals, which offer protection from garage door bypass attacks. They also work great as tamper evident seals.

Our other addition to the ITS Store this week is the new ITS No Step on Snek Morale Patch, paying a humorous homage to the Gadsden Flag. Check out the details of both our new products below. Continue reading

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Fromunda Cheese – Ridiculous Dialogue Episode 74

Episode 74 – Fromunda Cheese


Sometimes when cooking, recipes go terribly wrong and on this episode of Ridiculous Dialogue, we hear all about the gang’s failed recipes. In addition to cooking mishaps, Bryan, Kelly and Rob discussed Internet Privacy, road trip essentials and the decline of Skymall.

Finally, the crew tried to create the worst Crayola Crayon names imaginable, which ultimately led to a heated debate on the correct pronunciation of Crayon.

cast-episode-35

Ridiculous Dialogue was created to share the banter that takes place at Imminent Threat Solutions on a daily basis. It’s us; candid, unedited and talking about everything from what movies we’re watching to the general geekiness that keeps us laughing here at ITS HQ.

While we generally keep the vibe in our articles PG rated, be warned, it may not be safe to blast over your speakers at work. We hope you enjoy the insight into ITS and who we are behind the scenes as a company; pull up a chair and tune in to Radio ITS.

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New Badger Bi-Pod Mount and Battery Storage Tips – Gear Tasting 82

In this week’s acronym-filled episode of Gear Tasting, Bryan showcases a new low-profile bi-pod mount from Badger Ordnance that saves over 4 oz. from his previous mount. He also offers a look (and an acronym) for Hoptic USA’s new Picatinny Bubble Level.

For Questions Over Coffee this week, Bryan tackles the best methods he’s found for storing batteries and gives his thoughts on utilizing Bluetooth padlocks.

In each episode of Gear Tasting, Imminent Threat Solutions Editor-in-Chief Bryan Black answers your gear-related questions and shares his insight into what we’re currently evaluating at ITS HQ.

For more on the gear we review, check out our GEARCOM category here on ITS.

To have your gear related question answered on an upcoming episode, tweet us using the poundtag #GearTasting on Twitter.

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Do You Still Care About the Skill of Navigation? Here’s a Few Great Resources to Help You Out

No adventure in the great outdoors is complete without a little navigating! Navigation using a map and compass is fast becoming a lost art and it’s one of the main reasons we created our Land Navigation Starter Pack. With the tools in the Starter Pack and a good compass, all you’ll need is a topo map of your area and you’ll be ready to hit the trail.

However, sourcing a good topo map can be a challenge, unless you have access to a plotter and industrial printer. If you do, then this article probably isn’t for you. For those without access to professional grade tools, we’ve listed some great resources below to get the topo maps you need for your next adventure! In addition, we’ve also listed some great resources here on our website, that will help you to sharpen your navigational skills.

National Geographic Maps

Most likely the best option for those with a home printer, these free National Geographic Maps are available to print on a standard 8.5″ x 11″ piece of paper. Their online map selection makes it easy to find the exact quad you’re looking for and the site breaks the 7.5 minute quad into four printable PDF files.

The only downside to this option is the limited space you’ll have on an 8.5″ x 11″ piece of paper. If your adventure requires a full size topo map, you may want to look at another option.

One Map Place

For our annual Muster, we always print up a full-size custom topo maps for our participants and instructors. Our Muster maps are designed by our graphic artist and printed at One Map Place. For those looking for a custom map printing, look no further than One Map Place.

Don’t let their website’s humor fool you, they offer top notch service and we’ve been very pleased with the maps they’ve provided. In fact, even if you’re not looking for a custom map, their website is worth a visit for the humor.

The USGS Store

If custom maps aren’t something you need, the USGS Store has you covered with a wide range of standard paper maps for almost anywhere in the United States. While their site is a bit hard to navigate, you can narrow down the maps they offer by state, or you can search using their Map Locator.

In addition to a variety of different maps, the USGS Store also offers education products, books and even passes to National Parks, Forests and more!

National Parks Maps

While they don’t offer topo maps, NPMaps.com is a great resource for anyone visiting National Parks in the U.S. The creator of this site grew tired of using each National Park’s embedded map to plan his trip and created this site as a resource for printing out maps of each park.

If you’re not looking to shoot a bearing and navigate off the map itself, this may be a great resource for you.

The Complete Guide to Land Navigation with MGRS

Navigating with a map and compass is an empowering skill-set, but it’s one that needs frequent sharpening. With all the GPS and electronic navigation technology, it’s easy to simply rely on our devices to get us from Point A to Point B. In this article on ITS, we cover the basics of navigating using the Military Grid Reference System.

For those looking to view this guide on your tablet or eReader, check out our eBook version in the ITS Store!

The ITS Land Navigation Starter Pack

Land Navigation is an important skill-set to have in your toolbox, but getting started can be a little daunting. With all the different systems and tools, it’s difficult to know which direction to head.

We’ve taken out the guesswork with the ITS Land Navigation Starter Pack. It includes reference guides and tools, the all important protractor and everything you’ll need to make your own pace count beads. Just grab a compass, local topographic map from one of the resources above and hit the trail!

Where will your next adventure take you?

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Shop Tools for Projects at Work and Home – Gear Tasting Radio Episode 08

No matter what your project is, tools help you accomplish the job. On this episode of Gear Tasting Radio, Bryan and Rob talked about the tools they use most often for projects, repairs and other hobby work.

In addition to citing some of their favorite tools, they highlighted some techniques that have helped them on projects in the past and discussed some of their upcoming projects.

Episode 08 – Shop Tools for Projects at Work and Home


Highlighted Products

In each episode of Gear Tasting Radio, we offer an in-depth look into the usage and philosophy behind the equipment in our lives.

For more on the gear we review, check out our GEARCOM category here on ITS.

To have your gear related question answered on an upcoming episode, tweet us using the poundtag #GearTasting on Twitter.

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