10. Golden Tiger 7.62x39 ball. My rifle likes this stuff! Uniform, pretty accurate, pretty clean. I definitely prefer it to Wolf. Still available for under $0.25 / round shipped, which ain't like the old days, but have you priced, say, .308 Win. lately?
9. CZ light rifles. I handled one of the compact CZ-527 Americans in .223 lately and that was the cutest, handiest rifle I've seen in months. Nice wood, nice stock feel, gorgeously crisp set trigger. I now have a crush on the iron-sighted 527 Carbine version in 7.62x39:
http://www.gunblast.com/Paco_CZ527.htm 8. Prvi Partizan 5.56 mm ball. This is new M193 spec 55 gr ammo from Serbia for under $0.40 / round shipped. Again, not like bygone days, but it's excellent, reloadable ammo, and have you priced domestic .223 like American Eagle lately?
7. U.S. Firearms single action revolvers. What might be the best traditional production SAA ever is being made in America right now, in a shimmering variety of finishes, calibers and styles. I finally got the chance to shoot one of these, in .45 Colt, and was just as impressed as I'd hoped. Make mine a 5.5" Pre-War .44 Special with one piece walnut grips, please.
6. Michael Bane buying a Barrett .50 BMG rifle. See his blog! I can't follow his lead (lack the $$$ and a place to shoot), but I like the idea of more big .50s being in the hands of responsible private citizens. Stock up on ammo.
5. The Ruger LCP. I'm waiting a few months for the teething problems to work out before I buy one. That doesn't change the cultural significance of this pistol intro. I've said it before: America's most conservative (some would say "congenitally PC") handgun maker introduces a lightweight, enormously concealable, semi-auto pocket pistol that Sanetti acknowledges is
intended for private CCW. That's big.
4. Gun shows. Love 'em now while you can. McCain would actually be OK on most RKBA issues, but the supposed "gun show loophole" is the big exception. As for Obama or Hillary? Nuff said.
3. Mass market tactical long guns. Mossberg shotguns have broken out with tactical option packages in a big way; Remington is doing it too. Add to that dozens of commercial .223 self-loading carbines in the last four years, from big boys like SIG and S&W, down to upstarts like Microtech bringing you a new, U.S.-legal Steyr AUG clone! And that's partly a result of:
2. The expiration of the 1994 federal AWB. It's been almost four years now. Americans have been making big use of this historic episode of federal gun
de-control. Millions of new full-featured semi-auto rifles, pistols, and magazines, in private hands. This changes and evolves understandings of what counts as an "ordinary gun."
1. D.C. v. Heller. Nothing -- nothing -- is in the bag until the actual decision comes down in June. But the signs were encouraging. I think and hope that the case will prove a net positive. If so, it will also open up many new battles to fight. This is high-level history in the making.
EDIT TO ADD: What do y'all think belongs on the list? Concrete or general. The S&W M&P pistol? A favorite training class? The prospect of National Park carry reform? Etc., etc.