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  35
 | L. Neil Smith's
 THE LIBERTARIAN ENTERPRISE
 Number 35, January 15, 1998
 
 
 
Hand Me The Strela, Stella
by Victor Milan 
[email protected]
 
Exclusive to The Libertarian Enterprise
 
         L. Neil Smith and Vin Suprynowicz frequently write that the 
undeniable intent of the Second Amendment is that the every American  
ought in principle to possess arms at least as competent as those of 
potential oppressors -- the most likely of whom, for the slow, are our 
own military and increasingly paramilitary police.  That sort of talk 
makes liberals dismiss us as nuts and wrings anguished howls from 
give-them-our-daughters-in-hopes-they-won't-take-our-sons compromisers 
like the NRA.  
Does that mean we shouldn't do it?
 Let's consider some ramifications.  What would it mean if 
everybody in America had, say, an SA-7 Strela shoulder-fired SAM in 
the closet, and a MILAN anti-tank missile -- what a great name -- 
beneath the bed?  We can all say it in unison with the government 
junkies:  "But That Would Mean Anarchy!"
 In one sense, that's exactly the fucking point, thank you very 
much; do those chains chafe your wrists, or are you used to them, 
since you love them so?  In the sense of what's actually meant -- 
riot, rapine, ruin, blood and fire in the streets, another perfect day 
in LA -- the answer is:  nope.
 First off, these things are in private hands.  Right now.  And 
not generally what we consider the right hands.  Back in the early 
Nineties reasonably authoritative rumor held that Albuquerque's 
premier gang, 18th Street, had got hold of an antitank rocket and 
zapped a derelict house with it by way of experiment.  Like so many 
odd things one runs into -- like the gun-battle outside a Village Inn 
I was sitting in last winter -- the media never mentioned the event, 
and I can't confirm it.  But I have no reason to doubt it happened.  
Common sense tells us such things are happening.
 Word was the rocket was American -- fell off an Army truck.  But 
the Communist Chinese company that's taking over that erstwhile Marine 
base in California allegedly got caught smuggling in full-auto AKs 
last year. Do we really believe they'd scruple to import RPGs and 
Strelas?  Socialists will do anything for money, and there are wads of 
socialist countries out there, some our ostensible allies.  And as was 
the case when Russia still copped to being commie, the only thing most 
of these people make that anyone would willingly pay for is weapons.
 So society's designated badguys have backpack artillery already; 
bet on that.  Has that in itself caused more chaos?  Not so's you'd 
know it.  We've chaos aplenty, to be sure:  thank the War on Drugs.
 But what if your neighbors had these things?  Gasp!  That would 
mean our suburbs would look like Beirut or the Bronx, right?
 Really?
 By estimates I deem conservative, there're over a quarter billion 
private firearms in this country -- basically one for every American 
alive.  More than there are cars, lots.  Guess which kills more?
 Consider what shoulder-launched AT and antiaircraft rockets 
actually do.  Say your neighbor pisses you off by blasting Queensryche 
at 3 AM -- which I can empathize with, if they play anything later 
than Operation Mindcrime.  So you resolve to teach him a lesson.
 Let's check our Suitcase Arsenal.  Forget your SAM; most are heat- 
seekers, and generally won't even let themselves be launched if their 
infrared "eyes" don't see any targets hotter than the average American 
home is liable to offer unless it's already in flames.  Antitank 
rockets will serve, but you're gonna have to back off a ways to let 
that old bastard Johnson have what's coming:  they won't arm inside 
some arbitrary flight-distance, usually at least ten yards, to keep 
draftees from vaporizing themselves.  Be wary of the backblast, too; 
most of these beasts shoot a big jet of flame out the rear.  They're 
rockets.
 Duh.
 Now, they won't blow up your neighbor's house.  Most backpack AT 
rockets use shaped-charge warheads, which will make a small hole and 
set the place ablaze.  Some, like Russian RPGs, can be loaded with 
high-explosive heads.   These won't blow the house up either, though 
they'll make a bigger hole, and again likely set the place on fire.  
In time, that means your house'll probably go too -- ask the MOVE's 
Philly ex-neighbors how that works.
 So there we have it:  Instant Chaos.  Awful.  See?  We gotta do 
away with the Second Amendment because if it's really lived up to, 
we'll get Suburbia Aflame.  Right?
 Nope.
 You want to achieve the practical effect of one of these wonder 
weapons?  For an invisible fraction of the cost -- and these things 
cost beaucoups bucks, even when you cut the government-procurement 
fat out of the price tags -- you take a glass bottle, a quart of 
gasoline, an old sock, and a lighter.  Combine -- I won't tell you 
how, lest I face prosecution -- and chuck it through Johnson's window 
while he's watching Seinfeld.  Poof:  instant antitank weapon.
 You've got all these things, right?  Everybody you know has these 
things, right?  Despite the anti-First Amendment frenzy of neo-Nazis 
like Dianne Feinstein and Schumer the Tumer to ban dissemination of 
bomb-making knowledge, everybody knows what a Molotov cocktail is and 
how to make one, right?
 So where are all the suburban barbecues?  In backyard grilles 
where they belong.  Until EPA shuts 'em down, anyway.
 When these potent portable weapons become widely available, yes, 
occasional Americans will bedevil their neighbors with them.  But more 
often than they already set each other on fire the good old-fashioned 
way?  Why would that be?  The old ways will still be cheaper, easier, 
and more convenient:  the watchwords of the American consumer.
 Indeed, once most Americans possess competent weapons of personal 
defense such as shotguns and handguns, and the knowledge and 
determination to use them, we'll see less of this and all violent 
crimes, because -- duh -- there will be penalties imposed.  Not like 
today, when the average time served for murder -- on the off-chance 
you're caught and convicted -- is twenty months and dropping (thanks 
again, War on Drugs.)
 So what's the real objection to home anti-armor and anti-aircraft 
weapons?  They're wizard effective against armored vehicles and attack 
aircraft.  Such as the ones the Aggressive Termination Force and the 
Friendly Baby Incinerators used to massacre peaceful American 
civilians outside Waco.
 In this century technological revolution has placed immense 
leverage in the hands of the individual.  At the same time advances in 
big, indiscriminate "weapons of mass destruction" have made commanders 
who concentrate their forces in accordance with long-standing military 
principles into potential Kevorkians writ huge.  These are the worst 
of tidings to the forces of oppression -- which means, if we're honest 
with ourselves, all governments, everywhere.
 The dispersed defensive is where it's at, folks.  All those 
privately-held pistols, rifles, and shotguns are an excellent start, 
and anyone who tells you otherwise has no idea what it's talking 
about.  But even better will be the widespread private ownership of 
effective personal antitank and antiaircraft weaponry.
 When that arrives, you will have no more to fear from your 
neighbors -- and far less to fear from would-be oppressors, domestic 
or foreign.
 Victor Milan married Jennifer Lipsinsky on August 9th.  Lucky or 
smart?  You decide.
 
 
 
A Juror's Creed: As an American juror, I will exercise my 1000 year 
old duty to arrive at a verdict, not just on the basis of the facts of 
a particular case or instructions I am given, but through my ability 
to reason, my knowledge of the Bill of Rights, and my individual 
conscience.
-- L. Neil Smith
 
 
 
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